Newspaper Page Text
..._ —tnierpnse, i\*u. —, veorgia, February 1/, iy/2
I I i H H I n I 1 I MwJkJtwi | I m
Pw <; Hr i i v Wot *hl
FOR SALE
1965 International Pick up
Truck $700.00. can be seen af
ter 5:00 p.m.
R.J. Wainright
Rte. 2, Nahunta, Ga.
Telephone-46 2-5389.
100. 00 TRADE - IN
Will allow SIOO.OO trade - in
on 2 piece Living Room Suite
Several to choose from.
CECIL MOODY’S FURNITURE
COMPANY, NAHUNTA, GA.
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
Highest prices paid for land,
poles, sawlogs and pulpwood.
Contact William R. Davis or
call 912-882-5625. 4-20
FOR SALE
Quail for sale, On the wing
or Dressed.
Call Gilman Hand - 462-5494
FREEZERS
Freezers From 6 Cubic Feet Tc
30 Cubic Feet, Regular And
Automatic Defrost, Chest Ana
Upright Some With 10 Year
W nty On Compressor. All
With Food Spoilage Insurance.
See G.E., REVCO, NATION
AL And GIBSON FREEZERS At
CECIL MOODY'S. We Service
What We Sell. ts
CAR FOR SALE
One 1968 Four Door Wildcat
Buick With Automatic Seats,
Windows, Air Conditioned,
Power Brakes And Steering.
Call Junior Lewis -462-5668
2-17
WANTED PAINTING 8
REMODELING
Would like to do your painting
• andremodeling. Prices reason
able. Call Ettric Gaskin in
Hortense, Ga. - 473-2845 or
473-2198.
REFRIGERATOR SALE
SIOO.OO OFF
G. E. Side by Side 22 cu. ft.
Demo. Refrigerator, Reg.
$599.95 with trade Now $499.
95. with trade.
Brand New with full Five Year
Warranty at CECIL Moody’S
PIERCE COUNTY history, gen
alogy, old photographs, news
stories to 1878, in 108 page
Historical Edition of The Bla
ckshear Times, available at
Broome Printing and Office
Supplies, Blackshear, Ga.
$2.00 mailed. 3-9
r— —
INGLE GROCERY
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
SPECIALS
HICKOK GEORGIA
The Money You Save Will Jingle
If You Always Trade With Ingle
Open Monday Hirv Saturday, I A. M. to ♦ P. M.
FEBRUARY 18 & 19
NORTHERN TOWELS, ROLL 39<
SNOWDRIFT, 42 OZ. CAN 79<
TOMATOES, POUND 29<
TANGERINES - BANANAS - ORANGES - GRAPEFRUIT
CABBAGE - LETTUCE - CELERY - IRSH POTATOES
RADISH - TOMATOES - ONIONS - SWEET POTATOES
SEED IRSH POTATOES |
I LEMONS - BELL PEPPER - APPLES - GRAPES - CARROTS |
APPLES
s*-10*
SMALL COKES, 6 OZ. SIZE, 6 PACK CARTON 49<
LARGE EGGS, 2 DOZEN FOR 89<
KING COLE MIXED VEGETABLES,
BRISKET STEW - HAMBURGER - BEEF ROAST - SAUSAGE
h ALL MEAT STEW - TENDERIZED HAM - LUNCHEON MEAT
j SMOKED BACON - WHITE BACON - WEINERS - BOLOGNA h
2 PORK CHOPS - FROZEN BEEF MEATS - PICNIC HAMS k
J FROZEN T.V. DINNERS - POT PIES - FISH STICKS j
FROZEN HAMBURGER STEAKS - FROZEN SHRIMP J
(STEAK)
ROUND ~ T-BONE - SIRLOIN
OYSTERS IN THE HULL
Fresh Oysters in the shell de
livered each Thursday. $5.25
per bushel. Already shelled by
the pint or gallon. Stop by or
call in your order at Jimmy's
Jiffy Market (462-5712). ts
BILL KAISER'S
FACTORY OUTLET
Save money at Bill Kaiser's
Factory Outlet. Men's suits,
jackets, trousers, allweather
coats 6 jackets. Ladies & junior
sizes pant suits, dresses, slacks,
tops, sweaters, and coats.
Rt. 17 North, Brunswick.
WANT TO BUY
Hides and Furs, i.e., Otter,
Mink, Coon, Bob Cat, Fox,
etc., fresh or cured. Top
Prices. Hoyt McDaniel, at
Air Base, Way cross, Ga. Phone
(call collect) 283-4748 after
6 P.M. or 285-8231 days.
3-30
FEBRUARY
CLEARANCE SALE
Save big money on Baldwin
Spinet and console pianos.
Your choice of furniture style
and color available. No extra
charge for matching bench or
delivery during this sale.
On the spot financing. Rent if
■ou prefer at TAYLOR PIANO
COMPANY, 910 S. Peterson
Douglas , Ga.
SIOO. 00 TRADE - IN
$100:00 Trade - In On 4 Piece
HERCULON Covered Section
al Sofa With Built - In Tables
at CECIL MOODY'S
3-2
TAKE - UP
PAYMENTS
Take - Up Payments of Only
$6.45 Per Week on 23 Inch
RCA COLOR TV and Color
Antenna with Only $395.70
Owing on These Combined at
CECIL MOODY'S.
3-2
FOR SALE
Fran - Sue • Topper thermo,
panel const, factory built for
short wheel base truck.
$200.00. Call after 4:00 p.m.
Carroll Crews Rte 1, Nahunta.
Phone- 462-5580. ts
-
The first mail-order company
in the Unted States was form
ed by Aaron Montogomery Ward
in 1872 in Chicago, with a cap
ital of $2,400
DIXIE CRYSTAL
SUGAR
5 LB. 49*
Deaths & Funerals
Mrs. Varena Parrott
Mr#. Varan# Sh#w Parrot
63, of Brunswick passed away
early Tuesday morning, Feb.
15, at the home of her daught.
er, Mrs. R.J. Rooks, near Wa
ynesville following an extend,
ed Illness. Her death brings
personal sorrow tomanythrou.
ghout this section.
A nativeof Long County, Mrs.
Parrot was the daughter of
the late John and Martha Zorn
Shaw. She had resided In Brun,
swick for the past nine years.
Survivors include her hus
band, Hansford Parrot, of Brun
swick; another daughter, Mrs.
L. E. Driggers of Lakeland, Fla;
four sons, William V. Cobb of
Jacksonville, Fla., Frank H.
Cobb of Mims, Fla., Willis Q.
Cobb of Alexandria, Va. and
Ronald N. Slrmons of Bruns*
wick; two sisters, Mrs. Ednr
Carlisle of Titusville, Fla. anc
Mrs. Eunice Chan of Savannah;
one brother, Dykes Shaw of
Titusville, Fla.
Also survuving are 17 grand,
children, 2 great grand
children, several nieces, neph.
ews and other relatives.
Funeral services were held
at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, Feb.
16, from the chapel of the Cham
bless Funeral Home with the
Rev. J.C. Shepard officiating.
Interment followed in Mount
Olive Cemetery near Waynes
ville.
Serving as casketbearers
were the Messrs. Terry Thom
pson, Sammy Drury, John
Jones, Mike Stone, Tom Gib-
SEPTIC
TANKS
Free Estimates
• GRADING
• ditching
• FIELD LINES
• BACK HOE
>5 • CONCRETE
I® PIPE
mA • CLEANING
IMA Sid Hulett
üßFlx* — Owner —
COMPLETE SEPTIC TANK SERVICE
1000-1500 Gallon Tanks
DIAL
462-5999
SID’S SERVICE
Nahunta, Ga.
POTATOES J
10 POUNDS
10 FOR .
49*
son and Johnson Wiggina.
Th# Ch#mbl#M Funaral
Hom# of Nahunta was in charge
of arrtng#m#nta,
" It's a dry cleaning list!"
DON'S CLEANERS
Rhone 462-5933
Nahunta. Ga.
|toyota|
TOYOTACARS &
TRUCKS
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
USED CARS
SEE RAY WHITE
BRUNSWICK
265-JBI4
NAHUNTA
462-5736
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
THE. World's
BReSTeST
MsMaN
old LIKE TO
MVOUACAR.
aNdSO
M|d 11
If you just want a money
savingr a r deal and a
lot of personal attention
(without super-salesmanship),
come in. It could be the beginning
of a beautiful friendship.
FREI) HAG EX
MRMWS IIXCOI.X MERCIR)
HOME PH()X E- 28 3•5 59 6
OFFK. E PHOXE—2B3-817 I
J fcj ।
|M[^ITO^^RMER|
I HOG PRICES ARE HIGH. I
I OUR FEED PRICES ARE LOW I
I PROGRESS FEEDS Announces a New 3% Cash I
B Discount For All Hog Feeds. I
BWe Have a Complete Inventory of Bulk and Bagged I
B Hog Feed-Including 40% Hog Supplement B
I CALL 458-4444 I
I =PROGRESS FEEDS r : I
I HOBOKEN, GEORGIA I
There’s A New Breed
Os Cat In
Georgia’s Hills Today
By Carl Darnell
(The author is a retired school
teacher and Jasper community
leader now acting as historian for
Bent Tree mountain resort
community near Jasper.)
Those blue blooded cats
and pedigreed pooches moving
into Bent Tree’s new homes
with their
citified owners
aren’t much ■
like the dom- HL
estic or wild ’J
life that used g^H x
to roam our
lush green J?
bowl of Blue K^H^ JU
Ridge Moun- B
tains. M
About 1900, as I recollect,
those of us who lived at the
foot of Hendricks and Little
Pine and Oglethorpe
Mountains ranged our cattle,
hogs and sheep on the slopes
where pretty mountain homes
are now going up so fast at
Bent Tree.
Some of the hogs went wild
and the males grew up to be
large and vicious, but their
New Land Reclamation
Rules Are Now In Use
ATLANTA (PRN) - New
and improved rules for the
reclamation of surface mined
lands have been put into use
by the Surface Mined Land
Use Board. The Board’s
Director, Sanford Darby,
stated that the revised
reclamation regulations were
effective immediately and
have been simplified, clarified
and strengthened. He
commented that less paper
work would be required for
miners, that grading,
revegetation and lake
development requirements
have been expanded and that
additional enforcement
powers are now available.
Primarily rule changes, a
considerable amount of which
was necessitated due to the
fact that the Surface Mining
Act of 1968 was amended by
the Legislature, pertain to
bonding requirements, the
preparation of reclamation
plans, the substitution of
previously mined lands for
lands currently being mined,
and methods of enforcement.
Surface mining operators in
BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY
L “ aßiwwii I ■
C. L. KING NAHUNTA AUTO CHANCEY’S JERRY’S TV
ELECTRICAL . SUPP ^ 7™^
CONTRACTOR i Complete Line ^ av e the new
Os Auto - Truck y Motorola Quasar
New House Wiring & Tractor p artß Color T - V -
Electrical Repairs ■ . WF with Instamatic,
Located on Main
■ t • . x kt x one button does it.
Specializing in Street Next to ’WE TAKE BETTER CARE OF
House Trailer Ham’s Barb.r.hop TOUR CAR- PHONE: 462-5501
Service Entrance Phone 462:5850 CARWASH4LUBRICATION NAHUNTA GA
60 & 100 amp panels NITE 458-4313 EDWARD CHANCEY OWNER Jerry Garland
Phone 462-5699 NAHUNTaA, GA. NAHUNTA. GEORGIA Owner
descendants don’t bother us
much these days. They’re
anti-social and stay hidden in
coves and caves.
For meat, we had plenty of
rabbits, squirrels, deer and
possums, enough to keep our
dinner tables supplied year
round. And tastier than some
of the tough beef steak you
get these days, too.
As for wild animals roaming
our hills, there were bobcats,
raccoons, foxes, wood chucks,
weasels, minks (yep, the kind
you ladies make your fancy
coats from) and. . .skunks.
One of our favorite
mountain yarns about bobcat
hunting goes this way. Two
hunters had been stalking a
large cat for several weeks. He
would run for a short time
then return to his lair.
One morning they decided
they’d outsmart Old Bob and
staked themselves out at his
den, keeping him out in the
open. Soon Old Bob came into
view.
One hunter took a shot at
him and missed. As the cat
Georgia are required by law to
obtain a license and provide
for the reclamation of lands
affected by their operation.
Miners participating in the
program are bonded and given
a reasonable period of time in
which to return mined lands
to a state of usefulness.
It was emphasized that, to
date, 99% of Georgians
engaged in surface mining have
fully cooperated with
personnel of the Surface
Mined Land Use Board in
minimizing land pollution
normally associated with
surface mining. Darby stated
that he is confident that this
relationship will continue and
that perhaps the strengthened
and expanded rules would
make good reclamation
workers out of the small
number of operators who are
uncooperative.
Anyone wishing to obtain a
copy of the Board’s revised
rules and the Surface Mining
Act of 1968 as amended may
do so by writing the Board at
P.O. Box 4845, Macon, Ga.
31208.
started for his den, the other
hunter grabbed him by the
hind legs. That was his
mistake.
Old Bob turned and
attacked him savagely instead
Veterans
Corner
A veteran should know wnat
benefits his survivors are en
titled to upon his death, A. W.
Tate, Director, Atlanta Veter
ans Administration Regional
office, cautioned today,
marriage certificates, should
be kept where they are prot
ected from fire and theft, but
readily available.
Good advice, Tate states, is
for the veteran and his wife to
discuss openly the locations of
these papers and where to turn
in the event of his death.
Veterans service organizat
ions, as well as VA offices,
can be of immeasurable assis
tance in times of death.
Other important documents
that should be safeguarded in.
elude separation papers, death
certificates, divorce decrees
and guardianship or child cus
tody evidence, Tate said.
G.I. Insurance policy numb
ers, VA “C” numbers for all
correspondence, commercial
insurance policies, Social Sec
urity numbers and naturalizat
ion papers are all important in
claiming benefits.
of running away as usual.
The hounds arrived about
this time and took on the
fight, saving the hunter’s life.
But he carried scars from
Bob’s claws and teeth as long
as he lived.
“That’s the only cat I ever
took hold of that wouldn’t
turn loose,” the defeated
hunter admitted.
Another cat like the polecat
had a different defense
mechanism, as you know, and
we used to have several
varieties of these in our hills.
The smallest -- civet cats, we
called them - were about the
size of a small housecat and
were mighty pretty. They
were dark brown with long
white stripes.
Unlike the bobcat, the wise
old fox - and we have the red
and grey varieties - never goes
into a hole unless it has a back
door. So we didn’t catch too
many of these in the old days.
Game birds? We had plenty
and still do: turkeys, quail and
grouse. Then there were owls,
hawks, crows, buzzards and
the majestic Golden Eagle.
Trouble with our old time
hunting was we mostly used
muzzle loading rifles and by
the time we re-loaded, all that
fancy game was gone.
February is Heart
Fund Month!