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Perry Country Club Championship
Scheduled Sunday and Labor Day
The Perry Country Club Cham
pionship will be played at the club
Sunday and Monday, August 6 and
7 The championship will be de
cided by a 54-hole, medal play con
test, with 27 holes to be played
Sunday and 27 holes Monday.
This promises to be the best
tc t for championship the club has
ever had, and there appears to be
a real battle in the offering when
the first foursome tees off on Sun
day at 9 a. m.
Based upon the consistent golf
which has been played in the past
few weeks by Bobby Jones, Geor
gia Southern star, it appears that
he is the man to beat this year,
although, there are several players
who definitely are not to be count
ed out. These include Norman
Parker 111, former high school
star and former Class “B” high
school champion; Edgar Barfield,
current State Class “A” titlehold
cr, A1 Lasseter, the 1962 club
champion, and Joneal Lee, the de
fending champion.
The championship flight will be
split into A and B divisions, at a
time to be decided by the tourna
ment committee. Trophies will be
awarded to the winner and runner
up of each division. Players in the
lower flights will be determined
by handicap (10 and under will
play in the championship flight),
with trophies to be presented to
the winner, runner-up and third
place winner in each flight. The
flights will play 36 holes medal
play, 18 holes Sunday and 18
holes Monday.
Anyone who has not signed up
or who has not been contacted by
the Tournament Committee should
contact Pro M. L. Langston before
Friday, September 4, so that pair
ings may be definitely set. Entry
fee is $4 for Championship and $3
for flights.
A picnic supper is scheduled for
Monday evening at which time tro-
YOUR i,
PHARMACIST '
SKAKC
Ethridge Akin
BY EMMITT AKIN
AND BILLY ETHRIDGE
Have you wondered how vaccine
differs from antibiotic treatments?
Both utilize bacteria to destroy
disease-causing germs, but the vac
cine contains the identical germs
that cause the disease, only in a
form harmless to the individual.
Antibiotics, however, contain
substances hostile to the disease
causing germs which provide the
body with the means of destroy
ing the attacking germs.
Antibiotics are used extensively
these days in prescriptions to com
bat a wide variety of human ail
ments. Whatever your prescription
needs, you are assured of friendly,
courteous service when you trade
at AKIN DRUG CO. Phone 429-
2114.
THIS WEEK’S HOUSEHOLD
HINT: If there is not a pin cush
ion handy, try using a bar of soap.
It keeps pins and needles sharp.
VOTE FOR
ALPHA A. FOWLER, JR.
CANDIDATE FOR
PUBLIC SERVICE
COMMISSIONER
,
LEGISLATOR - COMBAT VETERAN -- FARMER
BUSINESSMAN
Dedicated to represent YOU the PUBLIC on the Public
Service Commission - Grateful for your confidence and
support .
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1964
Paid By Houston County Friends and Supporters
phies will be presented to the win
ners.
Come on out and help make this
the most successful club champion
ship ever.
This tournament has the added
attraction that several players
were participants in the Kennesaw
Open last weekend.
■
Teen Topics
Last Friday night was an even
greater success than the other
nights in August, and it is evident
that the regular combos are a real
drawing card.
We have engaged the Catalinas
for every Saturday night in Sep
tember, so be sure to come and
support them. Many teen club
members have requested the Cata
linas.
Don’t forget that from now on
Teen Club will meet on Saturday
night. Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Dan
iel and Mr. and Mrs. Otis Gunn
are in charge for the month.
The Teen Club Council has de
cided that dues will be payable
three months at the time at the
rate of $1.50 for the period. Dues
are payable now for September,
October and November, and no
one will be allowed to join after
September.
Will see you Saturday night!
Commission Backs
Sanitarian Hiring
Houston county commissioners
Tuesday voted to join with four
other counties in this area to hire
a distreit sanitarian to direct ac
tivities in Houston, Peach, Craw
ford, Pulaski and Macon counties.
Each county will contribute to
the sanitarian’s salary, which also
is paid in part by the state health
department.
Other actions taken by the com
missioners included:
Appointment of W. B. Living
ston as deputy warden at the
county public works camp;
Designation of the new First
National Bank of Perry as one of
the depositories of county funds;
Approval of a bond resolution
for $400,000 for water systems at
Kathleen, Henderson, Hayneville
and the Sandy Run Area, another
step in obtaining funds to build
these water systems;
Adoption of a plan for the Bay
gall Drainage Area, including a
10,000-foot long ditch, part of
which is in the city limits of War
ner Robins;
Received a request from Perry
Mayor Richard B. Ray and Coun
cilman Raymond Gornto for the
commissioners to assist in obtain
ing state aid for sidewalks on
some major streets in Perry.
Jaycettes to Have
Trip to Atlanta
The Perry Jaycettes will spon
sor a fun-filled day of shopping at
a “Spend The Day” party in At
lanta on Saturday, September 26.
The trip, via the Nancy Hanks, -
will feature lunch on the train and
a benefit tea and fashion show ;
with door prizes.
A round trip ticket is only five
dollars. For further information,
contact any Perry Jaycette or call
429-2845.
\ WM WtM P*"
Studying the New Building Site of Security Federal
The building committee proudly surveys the vacant lot which will be occupied by Security
Federal s new home. Left to fight: Harold Norris, architect; W. K. Whipple, Mayo Davis, A. Law
ton Pearson; Joseph Higgins, representing H & H Construction Co. from Thomasville: Malcolm
Reese; President M. L. Brown; G. F. Nunn, chairman of the building committee; and Richard B.
Ray, Mayor of Perry. (Home Journal Photo).
Bloodmobile to Visit Perry Again
Sept. 16 at Baptist Ed. Building
Under the joint sponsorship of
Perry Jaycees and Jaycettes, work
ers are making plans for the semi
annual Bloodmobile visit here on
September 16. Donors will visit the
Baptist Educational Building be
tween the hours of ten and four
o’clock.
Charles Jay, John Williams and
Jim Pinson are co-chairmen of the
project.
In summing up the benefits de
rived from Bloodmobile visits, Jay
had this to say: “The blood flow
ing in your veins is today’s most
amazing medicine. It has become
a miracle worker, newer in some
respects than penicillin. Blood al
ready does more life-saving than
any one of our wonder drugs.
Blood and medicines made from
blood are already working as
jacks-of-many trades. If, on a sin
gle day, you looked in upon the
hospitals in one large city, here
is what you might see.
In the hospital accident ward,
a quick injection of a clear liquid,
. which is human serum albumin
made from blood, will save a man
dying of shock.
In a ward bed an elderly man
will receive 12 pints of blood to
pull him through a dangerous op
eration”.
As a family man, Williams says
he is interested in what is being
done in the children’s ward.
“Youngsters with rheumatic fever
get injections of gamma globulin,
a blood fraction, to save them
from a serious bout with measles.
A boy with hemophilia, a bleeding
disease, comes in for a dose of
still another blood product, fresh
frozen plasma. This boy, who could
die of prolonged bleeding from a
simple scratch, will soon have a
safe operation to remove disease
teeth.”
“Don’t forget,” Pinsom remind
ed them, “in the delivery room, a
newborn baby may be given a com
plete new blood supply which will
halt a possible fatal battle with
incompatiable antibodies in the
i blood”.
These, they say, are just a few
'of the common, everyday uses of
■■■ i
blood in any large hospital.
That is why they hope every
adult in Perry will be behind
them when the American Red
Cross workers arrive in Perry,
Wednesday, September 16, for the
last Bloodmobile visit to the city
this year.
Will you give them your sup
port?
Stalnaker Family
Enjoys Reunion
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Adams were hosts at their home
near Ft. Valley for a reunion Sun
; day of the family of Mrs. Alma
Hartley Stalnaker and the late Joe
! P. Stalnaker.
i
Mrs. Stalnaker and all six of her
living children were together for
’ the first time in several years. Al
’ so present were 12 grandchildren
j and five great grandchildren and
other members of the family.
1 Those present were Mrs. Alice
’ Hartley Arnold, Mrs. Mary Alice
' Hatchett, Mrs. K. D. Smith and
Debbie of Macon, Mr. and Mrs.
| H. D. Miller and Nell of Forsyth,
; and Airman 1/c Joseph D. Miller
of Wichita Falls, Texas.
Mrs. Stalnaker’s children in ad
dition to Mrs. Adams are Mrs.
Warren Newell of Powersville;
Mrs. John A. Tucker Jr. of Ros
well, N. Mcx.; Jack H. Stalnaker
and Paul Stalnaker, both of War
ner Robins.
Centerville News
BY MRS. GORDON
SCARBOROUGH
Phone 953-3401
Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Scarborough
spent Sunday in Macon with Mr.
and Mrs. R. M. Scarborough and
Julie.
* ♦ ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Deßoss and
Miss Mil Iffland of Litchfield,
Conn, and A. P. Brown of Macon
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ira Garvin and all attended
the wedding of Miss Virginia Bass
and Randall Mimbs at Avondale
Baptist church Sunday afternoon.
* * * ,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McKleroy
and Kenneth spent several days
last week in the mountains of
North Carolina and Tennessee.
♦ * *
Mrs. Lora Posey of Butler and
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Cosey of
Atlanta spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs, T. C. Casey. Joining
them Sunday for a surprise birth
day dinner for Mrs. Posey were,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Posey and
Darlene and Mr. and Mrs. Joel
Posey and Michael of Butler.
♦ ♦ ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Stafford of
Fitzgerald spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Stafford. Sun
day afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Con
nell Stafford and Mark of Macon
were guests.
* * ♦
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Holt and Mrs.
J. D. Stembridge visited Mrs. T. C.
Holt in Byron Sunday afternoon.
Each year more than 29,000 in
dividuals lose their lives in home
accidents in the United States,
reports Miss Lucile Higginbotham,
head of the Cooperative Extension
Service health department.
Wife to husband: “One of the
ducks you were hunting last week
end phoned and left her number.”
Intergration Tried
At Robins Schools
Negro students who appeared at
two Warner Robins schools Mon
day were advised to follow proce
dures of the Houston County |
Board of Education in asking for I
transfer to specific schools.
The students and their parents
appeared at Rumble Junior High
School and Watson Elementary
School, where the principals told
them to obtain transfer applica
tions at the offices of the board
of education.
The board of education recent
ly adopted a gradual plan of inte
gration on a pupil placement basis.
Personal Mention
Mrs. W. T. Middlebrooks and
Miss Mary Middlebrooks spent sev
eral days last week with Mrs. Mid
dlebrooks’ sister, Mrs. L. L. Moore,
in McDonough.
* ♦ *
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Myers
and children of Macon spent Sun
day with Mr, and Mrs. W. B. Har
rison and family.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gayle and fam
ily have as their house guests her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Currey Rob
nison of Nicholasville, Ky., and
her sister, Mrs. J. W. Holcomb,
Mr. Holcomb and their children,
Jim and Libby Ann, of Troy, Ohio.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford B. Grimes
had as their Saturday dinner
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Nob
liett and daughter, Michelle, of
Huntsville, Ala.
* * ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Maxwell
spent last Friday, Saturday and
Sunday at the Towne House Motor
Lodge in Augusta attending a
Board of Managers meeting of the
Georgia Press Association.
Wife: “Waltz a little faster,
dear; they’re playing a rhumba.’
SALLY McCORD STANLEY
ANNOUNCES
Fall Classes of the Dance Academy
Limited Classes 3 Years and up
• BALLET • TOE
• MODERN JAZZ • TAP
• CHARACTER • ALL BOYS TAP
AND EXERCISES CLASSES
Mrs. Sally Stanley has studied new techniques this
summer with Imogen Stooke-Wheeler and Ken Hooks—
Formerly associated with Steeple Arts Ballet Company
and has studied under Alexander Danilova, Lola Mae
Jones Coates, Nina Popova, Bettye Stracener and Frank
Jones .
FOR INFORMATION CALL 429-2838 OR SEE 1305 GEORGIA AVENUE
The Houston Home Journal, Perry, Ga., Thurs,, Sept. 3, 1964
I
Heeling Conducted
By FFA Chapter
The Perry FFA Chapter held its
August meeting on Tuesday night,
August 25. Richard Andel, vice
president, presided in the absence
of George Andel, who was on va
cation.
Harry Johnson, Seabie Talton
>and Advisro Casey gave a report
on the American Institute of Co
operatives which they attended at
Michigan State University. After
attending the convention, the
Georgia group came back by the
New York World’s Fair. It was re
ported that 23,000 students attend
ed the meeting at Michigan State
University. George Andel and Har
ry Johnson participated on the
program at the convention.
At the FFA meeting plans were
discussed for selling the annual
chapter calendar ads for the year.
Other FFA plans for the FFA year
were discussed.
Elton Dunn, executive secretary
of the Georgia Association of FFA,
notified the Perry chapter that he
would visit the chapter Friday to
judge the state Achievement
Awards program.
Other chapters being judged are
Winder-Barrow, Central of Carroll
ton, Sylvester and Appling Coun
ty. This awards program is based
on the total program of an FFA
chapter. The Perry chapter has
I been judged the winner of the
Southwest Georgia district during
the summer. The winner in the
state finals will be announced at
the State Rally in Macon in Octo
ber.
DELL COFFEY, Reporter
Trade at Home!
I
She is beautiful and of course she has had help—
proper diets, including the best dairy products.
To keep that complexion and the trim figure, milk
products are a natural.
And when your milk is Weaver's Milk, you are
| assured of using the milk that is world famous for its
high protein and vitamins, delicious flavor and golden
yellow color (Guernsey Milk). You can have this milk
by simply dialing MONTEZUMA 89181.
I
I
Davis Re-Elected
ASCS Chairman
Farmers elected to serve as the
Agricultural Stabilization and Con
servation (ASC) County Commit
tee for the year beginning Septem
ber 1, include J. A. Davis Jr. of
Perry, chairman; M. K. Dorsett of
Byron, vice chairman and F. W.
Langston of Elko as member.
Harold Cook of Route 2, Perry,
and C. E. Sasser of Bonaire were
elected alternates.
The election was held at a coun
ty convention August 27, at the
Houston ASCS County Office.
Electors were farmers chosen as
convention delegates at recent
ASC community committee elec
tions throughout the county.
Chariman Davis points out that
the ASC county and community
farmer-committees are in charge
of local administration of such na
tional farm programs as the Agri
cultural Conservation Program,
the feed grain program, the volun
tary wheat program, acreage al
lotments and marketing quotas,
the National Wool Program, com
modity loans, and storage facility
loans.
The ASC county office at Perry
is headquarters for the county
committee, and serves as the. farm
ers’ local contact for business
connected with participation in the
programs administered by the
committees.
Mr. Davis and Mr. Dorsett are
re-elected committeemen. Mr.
Langston, Mr. Cook and Mr. Sas
ser are newly elected. All five
committeemen arc lifelong farm
ers of Houston county and are ex
perienced in the production of cot
ton, peanuts, wheat, oats and soy
beans.
w