Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, January 29, 1942, Image 5
I^STmention; I Mr William Barfield and Mr.] m jjjrris Rape spent Sunday in] Statesboro. S Mr Avery Lee left Monday for ■ .AUovvn. Pa. where he...will ■ Mld our months while training} fellkat the Wellston Air ■ Depot- I vfr? LB. Moody Sr. of Kath ■ jee n is' visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Moody. ■ MrP \v E. Marshall Jr. spent ■ Thursday and Friday in Ameri ■ Jus with her mother. I Mr and Mrs. JD. Stembridge II n f Centerville visited Mrs. J. M. H Holloman several days this H week. | Mr JL. Beavers spent sev- H eral days with relatives in Bir- II ra ing, Ala. recently. I Miss Marianne Nunn came II home from Wesleyan College and II Inent the weekend. She had as | Jor guest, Miss Martha Gragg,of || Bain bridge, another Wesleyan II student. | Mr and Mrs. W. V. Bass have ■ an apartment in the home of ■I Mrs. H. T. Gilbert. I Mr. Arthur Cobb, Atlanta, l| spent the week with his par | Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Roberts || had as their guests Sunday: Mr. II and Mrs. W.H. Winters,Bradley; II Mrs. Jesse Moore, Haddock; and || Mrs G. A. Bloodworth and chil li dren, Joanne, Ruby, Carolyn,and || Albert Jr., of Spartanburg, S. C. | 1 Mrs. G. C. Nunn is a delegate || from the W. S. C. S. of the || South Ga. Methodist Conference || at a meeting being held in Nash-] || vilie, Tenn. this week. I ! Mr. J. M. Tolleson Jr., a stu-| |l dent at Davidson College, David-, || son, N. C., spent the weekend at j II home. I i Miss Jane Riley visited Mr.and II Mrs. J. J. Sparrow in Hawkins - 11 vilie Saturday. I Mrs. Fred Thomson entertain-i [| od her Bridge club last Thursday ( || at her home. | I ; Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Pritchett, || had as their guests Sunday Mrm [| Sidney Williams and Mr. Francis] || Sheppard, Cochran Field. I Mrs, J. Z. Smith, Sasser, spent || the weekend with her daughter, II Mrs. Warren Hodge, and Mr. l| Hodge. | Mr. Robert Greene and Mr. [ | Marvin Greene came home from 11Mercer University for the week-] || end. Mrs. L. H, Gilbert was hostess j |to her Bridge club Saturday. | Mrs. W. M. Haywood ofj || Thomasville visited her mother, | Mrs. Kate Hodge, during the |weekend. Mr. and Mrs. L, C. Walker |spent the weekend in Warthenj 1 1 with his parents. I Mrs. H. P. Houser Jr. went to' | Atlanta Saturday fora visit of ' Bseveral days with friends. Miss Edwina Osier vi s i t e d | friends at G. S. T. C., States- Hboro, during the weekend. I Miss Elizabeth Short, Fort | Valley, spent the weekend with | Miss Helen Gray. I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morgan ■of Macon spent Tuesday with her |mother, Mrs. N. W. H. Gilbert. | Mr, and Mrs. J. P. Etheridge |bad as their guests Wednesday ■ last week: Mrs. Cooper Ether |idge and little son, Charles Coop ■tr, of Cincinnati, Ohio; Mrs. B. ||A Scharff, Macon; and Miss ■Hortense Williams, Marion, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dyal have apartment with Mrs. H. T. | ■Gilbert. j ■ Mr. J. P. Etheridge returned [ ■Wednesday from Jackson, Miss, ■where he attended a Cotton: ■Council. Mrs. Etheridge visited ■Mrs. W. J. Little in Macon Mon- Way. ■ Mr. Benny Griffis of Macon ■was the guest speaker at the ■monthly meeting of the Baptist ■bunday School Teachers and] ■ workers’ Council held Tuesday ■mght at the church. ■ Mrs.W.V. Tuggle accompanied ■ A ‘ er Parents and brother, Mr. and ■Mrs. S. J. Powell and Mr. Joe °weli, of Leesburg, to Atlanta spent several days last week. J ■ •J. A. Beddingfield and 1 W au^. r 'ter, Joye, returned Tues K‘ ay from a ten days’ visit with | L anc l Mrs, L. R. Bryson in ■ efferson, Ga. j | BOOK CLUB MEETS I j ; Mrs. J. M. Gooden and Mrs. S. )A. Nunn entertained the Wed nesday Afternoon Book club last week at the home of Mrs. J. M. Gooden. | Mrs. C. B. Andrew Sr., presi dent, conducted the business ses sion. She appointed Mrs. J. L. Beavers, Mrs. S.L. Norwood Jr., Mrs. A. P. Whipple, Mrs. J. B. Calhoun, and Miss Martha Coop er as a committe to serve with Miss Louise Rainey, Houston county chairman of the Victory Book Drive which is being spon sored by the club. The program consisted of a re view of Kenneth Roberts’] “Oliver Wisnell’’ by Mrs. T. D. Mason Sr.; a paper on“ Williams-! burg” by Mrs. G. E. Jordan;and [current events by Miss Rainey. A salad course was served by the hostesses. BIRTHDAY PARTY Mr. John Heller was given a surprise birthday party Tuesday, Jan. 20, by his wife. After Bridge was played, de lightful refreshments were serv ed with the birthday cake. Guests included Mr. and Mrs, Drew Harris, Mr. and Mrs Fran cis Nunn, Mr, and Mrs. Guy Watson, Mr. and Mrs. E.F, Bell- 1 flowers, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hel ler,and Miss Margaret Sammons. Mr. and Mrs, Miller Edwards and sons, Gordon and Dick, of Macon spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Edwards. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Evans had as their guests during the weekend her sister, Miss Doro 'thy Franklin, of Vienna. ! Miss Catherine Hickson has [been appointed on the Sports i Council at Georgia State Wo i man’s College, Valdosta. She is the only freshman to receive this honor. Mr. Eugene Lashley Sr. has gone to Middletown, Pa. where he is receiving training for em ployment on government work. I] Mr. and Mrs. Joe Andrews and children, Gene and John Cater, [spent last Sunday in Macon with ! their daughter and sister, Miss Evelyn Andrews. Mrs. J. Blue Calhoun was hostess to the Presbyterian Aux-| iliary Monday afternoon. Mrs.] Calhoun,president, presided over the business session. The for eign mission study book was pre sented by Mrs. Virgil Bass. Re ! freshments were served by the ] hostess. Mrs. T. W. Hentz is visiting j her sister in Montgomery, Ala. I Mrs. R, L. Cater. Mrs. Roll Pate, Miss Katharine Cater, and| Mrs. Eliza C, Massee spent last Thursday in Atlanta. Mrs. Blue Calhoun, Mrs. Lewis Tabor and Mrs. A. B. Ramage attended the Presbyterian Board j meeting at the First Presbyte j rian church in Macon Wednesday. AND Face Powder 00 • ° r *l 00 This Atl-PUP. FOSE cream will astound you with its results. It helps nourish and stimulate the shin cells to renewed activity. Vita-Ray Cream relieves dryness, helps recede enlarged pores and adds a fresh glowing tone to your face. The exquisitely fine textured Vita- Ray Powder adds a soft, transpar ent radiance to your re-vitalized skin. Choice of 6 flattering shades. For a Limited Time Only. 1 HOUSTON DRUG CO. Phone 52 Perry, Ga. Tunnel for Brooklyn The tunnel connecting New York : and Brooklyn, under the East river was opened for use on January 9, ! 1908. J War Expenses Cut for Britain Millions of Pounds Saved for Many Taxpayers by Special Board. LONDON.—Meting in quiet con ferences in an oak-paneled room in the shadow of London’s “Big Ben,” a committee headed by Sir John Wardlaw-Milne, economist, has saved British taxpayers millions of pounds by cutting unnecessary ex penditures in government depart ments since the start of the war. Sir John and his committee of 31 | men and women members of parlia-. , ment went into action three months I after war broke out. Now, with the job far from finished, they have completed surveys of the complex financial backgrounds of the army, navy, air, supply, home defense, trade, agricultural and transport services. They have jurisdiction over everything to do with the war, and the spending of the British gov ernment’s money to win it. Each Member a ‘Sleuth.’ Each member of the “team,” which is known as the select com mittee on national expenditure, is a modern Sherlock Holmes. Each does his own investigating and field work. Since the committee was formed, more than 1,000 witnesses have been interviewed at more than ' 500 hearings. Each of these hear | ings has resulted in some new sav ing to the government. “We have no outside ‘experts’ to help us,” Sir John said in a recent interview. “If we have a suspicion of waste we visit the spot ourselves and interview witnesses personally. The government has given us the power to demand and examine any documents or papers we may need i for our investigation, and we use this power.” Members of the committee have traveled thousands of miles to ob tain evidence of possible savings. They have studied dock yards, air ports, factories, film studios, muni tion works, fire-fighting units, and a variety of government offices. Ship Costs Cut Sharply. It was about a year ago that Sir John put his finger on the pulse of Britain’s sea might and realized that, although the expenses of ship building were rising sharply, the in creased output did not seem to be in ratio to the expenditure. Accord ingly, committee members visited shipyards in major British cities and soon found the cause for mount ing expenses. It developed that workmen were striving to increase the production of their own yards by working over i time. They received increased over j time pay, but the excessive work was causing a number of workers to become sick and thus, although there was a rise in the cost of labor, the efficiency of the labor was slack ening. The recommendations of the investigators rectified the situation. The past year has been a fruitful one for Sir John and his co-workers. They have been able to recommend substantial savings to the ministry of information in relation to the pro i duction of motion pictures concern | ing the war, and they have solved financial problems encountered in housing members of the balloon barrage command at field locations. Ultra-Violet Rays Bare Theft of Dimes in Mint PHILADELPHIA. Edwin H. Dressel, superintendent of the United States mint here, credited science with the arrest of a 35-year old mint employee on charges of stealing 22 dimes. The dimes, which Mr. Dressel said were found in the pockets of George J. Kraft, were subjected to ultra-violet rays. One by one, they became fluorescent. “All right,” Mr. Dressel quoted Kraft as saying, “I stole them.” The dimes, slightly defective - ;, had been dipped in a solution invisible to the naked eye as a means of labeling them. Kraft was held in $l,OOO bail by United States Commissioner Nor man Griffin. Joe Is the Only Name Prisoner Can Remember MONTICELLO, N. Y.—One of the ! prisoners at the county jail travels 1 light—even so far as his name is concerned. He is called Joe, nothing more. Sheriff Harry Borden determined that the 74-ycar-old prisoner was not an amnesia victim, but persis tent questioning could elicit no fam ily name. Finally the officer got a Russian interpreter and here’s the story i that came out: I It has been so long since anyone I called him anything but Joe, ex- I plained the prisoner, that he had I just forgotten the rest of his name. Defense Is Luring Away Trade School Teachers BOSTON.—Highly paid jobs in de ; fense industry have proven a lure i to trade school teachers, according ; to Edward M. McDonough, head master of Boston Trade school. Mc- Donough said qualified men scorn the $7-a-day compensation offered by the school with the result he ! has been unable to obtain five in | structors for courses in machine ! shop practice, automobile mechan- I ics, radio and sheet metal work. NEW SHIPMENT OF j Spring Merchandise Has Just Arrived at MOORE'S Ladies, you owe it to yourself, your family, and your friends to look your best during these times, Good clothes help to maintain a high morale. We are proud of the array of pretty spring dresses, coats, and other wearing apparel assembled in our store for women who have good taste and discrimination in their selection of clothes. Come in today and choose yours. DRESSES SPRING COATS Alpaca and Crepe Plaids and Solids Tailored and Dressy $10.95 and $12.95 Styles $7.95 WOOL SKIRTS Solids and Plaids DRESSES AH Wool Flannel Shantung and Crepe Made by Parker, «t»c qe Wilder & Co. * DVD All sizes, priced at DRESSES $2 - 45 and $2 - 95 Prints ami Solids SPORT BLOUSES Miami Cloth and Crepe $4 95 $1.29 and $1.98 All these dresses are in the FLAID JACKETS newest spring shades, includ- $4.95 ing Dark colors and Pastels in Aqua, Dusty Pink, Rose, SPRING FELT HATS and Powder Blue, In Pastel Shades Moore Dry Goods Co. “More For Your Money At Moore’s” rhone}l4o Perry, Ga. g - Lf ■ 11 — IWI ■wgijw j WE HAVE IT The Largest Stock of Farm Equipment South of Atlanta. We have a full stock of Plows, Harrows, Planters, Guano Distributors, Stalk Cut ters, Weeders, Plow Gear, Plow Parts, | Tractors, Manure Spreaders, Fertilizer and Lime Sowers, Combines, Binders, and Threshing Machines. Several nice Mules; Feed, Seed & Fertilizer. Don’t wait until you are ready to start farming to got your equipment, but get it now while it is available, From 1 Horse Plows to 50 Horse Power Tractors. When you think of Farm Equipment, think of- Geo. C. Nunn & Son Phone 31 Perry, Ga. Repair Parts For Machinery of International Harvester Company In Stock. Farmers are urged to buy these parts now while a full stock is on hand. No new machinery will be available this spring, due to the war. So check over your machinery and let us supply your needs in Farts. Andrew Hardware Co. PHONE 500 PERRY, GA. • .. **•*' —. ... .. . . - ■ i The World’s News Seen Through \ The Christian Science Monitor | An International Daily Ncivs paper X is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational- X ism Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily ,5 Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society <S One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts V Price 12.00 Yearly, or $l.OO a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. v Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents. \ Name _ V » Address ,S $ SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST & Wrote ‘Sun Song* While Mice Crawled Over Face The famous “Sun Song,” or Song About Creatures, was written by St- Francis of Assisi, in Italian. It <s still a widely popular hymn in all churches, most familiar perhaps tn a translation which begins tures of our God and up your voice and with us suljpf t AC«s luia!” Under great difficulties St. Fran cis wrote this remarkable poem »» the unusually hot summer of 1225 k. when he was ill and so suffering from loss of sight that he was un able to have his eyes exposed to anr light. During this illness the good man lay helpless, and according to one biographer: “He was plagued by a swarm of field mice which probably had their home in the straw walls of the hut and which eventually ran over his face so that he had no peace day or night: and yet it was precisely in this wretched sickness that he composed this woo derful masterpiece.” There is some dispute as to (he authorship of many of the hymns that are ascribed to St. Francis, but none concerning this Song of the Sun. It is a charming expres sion of St. Francis’ childlike delight in God’s good works. ‘Hunch* Bets Okeh, Says Expert on Betting Odds Scientific betting is sounder than, common sense methods of wager ing, but there are gambling situa tions in which the laws of probabii ity cannot be applied, and times when even playing a “hunch” is dic tated. This conclusion was presented in v a discussion of the science of prob ability, now an indispensible to« 4 m modern business as well as in sci entific research, by Dr. Milton lik Singer, research associate in philos ophy at the University of Chicago and authority on mathematical methodology. Dr. Singer classified methods of betting into the scientific, common i sense and superstitious. The scoe»- | tific method is superior to the two • others, he said, because it provides an exact method of calculating cwfds and chances. “However,” he declared, “it caim not completely supplant the use al common sense and superstition am making bets. There are many bests in which the laws of probability do not involve repeatable phenom ena, or because statistics about the relevant factors have not been galJ»- ; ered.” Sign Language Something over a century ago, 12- year-old Alice Cogswell encountered a young man in the garden of tor | father’s home in Hartford, Cotua. The young man, Thomas GallaudeJ, had just completed his theological! studies. He was waiting for an in terview with the girl’s father, whom he hoped might aid him to deter mine his field as a missionary. Alk-e I had been deaf since she was two years old and, at that tjpnc, doaii mutes were classified among Hue feeble-minded and insane. Idly, Gallaudet attracted her at tention with a few simple gestures. To pass the time, he casually point ed to his headgear and with a stick wrote on the ground H-A-T. A gleam i of understanding passed over the child’s face. She grabbed the stick, j copied the word, took the hat and ! placed it upon her own head. Point ing to another object, she handed back the crude “pencil.” Ounnut j nication had been established. Thomas Gallaudet’s life thereafter was dedicated to his work for the education of the deaf. Cosmetic Hygiene New York university offers a well rounded course in cosmetic hygiene to both men and women. Tn« course, introduced five years ago by Florence E, Wall, outstanding woman chemist and cosmetotogct, teaches students how to know their own needs and how to choose their cosmetics wisely and use them to the best advantage. The No. 1 cosmetic necessity is water softener. That’s any one of those fragrant needle-fine crystal salts or powders that you heave by the handful into your basin and your tub. They’re important, but not be cause they waft a cloud of perfume, but because they make the minerals in water receptive to soap. Thus, yuai get more action from your soap, little or no curd in the water, and a better job of cleansing. The water-softening habit is one in which this class of students is en couraged for all washing purposes —hair and hands, as well as bath and “basin laundering”—especially in hard-water districts. :f i Knowledge Trebled , “Knowledge of heart disease has trebled since the First World war and has advanced as much in that period as in the prior 200 to 300 years,” said Dr. Paul Dudley White of Boston, Mass., president of the National Heart association and Har vard lecturer, recently. “What used frequently to be termed indigestion is now frequent ly called heart disease, and wtut used to be termed a disease of the arteries is also now frequently diag nosed as heart disease. “We still can’t give medicine and have heart trouble go away, but we are learning tremendously more about hygienic measures, such as proper diet and bodily and mental . care, as an offset to the malady.’’