Newspaper Page Text
SATU RDAY. DECEMBER 15
FUNMY business By Hershbe rger
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:OM. ms BY NtA SERVICE, INC. T. M, KEG U S Off
I m bringing her in through the kitchen door—I wan*
to see if she can cook! ♦>
7 MONTH EN ROUTE
ITHACA, N. Y.—(IP)—Seven months
after Joseph Conley, service station
»"(}prietor, sent a package of candy |
bar's to a former employee, Sgt. Gale
Terry, in France, Terry received] ]
them at Conleys gas station
Shortly after Conley mailed the ;
candy, Terry was wounded, hos-;
pitalized and later returned to the !
States. He received a medical dis
charge and was back at his old gas
station job when the package finally
readied him,
JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. IIP—
^ £U 88e s t* on frrm Mary Forshaug
01 Loui8vUle - Kv., saves the federal
government $18,200 annually. uc
co,c ^ n & lo officials, of the Jefler
£on ' i!le Quarterm aster Depot The
.
su ^® es ' ; ’ on reducing tne number
of duplicate bills on purchases at
the depot—saves approximately 1,-
700 clerical hours per month.
BUILDERS WHITE
SEMI-PASTE PAINT
The Master Painters 1 TITANOX PAINT
This s a BRILLIANTLY WHITE soft paste paint, ground
in Pure Linseed Oil for all exterior and interior painting.
It gives excellent wear and durability under the most severe
weather conditions. Because it is made with TITANOX
it covers exceptionally well Price $3.00 Per
In One Gallon Cans! Gallon
Newton Realty & Investment Company
n 885 East Solomon Street Phone 2023
SUPER ROCK
CONCRETE BLOCKS Y
NOW AVAILABLE
We are delivering these blocks every
day for building homes and for com
mercial construction.
CALL S£
WILLIE BRANNON
PHONE 3274
or
WILDE ROOFING COMPANY
PHONE 3615
i
Sr I
-•*' r J
T
)
W e
L V
Makes yours the gift v ys
of better living...^ /i ( 7
.
the inconspicuous &
G
I
Radionic Hearing Aid Now Earphona Neutrnl ■A and Co C i
is scarcely noticeable.
Make this a Christmas to be remem- i
bered—help a loved one emergo v V
from the "shadow of silence” into
a bright new world of conversation
and companionship. control Four-i»oRition anyone tone can I
Super-Powered Bone-Air Model ndjust himself —
instantly!
With New Neutral Color + r
E arphone and Cord, Ready # *S II
to > Wear. Model A-3-A
Bone Conduction Zenith ^50 XV Y
Model B-3-A Amplifier in KIkjl, I
Standard Air Conduction Zenith for wear with dnr,
for hearing loss. *40 clothing for in Paste
average Model A-2-A Coral wear with
light upptareL
DR. LeROY S. HARRIS
104 S. HILL ST. PHONE 2038
v QfQp Affj$| r
Jumps Again
! Pn UAKLUrt •
I , United r . Press Staff Correspondent
I HOLLYWOOD (U P.)—Leaping in
a g. aceful swan dive from a plane
,it 1 1.0,000-foot altitude, the "Black
Recket" plummeted down with a.
rnoi.e screen trailing behind him.
<At LOCO feet lie ripped the rip
cord and a mottled green "um
orella" ' blossomed out abeve the
world's only Negro professional par
achute jumper.
| That was the 728th jump for the
,' 43-year-old ."drop artist" who was
! fascinated by a barnstorming ex
! Libit ion in 1921 and jest jumped" for
the management
Like that first jump, Number 728
didn't frighten Parkhurst, and like
the first one, he landed right
front of the grandstand.
Served As Instructor
Parkhurst’s technique was bor
rowed from the late Spud Man
ning, world's champion jumper in
1932-34.
Ar.d Lis parachute was borrowed
from a Marine jumpmaster— which
I explains tire precit-und-brown col
or
SlatUmed in Canada and later
Lord n Parkhurst served as in
siri'chu- i r British paratroops
the blitz days of 1939 and 1940, while
I re.M, DofO
OEORGTA. f 'aidin'* Cortn’v.
TO Tl’P OT ‘PRIOR COURT
S " TO COUN Y:
ne«M-n of MIP-GA.
PARTS COMPANY. INC., shows:
l
That on .Titlv 30. I n t3, the Hpad
iAv’to Parts Coronanv. Ine, was duly
j chartered bv the Superior Cmrrt
of said eonritv for a period oi thlr
j ty-fft-e f3.5> years.
2
That on Audist 7. 19’ 4 . said char
ter was amended so as to change its
home to th°t of Mid-Ga. Auto Pans
I Company, Inc.
3
| Petition desire* t* orrend Parst
) graph a of its orieirM c v ’artpr ns
l
amended', 1 so as to authorize stock
, holders to increase the capital stock
j in said corporation to an amount
*•> of in evered Fifty Thousand ($50.
] 000.00) Dollars, so that Paragraph
i 4 of said charter, when
j will “4. read The as maximum follows: number ol
'hares of sto*k which th° cornora
tlon shall be authorized to have
outstanding at -any time, shall be
File Hundred (500) shares of the
"ar value of One Hundred ($100.00)
Dollars each.".
4
Petitioner hereto attaches amd
r i!os with (his nptitt'n a certUi’d
abstract from th n min'ite* of sajri
corporation, marked Exhibit “A,”
shnwin'T that anrlication for amend
ment of its charter as aforesaid has
been authorized by proper corporate
authority.
WPERFFORE. petitioner prays an
amending its charter under i
'he terms of the Act of the General
■
trembly cf Georgia, approved
January 28, 1938, with sll th“ r4** v ': -,
privileges, and powers as provided
In said Act.
(KRISTOPHER A; FUTBAL
Attorney for Petitioner
GFOPOIA. apnldttjg County.
I, Clara E. Allen. Secretary of
•he Mid-Ga. Auto Parts Company.
r r*.‘ o Corporation of Spalding
Conntv Georgia, hereby certify that
spee'al mootin'' cf the stockhoi.l
of tlm aforesaid corrymation duly
levallv calk’d for the purpose
c'mstd"*{nst the question of In
creasing the authorized ca”i)-al stock
to an amount not to exceed $50,000.0'’,
was held in the office thereof, at
tip wo a. cn Ncvemhcv is. tot'
There was presented and passed
by a total vot“ of th° outstanding
capital stock of the coTpornMnn, a
resolution, of which the following
is *he matertal abstract as taken
' erbatim f*om the recorded, miii
ute* ( ,f y-aid meeting:
' "Re it resolved at this called
meeting of the’sf mkh' lders of Mid
Ga. Auto Parts'Company, Inc., that
naraaraph 4 of its original char
ter he amended sc ns to authorize
ct rkhclders to increase the capital
s'oek in said corporation to an a
mour.f not to exceed $59,009 00, and
that the nrrppr nffirc-s of the or f -
twration he authorized and dirce'
eri to institute th" necessary lego'
i-roceedinas immediately to amend
)he "barter as aforesaid "
fiver, under mv nffi-ial hand a;iu
seal, on this November m, 1945
CLARA K. ALIEN,
S-'-etarv. Mid-Ga, Autu Parts
Company, Inc.
SEAL >
pyi'TPTT "A"
Order of Court
Amending Charter of
Mid-Go, Anto Parts Company,
IAromoratpd
tv the Superior court of
PPM OTNO COUNTY. GEORGIA.
GEORGIA Snaltiins C'untv.
The fnrptminq petition of . MtU
Oa. Auto Ports Company, Ino.r
ivtrnfeh to amend its charter in :.e
a-t'riilnrs therrin set out read nna
(’onsidereci. It appearing that said
petition is rmci" In aceerriance with
Chapter 22-18 ol the Ge'-rRla Code,
arjri that the requirements of law !
!n such C”srs provided have been
fuliv crjimjiati with: and]
ri ytmenmE ' rrtrrod, adjudged
deejwd that all of the prayers of
1 the re'itl.yi chart are of hereby the ifetitloner. K'ftnlcJ i
in ’r
' hereiiy amended In all of the par-'
ieulars ." t out in .aid t>et1tio)i.
Granted at Chambers, this 29 day
of November, 1945.
CHESTER A. BYARS,
Judge of the Superior Court
of Spaldln< County, GeorfLa.
GRIFFIN (CiXJKGiA/ MrtS.
Britain was training 'chutists to
catch up with the mass invasion tat
tics of the Nazis,
Four years later, many of Par k*
v,,™.., hulsts . sUments storiente" poured ou ' of a
sky over "festung Europa."
After the Japanese pulled theii*
sneak attack. Parkhurst returned t
the United States and became civil
lari instructor in parachute rigging,
packing aiid jumping for both Army
and Navy at Pearl -Harbtr.
Headed 'Chute Department
At McClellan Field, Sacramento,
and at Boston, he continued teach
ing the gentle art of "gettin’ out and
walkin'" two or three miles above
terra firma.
Last year he served as iiead of the
parachute department, Headquar
ers Squadron, at the East Boston
Airfield He returned to profession
al jumping when Ute war ended.
Parkhurst was bom in Oklahoma
and educated in Boston.
He packs and rigs his own ’chute
with the help of his wife, Philomene.
"It doesn't frighten me to see John
jump any mere. Vm used to it," she
«aiu.
MAKES POSTMASTER GUESS
CHEYENNE, Wyo HP) — Next
time a Cheyenne businessman gives
his secretary money with whicn
to buy stamps, he's going to be more
explicit in his directions. He hand
ed his secretary a $30 check and
tol(J iler to duv some stamps. She
10% more than
wartime take-home pay
refused by UAW-CIO
Before GM workers were called out on strike, the UAW-CIO refused
an offer aimed to increase wartime take-home pay by at least 10%.
Read the background and ask yourself, does this make sense ?
HERE ARE THE SIMPLE FACTS:
1. During the last year of the war, the and determined called the to amount strike. This to an offer average has of finally 13 x /i cents been !
average General Motors hourly-rate per hour.
worker earned $56.93 per week. 4
This is based actual records of the money paid . The UAW-CIO turned down a'
on would have given the 1
and the number of people working. To earn this proposal which
money they worked an average of 45.6 hours per average GM worker $63.44 a week.
week. Under this offer, the average General Motors
2m GM prod- hourly-rate worker would have received $6.T44
> The public demand for for the same number of hours for which he was
ucts and services is enough to keep paid $56.93 during the war. This is at least .33%
plants working at the wartime more than he would have received in January
our 1941 if he had worked the same number of hours
level of 45 to 48 hours weekly. then. The union rejected the offer. The strike
\ continues. The workers getting nothing.
During the period of shortages, we plan to oper- are
ate at this rate, barring work stoppages due to 5 does the UAW-CIO want?
causes beyond our control. In fact, some of our . What
p'ants were working 48 hours a week when the Government figures say that the cost of living
strike was called. The number of people em- has gone up 33% since January 1,1941. As already
ployed when reconversion is completed and our pointed out, General Motors has offered this
new plants and facilities are in production, will much to its workers. But the union insists il
he larger than before the war. wants 30% more than present rates, which an;
already substantially higher than 1941 rates. It^
3 General Motors offered to adjust 40 battle hours’ cry work. is “52 for 40 or fight”—52 hours’ pay for
wage rates in line with the cost of budge from that demand,
living. It refuses to
was have Since called, increased adjustment January the 1941, union substantially. in General line was with offered Motors’ the Before a Government’s cost-of-living wage the strike rate** General Motors
wage
tabilization policy^ The union rejected this offer “MORE AND BETTER THINGS FOR MORE PEOPLE”
.
XT
and recorded in Voiume 6, folio 534,
of the general deed records of Mc
Intosh County. Georgia, which deed
I of conveyance erroneously gave the
Western boundaiy of the tract
\ i the Ccwhcun *Road when in fact
a .„ on 0 , Us extPnd ed wesleny
of the said road, and thereafter on
September 26th. 1940. the said Se.i
Island Company made a second con
veyance to the said Mrs. Evey hell
Harris, which was recorded In Book
10. page 484. of the said deed rec
or(ls 0 ( t ) le said county, and ythich
specifically conveyed the port! n af
the tract lying West of the Cow
horn Road, reference to the said
conveyance and the record
being hereby had; saving and ex
cepting therefrom that
tract or parcel of land containing
ten U0) acres, more or less,
is held by Mrs. Evey Kell
bletl and which tract was
her by two deeds cf conveyance
the first from the Trust Company
Georgia, dated August 7.
and recorded in Deed Book 7, foli
283. of the general deed records
McIntosh County. Georgia, and
which conveyed a tract of three
and cne-half (3 1-2) acres, and the
second also from the Trust Company
of Georgia, dated July 7, 1941, and
recorded in Deed Book II. folio 218,
of the said deed records which con
veyed a tract six and three-tentns
(6J) acres, reference to the said
detds of conveyance and the recora
thereof being hereby had fer a
more complete description of the
tract of land so excepted,
and reinvest the proceeds beeausr
there is no income from the prop
erty sought to be sold,
This the 29th day cf Novemboi
1943
CLAl'DE CHRISTOPHER,
As Guardian of Mrs. Evej
Kell Harris.
addressed an envelope to the local
postmaster, put the cheek in it and
sent the letter on its wav with no*
thing in it but the check, she
Plained later that she , thought . . . tne
postmaster "would know what to
yi ith it and we’d get the stamps.”
LEGAL 5551
GEORGIA, Spalding County
Claude Christopher, as Guardian
« of Evey Kell Harris,
Mrs^ gives nc
rice that he will apply to the Hon
rable Chester A Byars, Judge o:
the Superior Courts, oi the Griffin
Judicial Circuit at 10:00 o'.-lock
A. M, on the 24th day -o! Decem
ber, 1945, at Griffin, Georgia, to
fell the following described prop
erty, to-wit:
All of that certain tract. I t or
a reel of land situate, lying
being in McIntosh County,
containing Five Hundred and
venty-nine (579) acres, more or less,
and being bounded as follows, to
wit: Northerly by lands now or for
merly of Kittles and George At
word, and by lands formerly of R.
K. Hopkins, but now the property
of F. B Williams and W. E. Wil
liams; Easterly by the salt marsh
and Atwood River: southerly by
tends formerly cf R. K. Hopkins
but now the property of F. B
Williams and W. E. Williams, and
lands of Watson and lands o£ Pal
mer and lands formerly of F. A
and C. A. Mzlnt;,sh. and Westerly
by lands formerly of R. K. Hopkins,
but now the property of F. B. Wil
liams and W E. Williams, and lands
of Watson, and being the same prop
erty which was originally conveyed
by the Sea Island Company to Mrs.
Evey Kell Harris by deed of con
veyance, dated October 23, 1933,
PAGE THREE
CARNIVAL •s By Dick Turner
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