Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Jan. 18, 1968
G pharmaceutical B
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Ernest Knight
DRUGGIST
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry St.
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup. Ga
For
New RCA Television
and Other Used TV's
See
Jimmy's TV
Shop
Phone HO 2-3870, 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.
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.
I GROCERY SPECIALS I
■Make It a Habit to Trade with Harris I
H RIB AND BRISKET
I STEW BEEF
POUND 29c
■ tender round
I STEAK
POUND 79c
RED LABEL LUZIANNE
I COFFEE
I POUND CAN 59c
3 CENTER CUT
■ PORK CHOPS
B POUND 59c
® Sealtest Cherry Nugget
I ICE CREAM
HALF-GALLON 79c
■ GOOD HOPE
I MILK
|3 TALL CANS 39c
■ RICELAND
I RICE
2 LB BAG 19c
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
I HARRIS GROCERY I
S W. B. “Bill” Harris, Owner H
Phone HO 2-2475 Nahunta, Ga.
DID MISS ELIZA TEACH IN
YOUR TOWN? Ted Owens, who
supervises our teacher certifica
tion program, got a letter re
cently from Miss Adel Stewart
Sallee, 900 East Tulsa Street, Sul
phur, Oklahoma. This was what
the letter said: “My great grand
mother, Eliza Ann Stokes Tig
ner, taught in 1840 in the vici
nity of Monroe County. Could
you please tell me the exact de
tails?” We had to write her that
we do not have such records.
Could you help?
IF WE GET IT, YOU’LL GET
IT — We will have a penny less
per school lunch to send out to
your school this year as reim
bursement, because we ran out
of school lunch money last year,
and we are trying to spread next
year’s allotment over the whole
year. But if more comes down
from Washington, your school
system will get its share. Miss
Eleanor Pryor, our able school
lunch director, has been ill in the
Sumter County Hospital at A
mericus.
SOLUTION? — NEA has re
printed the hilarious paragraph
from the New Yorker on solving
the money problems of the
school in New York. ‘‘Just com
bine the budgets of the education
and the sanitation department.
[Use it as far as it will go. When
the money runs out, the garbage
will pile up and the New York
ers, with garbage on their door
steps and under their nose, will
have a very effective daily re
minder of the importance of edu
cation.”
GRADE A
FRYERS I
POUND 29c
PORK
NECK BONES I
POUND 19C
TENDER CHUCK
STEAK |
POUND 49c
SUNNYLAN’D
PURE LARD I
4 lb carton 49c I
GOOD HOPE K
TOMATOES I
2 tall cans 23c|
Irish POTATOES!
: 10 POUNDS 29c |
JIM DANDY ■
GRITS I
5 POUNDS 29c
TALES OUT OF SCHOOL
By Bernice McCullar
State Department of Education
GEORGIA’S EXCELLENT
SAFETY RECORD IN SCHOOL
BUSES — Joe DeFoor, our state
pupil transportation director, re
ports that we had fewer school
bus accidents during the last
school year, as compared with
the year before. This may be due
in part to new and stricter laws
about bus drivers passing rigid
physical tests, and to the people
who have drawn up better safety
standards for mechanical aspects
of our school buses. Our school
bus drivers got a S2OO raise this
year, bringing their annual salary
to $1,200. (Average in Georgia is
$1,456) North Carolina bus driv
ers, who have been getting $25
a month for 9 months, got a raise
of $2.50 per month.
HONOR TO A GOOD MAN —
Dr. C. S. Hubbard, assistant state
superintendent of schools, was
honored Georgia’s librarians at
their Jekyll Island meeting with
the Hubbard Scholarship Fund
set up by their Georgia Library
Association. No finer way could
have been devised to honor this
man who for many years headed
the library and textbook depart
ment of the State Department of
Education, and who built it into
something that the entire nation
highly respects. Hundreds of let
ters attested to the love and ap
preciation that those who love
books feel for this man who has
given his life to the cause of edu
cation in Georgia. One letter
said, “Dedicated lives like his are
needed more and more in these
crucial times.” His sage wisdom,
his quiet listening to people who
needed to talk about their prob
lems, and his strong, steadying
hand to those who had for a mo
ment lost their way, put a golden
glint along the years. He was ele
vated to the office of assistant
state superintendent by Dr.
Claude Purcell several years ago.
They worked together before,
when Dr. Purcell was Haber
sham County school superinten
dent and Mr. Hubbard was prin
cipal of the Baldwin school. Dr.
Hubbard was in the legislature at
one time, and he is due much cre
dit for the Free Textbook Law,
by which many children have
profited in this state. The begin
ning of the regional library pro
gram and the bookmobiles were
also milestones in his career. It
is heartening in a world full of
demogogues and loudmouths that
a quiet, good man has got his due.
are you reading IT? — I
hope you are not missing the
fine education section that ap-
Points to Remember When
Writing Your News Stories
1. Be sure to typewrite your news story.
2. Double-space on only ONE SIDE of paper.
3. Start at least two inches from top of page.
4. On regular size typewriter paper — no scraps, please.
5. Leave at least an inch or more margin at left side,
also right side of page.
6. Give dates of meeting, otherwise story will not be
published.
7. Get your news in EARLY, as paper must begin to set
type days ahead of publication.
8. Don’t send in any news MORE THAN A WEEK OLD.
9. Don’t put names of commercial firms in news. The
paper does not run free advertising for commercial firms.
10. If your news is worth printing, it is worth taking a
little trouble to get it right and in on time.
Your editor will be glad to cooperate with you if you
will go to the trouble of cooperating with him.
Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale on Monday, January
15, 1079 head of hogs and 281 head
of cattle were offered for a total vo
lume of $50,956.87.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $17.60,
Li’s at $17.76, No. 2’s at $16.85, No.
3’s at $15.91, No. 4’s at $15.36 and
No. s’s and Ls’s at $15.75. Rough
sows sold up to $14.75 and feeder
pigs sold up to $19.75.
Calves sold up to $32.00 with steers
and heifers up to $24.00, cows up to
$20.00 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
pears periodically in one of the
nation’s best edited magazines,
the Saturday Review. Editor: Paul
Woodring.
JOSEPHINE MARTIN HEADS
OUR SCHOOL LUNCH PRO
GRAM — We have just welcom
ed Josephine Martin back to our
State Department of Education
staff. She was appointed by Dr.
Claude Purcell, state superinten
dent of schools, as state supervi
sor of the school lunch program.
She succeeds the late Eleanor
Pryor, whose assistant she was
for some years. She is a native of
Lula, Georgia, near Gainesville.
She is a graduate of the Univer
sity, did internship in dietetics at
Duke, and received the very first
scholarship awarded by the A
merican School Foods Services
and got her master’s degree She
is listed in the 1962 “Who’s Who
in American Women.” She has re
cently been away from the De
partment, working with the De
partment of Agriculture. In that
job, she worked with school
lunchroom programs in 9 states
jin the southeast. We are happy
to have her back. Working with
her to keep your children well
fed in our 1800 school lunch
rooms, will be five able assistant
supervisors: Mildred Craig,
Athens; Lucy Edwards, Albany;
Frances Lewis, Swainsboro; Sa
rah Johnstone, Atlanta; and Mar
garet Roper, Waycross. Also on
I her staff will be Electa Wofford,
who supervises the school lunch
'room program for the Negroes.
WHAT’S HISTORIC AROUND
YOU? — Many Georgia children
are now learning Georgia history
by TV, guided by fine teachers
in their own classroom. What we
need now are parents, eager to
take their children to historic
sites and to learn with them the
story of Georgia. Why don’t you
drive this weekend to the near
est shrine where history happen
ed, or walk with your children
around your own community? I
talked with an able and charm
ing educator from Massachusetts
recently, and this is what he said
about our unawareness of his
tory-under-our-noses: “I grew up
in Lexington and my wife in
Concord, where the Revolution
started. I swam, all during my
boyhood, in Thoreau’s Walden
Posted Signs for Sale
At Brantley Enterprise
Want Ads
SEED SWEET POTATOES
FOR SALE
Seed sweet potatoes for sale,
100-to-Hill. Alfred R. Rozier,
Route 1, Waynesville, Ga. 2-1.
BERMUDA HAY FOR SALE
Coastal Bermuda hay for sale,
choice quality, 90 cents a bale.
Also five polled and four horned
registered Hereford yearling
heifers. Chas. H. Gibson, Phone
Hyatt 6-4611, Folkston, Ga. 2-1.
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.
DON’T GET UP NIGHTS
It takes just 39c and 12 hours to
start relief *— or your money
back at any drug store. When
functional kidney dirorders cause
gettiing up nights, scanty flow,
burning, backache, leg pains, diz
ziness use easy-to-take BUKETS
4-day treatment. Acts fast to in
crease and regulate passage. NOW
at Campbell’s, Nahunta, Ga.
12-14
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.
I Grocery Specials I
■ Friday and Saturday, Jan. 19 and 20 I
Get More for Your Money at Morgan's
I FAB LARGE SIZE 25c I
I BLUE PLATE MAYONNAISE QUART 55c I
| HUNT'S PEACHES no u can 25c I
I PRIDO SHORTENING 3 pound can 59c I
I TOMATOES NO. 300 CAN 2 FOR 23c I
I PINK SALMON large can 63c I
I DIXIE CHEF JUNE PEAS no 300 can Wc I
I INSTANT NESCAFE COFFEE ooz jar $1.29 I
I GOOD HOPE MILK 3 cans 39c I
I Riceland Long GRAIN RICE 3 POUNDS 39c I
I GOOD WHITE BACON pound 29c I
I CHUCK ROAST or STEAK POUND 49c I
STEAK ROUND, T-BONE OR SIRLOIN POUND 79c
I CHEDDAR CHEESE GOOD AGED POUND 49c I
QUANTITY LIMITED
I Morgan Grocery I
Phone HO 2-2561 Nahunta, Ga.
We Do All Kinds
of Job Printing.
Let Us Quote
You Prices.
City Tax Returns
Tax returns on your city property must
be made to the city clerk before April,
1962.
All property owners in Nahunta are re
spectfully requested to come to the city
office and turn in their property for 1962
taxation. Your cooperation will be ap
preciated.
City of Nahunta
Mrs. E. T. Higginbotham, clerk.
City Business Licenses
Due by February 1
This is to remind all proprietors of busi
nesses in Nahunta that city license fees
are due on or before February 1,1962.
Please come to the city office and pay
business license fees. Your prompt atten
tion to this will be greatly appreciated.
City of Nahunta
Mrs. E. T. Higginbotham, clerk.
Dr. Charles H- Little
OPTOMETRIST
607 Isabella St. Telephone
Waycross, Ga. ATlas 3-5144