Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, May 12, 1960
Brantley Enterprise
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
Carl Broome .... Editor and Publisher
Mri, Carl Broome Associate Editor
Second class postage paid at Nahunta, Ga.
Official Organ of Brantley County
Address all mail to Nahunta, Georgia.
Brightens
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Phone HO 2-3544, Nahunta, Ga.
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale on Monday, May 9, a
total of 575 head of hogs and 146
head of cattle were sold for a total
volume of $24,431.32.
Feeder pigs sold up to $14.70 with
grade hog prices as follows: RI, $15.-
13; LI, $15.30; and No. 2, $14.64.
Calves sold up to $23.80, steers and
heifers up to $22.25, cows up to $21.-
10 and bulls up to $20.50.
For pick-up or contact for sales please call
Woodrow Wainright Phone HO 2-3471 Nahunta,
Georgia.
Waycross Livestock Market
L. C. Pruitt, W. H. Inman and
O. A. Thompson, Operators and Managers
See us W!
on a "truck
J
WILSON'S GARAGE
Phone HO 2-2721 Nahunta, Ga.
UJ INTERNATIONAL
IVI.TRUCKS
Frances Saddler Is
Crowned Miss
Nahunta High School
The Senior Class of Nahunta
School presented their annual
beauty pageant Thursday night,
May 5, at the high school gym
nasium.
The judges for the pageant con
sisted of three officers from
Glynco Naval Base in Brunswick,
and two women teachers from
Patterson.
Miss Frances Saddler was
crowned “Miss Nahunta High” by
Mr. Russell Huffman who was
master of ceremonies for the oc
casion.
Miss Lynn Herrin was crown
ed “Miss Nahunta Junior High”
by Miss Grace Middleton, last
year’s Junior High Queen.
Miss Sue Wilson was crowned
“Little Miss Nahunta” by Miss
Nancy Moody, last year’s Little
Miss Nahunta.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thomas of
Americus, Ga. announce the birth
of a baby girl on May 4, weigh
ing eight pounds and three and
one-half ounces. She has been
named Tena Leslie.
Little Tena is the granddaugh
ter of Mrs. Aaron Sadler and Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. Thomas of Na
hunta.
Political
Announcement
TO THE VOTERS OF
BRANTLEY COUNTY
This is to announce that I have
qualified as a candidate for Re
presentative subject to the rules
and regulations of the Democra
tic Primary to be held on Sep
tember 14, 1960.
Your support and influence in
behalf of my candidacy for this
important office will be greatly
appreciated.
Respectfully Yours
J. Robert Smith
Legal
Advertising
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. Ro
berson, heirs of W. M. Roberson,
Sallie Roberson, Mrs. Wanell R.
Brooker, Miss Eppie Roberson,
L. E. Roberson, J. R. Roberson,
Clinton Roberson, Wayne De
velopment Company, Amos
Buess, heirs of Amos Buess,
Charles Buess, W. T. Highsmith,
heirs of W. T. Highsmith, Mrs.
W. T. Highsmith, J. S. Herrin,
heirs of J. S. Herrin, Mrs. J. S.
Herrin, A. R. Herrin, J. L.
Stacy, Aubrey Herrin, Laverne
Rowell Morgan, Sherry Morgan,
James T. Altman, Marvene Alt
man, Anita Altman, J. C. Allen,
Harry Smith, Adams Louisiana
Co., 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 corpor
ations whose charters have ex
pired by operation of law:
Take notice that Edgar Moul
trie Morgan 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 original
ly Wayne County, but now Brant
ley County, Georgia, more parti
cularly described as follows: Be
ginning at an iron pipe on the
south side of U. S. Highway No.
84 where said highway intersects
the land of J. C. Allen and
Harry Smith; thence south 8 de
grees 35 minutes west a distance
of 235 feet; thence north 81 de
grees 30 minutes west a distance
of 420 feet to an iron pipe at the
lands of J. C. Allen; thence north
8 degrees 35 minutes east along
the lands of J. C. Allen a distance
of 235 feet to an iron pipe on
the south side of said U. S. High
way No. 84; thence south 81 de
grees 30 minutes east along said
highway a distance of 420 feet
to the point or place or begin
ning, and being tracts 1,2, 3,4,
and 6 as shown on plat made
April 11, 1960, by David S Page,
Georgia Registered Land Sur
veyor, recorded in plat book 3,
page 143, of the public records of
Brantley County, Georgia.
You are warned to show cause
to the contrary, if any you have,
before said court on the 15th day
of June, 1960.
This 4th day of May, 1960.
Mrs. Ruby Lee Herrin,
Deputy Clerk.
Memory, Barnes & Memory
Attorneys for Applicant
First Federal Building
Waycross, Georgia
Oswell
Award
Oswell Smith of Patterson was
presented the Sportsman's Clubs
Conservation Award in Forestry
on Tuesday night of this week
in recognition of his contribution
to forestry advancements in
Pierce county.
The award, an engraved certi
ficate, was presented by Ranger
Willard Davis of the Pierce
County Forestry Unit during the
PTA program at Patterson High
School.
Awarded by the Georgia
Sportsmen Federation in cooper
ation with the Georgia Forestry
Commission, the Pierce county
award went to the Patterson vo
cational agriculture teacher “as
a token of recognition of out
standing service to the communi
ty in the field of forestry con
servation.”
Mr. Smith has worked closely
with his FFA boys in carrying
out forestry projects and empha
sizing forestry education during
his 21 years at Patterson.
On March 22 of this year the
Patterson chapter placed second
in the district’s first annual
Forestry Field Day events at
Broadhurst.
The forestry awards program
is being conducted throughout
the state and will bring attention
to the importance of forestry
conservation and to those who
have played major roles in the
continuing program.
Mr. Smith will now be con
sidered for recognition in the re
gional awards program at a later
date this month.
Winners in the five regions
will be judged on a state level
and the one selected will be pre
sented an engraved trophy by
Lt. Governor Garland Byrd at a
special ceremony at the capitol
in Atlanta on June 4.
LAUNDRY VENTILATION
In a laundry room, doors and
windows should be arranged so
as to give cross ventilation be
cause of steam, odors, and heat
unavoidable in such rooms, says
Paul Crawford, engineer, Agri
cultural Extension Service. A
small exhaust fan will help make
the room more comfortable in
summer and do a good job of
removing vapors in the winter, he
adds.
Sows should be fed so that
they gain approximately one
pound per day during gestation,
declare animal husbandmen,
Agricultural Extension Service.
25
We Cordially Invite
our city neighbors to join us this year, as we cele
brate the 25th birthday of rural electrification.
THERE’S A GOOD REASON. City jobs are more
secure, paychecks fatter, and business is better,
since rural Americans banded together to serve
themselves with electric light and power.
THIS YEAR THEY WILL BUY over a billion dollars
worth of electric appliances and equipment — made
and sold in cities and towns. And this market didn’t
until rural America was electrified by member-own
ed, private enterprises, such as ours.
THOUSANDS OF MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN —
our city neighbors — live happier, safer lives today,
because of this great surge of buying power provided
by the growing needs of rural America. That’s why
we’re proud to say . . .
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
is good for All Americans
Your Satilla REA
Is A Leader In The March Os
PROGRESS
Satilla REA
' Headquarters In Alma, Georgia
Smith Gets
Forestry
in
Nahunta Baseball Team
Drops Doubleheader
The Nahunta Baseball Team
went down to defeat Sunday to
the Arco nine in both games of
a doubleheader. The first game
showed Arco on top 13 to 9, with
the battery of D. Drury and W.
Cleland taking that loss.
The second game left Arco on
top 7 to 4, with the battery of R.
Luke and B. Chancey taking that
loss.
Two of the Nahunta stalwarts
hit home runs Sunday, Ben Jones
and Harry Raulerson sharing
those honors.
Sunday, May 15, Nahunta will
be host to Glennville for two
games on the home diamond here.
Hinesville is the team to beat in
the South Georgia League. First
game at 2:00 P. M.
Youths Under 18
Need Working Permit
“Young people under 18 who i
work must have employment
certificate issued by their city
or county school superintendent,”
Georgia Commissioner of Labor
Ben T. Huiet said here this week
in reminding parents and others
of Georgia Labor Laws govern
ing hours and type of work
children can do.
“During summer vacation,”
Huiet stated, “boys from 12 to
16 may work 40 hours a week in
wholesale and retail business
such as grocery and drug stores,
but they are not permitted to
work after 9 P. M. The same ap
plies to girls 14 to 16.
“During school sessions the
law provides that boys 12 to 16
and girls 14 to 16 may work four
hours a day after school, eight
hours on Saturdays and. holidays,
but not after 9 P. M.”
Huiet said Georgia law does
not limit the type of work nor
hours .minors 16 to 18 may work,
but they are required to have
employment certificates.
Dr. Charles H. Little
OPTOMETRIST
607 Isabella Street Telephone
Waycross, Georgia At 3-5144
YEARS of SERVICE
9 Georgia Counties
Soil Stewardship
Week to Be Observed
Soil Stewardship Week is being
observed the week of May 22
through 29, it is announced by
James A. Ross, Work Unit Con
ervationist. Soil Stewardship
Week is a time when the im
portance of soil conservation is
stressed.
Farmers of this nation at one
time were wasting and abusing
soil at a rate faster than any
other nation.
About 25 years ago our leaders
saw that if something wasn’t
done about the soil, there would
only be a short time before we
could not produce enough food
for our own country.
“The soil is our basic natural
resources,” Mr. Ross stated. “All
life depends on what is grown
from the soil of the earth. The
people in Brantley county are
blessed with a fine type of soil
for growing everything from
trees to tobacco and food crops.”
The growing realization of the
need for conservation of the soil
has led many farmers to improve
methods of soil usage.
The soil is the “bank” from
which is drawn the greater part
of man’s need of all animal life.
The soil combined with air and
water, is man’s greatest asset.
The soil can either be built up
or ruined. With proper usage the
soil will go on producing bless
ings for mankind for many thou
sands of years. But if our soil
is depleted or washed away, then
mankind suffers increasing po
verty and need.
DANCE REVUE
Sponsored by Junior Woman s Club
Presented by
JACKIE MATHISON
Nahunta Grammar School
Thursday, May 19, at 8:00 P. M.
ADMISSION: Children 25c, Adults 50c
STARTING 25 YEARS AGO
WITH A VERY SMALL
NUMBER OF PATRONS
12,000
Subscribers
The people of Brantley County
are urged to adopt every possible
means of conserving our soil and /
build it up for the benefit of the
present generation and for the
future of mankind throughout
the ages.
PEANUTS
Peanuts, particularly the
Spanish and bunch types, pro
duce most of their blooms from
lower points around the base of
the plant, states J. Frank McGill,
agronomist, Agricultural Exten
sion Service. When this part is
covered with soil in cultivation
there often is no further increase
in numbers of blooms on the
covered portion of the stem.
A tried and proven ad
vertising medium—the col
umns of your hometown
newspaper.
WE ARE TODAY
SERVING OVER
Ford and Chevrolet
Transmission
Overhauls
$99.00
Guaranteed.
Comparable prices on all
other transmissions.
Financing available.
STRICK'S
Transmission Shop
Phone TUxedo 2-4551
St. Marys, Ga.