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LEGAL
NOTICES
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF BRYAN
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
BRYAN COUNTY
APPLICATION FOR AN ORDER
GRANTING CHARTER
THE PETITION of Bettyanne
Pedersen, John E. Simpson, and R,
M. Hitch, of 400 Georgia State
Bank Building, Savannah, Chatham
County, Georgia, respectfully
“shows: : ‘
.., Petitioners desire for themselves,
*their successors and assigns to be
incorporated for a period of thirty
five (35) years under the name and
style of
"LIJAZ. INC.
The general nature of the busi
ness or businesses to be transacted
shall be to own and operate restau
rants, coffee shops, drive-in restau
rants, and catering services, to sell
food “at. wholesale and retail, to
prepare food for consumption, to
own and operate coin-operated
music machines and vending ma
chines, to buy, sell, lease, hold, im
prove, encumber and generally to
deal in all forms of real and per
sonal property, and generally to
do all and everything incidental to
carrying on saléi businesses.
The ‘maximum number of shares
of stock which the corporation is
authorized to have outstanding at
any time shall be Five Thousand
(5,000) . shares of common stock of
the _ogar value of Ten Dollars
($10.00) per share, which shall be
the only class of stock and which
shall possess all voting rights.
Y
That a Certificate of Availability
from the Secretary of State is
hereto attached and made a part
of this Petition. .
The amount of capital with
which the corporation shall begin
business shall be in excess of Two
Hundred Dollars ($200.00),
{FARMERS' LOANS
m C%mm
] Shor{ and Intermediate Term Loans
For Every Purpose
DIXIE PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSN.
: Savannah Office, 2903 W. Bay Street
- SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
GARDNER’S GROCERY
| Whare 80 ond 280 Join
e
Gallon
CLO-WHITE 49c
M—
FLOUR 49
Chili With Beans 39
FRUIT COCKTAIL 39
Nescafe o
COFFEE 79
FAB 29c
e . T
“FINEST FOODS AT LOWEST PRICES”
# You Con Find it Anywhere, We Have it
Bring your Soybeans to the Qil Mill in Estill, S. C. and buy your Soybean Meal from the Oil &
Mill in Estill, S. C. #
WE OFFER: b
1 FAST UNLOADNG FACILITIES &
2 FRIENDLY AND COURTEOUS SERVICE &
3 'WE INVITE YOU TO WATCH YOUR SOYBE? S BEING GRADED k
4 LOCATED ON U. 5. HIGHWAY 321 AND ONLY 19 MILES FROM CLYO, GA. TOOiL miL | ™
5 WE PAY TOP MARKET PRICES o
6 MANUFACTURERS OF 44% PROTEIN SOYBEAN MEAL ;l
7 MANUFACTURERS OF 50% PROTEIN SOYBEAN MEAL :
8 MANUFACTURERS OF 11% PRCTEIN SOYBEAN MILL RUN (Good Cattle Feed) P
i
Southern Soya Corporation
Telephone 625-2711 Estill, South Carolina i
-6 -
The principal office of the corp
oration shall be located in Bryan
Countfl. Georgia, but the corpora
tion shall have the right of estab
lishing branch offices and places
of business elsewhere within or
without the Stat; of Georgia.
The said corporation shall have
all the rights, privileges and im
munities which are now or may be
hereafter granted by the laws of
the State of Georgia to similar
co‘t"‘?orations.
HEREFORE, Petitioners pray
to be incorporated under the name
and style aforesaid, with all the
rights, powers and privileges here
inabove specified, and such other
additional powers, privileges and
immunities as may be granted like
corporations under the laws of the
State of Georgia as they may now
or hereafter exist,
HITCH, MILLER,
BECKMANN &
SIMPSON
By R. M. Hitch
Robert M. Hitch,
Esquire
Post Office Box 2126
Savannah, Georgia 31402
Attorneys for
Petitioners.
Dated: October 23, 1968
ORDER
THE FOREGOING APPLICA
TION for Charter having been ex
amined and considered by the
Court; and
IT APPEARING to the Court
that the Application is legitimately
within the purview of the laws of
the State of Georgia;
IT IS CONSIDERED, ORDERED
AND ADJUDGED that the said
Application be and the same is
hereby granted, and Petitioners
their associates and successors are
hereby incorporated and made s
body politic under the name and
style of:
“LIIJA, INC.”
for a period of thirty-five (35)
v rights, wers,
- %fi?\fislbg‘:;tha:(lil g:\emursities l{los are
! now or may hereafter be provided
" by law to s?\ila;{cgfiifigofi%sa :
S T mmPafix}; E. Caswell ‘
B
Q&%fiior Court,
Bryan County, Ga.
> petition and Order thereon filed
4 in office
? October 28, 1968.
g
GEORGIA, BRYAN COUNTY
; By virtue of an order of the
. Court of Ordinary of said State
- and County, there will be sold
r at public outery on the first
: Tuesday in December, 1968 at
e the courthouse door in Bryan
v County, Georgia between the
legal hours of sale, to the high
est and best bidder for cash, the
following described real estate
located in said county, to-wit:
All that certain lot of land
situate, lying and being in the
2 20th G.M. District of Bryan
County, Georgia described as
follows:
BEGINNING at a stake at
the most southwest point of
- said lot, which point of begin
e ning is common to the within
. lot, the East side of the Old
; Daniel Public Road and at the
¢ North property line of the lot
known as the L. M. Shaw Store
g Lot and running along the
s eastern edge of said Old Daniel
s, Public Road in a northerly di
€ rection for a distance of 155
& feet to a stake; thence in an
easterly direction along lands
. of McCallar and Shuman for a
) distance of 441 feet to a stake
on the western edge of the new
Daniel Public Road; thence in
a southerly direction along the
western edge of said New Dani
el Public Road a distance of
114 feet to the southern prop
erty line of the home lot of C.
A. Fisher; thence in a westerly
direction along the northern
property line of the C. A. Fish
er home lot for a distance of
1 90 feet to a_stake; thence in a
southerly direction along the
western property line of said
Fisher home lot for a distance
of 200 feet to the northern
property line of the Texaco
Filling Station lot; thence in a
" westerly direction along the
northern property line of the
said Texaco Filling Station lot
and along the northern prop
erty line of the old L. M. Shaw
I Store Lot for a distance of 250
feet to a stake, point of be
ginning,
y The sale will continue from
day to day between the same
hours, until all of said property
is sold.
This 4th day of November,
1968,
Rebecea H. Futch,
Administrator of the
Estate of Thomas H.
Futch, Deceased,
~ Nov. 7-14-21-28. _
* ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE
UNDER POWER
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF BRYAN
On March 4, 1964, DANIEL
* E. DAVIS and MARGIE J.
DAVIS executed a note for $2,-
360.00 payable to FRANK R.
FOSS, SR., which note with in
terest thereon at the rate of 8
per cent per annum from ma
turity, was payable in 36
" monthly installments of $65.55
~each, beginning on the 4th day
" of April, 1964, and alike sum
on the 4th day of each month
thereafter until fully paid, and
the note contained a provision
for the payment of ten per cent
~ of the principal and interest as
~ attorney fees, if collected by
law or through an atotrney at
law. In order to secure the
payment of said note, DANIEL
E. DAVIS and MARJIE .
DAVIS executed and delivered
to FRANK R. FOSS, SR. a
deed to secure debt conveying
the following described land:
All that certain tract or lot
of land situate, lying and be
ing in the 1380th G.M. District
of Bryan County, Georgia, con
taining one and seventy-one
one-hundredths (1.71) acres,
and which is bound on the
North by lands of C. C. Slater;
on the East by the Blitchton-
Eldora Public Road; on the
South by lands of Foster F.
Shuman; and on the West by
lands of R. W. Shuman.
Said tract of land is more
minutely described by courses
and distances on a plat made
by W. M. Sheppard, surveyor,
on September 10, 1959, to which
plat reference is made.
Said deed is recorded in Deed
Book 3-L, page 465, Clerk’s Of
fice, Superior Court, Bryan
County, Georgia.
Because the said MARGIE
J. DAVIS and DANIEL E.
DAVIS defaulted in making
payment of the monthly install
ments as they matured, the said
FRANK R. FOSS, SR., pursu
ant to the provisions of said
note and the deed aforesaid se
cured the same, has exercised
his opinion and declared the en
tire balance due and collectible.
Notice fixing the liability for
httorney fees has been given
according to law. There is a
balance due as of November 5,
11968, of $1635.70 principal, in
terest and attorney fees.
The said deed contains a pow
er of sale authorizing the gran
tee, as attorney in fact for
grantors therein, to sell the
property conveyed thereby in
order to satisfy said note, as
well as subsequent advances,
after advertising the same once
a week for four (4) weeks in
the official gazette of said
county, and in accordance with
said power of sale and by vir
tue thereof the said FRANK R.
FOSS, SR. will sell the prop
erty above described at public
outery to the highest and best
bidder for cash, on the first
Tuesday in December, 1968, at
the place of public sale before
the courthouse door in Bryan
County, Georgia, within the
legal hours of sale.
The proceeds of the sale will
be used as follows:
1. To pay the expenses of
said sale.
2. To pay the sum secured by
said deed.
3. The balance to Daniel E.
Davis and Margie J. Davis.
Margie J. Davis
Daniel E. Davis
Frank R. Foss, Sr.
Attorney in Fact
John R. Harvey-Allen &
Edenfield
Attorneys at Law
P. O. Box 216
Pembroke, Ga. 31321
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE
UNDER POWER
STATE OF GEORGIA
On January 28, 1967, RUFUS
CRIBBS and CLARA MAE
CRIBBS executed a note for
$1,900.00 payable to DR. W. E.
SMITH, which note with inter
est thereon at the rate of 8 per
cent per ‘annum, was payable
in 96 installments of $26.87
each, beginning on the 3rd day
of March, 1967, and continuing
thereafter on the same day of
each succeeding month until
fully paid, each payment being
applied to the interest then due
and the balance to the reduc
tion of the principal amount,
interest being computed on ‘the
unpaid principal, and the note
contained a provision for the
payment of 15 per cent of the
principal and interest as at
torney fees, if collected by law
or through an attorney at law.|
In order to secure the payment
of said note, RUFUS CRIBBS
and CLARA MAE CRIBBS ex
ecuted and delivered to DR. W.
E. SMITH, a deed to seure debt
conveying the following &e-.
scribed land: .
A certain tract, parcel or lot
of land situate, lying and being
in the 1380th G.M. District of
Bryan County, Georgia, being
rectangular in shape with a
Western frontage of 75 feet on
a road or street which separ
ates the within lot of land from
lands of Mack Edwards, with a
parallel uniform depth of 100
feet.
Said lot of land is bound on
the North by lands of T. E.
Newman; on the East by un
sold lands of Dr. W. E. Smith;
on the South by the road run
ning to the Old Sawmill; and
on the West by a road or street.
Said deed is recorded in Deed
Book 3-P, page 59, Clerk’s Of
fice Superior Court, Bryan
County, Georgia.
Because the said RUFUS
CRIBBS and CLARA MAE
CRIBBS defaulted in making
payment of the monthly install
ments as they matured the DR.
W. E. SMITH, pursuant to the
provisions of said note and the
deed aforesaid securing the
same, has exercised his option
and declared the entire balance
due and collectible. There is a
balance due as of November 5,
1968, of $2264.91 principal and
interest.
The said deed contains a pow
er of sale, authorizing the
grantee, as attorney in fact for
grantors therein, to sell the
property conveyed thereby in
order to satisfy said note, as
well as subsequent advances,
after advertising the same once
a week for four (4) weeks in
the official gazette of said
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“America's greatest gift to India,” is the way the Indian press described Helen Keller. Here she
is shown with her companion, Polly Thomson, charming Prime Minister Nehru at Government
House, New Dehli, India.
It took a sightless heroine to |
open the eyes of the world to|
the injustices growing from old |
myths about the “‘helplessness” |
of the blind. !
Helen Keller, blind and deaf |
from infancy, put it this way: |
“Not blindness but the atti
tude of the seeing to the blind|.
is the hardest burden to bear.”
Throughout a lifetime of}.
awesome personal accomplish-|
ments, she uprooted supersti-|
tions nourished by milleniums|:
of ignorance. Here are some of|
the most stubborn fallacies, ex-|
ploded by the facts of Miss|
Keller’s inspirational career: |
The blind have a limited ca-|:
pacity for learning. |
Yet in 1900, Miss Keller en-|
tered Radcliffe College, took
all the standard examinations
during four years of study and|
was graduated with a B.A.—|
cum laude! Later, she became
the first woman ever to receive
an honorary doctorate from
Harvard University. ]
The blind read little or not|
at all. |
Yet Miss Keller not only was|'
an avid reader of braille books|
county, and in accordance with
said power of sale and by vir
tue thereof the said DR, W. E.
SMITH will sell the property
above described at public out
crv to the highest and best
bidder for cash, on the first
Tuesday in December, 1968, at
the place of public sale before’
. the courthouse door in Bryan
County, Georgia, within the
legal hours of sale,
The proceeds of the sale will
be used as follows:
1. To pay the expenses of
said sale,
2. To pay the sulm secured
by the said deed.
! 3.. The balance to Rufus
Cribbs and Clara Mae Cribbs.
Clara Mae Cribbs
Rufus Cribbs
Dr. W. E. Stith,
Attorney in Fact,
John R. Harvey-Allen &
Edenfield
Attorneys at Law
P. O. Box 216
Pembroke, Ga. 31321
Need Immediately
Immediate opportunity for
man or woman. Full or part
‘time, serving consumers with
Rawleigh Products. Can earn
SI2E per week or more. Write
C. R. McDaniel, GAJ-1160-769
DeSoto Station, Box 2467,
Memphis, Tenn. 38102,
iBO JORe
N
> Wl W
| '?lmabf” 332;*1
parn more for the futurg,
iathe B 2 | -
Army Nurse Gorps Reserve.
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THE U.S. ARMY RESERVE
7 %Y %ww ® ® @ % T
PR REREE R e ree vo PP TR ORI
|
~ Now |s THE TIME FOR
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11 $
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Sl D NELD eey
~ovwpercemmnou ! LOW, low pri —s | e
T e TS, I
SHUMAN - OWENS SUPPLY (0., Inc.
Telephones 653-2331 ond 653.4394 "EMLTOKE GEORGIA B
m“'”m-“m.“m an . :
THE PEMBROKE JOURNAL, Thursday, November 7, 1968—
in English and German but
wrote 13 autobiographical and
inspirational works of high lit
erary merit. Her first book,
“The Story of My Life,” ap
peared in 1902 and her last,
“Teacher,” in 1955.
The blind live isolated from
reality.
Yet Miss Keller joined the
American Foundation for the
Blind and the Helen Keller
World Crusade for the Blind
as counselor on national and
international relations and
toured 39 countries on the five
continents. She was received
by kings, queens, pr:uniers and
other world leaders, including
every American President from
Grover Cleveland to John F.
Kennedy. She so impressed
her hosts that many estab
lished pioneering programs for
their national blind.
The blind are unemployable.
Yet Miss Keller convinced
hundreds of employers that
blind workers are capable of
performing the most challeng
ing tasks. Today there are blind
teachers, lawyers, computer
programmers, salesmen and
TOUR
S'tategf Aeventute.
ATLANTA (PRN) -
Lumpkin, Georgia -- Nature
has used an artist’s palette and
a sculptor’s chisel to carve out
of red clay a spectacular
phenomenon called the ‘““Little
Grand Canyon of Georgia.”
Near Lumpkin, 40 miles
south of Columbus, Georgia,
on U.S. 17, is Providence
Canyon, one of the most
breath-taking, yet
least-developed tourist
attractions in the State.
No one is sure how it
started. Some claim the
canyons resulted from erosion
caused by rainwater eating
away marine sands deposited
when this was the ocean floor.
Others believe that they were
gradually gnawed out by
heavy traffic on an old Indian
trail. There’s one story that
the canyons were made by the
drip of rain trickling off a barn
roof -- or by the overflow of a
stream.
Whatever the cause, the
canyons are a spectacle of
destruction in the heart of an
agricultural area that has
fought erosion for generations.
A study of the land reveals
that below the topsoil is a
100-foot stratum of very loose
clay-sand overlying a layer of
blue marl, a harder clay
limestone. If the protective
covering is worn away, water
seeping through the sand
causes cracks which first
appear about 10 feet below
the surface. In the canyons
_this marl limestone has wom
lengineers. Nearly 30,000 blind
| college graduates hold respon
|sible positions once closed to
| the sightless.
| The blind are immobilized
| by their handicap. ‘
Yet Miss Keller swam,
danced, rode horseback and
hiked over the countryside
| around her Connecticut home.
| After Miss Keller's death
|last June, her friends estab
| lished the Helen Keller Mem
|orial Fund as a living monu
| ment. Co-sponsored by the
| American Foundation for the
| Blind and the Helen Keller
| World Crusade, with offices in
| New York City. The fund com
| mittee is headed by actress
| Katharine Cornell, a long-time
| friend of Miss Keller’'s. In a
| public appeal, Miss Cornell
| said:
“I hope ‘that you will join
|us in this tribute to Miss
|| Keller by making a generous
| gift to the Memorial Fund in
| support of the services which
| were her life work.”
|| 'The Memorial Fund is in the
| finest tradition of Helen Keller
|| —the blind woman of vision.
away completely and immense
gullies have been formed.
Some are miles long and
several hundred feet deep.
Their magnitude and
delicate color give them a
durious beauty. Red, yellow,
brown, mauve, lavender, jade,
ocher, orange, and chalk-white
are evident in the different
strata of the soil, though white
and yellow predominate. :
These canyons (named for
the ante-bellum Providence
Methodist Church which once
stood on a spot which now is
in the middle of the big
ravine) cover an’
octopus-shaped area of more
than 30,000 acres with chasms
300 feet wide and 200 feet
deep.
Looking upward from the
floor of Providence Canyon,
one is awed by the contrast of
colors ranging from peaceful
greens at the bottom to the
violent hues of the walls. High
overhead is a rim of tall pines, |
some hanging only by their
roots. To look around the
perimeter is to realize that
Georgia’s canyons are not
complete. Each year
additional acres cave into the
abyss. Little is being done to
harness the ravages of erosion
but the need - despite the
innate beauty - is ever present.
The Tourist Division of the
Department of Industry and
Trade recommends the
Providence Canyon for an
unusual weekend trip.
Page 5
R 3 O RS 1 T SON P
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IR i
1B )
JOHN FISHER
Travel Expert
.
Will Address
Conference
ATLANTA (PRN) — John
Fisher, Toronto, well-known
travel expert, will address the
annual Governor’s Conference
on Tourism at Savannah Inn
and Country Club, opening
Nov. 7. He will be introduced
by Lt. Gen. Louis Truman,
executive director, Georgia
Department of Industry and
Trade.
Fisher, in 1956 was named
executive director of the
Canadian Tourist Assn. and in
1961 appointed special
assistant to the Prime Minister
of Canada. In 1963 he became
commissioner of the
Centennial Commission, the
federal agency responsible for
the celebration of Canada’s
100th birthday in 1967.
He has broad experience in
newspaper publishing and
radio-tv broadcasting.
Fisher will discuss the
potential tourist development
possibilities in Georgia’s
upcoming 250th birthday and
the nation’s 200th birthday at
the conference, sponsored by
the Georgia Travel
Commission.
Governor Lester Maddox
will make the kick-off address
at luncheon, Nov. 7 and the
concluding session “will be
Nov. 8 when the Stay and See
Contest winners are
announced.
Others appearing onthe
program include Bill T.
Hardman, director, tourist
divisiony ~Department of
Industry and Trade; Frank
Griffith, Burke Dowling
Adams, advertising agency;
Pete Little, Cargill, Wilson and
Acree, advertising agency;
George Goodwin, Bell and
Stanton, public relations
agency; Louis Manning, W.R.
Bean and Sons, Inc., printing;
Frank Child, Rjce Printing
Co.; Ed Stone, public
relations, Callaway Gardens
and Mrs. Mozelle Christian,
Georgia State Chamber of
Commerce. e
Bids on United States dam
closed to Soviet.
F.C.C. panel urges a wide
pay-TV system.
5 \z" -’v:'
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60 years of service.
60 years of strength in reserve.
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