Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, February 24, 1944, Image 3
PERSONAL MENTION ! Mr and Mrs. R. G. Hardy of Macon spent Sunday with Mr. , and Mrs. T. F. Hardy. Mrs. Charlie Logue has gone | t Fresno, Calif, to be with her husband, Pfc. C. W. Logue, who' is at Camp Pinedale there. Mrs. C. 0. Davis and son, Joel, we nt to Hondo Field, Texas last week to be with her husband, Air Cadet C. 0. Davis, who is stationed there. Her father.Mr j C. Mathews, accompanied her there. Miss Anna Lee Beavers came home from Huntingdon College, Montgomery, Ala. for the week end. She had as her guest, a college friend, Miss Nancy New ton, of New York, N. Y. Mrs. Sam Houser spent the weekend near Fort Valley with her daughter, Mrs. Joe Borders, and family. Perry friends of Mr. F. Cole man Strother will be interested to learn that he entered the Ar my on Feb. 1 at Tampa, Fla. Mrs. Strother and daughter, Mar cie, are at St. Petersburg, Fla. for awhile. Mrs. Eliza C. Massee visited her son, Mr. R. C. Massee, and family at Hawkinsville Sunday. Mrs. Chas. Worley of Birming ham, Ala. was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. V, Tuggle, Mr. and ► Mrs. R. T. Tuggle, and Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Tuggle from Thurs day until Monday. Corp. J. A. Powell of Robins Field, Ga. and Mrs. J. A. Powell of Leesburg, Ga. spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. W, V. Tuggle. Mrs. A. W. Gillette is visiting relatives at Daytona Beach, Fla. t Mr. Max Moore is visiting rel atives at Titusville, Fla. Pvt. and Mrs. Gardner Watson of Atlanta visited in Perry and Warner Robins Friday and Sat urday. Seaman Pearsall Brown, U. S. Navy, who has received his basic training at Great Lakes Training Base in Chicago, arrived Wed nesday for a visit with Mrs. Brown and their sons, Pearce and Phil. The epidemic of measles is rivaling that of the mumps in Perry. Many adults as well as children have had the mumps during the past three months. Last week the measles began rounds. Mrs. S. Bernstein is visiting her sister in Titusville, Fla. Charlie Harper Jr. is quite ill at The Clinic Hospital, Macon. i Sgt. and Mrs. D. B. Cox of Washington, N. C. and Sgt. and Mrs. C. P. Cassidy of Spring Valley, Wisconsin, have apart ments in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J, W. Bloodworth. Mrs. Annie Meadows and Mrs. E. D, Mason and daughter,Carol, went to Bartow, Fla. Wednesday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Meadows. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pate Wim berly of Atlanta announce the birth of a son, Lawton Duncan Wimberly, on Saturday, Feb. 19, in an Atlanta hospital, Mrs. Wimberly was Miss Jennie Lee Luncan of Perry. Mrs. Drew Harris returned Tuesday from Atlanta where she spent several days with her mother, Mrs. C. C, Duncan. Pfc. Wm. A. Chapman has been transferred from Gulfport, Miss, to Buffalo, N. Y. . CENTERVILLE NEWS »» Mrs. Maude Newell and Mrs. Connell Stafford and little Terry Stafford spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Stafford. Mr. Earnest Brantley has re turned to his home in Jackson ville, Ida. after spending several '■ays with relatives here. briendsof Mrs. Jack Garvin l! |gret to know she is critically ib at Middle Ga. hospital, Macon. Mr. Frank Seay spent the weekend with his mother, Mrs. Garvin. Mrs. Seay and !t ’le daughter, Hallie, returned 1 11 him to Jacksonville after a * ee k s visit here. .Mi's. J. D. Stembridge Jr. vis- f e .d Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Stem l ri(i ee Sr. this week. s . r ' and Mrs. Frank Rambo tr l Saturday in Macon. « Red Cross Asks $200,000,000 To Cover Wartime Needs , WASHINGTON, D. C.—Confronted j wit h responsibilities of unprecedented proportions, as the war enters its most crucial stage, and with a stagger ing task ahead in the post-war period, the American Red Cross opens Its 1944 War Fund appeal March 1, con fident that the American people will respond to the limit of their ability. President Roosevelt, president of the American Red Cross, Norman H. Davis, j chairman and active head of the vast j organization, and Leon Fraser, na tional War Fund chairman, join in j urging the people of this country to \ help Red Cross reach its national objective of $200,000,000 because of , the vital part it must play within the next twelve months. Chairman Davis, in opening the campaign, will stress the fact that 1 with the decisive stage of the war at hand, the Red Cross must assume a greater burden than ever before, and at the same time must provide aid to servicemen being returned in ever • increasing numbers. Red Cross operations over the entire world during 1943 have dwarfed its activities during the first two years of war. An even greater burden will be placed on Red Cross services in 1944. Thousands of American men and women are now in Red Cross service with U. S. troops at home bases and 1 overseas. Field directors, hospital, club and recreation workers are with American armed forces in virtually every command, Mr. Davis asserted. Both in Europe and in the Far East, Red Cross workers have either gone ■ with invasion forces into new combat areas, or have followed within a very limited time. On the home front, the Red Cross > has broadened its service tremend -1 ously. Field directors are serving in I 80N0S OVER AMFRICA * * * Delaware 8 * 1 standi £ Keystone Home oldest residence in Pennsylvania, the I Caleb Pusey House, built at Upland in 1683 ,0. . of field stone and^ The countries of occu - pied Europe hold an cient landmarks point ing to the dim past, but ’ in the mad attempt to Nazify the entire conti ; KC6D Our nent Germany has wan , tonly destroyed thou- Elent≥ Buy sands of historic links __ *«*__ ¥»__ to obliterate all but the l More War xsonus Teuton trademark. fwnKoaHßMniannmfc«ftb»fl«r r iiwimm —imii hi—mn« wm i ■ !■ ■ ■wnm ■■■■ —■■■——ii_ , REAL ESTATE LISTINGS 195 ACRES, good house and barn, 4 miles from Perry, s $8,000.00. Easy Terms. 1 405 ACRES, 2 miles west of Hawkinsville, on paved High • way No. 11, Plenty timber, good house, 3 tenant houses. In good state cultivation. Tenant will remain f0r1944, and 'i purchaser gets rent. $9,500.00. 5 Room FRAME HOUSE, newly refinished. $3,500.00. J. P. ETHERIDGE REAL ESTATE Phone 238 Perry, Ga. DO YOU KNOW How EASY it would bs to Buy or Ke-finance a ii HOME with Our Plan? FULL DETAILS GIVEN .... WITH NO OBLIGATION PERRY FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION Accounts by Mail Solicited. Write Us. i Perry, Georgia. jj FARM HARDWARE Now is the time to repair Farm Machinery. We have genuine McCormick-Deering . parts at our store. Plow Points and Plow Equipment of all kinds. All types of Farm Tools. Let us i supply your needs now. Andrew Hardware Co. PHONE 500 PERRY, GA. every sizable military establishment and camp throughout the country, and recreation and social service worker?, are located in Army and Naval hospitals. One of the most Important and necessary war-time Red Cross func tions has been the collection of human blood for plasma. Thirty-five blood donor stations are now operating. The dramatic story of the Red Cross Blood Donor Service, through which thousands of soldiers and sailors have been saved from death, began In Feb ruary, 1941, when the Surgeons Gen eral of the Army and Navy asked the Red Cross to procure 15,000 pints of blood. Last year more than 3,700,000 pints of blood were collected for the Army and Navy. This year the goal is more than 5,000,000 pints. With major battles of the war yet to come, the Army has asked the Red Cross to supply many millions of sur gical dressings. American men wounded in battle will depend acutely on the vast Red Cross surgical dressing pro duction program. Numerous other Red Cross home operations, such as Prisoners of War 1 packaging centers, where more than a million parcels for war prisoners are prepared each month for shipment overseas, are supported by citizen participation in the Red Cross War Fund. So extensive is Red Cross service during this war that every American civilian can contribute something to at least one of its functions. To con tinue this gigantic work, all Americana must assume their share of tho re sponsibility of carrying on this far- , reaching service. The $200,000,000 quota will enable I Red Cross to alleviate suffering and 1 pain at home and abroad, and to carry i on its vast military welfare service. F^^TORY Papsl-Cola Company. Long Island City, N. Y. | Franchized Bottlers: Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of iV?acon j ' BBMMMMMMMMMMM —— M—PBIjaBPBBBBSHS ’WBmmrWß* MßlB—i FoU * infl job will bring you these re^ lit Remove Sludge and Carbon !• Give Y ou better gasoline your lubricating oil. WS-: Deposits economy. 4. Increase oil economy and . 2. Restorecompletelubrication man y cate# eliminate Clean Carbon- fo oM v | !al partB of your o\\ pumping. oate a engine. 5. Improve the smoothness of Clean Sludge- 3. Eliminate corrosive and engine performance. Packed Piston damaging chemical de- 6. Prolong the life of your Rings posits which contaminate engine. Clean Sludge- ,l De-sludglng” will help to keep your car serving for the duration Clogged Oil Uft AH Baek , h# Attack i buy war bonds Screen HRMH UNION MOTOR COMPANY Phone 136 Perry, Ga. , , ; WALTER AND INCHCLIFFE. d I SAYS, WALTER^) ELECTRICITY IS CHEAPER \ You’ve got something there, Inchcliffe! Electric serv -1 ' P ice * 8 getting - cheaper all the time, while other things are (5 0 * u (? U P- For i nstance ’t^ lo average price per kilo watt hour in Georgia homes was 2.74 cents in 1940, I S \ : yf^)/ / \Wi H HJ) ’"W hut only 2.01 cents in 1943 —a decrease, coming at a Gy/ I lime W * lCn l ,ractica^y everything else is increasing. (Advertisement of the Georgia Power Company) J///