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Beth, 3
Mr. and Mrs. David Biiteh
Pembroke, Ga.
Denmark News
Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Waters
and children have returned to their
home in Memphis, Tenn, after
visiting Mr. Water’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frary Waters and other
relatives and friends in Bulloch
County. They also visited Sue
Richardson and Mr. and Mrs. E.
W. Thomason in Savannah and Mr.
and Mrs. Gibson Waters in Au
gusta.
Mr. and Mrs. James Haygood
and sons, Savannah, spent last
Sunday with Mrs. Haygood’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Roberts
Mrs. J. H. Ginn spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph
Ginn and family in Sandersville.
Mr. and Mrs. George 0. Doan
and family, Jacksonville. Fla. are
visiting Mrs. D. H. Lanier and
other relatives here.
Mrs. C. A. Zetterower visited
Mr. and Mrs. Slater Tippins dur
ing the weekend.
Carole Cromley spent Friday
night with Linda Zetterower and
Saturday night with her grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Zette
rower.
Sara Richardson is at home with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frary Waters, after spending part
of her vacation with her mother
and sisters in Savannah. She also I
Creasy Well Drilling
Statesboro, Ga.
R.F.D. 6
At Denmark TE 9-3394
Pumps, Pipes and Fittings
Easy Terms up to 5 years to
pay No. Money Down
Water Well Drilling
3"—6" Wells
—
I Something you should think about 1
| if you’re about to buy a truck: |
m if all trucks were built the same way,
O cost the same to keep up, were worth the
Q same at trade-in . . . then probably the
■ price tag would be your only concern.
M It can’t be, of course, because some trucks
• have more quality than others. And marks
<0 of quality are the real keys to low cost.
M Chevrolet trucks, for example, have
■ double-wail construction, which gives
0 bodies and cabs more strength. Cabs are
Q insulated against heat, cold and noise. A
M big part of road shock, which shortens
truck life, is damped out by Chevrolet’s
H suspension system; it also makes riding
H in the truck a pleasure. Pickup bodies
% and cabs are separated to eliminate stress
S between them.
■ CHEVROLET TRUCKS ’
Quality trucks always cost less! ® •
tJML. 1
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•••- ; -n^y"
Cheviulel ‘4 Ton flettside Pickup
/ * •
Sec your 1 ■ /iil/oriy'd ('hcri’iilt l (l<'(ih'i'
BRYAN MOTOR COMPANY
DIAL 653-4512 PEMBROKE, GA_
TODAY’S CHILDREN WILL BE BRYAN COUNTYS CITIZENS OF TOMORROW
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tpjU'ik s,. >4
Cathy, 5.
Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Burpitt
Pembroke, Ga.
.visited her aunt, Mrs. E. W. ]
Thomason, and Mr. Thomason. I
While with them she visited
Daufuski Island and Lexington, !
N. C. where Mr. Thomason’s fam- I
ily resides.
Mr. and Hrs. Douglas Leonard,
Pembroke, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Leonard’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Woodward.
)
Friends will be interested to
learn that Mrs. Ruel Clifton has ,
returned from Bulloch County Hos
pita! and is improving.
Mrs. buie NeSmith is a patient I
at Memorial Hospital in Savannah.
We wish her a speedy recovery, i
Mr. and Mrs. James Harris and
little daughter spent the weekend ,
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Otis Ansley.
Rev. and Mrs. Reeves Hoyle
spent Sunday, July 29, as dinner]
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy j
Boat right at Nevils
Miss Patty Rigdon is visiting her
sister at Moneks Corner. S C
Bonnie Smith and Brenda
Cheney are visiting the former’s
grandparents, Mi and Mis. ,1. 1’ |
Whitaker.
Mrs. Walter Royal and Mrs. |
Clevy DeLoach spent the weekend !
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas De- 1
Loach in Columbia, S. C.
Friends regret to learn of the
iillness of Mrs. Douglas DeLoach
and are hoping that her condition
'will soon improve.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H Zetterower
visited Mr. and Mrs Ernest Ne
! Smith Sunday afternoon at Nevils.
I Mr. and Mrs. H H. Ryals visit
ed Mr. and Mrs. William H Zetti i
rower last Sunday afternoun.
For Sale
Cucumbers for sale. Jud righti
for pickling. Contact Earl Shu-;
ma:, Pembroke. Home delivery if
* 1 4
CTPOOf 151
1^
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Catherine Annette, 18 months
Mr. ami Mrs. James Cowart
Pembroke, Ga. *•
Health Depatment
Tells Requisites
For Ist Graders
Letters are being mailed to all
parents of known pre-school age
notifying them of the schedules
for pre-school clinics, and offering
assistance in helping to thorough
ly prepare the child for the im
portant occasion of beginning
school.
The following steps are neces
sary, according to the Bryan Coun
ty Health Department, before a
child may enter the first grade:
have immunizations for smallpox,
diphtheria, whooping cough, and
tetanus (DPT), which are requir
ed. Three polio ami three typhoid
immunizations are strongly recom
mended. If a child has already had
these ••shots" the record should be
taken to the Health Department.
Have a complete physical examina
tion by the family physician dur
ing the summer, The Health De
partment will cheek the children’s
eyes, ears, height and weight, If
there are any defects or abnormal
condtiions present, they should be
corrected during the summer.
Children should be tested lor
i hookworm and treated it positive.
Thy to adjust children to the idea
,of going to school by making it
sound just as interesting and plea
ant ,i possible. Parents can go
a long way in preparing their
children for school and the first
"iade teacher. All parents of pre-
I school aged children are urged to
I bring their children to the Health
Department at the time stated on
their letters so the department
■ might do what it. can in prepar
ing the children for school en
trance, If there are younger ohil-
Vo/iic such os t/irs bos imbued more w
peop/e to inresl in ( hevrotel truck's ereri/
year since 1037.
This can he a good time to buy
a modern new Chevrolet truck
Late summer traditionally is the season
for all-around savings on a new Chev- gi
rolet truck . . . selection is still good S
deliveries are prompt . . . and Chevrolet K
dealers are doubly anxious to put you ■
into a new vehicle in order to make way
for next year’s models. Coupled with the ■
efficient performance a new Chevrolet UI
truck will give you, it seems evident that aj*
you couldn’t buy at a better time.
t ome in and take full advantage ol it! £
THE PEM'BROk£ JOUftNAt
is
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Janice Eiouise, 4'l months
Mr. and Mrs. James Cowart
Pembroke, Ga.
[dren in the home needing immuni-
Izations, they should also be
. brought.
County Agent
News
Managing Beef Herd
For Profit
Bryan County beef producers
who keep the herd bull in the pas
ture with the cows now or during
late summer may lose $lO to S2O
। per head when he markets calves.
This Is based on a study, made
by Extension Animal Husbandman,
'Orville K. Sweet, of records on
i more than 9,000 calves in the beef
i cattle performance testing pro
'gram. These records show that
I calves born after M a r c h w ea n
lighter than full and winter calves.
If cows are mated later in the
summer, the potential loss becomes
even greater. The records show
i that calves born in August wean
|an average of 70 pounds lighter
i than fall and winter calves. This
information indicates that the best
I time to put the bull with cows is
'from December to early July.
The ideal breeding program
i would be to have all calves born
। within a 90-day period of time.
This not only means that they
would be born at the time for most
I profitable growth, but would also
, give a uniform calf crop and de
crease the labor need.
' A uniform calf crop is more at
tractive to the buyer and therefore
, : more profitable because all calves
: are marketable at the same time,
i Since the new calf is not able to
] use all the milk the mother is cap
able of producing at first, the milk
flow is sufficient in the late winter
and early spring. By the time the
4 IB
MK ||
Sharon, 8,
Mr. and Mrs. (larold Bennett
RichmoncrHill, Ga.
j calf is 60 to 90 days old, spring
grasses will have grown up and
the cow will be producing ample
, milk for the calf’s increasing ap
। petite. With the arrival of grass,
' the calf will be old enough to con
i sume all the milk the mother will
give and also benefit from grazing
■ himself.
“Maximum gains on pasture, the
cheapest food, ultimately yield
more net profit for the cattle
man.”
BUNKLEY TAKING
PART IN MATCHES
FORT RILEY, Kan. (AHTNC)
Specialist Four Weyman C.
Bunkley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leondis B. Bunkley, Route 1, Pem
broke, Ga., is among the active
Army personnel supporting the
1962 National Rifle and Pistol
Matches, which are being conduct
ed at Camp Perry, Ohio, July 27-
Aug. 26.
Specialist Bunkley, who is reg
ularly assigned as a squad leader
in the Bth infantry’s Company A
at Fort Riley, Kan., is assisting
in the ooperation of the ranges and
statistical office for the matches.
The 25-year-old soldier entered
| the Army in July 1961 and com-
I pleted basic training at Fort Riley,
Kan,
Bunkley is a 1955 graduate of
‘ Nevils High School, Statesboro,
(and was employed by the Williams
Construction Company, Savannah,
I before entering the Army.
| His wife, Louise, live., in .lum
tion City, Kan.
WSNTEI
ONE MILLION
“Be honest with yourself”
VOTERS who now demand that
their votes return the full benefits of a newly
wm,freedom of choice by casting their ballots
Honest, Clean Government □ Economical
Use of Tax Dollars □ Fair Distribution
of State Purchasing □ All-Out Business &
Industry Expansion □ Education Geared
I
for Challenging Future □ Highway Pro
grams without Politics I!! 1I !! II 1 I
VOTE GEORGIA’S FUTURE
eV W w I aw bi •
■ 11 'III ■ • K
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Paid Political Advertising Paid for by a Sanders for Governor Supporter
jaMeMpIHP: x ,
; Mw .'l
4 Wws if 'J
M w
M untie, 8.
Mrs. John B. Strickland
Richmond Hill, Ga.
I Bowen Furniture Co. j
FROM THE NAME THAT MEANS S
$ QUALITY - COMFORT - ECONOMY
2 •
• We Make Deliveries to Bryan County Every •
Week •
$ 16 S. Main Street Phone PO 4-3414 J
*•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••«
fr **• *2* \ * *** *•* ♦J* *l* •J* **♦ »*« •*« •5* •** *.•
{ COASTAL UPHOLSTERY
If. 3209 Bay Street Savannah, Ga. ?
| “Call Collect” AD 3 . 26 7 4
Y Refinish any type furniture.
V Free Pick-up and delivery.
y Absolutely no down payment. tT ' a.
45 days before first payment BV
X due ' llU'^riMgu IV4 $
2-Piece Living SCQSO v < W *
••• Room Suite JIK4I X
Platform Rocker. siyso I
Sofa B.d« SOQSO If
* as low as ® ❖
T THESE PRICES INCLUDE All I ❖
LABOR AND MATERIALS * '
♦*. •*« .*« ♦*« .*• »*. »*• »•« »*. •*« •*» •’« %♦ •J* *.♦ **• *l* *l* C* **• *s* *•* *•* *•* *•* *** *»• •.
HOKE O’KELLEY
Candidate for Governor
Sept. 12, 1962 Democratk Primary
MuMMNiM LHE umiil SXAU Os (MORtMA
Proadße -A Brand New Day bi >
■■be OVaßqr
Thursday, August 16, 1962
?■. ■ • ; wk
Reba, 7,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Taylor
Richmond Hill, Ga.