Newspaper Page Text
LTI ES
GEORGIA
CLAYTON COUNTY
The petition of HERBERT B
HAYES, CEORGE E. GLAZE and
JOHN R. McCANNON, hereinafter
called npetitioners, respectfully
shows:
1.
Petitioners desire for themselves,
their associates and successors to
be incorporated under the name ot
“FARM HOUSE. INC."
2.
The object of said corporation is
pecuniary gain and profit.
3.
The general nature of the business
or businesses to be transacted is as
tollows: The purchase of land, sale
ot land, and the improvements
thereon, including all the business
incident thereto and the erection
and construction of structure on
structures, including remodeling, so
the purpose of operating a restau
rant business for the purchase and
sale of foods, both wholesale and
retail, and the catering to and serv
ice of the general public as well as
private parties in this field, along
with all of the allied and appurte
nant operations incidental and nec
essary to the proper performance
and carrying out of a restaurant
business and the emplovment of all
agents, servants and employees of
every nature and description con
nected with the said business. Thix
is to include leasing of property.
both improved and unimproved, for
the purposes aforesaid and is
all encompassing to care for every
business venture connected with the
ownership and performances for
restaurants and food service organ
-Izations and the missions attached
thereto
4.
Petitioners further desire that said
corporations be vested with all the
rights and powers now or hereafte:
given to do any and all things which
may be needful or proper in the
operation of the above described
business. and that said corporation
have all of the powers enumerated
in - Sections 22-1827 and 22-1828.
Georgia Code Annotated, and such
powers as may hereafter be given
by law
5.
The maximum number of shares
of stock with par wvalue shall be
1.000 shares at SIOO.OO per share
SRR SN T O SN T S
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YOUR BEST BUY...
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
J.L.HUIE & SON,
INC.
Lumber - Paint - Hardware
Building Supplies
130 Mill Street
JONESBORO, GA.
_ E.D. (DENNY) BURNLEY
™ FOREST PARK
4“« viv SINCLAIR
as X LET'S ALL GO NOW
A AND REGISTER
W FOR 1968 ELECTIONS
CONCRETE COMPANY
— Concrete Products —
W. H. Huddleston, Manager
Phone 474-1211 - 414-1211
Night: Charles Mundy 478-8019
Cecil H. Lyle 474-4381
W. H. Huddleston 478-8181
(GRIDIOPETIING. -
Coiffures By
LaVerne
Operators: lé"}“;ERKNI%(?LMR
Regular Permanent $17.50 SIO.OO
Loving Care $ 550 $ 5.00
Tint $ 750 $ 6.50
Frosting - $17.50 $15.00
SHAMPOO and SET _ $3.00 and $4.00
HAIRCUT __s2.oo
1058 Main St. Forest Park
366-6897
However, the amount of capital with
which the corporation shall begin
business shall be not less than
$500.00. The corporation shall be au
thorized to issue additional shares
up to the maximum sum above
stated, and thereaiter from time to
time, but within the limitations set
forth in Section 22-1854, Georgia
Code Annotated, to reduce the
amount of capital outstanding
6.
_'rm- time for which the corpora
tion is to have existence is thirty
five (35 Nears, with the privilege
of renewal of the charter, from time
to time, upon the expiration of said
periods of thir'yv-five (35 years
%
The county in which the principal
office of the corporation is to be
h?mh'd 15 Clayton County, Geor
&ia, but the privilege is desived of
estublishing branch offices and
plices of business both within and
without the State of Georgia,
8.
The name and post office address
of each of the applicants for char
ter are as follows:
Herbert B, Haves, Atlanta, Georgia
George E. Glaze. College Park.
Georgia
John R McCannon, Jonesboro
I Georgia
{ 9
Petitioners further desire that by
laws of the corporation shall be
adopted by the common stockhold
ers, and such by-laws shall provide
for the officers of the corporation
the manner of thenr selection, and
such other rules appropriate to by
laws which have as their n\l|u({.~v
the control and management of the
corporation, including provisions
whereby the by-laws may be
amended
10
Your petitioners herewith exhibit
a o certificate of the Secretary of
State of Georgia as required by Sec
tion 22-1803, Georgia Code An
notated
WHEREFORE. petitioners prav to
be incorporated under the name and
stvle aforesaid with all the rights,
powers, privileges, and immunities
herein set forth, and such addi
fional rights, powers and privileges
as. o may be necessary, proper or in
cident to the conduct of the busi
ness aforesaitd, and as mayv be in
herent in or allowed to like corpo
rations under the laws of the State
of Georgia. as they now exist ol
mav hereatter exist
s/ JOHN R. McCANNON
Attorney for Petitioners
114 N. McDonough Stieet
Jonesboro, Georgia 30236
478-6606
ORDER
The foregoing petition of HER
BERT B HAYES, GEORGE E
GLAZE and JOHN R. McCANNON
having been duly presented. and
the same having been fully ex
amined by the Court, and it ap
pearing that all the requirements
of law having been fully complied
with, and that said petition is with
in the intention and purview of the
law; and it further appearing from
a certificate of the Secretary of
State tha' the name of the proposed
corporation is not the name of any
other corporation registered i the
vecords of his office;
IT IS THEREFORE CONSIDERED
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that
the pravers of said petition be and
the same are hereby granted; and
petitioners, their associates, succes
sors and assigns, ame hereby incor
porated and made a body politic
under the name and styvle of
“FARM HOUSE, INC."
for and during the perviod of thirty
five 135 vears, with the privilege of
renewal at the expiration of that
time, and with all ihe rights, powers
and privileges praved for, together
with such additional rights, powers,
privileges and immunities as are
provided by the laws of Georgia as
they now exist or may hereafter
exist, exercised and permitted to
similar corporations
This, the 31 day of October, 1967
s/ HAROLD R. BANKE
Judge, Superior Court
Clayton Judicial Circuit
2-22
Production of red meat
in Georgia's commercial
slaughter plants totaled 34.2
million pounds during Octo
ber, according to the State
Crop Reporting Service.
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NEW MEMBERS to Forest Park Kiwanis Club being wel
comed by Herman R. Walker, vice president (at left),
and Allen T. Johnson, Kiwanis President (at right). Theve
recent additions to the Forest Park Kiwanis Club are,
left to right and beginning with second from left): Wil
liam Haney, contractor; Terry Lyle, dentist, and Layfield
Mitchell, automobile dealer.
Junior Woman's Club
.| The International Affairs
| Department of the Jonesboro
; | Junior Woman's Club is spon
' | soring an essay contest on
. | U. S. foreign policy for the
# 11th and 12th grade students
. | of the Jonesboro Senior High
I School. Mrs. Thomas E. Has
.| sey, chairman, announced
| plans for the local contest at
| the January Board of Direc
tors meeting held at the
. | Bank of Jonesboro on Tues
! day night, January 23.
| Coordinating the contest
- | in the Senior High School
. are the faculty members of |
the Social Studies Depart- |
. ment headed by Miss La |
Blanc Hardin. The contest |
began on Monday, January
29, and will terminate on
| Friday, February 16. Both
' Clayton County Federal Sav- |
ing and Loan Assn. and the |
Bank of Jonesboro have do- |
. | nated a ten dollar savings‘
| account to be used as prizes.
| Mrs. Burch E. Wright, pub- |
‘ ] lic affairs chairman, stated |
.| that the Public Affairs De- |
; | partment in conjunction !
| with the club sponsored the
, Jonesboro area Mothers'
. March on Saturday, January
i 27. To promote the Georgia
. | Junior Conference project, |
| “"Operation Healthy Bables,” |
members also distributed lit
! erature on pre-natal care
. during the fund-raising drive
. Home Life Department
| chairman, Mrs. Charles B.
| Daniel, announced that the !
_ i judges for the sewing contest
| had been secured, and that |
' l five entries had already been |
' submitted. With the empha- |
sis on “Seeing Georgia First,” '
- the department is featuring |
a series of articles in the club |
' newspaper on the many his- ‘
torical and recreational at
: | tractions the state has to of
|| fer. With spring just around
' | the corner, it is hoped that ’
yclub members will avail |
| themselves of the many op
portunities that surround |
; them and plan outings for
| the whole family.
Long active in civic and
| social organizations through
| out the county, Mrs. Byron
| Joseph Turner, Sr., was
| chosen as the club’s nominee
Babb 1
|
"To Host |
{ ° °
Band Clinic |
On February 2 and 3, the |
. G. P. Babb Junior High
| School Band, and Band
Boosters Club will be the
host school for instrumental |
students who will be taking
part in the sixth district
junior high school band
clinic. Donald E. Wilkes,
Band director at Babb, Is
chairman for the clinic band
event, and the clinication
director of the clinic band
will be Charles I. Bradley,
outstanding director of the
well known East Atlanta Ele
mentary Band. In addition
to producing one of the
finest elementary bands in
the country, Bradley also is
considered an expert in the
| design, and creation of
mouthpieces for clarinets
and other woodwind instru
ments. Bradley will devote
part of one rehearsal session
to the problems of instru
ment tone production, for
the benefit of the visiting
band directors.
The clinic will begin after
school, Friday, and will be
climaxed Saturday night
with a program by the clinic
band. This Band concert will
be Saturday evening at 7:30
and the public is invited to
attend. There will be no ad
mission charge. Schools and
bands to be represented in ‘
this 90 plece clinic band are: |
Fayette County High School | ‘
and Elementary School; |
Bowdon H. 8.; LaGrange Jr. | '
H. S.; Spalding County Jr. |
H. S.; North Clayton Jr. H. |
S.; Jonesboro Jr. H. S.; For- |
est Park Jr. H. S.; and G. P.
Babb Jr. H. 8. ‘
The purpose of a clinic ]
band of thi§ type is to give ‘
the better junior high school
band students in the district |
the opportunity to gather to- |
gether, rehearse and prac- ]
tice, and give a program, ‘
and to be given the oppor- ,
tunity to play in a large well |
balanced band, under the |
leadership of an outstand- |
ing band director. |
| for the “Georgia Mother of
the Year” contest. A Sunday
School teacher at the First
Baptist Church of Jonesboro
for many years, Mrs. Turner
was also the charter first
vice president of the Jones
boro Woman's Club and pres
ident of the Home Demon
stration Council.
Plans for hostessing the
Clayton County cancer kick
off luncheon were presented
by the chairman, Mrs. Bobby
Anderson. A luau with all |
| the trimmings will be held
' on Thursday, March 28, at |
' the First Baptist Church of ‘
]Jonesboro. with the Jones
| boro Junior Club again serv
ing as the official hostess
group.
“Operation Helping Hand"”
is in full swing with mem
bers busy donating food and
, used clothing to needy fami
‘lies in the Jonesboro area.
Heading the "“Helping Hand"
| movement is Mrs. Charles W.
. Smith assisted by Mrs. 8. K. |
. Parrish, Mrs. Bobby Ander- |
. son, Mrs. Patrick Hall and
Mrs. Burch Wright. |
With the club’s first year !
coming to a close, Club Pres
ident Mrs. Jerry ’l‘urner-;
. thanked all members for |
. their devoted efforts and co- |
operation in making the
club’s first year a success. !
With great pride, Mrs. Tur- |
ner announced that the club !
had reached 100 per cent in
| its Achievement Goal Sheet. !
- In celebration, the club will
' hold its installation lunch
‘; eon on Monday, March 4, at
. the Holiday Inn on the South
- Expressway. Mrs. Barbarai
' Stanford, president of the;
| Sixth District, will install the |
new officers. |
Attending the board meet. |
ing were Mrs. Jerry A. Tur- |
ner, Mrs. Charles W. Smith, |
' Mrs. David Zuck, Mrs. Thom
as E. Hassey, Mrs. Burch E. '
| Wright, Mrs. Raymond Gar- |
~ber, Mrs. Ted Norris, Mrs. |
Bobby Anderson and Mrs.
l Charles B. Daniel. |
St h
g |
’ Civic Club
The Stagecoach Civic Club
of East Clayton County at |
their meeting Tuesday night !
voted to conduct future |
meetings on the third Mon
day night of each month.
Residents throughout the
area and adjacent areas are
invited to visit the club and ;
become members. A covered
dish dinner is planned for
the February meeting which
will be held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Neal on
Doublebridge Road. The
purpose of the club is to
promote community inter
est, countywide interest, and
beautification of the East
Clayton area.
Mrs. Guy Neal reported on
the beautification project
which is being carried out on
Ellenwood Road.
Members voted to give the
club secretary $25 per year
for service to the club.
Mrs. M. E. Waggoner re
ported on a recent trip to
the Atlanta Area American
Red Cross Building in At
lanta. She gave a most in
formative talk on what the
Red Cross is doing in Viet
nam and in other places.
Mrs. Lamar Quick read a
letter from Dr. J. B. Cralg,
Superintendent of Central
Georgia Hospital in which
he expressed appreciation to
the club and to other people
in Clayton County for gifts
sent to patients. Mrs. Quick
asked the club to consider or
think about sending items to
the hospital and visiting sev
eral times each year.
Mrs. Ralph Pinnell, the
club president offered to
send 100 stamped envelopes
and Valentine cards to pa
tients on Powell II at the
hospital for them to send to
their families and friends.
Members voted to continue
sending the monthly news
letter to members of the
club.
Those on the program
were Mrs. J. B. Johnson who
gave the devotional and Guy
Neal who presented a film
on the harvesting of grain
and how large tractors are
assembled in order to do the
job. He served in the absence
of Tom Cole, program chair
man.
Kiwanis
The weekly meeting of the
Kiwanis Club of Forest Park
was held Thursday, January
25, at the Kiwanis Youth
Center on South Avenue.
Speaker for this program
was Ernest Cheaves, who is
presently serving as Lieuten
ant Governor for the 12th
Kiwanis division of Georgia.
He spoke on the continuing
aims of Kiwanis, in accom
plishing concrete community
service work.
Cheaves stressed the two
fold need of an active mem
ber building program in the
club. First, a club member
ship Is needed that repre
sents all areas of business
and community life. Sec
ondly the continued success
of Kiwanis is dependent
upon its leadership passing
from those members of long
standing achievement and
experience—to the organiza
tion's newer members.
Among service clubs, Kiwanis
International is noted for its
unique method of training,
at every level.
The Forest Park Inter-
Club Relations Committee
Chairman, Milton McDonald,
is to be commended for his
fine job in inter-club visits.
On Monday night Milton
McDonald, Pete McQueen,
Layfield Mitchell and Donald
. Wilkes visited with the Mor
row Kiwanis Club, while Lt.
Gov. Cheaves brought the
. program to the Jonesboro
Kiwanls Club and inter
clubbed with Emmett Lee,
| Bill Quice and President
| Allen Johnson. Interclubs
' are being scheduled with
Mountain View and South
| College Park.
i High School Key Club
' members visiting with the
' club were Terry Peoples and
| Freddle Cash. Also visiting
; with the club was a group
| from the Morrow Kiwanis
| Club; Mack Jennings, Ru
| dolph Johnson, Harold
g Greene and Ernest Duffey.
The Forest Park Kiwanis
; Club is always happy to
have these visitors meet
{ with the club.
The program for Feb. 1 will
be glven by Rev. George
. Coker, Courts Chaplain,
! Floyd County Court, in re
| gard to his experiences with
! youth,
If We Knew Our Need, No. 4-68'
Would We Make It Profitable to Us?
"Know therefore and see that it is an evil
thing and bitter, that thou hast forsaken
the Lord thy God, and that my fear is not
in thee, saith the Lord God of hosts.” Jer.
2:19. As it was with the men unto whom
these words were spoken, so it is with man
today. Many things in the lives of men are
not as God would have them; they are not
abiding in God’s truth when these things
are present in them, and their pretense that
God is their Father is vain. See John 8:41
to 44. Man’s need is to live such a life that
they can truly say that God is their Father.
Freely and uninvited out of his grace, God
has taken steps to reconcile the world unto
himself, not imputing their trespasses unto
them; and hath committed unto us the word
of reconciliation.
“"Now then we are ambassadors for Christ,
as though God did beseech you by us; we
pray you in Christ’s stead, be ye reconciled
to God, for he hath made him to be sin for
us, who knew no sin; that we might be made
the righteousness of God in him.” 2 Cor.
5:19-20-21. God has taken man by the
hand, as it were, to lead them. “The word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and
we beheld his glory, the glory as of the
only begotten of the Father, full of grace
and truth.” John 1:14,
There is one glory, one grace, one truth
which is of God, by which men are recon
ciled to God. "“The carnal mind is enmity
against God, so then they that are in the
flesh cannot please God, but ye are not in
the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the
Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man
have not the Spirit of Christ (his glory, his
grace, and his truth) he is none of his.”
Rom. 8:7-8-9; Man that has no glory, grace
and truth walks in darkness, and stumbles
at noon day as in the night. Isa. 59:10.
But the day spring from on high having vis
ited us, to give light to them that sit in
darkness, and in the shadow of death, and
to guide our feet in the way of peace, we
need not stumble. Luke 1:78-79. Christ was
the true light that lighteth every man that
cometh into the world. John 1:10. "While
ye have light believe in the light, that ye
may be children of light.” John 12:36. Those
in the light are a chosen generation, a royal
priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar peo
ple that should shew force the praises of
him who hath called them out of darkness
l 511 Pegg Road, Atlanta, Georgia 30315 I
|
New WMU
Program
Presented
An Interpretation Meeting
for Baptist Woman’'s Mis
sionary Union Associational
officers throughout Georgia
was held at Macon’s new
Highland Hills Baptist
Church on Friday, January
19. The meeting was for the
purpose of presenting a new
WMU program of methods
for 1968-69. Attending from
the Clayton Association were
Mrs. Harry Durham, Asso
! ciational President, Mrs. Er
| nest Bellinetti, Young Wom
an’s Auxiliary Director, Mrs.
Charles Frith, Girls’ Aux
iliary Director and Mrs. How
ard Strickland representing
the Sunbeam Director, Mrs.
Glen Mathis. Pastors from a
number of Georgia Baptist
I churches were in attendance.
| Mrs. Durham is preparing
a similar meeting for the
Clayton Association, the date
of which will be Thursday,
March 28. It will be held in
two sessions, at the Conley
Baptist Church from 9:30 to
2:30 and at the Fayetteville
Baptist Church in the eve
ning from 6:45 to 9:30. Nurs
' ery will be provided at both
meetings.
At each meeting the State
WMU office will have repre
sentation and a missionary
for the inspirational mes
sage. All WMS members with
youth directors from each
' church and pastors are
| urged to attend this very im
] portant meeting.
?
Pyt. Ad
vt. ams
®
|Arrives
| : .
'ln Vietnam
! Army Private First Class
| Donald M. Adams, son of Mr.
| and Mrs. Duell L. Adams, 634
West Warren Drive, Forest
' Park, recently arrived in
‘ Vietnam,
After his basic training at
Ft. Benning, Ga., he received
ten weeks of specialized
schooling in Renovation at
Redstone Arsenal, Ala.
He is serving with the
174th Ordnance Detachment
in Cam Rahn Bay, Vietnam.
Private First Class Adams
was a 1966 graduate of For
est Park High School.
| Free Press-News & Farmer, Thurs., Feb. 1, 1968 v
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i J
’ ATLANTA ARMY DEPOT—Left, M Sgt. J. D. Wooten re
[ ceives Bronze Star Medal for service in Viet Nam from
[ Col. A.J. McDermott, Jr., Depot Commander. Sgt. Wooten
| was decorated for meritorious service from April, 1966,
| to December, 1967.—(U. S. Army Photo.)
| %J‘ J
E Monday Thru Friday—ll:3o to 2:30
i ; ,
| Choice Meat, 2 Vegetables, Rolls or
) Hushpuppies, Dessert
l
—Phone 622-0757—
Corner Moreland Ave, S.E. and Cedar Grove Ra.
| @ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK—II:3O TO 10:30
|
|
S\ B NN S B
‘) o A
- - & or CHICKEN you
e 2
| 2®* can eat—sl.so
\ Y CHILD'S PLATE—7S¢—
[ 4
RIO VlSTA—the South’s most famous res
taurants, specializing in Channel Catfish
& Hushpuppies.
FOUR LOCATIONS:
NO. 15000 Memorial Drive—U, S. Highway 78—Phone 443-9888
NO. 22375 Stewart Avenue, SW.—Phone 766-4611
NO. 3-3425 Moreland Ave. S.E.—(Georgia 42) and Cedar Grove Rd.
—Phone 622-0757
NO. 4—914 South 4-Lane Highway, Marietta—', Mile Past Dobbins
Air Base—Phone 428-8020
Telephone for Reservations or Take-Out Orders
into his marvelous light. 1 Peter 2:9. Walk
ing in the light as he is in the light we are
born again, not of corruptible seed, but of
incorruptible, by the word of God, which
liveth and abideth for ever. 1 Peter 1:23.
That which is born of the flesh is flesh (cor
ruptible) and that which is born of the Spirit
is Spirit (incorruptible). John 3:6. The old
man cannot be reconciled to God. The new
man which is renewed in knowledge after
the image of him that created him is a man
that is reconciled to God. Col. 3:9-10
The natural man has nothing to do with
God; the new man is the son of God. The
new man has received the promise which
Jesus spoke of when he said, "I will pray the
Father, and he shall give you another com
forter, that he may abide with you for ever,
even the Spirit of truth whom the world can
not receive because it seeth him not, neith
er knoweth him, but ye know him, for he
dwelleth with you, and shall be in you.”
John 14:16-17. We know he abideth in us
by the Spirit which he hat given us. 1 John
2:24. '"He that saith he abideth in him,
ought himself so to walk, even as he walk
ed.” 1 John 2:6.
To be in Christ is to order our lives by the
Holy Spirit. By the Spirit we are delivered
from the power of darkness, and translated
into the kingdom of his dear Son. Col. 1:13.
If we have not the Spirit of Christ we are
none of his. Rom. 8:9. And it is because the
god of this world hath blinded the minds
of them which believe not, lest the light of
the glorious gospel of Christ should shine
unto them. 2 Cor. 4:4. The gospel is that by
which men are predestined to be conformed
to the image of his Son. See Rom. 8:28-29-
30. Through conforming to the image of his
Son we are reconciled to God, which finishes
the matter God came in the flesh to settle.
We must let nothing deter us from conform
ing to the image of his Son, tribulation, dis
tress, persecution, famine, nakedness, peril,
or sword, as it is written ““for thy sake we
are killed all the day long, we are accounted
as sheep for the slaughter, (but this should
not deter us). Nay, in all these things we
are more than conquerors through him that
loved us.”
Let every man be sure that God will be with
those who are faithful to the end. Read Rom.
8:35-36-37-38-39.
11