Newspaper Page Text
PERSONAL mention
Mrs w. W. Weddington and
' hter 0 f Hawkinsville visited
and Mrs. J. P. Duggan and Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Lawson last Wed
nesday. .
D M. Ryle was host at a dmner
at the new Perry Hotel Thursday
ni?h t for the board of deacons of
Jhe Perry Baptist Church. Follow
ing the dinner, the deacons held a
business session.
Mrs William Stubbs went to New
Orleans. La., Saturday, where she
is a patient at Ochener Clinic and
Touro Infirmary. Billy Stubbs is
visiting his aunt, Mrs. J. D. Helms
in Andalusia, Ala., while his mother
is away.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Buchanan
0 f Manchester spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Carney.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Driggers and
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Whittington at
tended a family reunion at Cordele
last weekend.
Mrs. A. M. Howard, Misses Ruth
and Nellie Howard of Atlanta were
the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
C. K. Vance.
Mr. and Mrs. James Calhoun and
daughter, Lynn, and Mr. and Mrs.
John William Calhoun of Laurin
burg. S. C., visited Mr. and Mrs.
j. B. Calhoun here recently.
Miss Eva Borom of Dublin spent
the weekend here with her sister,
Mrs. W. B. Roberts, and Mr. Ro
berts. I
Allen Whipple and Sam Norwood,
Jr,, of Emory University and Lewis
Bledsoe of M.G. C., Cochran, were i
among the college students who
spent the weekend here.
Mrs. Stella Lynn of Atlanta visit
ed Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Roper this
week.
Mrs. Emma Hammond of Caroll
(on, Ala., is visiting her daughter,
Mrs. A.E. Carpenter, and family
here.
Mrs. F. H. Armstrong spent
last weekend in Macon with her
daughters, Mrs. Robert Crenshaw
and family and Mrs. Lawrence
Moody and family.
"WYNN’S 5 1 10
KNOWN FOR VALUES
Ladies’ Panties
High finish Rayon, reg. Af\
sue, clastic all around.
Ladies’ Panties
Extra size, rayon, full £2(\
elastic, Ob/C
Ladies’ Panties
Chalk rayon finish, OQ
extra size, i/uC
i
Ladies’ Bloomers
Extra size, chalk finish,
elastic waist and leg, Ob/C
School Supplies
Blue Horse Pencils 2 for 5c
Notebook filler 5c
Rough Paper Tablet 5c
Ink Tablets 5c
Ink, m washable blue, blue
and black
Fre-flow 5c
Carter’s 10c
Skrip 10c
Candy
Eresh, delicious
and wholesome,
a good assortment, 3 oz. for v; SC
Cosmetics
Ponds 35c creams 25c
Jcrgens Lotion
50c size 39c
51-00 size 89c
Men’s Hosiery
Long sox, beautiful
Patterns in rayon,
Anklets, clastic tops, «-»r*
Hne for now, £OC
Ladies’ Anklets
Plain and fancy weaves.
a good assortment of .. i
colors 1 5C
WYNN’S 5 i ICC STORE
AT YOUR SERVICE
Mrs. George Jordan. Mrs. Irene
Lawler Eden, Mrs. S. L. Norwood,
Mrs. Eliza C. Massee and Mrs. A.
G. Hendrick attended the Atlanta
Camellia Show at the Georgian
Terrace Hotel on Tuesday.
William J, Boone of Elko was
listed on the Dean’s list at the Uni- 1
versity of Georgia for winter quar
ter.
Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Cooper, Jr., of
Macon announce the birth of a
daughter, Elizabeth Doris Cooper,
on Tuesday in Macon. Dr. Cooper
is the son of Dr. and Mrs. C. F.
Cooper, Sr., of Perry and Mrs.
Cooper is the former Miss Josephine
Applewhite of Macon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Head and
family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles White of Macon.
Mr. and Mrs. J. William Hudson
have moved to Fort Valley. Mrs.
Hudson will continue to teach the
Fifth Grade in Perry High School
Miss Frances White. Miss Hilda
White, Thomas Gunnells and Jack
Mille of Macon visited Miss Louise
and Martha Head Sunday night.
Mrs. J. E. Adams spent the week
end in Cartersville with her mother,
Mrs. C. J. Bell. Mrs. Bell returned
to Perry for a few days visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Adams.
Mrs. D. F. Walker of Warthen
spent the weekend with her son,
Cohen Walker and Mrs. Walker.
Mr. D. F. Walker spent Sunday
here. Larry Walker returned to
I Warthen with his grandparents for
a week’s visit.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Maddox and
i son of Atlanta spent Sunday with
her brother, Cohen Walker and Mrs.
Walker.
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Bramblett
spent Tuesday in Atlanta.
Fiiends of Mrs. H. C. Armstrong
will be glad to learn that she has I
returned from the hospital to her 1
home and is improving. Her daugh
ter, Mrs. Joe Davis and grand
daughter, Linda, of Newport, R. I,
are visiting her.
Mr. and Mrs. John Etheredge and
daughter Ellie spent last weekend
in Kingsport, Tenn., visiting their
first grandson and nephew, Master
Alan Robert Teeter, who arrived
about four O’clock Jan. 28. His
mother, Mrs. Robert Tetter, is doing
nicely and they expect to be home
from the Hospital in a few days.
Mrs. Etheredge will be in Kingsport
for two or three weeks to be with
Mrs. Teeter and the baby.
Mr. and Mrs. Parnell Brown of
Ohio were the weekend gutsts of
their cousin, Clifford W. Morrow
and Mrs. Morrow, en route to Fort
Myers, Fla., to spend the winter.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rainey an
nounce the birth of a son, who hast
been named James Watt Rainey,
Jr., on Tuesday Feb. 4.
I
EVANS’GROCERY
OUR STORE YOUR STORE
See us for Feeds, Seed Potatoes, and
Staple Groceries.
CIGARETTES, pkg 18c
COMPOUND LARD, 4 lbs $1.60
PURE LARD, 4 lbs. 1.50
POTATOES, 5 lbs 22c
EARLY JUNE PEAS, No. 2 can 15c
PINK SALMON, can 47c
WEEKEND SPECIALS FOR FEBRUARY
5 lb. Sugar 44c Bread 12c
You’re Always
WELCOME
There’s warmth in the
word “WELCOME”-
a feeling of friendship
and good will. Many 'MS
folks already know the
warm friendliness of our
Fresh Ingredients
welcome, and we want REGISTERED
you to know it too. PHARMACIST
Whether the request be Prom P'
II | You have every reason
great or small, we WOl- to rely on ue when your
doctor gives you a pre
come the opportunity to *cn P noo to h.»e rilled,
serve you.
I
Houston Drug Co.
Phone 52 Perry, Ga. )
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Parent-Teacher Association
will meet at Perry High School at
3:30 p. m. Tuesday, Feb. 11, Mrs. D.
N. Williamson, president an
nounced.
The general meeting of the Bap
tist W. M. S. will be held at the
church at 3:30 p. m. Monday, Feb.
10, Mrs. W. B. Roberts, president,
announced.
I
The Circles of the Methodist W.
S. C. S. will meet at the following
homos at 3:30 p. m. Monday, Fob.
10: No. 1, Mrs. C. E. Andrew, N 0.2,
Mrs. Freeman Cabcro, No. 3, Mrs.
O. B. Muse, and No. 4, Mrs. W. V.
Tuggle.
The Sorosis Club will meet at the
home of Mrs. L. H. Gilbert o n
Thursday, Feb. 13.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Etheridge
will leave Sunday for Tampa, Fla.,
where they will visit Mr. and Mrs.
J. P. Etheridge, Jr. Mrs. Gertrude
Brantley, sister of Mr. Etheridge,
will return t o Perry with the
Etheridges next week.
Miss Angela Anderson spent the
weekend in Macon as the guest of
Miss Barbara Jacobs.
Miss Betty Joyce White of Ameri
cus visited relatives in Perry over
the weekend.
Miss Bess Nunn, a student at Wes
leyan College, spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo.
C. Nunn.
Albert Skellie and Eugene Lash
ley were home from Tech for the
weekend.
Jack Marshall, a student a t
Emory was home for the weekend'.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Marshall, Jr.,
spent the weekend in Reynolds with
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Marshall, Sr.
Mrs. A. P. Whipple spent the
weekend in Griffin with her sister,
Mrs. Dozier Wynn and Mr. Wyjnn.
Mrs. Byron Warren and Horace
E. Evans attended a fashion Show
in Atlanta Monday.
Miss Eileen Evans of Tifton, a stu
dent at the University of Ga, spent
the weekend with her aunt, Mrs.
H. E. Evans, Sr.
JERSEY HERD RECORD
A Jersey herd at the Reidsville
State Prison Farm set a new pro
duction record last year for a herd
of over 10 cows, according to F. W.
Bennett, associate professor of dairy
husbandry at the Georgia College
of Agriculture. There was an aver
age of 35 cows in the herd and they
averaged producing 8,115 pounds of
milk testing 5.3-percent butterfat
and containing 430 pounds of butter.
The cows were milked twice daily.
I
Centerville News
By Mrs. J. D. Stombridge
Mrs. Nora Ray of Macon spent the
weekend with her brother, J. M. 1
Mathews and Mrs. Mathews.
Mr. and Mrs. Paschal Stafford |
and Paschal, Jr., and Art, Mr. and
Mrs. C. C. Stafford and Terry Staf
ford spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. C. P. Stafford.
Friends of Mrs. Gordon Scarbo
rough will regret to learn that she
is on the sick list.
Paul Brown and Riley Ethe
ridge of Macon visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Garvin Sunday.
Elder W. H. Hancock and T, M.
Nash visited Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
Garvin recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Tucker an
nounce the birth of a daughter, Jan.
31. She was named Dorothy Ann.
Mrs. Tucker was Miss Erma Sulli
van before her marriage.
Friends of E. D. Gray will be (
glad to know that he has returned
to his home from a Macon hospital
where he was a patient for some
time. Mrs. Gray is a patient at the
Clinic in Macon.
Mrs. Ira Garvin is able to bo out
again after a week’s illness.
Mrs. J. D. Judd, Mrs. S. M.
Rape and Mrs. Lonnie Andrews
spent Friday with Mrs. Homer Long
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Ryals and
Catheryn Ryals visited Mr. and
Mrs. J. D. Stembridge recently.
Meet Set Here
On Garden Chain
The 1947 Georgia 4-H garden
chain project will be carried on by
4-H members in 30 counties—five
counties in each of the six Exten
sion Service districts, Elmo Rags
dale, horticulturist, and Miss Kath
leen Weldon, assistant State 4-H
club leader, for the Extension Ser
vice, announced this week.
Objectives of the garden chain
project are to encourage 4-H club
members to produce the necessary
supply of fresh vegetables for the
needs of their families, to show
value of year-round gardening and
to teach the club members the best
varieties, best fertilizers and met
hods of production, they said. The
project is sponsored by the Exten
sion Service in cooperation with a
[ large Atlanta seed concern. (H. G.
Hastings Company.)
Ten 4-H members—five girls and
five boys—in each of the counties
will receive collections of seeds
that will be sufficient to make suc
cessive plantings in a year-round
garden. County garden shows will
be held during the height of the
gardening year at which the club
members exhibit some of their gar
| den products.
After the judging and awarding of
prizes, the vegetables will be sold.
The money from the sale of the
garden products exhibited at these
county shows will be used to ex
pand the garden chain next year.
Mr. Ragsdale will hold gardening
training meetings for the 4-H club
members, thtir parents and 4-H ad
visers in each county participating
I m the garden chain projtct. Hous
ton being one of the counties se
lected, Mr. Ragsdale will meet with
our group on Tuesday morning
February 18, at county agents of
fice.
affidavit of ownership
GEORGIA, HOUSTON COUNTY
Personally appeared before me
Mrs. Grace Bcrryhill whose Post
Office address is Warner Robins,
Ga. ( who on oath deposes and says
that she is doing business in Hous
ton County at Warner Robins, Ga.,
under the name and style of Warner
Robins Beauty Shop, and that she ]
is the true and lawful owner of said 1
Warner Robins Beauty Shop.
The business to bo carried on is 1
Beauty Shop.
This affidavit is made in accord- 1
ance with the Act of the Georgia
Legislature approved August 15,
1929, amended March 29, 1937 and
March 20, 1943.
Mrs. Grace Berryhill
Sworn to and subscribed before
me this Ist day of Feb., 1947,
C. L. Williams, Notary Public,
Houston County, Ga.,
Filed in Office Feb. 3, 1947
j Tommie S. Hunt, Clerk
With canned meat in the pantry,
the homemaker can prepare a sav
ory stew, meat pie or other good
meat dish easily and quickly,” Mrs.
Broach added. “This will save the
homemaker time and energy on
busy days when she has big house
j hold tasks or is helping with farm 1
j work.
HOME JOURNAL, Perry, Ga.. Feb. 6, 1947
i # ‘
I__ _ . _
Perry Students Vie
In Speech Contest
We say without fear of successful
contradiction that three Perry High
students will win the three prizes
in the Houston County Oratorical
Contest Friday morning at 11:20
at the school.
This prediction is sure-fire be
cause no other students will enter
the contest. Bonaire and Warner
Robins decided not to enter the con
test.
The Perry students, speaking on
some phase of the Constitution,
will compete for a $25 War Bond, a
$lO and a $5 cash prize.
The public is invited.
Marshall Honored
I By Belgian Gov't.
Jack Marshall, son of Mrs. Agnes
Marshall of Perry and a student at
Emory Universoty, has recently
been notified that the Belgian Gov
ernment has awarded him “L’Ordre
de Leopold, Grade de-Chevalier.”
for service rendered tht Belgian
Government in World War 2.
Gas Sales
In 1941, 52.6 per cent of total
gas sales were made in nine states.
Have You Ordered Your
VALENTINE FLOWERS?
gif your Valentine is here
in Perry or 1,000 miles*
away, we can assure yota
the delivery of fine flow
ers through the Florist’s
Telegraph Delivery As
sociation of which we are
a Bonded Member.
I
SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
FROM
CAROLYN WHIPPLE, Florist
Phone 72 Perry, Ga.
ROGERS
GREEN TOP ' WINESAP
CARROTS 2 13c APPLES 2lb . 25c
LEMONS doz . 23c RUTABAGAS f b . KX,
JUICY FLORIDA
ORANGES 8 LB. BAG 27c
YELLOW LARGE
ONIONS 3lb . 10c GRAPEFRUIT 5c
GREEN K. D.
BEANS zib. 31c YAMS stb. 45c
JACKSON’S
SAUERKRAUT 2 N c ° an V 2 25c
1111111111 WMIT—WriBIIIMI lIHHWHTriIII lIWfT'fH j-Tlf 1 1 m llll■■lll■l—
COMSTOCK
APPLES N 0 .2 caß 25c
LIBBY’S
| PEACHES No. 2i-2 c 32c
ORANGE or GRAPEFRUIT
JUICES 3 No. 2 cant 25c
46 oz. can 19c
I TRADE HERE FOR EVERYDAY
I SAVINGS
METHODIST W.S.C.S.
CONDUCTS MEETING
The general meeting of Umr-
Methodist W S. C. S. was liefc
the church on Monday afternaoßfc-
After a business session, a progta**
was presented by Mrs, W. F. Star
wood and Mrs. R. H. HowanL.
Miss Dot Ogletree sang and Mi»
Benniota Andrew gave a reading^.
SCHOOL LUNCH TALK
Members of the Gaines School
home demonstration club in Clarluc'
County team up with the PTA
members to supervise the sdhuni
lunch program, according to Mol
Mary M. Smith, home demonstra
tion agent. Mrs. Troy Whitworflbu
president of the club, says ttuC
around 100 lunches are served daidyr..
Recently the two clubs cooperated
to raise money for a new stove fi*r
the school lunch kitchen. The -tBBr
members in the home demonstra
tion club also sponsored a Rafik*-
ween carnival to raise funds for (Sm
stove and to help pay the salary
one of the lunchroom workers.
Museum Visitors
Before the war 50 million Ameri
cans a year visited museums; 2S>
million were registered borrowers,
at public libraries.