Newspaper Page Text
Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, October 4,1962
IL Mik
'■W/fUV^^^
t r U jWF MKSWrW^W Oh/ i
'iff.
(irmw /
. f *
PW' ^"-
3 <
&■&<*
Wi
^: ■
J*
NOW! Keep fuel grime out of your home!
Enjoy flameless heating at the new low
•••••••
Only electric house heating is flameless.
This means no fuel grime to coat walls,
windows or mirrors or to settle on books,
clothing. Your home is clean when you
heat the modern, flameless electric way.
And never has electric heating been so
low in price to our customers! Our new
total-electric rate lets you enjoy house
heating, water heating, cooking and all the
other advantages of electricity for less.
Call us. Learn how you can save up to
20 per cent on your total electric bill.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN ..
WHEREVER 4
WE SERVE ’
GO TOTAL ELECTRIC... FOR LESS
That’s not all! Ask ns how we can pay
up to SIBO toward wiring your home so
you can live better electrically.
Obvious, isn’t it, that Pontiac's come up with another
beauty this year. Fresh overandunder headlights, clean
profile-but you can see that. There's a wider Wide-Track,
total
electric
rate
-J
> MCW LOW
^^^^TOTAL lIICTRIC «ATt
( W
Proceedings of
Brantley County
Commissioners
Thu Board of Commissioners
of Roads and Revenues of Brant
ley County met in regular session
on Tuesday September 4,1962.
With all members present. After
a discussion of the various phases
of the County Affairs they order
ed the following bills paid for
the month of August 1962.
GENERAL EXPENSE: R. B.
Brooker $17.21 Salary, R. C. Har
rell Jr. $16.06 Salary, Louis Pres
cott $17.21 Salary, Silas D. Lee
$29.06 Salary, Major Riggins $29.-
06 Salary, Archie A. Johns $77.-
50 Salary, C. Winton Adams $53.-
15 Salary, John M. Wilson $83.94
Salary,
SUPERIOR COURT; W. J,
Summerall $46.00 Salary, Dewey
Hayes $113.34 Salary,
EXTENSION DEPT: George
A. Loyd $207.63 Salary and Tra
vel, Virginia N. Raulerson $139.82
Salary and Travel,
HEALTH DEPT: Dr. Hart S.
Odum $62.00 Travel, Alvin M.
Powell $12.00 Travel, Dr. E. A.
Moody $30.00 Salary, Rebecca D.
Griner $367.26 Salary and Travel
and contingent fund, Baxter G.
Hammond $106.49 Salary and
Travel, Charlotte O. Wilson S2QI,-
49 Salary.
WELFARE DEPT; Dept, of
Public Welfare $632.04 Budget,
Robert R. Riggins SIO.OO Pauper,
Daniel Roberson SIO.OO Pauper,
Mamie O’Neal SIO.OO Pauper,
Willie Hayes SIO.OO Pauper,
FORESTRY DEPT: Georgia
Forestry Commission $600.00
Budget.
ROAD DEPT: Ellis Altman
$207.85 Salary, Perry Crews $285.-
41 Salary, Talmadge Gunter
$212.86 Salary, Weita Herrin
$220.65 Salary, Gillis Hickox
$191.13 Salary, Mitchell Hulett
$205.54 Salary, Alex B. Lee $169.-
01 Salary, John H. Mercer $203.-
50 Salary, Virgil R. Murray $172.-
21 Salary, Fred Willis $217.54
Salary, Woodrow Wilson $207.85
Salary, Morty Griffin $89.28 Jani
tor Salary,
INVOICES: Georgia Power Co,
$79.97 Light bill, Dept, of Reven
ue, Motor Vehicle License SI.OO
Tag for Ford Truck, Georgia
Hospital Service Association
$226.40 Employee’s Premium,
Cotton States Life & Health Ins.
Co. $15.55 Employee’s Premium,
Georgia Chemical Corp. $14.95
Janitor Supplies, Brantley Tele
phone Co. Inc. $86.55 Phones and
Calls, Standard Oil Co. $211.68
Gas and Oil, Dußose Garage
$8.95 Repairs on Road Equip
ment, Dixie Concrete Service Inc.
$186.31 Ready Mix Cement, R. E.
A. Corp. $3.00 Caution Light At
Here’s what the other ’63’s wish they looked like.
SEE THE CAR THAT'S EVEN NICER THAN THE '62 PONTIAC AT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER'S TODAY
Today—Wide-Track Pontiac *65
too, and a full line of Trophy V-B’s. [That ought to be
enough to make those other cars turn green.] And we
haven’t mentioned such happy touches as self-adjusting
PADGETT PONTIAC-CADILLAC, Inc.
447 State Street
Hortense, Yarbrough Brothers
$16.05 Office Supplies (Sheriff),
City of Nahunta $24.50 Water
Bill, The Brantley Enterprise
$68.05 Advertising and Supplies,
Getz Exterminators $5.00 Spray
ing Jail, Farr Office Equipment
$1.70 Supplies (Tax Comm.),
Foote & Davies Inc. $29.83 Sup
plies (Board of Registrars), Carl
ton Company $1,061.74 Repairs
on Motor Grader, J. J. Lee $40.00
Four Days Board of Registrars,
Alvin Shumans $40.00 Four Days
Board of Registrars, Sam McAfee
$50.00 Four Days Board of Regis
trars, Hazel Wilson $45.00 Pre
paring Voters List, Professional
Ins. Co. $80.60 Employee’s Ins.
Premium, Ellis Drug Store $73.20
Drugs Special Fund, Mrs. Mildred
Walker $25.00 Transportation of
Delto Morgan, Ernest Knights
Drugs $15.46 Drugs Special Fund,
Satilla Lumber Co. Inc. $76.12
Lumber Road Dept. J. W. Brook
er $33.50 Supplies, Sid’s Service
Station $122.92 Repairs, General
Business Service $157.15 Tax
Receipts (Tax Comm.), Dr. E. A.
Moody SIO.OO Drugs for Joe Mel
ton Special Fund, Dr. E. A, Moody
$23.50 Inquest and Treating Pris
oners, J. W. Crews $220.90 Ser
vice Rendered (Sheriff), DePrat
ter Service Station $236.59 Re
pairs, L & M Truck & Tractor
Co. $10.04 Repair on Road Equip
ment, Charles Service Station
SIIO.OO Repairs, Wilson-Wainright
Oil Co. $104.74 Gas, Oil, Recordak
Corporation $54.83 Office Sup
plies (Clerk), C. S. Kizer $43.00
Inquest for George Lee, Brantley
Telephone Co. Inc. $417.92 Re
locating Poles on Right of Way.
There being no further business
the meeting adjourned.
John M. Wjlson
Undelivered Checks
Await Some Taxpayers
In accordance with Section 15
of the current Income Tax Pay
ment Act of 1960, as amended by
the Act approved February 23,
1961 (Ga. Laws 1961, p. 53), State
Revenue Commissioner Dixon
Oxford has published the names
of persons claiming withholding
tax refund checks, whose checks
have been mailed to them at the
address shown on their returns
and which have been returned
by the post office undelivered-
The above mentioned law pro
vides that persons entitled to such
checks must claim same within
90 days after publication of such
list and that refunds of such a
mounts will not thereafter be
made unless formal application
for refund is made to the State
Revenue Department.
Any person whose name ap
pears on the attached list should
communicate in writing with the
State Revenue Department, Tax
Refund Office, Room 515, State
Office Building, Atlanta, Georgia
in order to obtain the refund.
TALES OUT OF SCHOOL
By Bernice McCullar
State Department of Education
PEOPLE YOU KNOW — Our
Rehabilitation Division at its
summer conference in Savannah
had a “May Talmadge Night,”
honoring Mrs. Julius Y. Talmad
ge of Athens, former national
regent of the DAR, who retired
from the State Board of Educa
tion because of ill health some
time ago. Miss Inez Wallace, our
state supervisor of homemaking
education, is now Mrs. J. Howard
Tumlin of Carrollton Mrs.
Cicero Johnston, president of
Georgia’s powerful PTA which
has more than a quarter of a
million members in over a thou
sand local units, came to the De
partment o f Education with
members of the PTA Board of
Managers recently for coffee and
information from the State
Superintendent and his staff ....
Two Department members lost
their mothers by death during the
summer: Mrs. Mary Grubbs of
our TV staff and T. A. Carmi
chael, director of Negro educa
tion Mrs. Margaret Lewis
of our library staff, is convalesc
ing from a bad injury sustained
when her car went over a cliff
in North Carolina while she was
vacationing .... Chairman James
S. Peters of the State Board of
Education will be back at his
home in Manchester in Septem
ber from 3 months in Great Bri
tian and the Scandinavian coun
tries.
MOST INTERESTING TEACH
ER I MET THIS SUMMER —
He’s a slow-talking man who has
plastic reinforcements in his
tongue because a boat blew up
under him in the war. He is
quiet, wise, kind. He runs a
shrimp boat in summer. He has
been librarian, but this year will
also be counselor. On Sunday, he
preaches at a little south Georgia
church. Children come into his
benign presence, and go out a
little gentler, a little kinder, a
good deal wiser. (Who is the
most interesting teacher in your
town? When William Lynn
Phelps taught English at Yale,
he said, ‘I regard it as my first
duty to make my studies IN
TERESTING people!’)
MEET THE CLASS OF 1974 —
The graduating class of 1974
started to schools this September.
These are the babies who were
born in 1956. This is Georgia’s
largest baby crop born in one
year. There were 196,587 of them.
The big job now is to see what
you can do to make sure that all
of them will still be there in 1974
to graduate.
W
V
Waycross, Ga.
No other medium brings
such consistent, profitable
results as newspaper adver-
tising.
Beginning Monday, Sept. 10, through
Daughter Gets Wave for Half-price $5.
Sherry Hendrix, Qualified Beautician,
My friends,
I am grateful for the confidence
you expressed by electing me to serve
as your representative in Congress.
I solicit your continued support in
promoting the Bth. district.
My campaign pledge of regularly
scheduled visits to each county will
be kept. My services shall be always
available.
I hope to see all of you soon.
Sincerely yours,
Russell Tuten
1963
brakes. So what, pray tell, could be keeping you Srom a
new Pontiac of your own? A small suggestion. Don’t run
down to see one. Gallop! Wide Track Pontiac
Mother-Daughter Special
Saturday, Oct. 6:
Mother Gets $lO Wave,
Is Now with Lorraine.
Lanolin Cold Wave $5
Shampoo and Set $1.50
Haircut $1
Lorraine's Beauty Shop
Near Nahunta, Georgia
DON’T MIX BLEACH
AND CLEANSER
Never mix a bleach with
cleaning agents such as toilet
bowl cleanser, ammonia, lye,
rust remover or oven cleaner. A
poisonous or highly irritating
gas may be formed by the mix
ture. Several persons have been
made ill in this way, and one
death resulted from a woman’s
pouring a cup of bleach into a
toilet bowl while cleanser was
still in the bowl, reports W. E.
Huston, Extension engineer.