Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, September 14, 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.
All Kinds of Insurance
We Buy or Sell Property
Phones HO 2-3931, HO 2-3825 and HO 2-3749
Representing Cotton States Insurance.
Brantley Real Estate
& Insurance Agency
J. Robert Smith and Clint Robinson
Drury Building Nahunta, Ga.
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.
Miss Walton's
School of Dance
Will open at Nahunta, Sept. 19 at the American
Legion Home.
Registration for the dance school will start Mon
day, Sept. 18, at 3:30 P. M.
Classes will be held in tap, ballet, acrobatics, and
modern jazz.
For information call Miss Walton
ATlas 5-1807, Waycross, Ga.
Waycross Livestock Market w
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET *
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale on Monday, September
11, 725 head of hogs and 400 head of
cattle were offered for a total volume
of $47,308.14.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $18.71,
Li’s at $18.79, No. 2’s at $17.92, No.
3’s at $17.60, No. 4’s at $19.00 and
No. s’s at $18.90. Rough sows sold up
to $16.20 and feeder pigs up to $30.-
25.
Calves sold up to $25.50, steers
and heifers up to $22.50 and cows up
to $18.90. ।
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
Subscribe to Your
Home Newspaper
The Brantley Enterprise
More Training for Rangers
Georgia’s wildlife rangers are probably the best
equipped and trained in the South.
Last year, prior to the Game and Fish Commis
sion’s inauguration of the Boating Act, more than
100 rangers undertook extensive and rigorous water
safety training and small boat handling in a week
long class.
This year, seven rangers were trained as
instructors of first aid by the American National
Red Cross at another weeklong school. These
men will in turn instruct their fellow rangers.
The seven picked rangers were shown various
treatments of simple abrasions and cuts and learned
“how to” methods dealing with broken backs, necks
and artificial respiration.
Rangers posed as “victims’ ’of broken arms, legs,
shock and burns, while the Red Cross instructor
pointed out the various ways of treatment now
in use.
They participated in the practicing of dif
ferent carries. If a person is suffering from a
broken neck, the mode of carry differs than if
he w'as afflicted with a broken leg.
The men also were taught splinting methods,
what to do for dislocated joints, lacerations and
fractures.
Each man was required to get up and speak on
one facet of the training course, while the Red
Cross instructor pointed out flaws or weaknesses in
the talk. He was given helpful hints on how to get
his messag eacross to the audience through use of
charts and other visual aides.
Throughout this year and in years to come, wild
life rangers will be instructing first aid as prescribed
by the Red Cross.
Now, when rangers come across accidents
during their daily routine, not only will they
know what to do, but how to do it.
Yes, Georgia’s wildlife ranger force is the best
equipped of its kind in the South. Modern vehicles,
boats, two-way radios and other mechanical means
all make their work easier.
But most important of all, they are now
equipped to help save lives.
CALMING NERVES
BY DR. A. E. TUTEN
The U. S. News and World Report stated that, “The Army
has put a ban on flying for pilots who take tranquilizing
drugs.” “One expert says it is always better to try and ar
range our lives so that we do not need artificial help to calm
aur nerves.”
To paraphrase the remark the expert quoted in the World
Report it is “always better to have the natural chiropractic
way of normalizing nerve action so that we do not need ar
tificial help to calm our nerves.”
Many people think of the chiropractor as one who works
an bones, or works on the spine. That is true. But, the PUR
POSE OF CHIROPRACTIC is to RESTORE NORMAL ACT
ION TO NERVES. Try Chiropractic. It will not let your
nerves down.
A public service featured by
TUTEN CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER
360 State Street ATlas 5-1559
AQUARAMA AT JEKYLL — Twin hyperbolic para
haloids strikingly frame the entrance to the huge new
Aquarama at Jekyll Island. Built almost entirely of
concrete for the Jekyll Island Authority, the building
houses a 150-foot-long swimming pool, a wading pool,
a vast meeting room and an exhibition hall. The
architect was Pope Fuller of Atlanta. Structural engi
neer was the Atlanta firm of Morris, Boehmig &
Tindel, Inc.
GAME
AND
FISH
By FULTON LOVELL
Clearing Scrubland
Is a 'Pay-off' Project
Pierce County's J. Charlie Waters
Recovers Vast Acreage Returns
(From The Atlanta Joamal)
Four years ago J. Charlie Wat
ers started clearing a sand ridge
of scrub oak and brush to plant
useful pines and now he has
completed setting pines on 205
acres.
This is a continuation of Mr.
Waters’ farm improvement pro
gram, coupled with a top-notch
farming program running con
currently.
He has 791 acres in this farm
that he bought 15 years ago, with
150 acres of it cleared for farm
ing and pasture purposes.
“I’ve completed the sandhill
setting of pines, but I have a lit
tle spot-planting to do in places
where the stand is bad, or in
some established woods, where
there is some bare spots,” Mr.
Waters said.
He will begin some thinning on
some of his other wooded areas
this fall, the first cutting in four
years now since he sold some
worked out timber.
“That was just a sandridge that
wouldn’t grow anything else, so
I decided to plant it in pines,” he
said.
The scrub oaks were bulldozed
and burned to make way for the
tiny pine seedlings. He had to
take a heavy rotary .mower to
knock down some of the oaks
that have come back in the early
planted areas.
He has tobacco, corn and live
stock in addition to his wooded
areas. “This is my sorriest to
bacco crop in seven years and I
don’t know why,” he said.
He is going to average “only”
2,500 pounds. He made about the
same last year, but the grade was
better. The grade is his chief con
cern this year although he thinks
he’ll average about 60 cents when
all is figured.
Subscribe to the
BRANTLEY
ENTERPRISE
THERE'S A REASON . . .
A newspaper advertisement works for you 24 hours
a day — not for just split seconds.
A newspaper ad can be seen and read, over and
over again, at your leisure and it is not necessary for
the customer to be at a fixed place at a fixed time to
see or hear your ad message.
Busy merchandisers know these facts. That’s why
they are busy and why you will find their advertising
elsewhere in the columns of this newspaper.
The Brantley Enterprise
Nothing Brings Results Like Newspaper Advertising."
I Q LETTERHEADS +
I PROGRAMS +
I B Q ENVELOPES +
I IC - CIRCULARS +
I * I BOOKLETS +
I I LI FORMS +
T l
N G
■ Brantley Enterprise
■ Nahunta, Georgia
Posted Signs for Sale
At Brantley Enterprise
Make a date with
the SCOUT !
So versatile you’ll have to plan its days.
A handy 5-ft. pickup for light hauling; without
cab, sporty for fun; with doors and windows
off —runabout for hitting the trail; with steel
Travel-Top or soft vinyl top, a fully-enclosed
wagon. Peppy 93 hp Comanche engine
even pulls a light trailer. Optional all-wheel
drive makes it a tiger when the going’s
tough. Try it, buy it today!
WILSON'S GARAGE
Phone HO 2-2721
INTERNATIONAL® TRUCKS 1 J
WORLD’S MOST COMPLETE UNE ■Hfß®
Marsh Hen Season
Opens September 20
The lawful season for shooting
marsh hens shall be September
20-November 28, 1961. Daily bag
limit is 15 daily, possession limit
is 30. Shooting hours are from
sunrise to sunset.
It is illegal to shoot from a mo
torboat (inboard or outboard) any
time the motor is running and
the boat is under power.
In the case of marsh hens a
person may shoot from a boat
with motor attached when the
source of power has been shut
off, the forward progress due to
automotive power has ceased and
the boat is immobile or being
propelled by paddle, oars or pole.
Nahunta, Ga.