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THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MAY 20, 1954.
Piano and Voice Recital
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PUPILS OF MRS. LEWIS RUFFIN
GYMN ATORIUM
Fuller, Georgia
Tuesday May 18, Ipjj — 8 o Clock
Piano Solo—‘‘Water Sprites At Play” \ Howell
Sue Moore
Piano Solo—(a) ‘‘Going to Market” Beissert
,(b) “The Jolly Acrobats” ..." j, Rebe
Raymond Tucker
Piano Solo— (Si “The Elevator” ; Schaum
(b) Evening Bells” Thompson
Stanley Gee
Piano Solo—“Dancing DaisyFields” „ j. Mokrejs
Beverly Robins
Piano Solo In the Canoe” Dorothy B. Crocker
Mary Ellen Allen
Piano Solo—“The Silver Waterfall Adrienne Penny
Frances Wainwright
Piano Solo—“Climbing” Maclachlan
Fred Brown
Piano Solo “Caprice” Florence Goodrich
Patricia Brown
Piano Solo—“The Gypsies Are Cming” j. Rodgers
Lynda Barfield
Piano Solo—“Vale of Song” Rolfe
Sonny Miller
Piano Solo—“In the Forest Tall” E. Burnam
Carolyn Haywood
Piano Solo—“From a Lighthouse Window” E. Burnam
Jcftin Locke
Piano Solo—“The Elf and the Fairy” ....— Bernice Bentley
Jacqueline Peed
Piano Solo—“Spinning Song” Ellemnrich
Mary Ann Wilson ,
Piano Solo—“Yakima” Florence P. Rea
Naomi Bone
*
Pinao Solo—Album Leaf in D” C. Koelling
Janice Davis
Piano Solo—(a) Tarantelle” Stephen Heller
(b) “Blue Haze” Olive Dungan
Sylvia Maxwell
Intermission
Boys Quartet—la) “Softly a Serenade Paul Bliss
(b) “Kentucky Babe” Adam Geibel
Robert, Brewer,H arris Hortman
Garrett Purvis, Jack Kendrick
Piano Solo—Noah’s Ark” Edna M. Burnam
Steve Brown
Piano Solo—“Nymph’s Harp” Florence Rea
Charlotte Garrett
Vocal Solo—“Star Dust” H. Carmichael
Charlotte Garrett
Piano Solo—“Whirling Leaves” Edna Burnam
Clarice Giles
Piano Solo—“Traumerei” ... j R. Schuman
Charlotte Edwards
Vocal Solo—“Danny Boy” F. Weatherly
Charlotte Edwards
Piano Solo—“Dance of the Wooden Shoes” M. Schuldt
Jeanette Wainwright
Piano Solo—Aragonaise” J. Massenet
Anna Ruth Jarrell
Piano Solo Selected
Rilene Gray
Piano Solo—“Surprise Waltz” Joseph Ogle
Betsy Theus
Vocal Solo—“My Hero” Oscar Straus
Betsy Theus
Piano Solo—(a) “To a Wild Rose” MacDowell
(b) “They Say It’s Wonderful” Irving Berlin
Charlotte McCants
Vocal Duet—“The Desert Song” Sigmund Romberg
Charlotte McCants and Jeraldine Davis
Piano
Solo—“Sea Sparkle”
Janelle Adams
Vocal
Solo—“Sleepy Hollow Tune”
Jackie Driskell
.... Richard Kuntz
Piano
Sclo—“Dutch Shoeson Vienna Street” .
Annette Guy
Schuldt
Piano
Solo—“Beautiful Dreamer”
Earnestine Davis
... Stephen Foster
Vocal
Solo—“Too-Ra-Loo-Ra-Loo-Ral”
Earnestine Davis
J. Shannon
Piano
Solo—“Fiddle-Faddle”
Helen Rustin
Leroy Anderson
Vocal
Solo—“The Sunshine of Your Smile” ....
Helen Rustin
L. Ray
Piano
(b) “Wind Cradle”
Adrian Downs
K. Daniel
Vocal
Solo—“Somewhere a Voice Is Calling” ..
Jack Kendrick
Arthur Tate
Piano
Solo—“Coasting”
Mary Ann Moore
Burleigh
Vocal
Solo—“WhenI Grow Too old to Dream”
Mary Ann Moore
Romberg
I’iano
Solo—“Norwegian Concerto”
Harris Hortman
* Grieg
Vocal
Solo—(a) “You’ll Never Walk Alone” ...
(b) “One Alone”
Harris Hortman
R. Rodgers
S. Romberg
Piano Solo—“Hungarian”
Margie Jarrell
Vocal
Solo—“Why Do I Love You”
Margie Jarrell
Jerome Kern
Piano
Solo—“Valse in A-flat Major
Jeraldine Davis
Vocal
Solo—Once in a While”
Jeraldine Davis
Michael Edwards
Piano
Solo—Clair de lune”
Barbara McCorkle
Debussy
Vocal
Solo—“I Love You Dear”
Barbara McCorkle
Rudolf Friml
Piano Solo—(a) “Arabesque in A Major”
(b) “Malaguena”
Nancy Childs
Debussy
Lecuona
Girls Trio—(a) “The Robin in the Rain”
(b) “The Rosary”
Barbara McCorkle, Jeraldine Davis, Nancy Childs
Prominent Macon Man
Named Federal Judge
Middle Georgia District
Marine Corps’ Officer
Candidate Course Program
Has Been Reinstated
PAGE FIVE
Washington, May 12—A Senate Washington. D. C.—After being
judiciary sub committee has ap- suspended for several monthms
proved the nomination of W. A. the Marine Corps’ Officers Cours^
Bootle of Macon, former Ifean of program has now been reinstated
the Mercer University Law School according to information received
nad a lifelong Republican to be from Headquarters, Marine Corps,
federal judge for the Middle District! Plans have been completed for
of Georgia. j Marine Officer Procurement Offic-
Bootle, 51, was assistant district 1 er s and Marine Officer Insturctors
attorney in the area from 1929 to vat NROTC units to accept applica’-
1933 under the Hoover administra-1 tions rom May 1 to July 1, 1954 for
tion and has practiced law in Ma-j thc ' Hth Officer Candidate Course
con and Bibb county since. | to convene in November, 1954 at
If the nomination is approved by j Marine Corps Schools, Quanti-
the Senate, which normally follows, co > ^’ a -
its subcommittee recommendations, j Applicants for this class must be
Bootle will suceed the late Judge! at Jeast 20 years of age and not
Conger who died last December.The i over 2 ? on July 1, 1955. They must
judgeship was created in 1949 to j be seniors or graduates from an
relieve Judge T. H. Davis of some 1 ar( ; redi,ed college or university and
of his duties- J bfdd degrees in fields other than
I The nominatnon of Bootle eariler, n ? edicine> dn etistry, veterinary the-
! this month for the judgeship ended j ology .’ P harrr >acy, music or art. All
months of speculation and maneu- canrhdale s enrolling in this pro-
vering by Republican forces in gram are subject to serve three
Geoigia. , ye f rs °f active service after ap
pointment to commissioned rank.
Geoigia.
F. O. Evans, Millede.gvile, U. S.
attorney for the district, had been' , Acde P ted applicants will be or-
a leading candidate for the postj j" r ' „ to . a 10 " wee k basic training
and in January Georgia Republican f ° ” e m ®L? Uant # 1CO u. Up ° n success -
Chairman E. P. Tuttle said he had, °? this course, can-
recommended that Evans be nomi i aidates Wl11 be commissioned and
rated nomu . assigned five months of specialized
But Evans withdrew from con- fnWsTed^con.r.f 810 SCh ° 01 '
sideration because of illness.Others craduats cm nhtlm ®? nioi ; s . f nd
considered for the post included T - obtain national mfor-
B. Martin of Macon, 1 ^treasurer of^ the 'Si, C ° ncernln * , tbe otOcerB
Ge„r ?la Republican P.„» and Ed
Smith of Columbus, a Muscogee
county Republican leader.
Bootle is the Republican Party’s
cal Marine Corps Officer Procure
ment Officers, Marine Instructors
and Marine Corps Recruiting Sta-
Sixth District Chairman, a member tions.
of Bibb county’s executive commit- j
tee and a member of hte Georgia j
He actively campaigned (or Presi.! ^Ppljf for HOtTieStead
dent Eisenhower during the last -
presidential election and said “I’ve CXeiTIDtlOll Ofllv (Wp
always voted the Republican tick- "" "
et ”
Next Governor of This
State Will Face a Huge
Deficit It Is Reported
Eugene Cook Rules
Georgia home owners need apply
for homestead exemption only once,
provided the owner stays in con
tinuous residence, Attorney-General
Eugene Gook stated last week in
an unofficial opinion given the
Board of Tax Equalizers of Ogle-
next thorpe County.
1 The 1952 Assembly emended the
Atlanta, Ga. — Georgia’s
governor is sure to take office with lllc
a $10,000,000 deficit looking at him. law, Cook said, so that a person
It could be much higher than that does not have to file every year for
if Gov. Talmadge follows the last homestead exemption,
months’ fiscal policies of most past I The Attorney General stated, also
governors. (that the 10% penalty, which the
And that is to spend everything law imposes for failure to file a
around in a final fiing of favor- ta * return, will have no effect
granting. The pressure during the where the homestead extmption of
final months is terrific. , the taxpayer is equal to or greater
But here's the gloomy fiscal pic- than the value of the taxpayer’s
ture with what is known now: property.
Education, the state’s costliest If the taxpayer owed no tax, then
department will need some $6,570,- he would have no 10% penalty to
000 more in 1954-55 than this year- P a Y-
The total of about $106,570,000 is Mr - Cook stated, also, that the
swelled principally by automatic * aw with reference to exemption of
teacher raises and additional teach- personal property was not amend-
ers—about 900 of them.
The governor, who in the current
fiscal year had to dig deep into
surplus to meet the education bud
get, is committed to meet this in
crease again.
He also is fairly bound to pay an
extra $2,500,000 for increased wel
fare benefits and institution im
provements, $600,000 tor extra rev
enue department help, and about
$200,000 worth of odds and end
promises.
cd by the Act of 1952.
NFPA Meeting
Draws Georgia
Fire Officers
Atlanta—State Fire Marshal F. E.
Robinson his chief deputy F P
Reinero and Bill Munday ’public 1 ?' Nev ° r look di . recUy into the
relations director of the Georgia sun, even with sun glasses.
Safety Fire Commission, are 2 - If you wear corrective lenses
Dark Eyes Better
Protected from Sun
Rays During Summer
If you’re brown-eyed, chances are
you’ll come off better in the battle
of “sun and eye” this summer.
Dark eyes are botier protected
against light and thus protect bet
ter against the rays o f the hot sun.
So said a spokesman for the Ga.
Optometric Association as he gave
several tips for sun-seekers now
packing their vacation luggage for
trips to the seashore, the lake and
the mountains.
The suggestions are:
1. Never look directly into the
Washington this week attending
annual National Fire Protection: 0Wn prescri P tlon arp bps L
A r I 3. Do awav wilh priori
sunglasses combined with your
Association conference
Statler Hotel.
at the
3. Do away
bright-surfaces.
with glare-causing
Commissioner Zack Cravey said 4 - Alw ays wear
sent these officials to th„ £ larP to prevent eye strain.
sent these officials to the conven
tion in line with his policy to keep
his department thoroughly posted
4. Always wear your sunglasses in
5. Never wear sunglasses indoors
or at night, as this may cause the
eyes to develop even greater sen
on fire prevention methods, old and GyGs . to devclo P even greater sen-
new, as practiced universally. sitivity to daylight and dark lenses
will not serve as well.
new, as practiced universally
“The NFPA membership is an in-
ternational organization,” Mr. Cra- • —
vey explained, “it is dedicated to HISTORIC PAINTING AT
the dissimination of fire nrever-
tion information and we are happy NATIONAL CAPITOL DOME
in Georgia that we are enabled to DED ICATED BY PRESIDENT
make available its vast facilities.” j ■
“Georgia’s Safety Fire Law,, the Washington. — President Eisen-
Cornmissioner continued, “is based hower will make a rare trip to Capi-
in the main on the nationally rec- to1 H hl to dedicate a newly com-
ognized practices of fire safety as P Io ted frieze of historical paintings
recommended by the NFPA,, these * n the Capitol dome,
being followed internationally. j The frieze, already seen in par-
“While attending te convention tial or completed form by millions
Bill Munday,” Mr. Cravey declared of Capitol visitors, traves the his-
“will confer with officials of the tory of the United States in bold,
NFPA and National Board of Fire chalk-white characters extending
Underwriters on ways and means around the interior of the -huge
to keep the Safety Fire Commis- dome 90 feet around hte floor,
sions weekly TV program on a’ Begun more than 70 years ago,
plane equal with that of any in the frieze has never been dedicated
the country.” jand the final three panels were
The TV program is seen each completed only last year, after Rep.
Sunday over Atlanta’s WLW--A, Jenkins (R-Ohio) put through con-
Channel II at 3:30 p. m. igress a measure directing the work
Baccalaureate Berman
CHURCH of the NAZARENE
J. C. WHITENER, Pastor
Butler, Georgia
May 23, 1954
. Borowski
Congregation
Congregation
BACCALAUREATE
Processional . . . “Adoration”
Doxology
Invocation
Hymn . “Come, Thou Almighty King”
Scripture
Senior Hymn . . . “Open Mine Eyes, That I »tay See”
Announcements
-
“The Lord’s Prayer” Harris Hortman
Recessional .... National Hymn .... Warren
SENIOR CLASS ROLL
Emily Allen
Barbara Barfield
YVonne Barfield
Gordene Blackston
Ferrell Bone
Frederick Bone
Robert Cooper
Sylvia Cosey
Buddy Dunn
Tom Edwards
Clay Griggs
Richard Guined
Morrell Harbuck
Riley Harmon
Nellie Hart
Priscilla Jones
Betty Maddox
Barbara McCorkle
Martha Melton
Mary Joyce Montgomery
Janet Neisler
Floyd Robinson
Gilbert Sawyer
Eugene Streetman
Clifford Swain
Tommy Theus
Mary Ann Wainwright
James Williamson
"Please Make It Work for Other Kids
38$
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