Newspaper Page Text
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, July 15, 1965
DOESN'T YOURtJ I NO, he'S J |OHTSEE,you
SON HELP W IVIfK boo tbiach in make way while .
The farm work?] r 'Townj^ the son shines.
wJf
REGULAR SIZE Safeguard Deodorant
TIDE SOAP
29* 2 Bars 29*
Sudden Beauty Hair Spray 89c
Icy Waters Pink Salmon, Can 49c
Maxwell House Coffee, Pound 85c
All Brands Canned MILK, 3 Cans 45c
S & S LONG GRAIN GOLD MEDAL
RICE FLOUR
3 Lbs. 39* 5 Lbs. 59*
Soft-As-Silk CAKE FLOUR, 2 Pounds 39c
Dixie Crystal Sugar, 10 Pounds . $1.19
Frozen Pies, Apple, Peach, Cherry, 3 for SI.OO
Frozen Strawberries, 2 Packages 49c
Farmhouse 9-lnch Borden's Buttermilk
PIE CRUST BISCUITS
2 For 35* 4 For 35*
BEEF LIVER, Pound 39c
GROUND BEEF, 3 Pounds SI.OO
CHUCK ROAST, Pound 39c
Chuck Steak, Pound 49c
BRISKET STEW, 4 Pounds SI.OO
Ed's Grocery Bargains
Hickox, Georgia
Open 8:00 A. M. Until 9:00 P. M.
A 2 lb. chicken ...
$ 3 00/
gW *2
|®Ew* S?jUHOy
Economists tell us that if you were a Russian, working
in Moscow today, it would cost you around $3 to buy a
two pound chicken . . . and you'd have to work more than
5 hours to pay for it! . . .
It would cost the Average American less than 75c to
buy a two pound chicken, and he'd work less than a
half hour to pay for it!
Why is your food better? . . . and so plentiful?
Rural Electrification, and greater farm efficiency is one
reason. The bringing to Rural America of abundant, low
cost electric power helps provide the highest standard of
living in the world . . . production of quality food at the
lowest cost in the world . . .
Our job is not done. Many areas are "under-powered",
as demand for electricity increases each year. But we're
planning . . . and we're ready to continue with the ful
fillment of our mission: ... to provide our Members with
the best possible electric service at the lowest possible
cost! . . .
MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION
COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
• COMMUNITY BUILDS*
CNSECA
OKEFENOKE
RURAL ELECTRIC
Want Ads
S2OO TV TRADE-IN
Up to S2OO trade-in allowed on
brand new 1965 GE Color TV. Of
fered for limited time only. Moo
dy Bros. Furniture Co., Nahun
ta, Ga. Cecil Moody, Owner. 7-29.
FOR SALE: One 1962 Chevro
let two-door sedan. Good condi
tion. Good tires. V-8, straight
transmission. Can be seen at Oke
fenoke REMC. Bid by July 23, 19-
65. Right reserved to refuse any
bid. 7-15
FOR SALE: One 1963 Chevrolet
% ton pickup. Good condition.
Fair tires. New body, 6 cyl. Can
be seen at Okefenokee REMC.
Bid by July 23, 1965. Right reserv
ed to refuse any bid. 7-15
FOR SALE OR RENT
Three bedroom and bath home
on one acre near Lulaton for rent
or for sale. Easy terms. E. L.
Sears, Nahunta, Ga. HO 2-4455
7-22
COW FOR SALE
Young Jersey milk cow for sale.
Will be fresh in two months. Lon
nie Wasdin, phone HO 2-2330, Na
hunta, Ga. 7-22
WAREHOUSE PIANO SALE
Practice Pianos $125.00. New
Spinet Panos $449.00. Used 2 Man
ual Organ $495.00. Prices on ALL
Pianos & Organs Reduced for this
Sale. Make your Own Terms. Lar
gest Stock to Select From. TAY
LOR PIANO & ORGAN CO.,
DOUGLAS, GA. 7-15.
LOTS FOR SALE
Two lots 60 feet by 120 feet,
are for sale in Allen Addition in
Nahunta on Cherry Street. Phone
HO 2-4381. 7-22
DURALITE PAINT
Inside paint $2.98 gallon.
Outside paint $3.98 gallon.
Moody Bros. Furniture Co., Na-
hunta, Ga. ts.
DON'T LET THAT
GARDEN GO TO WASTE
Get your freezer bags and
boxes now. Special sale, 25 pint
freezer bags 29?; 50 pint bags
39?; 20 quart bags 29?, 30 quart
bags 39?, 12 half-gallon bags 29?.
Pint plastic freezer boxes 10?
each. Quart plastic freezer boxes
12? each. Moody Bros. Furniture
Co. Nahunta, Ga. 7-15
WANTED TO BUY - Green
Pine Fence Posts. Also Treated
Posts For Sale. Waycross Wood
Preserving Company, Waycross,
Ga. ts
MOBILE HOMES -If you are
hard to please, come to see Tom.
“We sell only Quality Homes”.
Easy Terms. Bank rate financing.
Closed all day Sunday. TOM
BARNES MOBILE HOMES, INC.,
1742 Memorial Drive. Across from
the Holiday Inn. Phone 2832802,
Waycross, Ga. ts.
RECORDS FOR SALE
Records for sale, by top re
cording artists. Prices 99c to
$3.98. Sherman D. Tomlinson
Phone HO 2-4588, Night phone
NO 2-4821, Nahunta, Ga. ts
FOR SALE
Drugs, gifts, sundries, veteri
nary supplies. Sherman D. Tom
linson, Phone HO 24588, night
phone HO 24821, Nahunta, Ga.
ts.
INGLE GROCERY SPECIALS
HICKOX, GEORGIA
THE MONEV YOU SAVE WILL JINGLE
IF YOU ALWAYS TRADE WITH INGLE.
OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL NINE
Shawnee's Flour, 10 pounds 1.19
Luzianne Tea, %-pound 31c
Blackburn Syrup, half-gallon 49c
Luzianne Instant Tea, 3 ounces 59c
Charmin Tissue .. 39c
Charmin Napkins, 15c
S & S Rice, 5 pounds 59c
Blue Plate Salad Dressing, 29c
Dixie Lily Grits, 5 pounds 29c
Van Camp Pork & Beans, 2 for 49c
Van Camp Beef Stew 45c
Cheer, regular 29c
Stokely's Ping, 3 for SI.OO
Stokely's Pong, 3 for SI.OO
Babo, 2 for 35c
Red Devil Lye, 2 for 45c
Hamburger, 3 pounds SI.OO
Brisket Stew, 4 pounds SI.OO
Steak, T-bone or Sirloin, lb 69c
Fryers, pound 29c
•l
VI
Georgia Commissioner of Labor Ben T. Huiet (Left) accepts
the 1965 Achievement Award from the International Association,
of Personnel in Employment Security. Presenting the award is
Marion Williamson, Director of the Employment Security
Agency, who headed the Georgia delegation to the Association s
annual convention in Miami Beach, Florida, where over 1,000
delegates were assembled from throughout the free world. The
top award has come to Georgia nine times since it was initiated
15 years ago. At right is Howard Weeks, Information Officer,
Georgia Department of Labor, also a member of the Georgia
delegation attending the convention.
Questions and Answers
on the Bible
BY MRS. GLADYS C. JOHNSON
What do we mean when we
say, "It's God's Will"?
As Completely dedicated Chris
tians we should always be sur
rendered to the will of God for
our lives. We should be able to
say with assurance that “all
things work together for good to
them that love God.” Romans
8:28.
However, we must be careful
to distinguish between the DI
RECTIVE will ot God and the
PERMISSIVE will of God. I be
lieve that God has a blueprint
for our lives which, if we would
follow, would enable us to live
the fullest kind of a life. This
blueprint is the directive will of
God for us.
But many of us are like the
individual who pays good money
for a house plan and then puts
in a closet here—takes out a door
there—adds a porch where none
was intended. The result many
times is an architect’s nightmare
and has no resemblance to the
original plan. We are paying for
it—so the carpenter PERMITS
us to do as we will.
We start out in the Christian
life and suddenly we come to a
moment of decision—a choice
must be made. Very often we do
not ask God’s will in the mat
ter. We decide “on our own.”
The result is that we have
changed God’s blueprint.
God in His love PERMITS us
to alter the plan and, in so far
as He can, will bless us even
when we have chosen second
best. Many of us can look back
and pinpoint the very time and
place when we made the wrong
choice.
The tragedy of it is that it is
not necessary for us to make
such mistakes. God will close
doors and open others as we ask
Him to show us the way.
There is a very touching in
stance of the permissive will of
God given to us in the 46th chap
ter of Genesis. You remember
that Joseph, as a lad, had been
sold into Egypt by his brothers.
Now he has become the Prime
Minister of Egypt and in a time
OPTOMETRIST
Dr. Charles H. Little
607 Isabella St. Telephone
Waycross, Ga. ATlas 3-5144
of famine his brothers come
down from the land of Canaan
to find food.
A heart warming reunion takes
place between Joseph and hi s
brothers but he longs to see his
old father. Because of God’s love
and mercy He allows Jacob to
leave the land of promise and
go down to be with his son, Jo
seph, although Jacob’s rightful
place as a child of God was in
Canaan.
Another instance is in Israel’s
choice of a king so that they
might be like the other nations
around them even though it was
God’s will that He should be their
King.
Let us be careful that we have
not made our own choice and
thwarted the DIRECTIVE will of
God and then claim that it is
God’s will because He PERMIT
TED the change of His plan.
Let us not be content with sec
ond best in our Christian life.
'Doctor's Nurses
Day' Proclaimed
For July 15th
Governor Carl E. Sanders has
issued a Proclamation, making
July 15th “Doctors’ Nurses Day”
in the State of Georgia. This an
nouncement was made by Blan
che Mobley, D.N., President of
the Atlanta Society of Doctors’
Nurses, which is hosting the An
nual Convention of the American
Association of Doctors’ Nurses,
July 15-18th, at the Atlanta A
mericana Motor Hotel.
Henry Neal, of the Governor’s
office, will welcome the Doctors’
Nurses to Atlanta and read the
Proclamation as representative of
Governor Sanders, at the open
ing ceremonies of the Convention.
Mayor Ivan Allen will also b e
present to welcome the delegates
to the Convention and the City.
Believing that next to war and
peace, health is our greatest pro
blem, the Doctors’ Nurses, em
ployees of physicians, are em
barking on a Decade of Health
plan, to save thousands of lives
by telling people about known
health hazards, including smok
ing, drinking, use of narcotics,
and failure to have regular check
ups.
Harvey L. Simpson, Jr., M.D.,
of Americus, Georgia states: “I
am very pleased with the organ
ization of Doctors’ Nurses in our
state. The doctor’s nurse is quite
often the closest person to the
patient and is a big aid in treat
ment, other than just as mechan
ical help to the doctor. It makes
me feel good to see them get
ting some of the recognition
which they so richly deserve.”
Comments Henry R. Fenn, M.
D.. also of Americus: “It was
indeed a pleasure to see that the
Governor and State are designa
ting a “Doctors’ Nurses Day” in
Georgia. These girls really de
serve this recognition being giv
en them. I always feel that my
doctor’s nurse will do everything
she can to make my patients of
fice visit more comfortable for
them and to make my office run
as smoothly as she possibly can”.
In addition to the Decade o f
Health project, the Convention
program will include several in
stitutes and seminars designed to
acquaint the Doctor’s Nurse with
knowledge to better serve her
employing physician and his pa
tient.
STRAWBERRY TIP
The main reason strawberries
die in the summer is because they
are not provided with supplemen
tal water during the dry periods,
says C. D. Spivey, Extension Ser
vice horticulturist.
Social Security
Card Needed by
Warehouse Workers
Do you plan to work in a to
bacco warehouse this summer?
If so, do you have your social
security account number card
ready to show to your prospec
tive employer? O. L. Pope, Dis
trict Manager of the Waycross
Social Security Office, urges ev
eryone who plans to work in or
for tobacco warehouses this sum
mer to make sure you have your
social security account number
card ready to show to the per
son you expect to work for; other
wise, you may be disappointed.
Employers must have these num
bers for their quarterly social se
curity tax returns. “Even if you
have worked for a particular to
bacco warehouseman before you
are required to show him your
account number card each time
you go to work for him,” Pope
said.
If you have had an account
number card and lost it or you
plan to work for the first time
in the tobacco warehouse and
have never had an account num
er card, apply for your dupli
cate or first card now. Accord
ing to Pope it takes ten to fif
teen days in some cases to get
a new or duplicate account num
ber card. Don’t force your would
be employer to refuse you that
job you’ve been wanting due to
the fact you don’t have your so
cial security account number
card. He can’t accept your ac
count number from your mem
ory, your previous employer or
a scrap of paper. It’s too much
trouble and expense to him or
his company to run the risk of
having an incorrect account num
bet, or to have to look back on
his previous records that may be
in another State. There are too
many other people who will have
their social security cards ready
to show the employer, so b e
smart, be safe and apply for
your new or duplicate social se
curity card at once at the So
cial Security Office at 704 Jane
Street, Waycross, Georgia, be
tween the hours of 8:30 A. M. to
4:30 P. M., Mondays through
Fridays.
The Social Security Administra
tion makes no charge for a new
card or a replacement for a lost
card. If you live away from Way
cross, you may get an applica
tion form at your nearest post
office to complete and mail to
Post Office Box 756, Waycross,
Georgia.
By 1970, predicts Extension Ser
vice Agronomist James F. Miller,
90 percent of Georgia’s peanut
acreage should be treated with
herbicides. Chemical weed killers
were used on 58 percent of the
acreage last year. The increase to
90 percent, says Mr. Miller, can
reduce weed loss by an estimated
$2 million.
—■—
3 POUND CAN
Snowdrift
69*
I AJAX CLEANSER, 14 Oz. 2 for 29* I
I BEAVERS OIL SAUSAGE, 3 Lb. Can.... 89* I
I WESSON OIL, 48 Ounces 79* I
I SILVER COW MILK, 3 Cans 39* I
POWHATAN Pocahontas, 2 No. 2Vi Cans S & S — 5 Lb. Bag
I Mayonnaise Pork & Beans RICE I
I Pint 35* 35* 59* I
I Pure Gold Salad Cube Pickles, Pint 25* I
IR. T. Coffee & Chicory,Lb. 8ag....' 49* E
I Scott's Soft-Weve Tissue, 2 Roll Pkg.... 23* I
I Nabisco Oreo Creme Sandwich, Lb 39* I
I Wagner's Breakfast Drink, 4 32-Oz. Btls. S I.OO I
. FRESH CHUCK RIB
I FRYERS ROAST STEAK I
I Pound 29* Pound 49* ’’ound 59* I
I Morgan Grocery I
Phone HO 2-2561 Nahunta, Ga.
Friday & Saturday
Grocery Specials
Make It a Habit to Trade with Harris
GRADE A
FRYERS
Pound 29*
GROUND
BEEF
3 Lbs. s I.OO
FIRST CUT
Pork Chops
Pound 49*
CHUCK
Roast Beef
Pound 49*
Neck Bones
Pound 19*
MAHATMA
RICE
2 Lb. Bag 29*
GIANT SIZE
FAB
59*
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
HARRIS fiROCERY
Meat Cut and Wrapped for Your Freezer.
Phone HO 2-2475
SUBSCRIBE TO THE ENTERPRISE
M 9
\GROCERY SPECIALS
^Get More For Your Money At Morgan's
r f
a Friday & Saturday, July 16-17
QUANTITY LIMITED
BLACKBURN GIANT
SYRUP Super Suds
32 Ozs. 43* 59*
GOLD CROSS
MILK
3 Cans 39*
KOKEN NYLON
WHITENER
12 Ozs. 39*
SHAWNEES
FLOUR
5 Lbs. 49*
SEALTEST
ICE MILK
%-Gal. 49*
CRISCO — 3 Lb. Can
SHORTENING
79*
With Ham, Swift's
Lima Beans
24 oz, can 39*
Luzianne — 'A Lb. Pkg.
TEA
35*
Nahunta, Ga.