Newspaper Page Text
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, Dec. 19, 1968
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Fill your happy hearts anew which the
blessings of Christinas bring to you.
Okefenoke Rural Electric $
Membership Corporation |
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TO MEN OF GOOD
WILL, CHRISTMAS /
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HUMANITY UPWARDS. * M A
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Coin Laundry
Don and Dawshene Mathie
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W«>- To wish y° u ©very happy |
thing the Christmas L
\tk > season can bring. I.
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R. B. Brooker Hardware
Nahunta, Georgia
Nahunta, Georgia
PUT OFF PRUNING
Why should you put off
pruning fruit trees until late
winter? C. D. Spivey, horticul
turist with the University of
Georgia Cooperative Extension
Service, says you should delay
this pruning because your fruit
trees have worked hard in
storing up food in the form
of carbohydrates to carry
themselves through the winter.
JN WFtBJJwr
Full of warmth, full
of cheer and a merry
joyous Christmas.
^6B
Western Auto
Associate Store
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$ The best the season
$ brings is wished for
$ you and yours.
$ Mr. and Mrs.
$ Cecil Moody
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I Christmas * i
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W To wish the meaning of Christmas^
.▼^deeper, its friendships stronger
W and hopes brighter for you. ®
Hilton and Janice Morgan
MISSING PERSON
Elizabeth Lurene Ernstein
14-Year-Old Girl
Missing from
Redlands, Calif.
Redlands, California — Mon
day, March 18, 1968, began as
an ordinary day for Elizabeth
Lurene Ernstein when she left
home for classes at Moore Jun
ior High School in Redlands,
California. But this Monday on
the 18th of March was not to
be an ordinary day.
Elizabeth’s school day pass
ed without incident. She at
tended her last class, then left
school at 3:40 p. m. to walk
home, a two-mile route
through b’ossoming orange
groves. She never arrived
home. Somewhere along the
lonely street. Elizabeth Ern
stein vanished.
There are no clues to her
whereabouts, or even to what
happened to the 14-year -old
girl, o*her than a report from
a Redlands businessman who
was driving through the area.
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Warm good wishes
to all for a very *
Merry Christmas. I
Nahunta, Georgia £
Campbell's
He thought he saw a girl re
sembling Elizabeth walking
toward th? corner of the street
on which she lived.
To h*r parents. Norman and
Ruth Ernstein the .months of
uncertaintv and anxiety over
their missing daughter “are
the deenest anguish a person
can go through. It is a shock
so deen you become wooden,”
th* mother explained.
The Ernsteins are appealing
nationwide for help in locat
ing their daughter. Ernstein. a
ch°mical engineer at Lock
heed in Redlands, and his wife,
a psychiatric social worker,
have nested a $5 000 reward
for information that will solve
the mystery of their daughter’s
disapnearance. They have
vowed: “We will not rest until
we know."
Neither parent has rested
since that first long night
when their young daughter
f*ll°d tn come home. Theye
have tracked mli°s fim*”"h
orange groves, fields, foothills
and canvons in and around
th* Rodlandc; pr°a. They have
followed every lead, no matter
how slight, in the search for
Elizabeth.
“I can fa*e the davt’me bet
ter than the night.” the dis
traught moth°r said: “At nicht
I find myself saving: ‘ls she
safe? Is she warm? Is she
f°d?. . . and finally ... is she
alive?”
Wh°n Elizabeth, nicknamed
“Liz” bv her friends, left for
school that March morning, she
had only 25c with her. She
was dressed in a blue dress
with white flowers, tennis
shoes and dark-olive corduroy
coat. Around her n°ck she
wore a small gold chain w’th
a pendant gold and blue star.
Enroute home, she carried a
red algebra book and a blue
loosoleaf notebook. Neither
has been found.
Elizabeth is five feet, five
inches tall, weighs 105 nounds
and had brown hair and brown
eves. Ph* is one of five Ern
stein children. The family
lost one of these, a son, to polio
in 1052.
“This, the second tragedy in
our lives, is even greater be
cause of th* uncertainty” the
desDerate father said in his ap
peal to end the nightmare. I can
accept anything, even
the worst, which I’m resigned
to, but I must know.”
Any information concerning
young Liz Ernstein should be
reported promptly to tins
newspaper or to Cant. Charles
Callahan. San Bernardino
County Sheriff’s Office, San
Bernardino. California, phone
(714) 889-0111.
Tradition Has It
That Yule Tree
Began in Egypt
The Christmas tree, now al
most a universal symbol, pro
bably came to America from
Germany, al+houeh tradition
has it that Christmas trees ori
ginated in Egypt. The palm
tree is supposed to put forth
a branch every month, and a
soray of this tree, with 12
shoots on it, was used in
Egypt.
German writers mention th°
tree as early as 1605. Th°
German prince Albert, consort
of Queen Victoria, introduced
the Christmas tree in England
wh°n he had a tree for his
daughter.
1958
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£ The young child and mother Jy
•71 departed into Egypt. Wo wish F|*
X you the spirit “< Christmas. 'X*
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Riggins
Nahunta, Georgia
CARE PACKAGES
You can spread Christmas
joy overseas to needy families
through CARE packages. Not
only food, but clothing packa
ges are made up and sent in
your name. CARE stands for
Co-operative for American Re
mittances to Everywhere, Inc.
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• Glad tidings ...Good
luck... Good health
and every happiness.
Waycross
Pharmaceutical
Association
Waycross, Ga.
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f i and wishes too, that g
Christmas brings the 11
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’'WM very Merry Christmas
~ " is wished to you.
Harris IGA Grocery
Nahunta, Georgia
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Illi r A blessed Christmas
wi ^ p eace
and great happiness.
ChamMess Fs^era! Home
Ruth and Guy Chambless
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It's an aid fashioned but sincere wish...
Mirry Merry Christinas to you.
Wilson's Enco Service Center