Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Jan. 11, 1961
TIRED KIDNEYS
GOT YOU DOWN? Make the BU
KETS 4-day 39c test.' Give kid
neys a gentle lift with BUKETS
well-balanced formula. Help get
rid of uric waste that may cause
getting up nights, scanty passage,
burning, backache, leg pains. If
not pleased, your 39c back at any
drug store. TODAY at Camp
bell’s, Nahunta, Ga. 1-11.
HOUSE AND SMALL
STORE FOR RENT
House and small store for
rent in Nahunta, Contact E.
Parker Dodge or Phone HO 2-
2081, Nahunta, Ga. 1-11
ts PHARMACEUTICAL I
S XL ill I
I oKill
uoo in filling hrt prejcnptioa*.
Htimowj thttwbeo » pf«aip
I noo b brought to <h« R.emll
Drug Store « it compounded
1 with highest qunlity iagt*
I <£aoo vid Satanic dull
Ernest Knight
druggist
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry St.
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, 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.
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.
rFRnJTZ^ATUI^
I GROCERY SPECIALS I
■Make It a Habit to Trade with Harris I
& RIB AND BRISKET
I STEW BEEF
POUND 29c
ROE ND
I STEAK
■ POUND 79c
HAM
I ENDS
I POUND 39c
GOLD NOTE
I MARGARINE
I LB PACKAGE 19c
® NIAGARA INSTANT
I STARCH
I 12 OZ PKG 19c
■White Potatoes
I 25 IB BAG 69c
■ HERSHEY'S
I COCOA
■ HALF-LB CAN 29c
■ QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED H
I HARRIS GROCERY I
W. B. “Bill” Harris, Owner
Want Ads
SERVICE STATION
OPERATOR WANTED
Night operator wanted for ser
vice station. See Ben Jones at
Ben's Bay Station, Nahunta, Ga.
1-11.
TWO HOUSES FOR SALE
Two houses for sale. One has
three bedrooms, other had two
bedrooms. Hot Water, bath, elec
tricity. Terms. Dan Jones, Na
hunta, Ga. 1-25.
CAR FOR SALE
One 1953 Oldsmobile for sale.
In fair condition other than trans
mission. Needs Hydra-matic trans.
Joe Smith, Hortense, Ga. Phone
HO 2-3180. 1-25
HELP WANTED — SALESMEN
Want to make $2.50 or more
per hour in pleasant route work?
Can use man or woman part or
full time. Write P. Q. Todd, Pres
cott St., Ext., Waycross, Ga.,
Phone AT 3-3310. 1-18
HOUSE FOR RENT
Six-room house for rent in Na
hunta. See D. W. Lee, Nahunta,
Ga. 1-18.
100 ACRES LAND
FOR SALE
100 acres wooded land for sale,
about a mile from Nahunta on
public road. G. W. Highsmith,
Route 1, Nahunta, Ga. 1-11.
GRADE A
FRYERS I
POUND 29c I
PORK
NECK BONES I
POUND 19C I
RED LABEL LUZIANNE Qj
COFFEE I
POUND CAN 59c I
BAMA
APPLE JELLY I
18 OZ TUMBLER 23c|
GEORGIA GROWN
Sweet Potatoesl
POUND 8C
TIDE I
GIANT SIZE 69c I
fluff© S
SHORTENING I
3 POUND CAN 69(1
78 New Industries Locate on
Power Company Lines in 1961
A total of 78 new industries,
representing a capital investment
of $105,834,000, located on lines
of the Georgia Power Company
during 1961, E. A. Yates Jr., vice
president and manager of the
company’s area development di
vision, announced this week.
In comparison, 83 new firms,
representing a capital investment
of $31,158,000, were established
in the power company’s service
area during 1960.
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,
51 existing industries expanded
their facilities during 1961. These
expansions involved a $22,670,000
capital investment. During 1960,
a total of 39 manufacturing plants
increased their productive capa
city at a cost of $61,638,000.
The 78 new and 51 expanded
industries of 1961 were located in
57 cities throughout Georgia.
The new plants and expansions
will provide employment of 9,-
325 persons at annual wages of
$27,947,500. Manufacturing plants
and additions established during
1960 provided 6,910 jobs totaling
$23,914,700 in wages.
Submitting news of social, civic
and religious events to the news
paper office EARLY helps your
newspaper staff to give you most
complete and most accurate cov
erage on these events.
A tried and proven ad
vertising medium—the col
tmns of your hometown
newspaper.
Help, But Don't Force Child
To Stop Sucking His Thumb
By The Medical Association
of Georgia
How often we see a mother
forcibly remove a child’s thumb
from his mouth, only to see the
child pop it right back in at the
earliest moment. Thumb sucking,
or sucking any other finger, is
the cause of much worry, aggre
vation and nagging on the part
of parents.
It is obvious to anyone who has
watched the thumb sucker that
the child indulges in the habit
when he is tired, hungry, unhap
py or sick. Sucking his thumb
seems to comfort him. This isn’t
difficult to understand when we
consider that the first good we
get is obtained through sucking.
But, from a practical standpoint,
sucking becomes unnecessary
when the child has learned to
drink from a glass, chew and
swallow food.
There is really no practical
harm in letting the child suck
his thumb after sucking becomes
unnecessary. And some children
certainly want to! Excessive
thumb sucking usually means
that the child is turning within
for comfort and reassurance
rather than to his parents.
This should serve to alert the
parents that the child needs a
little more attention. Perhaps
they’ve unintentionally been neg
lecting him in some fashion. A
very sensitive child or one with
a strong sucking instinct may
suck his thumb when he is get
ting a reasonable amount of at
tention and in this case the par
teeth is shed. Usually the child
will have given up the habit by
age five or six when ‘baby’ teeth
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale on Monday, January 8,
1137 head of hogs and 279 head of
cattle were offered for a total volume
of $53,392.12.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $17.01,
Li’s at $17.26, No. 2’s at $16.51, No.
3’s at $15.35 and No. 4’s at $16.40.
Rough sows sold up to $14.60 and
feeder pigs sold up to $19.25.
Calves sold up to $28.00, steers and
heifers up to $24.50, cows up to $20.-
25 and bulls up to $19.80.
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
Fertilizer-Lime
Courses Scheduled
For 12 Cities
A series of short courses to
familiarize fertilizer and lime
dealers with how soil tests are
made and the importance of fol
lowing recommendations will
be conducted in 12 Georgia cities
in January and February.
The courses will be sponsored
by the University of Georgia Co
operative Extension Service in
cooperation with the Georgia
Plant Food Educational Society.
Representatives of both organiza
tions will appear on the pro
gram.
Representing the Plant Food
Educational Society will be Dr. J
Fielding Reed, Dr. Irvin Wofford
and Dr. R. L. Beacher, according
to Quinton Lee, who represented
the Society in planning the
courses.
University of Georgia represen
tatives will be J. R. Johnson, Dr.
A. W. Tennille and P. J. Ber
geaux, Extension agronomists; R.
L. Carter, Coastal Plains Experi
ment Station, and Dr. H. F. Per
kins, associate professor of agro
nomy.
County agents will attend the
meetings with fertilizer and lime
dealers from their counties, Mr.
Bergeaux said. All meetings will
begin at 7:30 P. M.
ents shouldn’t feel they’ve been
neglecting him. But oftentimes, a
close look at the various stresses
and strains within the family and
their effect on the child will re
veal trouble spots that can be
corrected. When they are cor
rected, everybody — especially
the thumb sucking child — bene
fits.
What’s the best attitude toward
thumb sucking? In general, it
seems to be an easy going, per
missive one. This certainly seems
to be the wisest course if every
thing in the child’s environment
seems to be in order and if it’s
certain he isn’t being neglected
in some fashion. Usually, the
habit will run its course and the
child will give up thumb sucking
of his own accord.
If, on the other hand, he is
forced to stop sucking his thumb
when he needs some way to ex
press his stress and frustration,
he may turn to a less socially ac
ceptable habit — nose picking,
nail biting, rocking his bed or
banging his head on the bed
posts.
Probably the main reason
parents want their children to
stop sucking their thumb is that
they fear the habit will distart
the shape of the child’s mouth
and disturb the position of the
teeth. The views of specialists on
this matter are very varied.
Thumb sucking will affect the
positioning of permanent teeth if
it continues after the first set of
are generally shed. If he hasn’t,
a bit of subtle maneuvering us-
ually convinces him that he
wants to stop sucking his thumb
SEE HOW 1962 CAN BE THE MOST PROFITABLE YEAk
IN GEORGIA FARM HISTORY! PLAN NOW TO ATTEND
FARM MATERIALS
HANDLING DAYS
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS • JAN. 18 AND 19
This Program Sponsored by;
GEORGIA FARM ELECTRIFICATION COUNCIL
AND THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
IF YOU ARE A FARMER: See latest methods demonstrated. Ask experts
about your own problems.
IF YOU ARE A MANUFACTURER: Learn ways in which you can appeal
to the farm market. Ask how to become an exhibitor.
IF YOU ARE A GEORGIAN: Find how rural Georgia is making great
forward strides by farming electrically.
Whether you attend this as a professional clinic for the full-time
farmer or whether you are simply interested in Georgia’s farm future,
you will be most impressed. Georgia is making progress on all fronts.
One of the most important is agriculture. Here is your opportunity
to see what is happening to your state, thanks to electricity, scientific
know-how and the progressive spirit of today’s farmers.
Plan to attend
and bring a friend.
Legal Notices
CITATION —Year’s Support.
GEORGIA, Brantley County.
The return of the appraisers set
ting apart twelve month’s support
to the family of Ralph M. Herrin
deceased having been filed in my
office, all persons concerned are
cited to show cause by the 5 day
of Feb. 1962, why said application
for twelve month’s support should
not be granted. This Jan. 2,1962.
Claude A. Smith, Ordinary.
C. Winton Adams
Petitioner’s Atty. 1-25.
Georgia, Brantley County.
Banner J. Wainright having ap
plied as Executor for probate in
solemn form of the Last Will and
Testament, of Jesse B. Wainright,
of said county, the heirs at law
of said Jesse B. Wainright are
hereby required to appear at the
Court of Ordinary of said county
on the first Monday of February
next, when said application for
probate will be heard.
This sth day of January 1962.
Is| Claude A. Smith
Ordinary
Ben A. Hodges, Attorney
Waycross, Ga. 2-1.
Grocery Specials
Friday and Saturday, Jan. 12 and 13
Get More for Your Money at Morgan's
INSTANT LUZIANNE COFFEE 6 OUNCES 59c
SILVER COW MILK 3 cans 39c
SUPER SUDS LARGE SIZE 25c
SNOWDRIFT SHORTENING 3 POUNDS 69c
Riceland Long GRAIN RICE 3 POUNDS 39c
CAULEY'S PURE LARD 3 pound jar 45c
Dubuque OIL SAUSAGE 3 POUND CAN 79c
SNIDER'S CATSUP 20 OUNCE BOTTLE 23c
BAILEY'S TEA 5 OUNCE GLASS 49c
Blue PLATE PEANUT BUTTER quart 59c
Dixie Chef Black Eye PEAS no 300 can 10c
FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER pound 45 c
CHUCK ROAST POUND 49c
CAULEY'S RED SAUSAGE 3 pounds 69c
RIB STEAK POUND 59c
Phone HO 2-2561
Important Noike
To All Motor
Vehicle Owners
Georgia, Brantley County
To All Motor Vehicle Owners:
All 1962 tags will be on sale on
and after January 2nd .and your
attention is invited to the follow
ing law: applicants applying for
license tags shall present as a
part of said application an affi
davit showing the payment of
all ad valorem taxes due the
State and any city, county, or
school district thereof for the
previous year on such vehicles for
which an application is made.
Tax receipts or a signed state
ment from the Tax Commission
er will be acceptable instead of
the bove affidavit.
Respectively yours,
D. F. Herrin
Tag Agent 1-11
QUANTITY LIMITED
Morgan Grocery
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
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/^utinKßißssß^^^^"^''--^ l ^"'
Dr. Csarljs H. Little
CPTO-.IE/RIST
GOT Isabella St. Telephone
Waycross, r ' > . ATtas 3-5144
Fer
New RCA kL.irion
and Other Used TV's
See
Jimmy's TV
Shop
Phone HO 2-3870, Nahunta, Ga.
Nahunta, Ga.