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LEGAL MOTH€IIO
Notice
NOTICE OF
INCORPORATION
State of Georgia
County of Butts
Upon application of WIL
BERT ELLIS. L. P. OWENS.
W. D. LESTER. R. G.
JESTER. JAMES ETH
RIDGE. O.J. WATKINS and
EMMETT B. WATKINS and
their successors in office of
Jackson. Georgia, incorpo
rators, articles of incorpo
ration have been granted to
TOWALIGA COUNTY LINE
BAPTIST CHURCH. INC.
by HONORABLE HUGH D.
SOSEBEE, Judge Butts
Superior Court, in accord
ance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Non-profit Corporation Code.
The registered office of the
corporation is located at
Route 5, Bucksnort Road,
Jackson. Georgia 30233 and
its registered agent is MR.
WILBERT ELLIS, whose
official address is the same
as shown above. The purpose
of the corporation is not of
trade and profit but for
promoting the general design
and work of said church and
to look after the general
interest of the same.
HAROLD E. MARTIN
'Attorney for the Petitioner
P.O. Box 3862
Jackson, Georgia 30233
7-15-4tp
Notice
STATE OF GEORGIA
NOTICE OF
INCORPORATION
COUNTY OF BUTTS
On application of Richard
G. Milam, Articles of
Incorporation have been
granted to “Mid-Georgia
Construction & Maintenance
Company” by Honorable
Hugh D. Sosebee, Judge of
the Superior Court of Butts
County, Georgia, in accord
ance with the applicable
provisions of the Georgia
Business Corporation Code.
The registered office of the
corporation is located at 316
West Third Street, P.O. Box
3604, Jackson, Georgia,
30233, and its initial register
ed agent at such address is
Richard G. Milam. The
purpose of the corporation is
profit to the shareholders, for
the purpose of owning
property, managing and
using property for the profit
of the shareholders, and for
conducting of any business
not prohibited by law. The
minimum capital with which
the corporation shall com
mence business is $500.00.
Richard Milam
Attorney for the Incorporator
P.O. Box 3604
Jackson, Georgia 30233
(404 ) 775-4467
7-22-4tc
Notice
Court of Probate, Butts
County, Georgia
To any Creditors and All
Parties at Interest:
Regarding Estate of Sara
C. (Mrs. W. J) Sutton
formerly of Butts County,
Georgia, notice is hereby
given that the heirs have
filed application with me to
declare no Administration
necessary.
Said application will be
heard at my office Monday,
August 2, 1976, and if no
objection is made an order
will be passed saying no
Administration necessary.
July 6, 1976.
L. J. Washington
Probate Judge
i
7-8-4tp
Notice
\
NOTICE
Georgia. Butts County
Whereas, J. D. Patrick
Administrator of Aubrey H.
Patrick estate represents to
the Court in his petition,
duly filed and entered on
record, that he has fully
administered Aubrey H.
Patrick estate:
This is. therefore, to cite all
persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause,
if any they can, why said
Administrator should not be
discharged from his admini
stration, and receive Letters
of Dismission on the first
Monday in August, 1976.
L. J. Washington
7-8-ltc
Notice
Georgia. Butts County
To AH Whom It May
Concern:
Cathy Stodghill Keith
having in due form applied to
me for permanent letters of
administration upon the
estate of Oits Lerue Keith,
deceased, this is to notify the
next of kin and creditors of
the said Otis Lerue Keith,
deceased, that said applica
tion will be heard before me
at the regular August term,
1976 of the Court of Ordinary
of said county. Witness my
hand and official signature,
this 6th day of July, 1976.
L. J. Washington, Ordinary
7-8-4tp
Political
Announcements
To the Voters of Lamar,
Monroe, Butts and Henry
Counties:
FOR
JUDGE, SUPERIOR
COURT
FLINT JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
I hereby announce that I
am a candidate for Judge of
the Superior Court, to
suceed myself, subject to the
Democratic Primary to be
held on August 10, 1976.
If elected to this office I
shall continue to serve the
people of this circuit to the
best of my ability as I have
tried to do in the past.
Your vote and support will
be great appreciated.
Respectfully,
Sam L. Whitmire
6-
Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report of the
Van Deventer Memorial
Scout Foundation (IRS Form
990-AR) is available for
public inspection at the office
of the Van Deventer Founda
tion at 221 College Street,
Jackson, during regular
business hours on requests
made within 180 days after
the publication of this notice.
William M. Davis
Executive Director
7-
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THE JACKSON PROGRESS-ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
s-nsThe POWER of mb l<flb |L
'iRINT in AMERICAN HISTORY ft!
N.G THE
Pictures courtesy The Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery
PROMlSE—Guidebooks of the 19th century often indicated gold could be picked up
easily from California riverbeds.
This article is adapted
from a program of historical
monographs created by the
St. Regis Paper Company
in an effort to rededicate
our heritage and renew
our pride in our country’s
achievements.
The American West prob
ably inspired more flamboy
ant boastfulness, imagina
tive boosterism and bold
overstatement than any oth
er region. This was natural,
for every pioneer was auto
matically converted into a
self-appointed promoter.
His new home was under
peopled, hence his duty was
to convince others they
would find prosperity,
health, and happiness by
following in his footsteps
(and creating a market for
his crops and land).
Media to spread the word
were plentiful. Newspapers,
magazines, guide books,
letters to the Eastern press,
railroad promotion litera
ture, speculator’s circulars,
propaganda prepared by
state or territorial immigra
tion bureaus —all eager to
lure newcomers to the land
of promise.
Newspapers were in prac
tically every frontier town,
each an exuberant booster
selling its community to all
mankind. So were dozens of
guidebooks that gave such
exaggerated descriptions of
the wealth that awaited
every newcomer and the
near Eden quality of the
land that they set in motion
the nation’s most potent
weapon of conquest: its
restless population.
Do you waste your money
when you shop? You do if you
don’t plan ahead and buy
wisely, particularly when you’re
food shopping.
For example, are you aware
of what you’ve been doing to
drive store prices up? Handling
hF-ll'F 'IfT Ife
the fresh fruits and vegetables
hastens spoilage, increases the
costs of the store, and so in
creases prices.
Do you buy better things
than you should? Things that
are going to be mixed or
chopped or hidden don't have
to look as good as otherwise. A
can of ragged tomatoes is a
SERVICE, MAJOR REPAIR FOR
BUTTS COUNTY AND
SURROUNDING AREA
ON
TOYOTOS, DATSUNS, TRIUMPH,
AUDI LS 100 AND FOX
I am set up in Atlanta with distributor of all parts
- ONE DAY SERVICE.
New Guarantee on cars during warranty if your car should fail
because of my negligence l’ll rent you a car at my cost.
David’s VW Service
LOCUST GROVE, GA.
PHONE: 1-957-1241
A HOME FOR IMMIGRANTS.
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AND MORE PROMISES—Many pamphlets boosted bleak
wastes of western Kansas and Nebraska as "new and
better Eden" with climate just this side of Paradise.
The most dramatic event
leading to the populating of
the West was probably the
discovery of gold in Califor
nia. Excitement started
when President James K.
Polk devoted a paragraph in
his annual message to Con
gress to an enthusiastic
account of California min
ing. Suddenly, the whole
nation went mad. Eastern
newspapers filled their col
umns with tales of imagi
nary discoveries. A whole
library of imaginative cre
ations called guide books
rolled off the presses, all de
signed to prove that the
gold fields were easily
reached and that their ridhes
would transform every
better investment for spaghetti
sauce than a can of whole fancy
ones.
Do you go food shopping at
the wrong times? ]f you're
hungry or hurried, you're more
susceptible to more expensive,
impulse buying.
Do you buy the right foods?
Elect
DR. JO ANN MANLEY
Superintendent
of
Butts County Schools
THURSDAY. JULY 29. 1976
6 00.000 ACRE&S£vjjp|
NEBRASKA^
B.& MR.K.Cft/^^^yßiißO*os
-,fORSBAHO
PER ACRE/#
***°
STOCK RAISER j
Y n E b raska.
' c f Sf TO t.viO COI*SIO*£ R
■'£ -** PCt xes ot
miner into a millionaire.
When at last the West was
won, the power of print had
played a major role in that
conquest. Through word-of
mouth advertising, tales
spread orally by the first
frontiersmen, letters sent
Eastward to relatives and
friends, lectures and ser
mons all played their part,
none was more effective,
perhaps, than the barrage of
words that flowed from the
nation’s presses in the form
of guide books, newspapers,
magazines, promotional lit
erature and advertisements.
Without them, without
printing, the West—and the
United States—would not be
as we know it today.
Some homemakers make their
families go almost entirely
without the benefits of butter,
an important food in today's
diet. Butler is a rich source of
vitamin A. vitamin D. aids in
the absorption of A.D.K and K.
and can make practically any
thing, even inexpensive meals,
taste better!
Thursday Rites
Were Held For
Mr. Thompson
Rayford Willis Thompson.
70. a retired employee of
Avondale Mills, died Tues
day afternoon, July 20th, at
Sylvan Grove Hospital after
an illness of about six
months.
A member of Macedonia
Baptist Church, he was born
January 29, 1906 in Butts
County, son of the late Will
W. Thompson and the late
Geneva Singley Thompson.
Funeral services were
conducted Thursday after
noon, July 22nd, at two
o’clock from the chapel of
Sherrell Funeral Home with
the Rev. R. W. Jenkins
officiating. Interment was in
Jackson City Cemetery.
Pallbearers were James
Berry, Tommy Thompson,
John David Baker, Wayne
Bryan. Scotty Bryan and
Lamar McMichael.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Bessie Hardy Thomp
son of Jackson; daughter,
Mrs. Thelma Williamson,
Jackson; step-daughter,
Miss Brenda Thompson,
Jackson; granddaughter,
Cindy Lynn Williamson,
Jackson; several nieces and
nephews.
Sherrell Funeral Home
was in charge of arrange
ments.
!11hl§_ ji.
To get nearly twice the
amount of juice from a
lemon, soak it for 10 or
15 minutes in hot water.
VOTE FOR
JOE HARRIS
County Commissioner Post 3
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY AUGUST 10
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice hereby is given there will be a public
hearing at the main courtroom, Jackson, Georgia at
7:00 p.m. on Monday, August 9, 1976 upon proposals
by owners of the following described properties that
these petitioners be granted Special Exceptions of
locating Mobile Homes in zoning classifications:
A-R (Agricultural Residential.)
(1) 10 acres located on Hwy. No. 36, 612 Militia
District, Butts County, Georgia. Owner and
applicant of land: David Cawthon. Size of Mobile
Home 12 x 55.
(2) 6 acres located on Fincherville Road, 616
Militia District, Butts County, Georgia. Owner and
applicant of land: William E. Walker. Size of Mobile
Home 12 x 65.
(3) 15 acres located on Indian Springs to Cork
Road, 614 Militia District, Butts County, Georgia.
Owner and applicant of land: Charles Hegedus.
Size of Mobile Home 12 x 60.
Public Hearing to be held by the Butts County
Board of Appeals. The public is invited to the public
hearing hereinabove announced.
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