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Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, February 3, 1958
BRANTLEY ENTERPRISE
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
CARL BROOME EDITOR and PUBLISHER
Entered at the Post Office at Nahunta, Georgia as
second class matter under the act of March 3, 1879.
Official Organ of Brantley County
LEGAL
ADVERTISING
Georgia, Brantley County.
This is to notify all persons
concerned that Mrs. Melissa C.
Shuman as administratrix of the
estate of A. J. B. Shuman, de
ceased, has filed with me an ap
plication for leave to sell the fol
lowing lands belonging to said
estate, for the purpose of making
distribution, and that I will pass
upon said application in my of
fice in Nahunta, Ga., at the
March term, 1956, of my Court:
Description of property to be
sold: 165 acres more or less of
land in the ninth land district of
Brantley County, Georgia, there
being 105 acres more or less in
the North-east comer of lot No.
169 and 60 arcres more or less
in the South East corner of lot
170, bounded as a whole as fol
lows: North by lands of Perry
Strickland; East by the run of a
branch; South by lands of Rufus,
Lanie and Cleo Shuman, and
West by the original land lot lines
of said lots.
This Bth day of Feb., 1956.
Claude A. Smith, Ordinary.
Brantley County, Ga.
C. Winton Adams,
Atty, for A. J. B. Shuman Estate.
3|l
FOUND
The Best L. P. Gas Company
in South Georgia to do business
with. Brantley Gas .Company,
Nahunta, Ga. Phone 2-2222.
FOR RENT
Propane Gas Tanks, all sizes,
new. Brantley Gas Company, Na
hunta, Georgia. Phone 2-2222.
No serious damage from dis
eases of insects has been observ
ed on Emerald Zoysia improved
hybrid lawn grass in tests to date.
Today it takes $1.14 to buy
what $1 bought in the store in
1947-49, say home improvement
specialists for the Agricultural
Extension Service.
Strickland Insurance Agency
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PHONE 2-3375 NAHUNTA, GA.
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PHONE 2-3375 NAHUNTA, GA.
Georgia, Brantley County.
To all Whom it may concern:
Mrs. Rosa Lee Manning, now
Mrs. Rosa Lee Loper, having fil
ed her petition seeking leave to
encumber all real estate set a
side to herself and her minor
children out of the Estate of
Omer L. Manning, deceased, as a
year’s support, this is to cite all
and singular the persons who
may be interested therein, to be
and appear before me at the
Courthouse in Nahunta, Georgia,
on the 20th day of February, 1956
at 10:00 A. M., and show cause
if any they can, why the pray
ers of said petition should not
be granted.
Witness my official signature,
this 7 day of February, 1956.
Claude A. Smith, Ordinary,
Brantley County, Georgia.
2|9
CITATION—Year’s Support.
Georgia, Brantley County.
The return of the appraisers
setting apart twelve month’s
support to the family of Mathew
H. Rowell, deceased, having been
filed in my office, all persons
concerned are cited to show cause
by the sth day of March, 1956,
why said application for twelve
month’s support should not be
granted. This Feb. 7, 1956.
Claude A. Smith, Ordinary.
C. Winton Adams, Atty. 3jl
CITATION—Administration.
Georgia, Brantley County.
To All Whom It May Concern:
Fred Dowling having applied
for Permanent Letters of Admin
istration on the estate of S. T.
Newsome, late of said county,
this is to cite the creditors and
net of kin of S. T. Newsome to
be and appear at my office with
in the time allowed by law, and
show cause , if any they can, why
permanent adminstration should
not be granted Fred Dowling on
S. T. Newsome estate.
Witness my hand and official
signature, this 8 day of Feb. 1956.
Claude A. Smith, Ordinary.
C. Winton Adams, Atty. 3|l
. Religiously Speaking
By Rev. Howard D. Blalock, Pastor
Emmanuel Baptist Church, Blackshear
HOMES ARE CREATED
Earl Wilson tells of a Houston
rabbi who received this thank
you note from a bridegroom he
had married: “Dear Rabbi, I want
to thank you for the beautiful
way you brought my happiness to
a conclusion”.
This is a slip of the pen, but
there are married people who
discover their happiness has come
to an abrupt end for reasons
other than a slip of the pen.
The San Angelo, Texas, Stand
ard-Times’’ carried this want ad
recently: “Lost, one wife, some
where between wedding day and
15th anniversary, in the vicinity
of kitchen sink, PTA meetings,
WSCS, Cub Scout den meetings,
Dollar Day, pre-school clinic,
Community League, church soc
ials, Brownie Troop meetings, Lit
tle baseball transportation, music
school, grocery store, cooking
school, bridge club and spring
housecleaning. Has kind disposit
ion, bites only when tired. Lone
some husband will be glad to
have her back”.
Dr. Kristern Sorheim, of the
Royal Norwegian Ministry of Ed
ucation, makes this observation
about American homes. “America
lives mostly outside the home. All
night your streets are crowded
with cars. You have a profession I
known as ‘baby sitters’. Even in
the house, where sometimes you
have to be, you aren’t living in
it but away. You are listening
and looking at something else,
you have the radio on in one
room, the television on in an
other. You have roofs, yes, and
a fairyland of beautiful and use
ful things urider them, everything
money can buy. But not many of
you have what we Norwegians
would call homes underneath
your roofs. Because homes you
have to create out of yourselves,
and for that you haven’t the time.
J. B. Priestly has some interest
ing words to say about “not
going”, an art which most of us
need to develop. He says: “One
of the delights known to age, and
beyond the grasp of youth, is
that of not going. When we are
young it is almost agony not to
go. We feel that we are being
left out of life, that the whole
wonderful procession is sweeping
by, probably forever, while we
are weeping behind bars. Thus
we torment ourselves in the Ap
ril of our time.
“Now, not only do I not care
whether I receive an invitation,
but I can find delight in know
ing that I am NOT GOING. But
don’t I enjoy myself? By NOT
GOING, that is just what I am
trying to do”.
But America is busy. We ha
ven’t the time to heed the words
of Dr. John Sutterland Bonnell,
pastor of the Fifth Avenue Pres
byterian Church in New York
City. He said, “One cannot build
a home on a card table, a can
opener and a cocktail shaker . . .
One of the deepest joys of life is
to spend time with one’s children,
putting them to bed and listen-
FOR SALE
The Best L. P. Gas that you
can buy and good service too.
Brantley Gas Company, Nahunta,
Georgia. Phone 2-2222.
WANTED
To sell more Gas Ranges, Gas
Tanks, Water Heaters & Space
Heaters. Brantley Gas Company,
Nahunta, Georgia. Phone 2-2222.
This man can give you
dependable
delivery of
THE
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SCIENCE
MONITOR
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Name
Address
* City Zone State
ing to their prayers. God pity
those parents who bequeath to
their children the memory only
of a long succession of baby sit
ters”.
Burton Hillis was right when
he said in “Better Homes &
Gardens”, “There are better
things than curfews to bring kids
home and off the street at night:
A mother singing in the kitchen
and a dad whistling around the
house”.
Nels Ferre, in his book “Mak
ing Religion Real”, says . . .
“families could profitably slow
down in what they call the ‘rat
race’ of life. Why be chased by
life? Why let work chase us
when we should be the chaser of
any work we have to do? Why
be too busy to live?”
Then he suggests that we take
time to create a home. “Children
can have no better inheritance
than believing parents. No mem
ory can be holier for a child than
worshiping at the family altar
. . . Many of us have inherited
great riches from our parents —
the bank account of their per
sonal faith and family prayers”.
James Condon
Passes Away in
Camden County
Funeral services for James
Condon, 96, who died Monday
night at his home in Camden
county following a short illness,
will be held Thursday, Feb. 9,
at 11:00 a.m. at Baker Chapel
Methodist Church in Camden
county.
Mr. Condon was a native of
Waterford, Ireland. He was born
in 1858, but a great portion of
his life was spent in Georgia.
Survivors are two daughters,
Mrs. Lucille Drury of Brunswick
and Miss Eva Condon of Atkin
son; three sons, Lester W. Con
don and Sheppard Davis of At
kinson and Sank Davis of Pierce
county.
Darling Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.
Extension Service entomolo
gists say grasshoppers should be
controlled on fencerows, ditch
banks, -and adjoining fields be
fore they move into tobacco.
International
daily
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Blitch Raps
High Court's .
School Edict
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Con
gresswoman Iris Blitch, in an
earnest speech in the House of
Representatives described as “in
iquitous” the decision of the
United States Supreme Court on
May 17, 1954, against segregation
in public schools.
Occasion for Congresswomen
Blitch’s remarks was a floor dis
cussion on “Interposition: The
Barrier Against Tyranny,” led by
Congresswoman Blitch’s remarks
Congressman John Beli Williams
of Mississippi.
“The clear threat to constitu
tional government has been made
by the members of the United
States Supreme Court,” she said,
“and I take second place to no
one in my respect for the three
divisions of Government of the
United States. But my reverence
for one is not superseded by awe
of either of the other two.”
Congresswoman Blitch pointed
out that Thomas Jefferson, one of
the framers of the Constitution
foresaw the possibility of a “de
generated” court when that docu
ment was written. “His protesta
tions were overruled by Alexan
der Hamilton,” she explained,
“who argued, in effect, that there
would be so few men in the
Nation really qualified for mem
bership on the Court that it
would be impossible for the Court
to be composed of men other than
those of the most superior abili
ty-
“The mistake,” she said, “was
made in that the qualifications of
Justices were not spelled out. And
today we have a Court that by
one decision has usurped the po
wers of Congress and the rights
of the States.”
“Furthermore,” she said “by
predicating its decision not on
law and not on legal precedent,
the Court has itself established a
precedent which, if followed in
any successive decision, they have
jeopardized the liberty of every
individual citizen of this Nation
for all time to come, unless steps
are taken to obliterate the excess
of power in which the Court
wallows.”
Georgia’s only Congresswoman
closed her fiery remarks by say
ing, “I would like to warn my
colleagues of all parties and all
shades of social opinion that if
they would be mindful of the de
privation of individual human li
berty, and if they would deserve
the noble heritage which has
come to all of us, then they must
Phones 171-172
Bishop Arthur J. Moore, left, and Dr. Pierce Harris, right, make
final plans for a winter camp meeting at St. Simons Island, Feb.
19-26
Camp Meeting to Begin
At Epworth February 19
The first camp meeting ever held at Epworth-by-the-
Sea is slated Feb. 19-26.
Sponsored by the Waycross District of the Methodist
Church, it is expected to draw people from all over
Georgia. A cordial welcome is extended to all denomina
tions. ;
Preaching will be by Bishop
Arthur J. Moore and Rev. Pierce
Harris.
The two well-known Georgia
churchmen say it *will have the
flavor of old time camp meetings,
with singing and preaching twice
daily.
The assembly center, located
on St. Simons Island, has modern
cottages and dining hall for the
comfort of persons attending the
whole week.
Rev. James R. Webb, Waycross
District Superintendent, said
prayers and plans have been go
ing on for months, and it is the
hope of Methodists in this area
“a great beginning” will mean
the Camp Meeting will be a per
manent part of Epworth-by-the-
Sea.
Agronomists for the Agricul
tural Extension Service advise
Georgia corn growers to have a
bout 8,000 to 10,000 plants per
a^re for best results.
join their colleagues of the South
in a fight to correct this evil, or,
as sure as the sun sets this after
noon, we, in turn, will have no
heritage of liberty to pass on to
our children, much less to gen
erations yet unborn.”
Tebeau and Carswell Ave.
J. B. Preston, agronomist - to
bacco, for the Extension Service,
has warned tobacco farmers not
to allow insecticides being used
on cotton or other crops to drift
into tobacco fields.
— CANCER’S
Any sore that does not heal
0) A lump or thickening in the breast
or elsewhere
| Unusual bleeding or discharge
| Any change in a wart or mole
[Persistent indigestion or difficulty
in swallowing
Persistant hoarseness or cough
Any change in normal bowel habits
\ 1 Hone of these symptoms necessarily moons
P I that you hove cancer but any om of them
I should send you to yovr doctor
J GIVE TO THE
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
i—
GEORGIA