Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, October 13, 1955
Coming Soon - -
It'll Be Cold Weather
Before Long
AND YOU’LL WANT TO GET
READY BY GETTING THAT NEW
HEATER YOU HAVE BEEN
PLANNING TO GET.
Duo-Therm
Oil Heaters
WILL GIVE YOU PLENTY OF
WINTER SATISFACTION AND SAVE
YOU MONEY ON FUEL BILLS.
We Also Have a Complete Stock of
Gas Heaters, Wood Heaters and Other
Types of Oil Heaters.
»
Come in and Let Us Show You the
Best Type of Heater for Your Home,
Office or Place of Business.
MOODY BROS.
FURNITURE CO.
Phone 2-2185 Nahunta, Ga.
Legal Notices
ADVERTISEMENT
Georgia, Brantley County.
In the Superior Court of
Said County:
To whom it may concern, and
to City of Nahunta, Georgia,
State of Georgia, State Highway
Department of Georgia, John M.
Wilson, Tax Collector of Brant
ley County, Georgia, W. M. Rob
erson, heirs of W. M. Roberson,
Sallie Roberson; Mrs. Wanell R.
Brooker, Miss Eppie Roberson, L.
E. Roberson, J. E. Roberson, Clin
ton Roberson, Amos Buess, heirs
of Amos Buess, Charles Buess,
William Oscar Strickland, Mrs.
William Oscar Strickland,
William Robert Strickland, At
lantic Coast Line Railroad Com
pany, Dock Depratter, Mrs. Doro
thy Depratter, W. R. Strickland,
Agnes H. Drury, Oliver Pearson,
W. T. Highsmith, heirs of W. T.
Highsmith, Mrs. W. T. Highsmith,
J. S. Herrin, heirs of J. S. Her
rin, Mrs. J. S. Herrin, A. R. Her
rin, J. L. Stacy, Aubrey Herrin,
Wayne Development Co., Citizens
Bank of Folkston, Nahunta
Branch; together with the heirs
and legal representatives of the
parties above named, and the of
ficers, directors and trustees of
each of the above named corpora
tions whose charters have ex
pired by operation of law:
Take notice that William Os
car Strickland has filed in said
court a petition seeking to regis
ter the following lands under the
provisions of the Land Registra
tion Law, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
situate, lying and being in the
City of Nahunta, Brantley Coun
ty, Georgia, in land lot No. 88 in
the 2nd land district of originally
Wayne County, but now Brant
ley County, Georgia, more parti
cularly described as follows: Be-
AN ELEVENTH COMMANDMENT
“Thou shalt inherit the Holy Earth as a faithful stew
ard, conserve its resources and productivity from gen
eration to generation. Thou shalt safeguard thy fields
from soil erosion, thy living waters from drying up,
thy forests from desolation, and protect thy hills from
overgrazing by thy herds, that thy descendants may
have abundance forever. If any shall fail in this stew
ardship of the land, thy fruitfields shall become ster
ile, stony ground and wasting gullies, and thy des
cendants shall decrease and live in poverty or perish
from the face of the earth.”
ginning at the northwest corner
of the intersection of Ann Street
and U. S. Highway No. 84, State
Highway No. 50, and running
thence north no degrees and 2
minutes west along the west side
of Ann Street a distance of 437.1
feet to an angle iron and to the
right of way of the Atlantic
Coast Line Railroad; thence south
79 degrees and 48 minutes west
along said right of way a distance
of 347.4 feet to an iron pin;
thence south 8 degrees and 32
minutes west a distance of 321
feet to the north side of said
highway; thence south 81 degrees
and 45 minutes east along said
highway a distance of 393.4 feet
to the point or place of beginning,
containing 3.1 acres, according to
plat made August 22, 1955, by
David S. Page, Registered Sur
veyor, recorded in plat book 2,
page 168, in the office of the
Clerk of Superior Court of
Brantley County, Georgia.
You are warned to show cause
to the contrary, if any you have,
before said court on the 17th day
of November, 1955.
This 7th day of October, 1955.
Mrs. Ruby Lee Herrin,
Deputy Clerk.
Memory, Barnes & Memory,
Attorneys for Apnl cant
First Federal Building,
Waycross, Georgia. 11|3
CITATION—Year’s Support
Georgia, Brantley County.
The return of the appraisers
setting apart twelve month’s sup
port to the family of Vilas D.
Shumake, deceased, having been
filed in my office, all persons
concerned are cited to show
cause by the 7th day of Nov.,
1955, why said application for
twelve month’s support should
not be granted. This Oct. 10,
1955.
James N. Stewart, Ordinary
11|3
CLASSIFIED
ADS
HOME MADE CAKES
See me for your home baked
cakes of all kinds. Beautiful de
corated and tiered wedding
cakes or cakes for any occasion.
Reasonable prices and satisfac
tion guaranteed. Contact Mrs.
Horace Jacobs, Route One, Na
hunta, or The Country Store, in
Nahunta. Phone 2-2441. 10127
KEYS FOUND
Bunch of keys in leather case
found last week. Owner please
see Cecil Moody at Moody Bros.
Furniture Company, Nahunta,
Ga. 10|6
Would SIOO per week interest
you? Are you between 25 and 60?
Then, write, or wire, the J. R.
Watkins Company, 659 West
Peachtree St., N. E., Atlanta. A
Watkins Route is open in Brant
ley County. 10)27
LOGS AND TIMBER WANTED
— Highest prices paid for pine
and cypress logs delivered our
plant. Will cruise and pay top
prices for standing timber —
both large and small tracts. Sa
tilla Lumber Company, Phone
2-2155, Nahunta, Georgia. 11-3
PRECISION RADIO SERVICE
Phone 269 ’l9 Albany Ave.
Waycross, Georgia
Radios and Television Sets
Repaired and Installed
“You Know We Know Radio”
FARM FOR SALE
For sale, 25 acres of land, more
or less, house of prewar lumber,
six large rooms, right beside bus
and mail route, three nice out
houses, one new tobacco barn,
four miles northwest of Hoboken,
Ga., on REA line. See R. D.
Queen, Hoboken, Ga. 10-6
WILL BUY PECANS
If you have pecans to sell, see
or call me. Will pay best price.
Mrs. Turner Highsmith, Nahunta,
Ga. Phone 2-3230. 10-14
TWO HOUSES FOR RENT
I have two houses at Atkinson
for rent. If interested contact
Louis Prescott at Prescott Gro
cery at Atkinson, Ga.
George C. Lucas
Dies in Brunswick
George C. Lucas, 53, resident
of Brunswick for two years, died
last Wednesday at the home of a
brother, Guy Lucas, in Bruns
wick. He had been ill for seve
ral months.
A native of Florida, Mr. Lucas
was a machinist and moved to
Brunswick two years ago from
Savannah. He was a Mason, a
Shriner and a past Master of
Acacia Lodge 452, Savannah.
Survivors are his stepmother,
Mrs. J. A. Lucas, Blackshear; six
sisters, Mrs. E. T. Walker Jr.,
Waycross; Mrs. J. C. Roberson,
Offerman; Mrs. A. O. Roberson,
Waycross; Mrs. Betty Walker,
Blackshear; Mrs. J. F. Allen, Ar
kansas Pass, Texas; Mrs. O. W.
Griner, Alston; two brothers,
Nathan Lucas, Tampa; and Guy
Lucas, Brunswick.
Pallbearers were T. B. Brant
ley Jr., Wendell Brantley, Waldo
Brantley, Harlan Boykin, A. C.
Banks and Otis Varnedoe.
Honorary pallbearers were Dr.
W. O. Inman, Dr. T. B. Brantley,
E. A. Johnson, Masters and Past
Masters of Acacia Lodge and the
Master and Past Masters of
Thunderbolt Masonic Lodge.
Services were held Friday, Oct.
7, at 10:30 A. M. at the Edo Mil
ler and Sons Funeral Home. The
body was then taken to Savan
nah at the Aldersgate Methodist
Church for services at 4:00 P. M.
conducted by the Rev. William
Harry Moore, pastor.
Graveside services were held in
Hillcrest Abbey Memorial Park,
conducted by Acacia Lodge No.
452, F. & A. M., of which Mr.
Lucas was a past master.
B FILLING ®
Prescriptions!;
j IS OUR MOST
II IMPORTANT SERVICE 4
^7. ' w Jr Ms
KNIGHT-VICKERS
DRUG STORE
Ernest Knight, Carey Jones
and Luke Stewart, Pharmacists
Phone 2254 Jesup, Ga.
Emmanual Baptist Church Is
Host To Piedmont Meeting
The 140th session of the Piedmont Baptist Associa
tion met Thursday, October 6, with the Emmanuel Bap
tist Church, Blackshear, and Friday, October 7, with the
Sweat Memorial Baptist Church, Waycross.
The Emmanuel Church, the
youngest of its 30 churches, en
tertained the Association for the
first time.
The meetings were conducted
by the Rev. C. Douglas Jackson,
pastor of the First Baptist Church
Brunswick, and the vice-moder
ator, Elroy Strickland, a layman
from the Nahunta Baptist Church.
Representatives were present
from Mercer University, Brew
ton Parker Junior College and
the Georgia Baptist Children’s
Home. Dr. R. T. Russell, secre
tary of evangelism, spoke on be
half of the Cooperative Program,
the channel through which Bap
tists witness and minister in the
name of Christ to the “uttermost
parts of the earth.”
The Rev. C. M. Hart, pastor
of Satilla Baptist Church, preach
ed the sermon.
Lunch was served at 12:30 P.
M. by the Emmanuel Church. A
bountiful dinner was served to
the .more than 400 guests.
The afternoon session included
reports from the executive com
mittee and on mission work,
Christian Index, American Bible
Society, temperance and other
reports.
The second day, held with the
Sweat Memorial Baptist Church,
Waycross, included reports and
the sermon by the Rev. Brooks
Hampton, pastor of the Mershon
and Beulah churches.
The Rev. Howard D. Blalock,
pastor of Emmanuel Church, was
elected moderator. Rev. Brooks
Hampton was elected vice-mod
erator. Rev. A. J. Harper, pastor
of Second Baptist Church, Way
cross, was reelected clerk for the
tenth time.
DO YOUR PART. Buy at home
yourself. Urge others to buy at
home. Money spent in your
home town will eventually come
back to you.
New Ford Trucks for's6
LEADERSHIP LOOK and more horsepower
per dollar than any other truck line!
" ' They’re here! New Ford Trucks for ’56 with more
P ower f° r y° ur money—as proved by comparisons
of net horsepower and suggested list prices of all
truck lines. Now, a Six and seven Y-8 engines, all
' Superior Short Stroke! Only new Ford Trucks give
■' . / ' m i B » j। e you modern Short Stroke power in every model from
V w X New! 8-ft. 14-ton Model F-100 . x „
Bpr ’ \ Expret* for bulky loads. Pl <*ups 1 BIG J ° S ’ and at extra cost! New
Wllr IWii- . ' \ ®h-ft- Pickup also available. Drivented Cabs, new exclusive safety features! See
M \ GVW rating 5,000 Ibe. the new Ford Trucks now!
NEW! Deep-center Lifeguard steering wheel helps pro-
, ? . . tect driver from steering column in event of collision.
.. Lifeguard door latches help keep doors from
' II jarring open on vehicle impact.
« 12-volt electrical system for better starting, better
® performance, greater electrical reserve.
■ X NEWt “Special” engines with hood air scoop, 4-barrel
I ; , , '♦ ' carburetor, and dual exhaust system for extra power!
' N£W! Tubeless tires run 25“ cooler, give extra mileage.
" iSK " -A- - > > » resist blowouts! Standard on every Ford Truck!
New Ford F -*<» "2-tonnsr”
gives choit * of four Short
Stroke engines, up to 168
Up. and fur t ranamuwion
KM
M M WB exactly! Now up to 18,000
lbs. GVW—32,OOO lbs. GCW.
to haul more payload.
KING BROS. MOTOR COMPANY
HOTebeauSt. Phone 156 Waycross, Ga.
If You’re Interested in an A-l Used Truck — Be Sure to See Your Ford Dealer
Vilas D. Shumake
Funeral Services
Held Saturday
Funeral services for Vilas D.
Shumake, age 32, were held at
Satilla Baptist Church on Satur
day, Oct. 1, with Rev. Lester
Edgy officiating. Burial was at
Hortense Cemetery.
Besides his wife he is survived
by two sons, Rodney and Alfred.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Shumake of Savannah, a bro
ther, Laurance Shumake, and a
sister, Mrs. W. C. Yarbrough,
both of Savannah.
Rhinehart Funeral Home of
Jesup was in charge of funeral
arrangements.
SUWANNEE BERMUDA
Suwannee Bermuda grass con
tinues to be the most drought
resistant and most productive
grass for the deep sands of Geor
gia, according to a research re
port from the Coastal Plain Ex
periment Station. In 1954, with
rainfall only half of normal, Su
wannee Bermuda growing on a
deep sand and fertilized with
200 pounds of nitrogen per acre
produced more than five and
one-half tons of hay per acre.
Waycross Chiropractic
Center
DR. DELLA HICKOX,
Director.
All New and Modern Equip
ment. Scientific Chiropractic
Physiotherapy; Spinal Analy
sis Physical Examination.
Complete Adjustment includ
ing X-Ray.
604 Hicks Street
Office Hours 10 to 12
2 to 5 Wed. & Sat. 10 to 12
PHONE 3345
See us now for a LEADERSHIP DEAL!
Homing Pigeon
Found on Satilla
By C. S. Kizer
A homing pigeon was found
on the Satilla River by C. S.
Kizer on Monday, Oct. 10.
The pigeon had three bands
on its legs, one bearing the name
and address, R. H. Fennell, 1217
East 52nd St., Savannah.
Mr. Kizer took the pigeon home
and fed it some laying mash. The
bird died that night but it is
not known whether the kind of
food killed it or it had suffered
some injury.
Mr. Kizer has written to Mr.
Fennell telling him of the fate
of his homing pigeon.
ONE-VARIETY COTTON
PROGRAM PAYS
When the Georgia Agricultural
Extension Service launched its
one-variety cotton improvement
program in 1931, the average
yield per acre for the five-year
period prior to that time was 187
pounds. The yield for the last
five-year period was 267 pounds
— an increase of 43 percent.
see our SAW A
m OSELL ABWIONO
: Im
• ’**7^; ||||||| It’s the biggest sales event in chain c " |
’ * wllF saw h' Bl0 ^- It’s the time for you to ? 1
buy your new chain saw. Come in ?
mMs today for a free demonstration. r
MJ ? £ SR
1 CiJ McCULLOCHI
W < MLx (Ml a
W j fRe A
IH •" 1 'M M//*uiu/ <
:srr fir
(P ncw
*(3 1 I SUPER 33 MODEL 73
most powerful sow for most powerful of
its size, weight, or price I all 1-man chain sows I
Phone 2-2721
We have them now— the new trucks with the
Wilson's Garage
Johnnie Tripp was seriously in
jured when he fell from a crane
while at work in Brunswick on
Friday of last week. He fell 15
feet and suffered a broken arm
and hip.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Loyd of
Kite, Ga., are spending two
weeks with Mr. and Mrs. G. A.
Loyd.
FISH SUPPER
Atkinson Methodist
Church
Saturday evening,
October 15,
5:30 to 7:30
For the Benefit of the
Church Building Fund.
Enjoy a Good Fish
Supper and Also Help
Us On Our
Building Fund.
Everybody Invited.
Nahunta, Ga.