Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, June 15, 1961
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.
Legal Advertising
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
POWER IN SECURITY DEED
Georgia, Brantley County
There will be sold on the first
Tuesday in July, 1961, within the
legal hours of sale, before the
Courthouse door in Nahunta,
Brantley County, Georgia, at
public outcry to the highest bid
der for cash, the tract of land
conveyed in said Security Deed
from Hugh C. Daniels to NIX
AND COMPANY, INC., a Geor
gia Corporation, dated April 4,
1959, and recorded in the office
of the Clerk of Superior Court of
said State and County in Deed
Book 42, Page 325-27, of said
County records, and described as
follows:
All that tract or parcel of land
situate, lying and being in the
1493rd District, Georgia Militia,
Brantley County, Georgia, known
as “Headright Land,” located on
State Highway No. 110, being
more particularly described in a
plat of said land appearing of re
cord in Plat Book No. 3, Page 72,
in the Office of the Clerk of
Superior Court of Brantley Coun
ty, Georgia, which is hereby in
corporated and made a part of
this deed. This lot of land is a
portion of the ten acre tract of
land presently owned by Nadine
Daniels.
Said sale being made for pur
pose of enforcing payment of in
debtedness secured by said Se
curity Deed, the whole of
which is now due, including
principal and costs computed to
the date of sale. A Deed will be
executed to purchaser at said
sale, as authorized in Security
Deed.
This 31st day of May, 1961.
NIX AND COMPANY,
INCORPORATED, As
Attorney in Fact for
Hugh C. Daniels:
BY: R. C. MURRAY
Secretary-Treasurer 6-29
Georgia, Brantley County
Whereas, heretofore on August
11, 1960 Geneva Reeves did exe
cute to Modern Homes Construc
tion Company, a Florida corpora
tion, a certain security deed to
the following described land:
All that tract or parcel of
land situate, lying and being in
Land Lot No. 84 of the 9th Dis
trict, County of Brantley; State
of Georgia, more particularly
described as the land lying with
in the following described
boundaries, to-wit: “Begin at a
point on the western margin of a
County graded road; said point
designating a corner commonable
to said road and Eastern and
Southern original land lot No.
84 lines; and from said point or
corner run thence Northerly a
long said western margin of
graded road (which is also east
ern boundary line of Lot 84) a
distance of 210 feet; thence run
Westerly parallel to southern
boundary line of Lot 84 a dis
tance of 210 feet; thence run
Southerly parallel to said western
margin of graded road (eastern
boundary of Lot 84) a distance of
210 feet to southern boundary
line of Lot 84; thence run East
erly along aforesaid southern
original boundary line a distance
of 210 feet to the point of be
ginning.” Containing ONE (1)
acre, more or less.”
“Said described tract is cut
from a larger tract described in
•a certain Warranty Deed from
T. D. Mercer to D. L. Mercer, ap
pearing of record in Deed Book
15 at Page 111, office of the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Brant
ley County, Georgia."
“Said described tract is the
same tract described in a certain
Nahunta TV Center
Radio and TV Repairs
Plumbing and Repairs
Electrical Wiring and Repairs.
Contracting on All Wiring
and Plumbing.
Prompt Service. Reasonable Prices.
Nahunta TV Center
Phone HO 2-3544 Nahunta, Ga.
Warranty Deed from D. L. Mer
cer to Geneva Reeves (Grantor
herein) dated June 12, 1960, of
record in Deed Book 20 at Page
410, office of the Clerk of the
Superior Court of Brantley Coun
ty, Georgia.”
To secure a note of even date
therewith for Four Thousand
Three Hundred Eighty-Eight &.
40|100 ($4,388.40) dollars, all as
shown by a security deed record
ed in the Office of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Brantley
County, Georgia, in book 44,
page 595-596; and
Whereas, said note has become
in default as to principal, and the
undersigned elects that the entire
note become due at once;
Now, Therefore, according to
the original terms of said se
curity deed and the laws in such
cases made and provided, the
undersigned will expose for sale
to the highest and best bidder
for cash the above-described
land, after proper advertisement,
on the first Tuesday in July,
1961, between the legal hours of
sale before the courthouse door
in Nahunta, Georgia, Brantley
County, Georgia. The proceeds
from said sale will be used, first
to the payment of said note and
expenses, and the balance, if
any, delivered to the said Geneva
Reeves.
This 16th day of May, 1961.
MODERN HOMES
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
a Florida Corporation with
its principal office in
Valdosta, Georgia
BY: Horace E. Campbell Jr.
Its Attorney 6-29
Georgia, Brantley County
To Whom It May Concern;
Clarice Herrin, having applied
for Letters of Administration of
estate of Stella O. Herrin, de
ceased, of said county:
This is to cite all creditors and
heirs of said deceased to show
cause at July Term, 1961, of the
Court of Ordinary of said coun
ty, why Letters of Administra
tion should not be granted as
prayed.
Witness the hand and seal of
the Ordinary of said county, this
the sth day of June, 1961.
|s| Claude A. Smith
Ordinary and Ex-Officio
Clerk of the Court
of Ordinary
J. Robert Smith
Atty For Estate 6-29
Georgia, Brantley County
To the Creditors of OWEN G.
LEE, SR., Deceased:
You are hereby notified to
render an account to the under
signed of your demands against
the estate of the above-named
deceased, or lose priority as to
your claim.
This sth day of June, 1961.
Is| Owen G. Lee Jr.
Administrator of Estate of
Owen G. Lee, Sr., deceased,
Waycross, Georgia.
Ben A. Hodges
Attorney
Waycross, Ga. 6-29.
Georgia, Brantley County
All creditors of the estate of
RUFUS SHUMAN, deceased, late
of Brantley County, are hereby
notified to render in their de
mands to the undersigned ac
cording to law, and all persons
indebted to said estate are re
quired to make immediate pay
ment to me.
June 5, 1961.
Mattie Lee Shuman
Administratrix of Rufus
Shuman, Deceased 6-29
WINTER GRAZING PROGRAM WINNERS — State and district winners of the an
nual FFA winter grazing program are honored by sponsoring organizations during
special ceremonies recently at Sinclair Dan, near Milledgeville. Among winners in
the FFA’s District Two are (left to right) Oswell Smith of Patterson, winning ad
visor; Jesse Lewis of Patterson, third place winner; Jack Clayton of Millen, fifth
place winner; Jimmy Lanterman of Mayfield, first place winner; and Gary Clifton
of Millen, second place winner. The Georgia Power Company, in cooperation with
the vocational agriculture division of the State Department of Education, sponsors
the rural youth winter grazing program annually.
Doctors, Scientists, Architects
To View Hospital Design Ideas
Behavioral scientists, psychia
trists, and architects from across
the nation will meet for three
days this week at the Georgia
Department of Public Health, At
lanta, to consider all aspects of
designing the social system of
psychiatric teaching hospitals.
The meeting, believed by health
department officials to be the
first of its kind in the nation,
is sponsored by the Health De
partment, the Emory University
Department of Psychiatry, and
Region IV, U. S. Public Health
Service, Atlanta. It is financed by
a project grant from the National
Institute of Mental Health, Beth
esda, Maryland.
Coordinator of the conference
will be Robert N. Wilson, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor, Yale Univer
sity of Sociology.
The conference will meet from
June 14 through June 16. Mem
bers will be welcomed by Dr.
John Venable, director of the
Georgia Department of Public
Health, and Dr. Bernard Holland,
chairman of the Department of
Psychiatry at Emory.
“This conference is another
step in the Health Department’s
continuing effort to give Georgia
the benefit of the best thinking
the nation has to offer in de
veloping a comprehensive men
tal health program,” Dr. Venable
said.
Presentations on the first day
will include functional drawings
by Robert Schoenberner, Atlanta
architect; “Relation Between
Social System and Physical
Structure,” by William H. Ittel
son, PhD., associate professor,
Department of Psychology,
Brooklyn College; and “Some
Architectural Design Considera
tions for the Housing of the Men
tally Ill,” by K. Izumi of K.
Izumi, Arnott and Sugiyama,
Architects, Regina, Saskatchewan,
Canada.
Second day presentations will
include “Provisions in the Physi
cal Structure Which Can Imple
ment Teaching and Research
While Minimizing Interference
with the Therapeutic Process,” by
Robert Straus, Ph.D., chairman.
Department of Behavioral
Sciences, University of Kentucky;
“Relationship of Various Central
ized Facilities to Themselves and
to Patient Care Areas to Maxi
mize the Therapeutic Environ
ment and Research and Educa
tional Activities,” by Mrs. Kath
ryn Crossland, associate dean,
Texas Women’s University School
of Nursing, Houston; and “Ad
vantages and Disadvantages of
Reassigning Patients within the
Hospital to Accord with Their
Therapeutic Process,” by Murray
Melbin, Ph.D., Social Psycholo
gist, McLean Hospital, Belmont,
Massachusetts.
Final day presentations will in
clude “Relationship of Profes
sional Personnel Structure to
Patient Care,” by Harvey L.
Smith, Ph. D., Professor of So
ciology and Director of Social
Research, Division of Health Af
fairs, University of North Caro
lina; and “Employee Informal
Social System and Opportunities
Through Physical Design of
Maintaining and Effective In
fluence on Patient Care,” by Earl
Rubin g ton, Ph.D., sociologist.
Center of Alcohol Studies, New’
Haven, Connecticut.
Discussions and reviews of pre
sentations will be conducted
daily by Dr. Wilson.
Dr. Charles H. Little
OPTOMETRIST
607 Isabella St. Telephone
Waycross, Ga. ATlas 3-5144
Morgan Wilkinson
Receives Diploma
In Richmond, Va.
RICHMOND, Va. — Miss Helen
Morgan Wilkinson was graduated
from St. Catherine’s School, Rich
mond, Virginia, at commence
ment Monday morning, June 5.
Helen Morgan is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Wilkin
son Jr. of 1112 Western Road,
Rocky Mount.
William H. Trapnell, former
chairman of the St. Catherine’s
board, was the commencement
speaker. He is president of the
Commonwealth National Gas Cor
poration. Both his wife and his
daughter, Sally, who was gradu
ated last year, are alumnae of the
school.
Preacher at the baccalaureate
service in St. Stephen’s Episcopal
Church the preceding afternoon
was the Right Reverend Fred
erick Deane Goodwin, retired
bishop of the Episcopal diocese of
Virginia. Bishop Goodwin’s
granddaughter, Maria Williams, is
a member of the graduating class.
His daughter, Mrs. Peyton R.
Williams of Norfolk, Maria’s
mother, is an alumna of the
school.
Her extra-curricular activities
have included riding.
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.
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
Sales totaled $29,478.47 Monday,
with 450 hogs and 208 cattle being
offered.
No. 1 hogs sold for $13.85; Light
No. I’s $16.88; No. 2’s brought $15.-
25; feeder pigs $21.50.
Calves brought $23.50; steers and
heifers $22.50; cows $18.10; bulls
$19.00.
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
Vo-ag Teachers
Inspect Pole Barn
At FFA-FHA Camp
COVINGTON, Ga. — Teachers
of vocational agriculture attend
ing their annual state teachers
conference at the FFA-FHA Camp
here, inspected the newest addi
tion to the Camp Development
Program June 6—a pole barn.
Inspection of the barn, which
will be used to store hay for the
camp livestock, also included a
session on the construction of a
pole barn and its use on the farm.
Robert R. Rowe, Development
Representative, U. S. Steel Cor
poration was in charge of this
session, and answered questions
from the teachers pertaining to
the new structure.
The barn is approximately 40
ft. x 65 ft. in size. It has steel
roofing and siding, and the poles
and all lumber in contact with
the ground has been treated with
an 8 pound per cubic foot re
tention of No. 1 distillate coal
tar creosote oil per cubic foot of
timber. The structure is also
partially wired.
Personnel of the U. S. Steel
Corporation, Tennessee Coal and
Iron, which is a division of U. S.
Steel, and the Southern Wood
Preserving Company helped to
coordinate this project with the
agricultural education service of
the State Department of Educa
tion.
Serving in the supervisory ca
pacity from these companiet were
William L. Smith, General Man
ager Marketing, Tennessee Coal
and Iron; Robert R. Rowe, De
velopment Representative, U. S.
Steel and L. R. Potter, Sales Re
presentative, Southern Wood
Preserving Company.
Safety Council Seeks to Prevent
Traffic Accidents and Drownings
The National Safety Council
has opened a double-barrelled
Fourth of July safety campaign
aimed at traffic accidents and
drownings.
Everyone deserves a safe, hap
py Fourth of July holiday,” said
Howard Pyle, NSC president. “It
is up to all of us to help make
this possible by eliminating acci
dents on the highways and water
ways of our nation.
“Though traffic accidents are
still the nation’s prime killer,
they were outnumbered in some
states by drownings over the last
Fourth of July holiday.”
Last year’s Fourth of July
holiday traffic toll was 440 lives.
Drownings and boating mishaps
claimed 160 lives. Other acci
dents, including fireworks, fire
arms, heat exhaustion and falls
killed more than 100 persons.
“The Fourth of July is almost
.always celebrated outdoor s,”
Plye said. “This means travel,
swimming and sporting events,
coupled with their inherent haz
ards. To get the most out of all
these activities we must remem
ber safety — safe driving and
safe play means going by the
rules for the protection of your
self, your family and others.”
Pyle stressed two points:
1. Everyone learn to swim. It’s
the best possible insurance a
gainst drowning.
2. Install and use automobile
seat belts for all driving, near
home and on trips.
“Seat belts will reduce injury
and help save lives in case of
accidents,” said Pyle.
“But the need for accident pre
vention — before the fact — can
not be stressed too strongly,” he
said.
“On this 185th anniversary of
the signing of the Declaration of
Independence, let us all strive to
free ourselves from the tyranny
of accidents."
Chrome yellow was picked as
the school bus color because
color dynamics experts say it
is the easiest color to see.
First Line Goodrich TIRE SALE
670-15” Tubeless $16.95
670-15” White Tubeless $19.95
670-15” White $16.95
Plus tax and retreadable tire. Other sizes reasonable
Texaco Service Center
W. C. LONG
Highway 301 N. Phone HO 2-3899
\-1 Now b
ISg M | I/X ||
Electric milking machines, pumping systems
which convey the milk from cow to cooler un
touched by human hands, and dependable elec
tric refrigeration help to assure the
a trulv fine bottle of milk.
We salute the great dairy industry, and we’re
glad to have a part in its progress . . .
Electricity in rural areas — made available
by the Member - owned, Member - organized
Rural Electric Systems — has brought many
changes in the past quarter-century ... changes
and progress with benefits for everyone! . . .
fa A RURAL ELECTRIC
MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION
4/5 COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
©NIECA • COMMUNITY BUILDER
DAIRY INDUSTRY
America’s first dairy cattle
were brought to Jamestown, Va.,
in 1611. A census made in the
Virginia colony in 1625 record
ed 364 cows. Today there are
more than 19 million dairy cat
tle in the United States, accord
ing to John Conner, dairy
marketing specialist of the Uni
versity of Georgia Cooperative
Extension Service.
FOR SALE
1955 Ford station wagon. Pow
er steering, power brakes and
automatic transmission. New
paint, clean. S4OO. Lee Broome,
Broome Service Center, Black
shear, Ga. Phone HI 9-5941.
6-22
Posted Signs for Sale
At Brantley Enterprise
prescwtios
SERVICE
Ernest Knight
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, Ga.
DRUGGIST
The Rexaii Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry St.
OKEFENOKE