Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MAY 19, 1938.
PAGE MVS
The Butler School Journal
lOL
Butler, Georgm, Thursday,- May 19, 1938. No. 24.
idited
'"T'Xw by Students of Journalism Class at Butler Hindi School.
” sarnh Redfeam, instructor; Margery Walker, Carolyn Harmon
M' 8 ® Cooper, Dorothy Brows, Ethel Darrell, Margaret Luck, Milbry
SK «“>
grade enjoys
BING AT PERSONS' LAKE
IINTH
,| iss Redfearn and- Miss Branch
/ heir ninth grade spent a most
yabie time at Person’s Lake Fn-
p. m.
left school at one o’clock. Mr.
them out on the school
I They i
Irks took
lake some
lent
SENIORS HAVE THEIR
PHOTOGRAPHS MADE
BULLETIN BOARD
When they got to the
primming while others enjoyed
ut-riding*
Those in swimming enjoyed water-
M.% and ducking.
When sc* 1001 was out at 2 0 c och
In „ther guests arrived' including
liss Wood, Miss Martin and Mr. Ox-
l0 « four o'clock sandwiches,
,. eam anti punch furnished by Mrs.
, olds and the ninth grade were
'rved.
Miss Branch, the Candid Camera-
took many unexpected! poses of
ost everyone present.
About dark everyone left for home
me hiking while others rode.
newsy paragraphs
We are sorry that Sarah Hurst
uid Margaret Luck are out with the
[numps.
In French the class was reading
L, loud. One of the girls were
tumbling slowly over a very tender
Paragraph where the boy tells how
Lely the girl is. Finally Miss
(ranch said:
“This deserves to be translated
leadily. Besides it should 'be familiar
Lund.” We guess Miss Branch
jhiniks love is just alike in any lan-
nage.
The Senior Class reports they are
ftiU waiting for their privileges.
Some of the Senior girls believe
hat Friday the thirteenth is their
l.'e/ry day; but we’re still super-
Idtious.
J Signs of the coming graduation' are
Ifcentees in the Senior Class. As Mr
Word expresses it, “they’re getting
lied up.”
I Thursday we had our pictures
lade, We all tried our best to put
. 35 cent smile so as to get our
lioney's worth.
May I use your comb ? Where’s my
lipstick? Do I look all right?
These are only a few of the questions
that were circulating among the
high school girls Thursday just be
fore having their pictures made.
All the high school grades, the
music clubs, and ball teams had
their pictures made.
We are impatiently awaiting the
arrival of Mr. Moon, the photograph, i
er, with the pictures.
EDITOR1 AL
There is a big apple dance (which,
by the way, was explained by one
of the French students to her foreign
correspondent, but he couldn't un
derstand it), there are big apple
dresses being worn everywhere with
big apple buttons on them, bpt one
of the oddest big appltes we have
heard of is a fox terrier owned by
Brown Sealy, of Howard, an apple
on the back of a fox terrier owned
by Sealy.
Mr. A. E. Wooten, of Jonesboro,
presented the United Daughters of
the Confederacy with a Confederate
i flag, which her mother buried when
! the Federal army was marching thru
the state.
(By Ethel Jarrell)
“At the top of the hill is the
morning star.”' This motto, which
was suggested by Dr. H. J. Porter,
has been chosen by the seniors for
their class motto.
We have found that the .meaning
of this motto applies to each one ot
us individually. The morning star
represents our heart’s desire and* the
difficulty which we will have in at
taining our ambitions is shown' by
our stars’ being ait the top of a
hill.
The motto means to some of us
the beginning of life. We have
worked- for 11 or more years, nearly
always with the same thought: “Af
ter school we wall be out on our own
and can begin real living.’’
‘Steel workers eat gum drops and
salt in the summer. The gumdrops
are for energy, while the salt is to
replace body salts lost while work
ing.
DIARY OF THE WEEK
Monday: The Seniors are having a
hard time getting the money to get
Iheir invitations and cards. They are
expecting presents soon.
Tuesday: The Junior Class rings
have come. The school was besieged
by book agents. Miss Redfeam said
that it is wonderful how persuasive
they could be. Butler High school
defeated Reynolds High school in a
baseball game.
Wednesday: The seniors are send
ing orders for their diplomas whicn
they expect to receive in June. Butler
Five Points
iMiss iultie ana Mr. Mercer Smith
were ceunaay dinner guests of Mr.
ana Mrs. W. A. Jar rein, ana family,
.Miss Hazel Jarrell spent Sunaay
with uuiss Emily Jarrell.
Mrs. Morris Trapp and Mrs. Paul
Montgomery were Friday visitors of
Mrs. Henry and 1 Mrs Phillip Jarrell.
iMisses Margaret and Myrtle
Walker were Sunday visitors of Miss
Effie Kendrick.
Rev. Moss of Macon was the Sun
day dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Jarrell and' Mr. andi Mrs.
Phillip Jarrell.
iMr. and Mm. E. E. Jarrell of But
ler, Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Byrd of
Panhandle wee Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Jarrell
iMiss Margery McCorvey of Butler
and Miss Grace Jarrell spent Sunday
with Miss Helen' Jarrell.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Boggs and son
of Prattsburg, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Jarrell.
MATCH EL SODV
SIDE DRESSIN'
yas SUH/
Mr.
The morning star to some repre .
Bents success after we have 'begun ! f“ r schoo ‘ team was defeated by
our life’s work, whether .as house- j Reynolds grammar school team -
wife or in ibusines or .the professions.
Of course with this ambition there
will be a longer time and harder
work before we can reach it, com
pared to the thought that the star
means beginning life after school.
We, the Seniors, are all hoping "to
find' the morning star at the top oi
the hill.”
Moon came to take petures.
Thursday: “That Moon is here
Again,” taking pictures of different
high school groups
Friday: The Seniors have started
practicing their class songs. The
Juniors are proudly showing theii
new class rings.
THE BULLETIN BOARD
Joseph Koall of Chicago, lives a
rmal healthy life without a stem
'll 1 ' His stomach was removed in
year 1933.
m you believe that spiders have
|nm one to four pairs of eyes ? If
«one of set of “daylight eyes” for
in the sunshine, and 1 an en-
different set of “night eyes”
hunting prey during the dark
■he
Ire!'
The :
pn unmated quail has been known
If actual count to call •‘oobwhite’’
limes during the course of a
ingle day—apparently without get-
i n £ the right number.
fossil wing of a dock is esti
'd to be 50,000,000 years old, hag
discovered by a Princeton pro-
r in Utah. It was r.ot fo^ind—as
cynics might say --.n a restau-
int.
fhe male West African mouth-
“'fens, curious fish that reach a
*fth of seven 1 inches, incubate the
^ is their mouths. They thereby
l ' e to abstain from all food during
hatching period.
United' States ranks first
,<?e enrollment. Great Britain
Id.
Givietti worked for the N.
railroad for 47 years and' never
6 °n a train. He carried a rail-
'5 Pas in his pocket all the time.
like
I'imerico
1C
BUTLER HIGH SCHOOL
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
—Presents—
PUPILS IN A RECITAL
MAY 17, 1938, 7:30 P. M.
School Auditorium
PROGRAM
Glee Club Choruses:
(a) Salutation Gaines
(lb) Come to the Fair Martin
(c) Dance of the Fairies Brahms
Invention in D Minor . Bacn
Finale E. Minor Sonata Haydn
Foreign Lands and Peoples Schumann
Elves Schumann
ClydeAfay Green
(Note: 1938 District and State Meet Numbers)
Minuet in G Beethoven
Eliza Stephens
Cinderella- at the Princes Ball Hopkiric
Frances Windham
In Hanging Gardens Davies
Elsie Peed
Blue Daisies Manua Zucca
(a)
(b)
(c)
W>
Marie Parks
Reading
Leetimae Folds
I0TEL LANIER
Macon, Georgia
[ Conveniently Located
Excellent Cafe
R at es $1.50 and Up
SaxophomTSolo, “Country Gardens” — Percy Grainger
Alicenel Amos
(a) By a Roadside Fire Rodgers
(b) Lullaby Brahms
Doris Callahan
Swaying Tree Tops Daniel
Bernice Peed
Guitar Solo, "Hawaiin Waltz” Roberts
Gerson WalleT
Orchestra Ensemble (a) Overture - Fox
(b) Waltz Lelm*
Sextette from Lucia Donizetti
Ludde Renfroe
Violin Solo, “Serenade” ToselJf
Dan Callahan
Novelette Edward MacDowell
Ethel Jarrell
Juba Dance - Nathaniel Debt
Margery Walker
Reading Miss Josephine Huddleston
Trumpet Solo, Loch Lomond Scotch Air
Ben Persons
Second Valse Godard
Wilma Gill
Saxophone Solo, “Spring Song”
Gray Fountain
The Chase
Moreeau Brilliante
Mendelssohn
Alice Guinn
__ Rhineberger
__ Wollenhaupt
Godard
Lecuona
Alicenel Amos
(a) Valse Chromatique
(b) Malaguena
ClydeAfay Green
Orchestra (a) Scented Roses Zamecmlc
(b) —
High School Students and
Oscar Adams and Kathryn Amos
Choruses (a) Pale Moon — victor”Herbert
(b) Italian Street Song —- Vict ° r
Glee Club Includes: Misses Ruth J3h
Hortman, Leetimae Folds and Helen f arre “-
Arrangement of -Stage: Mrs. J. S. reen »
Stevens and Mrs. R. C. Humber.
WESLEY
Mr. and Mrs. U. \v. WiLson ana
family, Mrs. John Parker and son,
Mr. and: Mrs. Cecil Wilson spent
Sunday with Mr. 'and Mrs. W. J.
Willis.
Mr. and! IMr. Fred Jarrell, Mr and
Mrs Frank Slaughter and' family,
M. ad Mrs. Lewis Spinks of Columbus
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W.
A. Spinks.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Luke ' Adams and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bentley Adams
spent Saturday in Macon.
Miss Frances Adams is spending
some time with Mr. and Mrs. Luke
Adams.
Mr. C. C. Royal of Tiiomaston is
visiting .friends and relatives here
this week.
Mr. and) Mrs. Ernest Hill and son
and Miss Myrna Amos of Thomaston
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Amos and family.
Our community was shocked to
learn of the death Monday of Mr.
Willis Parker at Geneva.
CENSUS OF THE BLIND
IS NOW IN PROGRESS
A state survey of the blind is be
ing conducted in this county by the
Department of Public Welfare and
all persons are asked to co-operate
in this survey by notifying the local
Welfare office of any blind people
they may know of in the county.
“Crops likes to be fed natchel,” says Uncle NatcheL
“Plenty of de bes’ natchel food jes’ when dey wants
it de mos’. Not jes’ a bite at de beginning, den go
hungry de res’ o’ de time.”
That means a good healthy side dressing of Chilean
Soda. Because it is natural plant food, it’s got plenty
of nitrate and small amounts of other plant food ele
ments naturally blended with it. They’re not added.
They’re there, blended by nature.
So give your crops a natchel side dressing. “Dat’s
de secrut,” says Uncle Natchel, "plenty of natchel
Chilean soda jes’ when dey wants it
de mos’.’*
TNI
NATURAL
BIDE
0BEIBM
NATURAL
CHILEAN
NITRATE o, 5004
NEW BEAUTYSHOPPE OPENS
IN BUTLER FRIDAY
EXPERT BEAUTICIANS JN CHARQE
This is to announce the opening of my Beauty Shoppe
in Butler Friday, May 19.
The shoppe will be operated by Miss Lomax, who
has been working in Atlanta for the past year having been
manager for six months. She comes highly recommend
ed and is capable of doing every kind of Beauty work.
Miss Kathleen Kirkland, who has been operating my
shoppe in Reynolds since last August, will be here each
Tuesday and Friday for the next few weeks. Her work
is of the highest type, so all we ask of you is GIVE
HER A TRIAL.
In order for you to get a sample of the work of these
two beauticians the following specials will be given for
a limited time.
COUPON
NAME
ADDRESS
This coupon entitles you to either one of the follow
ing FREE when accompanied by another person who
gets the same work without a coupon.
LIMITED ONE TO A CUSTOMER.
Shampoo and Set, Manicure, Hair Cut, Hot OilTreatmen
Facial, Eye Browers Arch.
For appointment telephone number 25.
Your patronage will be appreciated and every ef-
fot will be made to please you.
N. L. HALLEY, Butler, Ga.