Newspaper Page Text
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs., April 13, 1961
PETITION FOR CHARTER
Georgia, Houston County
To the Superior Court of Said
County:
Paul Stalnaker, George W.
Oakes and R. Avon Buice, herein
after called applicants, bring this
application for the granting of a
charter for a private corporation,
and show to the court the follow
ing facts:
They desire for themselves,
their associates and successors, to
be incorporated under the named
of “ROL-O-VALVE COMPANY,
INC.” The principal office and
place of business of said corpora
tion shall be located in Houston
County, Georgia, with the privi
lege of establishing branch offices
and places of business in such oth
er places as may be determined.
n.
All applicants are residents of
Houston County, Georgia. The post
office address of Paul Stalnaker
and George W. Oakes being War
ner Robins, Georgia; and the post
office address of R. Avon Buice
being Perry, Georgia.
Look (harming! .
Feel (harming! mL
Be (harming!
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE
ENROLL NOW -
Alice Bell Charm and
Fashion School
SPONSORED BY THE SORELLE CLUB
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY , APRIL 13 AND 14
JUNIOR HIGH AUDITORIUM
Teen-Age Classes each night from 7:30 to
8:30, Price $2.00 (both sessions)
Adult Classes each afternoon from 3:30
to 5:30/ Price $5.00 (both sessions)
Learn how to select your most becoming colors, how to apply
make-up, simple exercises that keep you trim and lovely.
Many other beauty secrets.
ENROLL IN THE
Alice Bell (harm and Fashion School
The Gleaner A combine has proved its dependability, lasting quality and
fine performance over and over on thousands of acres of harvested crops.
Get the Inside Story of
HARVEST CONFIDENCE
"We own two Model A Gleaner combines Trust your harvesting to the combines
one is three years old and the other was that keep rolling. Come in and get the
bought in September, 1960. Our total re- inside story.
pair bill for both machines, including corn
heads, has been less than *l5O Most ot The Grea , silver pl
this cost came recently from harvesting _„ T . . T __ , .
corn downed by hurricane Donna." of GLEANER combines
“As far as we’re concerned, the Gleaner MODEL A. .. 10, 12 or 14-foot for
combine is the best machine on the market.” all size farms
Artis Geskins, Vanceboro, N. C. BIG C ’ }*'. 16 f - 18 ° r “-fool
’ ’ "Giant of the Harvest"
Men who know good combining have MODEL 8... 12-foot Rice Special 1
faith in Gleaner combines. When wheat MODEL AH.. 14-foot with automatic
is down . . . beans are tangled . . . corn is leveling for hillsides
tough to combine . . . there is a great feel- CORN HEADS 2-row for Model A
ing of confidence when the familiar silver 4-row for Model C
Gleaner combine rolls into the field. c " UNtl> i. Aiii. ch.imrr. ir.dtm.A.
Finance for profit. Ask us about Allis-Chalmers’ time payment plans.
Get the dollar-making difference with Ak
ALLIS-CHALMERS
SALES AND SERVICE
GRAY-WALKER TRACTOR COMPANY
| ,OT MA ' N STR “ T CA >-1173 PERRY, GEORGIA
i in.
| The purpose and object of said
corporation is pecuniary gain and
profit to its shareholders. The gen
| eral nature of the business to be |
transacted is, and the corporate
powers describedd are;
(a) To manufacture and sell yar
! ious items of building materials
equipment, and supply, together
1 with all activities incidental there
to and therewith.
(b) To have all of the powers
and enjoy all of the privileges
enumerated in Sections 22-1827,
22-1826, and 22-1870 of the Code
of Georgia, and all of the other
powers and privileges enumerated
in Chapters 22-18 and 22-19 of said
Code and all of the powers and
privileges enumerated therein are
made a part hereof to the same
I extent as if the same were quoted
herein.
IV.
The time for which said corpor-|
ation is to have exsitence is thir
ty-five years.
V.
The amount of the capital with I
which the corporation will begin
German talmadgl
B"*' Reports from ■
WASHINGTON j
THERE ARE SOUND argu
ments which can be made both
for and against President Ken
nedy’s proposal that farmers be
allowed to write their own farm
programs.
On the pro side there would
I be the obvious advantage of
having farm
] | policies deter
\ mined by those
w^° are c^°seß^
their implementation. Further,
the conflicts and pressures which
to date have thwarted affirma
tive Congressional action on the
subject would be circumvented.
On the other hand, however,
such a course would raise the
constitutional question of the
delegation by Congress of its
authority to make laws and, by
substituting the negative power
of veto over programs so formu
lated, would make it exceeding
ly more difficult for Congress to
halt controversial steps about
which there was no substantial
agreement. Present dissatisfac
tion with the results of similar
delegation of authority over
trade policy affords a case in
point.
♦ ♦ ♦
IF FARM PROGRAMS are to
accomplish their purpose they
not only must increase farm in
come but also must be corre
lated with the entire economy to
serve the beat interests of both
farmers and consumers.
Without reflecting in the
slightest upon the sincerity of
their motives, there is a ques
tion as to whether members of
all-f armer committees could
view farm problems in their
broadest perspective. For ex
ample, one of the most pressing
(not prepared or printed at government expense)
business shall be Twenty Five
Thousand Dollars ($25,000), either
; in cash or other assets or a com
j bination of the two.
VI.
The capital stock of said com
pany shall be divided into two
of those problems is the stagna
tion of our foreign agricultural
commerce caused by present
laws which hold a price um
brella over world markets and,
in effect, price American farm
products out of those markets.
As a result, American acreage
planted to basic commodities is
being continuously cut while for
' eign acreage is being corre
spondingly increased. Figures
compiled by the Library of Con
j gress show in the case of cotton,
for instance, that planting in
this country has decreased from
24.248.000 to 15,310,000 acres
since 1938 while world acreage
exclusive of the United States
has increased from 52,127,000 to
66.844.000 acres. The statistics
show a similar picture for wheat,
corn and peanuts.
* * ♦
IN THIS CASE the broad
view would indicate an urgent
need to let American ci’ops seek
their own price levels in inter
national trade while making up
the difference to American farm
ers by a program of compensa
tory payments on domestic con
sumption as contemplated by the
Talmadge Farm Plan. A parti
san committee taking a narrow
view likely would be reluctant to
initiate such action.
This and other examples which
could be cited point up the ne
cessity for giving careful, delib
erate and objective study to all
ramifications of the President’s
farm recommendation. Senate
Agriculture Committee Chair
man Allen Ellender has prom
ised just such deliberations and,
while still committed to my own
proposal, I certainly intend to
enter such a study with an open
mind.
hundred fifty (250) shares of com
mon stock of the face or par value
of one hundred dollars ($100) per
share. Applicants desire and pray
that they may be granted the right
to increase the capital stock, from
time to time, by a majority vote
of the stock outstanding at the
time of a meeting duly called for
that purpose, to an amount not to
exceed one hundred thousand dol
lars ($100,000), and all of the
stock of this corporation shall be
common stock with par value of
One Hundred Dollars per share.
VII.
Applicants herewith exhibit a
certificate of the Secretary of
State of the State of Georgia, as re
quired by Section 22-1803 of the
Code of Georgia Annotated.
WHEREFORE, applicants pray
to be incorporated under the name
and style aforesaid, with all the
rights and privileges herein set
out and such addition powers and
privileges as may be necessary,
proper or incident to the conduct 1
of the business of which applicants
are asking incorporation, and as
may be allowed like corporations
under the laws of Georgia as may
now or hereafter exist.
Nunn, Aultman, Hulbert
and Buice
Attorneys for Applicants
Georgia, Houston County
In (he Superior Court of Said
State and County:
The foregoing petition of Paul
Stalnakcr, George W. Oakes and
R. Avon Buice to be incorporated
under the name of “ROLrO
VALVE COMPANY, INC.” read
and considered.
It appearing that said petition is
within the purview and intention
of the laws applicable thereto, and
that all of said laws have been
fully complied with, incuding the
presentation of a certificate of the
Secretary of State as required by
Section 22-1803 of the Code of
Georgia Annotated;
IT IS HEREBY ordered, adjud
ged and decreed that all the pray
ers of said petition are granted
and said applicants and their as
sociates, successors and assigns are
hereby incorporated and made a
body politic under the name and
style of “ROL-O-VALVE COM
PANY, INC.” for and during the
period of thirty-five years, with
the privilege of renewal at the ex
piration of that time according to
the laws of Georgia, and that said
corporation is hereby granted with
all the rights and privileges men
tioned in said petition.
This 22nd day of March, 1961.
A. M. ANDERSON
J. S. C. M. C.
Filed in office March 22, 1961.
TOMMIE S. HUNT, Clerk
4tp. 3-23.
WEEDS AND GRASS
IN COTTON
Weed control, a major concern
of cotton farmers, should be given
special attention if the crop is to
be harvested mechanically, says
Extension Agronomist Larry Tor
rance at the University of Georgia.
Weeds and grasses in cotton pre
sent problems in harvesting quali
ty cotton by machine, so it is of
utmost importance that a good
weed and grass control program be
_followed, he explained.
CHARM SCHOOL CAN MAKE A NEW YOU';
IT'S SCHEDULED TODAY AND TOMORROW
BY HAZEL MITCHELL
Want to be an “oomph” girl . . .
to have a personality like Cleopa
tra’s ... to be able to twist Roman
generals around your little finger?
Are you tired of having your
husband say, when he comes in
from work, “What are we having
for supper tonight?” ... to take
one look at you and say instead
“WOW, how about letting me take
you out to dinner." Well, it’s en
tirely possible . . . here’s the op
portunity you’ve been waiting for.
Remember the time, not long
ago, when you had that cold and
were dragging around the house in
your old warm, fuzzy bathrobe and
hubby came in and said before you
were married you had colds
but he didn’t remember
seeing you look like a dish rag
then, with your hair uncombed and
your nose red and dripping . . .
and you hollered at him and asked
what he EXPECTED you to look
like and he said he EXPECTED
you to look like you do now, but he
shore as heck would like to see
you look like Gina Lollobrigida
for a change!
That’s the time you got so mad
you ordered a three pound box of
chocolates from the drug store and
gained four pounds no doubt, and
you felt so miserable and wished
you’d decided on a movie career
like your mother wanted you to do,
instead of settling for something
like HIM and a thankless task of
housekeeping . . . how you vowed
you’d SHOW him . . . well, as I
said, here’s your chance . . . You
can learn how to walk, how to talk,
how to gesture . . . and the next
time the Lion’s Club entertains
with Ladies Night, you’ll know just
what to do with mascara, how to
apply make-up, how to do your
hair and just at the right moment,
how to slink into the New Perry
Hotel like Tallulah Bankhead . . .
the music will probably stop and
everyone will turn to look at YOU
and you’ll stand there all poised
and groomed to the teeth
everyone will gawk and nudge
each other and in a moment, you’ll
I • limp 'ji
<j- fi /v) - «||
... i
“WE’VE BEEN SELLING OUR PEACHES AT 50
TO 100% ABOVE AVERAGE MARKET PRICE...
... even when there’s a glut thanks to ORTHOCIDE. Our buyers don’t know what
brown rot or rhizopus rot is. We can pick fruit in ripe condition, 3 to 4 days later than
we could with other spray programs, and still get a shelf life of 5 to 7 days longer."
Louis Caggiano, grower of Gaffney, South Carolina, knows what he’s talking about. He's
been on an ORTHO Spray Program since 1953. ORTHOCIDE (captan) 50 Wettable
effectively controls fungus diseases and improves the growth of fruit trees, resulting in
thicker, healthier foliage and increased bud capacity. You get increased yields of higher
grade fruit, with the fine finish and better keeping qualities that fetch top market prices,
ORTHOCIDE, in an ORTHO Spray Program, can produce a consistently higher net profit
than is possible with any other fungicide.
t
T.M. «ca. U-». PAT. OFf.. ORTHO. ORTHOCIDE. ON ALL CHEMICAL*, HEAD OIWECTIONi AND CAUTIONS BE PORE U.t,
v v 1 ” " rnT ~' r '
1 helping the world grow better
1 Mr. Caggiano with some of his top-quality peaches.
i
i CALIFORNIA CHFMICAL COMPANY, ORTHO DIVISION p.o. Box 576, Columbia, S.C.
ORTHO Parathion 8 Flow Concentrate is recommended for use with ORTHOCIDE 50 Wettable.
KERSEY BROS. HERB SMITH
D . Kath ' een ' Georgia ORTHO Sales Representative
I Phone: Perry GA 9 ‘ 1387 Phone: Griffin 2576
See your local ORTHO Dealer or nearest ORTHO Fieldman today!
be surrounded with an admiring
audience ....
Can’t you just hear what they’ll
say about you ... “I used to laugh
when she walked into a room” —
now, they’re al swooning. Can’t
you just hear your husband
bragging, when he shows off your
picture to the boys at the office,
not hiding it like he used to do,
and talking instead about the chil
dren ....
Can’t you just hear your mother
in-law .... “I’ll tell you Maggie,
she can’t cook, she can’t keep
house, she can’t sew, she can’t do
a blessed thing, but I can SEE
what John sees in her .... she’s
No more hopping ail over o
town to pay bills—once
you've started a checking
account at our bank!
||
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rxrv \ ''l
M V *■
I
COME IN SOON!
PERRY LOAN & SAVINGS BANK
MEMBER OF F. D. I. C.
ESTABLISHED 1889 PERRY, GEORGIA
the loveliest, most glamorous crea
ture, I EVER saw in my life, and
I think John’s a mighty lucky fel
low to be married to her” ....
Oh happy day ... . grab that $5
you were going to spend on gro
ceries this week and buy a ticket
to the Alice Bell Charm Clinic
sponsored by the Sorelle Club. Get
there early and grab a front row,
center seat . . . we’ll show our
“him” how pretty, how charming
his “her” can be! Classes begin at
3:30!
Georgia cattle were valued at
187-million dollars, as of January
1, 1961. This was a four-percent
increase in the total value over the
1959 value, and 79 per cent of the
1960 total in livestock value.