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HOME JOURNAL, PERRY, GA.. THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1951
There are more than 43,000 Ne
gro 4-H club members in Georgia
at present.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIiIIIIIIIHI
MOST
FUN
For Your Money
IN
FISHING
O R
Just Cruisin’
Around
We Have Them
A t
MOODY
Motor Co.
' Phone 40 Perry, Ga.
in 111111 in 11 ii 11111111111111111111111 m 111111
GRAND OPENING
* FREE ■ SIFTS ■ FREE '
WHERE TOUR
BUYS KBHE isj WOJ
Beeland’s Grocery
At Former Barfield’s Furniture Co. Corner
FRI. & SAT., JUNE 22-23
- - MANY FREE AWARDS - -
Each $1 Purchase Qualifies You To Participate
You Do Not Have To Be Piesent To Win
10 FREE BASKETS of GROCERIES
5 TWO WEEK PASSES TO MUSE THEATRE
2-1 YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS TO HOME JOURNAL
The Gifts Listed Above and Others Will Be Awarded Saturday N’ght, June 23,
At 9P. M. But \ou Do Not Have To Be Present lo Receive These Awards.
BEELAND’S GROCERY
J. H. BEELAND R. R. BEELAND
Robins Air Base
Said Permanent
ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE,
GA,—A public housing expert
from Washington, D. C., said Fri
day that construction of Ignico
Apartments in Warner Robins is
added proof that Robins Air Base
is a permanent installation.
William F. Todd is visiting five
Air Force bases and one Army
base to look over housing built
under the Wherry Act.
“The Wherry Act is tailored to
military housing,” he said. “No
base is eligible for Wherry hous
ing unless it is a permanent base.
In any project such as Ignico
Apartments, the secretary of the
proper service has to certify to
the Federal Housing Administra
tion that the base is considered
permanent.”
BONAIRE NEWS
BY MRS. W. B. WILLS
Mrs. A. E. Woodard had as her
spend the day guests Mrs. G. L.
Slocumb, Mrs. J. W. Story, Mrs.
W. W. Woolfolk and son, Johnnie,
of Kathleen.
Mrs. L. B, Sasser and Camilla
Williams had as their guest Miss
Bertha Holland of Holland, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Parker and
Shirley of Abbeville were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Per
due Sunday.
Pfc. Benney Wills, Camp Gor
don, spent the weekend with his
parents, Mr. and ,Mrs. G. B. Wills.
Mrs. H. D. Allen, Jimmy and
Ann, of Atlanta, visited Mr. and
Mrs. W. A. Farr.
Rev. and Mrs. Julian Spright of
Thomaston spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Davidson.
Members of the Georgia Home
Demonstration Council have pre
sented the State 4-H Club Foun
dation a check for approximately
SI,OOO to assist in building a per
manent state 4-H club camp.
rCOOD HEALTH——*rn
a. should AS**
QABIE* BE >///!'
t WHAT 16 THE GREATEST QUTcSoiU ' '/ft
ENEMY OF
Answer to Question No. 1:
1, Neglect is the greatest
enemy of health in old age.
People usually fail to go to a
doctor until an emergency arises.
In old age that is often too late.
Studies of the average diets of
elderly people show that in gen
eral the group is badly nourish
ed. Lack of teeth, and real or
imagined digestive disturbances,
cause many elderly men and
women to resort to diets high in
sugar, starch and fats. They
should eat foods rich in pro
teins and vitamins.
Answer to Question No. 2:
| 2. If the temperature is above
freezing aind the wind is not too
cold, a baby should be outdoors
two or three hours a day The
middle of the day is the best
MRS. GEORGE JORDAN
ATTENDS SCHOOL
Mrs. George Jordan is attend
ing a rug-hooking school at
Blythe, S. C., near Greenville,
where some of the outstanding
instructors in the country are giv
ing lessons at a camp for a week.
She left last Sunday and will re
turn this coming Sunday.
If a broiler is slow in feather
ing and has a bare back there
will be lots of pen-feathers to
contend with when the bird is
dressed.
time in colder weather. Your,
doctor will advise what is best
for your baby.
Answer to Question No. 3:
3. He does rt to listen for “the,
muffled sound of a drum cover
ed with a thick woolen cloth,”j
which indicates a healthy chest.
This discovery was made by Dr.i
Leopold Auenbrugger of Vienna;
in the middle of the 18th cen' J i
tury. It was the beginning of
scientific diagnosis of diseases of
the chest. Today, aided by X
ray and other modern tech
niques, diagnoses can be con
firmed and many more cures
effected. But the thumping
method is still useful in looking
for trouble.
{ (Copyright 1951 by Health Informs
[ tioi> Foundation!
WEDDINGTON IMPROVED
AFTER ILLNESS
W. W. Weddington, of Hawkins
ville, former manager of Georgia
Power company office here and
now owner of a large hardware
store in the Pulaski city, is recov
ering after a serious illness. Mrs.
Weddington is the former Miss
Katherine Lawson of Perry.
“Working Together for World
Understanding” is the theme of
4-H club members all over the
United States, according to state
4-H club leaders.
Farm news every week in The
Home Journal.
Stembridge
Family Has
Big Reunion
The annual Stembridge family
reunion was held June 10 at Vin
son’s Valley.
Attending were Mrs. Floyd
Stembridge, Mrs. Eldred Youm
ans, Mrs. Mayme S. Anderson of
Lake Wales, Fla., Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Roland and children, Ronald,
Billy, Victor, Malcolm and Sylvia
of Stone fountain; Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Stembridge and daughters,
Carol and Susan of Valdosta; Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin Stuckey and chil
dren, Beverly, Lou's, Carlan and
Bryan of Columbus; Mrs. Jessie
Tucker, of Athens, Tenn.; Mr.
and Mrs. Welch Dykes and chil
dren, Janet, Bubber and Rene,
Oscar Stembridge of Cochran;
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Davis Jr. and
children, Charles, Walter, Kath
ryn, Marcia and James Donnie of
Clinchfield.
Mrs. Mattie Stembridge, Mr.
and Mrs. Dud Poole, Dorothy
Aultman and Harold Stembridge
Jr., of Fort Valley; Mr. and Mrs.
L. S. Freeman, Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. Gober and children, Ann
and Emily, Mrs. Lena Stem
bridge, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Reyn
olds, Miss Scarborough, Mr. and
Mrs. Wyatt Hammock and son,
Wyatt Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hol
loway and children, Linda and
Tommy; J. C. Stembridge, Miss
Sarajo Stembridge, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Talbot and son, William
Paul, Mr. and Mrs. P. D. Walker,
Mr. and Mrs. Harper and Frances,
all of Macon;
Mrs. Ida S. Holloman, Mrs. Av
ery Lee and sons, Jimmy and
Joneal, Mrs. Nonie D. Stem
bridge, Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Stembridge and sons, Bill and
Johnnie of Perry; Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Thomas, Sherry Far
rington, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Scarborough and sons, Gordon
Jr. and James, Mrs. J. D. Stem
bridge of Centerville.
A picnic lunch was served. The
oldest member present, Mrs. Lena
Stembridge of Macon, received a
gift, and the youngest, Dyrwood
Rene Dykes, 7-months-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Welch Dykes, also
received a gift. Mrs. Sadye S.
Freeman, historian, had copies of
the Stembridge History on hand
for all members.
Officers were re-elected for the
coming year. Mrs. Josephine H.
Lee, pres.; Mrs. Erma S. Scar
borough, secretary and treasurer;
Mrs. Sadye S. Freeman, historian.
The reunion will be held ai
Vinson’s Valley in 1952.
—Erma S. Scarborough
Secretary-treasurer.
iWl&champion
f-4 HOME TOWN
A shortage of building materials is no handicap to a town determined
to be a Champion!
If you can’t build a gleaming swimming pool, perhaps you can fix up
a “swimmin’ hole” in a nearby creek or lake —or if that new
theatre has to wait awhile, perhaps you can show movies in
a schoolroom.
Yes, there are many ways to keep a town in the championship
class - priorities are not needed for such things as marking scenic and
historic sites, cleaning store windows, encouraging religious,
educational and recreational activities, eliminating junk piles.
A Champion Home Town knows there are plenty of prize-winning
projects that require only vision, enthusiasm and good ol’ fashioned
elbow-grease!
GEORGIA POWER
‘DeveCofimcKt T>cvtec<ut
NEGRO 4-H work
Negro 4-H club boys and girls
in Georgia are working on 15
projects offered through the Na
tional Committee on Boys and
Girls Club Work in 1951, accord
ing to Alexander Hurse, Georgia
Negro 4-H club agent.
Perry is the Camellia City.
MUSE THEATRE
PHONE 131
SUNDAY ONLY
CRASHING NEW PC
—ALSO —
A Color Cartoon
“FOY MEETS GIRL”
MONDAY & TUESDAY WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
THE UP FRONT
SHOWDOWN starr ‘” e
starring David Wayne
William Elliott and
Am j Tom Ewell
Walter Brennan PLUS
—PLUS— LATEST NEWS
LATEST NEWS
—and— —and—
A Color Cartoon A Special Short Subject
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
(Double Feature Program)
I ' —PLUS—
. . —ALSO—
Chap. 4 of Serial
“THE JAMES BROTHERS A COl ° r Carto ° n
OF MISSOURI” “CATNIP CAPERS”
ATTY. HORACE LYNN
MOVES TO ATLANTA
Horace Lynn, young attorney
who resided in Perry for the last
several months, has moved to At
lanta where he is doing legal ad
justment work for an insurance
firm. ,Mr. and Mrs. Lynn and
their two children will be missed
here.