Newspaper Page Text
———
ONE MORE TIME Not aerial goodbye
but a well-deserved thank you luncheon
Jor Dr. Bill Jerles drew several including
(from left) Linda Barnes, Thomas Shel
Visitin’
water 2 inches above beans.
Soak 8 hours. Drain.
Saute onion, bell pepper
and garlic in hot oil in
Dutch oven over medium
high heat until tender. Add
beans, 2 quarts water and
next 4 ingredients; bring to
a boil. Cover, reduce heat,
and simmer 1 hour or until
beans are tender. Discard
bay leaf. Serve over hot
cooked rice; sprinkle with
chopped green onions.
Yield: 9 cups.
• ••
Pound Puppy Report
Animal Control Officer Dan
Bass at 988-2800 has 18
puppies mixed breed most
ly black 1/2 female and 1/2
male and several mixed
breed dogs and a female
German shepherd 6-7
months old.
Grant and Myers Helping
Hand animal shelter at 905
Jernigan has 3 tinv little
pretty brown puppies and 3
larger lanky hound dog
L. >!1
p- tJK®
jjjL,
• • HmMiTTM TlMWwffitprW
gjftl
H ipl jl-1 mm |fjll| 9|«
w"r-"' r - |BML t JLnM^
Home Journal Photo by Joan Dorsett
YARD OF THE MONTH Jim and Paula Geiger of
Northside Road received the Pride in Perry Beautifica
tion Award for the month of October.
Come visit Langston House Restaurant
at Henderson Village where every meal
is an experience to treasure..
Call for Reservations: 912-988-8696
Henderson
Village
125 South Langston Circle
HENDERSON, GEORGIA
\ vuxaok /
\=Z==r/
K
ton, Valerie Whitney, Nadine Kinney, Dot
Woodard, BUI Jerles, Louis Shelton,
Kathye Roberts, Darlene Griner, Glenda
McLeod, and his wife Peggy.
Continued from page IB
looking friendly, frisky,
playful puppies, 2 momma
cats and their weaned lit
ters mostly black and white
and calico.
• ••
Meanwhile. Carey Collie
of Colquitt is our house
guest these days and is set
up at the Fair in the McGill
Building to do her “Car
toons of You."
It is uncanny how much
her caricatures look like the
person posing and can be
easily framed for safekeep
ing.
She has appeared at the
past two Beltista Spring
Home and Garden Shows
during Dogwood Festival
and is soon to be at Christ
mas Made in the South in
Macon.
The drawing at the right
is an example of what Carey
can do. This is her rendition
of Steve and Nancy Green
and Anna Kathryn amid
bubbles for the bath.
V ' '
.... .
Tj* cu- >/ -
" ( JPjiMf Y *(
•.- ; v#;. . r j & &
j jjs&BSE~
•: jp*# 5
Does this look like a prison?
••
It is if you are
a victim of domestic violence.
HODAC’S Victim Resource Center
(912) 953-5675 OR 1-800-338-6745
fj Sinter Free and Confidential
m i|i INCTON VllflNlA
' TV im«ta SK<i bnru wrt ofeanni iron. IMUiMuKi MkWOlftrOHHl, IWi fmaxolM tm, S.W, WMOi MO*,US*
Jerles celebrates
bosses day early
By JOAN DORSETT
wmtimmim r -~n~ f
Boss s Day is not until
Oct. 16 but you would have
thought it was Oct. 7 from
the looks of the group gath
ered around Dr. Bill Jerles
for lunch at Houston Lake
Country Club.
Though he recently sold
his practice to Dr. Louis
Shelton and Dr. Thomas
Shelton, Perry Dental
Associates, Dr. Jerles is
still in house weekly, fin
ishing up treatments for
longtime patients.
00 ...
STAFF TIME Longtime Perry Dentist Dr. BUI Jer
les and his former personal stqff gather. They are
(from left) Glenda McLeod, Nadine Kinney, Valerie
Whitney, Bill Linda Barnes, Darlene Griner, Kathye
Roberts.
Gayle
going back for a reunion
with his fellow Marines.
When the 55th anniver
sary arrived, he figured it
was time to make the jour
ney. Not by himself,
though. Gayle’s three sons
all in their 50s decid
ed to go with him.
The island, which he
remembered as a stark
landscape, with sun
gleaming off bare lime
stone, has had many years
to return to its natural
tropical state. The native
Micronesian population
returned generations ago.
and the island is now a
haven of banana and
coconut trees. There, arti
facts going back to 1600
B.C. can be found, right
along with World War II
armaments which have
never been removed.
Gayle and his sons
Have some news to share?Conta< i Joan
Dorset! at 987-1821*. She'd love to hear from
you.
Wed.. Oct. 13, 1999, Houston Home Journo! Page
Continued from page IB
arrived at the same time
that a delegation of Japan
ese veterans were there to
commemorate the battle.
Some 55 years after being
locked in deadly combat,
Joe Gayle found himself
exchanging courteous
salutes with former ene
mies.
“I wasn’t sure I could
handle meeting with the
Japanese soldiers." he says
now. “but after I sat on the
beach a long time, watch
ing one of the most beauti
ful sunsets I’ve ever seen, I
was ready to deal with it."
It was a journey half
way around the world -
but also a journey back in
time. For three sons, it
meant finally understand
ing a little of what their
father had gone through
years ago.
3B