Newspaper Page Text
Friday, Nov. 24, 1967
INK SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
Oft DC ft GRANTING CHARTIR
GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY.
The petition of HARRY KAPILOFF,
JACK KAPILOFF and MRS. RITA K.
SCHEER, whose post office address la
114 Whitehall Street, S. W„ Atlanta,
Georgia, reapectfully shows to the
Court:
1. They desire for themselves, their
associates and successors to be In
corporated under the name and style
of
HOLLYWOOD FASHIONS, INC.
for a period of thirty-five (35) years,
with all of the privileges of renewal
given to similar corporations by law.
2. The principal office of said corp
oration shall be In Fulton County,
Georgia, but the corporation shall have
the right to establish branch offices
and places of business elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
3. The object of the corporation is
pecuniary gain to Itself and its stock
holders.
4. The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by the corp
oration shall be the operation of a
business wherein are handled and sold
clothing and wearing apparel of any
and every kind for men, women and
children, as well as any and all other
items or articles of merchandise
usually or customarily handled and sold
by such businesses, and any and all
other kinds of merchandise, and to do
any and all acts and things necessary,
convenient, expedient, ancillary or in
aid of the foregoing.
5. The corporation shall have the
power to enter into, or become a part
ner in, any arrangement for sharing
profits, union of interests, cooperation,
joint-venture or otherwise with any
person, firm or corporation in the car
rying on of any business, operation,
enterprise or venture which this corp
oration has the direct or Incidental
authority to pursue. It shall have the
power, generally and without any lim
itation or restriction whatsoever, to
hold, purchase, own, deal in, mortgage
or convey real estate and personal
property in this State and in any other
state or country. It shall have the
S ower to enter Into guaranties or ln-
orsements, and otherwise to act as
surety whenever its Board of Direc
tors shall deem such action advisable.
S. The maximum number of shares
of stock shall be 10,000 of the par
value of TEN DOLLARS (310.00) per
share, all of which shall be common
stock.
7. The minimum amount of capital
with which the corporation will begin
business shall be not less than
TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS (320,-
000.00). The corporation shall be
authorized to issue additional shares
up to the maximum number stated
above, and thereafter, from time to
time, to reduce the amount of the
capital outstanding, but not below the
minimum stated above, and all this,
upon action duly taken by the Board
of Directors.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners pray that
HOLLYWOOD FASHIONS, INC. be ln-
corporated under the laws of Georgia
and that said corporation have all of
the rights, powers, privileges and im
munities which are hereinabove set
forth and such, others as are now, or
may hereafter be, allowed to corp
orations of like nature under the laws
of the State of Georgia.
GERSHON, RUDEN,
ABRAHAM and SCHWARTZ
Attorneys for Petitioners
730 Healey Building
P. O. Box 1398
Atlanta. Georgia 30301
JA 4-—4991
ORDER
The foregoing Petition for a Char
ter having been presented, examined
and found to appear legitimately
within the purview and Intentions of
the laws of this State, and there being
presented a certificate from the Secre
tary of State declaring
HOLLYWOOD FASHIONS. INC.
not to be the name of any other exist
ing corporation registered in the rec
ords of the Secretary of State, said
application is granted and HOLLY
WOOD FASHIONS, INC. is hereby in
corporated in accordance with the
laws and with the prayers of the
above Petition.
This 31st day of October, 1967.
CHARLES A. WOFFORD
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
Nov.lO,1744,Dec.l
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING AMENDMENT
STATE OF GEORGIA,
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY:
The petition of MORTON REALTY
CO., hereinafter called applicant,
■hows to the Court the following facts:
1. Applicant is a corporation duly
existing under the laws of the State
of Georgia, by an order of this Court
dated October 8, 1943.
2. This petition Is brought to amend
the charter of said corporation, In the
particular hereinafter set out, its pro
posed amendment having been favor
ably voted for and consented to by
the unanimous vote of all of the
stockholders of said corporation, at a
■pedal meeting for such purposes, as
shown by the certificate of the Sec
retary of said corporation attached
hereto and marked Exhibit "A” and
made a part hereof.
WHEREFORE, petitioner prays that
the charter of said corporation be
amended as hereinabove set out.
CHAS. W. BERGMAN
Attorney for Petitioner
' .National Bank Building
orgla 30303
EXHIBIT "A"
5LVED by unanimous
of the stockholders of
, XTY CO., of Atlanta,
___ Jia, at af special meeting duly call
ed on the 27th . day of October 1967,
at which meeting all of the stock
holders were duly present, that the
following amendment to the charter
of said corporation was unanimously
^“Fo^amend article I ot said coepora
tion by increasing said capital stock
In sn aggregate amount not to exceed
1238
Atlan
TWO MILLION (32,000,000.00) DOLLARS
such Increase or Increases to be Issued
In either common or preferred stock
of the par value of ONE HUNDRED
(3100.00) DOLLARS per share and upon
such terms and conditions as may be
authorised et the time of said in
crease in the capital stock of said
corporation. In the event said capital
Stock la increased, ss herein provided,
the same may be reduoed, from time
to time by a majority vote of the out
standing stock entitled to vote, pro
vided the same is not reduced to an
amount less than the minimum cap-
ltal stock.* 4
The undersigned, CHARLES W.
BERGMAN, Secretary of MORTON
REALTY CO., hereby certifies that
at a special meeting duly called for
the purpose of the stockholders of
said corporation held on the 27th day
of October, 1967, the above and fore
going resolution proposing the fore
going amendment to the charter of
said corporation was favorably voted
for and consented to by all of the
holders of the capital stock of said
corporation, all of same being present
as appears upon the minutes of said
meeting as recorded in the Minute
Book of said corporation on file in
the office of said corporation.
Given under my official signature
and the seal of the corporation, this
the 30th day of October, 1967.
CHAS. W. BERGMAN
Secretary, Morton Realty Co.
(Corporate Seal)
ORDER
The foregoing petition of MORTON
REALTY CO., to amend Us charter in
the particular therein set out read
and considered coming on reguarly
to be heard and the requirements of
law in said amendment having been
fully compiled with, it is, therefore,
considered, ordered and decreed that
the prayer of the foregoing petition
be and it is hereby granted and the
charter of the petitioner Is hereby
amended in the particular set out In
the petition and the said corporation
is hereby granted the power set forth
in said petition.
Granted in open court this the 30th
day of October, 1967.
SIDNEY T. SCHELL
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Circuit.
Nov.l 0,17,24, Dsc.l
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING CHARTER
GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY.
The petition of HARRY KAPILOFF,
JACK KAPILOFF and MRS. RITA K.
SCHEER, whose post office address U
111 Peachtree Street, N. E., Atlanta,
Georgia respectfully shows to the
Court:
1. They desire for themselves their
associates and successors to he incorp
orated under the name and style of
ANTHONY’S
MENS WEAR, INC.
AS WE WERE SAYING
By Robert Segal
Catfish Gets a Hand
(A Seven Arts Feature)
Catfish Meyfield is only 20. He
has served 27 months in a re
formatory. In one sense, he’s just
a personable kid who may be
forgotten tomorrow. But he stood
tall and effective in Washington’s
glamorous Sho reham Hotel not
long ago when he took the mi
crophone at the founding meeting
of Urban Coalition, alongside
such human %>owerhouses as
Henry Ford II, Walter Reuther,
David Rockefeller and the mayors
of some of America’s largest
cities.
Catfish Mayfield, a Negro who
heads Pride, Inc. — a group of
1100 youngsters who have been
cleaning up slum alleys and mak
ing war on rats—told Urban Coa
lition that although he had re
ceived no invitation to the big
meeting, he had come anyway.
He added that, granted the Prob
lem was out yonder in the Black
Ghetto, where it might have been
more effective to have the ses
sion, the solution to the problem
reposed here with America’s
power srtucture.
And he got a deserved hand.
For Catfish Mayfield, barging
in on America’s answer to Dixie-
cratism, personified a spirit need
ed to bring people to stop saying
all the wrong things about riots
and start doing all the right things
property In the State and In any other
state or country.
6. The maximum number of sharea
of stock shall be 20,000 of the par
value of TEN DOLLARS (310.00) per
share, all of which shall he common
stock.
7. The minimum amount of capital
with which the corporaUon will begin
business shall be not less than FIFTY
THOUSAND DOLLARS (350,000.00). The
corporation shall be authorized to issue
additional shares up to the maximum
number stated above, and thereafter.
from time to time, to reduce the
, amount of the capital outstanding, but
for a period of thirty-five (35) years, not below the minimum stated above,
with all of the privileges of renewal and all this, upon action duly taken
glven_to similar corporations by law. by the Board of Directors,
office
of said corp
oration shall be in Fulton County,
Georgia but the corporation shall have
the right to establish branch offices
and places of business elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
3. The object of the corporaton is
pecuniary gain to itself and its stock
holders.
4. The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by the corpora
tion shall be the operation of a busi
ness wherein are handled and sold
clothing, headwear, footwear, haber
dashery and all other wearing apparel
of any and every kind whether ready
or custom-made, for men, women and
children, as well as any and all other
items of articles of merchandise usual
ly or customarily handled and sold by
such businesses and any and all other
kinds of merchandise, and to do any
and all acts and things necessary, con
venient, expedient, ancillary or in aid
of the foregoing.
5. The corporation shall have the
power to enter Into, or become a part
ner In, any arrangement for sharing
S roflta, union of lnterosts, coopera-
on, joint-venture or otherwise with
any penon, firm or corporation tn the
carrying on of any business, operation,
enterprise of venture which this cor
poration has the direct or incidental
authority to pursue. It shall have the
power, generally and without any lim
itation or restriction whatsoever, to
hold, purchase, own, deal In, mortgage
or convey real estate and personal
WHEREFORE, Petitioners pray that
ANTHONY’S MENS WEAR, INC. be
Incorporated under the laws of Geor
gia and that said corporation have
all of the rights, powers, privileges
and immunities which are hereinabove
set forth and such others as are now,
or may hereafter be, allowed to corp
orations of like nature under the laws
of the State of Georgia.
GERSHON, RUDEN,
ABRAHAM and SCHWARTZ
730 Healey Building
P. O. Box 1398
Atlanta, Georgia 30301
JA 4—4991
Attorneys for Petitioners
ORDER
The foregoing Petition for a Char
ter having been presented, examined
and found to appear legitimately
within the purview and intention of
the laws of this State, and there, being
presented a certificate from the Sec
retary of State declaring
ANTHONY’S
MENS WEAR, INC.
not to be the name of any other exist
ing corporation registered in the rec
ords of the Secretary of State, said ap
plication is granted and ANTHONY’S
MENS WEAR, INC. Is hereby Incorp
orated in accordance with the law*
and with the prayers of the above
Petition.
This 31st day of October, 1967.
CHARLES A. WOFFORD
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
Nov. 10,17,24, Dec. 1
BY HENRY LEONARD
mm
M • FETINSTEIN
k
=X
(o
i /
\
X
/ I
about the reconstruction of
America. The fact that he came
to the Washington sessions and
didn’t nant, but employed the
sharp tool of humor (he bent
down to read Mayor John Lind
say’s name tag, as if he didn’t
know who Lindsay was), help
ed a lot to loosen any stiffness
at the Urban Coalition launching.
Moreover, many recalled that
Negroes walked out of an earlier
meeting in Washington — the
White House Conference on Civil
Rights — but not only stayed
throughout the Urban Coalition
conference but made many con
structive and practical proposals.
What is Urban Coalition? Why
is it so important now? What will
it strive for? What chance for
success?
Urban Coalition is a potential
ly powerful, new, unabashed lob
by, with leaders of industry and
business at long last joining civil
rights, labor, religious, and inter-
group experts in a bid to move
President Johnson and Congress
to make the Great Society a real
ity. It calls for the creation of
a million jobs now and for the
construction of a million low-in
come housing units now. It says:
“The country can wait no longer
for measures that have too long
been denied the people of the
cities and the nation as a whole
—additional civil rights legisla
tion, adequately funded model
cities, anti-poverty, housing, ed
ucation and job training pro
grams, and a host of others.”
Whet it says is Important, and
that Urban Coalition said it in
the way it did is perhaps even
more important. The steering
committee of Urban Coalition
sweated out its manifesto for
three and a half hours with many
sharp pencils at work. Adoption
of the program was unanimous.
The day the call for an end
to urban decay and ghetto orisis
was adopted, some of the most
influential men in America left the
meeting and took the program to
the Hill. Mayor James Cavan
augh of badly-burned Detroit,
reporting back to the assembly
of nearly 1000 determined Amer
icans, made it dear that the peo
ple on the Hill didn’t seem to
oatch the urgency of the mission.
But they will.
And so will the President.
They will for many reasons—
one, because a Republican leader,
Mayor Lindsay, received a stand
ing ovation from a strongly bi
partisan assembly, when he made
it clear that, regardless of the
importance of Vietnam, nothing is
more essential to the well-being
of America than making our
cities livable and the lives of the
city dwellers attractive. Specifi
cally, Mayor Lindsay said:
“Some say that we are power
ful enough to meet our pressing
urban needs without reducing our
other commitments—national, in
ternational and interterrestrial. If
that is true, let’s do it. Let’s meet
the challenge of our urban civil
ization honestly and forthrightly,
with programs strong enough to
match the magnitude of our
problems. Our international com
mitments should not be allowed
to weaken our resolve at home.
If our defense commitment, our
commitment to space, or any
other commitment made before
our urban areas were beset by
agony is blocking a vigorous ef
fort to end those agonies, those
commitments should be reorder
ed.”
Between Catfish Mayfield and
John Lindsay, we must find the
way to bring justice, as well as
order, to the cities. Add to these,
prosperity and full equality and
dignity for every dweller there.
Urban Coalition means to do just
that; and Urban Coalition, a dy
namic concept perfectly timed
for action, is on its way.
UN Assembly Head
For Direct Talks
UNITED NATIONS (JTA) —
Comeliu Maneseu, president of
the United Nations General As
sembly and Rumanian Foreign
Minister, reiterated here that he
favored direct negotiations be
tween Israel and the Arab state*
as a means to achieve a settle
ment of the Middle East crisis.
Mr. Maneseu was careful to
note, in reply to a question on the
subject, that his answer was given
as Rumanian Foreign Minister
and not in his capacity as As
sembly president. He said that
“we have to be realistic and take
into account the sovereignty and
rights of existence of every coun
try in the region.”
Rumania is the only Communist
bloc nation which did not break
relations with Israel as a conse
quence of the Six-Day June war
and the only one to publicly
support the principle of direct
talks.
"And to think that only last year he painted
them for Jewish delicatessens!"
LEGAL NOTICE
GEORGIA
FULTON COUNTY
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF FULTON COUNTY:
The petlUon of MARVIN H. ZION,
JOHN J. TARIJ5TON, and MARY EL
LEN LEONARD respectfully shows:
1.
Petitioners desire for themselves, their
associates and assigns, to be incorp
orated under the laws of the State of
Georgia for a period of thirty-five
(35) years, with the right of renewal
from time to time under the name and
style of:
"BULLS AND BEARS, INC."
2.
The object of said corporation is
pecuniary gain and profit to its stock
holders.
3.
The general nature of the business
to be transacted by the corporaUon
will be either on its own behalf as
principal, or as a Jobber, or on com
mission, or as a broker, or as com
mercial and general agent and factor
for any person, partnership, associa
tion or corporation, to purchase or
otherwise acquire, own, sell, assign
and transfer, or otherwise dispose of,
and to deal in and with, either at
wholesale or retail, a stock market
dart board game, and materials used
in or intended for use in connection
with same, including advertising mater
ial and circulars of ail kind and na
ture whatsover, and the power to do
all things which may be desirable or
convenient to the successful opera
tion of its business.
4.
The corporation shall have the pow
er, generally and without any limita
tion or restriction whatsoever, to hold,
purchase, own, deal In, mortgage or
convey real estate and personal prop
erty in this State and in any other
State or Country. The corporation
shall have the power to enter into,
or become a partner in, any arrange
ment for sharing profits, union of In
terests, cooperation. Joint-venture or
otherwise, with any person, firm or
corporation.
5.
The corporaUon shall have the pow
er. generally and without any limi
tation or restriction whatsoever, to bor
row money and make loans secured
by any or all corporate assets, as well
as the right to make unsecured loans.
6.
(a) There shall be one class of stock,
to be common stock of 310.00 par
value. There shall be five thousand
(5,000) shares authorized.
(b) The minimum amount of capital
with which the said corporation may
commence business shall be 3200.00.
The principal office of said corpora
tion shall be in Fulton County, Geor
gia, but petitioners desire the right
of establishing branch offices and
places of business elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
6.
The post office address of each of
the petitioners for the purpose of this
charter is:
1505 Wllliam-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray that
they be Incorporated under the name
and style aforesaid with the rtghta
powers, privileges and immunities as
are now or may hereafter be allowed
by law to corporations
TARLETON h ZION
1*1 Marvin H. Zion
Attorneys for Petitioners
1505 Wllllam-Ollver
Atlanta, Georgia
JAckson 3—2706
^ ORDI1*
The within and foregoing petition
read and considered, end it appearing
to the Court that the same is legitf
mately within the purview , and inten-
fi°J 1 ,? f the of this State govern-
7? e J ? L a J’ tlr ’ g 01 corporate charters,
£f| d r.VL f ^ t *£ ■PPeerlng from the ce£
tlficate of the Secretary of State pre
sented to me that the name of the
proposed corporation is not the name
2\J n l y °. th ? r now existing corporation
retary* 1 ^ sute r * COrd * ° f tte S ~"
..fj IS '.TTOptETORE, ORDERED that
said application be and the same is
herahJ ,? r * nted > Petitioners are
hereby Incorporated under the n.ml
•nd style of "BULLS AND BEAM
azid Immunities 'prayed 'or^rmw^r^h^j
byVhe g Uw." d of t0 thl^ m st:t r .. corpo ™«ons
J * rlr T v£Jxii, OT ® mb * r ’
11 •/£££ ETHERIDGE
JUDO*. FULTON SUPERIOR
Nov.1744,D#c.14