Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, June 25, 1959
Brantley Enterprise
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
Carl Broome Editor and Publisher
Mrs. Carl Broome Associate Editor
Entered at the Post Office at Nahunta, Georgia as
second class matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
Official Organ of Brantley County
Address all mail to Nahunta, Georgia.
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Legal
Advertising
Georgia, Brantley County
To the Superior Court of Said
County:
The petition of H. T. Jacobs,
W. L. Bohanon and John I. Lee
respectfully shows:
1.
The names and post office ad
dresses of your petitioners are
as follows: H. T. Jacobs, Rt. 1,
Nahunta, Ga.; W. L. Bohanon, Rt.
2, Nahunta, Ga.; John I. Lee, Rt.
1, Nahunta, Ga.
Petitioners desire for them
selves, their associates and suc
cessors, to be incorporated and
made a body corporate under the
laws of this State under the name
and style of the Brantley County
Farm Bureau incorporated, for
a period of thirty-five (35) years,
with full rights of renewal as
provided by law.
Said Corporation is not or
ganized for and shall not be op
erated for pecuniary gain or pro
fit and shall have no capital
stock.
The principal office or place
of business shall be in Nahunta,
Brantley County, Georgia.
5.
The membership of the Cor
poration shall be composed of
the present active members and
associate members of the present
association known as the Brant
ley County Farm Bureau. Eligi
bility and procedures for elec
tions to membership and the a
mount, time and method of pay
ment of membership dues are to
be set forth in the by-laws to be
adopted by the corporation.
The initial officers of the Cor
poration, who will serve until
their successors shall be elected
and shall qualify in accordance
with the provisions of the by
laws are to be the following in
dividuals:
President, H. T. Jacobs; Vice-
President, John I. Lee; Secretary
and Treasurer, W. L. Bohanon.
Directors, Owen Prescott, L. T.
Woods, Harvey Altman, Arthur
Sloan.
The purpose of the Corpora
tion shall be to incorporate un
der the laws of the State of
Georgia the now existing agri
cultural society known as the
Brantley County Farm Bureau, to
be a member of the corporation
known as the Georgia Farm Bur
eau Federation. To develop, fos
ter, promote, and protect pro
grams for the general welfare,
including the economic, social and
educational well being of farm
people. To cooperate to this end
with other organizations, insti
tutions, and agencies, both pri-
That Famous Paint,
Made in this section
for this section.
LSSTJ
Moody Bros.
Furniture Co.
Phone 2-2185, Nahunta, Ga.
vate and public, and legislative
and administrative bodies charg
ed with the responsibility of en
acting or administering laws af
fecting agriculture. To purchase,
hold, sell, assign, transfer, mort
gage, pledge or otherwise dispose
of the shares of the capital stock
or bonds of any other corpora
tion or corporations of this coun
ty, state or any other State or
government, and, while owner of
such stock, to exercise all the
rights, powers and privileges of
ownership, including the right to
vote thereon. To act as an agent
for its members and any insur
ance company or companies for
the purpose of securing insur
ance coverage or services for its
members and their dependants,
and for like purposes. To exer
cise all rights, powers and pri
vileges granted by this State to
ordinary Corporation under the
Corporations Act of 1938 as a
mended by the act of 1949.
8.
Your petitioners further pray
that the corporation shall have
the power and right to own,
lease, maintain and manage all
such real and personal property
as may be suitable to the pur
poses of such corporation that
power to make and perform any
and all such contracts as may
seem proper in carrying out its
purpose, and such other powers
as may be lawfully enjoyed and
exercised by similar corporations,
including the power to receive
donations from individuals, as
sociations or corporations, and to
make such donations as it may
see fit in the promotion of its
legal activities.
Petitioners attach hereto a cer
tificate from the Secretary of
State declaring that the name of
the proposed corporation is not
the name of any other existing
corporation registered on the re
cords of said Secretary of State.
Wherefore: Petitioners pray
that they may be incorporated
under the name and style afore
said, with all rights, privileges
and immunities as are or may
hereafter be conferred upon cor
porations of like character under
the laws of Georgia.
H. T. Jacobs
W. L. Bohanon
John I. Lee,
Petitioners.
In the Superior Court of Brant
ley County, Georgia.
The above and foregoing pe
tition of H. T. Jacobs, W. L. Bo
hanon, and John I. Lee, for a
charter for a corporation under
the name of “Brantley County
Farm Bureau Inc.”, having been
read and considered, and it be
ing made to appear to the Court
by a certificate from the Secre
tary of State that thename of
the proposed corporation is not
the name of any other existing
corporation, and it appearing that
said petitioners have complied
with the requirements of law
regulating the granting of such
charter;
It is ORDERED, CONSIDER
ED, AND ADJUDGED that said
application be and is hereby
granted, and the above named pe
titioners and their successors are
hereby incorporated under the
name and style of “Brantley
County Farm Bureau, Inc.”, for
the purpose set out in the peti
tion for a period of thirty-five
(35) years, with the privilege of
renewal at the expiration of that
time, in accordance with the
laws of this State;
And said corporation is hereby
clothed with all the rights, pow
ers and privileges set out in said
petition, and all the rights, pow
ers and privileges conferred by
law on corporations of like char
acter.
This the 2nd day of June,
1959.
Cecil Roddenberry, Judge,
Brantley County
Superior Court. 7|2
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
BRANTLEY COUNTY, GEOR
GIA:
To: Commercial Bank, Dr.
Wynton L. Hall, Archie Williams,
C. J. Altman, Marvin Guy, Tom
mie M. Aldridge, J. W. Hendrix,
D. A. Mercer, and also all other
persons whom it may concern:
Please take notice that R.
LONNIE HICKOX and DORIS
HICKOX have filed a petition
in said court seeking to register,
under the provisions of the land
registration law, the following
described lands:
All that tract or parcel of land,
situate, lying, and being in Land
Lots Nine (9), Thirty Eight (38),
and Thirty Nine (39), in the
Ninth Land District of Brantley
County, Georgia, containing eigh
ty-one and eight tenths (81.8)
acres, more or less, more parti
cularly shown by plat thereof
made by John K. Dußose, dated
November 28, 1958, and recorded
in Plat Book 3, in the office of
the Clerk of Brantley Superior
Court.
You are notified to show cause
to the contrary if any you have
before said court on or before
June 26, 1959.
D. F. Herrin, Clerk of
Brantley Superior Court.
Blount, Minchew and Gibson,
Attorneys. 6'25
It cannot be escaped that the
home is the foundation of society
and reflects the individual’s be
havior in society, declares Miss
Audrey Morgan, family life spec
ialist, Agricultural Extension Ser
vice. ,
Georgia, Brantley County.
Joseph T. Raulerson vs Marie
G. Graham.
In the Superior Court of Brant
ley County, Georgia. Case No.
1787. Action to Cancel and Re
scind Deed.
To Marie G. Graham, Defen
dant, whose address is No. 744
Derbyshire Road, Daytona Beach,
Florida, in said matter:
You are hereby notified that
the above captioned action was
filed in the Superior Court of
Brantley County, Georgia, on the
11th day of June, 1959, in the
office of the Clerk of the said
Court, and by virtue of an order
for service by publication which
was signed by the Judge of said
Court on the 11th day of June,
1959, you are hereby command
ed to be and appear at said
Court within sixty (60) days of
the date of said order for ser
vice by publication, and on the
10th day of August, 1959, to an
swer in said matter.
Witness the Honorable Cecil
Roddenberry, Judge of said Court,
this the 11th day of June, 1959.
s D. F. Herrin,
Clerk of the Superior Court
of Brantley County, Georgia.
Wilson & Wilson,
Attorneys for Petitioner. 7|9
Application for
Radio Station Is
3rd Filed with FCC
The status of a proposed radio
station for Blackshear is that
an application for a construction
permit has been filed with the
Federal Communications Commis
sion by Dixie Radio, Inc.
The construction permit has
not been issued as previously re
ported. The application was filed
on April 24, 1959, and it is ex
pected to take at least three to
four months for processing by the
FCC.
The application was filed in the
name of Denver T. Brannon, who
is president of Dixie Radio, Inc.,
P. O. Box 723, Panama City, Fla.
Two other applications for a
radio station at Blackshear have
previously been received, one
from Satilla Broadcasters, P. O.
Box 621, Madison, Fla., and one
from Collins Corporation of Geor
gia, P. O. Box 454, Vidalia, Ga.
Georgia’s annual income from
dairying almost aoubled in the
last 10 years, according to dairy
men, Agricultural Extension Ser
vice.
How Much
Would "No-Advertising"
Cost Your Business?
* * *
Some businessmen look upon ad
vertising as an expense. When
expenses must be cut, the ad
vertising budget is first to
come under the knife.
The trouble with that method
is—it just won’t work.
The fact overlooked is that
• newspaper advertising repre
sents only a fractional part
of the cost of goods sold.
Advertising is the instrument
which brings the greatest returns
when it is intelligently planned.
Advertising becomes expensive
when you don’t use enough.
It’s like failing to lubricate
a piece cf valuable machinery.
You save the cost of lubri
cant, but eventually you have
to pay the big repair bill—-
and production losses while the
machinery is idle.
- .
* * *
Brantley Enterprise
THE MORE YOU TEH
THE MORE YOU SELL
flß*W* * » • "vrvwwwwwwvx* • — ~
HERMAN TALMADGE
M^Reports From
I; ' £ s^^s3
I WASHINGTON 1
Li IMMW '
THE SAME OLD “divide-and
conquer” routine has won Secre
tary of Agriculture Ezra T. Ben
son his way for another year.
interests
against one another, the high
hopes which were entertained on
all sides at the beginning of the
86th Congress for the enactment
of a new and meaningful national
farm program this year have been
dashed on the rocks of disagree
ment. Unless the various mem
bers of Congress wake up to the
manner in which Mr. Benson is
manipulating their self interests
to defeat the national interest,
there will be little prospect for
the passage of any comprehen
sive farm legislation as long as
he is in office
• • •
WHILE IT WAS? generally con
ceded that the Secretary likely
would prevail upon President
Eisenhower to veto any farm bill
Congress might pass; the consen
sus among farm state legislators
in January was that Congress
should act this year to force the
President’s hand on the issue and
thus to place the responsibility
for the nation's worsening agri
cultural situation where it be
longs—squarely on the steps of
the White House. The over
whelmingly favorable reaction
both in Congress and throughout
the nation, to the introduction of
the Talmadge Farm Plan led
most observers to the conclusion
that it offered the best hope of
being a basis for agreement on
realistic new legislation.
It was with that goal in mind
that 1 joined with several inter
ested Senate colleagues in en
deavoring to perfect my bill to
(not prepared or printed at government expense)
give it the broad base of farmer
consumer support necessary to
pass it through both houses of
Congress. That was when the
whipsawing started to the drum
beat of provocative speecncs and
statements by Mr. Benson and
his associates in the Department
of Agriculture. Some commodity
groups which were included in the
bill wanted to be excluded and
vice versa; others demanded spe
cial considerations. Critics called
it both “too conservative” and
“socialistic” and both small and
large farmers complained it bene
fited one at the expense of the
other.
Because the
Secretary has
succeeded
again in play
ing off the var
ious commod
ity groups, re
gions and farm
and consumer
Despairing of agreement, the
talks came to naught and with
them the chance for any accept
able farm bill this year.
IN THE RECENT debate on
agricultural appropriations, Geor
gia’s Senator Richard B. Russell
correctly observed that the Agri
culture Secretary “does not be
lieve farm commodity prices
should be supported and he has
just about convinced a majority
of the people of the nation that
there cannot be a successful sup
port program.” He observed that
Mr. Benson’s “principal aim in
life ... is to prove that price
supports will not work, even if
if costs S2O billion to prove it.”
The only way in which the Sec
retary’s cynically-calculated bid
to destroy all farm programs by
destroying national confidence in
them can be thwarted lies in a
recognition by all interested
groups of the urgent need for
unity of purpose and action. Only
through sublimation of regional
and commodity interests to the
overall national interest can the
farmers of America ever hope to
get their just due. Mr. Benson is
betting that that cannot be done.
• • *