Newspaper Page Text
’ INFORMATION
from your
CO. EXTENSION OFFICE
ic < By George A. Loyd
County Agent
destroy
TOBACCO STALKS
tobacco farmers who have
finishing in a few weeks from
now are urged to destroy the
stalks as soon as harvest is
completed.
Destroyingthese old stalks by
mowing and harrowing the land
is one of the best ways to con
trol insects and diseases in the
following years.
When left to continue to live
and grow suckers, they provide
a source of food on which in
sects and diseases can feed and
breed and survive the winter
much better.
Destroying the roots of the
plants by turning them upwhere
they willbe exposed to sunlight
and drying will also help to re
duce nematode population
through starvation and dehy
dration.
/ Tobacco production is some
what like livestock production
in that the control of diseases
and insects with chemicals and
medication is much harder
when good sanitary practices
are neglected.
The destruction of the old
stalks should be considered a
sanitary practice in tobacco
production.
Smokey Sayt:
FOREST FIRES ARE STARTED BY
SOMEONE BEING CARELESS!
c; ' /who)
/ARE YOU)
I GUILTY?/
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-1-1114
Most forest fires are man-caused
Your Horne Newspaper
Reflects the History
Os Your County—
ALL PURPOSE of load. But the one-cycle
3. 111 B AMI E ® All ^ shwasher does what ha s just
■ IvvNE VIL been described and does it well.
Oils Evervthina Itfc *^ y “ eiecwcservant!
Prevents Rust ^BRANTLEY*
lituui-msrur-EiEcniciuiu ENTERPRISE lc
A VACATION'S
ALWAYS
BETTER
WHEN YOU
HAVE ENOUGH
MONEY!
THERE'S NOTHING WORSE THAN CUTTING YOUR VACA
TION SHORT BECAUSE YOU RAN OUT OF MONEY. DON'T
LET THAT HAPPEN THIS YEAR. IF YOU NEED A LITTLE
EXTRA CASH SEE THE CITIZENS BANK ABOUT A PERSON
a? LOAN WE'LL BE GLAD TO LEND YOU THE MONEY. IN
baotlF YOU NEED MONEY FOR ANY WORTHWHILE PUR
PME WE WANT YOU TO COME SEE US. WE'RE IN THE BUS
ri?ESS TO MAKE LOANS ... NOT TURN THEM DOWN.
2 h
By Virginia N.
Raulerson
Co. Extension
Home Economist
DISHWASHER
NOTES"
A national magafine recent
ly made a survey of over 400
families who had remodeled
their kitchens in 1970. From
this they learned that 94 per
cent bought new appliances
with 7S percent buying two or
more. By far the most popular
appliance was the dishwasher,
and it is no wonder for it can do
so much and do it well.
First of all, there are several
styles of dishwashers, with at
least one suitable for all in
stallations. It is not an expen
sive appliance and it requires
little space only 24 Inches
installed. One somestimes o"er
looked advantage is a neat kit
chen. Since you tend to load
articles as they are soiled, the
kitchen can stay relatively
straight and clean.
The dishwasher does not have
to be run until there is a load
which for many families is on
ce a day. Small families may 1
need to wash even less frequ
ently. The entire process is so
easy. Just add the recommen
ded amount of a special dish
w asher detergent, turn the con
trol to ON and you are through
until time to unload.
Although cycles vary some
what with the manufacturer,
this is approximatley what hap
pens inside. First there will be
one or two pre-rinses, elimin
ating this as one of your jobs.
Thenthe detergent is automa
tically empdedin and the dish
es wash for five or so minutes
using water hotter than you can
put yout hands into and deter-
gent stronger than the dishpan
kind. Then after two or three
rinses, the dishes are dryed au
tomatically. The entire pro
cess is a much more through one
than you can do by hand and
the dishes emerge squeaky
clean.
There are models with two,
three or five different cycles 1 ,
each tailored for a certain type
THE CITIZENS BANK
Folkston, Nahunta and Hoboken, Georgia
Members Federal Deposit insurance Corporation
TIPS ON
HOME BUILDING
By Suzanne Prichard
Bent Tree Home
Consultant
ATLANTA (PRN) - New
construction materials and
fresh approaches to old
materials and building
techniques can make the
construction of your resort
home a modest budget affair,
with easy care bonuses.
So reports W. Caldwell
Smith, Atlanta architect noted
for his quality city residences
and imaginative second homes
in picturesque resort
communities like Bent Tree
near Jasper.
Remember first, Smith
warns, that low-budget
materials and labor don’t
necessarily give low
maintenance homes. If
materials and workmanship
are too cheap, they just won’t
hold up, the architect reminds.
Here are Architect Smith’s
practical tips on “escape
home” building:
1. Check the possibility of
using local labor to lower
building costs. “But find out
the workmen’s capabilities and
prejudices,” he adds. This may
or may not save your money
in the long run.
2. Consider wooden pole
foundations as an alternative
to expensive masonry work.
3. Research thoroughly the
new types of exterior
construction materials, such as
plywood siding veneered in
cedar or redwood, to look
rustic and resist decay. This
double-layered siding replaces
the old combination of
sheating and boards with a
single, labor saving installation
and comes in a wide choice of
finishes.
4. Look into new versions
of traditionally rustic roofing
materials like shingles and
shakes. They now come in
quick-applying panels of 14-25
inch widths by 8 foot lengths
arid last as long as their
original counterparts. Asphalt
shingles are a less expensive
compromise.
5. Consider adding decks to
any side of your resort home
as an extension of outdoor
living space at a low cost and
requiring almost no
maintenance. Smith prefers
redwood deck flooring,
unstained. Decks do not
require the masonry work or
maintenance of ground level
patios.
6. For interior wall,
compare pros and cons of
vinyl-covered plaster board
with plywood panelings that
have prefinished surfaces. Or
consider “plain old”
sheating-grade lumber boards,
rough sawn, for a
“naturally-rustic” look.
7. Paint interior walls in a
light color or stain in a pale
tone to lighten your home’s
naturally-dark woodsy setting
and dark-stained exterior
walls. Perhaps stain the doors
EMORY PARRISH
GSPE Honors
Road Builders
ATLANTA (PRN) - State
Highway Department
Executive Assistant Director
Emory Parrish stands by the
award the Department won
this year from the Georgia
Society of Professional
Engineers for, “doing the most
for the professional
development of its engineers.”
The award was announced by
the society last fall, and a
plaque was presented to the
Department at the GSPE’s
annual meeting in June. The
GSPE cited the Highway
Department for its continuing
policies concerning
professional registration,
attendance at professional
meetings, office and support
facilities available, professional
development programs for
new graduates, promotion
policies, and other areas of
achievement.
Richmond Hill
Receives Grant
WASHINGTON (PRN) -
Congressman G. Elliott Hagan
today announced the approval
of a $222,600 Economic
Development Administration
grant to the City of Richmond
Hill, Bryan County, Georgia,
for the expansion of a water
system to serve a proposed
industrial park and to make
possible the redevelopment of
a plantation into a
recreation-tourism complex.
Hagan advised that City
officials said the enlarged
water system will encourage
the location of industry at
Richmond Hill and allow the
City to participate in the
growth anticipated with the
completion of Interstate
Highway 95.
“An estimated 200 new
jobs are expected” Hagan
further stated “with the
development of an 800-acre
plantation into two golf
courses and the construction
of a 100-unit motel, marina,
condominium, barge terminal
and airport. Another 24 jobs
are expected with the
expansion of an existing
motel.”
Hagan added that the City
of Richmond Hill will add
$95,400 in other funds to
meet the $318,000 total cost
of the project and included in
the EDA grant is a $31,800
bonus because Richmond Hill
and Bryan County are
members of the Coastal Area
Planning and Development
Commission, a multi-county
organization working to
overcome mutual problems of
unemployment and lagging
economic development.
Subscribe to the*
BRANTLEY
ENTERPRISE
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
yip
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The Rexall Store
|*harnMci»f Always on Duty
147 West Charry Strwf
Pbana GA 7-2254 Jesup. Ga.
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Hemorrhoidal
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caused by inflammation
Doctors have found a medica
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The answer is Preparation H*.
No prescription is needed for
Preparation H. Ointment or
suppositories.
Eggsellent Ideas
GEORGIA EGG COMMISSION
MISS MILDRED HUFF, HOME ECONOMIST
ATLANTA (PRN) — I knew the early west was inhabited by
consumers of buffalo meat, beef jerky, beans, biscuits, black
coffee, and bottles of whiskey, but bean sprouts and bird’s nest
soup?!!! Why were these foods always features on the menus In
Denver?
It took a while to clear the cobwebs from the historical part
of my mind and remember. Os course there was an oriental
influence on the food in the west! In the 1870 s thousands of
Chinese immigrated. In fact they were usually the cooks for
railroad crews who made tracks to join the east and the west,
and on ranches - Hop Sing on “Bonanza” for example.
The contributions of Chinese, Mexican, Indian, and settlers
from all parts of the United States made some very interesting
eating. One of my luncheon favorites was a remarkable
combination of ground beef and fresh spinach, sauteed and
spiced and then served alongside scrambled eggs. A glass of beer
brewed with Rocky Mountain spring water was the refreshing
accompaniment.
At various other convention functions we were served such
foods as buffalo tamale pie, Swiss enchalatas, trapper’s fruit,
mountain oysters, hailstorms (same recipe as our southern mint
julep), and Mexican margaritas.
The home economist with the Sunkist Company gave us her
version of the margarita -a pie.
MARGARITA PIE
PRETZEL CRUMB CRUST (9 INCH PIE)
3/4 cup finely crushed pretzel crumbs (or 6 tablespoons
pretzel crumbs and crushed vanilla wafers)
3 tablespoons sugar
5 tablespoons melted butter or margarine
Use a rolling pin to crush pretzels. Combine crumbs and
sugar; add butter gradually, stirring to mix well. Reserve two
tablespoons for garnish. Press remaining mixture onto bottom
and sides of well buttered 9 inch pie plate; chill.
MARGARITA COCKTAIL FILLING
1 envelope unfiavored gelatin
1 teaspoon freshly grated lemon peel
7 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
4 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons tequila
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons triple sec
5 egg whites
7 tablespoons sugar
1 Sunkist lemon, unpeeled, thinlv sliced for cartwheel twists
Soften gelatin in mixture of lemon peel and juice for five
minutes. Beat egg yolks in top of double boiler until very
thick/beat in 1/2 cup sugar and salt. Add gelatin mixture and
cook over boiling water, stirring constantly, until slightly
thickened and gelatin is dissolved about 7 minutes. Immediately
transfer to bowl; thoroughly blend in liquors. Chill over ice
water or in refrigerator, stirring frequently until just cold to the
touch. (Mixture should not be too thick.) Meanwhile, beat egg
whites just to soft-peak stage; gradually beat in 7 tablespoons of
sugar at high speed until all sugar is used. Whites should be
glossy and moist and tips of peaks should fall over slightly when
beater is withdrawn. Spoon into chilled Pretzel Crumb Crust;
sprinkle with reserve crumbs. Arrange cartwheel twists around
.edge of pie. Chill until firm. Best when served the same day it to
1 made.
If you have any questions or recipes you would like to share
please write to me: Georgia Egg Commission, 1687 Tullie Circle,
N.E , Suite 118, Atlanta, Ga. 30329.
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L. to R. - Patsy Griffin, Faye Gibson, Loureatha Sloan and Mary Lee Pinkney.
Patsy Griffin began work at Nahunta Manufacturing Company on Feb. 22, 1971.
She lives on Rt. 1, Hoboken with her husband, Carl, and one Daughter. She has
reached 90% Efficiency and was awarded 2500 Green Stamps. Her operation is
Fly Stitch.
Faye E. Gibson began work at Nahunta Manufacturing Company on May 10, 1971.
She lives on Rt. 1, Hortense with her husband, Walter, and four children. She
She has reached 100% Efficiency while still a Trainee and was awarded 5000 Green
Stamps and a Flag. Her operation is Joining Crotches.
Loureatha Sloan began work at Nahunta Manufacturing Company on March 24, 1971.
She lives on Rt. 1, Hortense with her husband, Marvin, and three children. She
has reached 70% Efficiency and was awarded 500 Green Stamps. Her operation is
Yoking.
Mary Lee Pinkney began work at Nahunta Manufacturing Company on July 9,197 L
She lives at Waynesville with her husband, DeWitt and six children. She has re
eached 100% Efficiency and received a Flag. Her operation is Leg Pressing.
NAHUNTA THREADS
"A Great Place To Work"
Residence Sales Representative
Atkinson R.L. Walker Chevrolet Co
Phone 462-5569 Phone 283-4250
Waycross, Georgia
CLOUGH-PEARSON
FUNERAL HOME
417 E. Main Street
24-Hour AMBULANCE SERVICE
OXYGEN EQUIPPED
BERNARD 8. PEARSON CLAUDE G. CLOUGH *
DIAL DIRECT (1-449-6626) Blackshear, Ga.
We honor and accept all life insurance. '
CAN YOU AFFORD TO LOSE
SIOO.OO
YOU DID IF YOU TRADED CARS BEFORE
YOU TALKED WITH . . .
JACK H. RENTZ
Padgett Pontiac-Cadillac, Inc.
WAYCROSS, GA. PHONE 283-7711
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Georgia, July 29, 1971
CAROLYN MIDDLETON
HAS SELECTED
"OLIVIA" STONEWARE
BY
C ASUA L CER AM M
AS HER MAIaI \a\
BRIDAL PATTERN
AT
CECIL MOODY'S
NAHUNTA, GEORGIA
WHEN YOU DECIDE
IT IS TIME TO
BUY OR TRADE
Ask for
JAMES "TINY" McCALL