The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, July 06, 1961, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE FOUR THE BT iTLER HERl t r> mrn.FR. GEORGIA, JULY 6, 1961. Petition for Charter The petition of Edward T. Gault- ney, Jr., Joseph M. Gaultney, and Walter Smith, respectfully show: -1- That they desire for themselves, their associates, successors, and as signs, to be constituted a body po litic under the name and style of “INTERSTATE DEVELOPERS, INC.” -2- The object of said corporation is pecuniary gain and profit. -3- The general nature of the busi ness to be transacted is construct ion, errection, repairing, and remod- ling of buildings and structures, of all types, including residences, a- partments, stores, warehouses, and office buildings, for itself and for others, and the doings of all kinds of public works and other public services. In addition to the privi leges herein grarfled the corporat ion desires to generally have all powers allowed corporations under the law, and to conduct any busi ness as permitted by the laws of the State of Georgia. -4- That the time for which said cor poration shall have existence is thirty five (35) years with the pri vilege of renewal at that time. -5- Petitioners desire the power to ac quire by purchase, lease, or to oth erwise and to hold, own, lease, sell, convey, otherwise dispose of lands, real property, personal property, equipment, and all property rights necessary to carry on the roposed business, and all powers enumerat- ed’in Georgia Code Sections 22-1827 and 22-1828, of the Code of Georgia Annotated and any other and addi tional powers as may hereafter be granted by law. -6- The principal office of said cor poration shall be in Taylor County, Georgia, with the privilege of es tablishing branch offices elsewhere. -7- The maximum number of shares of common stock to be outstanding at any time shall be 1,000 shares of the par value of $100.00 each. The maximum number of shares of preferred stock shall be 1,000 shar es of the par value of $100.00 each. The amount of capitol with which the corporation will begin business will not be less than $200.00. -8 - The post office address of all pe titioners herein is Macon, Bibb County, Georgia. -9- Petitioners attach hereto a cer tificate from the Office of the Sec retary of State of Georgia, certify ing that the name of the corporat ion is not the name of any other corporation registered in said sec retary’s office. WHEREFORE, petitioners pray for themselves, their successors and associates to be incorporated as aforesaid. WATER SMITH Attorney for Petitioners Order of Court The foregoing petition of Edward T. Gaultney, Jr., Joseph M. Gault ney, and Walter Smith, to be incor porated under the name acid style of “INTERSTATE DEVELOPERS, INC.” read and considered. It appearing that said petition is within the intent and purview of the laws of the State of Georgia, applicable thereto and that all of the laws have been complied with, including the presentation of a cer tificate from the Office of the Sec retary of State as required by law. It is hereby decreed, ordered and adjudged that all of the prayers of the said petition are hereby granted and the said applicants, their associates, and successors, are hereby incorporated under the name and style of “INTERSTATE DEVELOPERS, INC.” for and during the period of thirty five (35) years with the right of renewal of said charter at that time and it is here by granted and vested with the powers, rights, and privileges, men tioned in said petition together with all powers, rights, and privi leges, now given by law to said corporation. This 20th dav of June, 1961. /s/ HUBERT CALHOUN Judge Superior Court Chat tahoochee Circuit NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS GEORGIA. TAYLOR COUNTY: All creditors of the estate of John V. Ritter, late of Taylor Coun ty. deceased, are hereby notfied to render in their demands to the un- | dersigned according to law, and all persons indebted to said estate are required to make immediate pay ment. Iva Ernestine McClusky Ritter Administrator Citation—Year’s Support STATE OF GEORGIA TAYLOR COURT OF ORDINARY. July 1st., 1961 The appraisers upon application of Gussie S. Royeton, widow of said I Alton C. Royeton for a twelve mon- I ths support for herself and no 1 minor children, having filed their i return; all persons concerned here- | by are cited to show cause, if any ; they have, at the next regular Au- ' gust term of this Court, why said application should not be granted. ‘ MRS. BUSSEY CHILDS Ordinary Taylor County Six Counts Forger Pays Fine With Another One ‘Father Of Radio’ Dies MACON, Ga., June 28—When she riff’s investigators arrested Dewey S. Mercer on a forgery charge, he was ready with an explanation. Mercer told the officers he was scheduled to appear before Bibb Superior Court to be sentenced on five other counts of forgery. So, he said, he was cashing the sixth forged check to pay the fine on the other charges. Few people have the courage to resist the crowd, even when they know the crowd is off base. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT GEORGIA, TAYLOR COUNTY Under the powers in a deed from Willie M. Woodall to Jim Walter Corporation dated Dec. 15, 1960 re corded in Deed Book 11, Folio 366- 367, Clerk’s Office, Taylor Super jior Cou;', the same having been duly transferred and assigned to the undersigned transferee, there will be sold during the legal hours of sale on August 1, 1961, before the courthouse door in said Coun ity, at public outcry, to the highest bidder for cash, the following pro perty: All that tract or parcel of land lying and being in Taylor County, Georgia, to-wit: Out of a deed recorded January 12, 1952 in Butler, Taylor County, Georgia, in the Clerk of the Superior Court Office in Deed Book 4, page 465-466. All lands being In Land Lot 63, Land District 14, Taylor County, Georgia. Starting at a point on the Catridge Road at a telephone pole marking the N E corner of the pro perty of Nelson Woodall and mea suring 110’ along Willie Woodall Avenue to a point, this point being the point of beginning and mea suring 210’ in an easterly direction i to a point, thence 105’ more or less in a southerly direction to a point, thence 210’ in a westerly direction to a point, thence 105’ in a norther ly direction alongside Willie Wood- all Avenue to the point of beginn ing. All this land being on the 'southside of Catridge Road and on the east side of Willie Woodall 'Avenue, and being 1/2 acre. Default having occurred under the terms of the note secured by said deed, and the holder having elected to declare the entire debt due and payable, the power of sale contained in said deed has become operative. Sale will be held, deed made and proceeds thereof distributed in strict compliance with the terms of said deed. Mid-State Homes, Inc. Transferee William K. Buffington, Attorney Macon, Georgia HOLLYWOOD, Calif.—Dr. Lee de Forest, 87, considered the “father of radio," died at his home Friday. De Forest was inventor of the three-element vacuum tube. He had been bedridden for al most two years with bladder and heart trouble. His invention of the tube in 1906, paved the way for the age of electronics. It made possible the develop ment of radio broadcasting, tele- visioh and radar. Transcontinental and transoceanic telephoning, sound movies and other electronic devices came into being. He made contributions to each, as well as to aircraft-guiding beams, wire transmission of pictures, cosmic-ray measurement and many other de velopments. Reds Directed Freedom Riders Patrol Chief Claims ed the Havana meeting were: Katherine Pleune, 21, a white me- meograph operator from Chicago, arrested on breach of peace charg es when she arrived as a Freedom | June 6. Rider June 19, and James Robert Both were convicted and Miss Wahlstrom, 24, University of Wis- | Pleune is serving a four-month consin student from Madison, Wis. sentence, with two suspended, and arrested with a group of riders,! is free on a $500 appeal bond. Each | also was fined $200. Jackson, Miss.—Brig. Gen. T. B. Birdsong head of the Mississippi Highway Patrol, charged Thursday “Freedom Rides” were directed, in spired and planned by known Com munists. Birdsong told a press conference at least two riders arrested during efforts to desegregate Jackson tran sportaticn facilities attended a So viet-directed seminar in Cuba last February. He said 202 American students made the trip to Havana and heard addresses by nine officials of the Soviet Union “too teach the students how to make sit-ins, walk ins, kneel-ios and Freedom Rides”. The press conference was con ducted at the highway patrol head quarters here by Birdson after a brief statement on one rider’s back ground was handed to newsmen. Birdsong and Art Richardson, patrol public information officer, both an swered questions in Birdsong’s na me. Birdsong told newsmen the Con gress of Racial Equality was res ponsible for the Freedom Rides and was a Communist - front group. Earlier this week, Gordon Carey, of New York, field director of CORE, told newsmen here he plan ned the rides in February. Birdsong said other Freedom Ri ders had records of auto thefts, bur glary, grand larceny and undesir able discharges from military ser vice. He did not identify those rid ers. Some he said, were “Communist- backed, pawns in the hands of Communist powers that be.” Birdsong a retired Mississippi Na tional Guard officer and founder of the highway patrol 30 years ago, said the two riders who had attend- The Citizens State Bank BUTLER, GEORGIA Condensed Statement of Condition 4 As of June 30, 1961 RESOURCES: Cash and Due from Banks U. S. Government Bonds Other Bonds Advances on Cotton and other Commodities Loans & Discounts Furniture & Fixtures LIABILITIES: Capital Stock Surplus Undivided Profits Reserves Reserves for Losses .... Reserves for Securities Unearned Interest DEPOSITS $745,555.56 724,379.70 99,937.50 13,257.36 1,583,130.12 920,220.06 16,922.56 $2,520,272.74 $100,000.00 100,000.00 42,728.25 31,998.21 15,000.00 5,000.00 294,726.46 14,690.26 2,210,856.02 $2,520,272.74 MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. DEPOSITS INSURED TO *10,000.00. WE PAY THREE PER CENT ON TIME AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS OFFICERS R. C. BROOKS, President MRS. MAESAL E. CHILDRES Vice-President & Cashier MRS. LOUISE W. BAZEMORE, Asst. Cashier MRS. MILDRED S. BAZEMORE, Asst. Cashier MRS. FAYE M. PEED, Asst. Cashier MISS CHARLOTTE COSEY, Bookkeeper DIRECTORS R. C. BROOKS W. P. BROOKS MRS. FLORENCE P. BROOKS JIMMY D. NeSMITH ANOTHER BIG REASON BEHIND THE BIG BOOM IN FORD SALES: R 41 & No other wagon can match Fords features (orpopularity!) There’s a whole wagonload of Ford features that only America’s station wagon spe cialists can bring you. First, there’s more room. Ford’s extended load deck is the longest and widest in its field. The tailgate opening is seven inches wider than last year, too. There’s more convenience. You can have an electrically con trolled roll-down rear window in any Ford wagon ... it’s standard in all Country Squires and 9- Passenger Country Sedans. In their field, only Ford wagons have all seats facing forward. There’s more distinction. The Country Squire (shown above) is the one and only wagon in its field with body panels that look like mahogany, wear like steel. There are more savings, too. Ford’s Ranch Wagon is America’s lowest-priced,* full-size wagon. And like all Fords, every Ford wagon is built to be more service- free: goes 30,000 miles between chassis lubrications, 4,000 miles between oil changes, brakes ad just automatically, mufflers are made to last three times as long as ordinary mufflers, and the finish never needs waxing. STOP putting off that station wagon you’ve always wanted. SWAP for a ’61 Ford wagon now while your Ford Dealer’s cele brating record-breaking sales. SAVE with the wagon America loves most . . . made by FORD . . . America’s station wagon specialists for 32 years! ford division. SErd/ifgfcf&m/iany^ 'Based on a comparison of manufacturers' suggested reUil delivered prices Today is the day to STOP...SWAP...SAVE Payne Motor Company Butler, Georgia ■ Watch GREAT GHOST TALES every Thursday on NBC-TV, the only new live suspense series in five years■