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The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, August 12, 1965
Dairyman Uses
Quality Seed in
Forage Program
Use of quality seed along
with other recommended
practices is paying off in a
high-quality feed production
program for a Greene County
dairy farmer.
J. W. Channell, who is milk-
LE TS GO TO ED'S
i/fOW MS PUN kOI
PUN UMf? GREAT SUCCKC
S 4 S LONG GRAIN BLUE PLATE
RICE Mayonnaise
5 Lbs. 59* Quart 49*
Green Giant Cream Style Corn, 4 For .... 79c
Showboat Pork & Beans, 4 Ounce Can .... 29c
Sugar Rose Tomatoes, 2 For 29c
Island Sun Sliced PINEAPPLE, Can 29c
Dixie Lily GRITS, 5 Pounds 29c
Soft-As-Silk DIXIE LILY
Cake Flour FLOUR
39* 5 Lbs. 49*
FAB W. P. Regular Size 29c
Charmin Teilet Tissue, 4 Colored Rolls .... 39c
IRISH POTATOES, 10 Pounds 49c
Lemons, D0z..... 30c Lettuce, Head .... 19c
GOLD KING
Frozen Breaded Shrimp, 2 10-Oz. Pkgs... sl.lO
Chuck Roast, Lb. 39c Chuck Steak, Lb. 49c
G ro un o FRYERS
BEEF
POUND
3 Lbs. SI.OO 29*
Ed's Grocery Bargains
Hickox, Georgia
Open 8.00 A. M. Until 9:00 P. M.
INGLE GROCERY
SPECIALS f YBUY1
HICKOX, GA lAsSb/*/
The Money You Save Will Jingle \ /
If You Always Trade With Ingle
OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL NINE
FAB AJAX AJAX ^h^re
. e . । • "j rt BOUQUET
Giant Size Liquid Cleanser
73* Giant 65* 2 Cans 33* 4 Bars 36*
Continental Octagon I AJAX I. Rose Petal
Palmolive SOAP cleanser Vel Powder
3 Reg. 35* 2 Bars 25* Liquid 39* Reg 35*
AsaxLeundry Palmolive
Detergent. . Large Detergent SOAP
Giant 83* 59* Giant 64* 2 Bars 33*
SHAWNEES FLOUR, 5 Pounde s»c
BLACKBURN SYRUP, No. 5 Special 49c
POCAHONTAS PORK & BEANS, 4 No. 2^ Cans SI.OO
POCAHONTAS WHITE ACRE PEAS, 2 No. 303 Cans 49c
POCAHONTAS SALT, 3 For 25c
nn^r^rc Tomatoes LETTUCE
POTATOES pound each Potatoes
10 Lbs. 49* 15* 19* Lb. 10*
BEEF ROAST, Pound 49c and 59c
STEAK, T-BONE, SIRLOIN, Pound 69c
HAMBURGER, 3 Pounds SI.OO
BRISKET STEW, 4 Pounds SI.OO
ing 60 cows, plants 40 acres
of com for silage and has 20
acres of Coastal Bermuda
which he uses exclusively for
hay. Last year, according to
County Agent Marion H.
Shurling, Mr. Channell carried
over silage and had consider
able hay to sell.
Mr. Channell is cooperating
with the county agent on the
Georgia forage testing pro
gram and he also has a five
acre demonstration on Coastal
Bermuda. This demonstration
is showing how to get maxi
mum yields by applying lime
and mixed fertilizer according
to soil test and then top dress
ing with 100 pounds of nitro
gen after each hay cutting.
He fertilizes all of the
Coastal with 500 pounds of
6-12-12 and uses 200 pounds of
nitrogen, in split applications,
on the area not in the demon
stration plot. The grass is cut
when it is 12 to 15 inches high
or every four weeks. The 20-
acre field produced 5,400 bales
of hay last year even though
one cutting was lost because
of rain.
Mr. Channell harrows his
com land in the fall and again
in the spring to form a good
seed bed. He plants Coker 911
corn in 36-inch rows, spacing
the plants 12 to 14 inches in
the drill.
He uses lime and fertilizer
according to soil test recom
mendations. This year he
broadcast 600 pounds of 6-12-
12 fertilizer per acre before
planting and used 90 pounds
of nitrogen as a side dressing.
He cultivates two or three
times to control weeds.
Mr. Channell cuts the com
for silage when about two
thirds of the kernels are dent
ed. In 1964 the com yielded
12 to 15 tons of high-quality
silage per acre.
82 Confederate
Widows Receive
State Pensions
Atlanta — There are 82 wid
ows of Confederate Soldiers
receiving state pensions, Pete
Wheeler, director, Georgia De
partment of Veterans Service,
reported.
Four live at a Warm Springs
nursing home and receive $5
per month pensions. The other
78 live throughout the state
and receive sllO monthly from
the state. During the last fiscal
year, these pension payments
totalled $111,310.00.
The Department of Veterans
Service became the state a
gency charged with maintain
ing the Confederate pension
payroll and records in Janu
ary, 1961, when the General
Assembly abolished the Con
federate Pension and Record
Department.
At that time. 172 widows
were on the pension roll.
Georgia granted pensions to
Confederate veterans in 1879;
and to Confederate widows in
1893. During the peak year,
1912, there were 19,972 veter
ans and their widows on the
pension rolls.
Questions and Answers
on the Bible
BY MRS. GLADYS C. JOHNSON
Why did God forbid the
Jews to eat certain meats and
why are not the same foods
forbidden to the Christian?
The Jews were and are
God’s chosen people. They
were to be a people set apart
from the heathen nations and
separated unto God. The un
clean food was a picture of
sin and served to remind them
that they were to keep them
selves pure and holy because
they worshipped a holy God.
The Jewish people had been
in bondage to Egypt for some
400 years and then God sent
Moses to deliver them and
lead them into the Promised
Land — Palestine. This was
a company of about 3,000,000
souls — disorganized and un
accustomed to directing their
own daily life.
God has now become their
King and through Moses He
gives them not only a moral
code of laws, known as the
Ten Commandments, but from
necessity made social and diet
ary regulations by which they
were to live.
In Egypt the Israelites had
eaten anything and every
thing; but now God gives them
distinguished marks by which
they could tell which animals
were clean or unclean.
The clean beasts were all
those which chewed the cud
and parted the hoof, such as
cattle and sheep. (Leviticus
11:1-8.) For hygienic and sani
tary reasons, this rule could
still be followed — and is a
mongst most peoples. Exam
ples of the unclean animals
are given such as the camel —
“because he cheweth the cud,
but divideth not the hoof” and
the swine, “though he divide
the hoof, yet he cheweth not
the cud.”
Os the fish those that were
clean or fit to eat were those
having fins with which to
move through the water and
scales to keep the water out.
(Leviticus 11:9-12.) Anything
living in the water without
fins or scales was forbidden to
the Jew.
Many animals carry para
sites which communicate dis
ease to man, especially swine
or hogs, and the Israelites were
living in a climate and under
conditions where diet played
an important part in their life.
This was one reason for the
law against their eating of cer
tain meats.
However, there is also a dis
tinct relationship between that
which is unclean and sin. God
was teaching them that they
should be holy even as He
is holy.
As for the Christian, most
of the “unclean” creatures are
unclean to them also — not
because the law forbids the
eating of their meat, but be
cause they are naturally re
pulsive to them.
Remember also that the Jew
ish people were living in the
Age of the Law. The Christian
lives in the Age of Grace
which began when Jesus
Christ died upon the cross.
Paul tells us in Romans 8:2
that “the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus hath made
me (us) free from the law of
sin and death.”
When Peter received the
vision of the sheet let down
from heaven with all manner
of wild beasts and creeping
things in it, he refused to obey
God’s command to eat of it
because it was “unclean.”
The voice from heaven then
said, “What God hath cleans
ed, that call thou not common.”
Acts, 10.
Paul makes the statement in
Romans 14:14, “I am persuad
ed by the Lord Jesus, that
there is nothing unclean of it
self; but to him that esteemeth
anything to be unclean, to
him it is unclean.”
The responsibility of the
Christian is not in the “eating
ml' mam
Dr. A. E. Tuten
So many people suffer with backache when it
is easily possible to be entirely rid of it. There is
always a cause for such pain and when the cause is
corrected the pain leaves.
Why not have a spinal analysis to find your
difficulty.
Tuten Chiropractic Health Center
360 State St. Waycross, Ga. AT 5-1559
of meats” or the “keeping of
days” but in living his life in
the spirit of the teaching of
Jesus Christ Himself.
* * •
IS IT A SIN FOR
CHRISTIANS TO WORRY?
It most certainly is and that
is one of several reasons why
you and I, who claim the name
of Christian, will never become
perfect while still here upon
earth. To be perfect in the sight
of God is to be. without sin, and
Paul tells us that “There is none
righteous, no not one.” Romans
3:10
Worry, according to Webster,
is “to feel distressed in the mind;
be anxious, troubled, or uneasy.”
There isn’t a Christian who at
different times in his life has not
experienced these symptoms and
yet — Why?
We accept Christ’s promise that
if we believe in Him, we will have
eternal life and yet in the same
Scriptures we also have this pro
mise. “Be anxious for nothing;
but in everything by prayer and
supplication with thanksgiving let
your requests be made known un
to God, and the peace of God
which passeth all understanding,
shall keep your hearts and minds
through Christ Jesus.” Philippians
4:6.
It is that we doubt His ability
to do what He says He will do —
give us peace for the distressed
and anxious mind and rest for the
troubled heart? If we do, then we
are making God a liar and cer
tainly that is sin.
David in his times of trouble
called upon the Lord, saying,
“What time I am afraid, I will
trust in thee.” And again, “Com
mit thy way unto the Lord; trust
also in him; and he shall bring
it to pass.” “Cast thy burden upon
the Lord, and he shall sustain
thee ...”
The promises are innumerable,
but we try to do everything in our
own strength and because we do
not have the resources that God
has we fail miserably. We need to
learn to trust. If we trust we do
not worry — if we worry, we do
not trust.
The Holy Spirit was sent into
the world by God to assist us in
living a Christian life and when
we neglect to call upon Him in
time of trouble we are sinning
against God.
It was my privilege many years
ago to have George S. Schuler,
the well known hymn writer, as
my music teacher. A booklet
which he has written on the 23rd
Psalm has given me an entirely
new thought on the question of
God’s care for His children.
He calls it the “Why Worry?
Psalm.” Remember the phrase,
“Thy Rod and Thy Staff, They
comfort me?”
Prof. Schuler says he believes
that ‘Thy Rod’ is none other
than Jesus Christ Himself
who in the hand of God delivers
us from the sin and bondage of
this world just as Moses by the
rod in his hand delivered the
children of Israel from Egypt.
And then, as though to give a
double measure of assurance to
the believer that God would pro
vide for His children, He added
‘Thy Staff’ which could very well
be the Holy Spirit who leads and
directs our lives. We are to lean
upon His Rod AND His Staff.
The staff in the shepherd’s
hand was for the protection of
his sheep. If we do not avail our
selves of the Staff in the hand of
God, we are as sheep without a
shepherd.
Notify This
Newspaper When
Your Address
Changes.
BAD
BACK
Want Ads
MALE HELP WANTED
Sell KNAPP SHOES part or full
time. Earn $25 to $l5O a week on
high commissions and bonus.
Steady year-round business. E
quipment furnished free. Write
to J. C. Clayton, Knapp Shoes,
Brooklyn, Mass. 8-26
COME! SEE!
Come in and see the full
line of radios, TV’s and record
players just received at your
home owned Western Auto
Store, Nahunta, Ga. 8-19
HELP WANTED
Service station attendant
wanted. Call HO 2-4816, giving
age, experience and salary re
quired. 8-12
GOLDEN HARVEST
PIANO SALE
We offer the largest Select
ion of SPINETS, CONSOLES,
ORGANS, REBUILT PIANOS,
USED PIANOS AND PRAC
TICE PIANOS EVER. We urge
everyone interested in a Fine
Piano at BIG SAVINGS to
come in at once and get first
choice on these Fine Instru
ments that must be sold NOW.
LARGEST STOCK-LOWEST
PRICES - EASIEST TERMS.
TAYLOR PIANOS & OR
GANS, DOUGLAS, GA. 8-26
DURALITE PAINT
Inside paint $2.98 gallon.
Outside paint $3.98 gallon.
Moody Bros. Furniture Co., Na
hunta, Ga. ts.
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.
I
(Wn
I v™ 15 / */
ran Nabisco shawnees
I r- 7™ Saltines FLOUR I
I 6iant 59 Lb. 27* 10 Lbs. 99* I
I Signet (Brer Rabbit) Syrup, Half-Gal 39* I
I CHARMIN TISSUE, 4 Rolls .33* I
I CHARMIN NAPKINS, 8 Count, 2 F0r.... 25* I
I CHICKEN-OF-THE-SEA TUNA 29* I
I CARNATION MILK, 3 Cans 39* I
S & S Stokely's No. 214 Can Stokely's Fruit, No. 303 Can
I RICE PEACHES Cocktail I
I 3 Lbs. 35* 29* 19* I
I KRAFT'S MIRACLE WHIP, Quart 49* I
I R-T COFFEE & CHICORY, Pound Bag 49* |
I CRISCO, 3 Pound Can 69* I
I BRISKET STEW BEEF, Pound 29* I
FRESH RIB CHUCK ■
I FRYERS STEAK ROAST I
I Pound 29* Lb. 59* Lb. 49* I
I Morgan Grocery I
Phone HO 2-2561 I.ahunta, Ga.
(Friday & Saturday!
I Grocery Specials I
Make It a Habit to Trade with Harris
GRADE A
j FRYERS
| Pound 29*
CHUCK
I Roast Beef
| Pound 49*
Swift's Jewel
I Shortening
| 3 Lb. Can 69*
Circus Orange
I DRINK
146 oz. can 29*
Dragon Long Grain
I RICE
| 2 Lbs. 29*
Chase & Sanborn
I COFFEE
I Lb. Can 79*
McCORMICK
I TEABAGS
100 Count 79*
■I~ ~ M
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
I HARRIS GROCERY I
I Meat Cut and Wrapped for Your Freezer. ■
I Phone HO 2-2475 Nahunta, Ga. ■
SUBSCRIBE TO THE ENTERPRISE
GROCERY SPECIALS I
Get More For Your Money At Morgan's
Friday and Saturday, Aug. 13-14
QUANTITY LIMITED
GROUND
BEEF I
3 Lbs. *I.OO |
SOLIDS
OLEO I
Pound 19* |
GOLD CROSS
MILK I
3 Cans 39* I
Duncan Hines Coconut
CAKE MIX I
Suprise 39* |
Whitehouse
Apple Jelly I
2 Lb. Jar 39* I
PILLSBURY'S
BISCUITS I
4 Cans 39* I
LB. BAG
CARROTS I
10*