Newspaper Page Text
SALE UNDER POWER
G ^ > HBREA¥, H heret^re! rl OTi September IT,
property^to t or parC land el of district land, ! of * ln White * JJJ*
being in the third
County, Georgia, containing 280 acres, more
or less, and being part of land lot number
67, more fully described as follows:
Commencing at a government corner lo¬
cated at the Southwest comer of said lot,
running the original line East to a stake
corner, same being the Southeast comer of
said lot, also being a government ordinal corner; hne
thence North along the East of Duke
Westerly direction of old run s
creek to the Bast West origin^ line between
lots 62 and 67; thence still West with the
original East and West line to the Northwest
corner of said lot number 67; thence South
along the original line between lots numbers
66 and 67 to the beginning date corner. in the amount
To secure a note of even pi
of $2,400.00, and note in the amount
$600.00, dated May 17, 1956, and note in t e
amount of $200.00, dated August 4, 1956, -U
as shown by said security deed, recorded lr
office of the Clerk of the Superior Court sc
White County, Georgia, in Deed Book 1, L
Page 284-5, which said deed provides that at
should secure said obligation, as well as anj
other obligations which might exist between
the parties thereto, and said deed is cancelled
of record; excepted from the , above .
WHEREAS, prop¬
erty is three (3) acres formerly deeded to H.
N. Abernathy, and being the place where Er¬
nest Simms lives; and excepting also the ten
and one-fourth (10*4) acres of land which the
Superior Court of White County, Georgia, de¬
creed the title to be in H. G. Spahr, in an ac¬
tion brought by W. A. and H. J. White against
H. G. Spahr. have become . de¬
WHEREAS, said notes m the
fault aa to principal and interest, and
undersigned elects that the entire amount of
said notes, principal and interest become due
at once; therefore, according , to the . original f .
Now*, said deed to debt and the laws
terms of secure provided, the under¬
in such cases made and
signed will as attorney in fact, for T. J. Mc¬
Connell and Mariannie S. McConnell, expose
for sale to the highest and best bidder for cash
the above described land, after proper adver¬
tisement on the first Tuesday in January, 1959,
between the legal hours of sale before the
Court House door in Cleveland, White County,
^The proceeds from said said sale principal, will be used interest first
to the payment of note,
and expenses and the balance, if any, deliv¬
ered to the said T. J. McConnell and Mariannie
S. McConnell. December, 1958,
,i;sj jnt aay of
MAYNARD ABRAMS,
As Attorney in Fact for
T. J. McConnell and
Mariannie S. McConnell.
GEORGIA COUNTY
WHITE of Janies M. Wilkins, ... James r- o.
The petition S. Wilkins, hereinafter
Hampton and Betsy respectfully shows;
called petitioners,
petitioners desire for themselves, their asso¬
ciates and successors to be incorporated under
of “Helen Enterprises, Inc. ’
the name
The object of said corporation is pecuniary
gain and profit. ^
The general nature of the business or busi¬
nesses to be transacted is as follows; to op¬
erate a general lumber and building supply
business; to cut, saw, log, dry, dress, process,
manufacture, buy, sell, and dispose of timber,
lumber and products thereof, including the op¬
eration of sawmills, planing mills and other
plants equipment needful in the operation of
a general lumber business; to manufacture,
purchase, sell and otherwise deal in lumber
products of every kind and description and to
do all and everything incidental to carrying on
the business of manufacturing timber products
into consumer goods. The corporation shall
also have the right of purchasing, owning,
improving, renting, leasing, managing, and
selling or exchanging, generally trading and
operating in, timber lands and all types of
real estate or real property; purchasing, sell¬
ing, leasing and generally trading in, wood
pulpwood, and timber of all kinds; manufac¬
turing, purchasing and selling fiber board and
other products made wholly or in part
wood, metal or other materials.
—4—
Petitioners further desire that said corpora
tion be vested with all the rights and powers
now or hereafter 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 powerB
enumerated in Sections 22-1827 and 22-1828,
Georgia Code Annotated, and such powers .as
may hereafter be given by law.
—'0 ,
The corporation shall have a maximum num¬
ber of five hundred (500) shares of. stock of
the par value of one hundred ($100.00) dol¬
lars per share, all of which shall be common
stock and non-cumulative preferred stock in
proportions to be determined by the board of
directors. of capita! with , which •
However, the amount
the corporation shall begin business shall be
not less than two hundred dollars ($200.00).
The corporation shall be authorized to issue
additional shares up to the maximum sum
above stated, and thereafter, from time to
time, to reduce the amount of capital out¬
standing, but not below the minimum above
stated, and all this, upon a majority vote of
the board of directors.
—6—
The time for which the corporation is to
have existence is 35 years, with the privilege
if renewal of the charter, from time to time,
upon the expiration of said periods of thirty
nve (35) years. ^
The County in which the principal office of
(lie corporation is to be located is White
County, Georgia, but the privilege is desired
rf establishing branch offices and places of
nisi ness both within and without the State of
Georgia.
— 8 —
T.-e name and Post Office address of each
of the applicants for charter are as follows:
James M. Wilkins, Helen, Georgia
James G. Hampton, Cleveland, Georgia
Betsy S. Wilkins, Helen, Georgia
—9—
Petitioners further desire that by-laws of the
corporation shall be adopted by the common
stock holders, and such by-laws shall provide
for the officers of the corporation, the manner
of their selection, and such other rules ap¬
propriate to by-laws which have as their
purpose the control and management of the
corporation, including provisions whereby the
by-laws may be amended.
— 10 —
Your petitioners herewith exhibit a certifi¬
cate of the Secretary of the State of Georgia
as required by Section 22-1803, Georgia Code
Annotated.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray to be incor¬
porated under the name and style aforesaid
with all the rights, powers, privileges, and
immunities herein set forth, and such addi¬
tional rights, powers and privileges as may be
necessary, proper or incident to the conduct
of the business aforesaid, and as may be in¬
herent in or allowed to like corporations un¬
der the laws of the State of Georgia as they
now exist or may hereafter exist.
JAMES G. HAMPTON
Attorney for Petitioners
P. O. Box 232
Cleveland, Georgia
Telephone 5-3303
ORDER
The foregoing petition of James M. Wil¬
kins, James G. Hampton and Betsy S. Wil¬
kins, to be incorporated under the name of
Helen Enterprises, Inc-,” has been duly pre¬
sented to me, and read and considered; and it
appearing that said petition is within the pur¬
view and intention of the laws of this State
applicable thereto; and it further appearing
that all of said laws have been fully complied
with; it'
IS THEREUPON CONSIDERED, OR**
DERED AND ADJUDGED that said petition
be and the same is hereby granted; and peti¬
tioners, their associates, successors and ad
signs, are hereby incorporated and made a
body politic under the name and style of
‘‘Helen Enterprises, Inc.," for and during the
period of 35 years, with the privilege of re¬
newal at the expiration of that time, and with
all the rights, powers, privileges and im¬
munities as are provided by the laws of
Georgia as they now exist or may hereafter
exist.
This the day of ________________, 19_______
Judge, Superior Court,
FRED G. KELLEY,
White County
OUT OF TOWN
PRINTERS PAY
[NO TAXES HERE
LET US DO YOUR
PRINTING
Henrietta’s
Beauty Stop
Complete
Ueauty
Service
Your patronage will be appre*
' ciated.
' For appointment call 5-3151
Henrietta’s BeautY Shop
Mrs. Henrietta Davidson Harris, Operator
FOR SALE
L u grade pig and sow feed. Alll
kin poultry feed mash and pelleti feed|
mad fresh daily in our modern
mill. Hock bottom prices. ; Highestj
quality
The Ruby Milling Co.”
Phone 11V Cleveland, Ga ^
Come by the mill when vo-jarew. .owe
Georgia— White County. Concern:
To All Whom It May
William Donald Henderson, having in
proper form applied to me for Permanent
Letters of- Administration on the estate of
T, E. Henderson. late of said county j.thie
is to cite all and singular the creditors
and next of kin of T. E. Hemlersou to bl¬
and appear on Jan, 5, 1959 at my office
within the time allowed by law, and show
eaw. if any they caD, why permanent
a i, irtration should not be granted to
William Donald Hendeison on Ti E, H‘ n
derson’s estate.
Witness my hand and official eigna.
tore, ibis 8 th day of Dec. 1858
J. P. SAXON. Ordinary
WANTED
Business expansion. Need man nr woimin
to operate mute in White County. Many
dealers now naming $ 100 . 00 . and mi re
per week. iNo lay-offs Car necessary
Age 2s to 65 . Write 1\ F. Camp. 659
West Peachtree Sc*, N. E Atlanta, Ga, ^
,
OPPORTUNITY
Man t r Woman
Wanted to service an-i c Meet fn-m I
-oute of Cigarette machines. No eelMug
’oute is fully established t» operator.
, ,11 or part time. Up to $3fC r month
oeti't, $ 1,000 to $ 2,000 caeh " quiretl
vbii.li is secured. Write, givin, .')■ 1 P*r
icula s- nd phone number to P. 552
(alias I, Texas.
Business Opportunity
Male or feu ale. from this area, wauled t
service and H ct from automatic die
pens ng and : nueemenl devises, N
selling, Age t t eet-ntial. Car, refe -
ences, and $4i o $700 w -iking capital
necessary. 7 t 12 hi u s weekly nets to
$300 mo i h y. Possibility full time work
For local inter ievv give lull parlici.lare,
phone, Write P. «, Box 7004, Mit.nea
polis 11, Minn.
NOTICE
The merchants that advertise
regularly in The Courier get the
business The people of White
County read their Home News¬
paper— The Cleveland Courier.
An advertisement in The Courier
is an invitation for the people to
trade at ymr store. A live town
is where the local businessmen
advertise regularly in their
Home Newspaper. If you appre¬
ciate what The Courier has ac¬
complished in making White
County push forward, you will
show it by advertising regularly
in The Courier and giving ALL
of your JOB PRINTING to The
Courier.
Keep Cleveland a clean and att. to
tive town. ’J'hat’s a i"b for every t ti
BLOW
YOUR OWN HORN
In The Advertising Column*
OF THIS NEWSPAPER
THE etfctfctAM) IGA.) COURIER
NOTICE
Handbills and radio don’t keo^>
thousands of dollars from leaving
Cleveland each week. Adveitis
in«r regularly in The Courier will
keep most af that business at
home.
Dr. Edward H. Shannon
Optometrist
So. Main St. Gainesvile 6a.
=■■ ST.-T QEao i m i oeaot=
Public Notice
“1 be Annual Meeting of the Members nf
Physicians Service. Inc. will be bel <1 at
5 p m., Wednesday, January 28, 19s9^£t
tbe Blue .Shield office, 2357 Warm Springs
Roar], Columbus, Georgia Members
tbe Board of Directors will be nominated
and elected at this meeting.
Signed: George D. 8 chueasier, M D.
Secretary. ’
Business Opportunity
Be Your Own Boss
Dial A Pack will establish route in
thi area for reliable operator to service
and uoPect from new type dispenses
Excellent income possible for part ttime,
$600.00 to $1976 Investment Required. If
qualified write Dial-A-Pack for local in¬
terview. P 0 Box IO 52 , Oklahoma Cry,
Okla.
The Forgotten One
By Earle J. Grant
Doraville, Georgia
Another Christmas has cunw an I cone,
To th<* crowds C 1 riel was largely
forgotten;
Oh, what a tragedy that this sin sick
world
Would deny the One Who t f God was
bi gotten,
For He is lbs auaiv rtosar'h’s ’problem*,
He is the cure for our many ids;
Wi en VVe tbr w our heart's boor open
to Rim,
With peace an" j.-y nur i mils He fills
So, may it bo thu prayer of each one
.Who knows tbr Lord in saving grace.,
t hat, befue another Christmas comes.
Many will haves tight and f un i
His face!
Snowy Walk In Moon ight
By Earle J. Grant
Doraville, Georgia
Hand in lianil we go
Into the crysal night;
Treading on crunchy snow,
Shining in 1 old in nmiight.
Stars, ha' gihg in the sky.
Like silver lanterns gleam;
Everything, both far and nigh.
Looks strangely like a dream.
Then I turn and gnze at you,
With moonlight in your ey»-a
And oiscmi something 1 never knew:
You a>e au augel in disguise!
FOR SALE
2 # acres of land, 1 mile east of Clev
land on Clatkesv lle highway. Across
from Blalock lake.
Mrs, Clfto Williams
Trail, r « out t
Ccrnelia, Ga
NOTICE
When you give orders to printers
away from Cleveland for Letter¬
heads, Envelopes, and all Job
Printing, do they boost and work
for Cleveland’s progress and fu¬
ture growth? Don’t you think
that The Courier is entitled to
all the Job Printing in Cleve¬
land? Well, then give us your
order.
The Cleveland Courier.
**A\ YOUR 8Uner!Rirrn>\ now
^Waiting For a Sail
The Modern Merchant
Doesn’t wail for SALES
* HE ADVERTISES
Mottled Yolks
Downgrade Eggs
But Not Necessarily
Sign of Spoilage •
Mottling of egg yolks, a problem
lor *omo egg producer*, i* not nec¬
essarily a sign of ipoilage, accord¬
ing to Don Bray, University of
Illinois poultry specialist.
Mottling is a variation in the
surface color and clarity of egg
yolks. In sever# eases it can be
seen when parte of the yolk make
a dark shadow on the egg shell
during candling. 9
When mottling is sever* enough
to be easily noticed, consumers
think the eggs are of low quality
or spoiled, Bray says.
Off-color areas that may develop
around the germ spot are not the
same as mottling. The former will
develop in both fertile and infer¬
tile eggs held at room tempera¬
ture or higher. Mottling may bs
Mottling of egg yolk reduces
grade, but doesn’t mean that egg
is spoiled.
observed anywhere on the sur¬
face of the yolk.
Poultry scientists have studied
egg mottling for several years,
but its cause is still obscure. Bray
says that it may be due to some
type of flaw in the membrane that
surrounds the yolk. Water, and
possibly protein, then could pass
from the white to the yolk in some
abnormal way.
It’s known that mottled areas
contain more protein in relation
to fat than the rest of the yolk.
And extremely mottled yolks are
seldom found in fresh eggs — a
holding period is usually required
for the condition to develop. *
Egg Cell Development
Subject of Studies
Continued studies of partheno¬
genesis—the spontaneous develop¬
ment of embryonic tissue in infer
tile eggs—reveal that increased
occurrence of this phenomenon in
the eggs of non-mated turkeys and
chickens may be due in part to an
“activating agent,”
Incubation tests conducted for
the past 3 years at USDA’s Agri¬
cultural Research Center, Belts
ville, Md„ by poultry scientist M.
W. Olsen have shown a greater
incidence of parthenogenetic cell
development In eggs produced by
turkeys and chickens after the
birds were vaccinated for fowl pox
than in eggs produced by the same
birds before vaccination. *
It is not yet clear whether the
"activating agent” is the vaccine
itself or a contaminant it may con¬
tain. Dr. Olsen is convinced, how¬
ever, that a combination of strains
of birds genetically susceptible to
parthenogenesis and the presence
of an unknown activating agent re¬
sults not only in a greater inci¬
dence of parthenogenesis, but also
in a more highly organized devel¬
opment of the condition In eggs
from nonmated hens.
Dr. Olsen’s studies indicate the
tendency toward parthenogenesis
in poultry can be increased or de¬
creased by selective breeding. Cer¬
tain families of chickens and tur¬
keys receiving the same vaccina¬
tion treatment in his tests differed
widely In their ability to produce
eggs that develop parthenogeneti
•ally. The same is true of individ¬
ual birds. *
Strong Fenoo
Permanent barnyard fence that
will take plenty of wear and tear
eaa be made by casting special
concrete posts in wooden form
designed so that tbe beads of
bolts can be accurately imbedded
in concrete mix. • Set posts uni¬
form depth in ground and bolt
taMa. planks t* each poet.
v\Y >/, v.
i\ rm iirii
~ J ¥ I .W/.y 0 /
-1.: ;
■j&t
Cleveland Baptist Church
Sunday Si hoot 10.00 A, M.
Morning Worship 11:00 A. M.
Baptist Training Union, — 6 30"P.M
Evening Worship______________7:30 p m,
Rev.'Walter R. Evans, Pastor
Walter Memorial Seventh-day
Adventist Church Services
Saturday, 9:30 a.m.....Sabbath School.
11:00 a. m. W reiiip Service
Wednesday 7:00 p. —Prayer Meeting
Altaic weir,,me.
R. M. Kuf, pastor
Methodist Church Services
10:00 A M-----Sunday School
iI:00A.M Berm >j:
6:30 P. M M Y.F,
7' 3 !) P. M Sermon:
Prayer mseting—Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Choir Practice—Wednesday 8:30 p 01 .
H H. Sheets, Pastor
pay yhiir stirrcrii rrnv mow
Skillet Stew Made With Soup Mix
TJTERE IS A RECIPE FOR A HEARTY, delicious Skillet
A * Chopped Beef Stew made with a package of beef vegetable
soup mix that supplies not only delicious flavor but also the
nutritious ingredients of numerous vegetables as well as beef,'
This stew is simple to make and takes just about 35 min¬
utes from start to finish. The onions and chopped meat are
browned in melted butter and then 2 cups of water and the
package of beef vegetable soup mix are immediately added
and cooked for a half hour.
Serve piping hot with a lettuce salad tossed with a prepared
Italian dressing.
SKILLET CHOPPED BEEF STEW WITH ONIONS
2 tablespoons butter or 8 cups water
margarine 1 package beef vegetable
12 small white peeled onions soup mix
1 pound ground beef 1 tablespoon chopped parsley
Melt butter or margarine in skillet, add onions and lightly
brown. Add meat and brown well, stirring constantly. Pour in
water, stir in soup mix and cover. Cook about 30 minutes until
onions are tender, adding more water if necessary. Sprinkle
with parsley before serving. Makes 4 servings.
M HEALTH HORIZONS
Failing Eyesight After Fifty
As we get to fifty and beyond, most of us note that our vision is not
so keen as it once was. Eyesight, the most precious of our senses, seems
also to be the most vulnerable to the ravages of time. Perhaps the earlier
changes in vision are more annoying than worrisome. But with increas¬
ing years, many people become haunted by the fear that their
may end in blindness.
This is an unnecessary fear in
a v ast number of cases, according
to Dr. Arthur J. Bedell of Albany,
N. Y. One of the most frequent
causes of failing sight in people
over fifty is a condition called
“senile macular degeneration,” he
sa\ s—and this definitely does not
lead to blindness.
Early Sign*
“An afflicted person first no¬
tices that reading, writing and
other near use of the eyes is more
difficult ant> that a change of
glasses does not help,” writes Dr.
Bed H. “Often one eye is involved
weefs or even months before the
other, and unless the patient is a
keen observer the disease may be
far advanced by the time he seeks
help because a similar change has
started in the second eye.... The
most significant symptom is a dark
spot before the eye or eyes, which
increases in size.”
This “degeneration” is, unfor¬
tunately, simply a penalty of age.
It can’t be “cured,” as an infec¬
tion might be, with any of the
wonder drugs. “After the sight is
once reduced, it is never restored,”
says Dr. Bedell. Early treatment
with a drug such as «s potassium puiassium io- jo-
The (Blevelanb Courier
Of/i not t ’ t g t. 1 V I ; C
r- ubl.s ieu wsefcly h -1 1
Ja8 . P. Davidson, Editor.
Entered at the Post iffice at Cleveland
'Ga., as second class uiail uipuer.
Subscription Price Annually
In A dance
Ninth Congressional District $2,50'
Other $3.00'
Auto Section Features Latest Trends
Thinking about buying a new car? Get
some h Ipful information on the new
features of the 1959 cars in the ;tdg an¬
nual auto issue of the American Weekly,
Yon’JI also enjoy “Worn. njt re Better
Bitvers.” “t’ar Care Tips t hat Save You
Money," and “Tires Get Tired, Too,” . ,
all in the January 11th iseua of the
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERIC AN
Older from Your Local Newsdealer
. IvMrooaav/ffooitMivMrf/WM??
—kme MtHAStc/vausw ootsnav/
Certainly, house anyone who does not own
a and an acre of land in a
safe country village should make such
his first investment—war or no war.
too, to keep the general health at
a high level.
Seek the tight Help
Since this condition is somewhat
difficult to diagnose, the elderly
person wiih eye symptoms should
go to a real eye specialist, an oph¬
thalmologist. This does not mean
an optician or an optometrist, who
are experts in making and fitting
glasses but are not trained in dis¬
eases of the eyes. Non-specialists
may not recognize the disease, and
can mistake it for a malignancy
requiring drastic surgery. So, if
you do not know a good ophthal¬
mologist, ask your family doctor
to help you find one. Peace of mind j
alone atone may may be oe adequate adequate repayment repayment