The Butler herald. (Butler, Ga.) 1875-1962, June 13, 1929, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, JUNE 13, 1929.
Reynolds "^Department
Conduct by
Civic Improvement Club of Reynolds.
Mr. Ricks Carson spent Friday in
t antu.
Mr. and Mrs. C H Neisler are in
t.anta this week.
Mias Allies Seay hus returned
ftome from Albany
Mr. John Robert Fountain has re
turned home from Riverside
Mr. and Mrs. Elam Griffith spent
two days last wees in Atlanta.
Miss Minnie McAuley is expected
home this week from Daytona, Fla.
Mrs. Paul Hodges entertained the
Duplicate Bridge Club Friday p. m.
Miss Sarah Cooper left Monday fol
dimmer school at Mercer University.
Mrs. Rossee and Miss Miriam Car
ter silent a tew uays in Albany inis
week.
Mrs. John Proctor has returned
home alter spending several weens n
Atlanta.
Mr and Mrs Paul McDaniel spent
Sunday with their mother, Mrs. i’aul
McDaniel
Mrs W E Marshall, Jr., and chil
dren are spending this week in
Americus.
Mr. Joe Pyron is home from Buena
Vista where he taught school tne
past year.
Misses Louise Barrow and Blanche
Marshall have returned from school
at G. S C. W.
Mrs. Paul Poe, of Macon, is the
guest oi Her parents, Mr. and Mrs W
!l_ Marshall, Sr.
Mr
turned
demy.
REYNOLDS HJ.
SALUTATORY
(N ora Jones
How many, many times in life we
are forced to admit the inadequacy
of mere words to express the deepe st
especially for ours.
All students that have graduated
heretofore have endeavored, to a
greater or less extent, to fit them
selves for life. To many, the future
has not been promising. In our sec-
lion—the Southland — opportunities
, huve been limited. For lorty years
Brown Musslewhite has re- of mert> worJs t0 express tho deepest fter Appomattox t h e South has
from Riverside Military Aca-1 timenU of the goul | 0ur h ea rts fill ma ,i e brick without straw as did
I with emotion; and we learn when Israel of old. Sidney Lanier said of
anche Marshall, Mattie 1 01jr tonguog f a i ter am l 0 ur lips refuse j the young Southerners of his agi
, Wynita Taylor andj^ goy whftt we wl#h them t0 , TO me-1 that "the most of living consisted o
Misses Blanche
Musslewhite,
Louim- Barrow are borne liom G
C W.
thing oi what Tennyson had in nis
heart when he wrote:
•‘1 would tnat my tongue could utter
Tin- tnoughts tnat arise in me!”
h>eiu mends, one and ail, tnis oc-
! casion is one oi uiose limes, liau you
Our western meats are always e \er stop to tnniK now muen may lie
wholesome and delicious, and sold | u; ueimui.il tne sunace ot turn Won l
cheaper than can be bought elsewhere nave oeen enosen to speak to you .
W. T. POWELL & SON. | Welcome!—me word tout endeavors
Mrs. Mattie Pyron, Mrs W M.
Parker, Mrs Kate hicks and Mrs
Joe Pyron left Monday for a visit tc
relatives in Bartow, Fla.
to assure you tnat you have
tne word that we try to ex-
Miss Mattie Weaver who has been | ^
teaching music at Concord, Ga, left j . . .
s . . | press in so many ways, and yet, that
Friday for Last Rodford, Ya. where , .
... . . , . j u.ay be so beauuiuliy summed up in
she will attend summer school at ' .
the Va. Teachers’ College
Mr. George Carter and Miss Ma-
hie Poole, of Macon, Mr. and Mrs
Moore, Terrell Smith and Miss Eve
lyn Carter, of Atlanta, were guests
oi Mr and Mrs. Albert Carter Sun
day.
Y. W. B. CLASS
of
simply of not dying.
But times are changing. We are
living now in a great transition per
iod which began some 20 years ago.
The emancipated South has again
demonstrated the truth that “he who
comes victorious from wrestling long,
laborious, has power with gods and
men.
In 1492 Columbus discovered
America.* About the year 1900
we u | America discovered Dixie. It is the
lust undeveloped region in the North
Temperate Zone. It is the land of
which De Soto, Ponce de Leon, and
Sir Walter Raleigh told the
Europeans.
Its undeveloped resources are
boundless. The South has five-sixths
of the nation’s coast line and nume
rous harbors, she has more coal than
all Europe, great regions of fertile
words of tnat clever hostess, who
proposed the enigma:
"My first 1 nope you are;
My second 1 see you aie;
My whole 1 know yob are!”
For after all our fine words, our
lofty sentiments, and high-sounding
phrases, how much more can we real- I S0 *E a climate surpassed by none, and
ly put into tins gieeting to our 1 countless other treasures, all of
friends—we hope you are “well *: ! which only recently became known to
we see you are "come"; and we know
you are “welcome!”
lo you, tnis may be indeed a plcus-
The Young Woman's Bible Class
of the M. E. Sunday school had their
regular business meeting Sunday just
before class session. Mrs. C. H. Neis
ler, secretary, read most interesting
and full minutes of last meeting .! able as they may all be at the time,
theworld. We who live in this highly
favored section are witnesses of one
of the greatest economic and indts-
ant occasion for we shall certainly do | Dial changes the world has ever
our best to make it so; but at best.it I known. I he South, so long agricul-
vvill be only one oi many, many such I tural > is rapidly becoming industrial,
occasions in your life, which, enjoy- ^ er vas4 resources are inviting capi-
Many members who have been absent j will be but fleeting in their influence.
Mr. James Draughon
lor Blue Diamond, Ky.,
lor the slimmer.
Mrs. Otis Ogburn, Mrs E. H. Join-
«r and Mrs S H. Bryan spent Wed
nesday in Macon.
Miss Bessie Dean Aiken, of Mon-
licello, is spending this week
with friends here.
Mr. and Mrs Howard Neisler and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hodges spent thv
week end in Cordele
Mr. John Frierson, of Macon is
spending a few days here the guest
•i Mr. Hugh Neisler.
Misses Beulah Barrow, Marie and
Eva Draughon left Monday lor
Mercer summer school.
All of our fresh meats are given
government inspection before being
offered for sale.
Yv. 1. POWELL & SON
a few Sundays were present. Mrs.
Joiner who has been absent for some
time on account of her mother’s sick
ness, whopi we are glad to know is
, „ „ , I better, Was with us Sunday. We were
left Sunday , .
to be goile 1 ** lad to have man y out of town vlsl "
1 tors, viz: Mrs. Tanner, of Blackshear
visitor of Mrs. Williams; Mrs. Shuler
Antley, of Marietta, visitor of Mrs
Elza Barrow; Miss Mary McDonald,
of Fitzgerald, visitor of Mrs. T.
Whatley; and Miss Blanche Marshall
is with us for her vacation. The re
porter heard a member remark that
“she didn’t feel much like attending
Sunday but she hadn’t missed since
the contest find didn’t want to stay
out”. Get that spirit, members, and
such a good attendance each Sunday!
Just circle motto: “See You Sunday.”
—Reporter.
Mr. and Mrs R. E Aultman of Ma
con, aie spending a lew days here
the guests of relatives .
Mr. and Mrs Eugene Joiner ut-
tenuuu k .ie graduating exereises
Butler Monuay e\ emng.
Mr and Mrs Shula Antley, of Mari
etta, are guests of their parents Mr.
and Mrs. E. E Barrow
Mrs
Mary \Villis of Fitzgerald are guests
ol Mrs. T. Whatley.
Miss Jessie Musslewhite returned
com G S C. W Friday
been attending school.
Mr ard Mrs B. W Hinton, Mrs R A
Minton and Mrs Tom Pool spent
Wednesday in Macon.
Misses Marion and Frances Hodges
kave returned home after spending
Ihe week end in Thomaston.
MISS MITCHELL WEDS
MR. JOHN BROWN
To us, it is a gieat occasion, a red
tal. New enterprises are springing
up everywhere about us.
Neither is our progress altogether
letter day, one of the brightest spots ( hiuterial or industrial. To the South j
in all our lives, and bound to live j ‘ 5 comin K a KTeat educational and in- I
tcivever in our memories. j tellectual renaissance. Attendance on
To.you, it may be but a pleasant/ 1 ’^ 11 schools in Georgia have increas-
place to be amused for an hour, and I e,! 400 P er cent - Endowments of
while the time away; to us, it is a Scuthera colleges and universities
gleaming milestone along the journey 1 huv< ? doubled, tripled and quadripled
of life, and the interest you show in * n 4ae same period. The University of
us by coming to bid us God-speed on
OUR FLAQ.
Before the adoption of our present
flag many flags of various designs
and patterns were used.
One of these, which bore the device
of a rattlesnake, appeared as early as
1761; three years later another ap
peared with the form of a severed
snake. The parts were identified by
the initials of the 13 colonies, and the
motto: “Unite or Die.”
In 1776 John Paul Jones is said to
have been the first to hoist an Ameri
can flag on an American ship. The
snsign of this flag was a running
snake and the field consisted of 13
red and blue stripes.
About the same time of this inci
dent, Markor, of' Philadelphia pre
sented a flag to the country that con
sisted of 13 stripes only. A few
days later the batteries of Philadel
phia carried a flag with a white field
and a tree in the center. The motto
of this was: “An Appeal to Heaven.’
Later, in 1776, a yellow flag with a
coiled snake, ready to strike, bore the
motto: “Don’t Tread on Me”. This
same year a flag was unfurled at
Cambridge, which had a field of 13
red and white stripes, with the Brit
ish Union Jack in the corner where
the stars of the present flag are. This
flag was followed by many similar
ones and was doubtless the one that
gave Congress the idea of designing
our present flag.
On June 11, 1777, Congress out
lined the design of the National Flag
to be 13 stripes, alternate red and
white; that the Union be 18 white
stars on a olue field in the upper
corner next to the staff. On the ad
mission of Vermont and Kentucky in
1791, Congress declared that a stripe
and a bar be added for each new
state. It was soon seen however that
this would make the flag too large,
and Congress declared the ^tripes
should be reduced to the number, of
the way is most deeply and truly ap-
pieclated.
To those of you who have a per
sonal interest in us as the boys and
girls you have seen grow up from in
fancy, it means, of course, far piore
than to the chance guest to whom we
appear but as strangers.
To our parents anil relatives, if is
an ho.ur of pride and affection; to our
teachers, an hour of mingled joy in
our success, and regret, we trust,
over the necessary parting. So much,
you see, depends upon the individual
point of view.
As for us, this occasion closes an
epoch in our lives—th_ most impor
tant period that we have yet known,
and one of the utmost value in its
bearing upon all our future career.
As w;e look back over the past
few years we feel that we can truth
fully say that we have done our best
at all times and in all places to
make the most of every opportunity
“o far as our'young minds were a,ble
to understand it. We mean to Con-
Centering the widespread interest
of friends is the announcement of the
marriage of Miss Lillian Mitchell,
of Canton, Ga., to Mr. John Brown,
of Bloomington, Indiana, which was
solemnized on Monday evening, May
27, at 8 o’clock at tne lovely new
home of Mr: and Mrs. H. C. Simmons
al j at West End, Atlanta, a sister of the
groom.
Rev. W. Simmons, of West End
Methodist church, performed the
impressive ring ceremony in the
presence of a small assemblage
McDonald and daughter, Miss ] relatives and friends.
The home was beautifully deco-1 with us at the sundering of the
rated with floor baskets filled with ! dear class ties that each year has
roses and charter daisies. In the liv_ j Helped to make stronger, must at the
, , , , ing room an improvised altar was same time rejoice with us that we
. 10111 I 1 ay ' v 1110 sle as formed of ferns interspersed with) have been able to accomplish so much
floor baskets of roses and daisies.
The bride was lovely in a modish
ensemble suit of- midnight blue geor
gette with accessories to match,
wearing a shoulder bouquet of bride
roses showered with lillies of the
valley.
Mrs. Brown is the eldest daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Mitchell, of
Reynolds, Ga.. where she received her
high school education, afterwards at-
North Carolina has an income of $2,-
000,000. Like Harvard of the New
England Renaissance period it is be
coming the intellectual center of the
United States. Almost every member
of its faculty is a literary celebrity.
And the South has other institutions
that rank among the nation’s first.
Her writer, her newspapers, and her
magazines are winning nation-wide
prominence.
It is true that adjustments neces
sary and incident to our great eco
nomic transformation are bringing
sufferings to many, apparent losses
and distressing financial crises. But
to any forward-looking person the
vision of a New South is unmistak
ably clear and promising.The question
with my class mates, and me, as well
as with other young persons of today
is shall we have the faith to follow
the vision. Paul said in his defence
before Agrippa “I have not been dis
obedient to the heavenly vision. Our
ta.sk is to fit ourselves for the con
ditions that we so clearly see.
Furthermore we will make a great
inue to do that same best at all the 1 mistake to think we are already pre
imes and in all the places where ! par0(l- . These 11 years tlllat we have
1 ate may hcieafter direct our paths,
j And we are sure that at this time,
of every one must realize something of
I what it means to us, and while griev-
as we have, while wisshing for each of
us greater triumphs in whatever
work may lie ahead of us.
YVeask you then, dear friends, to be
spent in this beloved school have not
completed our education. We have
received merely the tools whereby we
may educate ourselves. All real edu
cation is self-education. It is only
through expression that the mind do-
velopes. Whether we go to college
next year or go to work does not de
termine whether we get an education
or not. But our thirst for knowledge,
our attitude toward self-improve
ment, our ideals, how we spend our
leisure, and the kinds of pleasures we
Mr. LeRoy Moody, Mr Buck Payne
Misses Ruth Moody and Neva Hobbs
■lotored to Monticello Sunday
Mrs. George Goddard, Mrs John
Mangham and Edward Goddard are
spenuing this week in Columbus.
The most rigid rules of sanitation
we applied in the care and handling
of our meats. When you buy from us
^•ou are prelected against unhealthy
loud.
W. 1. POWELL & SON.
that we are all most earnest in as
suring you of our joy at having you
with us, and that 1, in the warm in
spiration or your presence, am most
sincere in telling you, in the name of
tending the Palmer school in New j my class mates, how truly glad we
York, from which she graduated in ar e that you are here. We hop® that
the class of 1926 receiving her diplo-, 1’ou may all feel that it has been
ma as supervisor of penmanship, for ffood to be with us tonight, and may
a part of two summers -was a mem-j see in all that we do and say some
ber of the faculty of Mercer Uni_ j assurance of your welcome, even
versity. She has also been supervisor , while realizing that, as a class we
of Canton high schools for the past j cannot well ask you to “come
three years and very popular among , again!”
a wide circle of friends. — — —
glad with us and for us, as we enter ! choose_these are s°me of the factors
upon the program of the hour, sure that wil1 deveIo P our minds,
Mrs. Flowers and Mrs. Swearingen
left Tuesday for Milledgeville where ’ and
they will attend supimer school at G
S. T. C
Misses Winnie Aultman, Laurice,
Winnie Griffith, Martha Powell and
Mintie Tneus spent Wednesday in
Montezuma.
Mr. Brown is originally from Nel
son, Ga., a son of Mr. W. A. Brown
prominently connected
throughout that section. He has
traveled extremely in the interest of
music, he being an amateur musician
and judged by critics as
cornet player.
He now holds a responsible po-
> VALEDICTORY
“THE VISION OF A NEW SOUTH”
(Will Camp Sealy)
Solomon, the wise man, said,
Where there is no vision the people
expertperish." A thousand years later, Paul
ranked the gift of prophecy high
among the spiritual gifts. Both
Misses Ann and Emily Hicks will
leave the latter part of next week for 4kc happy couple left for a wedding
Athens where they will attend sum
mer school '
trip, (in the beautiful Nash coach,
the bride’s gift of the groom) thru
Tennessee, Kentucky and into In-
Mrs. Lovings Doyle has returned to | dianapolis to the World’s Automobile
lier home in Macon after spending the ' race. After the 15th of June Mr. ana
week end with her parents, Mr and Brown will be at home to <heir
Mrs T. J. Fountain. j friends at Bloomington, Indiana.
sition with the Indiana Limestone ferred, no doubt, to the kingdom of
Co. "Immediately after the ceremony the spirit, but vision in the natural
world is equally as important. The
ability to forecast the future, to pic
ture conditions that we shall shortly
cope with, along with strength of
character that enables one to follow
the visions that blesses him—these
are basic elements in worldly success
important for every generation, but
our minus, our
characters, our personalities, and will
round out our lives.
Thus my class mates, if it is a mes
sage I have for you it is that you
should set about this work of quali
fying, of equipping yourself mentally
for the part you play in the great
drama of the New South. May your
roles be brilliant ones.
In the reign of Queen Elizabeth
it was thought proper to develop
every faculty, every talent, and ev
ery ability one possessed. Sir Phillip
Sidney, that ideal knight, was a
courtier, who had every social grace;
a man of literary distinction; a sol
der, with the heart of a hero; and a
Christian with saintly virtues. Such
ideals as his made Queen Elizabeth’s
P.eign the Golden Age in English
History. I am trusting as I come to
bid you farewell that your ideals will
be pure enough, your aspirations
high enough, and your faith groat
enough that you will not be disobe
dient to the vision—this vision of a
new South that should lead us as the
pillar of fire lead the Israelites to
the Promised Land.
original colonies and u star onlTl
added upon the admission 0 £ 1,1
new state.
Since then many states have
added to the Union, so that now!
flag bears 48» stars, for that
states, and 13 stripes for the origifl
13 colonies. ” *
—By Scout Phillips Bryj
POST 13,
THE AMERICAN LEUi<).\
ASKS:-
1. Who killed Cock Robin?
2. Where is “The Land of the Skv’
3 Name the first steamboat to
the ocean.
4. What automobile slogan is, »aJ
the man who owns one”?
6. Who was Uncle Remus?
6. Who invented the cotton gin’
7. What was the original name
Macon ?
8. What is the inteinatioial v a(ti I
distress signal ? I
9>"What is the world’s oldest college!
for women? h t
10 - *J» r m ^ hom "as Taylor count,|
ANSWERS:
1. “I” said the sparrow.
2. Asheville.
3. The Savannah.
4. Packard.
5. A negro character of Joel Chan
dler Harris.
6. Eli Whitney.
7. Fori. Hawkins
8. “S. O. S.”
9. Wesleyan, at Macon.
10. General Zachary Taylor.
We have on display a nice assort-1
ment of crockery and can give you |
the right prices.
HINTON & HOLLIS
666
is a Prescription for
Cold*, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, I
Bilious Fiver and Malarial
It is the most speedy remedy known, |
We Save You Money. Why Pay More?
We offer you this week the following car lot prices
Flour and Feed.
Rock Ground OQ 24 lbs 2 Bushels flo oa
Meal. 12 lbs Sacks Sacks • DC Sacks yfa.ulj
Big Talker Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$6.55 Bbi
83c Sack
High Kicker Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$7.05 Bbi
89c Sack
High Kicker SelGRisIng
Flour 48 lbs Bags (Guarantee)
$6.85 Bbi
$1.73 Sack
Strict Good Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$7.05 Bbi
89c Sack
Delicious Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$7.30 Bbi
93c Sack
Delicious Self-Rising
Flour 48 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$7.10 Bbi
$1.82 Sack
Mothers Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$8.55 Bbi
$1.09 Sack
Gold Medal Self-Rising
Flour 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$8.05 Bbi
$1.03 Sack
Olympia, Fine Pastry Flour
24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed)
$8.30 Bbi
$1.06 Sack
Orient, Finest Flour on the A|-
Market. 24 lbs Bags (Guaranteed) *P»r»UD Bbi
$1.18 Sack
Blue Cow Feed (For Hogs and Cattle)
100 Pounds Bags .....
$2.09 Sack
100 lbs Sack Sugar . .
$5.70
10 lbs Sack Sugar
• ♦
58c
Choice White Meat per lb
. . 18c
We guarantee every sack Flour or your money back. We can
save you money on all your requirements. Give us a call.
G. H. GODDARD & CO.
Reynolds, Qa.
BUY YOUR FORD HERE
We have a beautiful line of dress
goods, ladies’ silk underwear, silk
hose, etc. Come to see us.
HINTON & IIOLLIS
New Fordor Sedan
*625
(F.O.B. Detroit)
Free Inspection Service at
500, 1,000 and 1,500 miles
This includes a chcck-up of the batlcry, generator charging rate, dis
tributor, carburcto r adjustment, lights, brakes, shock absorbers, tire
ir.f'anon and steering gear. The engine oil is also changed and the
chassis lubricated. A chcck-up of wheel alignment and spring shackles
is included as part of the 1,500 mile inspection. Everything is ftfC
except the cost of new oil and grease
Come in and see all the Newest Ford Cars
Taylor County Motor Co.
Reynolds, Ga.