Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Nov. 24, 1960
Brantley Enterprise
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
Carl Broome ..... Editor and Publisher
Mrs. Carl Broome Associate Editor
Second class postage paid at Nahunta, Ga.
Official Organ of Brantley County
Address all mail to Nahunta, Georgia.
■ ’^7 LI DIFFERENT SIZES 1
;Jisize for every office cecord^H
I
HR ■ ♦
legal sin $ 4 70 y
CHECK SIZE $ 2 45 '
Transfer your old records into Pronto Files and use your
steel equipment over and over again. Built of 275-lb. test
fibre board reinforced with steel on the shell and the four
corners of the drawers as well. Can be interlocked into
solid units and stacked to the ceiling. Will last a lifetime.
Office gray or olive green finish. Made in 17 other sizes.
The Blackshear Times
Would "No-Advertising"
How Much
Cost Your Business?
* ♦ *
Some businessmen look upon ad
vertising as an expense. When
expenses must be cut, the ad
vertising budget is first to
come under the knife.
The trouble with that method
is—it just won’t work.
The fact overlooked is that
newspaper advertising repre
sents only a fractional part
of the cost of goods sold.
Advertising is the instrument
which brings the greatest returns
when it is intelligently planned.
Advertising becomes expensive
when you don’t use enough.
It’s like failing to lubricate
a piece of valuable machinery.
You save the cost of lubri
cant, but eventually you have
to pay the big repair bill—
and production losses while the
machinery is idle.
♦ ♦ *
BRANTLEY ENTERPRISE
THE MORE YOU TELL
THE MORE YOU SELL
CHEMICAL FINISHES
FOR FABRIC
More and more chemical fin
ishes are being used along with
mechanical finishes for fabric us
ed in clothing, says Miss Peggy
Ott, clothing specialist for the
Georgia Agricultural Extension
Service. Primary purpose of these
finishes is no longer to disguise
imperfections in fabrics, but to
improve the appearance and per
formance, she says. New finishes
impart properties to fabric that
they do not inherently possess
such as crease resistance, per
manent pleating, water resistance,
spot and stain resistance, mildew
resistance, mothproofing, antista
tic and antibacteria.
Burn trash regularly, in small
quantities, in a safe place and at
a safe distance from buildings,
preferably in a good receptacle,
urge engineers with the Agricul
tural Extension Service.
Wi
| NoW« THE TIME TO EXAMINE VOUR »
I ^OOCi KUTIHIr PLANT, CHECK THE K
■ electric wiring anp nur I
|j kept ourtiPf. Safety wirt
’■ LITTLE WANT ADS
Rev. W. 0. Britt
Accepts Pastorage
Os Lulaton Church
Rev. W. O. Britt of St. Simons
has accepted the pastorate of the
Lulaton Baptist Church and will
begin his pastorate with preach
ing services next Sunday, Nov.
27.
Preaching services will be held
at Lulaton each second and four
th Sunday, with Sunday school at
10:00 A. M. and preaching at
11:00 A. M.
Nahunta High School
Basketball Schedule
HOME GAMES
Nov. 29—Screven
Dec. 6 Surrency
Dec. 13 —Blackshear
Jan. 10—Jesup
Jan. 17—Hoboken
Jan. 20 -Camden County
Feb. 7- Manor
Feb. 10—Folkston
AWAY GAMES
Nov. 22—Surrency
Dec. 2—St. George
Dec. 9 —Darien
Dec. 16—Atkinson County
Jan. 3—Folkston
Jan. 6 Nichols
Jan. 14—Camden County
Jan. 24—Jesup
Jan. 31—Blackshear
Feb. 3—Pineview-
Game Time 7:00 P. M.
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale on Monday, Nov. 14,
700 head of hogs and 131 head of
cattle were offered for a total volume
of $25,848.66.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $17.93
with Li’s at $17.94, No. 2’s at $17.01,
No. 3’s at $16.78, No. 4’s at $17.95
and No. s’s at $18.15. Feeder pigs
sold up to $24.25, with sows up to
$16.00 and large males up to $10.50.
Calves sold up to $20.00, steers and
heifers up to $19.00 and cows up to
$16.00.
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
TOY Clearance SALE
TOY PRICES REDUCED 20%
New Merchandise at Record-breaking Low Prices.
Prices on all our big stock of toys have been
slashed 20 percent, to give you the biggest savings
ever offered in this section.
Select Toys Now and Use Our Lay-away Plan. Here Are
Some of the Many Toys Now Offered at 20% Off the
Regular Price.
Automatic Score Pinball Sets. Farm Tractor Sets.
Badminton Sets. Bingo Sets.
Electric Train Sets. Rocket Launchers.
Ironing Board Sets. Country Doctor Kits.
Washer and Dryer Sets. Tool Chests.
Footballs with Kicking Tees. World Globes.
Archery Sets. Dump Trucks.
Cowboy Hats. Wheel Goods.
ALL BICYCLES, TRICYCLES, WAGONS AND OTHER WHEEL GOODS
INCLUDED IN THIS SENSATIONAL SALE. MANY OTHER EXCITING
AND USEFUL TOYS TO CHOOSE FROM. EXCITING
CHRISTMAS IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER. COME IN NOW AND
MAKE SELECTIONS FOR THAT HAPPY TIME REMEMBER FACH
AND EVE RY TOY WILL BE SOLD AT 20% BELOW ^HE REG^AR
i KILL.
Nahunta,
1961 Cotton
Program
On Tuesday, December 13, 1960,
cotton farmers will vote in a
referendum on marketing quotas
for the 1961 crop of upland cot
ton.
If you engaged in the produc
tion of upland cotton in 1960,
you are eligible to vote in the
referendum.
At least two-thirds of the
growers voting must approve the
quotas if they are to continue
in effect.
Unlike the last 2 years, there
will be only one allotment-price
support program available to
growers for their 1961 upland
cotton crop. “Regular” farm al
lotments will be determined for
all farms growing cotton, and
price support at one announced
rate will be available to all grow
ers who comply with their al
lotments.
The choice which growers will
make in the referendum is be
tween marketing controls for the
1961 upland cotton crop and price
support at not less than 70 per
cent of parity, or no marketing
controls on the crop and support
at 50 percent of parity, as direct
ed by law. Whether or not .mar
keting quotas are approved for
the, 1961 cotton crop, allotments
will remain in effect as a means
of determining eligibility for
price support.
WESTERN AUTO STORE
that headache has a meaning
Pain of any sort is the alarm bell which Nature signals
"Fire.” Stopping the ringing of the fire alarm does not put
out the fire, rather it permits a small blaze to grow into a
holocaust. Remember this when a headache occurs. It is trif
fling with tragedy to treat a headache, rather than its cause.
The intermediate causations of headache are manifold. They
include digesive, eliminative, kidney and heart troubles, eye
troubles infected tonsils, nerve pressure from spinal condi
tions, and in women disorders of the generative tract.
Research has revealed that the most common cause of
headaches can be traced to the cervical vertebrae (the bones
of the neck). This is the work for which your Chiropractor has
been educated and trained; and which he performs exceed
ingly well.
A Public Service Feature By
TUTEN CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
Corner Frances & Nichols Street AT 5-1559
COMPLETE FACILITIES FOR COLORED
'W-. »J» •* • - - • • #**:
Polk County
UNIQUE WATER SUPPLY s^' ’
Polk County, located on Georgia’s northwest border, was
formed from Floyd and Paulding County lands in 1851 to be
come Georgia’s 95th county. With a total area of 321 square
miles, this county, which ranks 97th in size, was named for
James K. Polk, eleventh President of the United States.
Cedartown, the county seat, marks the site of a Cherokee
Indian village and a large spring. This abundant water supply
originally attracted white settlers to the area, and continues
to provide Cedartown’s water supply. Today, a textile com
pany and a tire and rubber company operate branches in
Cedartown. Additional industrial plants produce industrial
chemical products, foundry steel specialties, plow and road
machinery. Other Polk County towns are Esom Hill, Akers,
Aragon, Fish, Seney, Etna, Van Wert and Rockmart. Farm
ing includes cotton, com and small grains among the princi
pal crops.
In Georgia counties where the sale of beer and ale is legal,
the United States Brewers Foundation works constantly to as
sure their sale under pleasant, orderly conditions. Believing
that strict law enforcement serves the best interest of the peo
ple of Georgia, the Foundation stresses close cooperation with
the Armed Forces, law enforcement and governing officials.
Georgia’s
Beverage of
Moderation
Dr. A. E. Tuten
By Dr. A. E. Tuten
« United States Brewers
\ Foundation
9 Georgia Division
• Suite 224, 710 Peachtree St., ft. E.
Atlanta, Georgia
Georgia