Newspaper Page Text
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, March 14, 1963
FRIDAY and SATURDAY I
GROCERY SPECIALS I
Make It a Habit to Trade with Harris
GRADE“A”
FRYERS
POUND 29c
RIB AND BRISKET
BEEF
POUND 29c
CHUCK
ROAST
POUND 49c
O'SAGE
PEACHES
No. 2| Can 19c
FRESH POLE
BEANS
2 POUNDS 29c
FIRST CUT
PORK CHOPS
POUND 49c
Whole or Half Cauley's Cured
HAM
10 to 14 Lb. Average
POUND 41C
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
HARRIS GROCERY I
W. B. “Bill” Harris, Owner
Phone HO 2-2475 Nahunta, Ga. £
Either you want it... or you’ve got it!
flameless
electric
clothes
dryer
Unce you’ve got it, then you’ll love it. Clean
as an electric light, odorless for life. Never
a by-product of combustion to worry about
with a flameless electric clothes dryer.
Remember, all dryers use some electricity.
The best use only electricity. The purchase
price of your electric dryer is low because
it has fewer parts, costs less to manufacture.
It installs easily with only one connection.
Choose your favorite electric model today.
Then run out and tell your neighbor about it.
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
S TOTAL iUCtBK RATI
GO TOTAL ELECTRIC... FOR LESS
Ask how we can pay up to SIBO toward wiring
your home so you can live better electrically.
ROUND S
STEAK I
POUND 69c
CAULEY'S PURE
LARD I
3 POUND JAR 39c J
FRESH ||
CUKES I
2 POUNDS 19c
BORDEN'S
MILK I
3 Tall Cans 39c I
U. S. NO. 1 IRISH
POTATOES I
25 pounds 79c I
ARGO CUT GREEN
BEANS I
2 No. 303 Cans 29c I
FLAT CAN BOOTH J
SARDINES I
In Oil, 2 Cans 19c
(Television’t Beverly Stark)
Good Seed Selection Is Important to
Success of Machine Harvesting Corn
Brantley county farmers must
lower cost of production to stay in
the corn growing business, County
Agent George A. Loyd declared this
week.
“One way to do this is by mechan
ical harvesting. Picker shellers and
■ombines modified to harvest com
have been highly successful. With
hese machines, growers can har
dest early and they dry their corn.
“But to harvest corn mechanically
most efficiently next fall, farmers
must choose the right kind of seed
for planting this spring,” the county
agent continued.
“Farmers who plan to harvest co
rn mechanically should select a rec
ommended hybrid that has a short
stalk. The hybrid should be resistant
to lodging also. Hybrids which have
these characteristics and which are
adapted to this county are: White
varieties; Coker 71 and Pfister 635-
W - Yellow varieties; Coker 67, Co
ker 71, Dixie 18, Speights D-4, and
Jackson.
"By planting such hybrids this sp
ring,” he explained, “corn growers
will be able to mechanically harvest
their corn next fall before it is dam
aged by weather and insects.”
The county agent said he believes
that corn production will have to be
mechanized in the future because
farmers will have to use all avail
able means to save labor and to
cut production costs.
“This is another reason all corn
growers should try for the Master
Corn Program goal of at least 60
bushels per acre. Low yields won’t
pay for machinery.”
TALES OUT
OF SCHOOL
BY BERNICE McCULLAR
State Department of Education
THE BOARD PLANS TO TALK
ABOUT THIS IN MARCH - If you
want to speak your piece about the
schools having to attend to too many
things besides teaching, you can
come to the March meeting of the
State Board of Education. They
plan to take up this matter, and see
how much time is left over from
athletics and club meetings and this
and that and the other, for the child
ren to learn. (They had the hearing
on lengthening the school year,
found most teachers opposing it, de
cided to take it under advisement
for later action.) Next meeting of
the Board will be during the GEA,
March 20 and 21.
MID-TERM MONEY-We will
have enough to send your school
systems for the salaries of 1,160
teachers that had to be added this
year, and $70,0(M) for more text
books. But we do not have enough
to send you the SSOO per teacher
for Maintenance and Operation Mon
ey. This money your school systems
gets in the middle of the year is
known as Mid-Term Adjustment.
It works like this: we allot teachers
(salaries and the SSOO per teacher
M & O money that goes with each
teacher unit) according to the Aver
age Daily Attendance your schools
had LAST year. Then if more pu
pils show up in your school in Sep
tember than you had there last
year, your board hires more teach
ers, and the state goes back, at mid
year and picks up the tab, retro
active to September. This year,
there wasn’t enough money to pay
it all.
HAIRCUTS AND CLOTHES
AGAIN—You may be interested to
know that in Pittsburgh, more than
fifty high school students have been
suspended from school for wearing
beatnik clothes and haircuts to
school. Said a teacher, “Some of
the girls looked as if they’d combed
their hair with an egg beater, and
others looked as if they had never
combed it at all.” (Georgia, you
remember, had a little trouble last
year in one or two schools, with
haircuts and such.)
IS YOUR SCHOOL ATTRACT
IVE?—Oscar Wilde said the school
should be the most beautiful place
in the community. Alfred Davis, who
heads our school plant service, tells
me that about 65 per cent of Geor
gia's new schools are being well
kept. Yours? Or is your school in
the 35 per cent that isn't? Some
schools are beautifully landscaped,
too, such as the Coffee County High
School at Douglas, and 4 small sch
ools in Towns county. Often the PTA
or the local garden club helps with
these. If you want advice about land
scaping your school, let us know.
We would like to have a picture of
the most beautiful school in Georgia
If this is YOUR school, will you see
that we get a picture of it? We wou
ld like to put it on our bulletin board
here on Capitol Hill.
FUTURE FORESTERS—The Pulp
and Paper Foundation of Riegel
wood. North Carolina, asks us to
tell you that they are giving about
20 scholarships ranging from S3OO
to SI,OOO for capable students inter
ested in a 4-year course at North
Carolina State College. If you know
a bright lad who is interested, tell
him.
70 MILLION HOURS: - Newton
Minow, chairman of the Federal
Communications Commission, says
that America's children under 12
spend 70 million hours a day in
front of TV. There are now 55 mil
lion TV 7 sets in America. More TV
sets than bathtubs!
Hoboken Revival
Starts Monday
The Rev. Walter Salter of the
Crawford Street Baptist Church,
Waycross, will be the preacher for
the spring revival of the Hoboken
Baptist Church beginning Monday,
March 18.
The services will begin each eve
ning at 7:30 P. M. and continue for
one week. An invitation is extended
to the interested public to join in
these services. The pastor, the Rev.
Chesley Walker, announced.
HD Club Members to
Meet in Hinesville
Home Demonstration Club
members in Southeast Georgia
will meet in Hinesville for the
District Council Meeting Friday,
March 15.
A special program with an out
standing speaker in Home Dec
orating is planned for the group.
A large attendance from
Brantley County is expected.
The club members will meet at
the Court House at 8:00 Friday
morning
Card of Thanks
We would like to take this
means to express our deepest
gratitude for the many acts as
kindness shown us during the
illness and death of our loved
one. We sincerely appreciate the
messages of sympathy, floral of
ferings, covered dishes and other
acts of kindness shown us.
May God’s richest blessings a
bide with each of you always.
The family of Mrs. Jack Kuhns
m filling m
PRESCRIPTIONS®
IS OUR MOST
H IMPORTANT SERVICE I |
^iWli
Ernest Knight
DRUGGIST
The Rexall Store
Pharmacist Always on Duty
147 West Cherry St.
Phone GA 7-2254 Jesup, Ga
Run clean through
spring with
RPM MOTOR OILS
Want your car to sing through spring... with smooth
er performance, every mile? Want engine parts so
clean, so friction-free, you save up to 1 gallon of
TIMBER CONTRACTS
A written contract is a sure
way to guard against disappoint
ment and misunderstanding
woods, say foresters of the Uni
versity of Georgia Extension
Service. County Agents will as-
IUXsTOWS 7*
I CELERY 10c I
I Morell Prido Shortening 3 Pound Can 49c I
Morton's Frozen Chicken, Beef or Turkey Pies 2 ° 35c
I Riceland Long Grain RICE 3 LB BAG 39c I
I SHAWNEE FLOUR 5 pounds 59c I
I Baker's Angel Flake Coconut 3'A 19c I
I BLACKBURN SYRUP halpgallon 49c I
I MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE POUND BAG 59c I
I Folger's Instant COFFEE 6 Ounce Jar 59c I
I SILVER COW MILK 3 cans 39c I
I Morrell Pride Snack 12 OUNCE CAN 35c I
I Stokely's Cream Corn No. 303 Can 15c I
I Bond's Sweet Sliced Fresh Pickles o* 25c I
I STOKELY'S FRUIT COCKTAIL n- 303 c. 19c I
I STOKELY'S CATSUP * ounce bottle 15c I
I BRISKET STEW BEEF, pound 29c I
I FRESH DRESSED FRYERS POUND 29c I
I CAULEY'S CURED HAMS whole or H a H Lb 39c I
QUANTITY LIMITED
■ Morgan Grocery I
Phone HO 2-2561 Nahunta, Ga. B
W. B. WILLIS, Agent
sist farmers in making plans for,
selling timber.
Proper care of tree seedlings be
fore and during planting is the se
cret to survival, point out foresters
of the University of Georgia Cooper
ative Extension Service.
\ Grocery Specials I
I Get More for Your Money at Morgan s
fl I
/ Friday & Saturday, March 15 &16 B
FAB LARGE SIZE 25c
gasoline in every 8? Then change to RPM Motor
Oils, the deposit-free oils with the amazing ashless
detergent that almost halts engine wear! Choose
from RPM Special and RPM Supreme—two great
oils. Both are high-detergent Both clean engine
parts as you drive, keep your engine young. You’ll
find that RPM in your crankcase means long-run
ning mileage, better protection for your car. One try
tells why Standard products are Dixie’s favorites!
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (KENTUCKY)
Nahunta, Georgia
FLOWERS! FLOWERS!
Azaleas 25c and 50c in cans;
roses $1.39 in lard cans; box
wood 75c in cans; camellias $1.50
set out in cans. Spivey’s Floral
& Gift Shop, Nahunta, Ga. 3-14