Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise. Nahunta. Ga., Thursday, January 26, 1961
SECOND GROWTH OF COTTON
INCREASES INSECTS
Second growth of cotton plants
furnishes abundant food supplies
and breeding places for cotton
insects, warns Extension Agro
nomist W. H. Sell. He says that
cotton stalks that continue to
grow after cotton is picked
fatten and increase the number
of boll weevils and other insects.
He recommends that all stalks
be destroyed immediately after
TVon BUNK
?
7 1111
Maybe your picture tube needs
replacing. If so, you'll get
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possible with a
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• 12month warranty.
J We use genuine J
• SYLVANIA receiving tube* too. •
* Your Phone Call Brings Us In A Hurry •
Jimmy's Radio
& TV Service
Nahunta, Georgia
Telephone HO 2-3870
A. S. MIZELL
INSURANCE AGENCY
FIRE, THEFT, COLLISION AND LIABILITY
INSURANCE. FIRE INSURANCE FOR YOUR HOME
OR BUSINESS. HAIL INSURANCE FOR YOUR
CROPS.
Phone 2-2171 Nahunta, Ga.
Brightest spot
in her budget
v will
,* B* ®
TRYING TO BALANCE a budget can put a lady
in the darkest kind of mood. But there is
one item that always makes the job easier—
low-cost electricity.
Over the years the price of electric service
has been generally downward. In fact, the
average price per kilowatt-hour of electricity
paid by our residential customers has
dropped more than 65 per cent since 1930.
That’s quite a contrast to the over-all cost
of living, which has jumped 46 per cent.*
For instance, the cost of food has increased
52 per cent; rent, 21 per cent, and clothing,
48 per cent.
Count all the jobs electricity does for you
— cleaning, cooking, washing, lighting, heat
ing, cooling, even entertaining. Then, think
of how little you pay
You haven’t known another bargain like
this in 30 vears!
• Source of national figures on over-all cost of living,
clothing, rent and food is the U. S. Department of
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
TAX-PAYING • INVESTOR-OWNED
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CIrI Zt N WHII IV I I W f Sf tV I
Want Ads
OLD PAPERS FOR SALE
Big bundles of old newspapers
for sale, 15 cents a bundle. See
Faye Brooks, Nahunta, Ga. 2-2.
HOUSE AND THREE
ACRES LAND FOR SALE
An eight-room house and three
acres of land for sale at Hickox.
Hot and cold water, electricity,
garage and other conveniences.
J. R. Proctor, phone HO 2-2345,
Nahunta, Ga. 2-2.
SAVE sl2
Boys’ 20-inch bicycles, regular
price $39.95, several to pick from,
special price now $27.95. Moody
Bros. Furniture Co., Nahunta, Ga.
2-2.
TV SETS FOR SALE
Assume payment on 17-inch
Philco TV at $lO a month; also
21-inch Philco TV at $10.75 a
month. Nahunta TV Center,
Phone HO 2-3544, Nahunta, Ga.
1-26.
MALE HELP WANTED
Wanted 25 colored turpentine
chippers, pullers and dippers.
Prefer families. Now putting up
10 crops of virgin. Call Mr. Ro
bert Rose after 8 P. M. at CH
2-7591, Valdosta, collect. Lake
land Turpentine Co., Inc., Lake
land, Ga. 2-2.
FLOWERS! FLOWERS!
Call us for fresh flowers artic
tically arranged for all occa
sions. We specialize in funeral
blankets, sprays, wreaths and
crosses. Herrin’s Coffee Shop,
Gifts and Flowers of All Kinds,
phone HO 2-3717, Nahunta, Ga
1-31
Wood residues, chiefly saw
mill slabs and edgings, are be
coming more important each
year as raw material for the pulp
industry, reports C. Nelson
Brightwell, Extension forestry
marketing specialist.
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF SALE
GEORGIA,
BRANTLEY COUNTY:
By virtue of power of sale con
tained in that certain security
deed executed and delivered by
JULIAN B. MIDDLETON to JIM
WALTER CORPORATION by
deed dated May 12, 1958, and re
corded in Mortgage Book 40,
Pages 215-16, in the office of the
Clerk of Superior Court, Brant
ley County, Georgia, and subse
quently assigned to the under
signed by virtue of an assign
ment dated the 16th day of July,
1958, and recorded in Mortgage
Book 41, Page 314, in the office
of the Clerk of Superior Court,
Brantley County, Georgia, there
will be sold at public outcry be
fore the courthouse door in said
state and county by the under
signed, during the legal hours of
sale, on the 7th day of Febru
ary, 1961 to the highest bidder
for cash, the following described
property, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in Brantley
County, to-wit: Begin at the
Southwest corner of the land
now owned by Louis Prescott and
which was formerly owned by
Jesse Jacobs in the town of At
kinson, Georgia, and lying and
being on the North right of way
line of U. S. Highway 84 for a
point of beginning; thence run
North 1 degree 45’ East 388.3 feet
to the South right of way line of
the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
to a point; thence run South 80
degrees 10’ West 209.7 feet to a
point; thence run South 8 de
grees 15’ East 379.8 feet to a
point on the North right of way
line of U. S. Highway 84; thence
run North 80 degrees 10’ East
142.2 feet along the North right
of way line of U. S. Highway 84
and lying in the County of
Brantley, Georgia.
Said property will be sold for
the purpose of paying the indebt
edness secured by said deed; and
the proceeds of the sale will be
applied to the payment of said
indebtedness and interest and
all charges and expenses in con
nection with this foreclosure as
provided in said deed and the ba
lance, if any, will be turned over
to the said Julian B. Middleton.
This 7th day of January, 1961.
MID-STATE INVESTMENT
CORPORATION
As Attorney in Fact for
Julian B. Middleton
Perry, Walters & Langstaff
Attorneys at Law
Albany, Georgia
Georgia, Brantley County.
Under the powers in a deed
from G. W. Freeman Jr. and
Minnie I. Freeman to Jim Wal
ter Corporation, dated April 21,
1960 recorded in Deed Book 44,
Folio 391-2, Clerk's Office, Brant
ley Superior Court, the same
having been duly transferred and
assigned to the undersigned
transferee, there will be sold dur
ing the legal hours of sale on
February 7, 1961, before the
courthouse door in said County,
at public outcry, to the highest
bidder for cash, the following
property: All that tract or parcel
of land lying and being in
Brantley County, Georgia, to-wit:
From a concrete monument locat
ed at NE corner of said Bell
tract, which concrete monument
marks boundary between said
Bell tract and lands of Bruns
wick Pulp and Paper Company,
said concrete monument being on
right-of-way line of Old Post
Road, running SI degree 30’ E
tor a distance of 1046 feet to a
stake; thence turning and run
ning Sil degrees 30’ W for a
distance of 54 feet to a stake and
point of beginning; from said
point of beginning, running SBB
degrees 30' W for a distance of
290 feet to another stake; thence
turning and running S 4 degrees
45' for a distance of 150 feet to
another stake, thence turning and
running NBB degrees 30’ E for a
distance of 290 feet to another
stake; thence turning and run
ning Nil degrees 30’ E for a dis
tance of 150 feet to point of be
ginning; all the bearings being
magnetic and the parcel being
one acre more or less; said par
cel being bounded on the N by
lands of Cindy Diana Richardson
and bounded on the W and S by
lands of Pete J. Gibson and
bounded on the E by Old Post
Road.
Default having occurred under
the terms of the note secured by
said deed in the monthly install
ments due September 15. Octo
ber 15. November 15, and Decem
ber 15, 1960, the entire debt was
declared due and payable and
the power of sale contained in
said deed became operative.
Sale will be held, deed made
and proceeds thereof distributed
in strict compliance with the
terms of said deed.
Mid-State Homes, Inc.
Transferee
William K. Buffington.
Attorney
MACON. GEORGIA 2-2.
Five Georgia counties produced
more than 100.000 cords of pulp
wood each in 1959, reports C.
Nelson Brightwell, Extension
forestry marketing specialist.
If there is a budding Beethoven
in your family and he is piano
less. why not let the fact be
known with a want ad. Its an
easy way to find one.
Machinery May Replace Much Traditional
Hand Labor in Tobacco Producing Areas
Farmers, farm machinery
dealers and farm machinery
industry representatives will me
et at the University of Georgia
Center for Continuing Education
January 30-31 for the annual
Farm Mechanization Conference,
Extension Engineer H. B. Gools
by of the University of Georgia
College of Agriculture announced
this week.
This conference is held every
year to enable all those interes
ted in farm machinery to work
closer together, Mr. Goolsgy
said.
This is especially important in
view of the rapid .mechanization
taking place in the state’s agri
culture, he stated.
Registration for the conference
will be from 8:00 to 10:00 a. m.
on Monday, January 30, at the
Continuing Education Center on
the University campus.
The conference is sponsored
jointly by the Georgia Farm
Equipment Association, the At
lanta Farm Equipment Club and
the Division of Agricultural En
gineering of the University of
Georgia College of Agriculture.
Mr. Goolsby said that anyone
interested is welcome to attend
any or all sessions of the confer
ence. Information about the pro
gram may be obtained from any
Georgia county agent.
Dean C. C. Murray of the Col
lege of Agriculture will open
the first session at 10:00 a. m.
Monday.
Others on the morning program
will be Director George H. King
of the Georgia Experiment Sta
tions; J. W. Fanning, chairman
of the Division of Agricultural
Economics; and Robert F. Weth,
regional sales manager for the
Ford Motor Company.
Monday afternoon’s program
will include several speakers on
different aspects of farmstead
mechanization. Steve D. Nimmer,
of Blackshear is president of
the Georgia Farm Equipment
Association.
L. W. Eberhardt, Jr. associate
director of the Cooperative Ex
tension Service, will speak at
the banquet that evening.
Extension, research and indus
try representatives will discuss
several mechanization develop
ments and problems Tuesday
morning.
C. M. Haasl, vice-president of
the John Deere Company, Cham
blee, will address the closing lun
cheon at noon Tuesday.
New Telephone
Directory to
Be Produced
A new telephone directory for
the Brantley Telephone Company,
Inc., will be produced in the
next few weeks.
The new telephone directory
will be produced by The Brantley
Enterprise. Anyone desiring to
advertise in the new directory is
requested to contact the Enter
prise concerning space for busi
ness messages to the phone-us
ing public.
The advertisements will run
for at least a year at a flat annual
price. In other words, your ad
vertisement will stand in the
telephone directory for one year
at one price for the entire year.
The list of phone subscribers
has greatly increased during the
past year and will still further
increase during the coming
months as the telephone expan
sion program is carried out.
Present plans call for more
than 200 new phones to be in
stalled during the next six to
twelve months. This means that
advertisers will gain extra cov
erage but prices for advertise
ments have not been increased
over 1959.
83 New Industries
During i 960 a total of 83 new
industries, representing a capital
investment of $31,158,000, locat
ed on the lines of the Georgia
Power Company, E. A. Yates Jr.
vice-president and manager of
the company’s area development
division, announced this week. In
comparison, 119 new firms, re
presenting an investment of $38.-
305,000, were established in the
power company’s service area
during 1959.
Only industries with more than
$50,000 of capital outlay and em
ploying at least 10 persons are
included in the power company’s
figures.
In addition to the new plants
located in Georgia last year. 39
existing industries expanded
their facilities. These expansions
involved a $61,638,000 capital in
vestment. During 1959. a total of
76 manufacturing plants increas
ed their productive capacity at a
cost of $59,611,000.
The 83 new and 39 expanded
industries were located in 54
cities throughout Georgia.
The new plants and expansions
will provide employment of 6.-
910 Georgians at annual wages of
$23,914,700. Manufacturing plants
and additions established during
1959 provided 10.236 jobs total
ing $30,857,000 in wages. ।
Farm Machinery
Conference Set
For Jan. 30-31
Washington — Machines now
under development may one day
relieve the nation’s 750,000 to
bacco farms of the hand labor
now required to “make a crop,”
says the current issue of Tobac
co News, published by The To
bacco Institute, Inc.
Stephen E. Wrather, director
of the Tobacco Division of the
U. S. Agricultural Marketing Ser
vice, writes in Tobacco News that
hand labor required in tobacco
fields today is nearly the same
as when tobacco-growing started
in this country.
Tobacco demands from 300 to
500 man-hours of hand labor per
acre, far more than any other
field crop, he writes. Tobacco
growers also find field labor in
creasingly hard to obtain.
Today, agricultural colleges at
three tobacco-state universities
are working on the mechaniza
tion problem. University of Ken
tucky researchers have develop
ed a method of pelleting tiny to
bacco seed in clay so they can
be panted in the field by a me
chanical planter.
A leaf-picking machine is be
ing developed by the University
of Connecticut for cigar-binder
leaf grown in the Connecticut-
Massachusetts area. At North
Carolina State College, experi
ments are under way in bulk cur
ing of packed leaves, a method
which would eliminate the la
borious stringing of leaves on a
stick, the age-old method.
it
. . . . the repair department at
Nahunta TV Center, Nahunta,
Ga., will enable you to sit down
before the sharpest picture your
tired old eyes ever enjoyed. For
top-notch repair call HO 2-3544.
MWUNTA
^CEMFER
^^23544
NAHUNTA, GEORGIA.
♦ PRICES SLASHED!
GOODYEAR
TIRE SA E
TIRE SALE
reduced to only I
f 'SSsJII - A■■ 5k Fits most pre-1957 ■
■ ■AC* models of Pl y - I
OJ (/ f €■■ □ □ mouth, Ford, Chev- ■
I ZV )) i OtO '■ *■ ■ W rolet, Hudson,
ff/ fz £ Jjj* 4 Uh H ■ Nash, Studebaker. ■
X A \ V I Studebaker. ■
*u^ I
i Hudson.
■llw »15*° I
[hihwikel .~ 1
PllOVElt Ue
Wilson & Wainright Oil Co.
Phone HO 2-2721
South Georgia
Baseball League
Meeting Planned
The annual meeting of the
South Georgia Baseball League
will be held at 8:00 P. M. on
Friday night, Jan. 27, in Jesup,
at the Modern Trim Shop, 456 E
Pine Street.
Any team interested in joining
the league is asked to have a re
presentative present. Teams in
the league last year included
Hinesville, Jesup, Arco of
Brunswick, Patterson, Glennville,
Screven, Nahunta and Sterling.
New officers for the league will
be elected Friday night and plans
made for the coming baseball
season, according to Norman L.
Mobley, president.
Delay is the thief of time. It
is easy to put off subscribing to
your weekly newspaper, the
Brantley Enterprise, but it is also
easy to “DO IT NOW.”
ATTENTION
Mr. Farmer
Take the guesswork out of farming.
Have your soil tested in Blackshear or
Hoboken Friday, Feb. 3.
The Mobile
Soil Testing Unit
OF C. 0. SMITH GUANO COMPANY
will be at Hoboken until noon on Feb. 3
and at Harris Milling Co., Blackshear, in
the afternoon on that date.
BRING YOUR SOIL SAMPLES
FOR FREE TESTING.
Bring as many samples as you like.
Don’t Guess —
Soil Testi
HARRIS MILLING CO.
J. R. (Rep) Harris. Agent for
C. 0. Smith Guano Co.
OF DOUGLAS, GEORGIA
Distributors of Sinclair Products. We invite you to use
Our Latest Tire Changing Equipment
Dr. Charles H. Little
OPTOMETRIST
607 Isabella Street Telephone
Waycross, Georgia At 3-5144
M FILLING । I
PRESCRIPTIONS^
IS OUR MOST
important SERVICE J g I
1.
Ernest Knight
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, Ga.
DRUGGIST
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry St.
Nahunta, Ga.