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The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Jan. 31, 1963
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.
Julian H. Bennett
Passes in Folkston
Julian H. Bennett, formerly of
the Dixie Union, Ware County,
settlement, died on January 23,
1963, at the Jackson Hospital, at
Folkston.
He was a prominent farmer
and timber owner, and until the
past several years lived near
Dixie Union, in Ware County. He
was prominent in local affairs of
Ware County and Southeast
Georgia, having been a director
of The Satilla Rural Electric
Membership Corporation for ap
proximately twenty years, hav
ing resigned June 18, 1959, when
he moved to Folkston, Charlton
County.
His first wife was Mrs. Cassie
Walker Bennett, who died sev-
dvrrn
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
Phone 2-2171 Nahunta, Ga.
FIRE, THEFT, COLLISION AND LIABILITY
INSURANCE. FIRE INSURANCE FOR YOUR HOME
OR BUSINESS. HAIL INSURANCE FOR YOUR
CROPS.
Springtime’s at your fingertips with
Flameless Electric House Heating
Only electric house heating is flameless.
This is important. It means no fuel grime
to coat walls, windows or curtains. Your
home stays so much cleaner.
Many of the electric systems allow you
to choose individual room temperatures
to suit the needs of each living area. Con
sult your local contractor and start this
year to live better electrically.
H 3
m n.
IiSK
Wall Panel Heaters
—FT —
Electric Furnace
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
jMFssSS v-- tr* <
AOI Bh^...^^V
eral years ago. As a result of this
union the following children sur
vive:
George R. Bennett and David
H. Bennett, of Ware County,
Georgia; Mrs. Flossie B. King, of
Ware County, Georgia; Mrs.
Grace B. Ballestreri, of Glen
Burnie, Maryland; Mrs. Bessie B.
Driver, of Macon, Georgia; Mrs.
Dorothy B. Beard of Charlotte,
N. C.; Mrs. Fennaleigh B. Clark,
of Baltimore, Maryland; Mrs.
Julia B. Jones, of Orlando, Flori
da; Mrs. Marie B. Sutton, of
Odum, Georgia, is the surviving
heir of a deceased son.
Julian H. Bennett was married
after the death of his first wife
to Mrs. Viola J. Bennett, of
Charlton County, Georgia, who
survives him, together with the
following step-children:
J. R. Jones, of St. Marys, Geor
gia; Charles Jones of Jackson
ville, Florida; Mrs. Helen J.
Wright, of Hilliard, Florida, and
an adopted child, Annette Keene
Allison of Charlton County, Ga.
Employers Must
Furnish W-2 Form
By January 31st
Employers are required to
furnish Form W-2 to all their
employees showing income and
social security tax information on
or before January 31, according
to A. C. Ross, District Director
of the Internal Revenue Service.
Hoboken Basketball
Schedule Announced
Hilliard, Fla. — There Fri. Feb. 1
Folkston — Here Tues Feb. 5
Blackshear — Here Fri. Feb. 8
Odum — There Tues Feb. 12
Baseboard Units
i IM
Heat Pump
Ask your local
contractor
about the best
electric system
for your needs.
Ceiling Cable
Information on
Metorites Sought
By Virginia Man
On any clear night, if you have
a little patience, you can see
what appears to be a falling star.
Actually, what you see is not a
star but a flaming mass of stone
I WAYCROSS LIVESTOCK
MARKET REPORT
At our sale on Monday, January 28, 671
P head of hogs and 285 head of cattle were of-
P sered for a total volume of $40,580.53.
Regular No. 1 hogs sold at $15.91, Li's at
| $15.91, No. 2's at $15.01, No. 3's at $13.71,
No. 4's at $12.40 and No. s's at $12.31. Rough |
O sows sold up to $12.25 and feeder pigs up to
I $16.25.
Calves sold up to $28.50 with steers and
|| 'heifers up to $25.75 and cows up to $21.50.
Tune in on WAYX Radio Station at 3:30 P. M.
|| and WACL Radio Station at 4:00 P. M. each
Monday for hog prices.
We appreciate your patronage. If you have
any livestock problems of sales, please contact
R. L. Bennett, Bristol, Ga. For pickup and de-
H livery, contact Eulis Watkins, phone 647-5624.
9
Get More Money For Your Livestock at The
Waycross Livestock Market
® Southeast Georgia’s Leading Livestock Market
Phone 283-3642
I W. H. INMAN &O. A. THOMPSON, Operators
or iron as it is being burned to
dust. These fragments are be
lieved to be the remains of a
planet that once existed in an
orbit between Mars and Jupiter.
Daily, billions of very small
pieces plunge from space into the
surrounding blanket of air that
covers the earth. Here, the fric
tion of the resisting atmosphere
ADVERTISE
disintegrates them to ashes.
It has been estimated that at
least two (2) every twenty-four
(24) hours are large enough to be
consumed by this friction and
land somewhere in the world.
When one is seen to fall against
the soil or by chance is found, it
becomes of great scientific im
portance; these meteorites, as they
are called, are the only tangible
matter from space that can be
studied in the laboratory.
Meteorites are found more of
ten than is presently realized.
With this fact in mind, an in
tensive scientific search has be
gun with a goal of reaching as
many people as possible. Maybe
you have plowed one up or found
one on an outing. The following
is a general description of the
three known classes:
1. The metallic meteorite —
looks like and actually is solid
iron; it is as heavy as any piece
of iron; usually covered with rust
but shows bright metal when
cut with a file.
2. The stone meteorite — al
most always heavier than an or
dinary stone and usually shows
bright metal specks when appli
ed to a grind wheel or file. When
freshly fallen, it has a dark crust
which turns brown when exposed
to weather. The inside is lighter
in color than the crust.
3. The stone-iron meteorites —
these are a mixture of both stone
and iron and are noticed because
of their extreme heaviness and
the presence of metal when cut
with a file.
The size of specimens of any of
these classes can be from that of
a marble up to several hundred
pounds.
A REWARD IS OFFERED for
any meteorites.
If you have any doubtful or
suspicious stones, please report
your finding. When possible,
please chip off a small piece to
send for analysis. (Please try not
to mar the sample in doing so).
If unable to send a chip, write,
stating your name and address
and a little about your find and
you will be promptly contacted.
Want a Cook
Want a Clerk
Want a Partner
Want a Situation
Want a Servant Girl
Want to Sell a Piano
Want to Sell a Carriage
Want to Sell Town Property
Want to Sell Your Hardware
Want to Sell Your Groceries
Want Customers For Anything
Advertise Weekly In This Paper.
Advertising Is the Way to Success
Advertising Brings Customers
Advertising Keeps Customers
Advertising Insures Success
Advertising Shows Energy
Advertising Shows Pluck
Advertising Is “Biz”
Advertise or Bust
Advertise Long
Advertise Well
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The Brantley Enterprise
Nahunta, Georgia
If
You
At Once
I Stock Yard |
I News I
At our sale last Friday, hog prices were as
follows: RI, $15.82; LI, $15.85; Hl, $14.69;
No. 2, $15.02; No. 3, $14.37; No. 4, $13.10; No.
| 5, $13.00; LR, $12.72; and HR, $12.45. Feed
er pigs sold up to $16.25.
Heavy cows topped at $19.70, heavy steers
topped at $24.50, stocker calves sold up to
? $28.50, veal calves up to $30.50 and heavy
bulls up to $20.00.
'J Station WBSG in Blackshear will broadcast ||
hog prices Friday afternoon at 3:00 from the
Pierce County Stock Yard.
We invite you to sell with us each Friday.
>;■ Our good line of buyers assures you of the top 0
K dollar,
WE APPRECIATE YOUR SELLING WITH
|J THE PIERCE COUNTY STOCK YARD. ft
I STOCK YARD I
I PIERCE COUNTY I
| H. F. Allen Jr. I
0. R. Peacock, Phone 449-5522
OPERATORS AND MANAGERS
BLACKSHEAR, GEORGIA
Stock Yard Phones 449-5305 and 449-5471
For Hauling, contact O. J. AMMONS,
Hoboken, Ga., phone GL 8-3122.