Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise. Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, June 16, 1955
tom
____
-^7' ■-
No other freezer
? lUI^ hr
x ®' VeS ^° U S °
" much value os
this 26.1 cu. ft.
W
dual-unit
\ model
FOR 2-WAY FOOD FLAVOR PROTECTION
1 FASTEST FREEZING Q SAFEST STORAGE
to lock in all the flavor /Jj to keep in all the taste
and freshness and texture
WON’T SWEAT-WON'T RUST-NO CONDENSER TO CLEANI
• 5-year warranty on Revcold • Safety Signal Light
Freezing Action System • Pressure-sealed lid
• 5-year Food Protection policy • Flavor-guard temperature control
• Easi-Slide Baskets • A host of other features I
COME IN-SEE IT TODAY!
JSL moody brothers
furniture company
MODEL SIZE PRICE
CS-154, 15.2 cu ft. $369.95
CF-174, 17.2 cu. ft _____ $449.95
CS-234, 23.4 cu. ft. $499.95
CF-264, 26.1 cu. ft. $579.95
FREE! FREE!
12-inch oscillating Fan, Value $24.95
Free with Purchase of One of These
Revco Freezers.
MOODY BROS. FURNITURE CO.
Phone 2-2185
Booklet Offered
On Building with
Creosoted Wood
Creosote, the age old preser
vation for telephone poles and
railroad ties, is now being used
more widely in farm structures.
Applications of pressure-creo
sited wood on the farm vary from
barns to feed bunks, and corrals
to fences.
United States Steel Corpora
tion, a leading supplier of creo
sote to the wood preserving in
dustry, has recently prepared a
publication illustrating the use
of pressure-creosoted wood on
Southern farms.
The folder, entitled “Build
and Save,” is available to the
farmer who is planning up-to
date ranch or farm structures. It
Seeing is Relieving
The child with fault/ 4
VISION IS APT TO DO POOR 4
SCHOOLWORK, GROW
RESENTFUL, AND DEVELOP |
A BAD BEHAVIOR PATTERN, I
SAYS THE BETTER VISION I
INSTITUTE. I
Out OF SEVERAL HUNDRED MW
NEW YORK DRIVERS W A
WHO HAP HAP 4 ACCIDENTS CMW
API ECE, OVER HALF WERE JISL-
FOUND TO HAVE VERY
POOR SIPE VISION^ / )
//
।—-—■ —. iz .>un ’ XlCx/
u^u. know ? The AMERICAN PUBLIC
SPENDS *1,000,000,000. 0
A YEAR ON EATING OUT
c FOR PLEASURE.”
Nahunta, Ga.
illustrates the wide variety of
modern farm buildings that may
be built at low cost with pressure
creosoted wood, and shows typi
cal steps in the pole frame meth
od of construction which can be
adapted to most farm structures.
Copies of the folder, “Build and
Save,” are available free of
charge, and can be obtained by
writing to: United States Steel
Corporation, Agricultural Ex
tension Section, Room 2831, 525
William Penn Place, Pittsburgh
30, Pennsylvania.
Another U. S. Steel publication
is in the hands of dealers who
handle pressure-creosoted mater
ials in the Southern states. Deal
ers have this booklet available
so their customers can select and
obtain plans for agricultural
structures made of pressure-creo
soted poles, posts and lumber.
you. nasw£
This irish-born English
SATIRIST (1667-1745)
SOON PEVELOPEP POOR
VISION BUT VOWEP NEVER
TO WEAR SPECTACLES.
, DURING HIS LATTER
| YEARS HE COULP SEE
J VERY LITTLE.
SEE NAME INVERTED HPRE
[ NVH-LVNor
CLASSIFIED^^^
FORD CAR FOR SALE
1953 Ford V-8. Tudor car for
sale, color light green. See Cecil
Moody, Nahunta, Ga.
MALE & FEMALE
HELP WANTED
Booming business makes open
ing available for responsible man
or woman with car to call on
farm women in Brantley County.
Full or spare time. Opportunity
to make S4O a day. Write Mc-
NESS COMPANY, P. 0. Box
2766, DeSoto Station, Memphis,
Tenn.
MAN WANTED
To distribute Watkins nation
ally advertised products in Brant
ley County. Many dealers now
making over SIOO-00 per week.
This is one of the best routes.
Write the J. R. Watkins Com
pany, 659 West Peachtree St., N.
E., Atlanta. 6j30
PRECISION RADIO SERVICE
Waycross, Georgia
Phone 269 119 Albany Ave.
Radios and Television Sets
Repaired and Installed
“You Know We Know Radio”
OLD NEWSPAPERS
FOR SALE
Old newspapers for sale, 10 cents
for a big bundle. Good for a lot
of uses around the house or for
wrapping fish and other wet
goods. Get them at the office of
The Brantley Enterprise.
CIVIL DEFENSE
2-DAY ALERT
NOW UNDERWAY
Theoretical
Target Hits
Part of Plan
Georgia’s entire Civil Defense
command structure at all levels
—state, county and city—will be
in continuous operation begin
ning at 11:00 a.m., Wednesday,
June 15, as part of the second
national “Operation Alert” train
ing exercise by the Federal Civil
Defense Administration June 15
and 16, according to Major Gen
eral George J. Hearn, Director,
Georgia Civil Defense Division.
The nation-wide exercise will
be based on theoretical hits on
more than 50 target cities
throughout the nation —at least
one in the State of Georgia —by
nuclear explosions ranging in
power from 20 kiloton atomic
bombs to 5 megaton H-bombs.
In addition to the known hits,
the exercise will include the sur
prise “bombing” of one or more
target areas in each FCDA Re
gion. Georgia is located in FCDA
Region 111, which includes seven
Southeastern states.
In order to squeeze a simulated
nine-day operation into the 26-
hours of the exercise, each civil
defense office in the state that
is participating will prepare in
advance a series of assumptions
of damage, casualties, etc.
During the exercise all State
Civil Defense personnel and
many other State agencies’ civil
defense representatives will be
working in shifts. All lines of
communication including tel e
phone, teletype, radio networks,
and amateur radio will be acti
vated. Existing resources stock
piled for civil defense in the
State will be “utilized” in the
problem.
General Hearn listed the fol
lowing purposes and objectives
of the exercise: 1. To increase
awareness of the supporting roles
of unattacked cities and counties;
2. To increase public knowledge
and training in survival; 3. To
provide training for civil defense
personnel; 4. To test public warn
ing methods, local plans, and lo
cal readiness; 5. To test opera
tional changes that have been
made in the past year, and to de
termine additional requirements.
mu
< *
GOOD CASH CROP
Soybeans are a good cash crop
on farms with available machin
ery, and they also can be sub
stituted for other cash crops now
under acreage restrictions. This
crop has about the same climate
and soil requirements as corn.
Now is a good time to plant soy
beans, and they can be planted
through June with a fair chance
of success.
Study Compares
Ways of Cooking
Low Grade Beef
To get the most in aroma and
flavor from those low grade cuts
of beef, try cooking them with
dry heat methods, Mrs. Homema-
Ker.
Recent research conducted at
the University or Georgia School
of Home Economics to scientifi
cally determine the best cooking
methods for low grade beef show
that cuts cooked by dry heat me
thods scored significantly higher
in aroma and flavor than similar
cuts cooked by braising. Dry
cooked cuts tended to be more
tender too.
The beef cooking tests were
conducted by Home Economists
Maude Pye Hood j Doris W.
Thompson and Leonora Mirone.
Their findings are reported in the
new publication of the Georgia
Agricultural Experiment Station,
Bulletin N. S. 4, Effects of Cook
ing Methods on Low Grade Beef.
Single copies are available free
upon request from the College
Agricultural Experiment Station,
University of Georgia, Athens,
Ga., which cooperated in the stu
dy.
The researchers used three
muscles from rounds of eight
grass-fed steers or low grade to
investigate effects of cooking me
thods on quality and nutritive
value of tnese less tender cuts.
Frozen cuts of 1.5 inches and
three inches were used. Dry heat
methods, roasting and broiling,
were compared with braising.
Braising in the oven and braising
on surface units of tne range,
also were compared.
The home economists found
that weight losses during cooking
were influenced by thickness of
cut. Thin cuts cooked by moist
heat (braising) lost weight more
than those cooked by dry heat,
whereas the reverse was true for
thick cuts. For all cuts, loss thru
drippings was greater in moist
heat methods than in dry heat
methods.
We offer you f '
% the finest in _ f
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Morris Service Station
PHONE 2-3271 NAHUNTA, GEORGIA
Student Nurses
Can Attend College
At Mercer U.
MACON, GEORGIA, June 15,—
Young women interested in be
coming registered nurses can now
get a full academic year of col
lege study as a regular part of
their three-year course at The
Macon Hospital School of Nurs
ing, Mrs. Margaret G. Klemer,
Director of the School, said to
day.
Arrangements have been com
pleted for next year between the
Mercer University and The Macon
Hospital school, whereby student
nurses will have their first year
classes on the college campus
just like all other Mercer fresh
men. The nursing students will
receive full college credits for
their work and they may use
them after they have become reg
istered nurses if they choose.
However, since the student
nurses will live in the hospital’s
newly refurnished nurses resi
dences with room and board pro
vided by the hospital, the cost
of this hospital-college coordinat
ed program is small. In this way
many young women who other
wise could not afford college
nursing work are able to attend
The Macon Hospital’s school.
Applications for next Septem
ber’s class are now being receiv
ed, Mrs. Klemer said. She invited
all young women who have a
high school diploma to see or
write to her about entering the
nursing school.
TO PREPARE WOOLENS
A simple way to prepare non
washable woolens for storage is
to hang them on a clothes line.
Then spray them lightly with
DDT. Do not soak them. Too
much of the spray will leave a
white deposit after the spray
dries. If this happens, a light
brushing will remove it. Be sure
treated woolens are thoroughly
dry before storing them.
Farm experiences and research
results show that millet is an ex
cellent crop for Georgia summer
pastures.
THREE GOOD REASONS
There are three good reasons
for controlling cockroaches in
the home: (1) they destroy food
and damage fabrics, books bind
ings, and other materials; (2)
when they run over food, they
leave filth and spread disease
germs, and (3) they are me
chanical carriers of many diseas-1
"We use McCulloch Chain '
Saws because they have
what it takes to perform
day in and day out on any
kind of logging job . . . And
we recommend them for
loggers who want to lower
costs and speed up produc
tion ..."
So says Albert Belcher.
president of W. A. Belcher Lumber Company, past presi
dent of the Alabama Forest Products Association and a
director of the Southern Pine Association.
"We've been using McCulloch Chain Saws exclusively since
they came on the market in 1948," he says. "Their light
weight, ease of handling and dependability make McCul
loch's four outstanding models top choice with us.'
W. A. Belcher Lumber Company is one of the largest
lumber manufacturers in the South.
. McWMCH
n . . z MODEL 4-30A
Prices of Z ,
McCulloch Saws f jm******”^
Start At $195.00 K J
f.o.b. factory £^*’** - ***^
4p>Oregon Chains Available
” J on All Makes of
“hain Saws
WILSON’S GARAGE
Phone 2-2721 Nahunta, Ga.
LESTER’S AUTO SERVICE
2129 Norwich St. Phone 9346
Brunswick, Georgia
es, one of which is Salmonella
food poisoning.
Phony disease, the most de
structive virus disease of peach
es in the U. S., can be partially
controlled by killing wild plumb
trees near peach orchards.
WANT ADS get there and do
the job in a hurry.