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LEGAL NOTICES
GEORGIA, BRANTLEY COUNTY:
To The Superior Court of Brantley
County:
The petition of J. 0. Wainright,
Aileen H. Wainright and D. W. Wain
right, respectfully shows:
1. They desire for themselves, their
associates and their successors to be
incorporated, under the name and
style of
.“WAINRIGHT’S INC.”
2. The object of said corporation
is pecuniary gain and profit.
3. The general nature of the busi
ness or businesses to be conducted
is as follows: To clear land, cut, haul
and selb pulp-wood or stump wood,
to buy and sell at wholesale or re
tail any sort and kind of personal or
real property, including any parts or
accessories therefor, to borrow or
lend money and to otherwise engage
in affiliated pursuits, and to do any
and every lawful act or acts allow
ed to be done by corporation created
under the “Corporation Act” of 1937-
38 Extra Session as amended.
4. The corporation shall begin
business with a paid in capital of at
least $200.00. The capital stock of
said corporation shall consist of 1,000
shares having a par value of SIO.OO
each, with the privilege of increas
ing the same to 10,000 shares upon
5. Petitioners desire to be incor
porated for a period of Thirty-Five
(35) years.
6. The principal office of said cor
poration shall be in Nahunta, Geor-
SEE
"HI
NEIGHBOR"
with
JIM WATSON
AND ON
March 31
SPECIAL GUEST
Mr. G. A. Loyd
Brantley County
Agricultural Agent
at 6:45 AM
ON
POWERFUL
CHANNEL 12
WFGA-TV
JACKSONVILLE
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A. America's Electric C . 7
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Rural homes — both farm and non-farm — are
made enjoyable by dozens of electrical appliances and
modern electric equipment... There are hundreds of
•uses for low-cost electric power on the farm . . .
This market —a billion dollars a year —- exists
because of the availability, on an area coverage basis,
of low-cost electric power from the Rural Electric
cooperatives . . .
When someone decides to build “out from town,’*
and he couldn’t consider it without electricity, he opens
•up more than 50 kinds of sales and jobs for local
merchants and workmen . . •
Rural living is good living ... it’s better because
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©NIKA
gia.
7. Petitioners desire to have all of
the powers genet-ally granted to cor
porations of this State by Chapter
22-13 of the Code of Georgia.
8. The Post Office address of all
petitioners is R. F. D. No. 1, Na
hunta, Georgia.
9. Petitioners present herewith a
certificate of the Secretary of State
showing that the proposed name of
said corporation is not the name of
any existing corporation in Georgia.
Wherefore, petitioners pray that
this Court pass an order incorporat
ing them and their associated for
the aforesaid purposes and the said
corporation name with the rights,
powers and privileges herein set
forth and are now allowed or here
after may be allowed under the laws
of said State.
C. Winton Adams
Attorney for Petitioners.
Nahunta, Georgia.
GEORGIA, BRANTLEY COUNTY.
In The Superior Court of Brantley
County:
IN RE: WAINRIGHT’S INC.
The petition, in the above stated
matter having been presented to the
Court this date; and
It appearing to the Court that said
business is within the purview and
intentions of Georgia and that all
requirements of law have been ful
ly complied with and that the name
of the proposed corporation is not the
name of any other existing corpora
tion registered in the records of the
Secretary of State.
It is therefore considered ordered
and adjudged that the prayers of
the petition be and the same are
hereby granted and petitioners, J. O.
Wainright, Aileen H. Wainright and
D. W. Wainright and their associates,
successors and assigns are hereby
incorporated as a body corporate un
der the laws of the State of Georgia
under the name of Wainright’s Inc.,
with all the rights, privileges and
immunities prayed for in said pe
tition.
In open Court this 6 day of March
1964.
S/G BEN HODGES
Judge, Superior Court.
D. F. Herrin
Clerk Brantley
Superior Court 4-2
GEORGIA, BRANTLEY COUNTY
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice is hereby given that Leland
H. Brooks, Sole Heir, has filed ap
plication to declare No Administra
tion Necessary on the Estate of J.
F. Brooks.
This application will be heard Mon
day, April 6, 1964, at my office in
the Courthouse, and if no objection
is made, an order will be passed
saying that No Administration is
Necessary on said Estate.
This 2nd day of March, 1964.
-s- Claude A. Smith, Ordinary
Griffin & Smith
Blackshear, Ga.
Attnys For Applicant. 3-26.
OKEFENOKE
RURAL ELECTRIC
MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION
COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
• COMMUNITY BUILDER
ORDER
Easter Chicks Can
Be Health Hazard
; Parents buying live chicks and
ducklings for their children’s Easter
baskets may be getting more than
a mere Easter “toy,” according to
Dr. John E. McCroan, Chief Epi
demiologist of the State Health De
partment.
These live Easter pets often carry
pn infectious bacteria called salmon
ella which, when spread by the
I- — -
' - RM !!■!!■
■
I WAYCROSS LIVESTOCK
I MARKET REPORT
At our sale on Monday, March 23, prices |
O were as follows:
No. 1 hogs sold in the ring up to $14.89,
B Ri's at $14.60, Li's at $14.49, No. 2's at $13.35, A
J No. 3's at $13.28, No. 4's at $12.95, No. s's S
|| at $12.90 and rough sows at $11.40. Feeder H
w pigs sold up to $17.75.
Calves sold up to $22.50, steers and heifers |||
up to $22.00, cows up to $16.50 and heavy J
bulls up to $19.00.
Tune in on the following Radio Stations for
M hog prices every Monday: WAYX at 3:30 P. »
M., WACL at 4:00 P. M. and Blackshear's Ra- ■
dio Station WBSG at 3:30 P. M.
For pick-up or contact for sales please call A
Woodrow Wainright Phone HO 2-3471 Nahunta,
K Georgia.
Get More Money For Your Livestock at The
I Waycross Livestock Market I
S Southeast Georgia’s Leading Livestock Market H
H Phone 283-3642
I , W. H. INMAN, Operator
droppings of these pets, may cause
salmonellpsis, a serious intestinal ill-
ness.
The Health Department advises
parents not to buy these pets for
pre-school children because the
rpread of salmonella to small child
ren is especially hard to control since
they are not aware of the danger of
transferring the bacteria to their
mouths while playing with the pets.
If Easter pets are bought for old
er children, cleanliness and caution
Take away the Rayonier Cellulose
-and what would be missing?
in both their playing and eating hab
its should be stressed, ft is also im
portant that the living area of the
pet be kept clean and sanitary.
Symptoms of salmonellosis are ab
dominal cramping, diarrhea, fever,
nausea, and vomiting. The illness
persists for three to four days but
is seldom fatal. However, complicat
ed cases may require hospitaliza
tion and intensive treatment for per
iods from up to a week or more.
CORN SILAGE
With good yields, corn silage is a
cheap source of nutrients for dairy
cows. But one pitfall of liberal corn
silage feeding, say Extension Ser
vice dairy specialists, is its low pro
tein content. If forage is nearly all
corn silage, a 20 percent protein
dairy ration should be included in
the feeding program.
I ENTIRE STOCK I
9Q%OFF
EXCEPT ITEMS MARKED NET — CASH ONLY
I APRIL 2-3-4 I
SORRY — We Cannot Deliver Or Charge At These Prices
I r - OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY - I
' Hi ■ HI
|1 Johnson Brothers Hardware I
| PHONE 496-2726 FOLKSTON, GEORGIA |
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, March 26, 1964
USDA Lists April
Plentiful Foods
Southeastern homemakers will find
a variety of beef cuts available in
generous supply for spring menus,
reports the U. S. Department of
Agriculture.
Beef will be plentiful for spring
cookouts because of increased mar
ketings of fed cattle during the Jan
uary to March period, USDA said.
According to USDA’s Agricultural
Marketing Service, other foods that
will be plentiful during April are
eggs, canned corn, dried beans, rice,
cottage cheese, and canned ripe ol
ives.
By late February, reports USDA,
(TURN THE PAGE AND SEB>
egg prices to farmers had dropped
more than 10 percent since mid-Jan
uary when the U. S. farm price was
37.8 cents a dozen. April supplies
are expected to be above those of a
year ago.
The 1963 canned corn pack of 44.2
million cases was only 3 percent
smaller than the record large 1962
pack, USDA said. This means there
will be plenty of canned corn for the
1963-64 marketing year.
Record dried bean production and
a record rice crop make these items
plentiful. According to USDA crop
estimates, 1963 dried bean produc
tion totaled 20.7 million hundred
weight, 12 percent above average.
Production of rough rice in 1963 also
set a record with a crop estimated
at 70 million hundredweight.