Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, July 2, 1959
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:
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 1. 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
The membership of the Cor
poration shall be composed ol
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
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.
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
namb 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
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
Highway Patrol
In Drive for
Safer July 4th
ATLANTA — Watch out for the
Georgia Highway Patrol! State
troopers are on the ground and in
the air. They’re conducting per
haps Georgia’s most intensified
enforcement drive in an effort to
maintain safety on the roads dur
ing the current Fourth of July
holiday weekend.
“We’re out to get all the traffic
violators we can,” declared Col.
William P. Trotter of the Georgia
Department of Public Safety.
“Motorists who abide by the law
and drive carefully and sensibly
ha nothing to fear from us. But
those who don’t — watch out!”
The special enforcement opera
tion officially begins at 6 P M.
Friday, July 3, and continues th
rough midnight Sunday, July 5.
All available personnel and
equipment at the 34 patrol posts
and Atlanta headquarters have
been pressed into service.
Troopers, as well as GBI agents,
will be working around the clock
during the 54-hour period. On the
ground they will set up road
blocks at unannounced places, us
ing patrol cars, speed timing de
vices and various other equip
ment. In the air they will use
helicopters which will be in com
munication with the ground units.
Last year 18 persons were kill
ed in Georgia and 138 injured in
309 accidents during a 78-hour
July 4th holiday period. This year
the prediction is for 14 deaths,
85 persons injured and 225 acci
dents.
“We hope our prediction won’t
come true,” the safety director
said. “We’ll be doing all we can.
But in the final analysis, it is
largely up to the drivers, them
selves, to prevent accidents.”
That Famous Paint,
Made in this section
for this section.
Moody Bros.
Furniture Co.
phone 2-2185, Nahunta. Ga.
Some Screwworms
May Still Exist
In the Southeast
Screwworm flies captured in
traps in Florida this spring in
dicate a limited native screwworm
population may still exist in the
Southeast, the U. S. Department
of agricultural reported this
week.
Several hundred traps current
ly are being used by the Depart
ment’s Agricultural Research
Service and the Florida Livestock
Board to double check the ef
fectiveness of the cooperative ef
fort to eradicate this livestock pest
from southeastern United States.
The last known animal wound
infestation that could be attri
buted to screwworms occured on
February 19, 1959. Since then,
however, fly traps in Florida have
picked lure both native and the
sterile flies being used in the
eradication effort, it is difficult
positively to identify trapped sp
ecimens as to their origin.
At this advanced stage of the
eradication campaign, final suc
cess depends more than ever on
how thoroughly livestock produ
cers of Georgia and other South
eastern states search for and re
port infestations, Entomologist R.
L. Robertson of the Agricultural
Extension Service, University of
Georgia College of Agriculture
said this week. It is necessary
for these farmers and ranchers
to report suspected cases, and to
furnish specimens of larvae and
eggs taken from wounds to their
county agents.
The eradication effort is unique
in the history of cooperative pest
control, Robertson explained. Mil
lions of screwworm flies are re
ared in a laboratory at Sebring,
Florida, and then exposed to ra
dioactive cobalt which .makes the
flies sterile.
Georgia Bulldogs
Have Five Games
At Home in 1959
ATHENS — The Georgia Bull
dogs, who usually play two-thirds
of their football games on the
road, are looking forward to the
1959 schedule when they will en
tertain five opponents in Sanford
Stadium here.
“It’s the home schedule in the
history of Sanford Stadium,”
believes Howell T. Hollis. “The
Alabama opening game has cre
ated .more interest than any
other opening since the stadium
was dedicated against Yale in
1929.
"We also are expecting a ca
pacity crowd for the Auburn
game in November. It will be the
first time Auburn has played in
Athens since 1929.”
The other home games are
with Vanderbilt, ancient SEC ri
val; the passing-minded Cow
boys of Hardin-Simmons, coached
by Sammy Baugh, and the now
powerful Florida State Seminoles.
The schedule with starting
time and prices in parenthesis:
Sept. 19 — Alabama in Athens
(2 P M. — $4 00).
Sept. 26 — Vanderbilt in Ath
ens (2 P. M. — $4.00).
Oct. 3 — South Carolina at
Columbia (2 P. M. — $4.25).
Oct. 10 Hardin-Simmons in
Athens (2 P M. — $4.00).
Oct. 17 — Miss. State in At
lanta (8 P. M. - $5.00).
Oct. 24 Kentucky at Lexing
ton (8 P- M. — $4 00).
Oct. 31 — Florida State in At-
hens (2 P M. — $4.00).
Nov. 7— Florida at Jackson
ville (2:30 P M. — $4.50).
Nov. 14 — Auburn in Athens
(2 P. M. — $4.00).
Nov. 21 — Open.
Nov. 28 — Georgia Tech in At
lanta (2 P. M. - $5.00).
Tickets ordered should be sent
to the University of Georgia Ath
letic Assn., Athens, Ga.
NOW! HORIBA’S GLAMOROUS
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SUMMER-FALL SPECIAL
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Double ISQ3^ S7O Double
SB4 Single sf| Single
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\f.’ ; Here'* yous top luxury vocation value! Fun-filled days and
nights in one of Rorida'i glamorous hotels with every facilrty
®for comfort and enjoyment. Malte your reservations today.
SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT OR WRITE —
new terrace hotel
New YOM 14, M. T. ®- *♦* ^2O — SeroMe, Elands — ToL Rlagtiaf 6-4111
Atlanta Pharmacy
College to Become
Part of Mercer
The Southern College of Phar
macy in Atlanta will become a
school of Mercer University on
July 1 as a result of final action
by the respective boards of trus
tees of the two institutions.
The pharmacy school will trans
fer its charter and all assets to
the Baptist institution in Macon
effective July 1. Under the new
arrangement, the Atlanta school
will parallel the Walter F. George
School of Law as a part of the
University. The pharmacy school
will continue to operate in its
present location at 223 Walton
Street, NW, in Atlanta.
Dr. Spright Dowell, acting pre
sident of Mercer, said the Mer
cer trustees “have long been a
ware of the excellent service of
the Southern College of Phar
macy and are pleased that it is
to become a part of Mercer Uni
versity.”
Carlton Henderson, chairman
of the SCP Board of Trustees,
said the board has long recogniz
ed the advantages of affiliation
with a larger institution.
Dr. Oliver M. Littlejohn, SCP
dean, said that “56 years ago Sou
thern was one of the pioneers of
private education for pharmacists
in Georgia; today, it is the only
private college of pharmacy re
maining in the State. Its merger
with Mercer will, in effect, in
sure the continuation of this edu
cational heritage.”
At present SCP has 122 stu
dents enrolled, and an enroll
ment of 200 is expected this Fall.
The college has alumni in 115
Georgia counties.
Personals
Mrs. Carl Smith and Ronnie
and Zonia Ruth and Mrs. Zonia
Harris spent Satudry night visit
ing relatives in Jacksonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Broome and
son, Milton, of Atlanta visited Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Broome on Mon
day of this week.
Mr. Carl Smith returned home
on Tuesday of this week from
Little Rock, Ark., where he spent
a week with his father, Mr. Clif
ford Smith.
Oran M. Lee, radioman seaman
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
D. Lee of Hoboken, Ga. gradu
ated June 3, from the Basic En
listed Submarine School at the
Submarine Base, New London,
Conn.
Mrs. James Hanson and child
ren, Kim and Gina and Mrs. Roy
Kaye all of Jacksonville Heights,
Fla., were guests of Mrs. Alice
Highsmith on Monday of this
week.
SP|4 Edgar Lewis Sears arrived
Thursday, July 2 from Alaska
where he has been stationed two
years to spend thirty days with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L.
Sears. He will be stationed in Vir
ginia after the furlough.
Danny Sears, Otis Bohanon,
Price Brooker, Jerry Popwell,
Bobby Strickland and Lacount
Smith spent last week at Camp
Safety Patrol on Lake Blackshear
near Cordele, Ga. They returned
on Saturday. The boys attended
classes each day before lunch.
They were given a certificate a
ward of merit to become patrol
boys.
Mrs. P. L. Gallman and child
ren, Lynn, Jane and Lloyd of
Oneonta, Ala., are spending this
week with Mr. and Mrs. W. R.
Strickland.
Mr. and Mrs. George Trhlik
left Nahunta Saturday, June 27,
to return to their home at Balto,
Md., after spending two weeks
with Mrs. Trhlik’s mother, Mrs.
Cindy Morgan, also visiting other
friends and relatives at Nahunta.
Want Ads
FEMALE HELP WANTED. Ex
perienced wrapper (roller) lay
ers for immediate employment.
If qualified contact either Geor
gia State Employment Service,
215, Pendleton St., Waycross,
or John H. Swisher and son Co.,
Inc., Waycross, Ga. 7 2
HAVE OPENINGS for 2 wo
men Dealers to serve the Wat
kins customers already establish
ed in Brantley County. Should
be in good health. 40 to 60, own
car, and anxious to earn $50.00 to
SIOO.OO weekly profits. Write The
J. R. Watkins Company, 659 West
Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta.
Georgia. 7,23
TV AND APPLIANCE REPAIRS
I repair all Philco Admiral
TV’s and appliances, Gould wat
er pumps, Whirlpool washers,
also bonded warranty service. All
service is cash. Ronald (Punk)
Hendrix, Phone HO 2-2324, Rt. 1,
Nahunta, Ga. 7116
MOTOR FOR SALE
Seven and one-half h.p. Scott-
Atwater outboard motor for sale.
$50.00 as is. See Blackshear Trac
tor & Implement Company,
Blackshear. ts
SHOE REPAIRS
We repair shoes expertly at
reasonable prices. Only best ma
terials used. Let us make your
shoes almost like new and save
you the price of a new pair.
Richardson Shoe Shop, Nahunta,
Ga. 7|9
NO DOWN PAYMENT
Almost new GE Refrigerator
for sale. Just take up payments
of $10.22 per month. Moody Bros.
Furniture Co., Phone 2-2185, Na
hunta, Ga. 7|9
BOAT FOR SALE
14 foot fiberglas Fisherman.
Perfect boat for pond and river
fishing. Special $134.50. Sam Mon
roe & Son, Boating Headquarters,
333 State St., Waycross, Ga. 7|9
FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Dusters, Sprayers, and Side
Dressers on sale at Blackshear
Tractor & Implement Co., Phone
Hickory 9-3891, Blackshear, ts
TWO BED-ROOM
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Apartment consisting of two
bed rooms, living and dining
room area, kitchen and bath
room. See Dan Jones, Nahunta,
Georgia. 7|2
TOBACCO STICKS FOR SALE
1 x 1% x 54 inches used but
good, bundled 1250 for $25.00 or
singly 3c each. WADE LUMBER
CO., Folkston, Ga. 712
NOW FOR ATHLETE’S FOOT
Use T-4-L liquid because it
gives you KERATOLYTIC AC
TION. This process sloughs off
and dissolves affected outer skin.
Exposes deepset infection to the
killing medication in T-4-L. Re
lieves itching and burning, speeds
healing. Watch new, healthy
skin appear. It not pleased in 24
hours, your 48c back at any drug
store. Also, use full strength for
itchy, sweaty feet, insect bites,
poison ivy. Get T-4-L FOOT
POWDER too — provides a film
of antiseptic protection. NOW at
CAMPBELL’S, Nahunta, Ga. 716
We Do All Kinds
of Job Printing.
Let Us Quote
You Prices.
BRANTLEY
ENTERPRISE
A. S. MIZELL
INSURANCE AGENCY
FIRE, THEFT, COLLISION AND
INSURANCE. FIRE INSURANCE FOR YOUR HON
OR BUSINESS. HAIL INSURANCE FOR YOU
CROPS.
Phone 2-2171 Nahunta, Ga.
Let Our A*l Mechanic
Repair Your Car Or Truck
We now have an expert mechanic in the person of
Chris Mercer. Bring your car or truck to our garage
for satisfactory repair work.
We will greatly appreciate your patronage.
NAHUNTA PARTS & SERVICE
W. V. Strickland, Proprietor
Phone HO 2-2621 Nahunta, Ga.
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
ON SALES MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1959
A total of 450 head of hogs and
202 head of cows were sold at our
market this Monday for a volume of
$28,889.38.
Feeder pigs sold up to $17.75 per
hundredweight and grade hog prices
were as follows: No. 1, $15.57; No. 2,
$14.42. The market trend was ap
proximately fifty cents lower than the
previous week.
Calves sold up to $32.50 per hun
dredweight; steers and heifers up to
$29.75; cows up to $25.25; cows and
calves up to $27.75; and bulls up to
$23.25.
Waycross Livestock Market
L. C. Pruitt, W. H. Inman and
O. A. Thompson, Operators and Managers
t
- z L
^onthewav^"
...on schedule
OLIVER DAM, the Georgia Power Company’s
latest hydroelectric development, is nearing
completion on the Chattahoochee at Columbus.
The sl4-million project was begun only two
years ago. All of the dam’s four generating
units, with a total capacity of 60,000 kilowatts,
will begin production this summer, as scheduled.
At Plant McManus, a steam-electric gener
ating station near Brunswick, a new 75,000-
kilowatt turbo-generator began operation on
May 15, two weeks ahead of schedule.
Hundreds of miles of transmission and distri
bution lines are being built all over the state as
part of a SSB-million construction program for
this year.
Other major projects are under way. Their
completion, on schedule, represents powej in
reserve for a growing Georgia.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A •ITI 1( N VMIRtVia Vs 111 V I