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Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Gs, Thursday, May 10, 1962
Brantley Enterprise
Published weekly on Thursday at Nahunta, Georgia
Official Organ of Brantley County
Carl Broome ~... Editor and Publisher
Mrs. Carl Broome Associate Editor
Second class postage paid at Nahunta, Ga.
Address all mail to Nahunta, Georgia.
$500,000 Ace
Will Be Built
Plans for the construction of a
new $500,000 manufacturing plant
in the industrial district of Way
cross were announced recently by
Charles J. Snyder, president of
Ace Rubber Products, Inc., Akron,
Ohio.
The plant will manufacture a ।
complete line of rubber acces- i
sories for the automobile industry
and for the home. The line in- 1
eludes automobile floor mats,-!
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.
ZACK D. CRAVEY
Announces for
HIS FIFTH TERM
As Georgia's
COMPTROLLER GENERAL
INSURANCE COMMISSIONS'
cwml4l HI te eadMMiee Zeck's
vest and prwvd super! secs for A MOU
MOMIMI
(Raid Political Adrartitamant)
Now...bcautifid buying days during Chevy's
GOLDEN SALES JUBILEE I
Spring’s a-wasling! So why wait any longer to
satisfy that new-car urge of yours? Especially
when your Chevrolet dealer has such beautiful
buys busting out all over the place. Like in
fourteen Jet-smooth Chevrolets. Or eleven
now-size Chevy II models. Or a whole crew
of frisky Corvairs. So come on in and pick and
choose to your heart's content at your
Chevrolet dealer’s One-Stop Shopping Center.
NEW CHEVY II NOVA STATION WAGON
Space and spice in a new kind of saver.
And it’s just one of three new Chevy II
wagons. Very parkable. Very packable, too.
Has a load floor that's over 9 ft. long with
second seat and tailgate dow r n.
NEW BEL AIR 4-DOOR SEDAN This
popular priced Jet-smoothie rides like a
family room on wheels. Got a mammoth
cave of a trunk, too, with bumper-level
loading and a handy deep well for bulky
items. Plus a choice of six or V 8 skedaddle.
See the new Chevrolet, Chevy 11 and Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer’»
R. L Walker Chevrolet Co.
Phone ATlas 3-4250, 515 Tebeau Street,
Rubber Plant
in Waycross
stair treads, door mats and hall
way runners.
Located on a 15-acre site, the
new plant is part of an expansion
program by Ace Rubber. It will
add a $300,000 yearly payroll to
the Waycross area and employ
100 local people, according to Mr.
Snyder.
In announcing the new facility,
Mr. Snyder expressed apprecia-
Zack Crovsv
NEW IMPALA SPORT COUPE
It couldn’t look more like a convertible unless
it were one.' ... A steel top molded into the
crisp contours of a convertible. Chalk it up
to Body by Fisher finesse. Here’s luxury
and riding comfort that add up to every
thing you expect in an expensive car—
except the expense.
NEW CORVAIR MONZA CLUB COUPE
The trim sportster that started the bucket
seat brigade. Here’s rear engine scamper
wedded to the road with tenacious traction
and quicksilver reflexes. And this one’s as
easy to own as it is to drive.
NEW IMPALA 6-PASSENGER STATION
WAGON Chevrolet wagoning at its most
elegant. With up to a whopping 97.5 cu. ft,
of cargo space—including a compartment in
the floor where you can stow golf clubs and
other valuables out of sight.
tion to the area development divi
sion of the Georgia Power Com
pany and the Waycross-Ware
County Chamber of Commerce
for their cooperation and assist
ance in locating the new indust
rial plant.
Construction is expected to be
gin June 1 to prepare the indus
try for scheduled operations in
December, 1962. Plans for the
building are being completed by
Waycross architect John Huff.
Containing 60,000 square feet of
floor space, the structure will be
financed by the Waycross and
Ware County Development Au
thority through the sale of rev
enue anticipation bonds.
Harold Reuben, production and
technical manager of the Akron
plant, will initiate the Waycross
operation.
Ace Rubber, a family-owned
industry, has been in business for
26 years. Its Akron, Ohio, plant
employs more than 150 persons.
Georgia Woodland
Owners Are Polled
In National Study
What can be done to insure
that the United States will have
the timber it needs at the end
of this century?
To help answer this question,
Extension foresters of the Uni
versity of Georgia College of
Agriculture and county agents
in 108 counties are gathering
information about why small
woodland owners put certain im
provement practices to use.
This is part of a nationwide
study to help Extension Services
throughout the United States de
sign a more effective program to
help these woodland owners in
crease production, according to
C. Dorsey Dyer, head of the
Georgia Extension forestry de
partment.
The need for helping these so
called “small” woodland owners
Dr. Charl ss H. Little
OPTOMETRIST
607 Isabella St. Telephone
Waycross, Ga. ATkis 3-5144
Waycross, Ga.
put their timber acres to more
efficient use is obvious when
one considers some national fig
ures on timber production, the
forester says.
By the year 2000, the country’s
forests must be in a condition to
grow 104.3 billion board feet of
sawtimber annually, or more
than twice the current net grow
th of 47.3 billion board feet. This
must be accomplished in the
face of continually decreasing
land on which to grow trees.
National statistics show that
55 percent of all commerical for
est land in the United States is
held in 4.5 million ownerships
of less than 5,000 acres each.
These woodlands grow substan
tially less timber per acre than
well managed larger private and
public ownerships.
Lands owned by forest indust
ries and by the public already
have programs of forest man
agement. They are in the busi
ness of forest crop production,
and such large ownerships are in
a good position to command the
facilities and professional per
sonnel necessary for attainment
of the greatly increased intensity
of management needed. Still,
these industrial and public lands
comprise less than half the
commerical forest area in the
nation.
Small forest ownerships, with
55 percent of the area, must be
looked to for a substantial por
tion of the increased growth
needed. By the year 2000, these
small ownerships will need to
produce an annual growth of a
bout 52 billion board feet, about
double what they are now pro
ducing, and more than the en
tire national output at present.
In most cases this will have
Florence Mayo Jet Tobacco Curer
We are agents for the famous Florence Mayo Jet
Tobacco Curer. It burns diesel fuel and one of the
most economically operated tobacco curers on the
market. This tobacco curer is on display at Strick*
land Plumbing Company, Nahunta, Ga.
For prices see Julian C. Strickland
or W. B. Willis.
TO THE VOTERS OF GEORGIA:
to be attained without the em
ployment of professional forest
ry personnel by individual own
ers, Mr. Dyer said.
This is where Extension fits in,
and why the forestry committee
of the national Extension Com
mittee on Organization and Poli
cy instigated the current study,
the forester explained.
Eighteen counties in each of
the six Extension districts in the
state have been chosen for the
study. County agents will quest
ion four owners of woodlands
ranging from 30 to 2,500 acres
OAT SILAGE
Oats for silage should be har
vested in the boot stage. This is
best indicated by the appearance
of the first heads but before
flowering, according to Extension
Dairymen W. H. McKinney.
g PHARMACEUTICAL I
1 Skill I
maost for peed- ■
I moo in filling hh preaaiptiom.
I Htknovr char when iprnaip.
| 6m b brought to 'ba tcxall
| Dtw Score u b compoundad
■ vita highest quality ingra-
I Amß wifrOWtic trill
DRUGGIST
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Daty
147 West Cherry St.
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, Ga
carl SANDERS
choice for Governor ^is^year^l
To give Georgians^acv°for that 12th statewide
srSSt.V».^ “SS
=“8"^ S *'
morality and ettect
.issues which have for so
“d proved administration on
City governments.
n served his State,
.. f Car i Sanders that he we Carl sanders offers^
s «^“ tion by the *•” 8
stand ~ many •
the expense of the
• n — to be decided
There is one ^’^^GovernoJ’ s^e this year:
by the voters m tne u
crive the people of
Which candidate "i honest, ® o ^L^ e
Georgia a compete t and worth while
responsible, effect i
administrations
•n resolve that question
^ng mt
for CARL SANDERS ’ l influen ce of every Ge g women voters,
our _° ther * Wh °“ “
d « tiny -
While there
£^o°^* ^' *"
of government tne p
,„ reality. We can
Mith your help, « ^Tr-
ognition of Georg. sincertly ,n
Ernest Knight
■iwi imimii Mi B WWW 11 "
■
SANDERS FOR GOVERNOR
STATE CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS
DINKLER-PLAZA HOTEL • ATLANTA, GEORGIA
SIDE DRESSING COTTON
{ Nitrogen side dressing must be
applied early to cotton to obtain
the most production for the ferti
lizer applied, says Extension Ag
ronomist Larry Torrance. He sug-
Igests applying side dressing at
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Waycross Livestock Market
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA’S LEADING
LIVESTOCK MARKET
HONEST WEIGHTS AND COURTEOUS
SERVICE.
At our sale Monday, May 7, 718
head of hogs and 180 head of cattle
were offered for a total volume of
$38,185.32.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $16.05,
Li’s at $16.14, No. 2’s at $15.30, No.
3’s at $14.94, No. 4’s at $14.32 and
No. s*s at $14.20. Rough sows sold up
to $13.65 and feeder pigs up to $19.-
25.
Calves sold up to $26.50 with steers
and heifers up to $25.25, cows up to
$21.50, bulls up to $21.50 and cows
and calves in pairs up to $23.50.
For pick-up or contact for sales please call
Woodrow Wainright Phone HO 2-3471 Nahunta,
Georgia.
Waycross Livestock Market
b
W. H. Inman and O. A. Thompson
Operators and Managers
Carl Sanders
about the time of the second cul
tivation. This corresponds to chop
ping time or the four-leaf stage.
A fellow wouldn’t mind loaning
his lawn mower if the borrower
woudn’t take it out of the yard.