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Presidential Hopefuls
Keep Eye On Wisconsin
By United Prest International
j Strategists for half a dozen
active and potential presidential
candidates looked hopefully to
Wisconsin’s primary today for
some meaningful result to help
Legals
LEGAL 1614
THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR
THE COUNTY OF SPALDING
STATE OF GEORGIA
In the matter of:
Arthur Forrer,
Mrs. Nancy R. Goldstein,
’ and Louis W. Goldstein,
Petitioners
Files No.
Incorporation
» The petition of ARTHUR
FORRER. MRS. NANCY R.
GOLDSTEIN and LOUIS W.
GOLDSTEIN respectfully shows:
> e- 1—
Petitioners desire to be in
corporated and made a body
corporate under the name and
style of CENTRAL LAND CORP,
for a period of thirty-five (35)
years, pursuant to the provi
sions of the Act of the General
Assembly of Georgia, approved
January 28, 1938, and Acts
amendatory thereof.
— 2 —
Petitioners' post office add
resses are as follows: Arthur
Forrer, 116 West College Street,
Griffin, Georgia: Mrs. Nancy
R. Goldstein, 507 Brookwood
Terrace, Griffin, Georgia; and
Louis W. Goldstein, 1246 North
Hill Street, Griffin, Georgia.
— 3 —
The purpose of said Corpora
tion is pecuniary gain to Itself
and stockholders.
— 4 —
The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted and the
corporate powers desired are:
(a) To conduct and carry on
the business of builders and con
tractors for the purpose of build
ing, erecting, altering, improv
ing, repairing or doing any
other work in connection with
any and all classes of building
and improvement of realty of
any kind and nature whatso
ever;
(b) To buy, sell, acquire,
mortgage, lease, transfer and
assigh lands and interest in
lands, of any kind and descrip
tion, wheresoever located; to
hold, own, Improve, develop,
maintain, lease, mortgage, sell
or otherwise dispose of such
property or any part thereof;
to transact a general real es
tate agency or brokerage busi
ness and to act as real estate
salesmen, agents or brokers in
the buying, selling, leasing, rent
ing and dealing In real proper
ty;
(c) To erect, construct, im
prove, rebuild, enlarge, alter,
manage and control, directly
or through ownership of stock
in any corporation, any and all
kinds of houses, apartments,
buildings, stores, shops, ware
houses, factories, or other im
provements of realty, and any
and all other structures and
erections which may in the
judgment of the Board of Di
rectors, at any time, be necess
ary, useful or advantageous for
the purpose of the corporation;
(d) To buy, sell, mortgage,
encumber, develop, maintain
and operate real estate sub
divisions and subdivision lots;
(e) To buy, sell, acquire, rent,
own, lease, mortgage, encumber
and assign any type of personal
property, of whatever kind and
character, and to deal with the
same in any way or manner
that mey be deemed expedient,
including materials used in the
building, construction, renova
tion, repairing, or furnishing
of improvements to real proper
ty:
(f) To have all the powera
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them regain their bearings this
baffling political year.
Though only two major active
contenders are on the ballot
former Vice President Richard
M. Nixon for the Republicans
and enjoy all the privileges
enumerated in Georgia Code
Section 22-1827 and 22-1870 and
all of the other powers and
privileges enumerated in Chap
ters 22-18 and 22-19 of the Geor
gia Code, and all of the powers
and privileges enumerated
therein are made a part here
of to the same etxtent as if
they were quoted herein, and
such other powers as may here
after be given by law.
The principal office of said
Corporation shall be In the City
of Griffin, Spalding County,
Georgia, With the privilege of
establishing branch offices and
places of business elsewhere In
the State of Georgia.
Petitioners desire that the
shares of stock in said Corpor
ation be of the par value of One
Hundred ($100.00) Dollars each,
and that all shares shall be
common stock. The maximum
number of shares of stock which
caid Corporation Is to have out
standing at any one time shall
be 5,000 shares. The amount of
capital may be subscribed and
paid for in cash or in property
at a fair market value, or a
combination of both, or its
equivalent. The amount of capi
tal with which the Corporation
shall begin business shall not
be less than One Thusand (sl,-
000.00) Dollars.
—l—
— name of the proposed
Corporation is no the name of
any other existing corporation
registered with the Secretary of
State.
Wherefore, petitioners pray
that they be incorporated under
the name and style as above
stated, with all the powers and
privileges set forth and such
other as are now or may be
hereafter allowed similar corp
orations by the laws of the
State of Georgia.
BECK, GODDARD, OWEN &
SMALLEY,
Attorneys for Petitioners,
By John H. Goddard.
P. O. Box 116,
Griffin, Georgia.
ORDER
The foregoing petition of
Arthur Forrer, Mrs. Nancy R.
Goldstein and Louis W. Gold
stein, having been duly present
ed and the same having been
fully examined by the Court,
and It appearing that all the re
quirements of law having been
fully complied with and that
said petition Is within the in
tention and purview of the law;
and It further appears from a
certificate of the Secretary of
State that the name of the pro
posed corporation is not the
name of any other corporation
registered in the records of his
office:
It Is Thereupon Considered,
Ordered and Adjudged that the
prayers of said petition be and
the same are hereby granted;
and petitioners, their associates,
successors an dassigns, are
hereby incorporated and made
a body politic under the name
and style of Central Land Corp.,
for and during the period of 35
years, with the privilege of re
newal at the expiration of that
time ,and with all the rights,
powers and privileges prayed
for, together with such addi
tional rights, powers, privileges
and immunities as are provided
by the laws of Georgia as they
now exist or may hereafter ex
ist, exercised and permitted to
similar corporations.
This 30th day of March, 1968.
JOHN H. MCGEHEE, Judge,
Spalding Superior Court.
and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy
for the Democrats—the political
upheavals of recent weeks and
the free-for-all Wisconsin prima
ry rules made a decisive
outcome all but Impossible.
Nixon had virtually no opposi
tion In the Republican primary,
but hoped for a substantial vote
to demonstrate voter appeal
and back hie call for military
firmness in Vietnam.
Seeks Crossover Votes
McCarthy, left without an
Opponent when President John
son renounced a second term
Sunday, hoped to pull substan
tial Republican crossovers while
holding his Democratic follow
ing from writing In the name of
New York Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy or Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey.
To complicate matters furth
er, Johnson’s name was still on
the ballot and votes for him
might mean anything from an
oblique endorsement of Hum
phrey to admiration for John
son’s decision to put national
unity ahead of another term.
Johnson backers continued to
plug for votes for him despite
his decision not to run again.
NLRB Orders
Mill To Stop
Intimidations
WARRENTON, Ga. (UPI) —
Tire National Labor Relations
Board has ordered Garland
Knitting Mills of Georgia, Inc.
to cease intimidation of em
ployes associated with union
activities.
The board ruled that the
company, employes of which
have been attempting to hold
representation elections at the
mills here, at Beaufort, S.C.,
and Boston, Mass., was guilty
of unfair labor practices in dis
charging or laying off six em
ployes.
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TANK VlCTlMS—Members of the U.S. Ist Cavalry share a
cigarette west of Hue, South Vietnam, after battle with a
surprise column of North Vietnam tanks. (Radiophoto)
Committee May
Suggest Legalizing
Liquor In Georgia
By DON PHILLIPS
ATLANTA (UPI) — Members
of a blue-ribbon subcommittee,
studying crime in Georgia may
be thinking of recommending
that liquor be legalized through
out the state, sources said
today.
Gov. Lester Maddox, who met
with the group for three hours
behind closed doors Monday,
and Rep. Tom Murphy of Bre
men, chairman of the subgroup
of the Governor’s Crime Com
mission, agreed that illegal li
quor sales could be linked to
half the state’s crime.
Maddox said that a U.S Trea
sury Department official, Willi
am N. Griffin, told the subcom
mittee that Georgia was the
worst state in the union for il
legal liquor sales.
“I think the unavailability of
legal liquor in 129 counties con
tributes to the moonshine prob
lem,’’ the federal Alcohol and
Tobacco Tax Division agent
said afterwards.
Only 30 counties, which are
allowed to vote themselves wet
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Membership
Class
‘One Man One Vote’ Ruling
Reaches Into Local Elections
By CHARLOTTE MOULTON
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Supreme Court’s new extension
of "one man, one vote” to local
governing bodies means that
about 20,000 “little legislatures”
now must check their voting
districts by population equality.
Government statistics show
about 81,000 local governmental
units in the United States. They
Include city councils, county
boards, townships, school dis
tricts, and special units for fire
protection, drainage, water con
servation, and the like.
But only about 20,000 of these
have members elected from
districts, the Justice Depart
ment estimated today. The
others have members who are
appointed or elected at large.
or dry, now have legalized sale
■of liquor. One subcommittee
source pointed to the death of
north Georgia Sol. Gen. Floyd
G. Hoard, for whose murder
convicted bootlegger A. C. Park
has been sentenced to die, as
an example of the links be
tween crime and bans on liquor
In most of Georgia.
Maddox, who ordered state
agents to swoop down on estab
lishments selling liquor after
hours one Sunday morning in
August, said that there was a
problem with enforcement of
the law by local authorities.
“Law enforcement and the
courts are not doing the Job
that needs to be done,” Maddox
said. “Some law enforcement
officials walk right by them
(illegal liquor establishments)
and some go in.”
Sources on the subcommittee
indicated that no decision had
been made, but there was
"strong feeling” that legaliza
tion of liquor would cut down
on crime connected with illegal
liquor.
(Griffin Daily News Staff Photo)
Thia Membership Class at the First Methodist Church has been preparing for church
membership during weekly sessions with the pastor and associate pastor for several
weeks. Many of them are to become members of the church on Palm Sunday. They
are (front, 1-r) Sally Ramsey, Kitty Woodward, Marqua Mclntyre, Alexis Kelley,
Andrea Weldon, Beth Peacock, Sandra Munday (second) Sam Bunn, Jr., Bill
Alison, Glenn Freeman, Kay Fannin, Vickie Davis, Jim Smith, Billy Bussey, Terrell
Bunn (third) Joel Clark, Jerry Statham, Greg Edwards, Gordon Ott, Tommy
Fetzer, Jeff Hunt, Phil Hopkins, Jim Kierbow. Standing in the rear are the Rev.
Don Clark, Associate Minister, and Dr. Delma Hagood, pastor of the church.
A department spokesman said
it has been impossible to
estimate how many of the 20,000
units elected from districts
already conform to the stan
dards of population equality.
The high court’s 5-3 ruling
Monday was seen to have an
important impact just outside
big cities, where the flight to
the suburbs has boosted the
Swainsboro
Man Arrested
In Liquor Case
MIDVILLE, Ga. (UPl)—Fed
eral and state revenue agents
arrested a Swainsboro man
Monday on charges of posses
sion and manufacturing illegal
alcohol.
William Glover, 34, was ap
prehended and agents destroyed
70 gallons of moonshine, 2,250
gallons of mash and two 1,570-
gallon distilling tanks in a
wooded area near here.
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population of subdivisions nea
rest the metropolitan areas,
while districts more remote are
still rural in character.
The decision followed a
momentous 1964 ruling that
members of state legislatures
must be elected from equally
populous districts. The ruling
rested on the 14th Amendment’s
guarantee of “equal protection
of the laws.”
Speaking for the majority
Monday, Justice Byron R. White
said:
"If voters residing in over
sized districts are denied their
constitutional rights to partici
pate in the election of state
legislators, precisely the same
kind of deprivation occurs when
the members of a city council,
school board, or county govern
ing board are elected from
districts with substantially une
qual population. . .while state
legislatures exercise extensive
power over their constituents
and over the various units of
local government, the states
universally leave much policy
and decision-making to their
governmental subdivisions.”
REVIVAL
Now In Progress
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
Located on East Mclntosh Road
Services Each Night
At 7:30, Through-April 5.
Rev. Max Tucker, Evangelist
A Nursery Will Be Provided
Rev. Gene T urkett, Pastor
Griffin Daily Newt
Tuesday, April 2, 1968
Funds Not
Available To
Certify Petitions
ATLANTA (UPI)— Secretary
of State Ben Fortson said today
he didn’t have the funds to cer
tify petitions anticipated when
Independent presidential candi
date George Wallace enters the
race in Georgia.
Gov. Lester Maddox Monday
officially vetoed a bill which
would have charged petition
candidates five cents per name
and given the certification job
to local ordinaries and boards
of registrars, thus cutting the
secretary’s expenses.
As it is now, Fortson says he
understands why Maddox would
want to veto such a bill in an
election year. However, he does
not have enough funds to cover
the expected $85,000 auditing
bill when Wallace enters the
Georgia race.
"I fear there will be very
great difficulty unless some
way can be found for me to
have the money for me to do
tbe job as quickly and effici
ently as I should,” Fortson
said.
Maddox last week said that
he would veto the bill, noting
that Wallace was running for
President.
“I wouldn’t want to fight a
fellow like that,” Maddox said.
7