Newspaper Page Text
TOE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER. GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 10, 1942.
PAGE FIVg
ocal Haggerting^
Mrs. J. W. Hall is visiting rela
tives in Macon,
Mrs. Tom J. Butt of Cairo is the
guest of Mrs. Ida Butt.
Dr. Ell Garrett made a business
trip to Macon Monday.
Mrs. C. W. Butt of Ducktown is
the guest of Mrs., Iida Butt.
Mr. Herbert Riley of Macon is the
guest of his mother, Mrs. Alice
Riley.
Miss Pansy Riley was the recent
guest of Mrs. M. E. Everett In Ma
con.
Mrs. John Howard Mulino of
Savannah is visiting Miss Pansy
Riley.
Mrs. T. G. Turk was the recent
guest of Mrs. Ben Gray Moore in
Atlanta.
Mrs. Dan Beeland was the pleas
ant guest of her mother in Butler
Saturday.
Mr. Richard Turk of Atlanta was
the week end guest of his mother
Hrs. Ouida Turk.
Miss Mary Frances Jones of Co
lumbus, was the weekend guest of
Miss Kathryn Amos.
Mr. Isaac Dreizin is spending the
week in Columbus the guest of his
sister, Mrs. Davie Satlof.
Mrs. W. H. Trussell, Mrs. Frank
Gray and Miss Anne Gray are
spending today in Macon.
Mr. Cecil Waters of Lavarnah,
was the recent guest of his parents
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Waters.
Mrs. Charles Milburn nee Miss
Marie Banks was the weekend
guest of Mrs. T. E. Tante Jr.
Mr. Alva Bazemore of Kingsport,
Tenn., was the recent guest of his
mother, Mrs. Bertha Bazemore.
Corp. Hubert Payne, of Augusta,
was the week end guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Payne.
Mrs. G. W. Williamosn spent the
week end in Reynolds with Mrs,
Homer Beeland and her dayghter,
Mrs. Dan Beeland.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Williamson
and little daughter Sandra, visited
their mother, Mrs. G. W. William
son here Labor Day.
Corp. John Turk of Camp Bland-
ing, Fla., and Mrs. Ben Gay Moore
of Atlanta were the Wednesday
guests of Mrs. T. G. Turk.
Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Locke of
Birmingham, Ala., and Mr. Lavalie
Dean of Anniston, Ala., were the
recent guests of Dr. and Mrs. L. R
Dean.
Mr. Horace McCants, son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. E. McCants, left Tues
day for Chicago, 111., wher he will
enroll as a student at the Chicago
Evangelistic Institute.
Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Fountain and
son Gray Fountainspent the week
end in Macon the guest of Dr. nad
Mrs. James Fountain at their home
In Shirley Hills, Macon.
The many Taylor county friends
of Mrs. Hattie Blassengame will be
grieved to know that she is serious
ly ill at the home of her son, Dr.
Gray Fountain of St. Charles, Va.
Miss Janey Neisler, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Neisler left
Monday for Chicago, 111., where she
will enroll again as a student in
the Chicago Evangelistic Institute,
The many friends of Rev. and
Mrs. E. H. Dunn and family wel
come them as citizens of Butler,
Rev. Dunn has accepted t position
as principal of the Butler High
school.
Mrs. Foy Rustin, who has spent
the past two months in Florida re
turned home Saturday accompa
nied by her niece, Miss Ruth Ham-
brie, of Macon, who was Mrs. Rus
tics guest during the weekend.
Mrs. Elmer Lee Gay, Miss, Atho-
line Gill and Miss Frances Harris
spent several hours Sunday with
Mr. Elma Gay. Mr. Gay, a mem
ber of the U. S. Navy, Gay has been
transferred from Miami, Fla., to
Washington, D C.
Dinner guests Saturday evening
cf Mr. and Mr3. T. L. Fountain in
cluded Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Fountain
and children of Macon; Mrs. Clin
ton Wood and Mr. Dan Fountain of
Reynolds; Mr. J. R. Fountain of
Cuthbert; Col. James D. Childs of
Atlanta; and Mrs. Atholine Saylor
of Albany.
W.S.C.S. To Observe
Day Of Prayer On
Tuesday, Sept. 15
Miss Margery Walker
Honred Fridav With
Miscellaneous Shower
The Young People's Class of the
the Butler Baptist Sunday School
assisted by Mrs. R. L. Sutton and
Mrs. J. W. Edwards were hostesses
at a miscellaneous shower given in
honor of Miss Margery Walker,
bride-elect, last Friday at the home
of Mrs. Sutton.
The affair was a surprise to the
honoree; however, she, a member of
the local school faculty, was “in
vited to a Coca Cola party for the
teachers at Mrs. Sutton's at six
o'clock p. m." The guests arrived
at five o'clock and were shown to
the living room where they regis
tered In the Bride's Book which was
kept by Miss Ruth Bazemore. The
living room was decorated with
lovely pink roses and pink ge
ranium. Miss Helen Bazemore di
rected the games while the guests
waited in suspense for Margery to
arrive. Each one present wrote
favorite recipe for the bride. These
were bound and presented along
with the other gifts.
The bride-elect came in later and
while standing in the door in
amazement wondering whut was
happening. She was handed anen
velope containing the prize-winning
invitation written by Mrs. H. B.
Walker, mother of the bride-to-be
which read as follows;
Walter sent word that he could
not come
So he sent the ring instead;
Lookinside the ring and find,
The presents that mean happi
ness ahead.
Still blushing, the bride-to-be
was ushered into the dining room.
And on the dining room table, in
the center of which' was a minia-
scene, showing the
SUNDAY SCHOOL jfSSON
DR, H. J. PORTER
Butler, Ga.
JOSEPH SOLD INTO SLAVERY
Golden Text: Love envleth not.
Introduction
The events of today's lesson
transpired about ten years after
Jacob's wrestling with the angel.
The patriarch now lived in the land
which God had promised him and
his descendants. His wife, Rachel,
whom he dearly loved, had after
many years of barrenness, born two
sons, Joseph and Benjamin. Jacob
at this .time had become an old
man and he seemed to have par
ticularly loved Joseph, the older of
the two sons of Rachel. He went so
Miss Martha Strange
Former Local Teacher,
Weds John Powell
The following account of the re
cent marriage of Miss Martha
Strange and Mr. John Albert Powell
recorde by the Ellavllle Sun will
be of interst to friends in this sec
tion of this popular couple. The
bride is the daughter of Mrs. Eula
Wilson Strange, a native of this
city, and Mr. R. H. Strange, of El-
laville. She was until recently one
of Taylor county's accomplished
school teachers.
Ellavllle, Sept. 5—The marriage
of Miss Martha K. Strange and Jno.
A. Powell was solemnized at the
home of the bride's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. R. H. Strange at high
noon, Sunday, Aug. 30th.
Rev. Roy J. Bond, pastor of the
The. Woman’s Society of Chris
tian Service is observing a day of
Prayer next Tuesday at the Butler
Methodist church beginning at
10:30 o'clock.
All denominations are invited.
Those attending are asked to bring i ture wedding
only sandwiches fofr lunch. Those bride, groom and minister through
who can't come for the entire day;the wedding ring, and at each
are requested to drop in anytime, corner long white fapers supported
DEAN
-In-
The program will consist of prayer
as God lays them on each heart.
Bring your burdens and leave them
with your Lord.
—Committee.
Miss Bazemore Weds
Capt. Allen Tabor
Friday Afternoon
The marriage of Miss Sarah
Frances Bazemore to Corp. Allen C.
Tabor was quietly solomized at the
home of Rev. E. II. Dunn Tuesday
evening, Sept. 4th. Rev. Dunn per.
formed the ceremony in the pers
ence of close relatives.
Frances is the youngest daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Bazemore
and a graduate of Butler High
school.
Corp. Tabor is serving ifi the U.*
S. Army, Second Armed Division,
Medical Battalion and is now on
maneuvers in North Carolina.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. W.
H. Tabor of Utica, Kentucky.
After a few days furlough Corp.
Tabor will return to his duties,
while Mrs. Tabor will remain in
Butler for the time being.
Specials
2 lbs Pure
COFFEE . . 35c
1 lb Can Luzianne
COFFEE . . 30c
lib Jar Baileys Supreme
COFFEE . . 37c
by candlesticks decorated with
orange blossoms, were lovely gifts
for the honoree, which were opened
and displayed.
Misses ClydeAfay Green, Frances
Harris and Helen Bazemore sang,
“I Love You,' Truly” and medley
of favorite songs while the hos
tesses served a delicious sand
wich plate.
Miss Ward
Lieut. Kesler
Wed Aug. 20
Miss Eva Hill Weds
Mr. Donald Parks
A marriage of cordial interest to
their many friends throughout the
state is that of Miss Eva Hill of Al
bany, to Mr. Donald F. Parks, of
Howard. The marriage occurred at
the Baptist parsonage in Albany
several days ago with Rev. Man-
gram officiating.
Msr. Parks is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs, Vester Hill of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Parks will mane
their home in Baltimore, Md.,
where Mr. Parks is engaged in
business.
1 lb Jar Maxwell House
COFFEE . . 37c
Cash
Grocery Co.
Phone 19 Butler, Ga.
We deliver
Christian Science
Lesson-Sermon
“Substance” is the subject of the
Lesson-Sermon which will be read
In Churches of Christ, Scientists,
throughout the world next Sunday.
The Golden Text is: “Thy name,
O Lord, endureth for ever; any thy
memorial, O Lord, throughout all
generations,” (Ps. 135:13).
Among the citaions which com
prise the Lesson-Sermon i s the
following taken from the Bible:
“The first of all the command
ments Is, Hear, O Israel; the Lord
our God is one Lord: And thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and with all thy soul
and with all thy mind, and with
all thy strength" (Mark 12: 29,30).
The Lesson-Sermon also includes
the following passage from the
Christian Science textbook, “Science
and Health with Key to the
Scripture” by Mary Baker Eddy:
“As God is substance and man is
divine image and likeness, man
should wish for, and in reality has,
only the substance of good, the sub
stance of Spirit, not matter. The be
lief that man has any other sub
stance, or mind, is not spiritual and
breaks the First Commandment,
Thou shalt have one God, one
Mind” (P. 301).
! a woman is some one who will
need drapes to go with the up
holstery she has In mind to matcj
the drapes.
Much local interst centers around
the marriage of Miss Verd J. Ward
to Lieut. Dan F. Kesler of Ft. Ben-
ning in a double ring ceremony at
the home of the bride at Liberty,
N. C., on August 20th.
The bride, who is one of the
most attractive and popular young
women of the home city, Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs ...
\yard.
The groom is a son of Mrs ....
Kesler of Griffin and the late Mr.
Kesler, and a brother of Mrs. R. L.
Sutton, of Butler .with whom the
couple paid a short visit following
the wedding and while enroute to
Columbus, near which city the ar
my officer is stationed.
Congratulations and best of
good wishes for a long and useful
life are extended the happy couple.
When a young man vainly boast
ed, “I am wise for I have conversed
with many wise men,” Epictetus
made answer, “And I with many
rich men, but I am not rich.” The
richest blessings are obtained by
labor.—Mary Baker Eddy.
‘The Dressmaker
Touch’
Sweeping bands of dainty
soutache braid give this
shoe the dressmaker's
touch. The smart patent
cross lace on the vamp and
patent t i p shorten this
shoe inches on your foot.
It's elasticized and has a
grand medium heel.
In black patent, also in
soft easy to keep suede.
Dreizin
Drygoods Store
BUTLER, GA.
far as to make for Joseph an es- Ellavllle Methodist church perform-
pecial garment that seems to have ed the ring ceremony in the
been a long garment with flowing
sleeves. This garment was quite
different from the clothes worn by
the other sons. The garments worn
by the other sons were different
from Joseph's coat. In a great
measure they resembled the tunics
worn by the chieftains. These sons
seem to have gotten into their
minds the idea that Joseph had
been selected by his aged father to
succeed him as the chief of the
tribe.
To make matters jworse, it seem
ed that Joseph had been spoiled
by his father's favoritism. Joseph
boasted of dreams that he had in
which the sheaves of his brothers
had bowed down to his sheaf. He
evert deramed that the sun and
moon and eleven stars made obe-
slance to him. His dreaming had
caused his father to rebuke him for
his dreams had included him iri
those who bowed.
Worst of all for the brethren was
the fact that the brothers realized
that Joseph was superior to all of
them and thus he had a right to
rule, regardless of the fact that
he was the youngest of all the
brothers except Benjamin. .They
must have spoken freely against
Joseph, and with the barbarity
that was characteristic of the age
and the jealousy arising from
polygamous home, had turned
bad for Joseph. Even if Joseph had
had these dreams he was not .dis
creet enough to keep them to him
self. Many are the times that we
could save ourselves much trouble
by not talking too much.
Trouble for a Favorite Son
Joseph seemed *to have inherited
from his father the power and dis
position to dream derams with i
significance to them. Jacob h ad |
dreamed of the heavenly ladder.!
Now his son, Joseph, whom the
father loved so dearly, because his
nature was akin to his own. One
day Jacob sent his son Joseph on a
short journey to ask of the welfare
of his brothers who were attending
the flocks in pastures some distance
away from the home. When the
older brother saw Joseph approach
ing they said to each other “be
hold this dreamer someth."
They plotted to kill him. Then
they said they would see what
would come of his dreams. The old
est brother, Reuben, seems not to
wish to kill him. He suggested that
instead of killing Joseph they throw
him into an empty well. By doing
this Reuben intended to be able
later to rescue him. The other broth
ers intended to let him stay in the
well and starve to death.
They took away Joseph's coat of
many colors. This reminds us of
how the cruel soldiers of Herod
in later years took the garments
from our Lord's back. These wicked
brothers and cruel soldiers were of
the same cruel heart and minds.
This is the story of Jacob over
again. When Jacob was a young
man he decided thathe could come
to be the leader of a tribe by out
witting his slow minded brother,
Esau. God at last in his own good
time made him chief of a tribe but
not till after he had had many
years of tragic experience in which
his characetr was tried. Joseph was
like Jacob in that he was a dream
er. God planned to do many great
things through Joseph as he had
done through his father, Jacob.
These are the kind of men that God
many times uses to accomplish His
ends. God was going to give him
command, but before he was al
lowed to take charge of the com
mand he was going to train him
for the great responsibility that was
to be thrust upon him with a great
number of disciplinary circumstan
ces. The pit into which Joseph was
cast by his brothers, was dry and
empty. The pit into which we cast
oursou is is always empty.There is
no refreshments ro comforts in it,
It is absolutely bare. The cruel sons
of Jacob could only see tlje end of
their envied although guiltless
brother, God, howevr, was using
these circumstances for the carry
ing out of his great purpose.
Slave Sale
After the brothers cast Joseph in
to the pit, they sat down and ate,
We are reminded here of an incident
in Peter's life that was in keeping
with this act. He, Peter, was warm
ing himself while his Master suf
fered indignities. There now seems
to have been a plan come to the
brothers when a company of Ish
maelites rode up. At this time Ju
dah, one of the older brothers sug
gested that they sell Joseph to
(Turn to Page 6; No. 1)
presence of only the immediately
families of the couple.
Immediately following the cere
mony, Mr. and Mrs. Strange en
tertained at a buffet luncheon. As
sisting in serving were Miss Ju
liette Strange, sister of the bride
and Miss Hazel Rigsby.
Mrs. Powell wore for her wedding
dress a costume suit of olive green
Her hat was a smart fall model of
brown felt. Her accessories were of
brown, and her shoulder corsage
was of tube roses and fern.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R.
H. Strange, Mrs. Powell's only sis
ter is Miss Juliette Strange. Mr.
Powell is the son of Mrs. Mamie D.
Powell and the late S. J. Powell of
Leesburg.
He Is an alumnus of the Universi
ty of Georgia and is a member of
the Sigma Nu fraternity. He holds a
position with the U. S. Engineers at
Turner Field Albany. Mr. and Mrs
Powell will make their home with
grooms mother in Leesburg.
THEATRE
Butler, Ga.
SUNDAY AND MONDAY, SEPT. 13-14
Sunday Shows 3-5-9:30 1 Monday Shows 8:30
Reta Hayworth - Victor Mature
MY GAL SAL
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, SEPT. 16-17
Night Shows 8:30
Preston Foster - Patricia Morrison In
Night In New Orleans
Penn; Singleton - Charles Ruggles In
Go West Young Man
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPT, 18-19
| Friday Night Shows 8:30 Saturday Shows Continue From 1:30 to 11
Lloyd Norlan in
The Man Who Wouldn’t Lie
Don (Red) Barry In
Missouri Outlaw
Snore's Market
See Us for Highest Quality Meats
Properly Aged Western Beef
CHUCK ROAST
Lb
30c
BONELESS RUMP ROAST . . .
Lb
35c
CHUCK STEAK
Lb
35c
STEW BEEF
Lb
19c
LAMB SHOULDER ROAST . . .
Lb
35c
VEAL SHOULDER ROAST . . .
Lb
35c
VEAL LOIN CHOPS
Lb
40c
SHOULDER VEAL CHOPS . . .
Lb
30c
FRESH PIG LIVER
Lb
23c
MIX SAUSAGE
Lb
17c
Fresh Pork
HAMS (Wiiole) Lb 35c
Smoked BACON Lb 29c
lips'
35c
Lb
Half or Whole
Lb . . . 38c
FRESH FISH