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STATHAM HIGH SCHOOL.
Commencement Exercises Friday
Evening, 8:30 o'Clock, May
16, 1919.
PROGRAM
Song Lullaby Lane
Operetta Music Class
(’HA RAFTERS
Aurora. (Queen of Dawn) Louise
Daniel.
Apollo, (Sun Cod) llerseliel Lowe
Fairies
Willie Lou Sikes. Virginia Rob
ertson. Esther Kenney, Vera Har
rison, Mildred Dial. Louise Porter
Louise Day. Kathleen Dolton, Lou
eile Hale. I •’ranees Hardigree, Ar
thur M. AVhitman.
Imps and Princes
Clarence Sykes. .Id!’ Sykes, Goo.
Daniel, dames E. Lowe, John U.
Perry. James Crow, Roy Willing
ham. William Stineheomb.
Debate. “De ain’t No Gliostes.”
Piano Solo Louise Day.
Song Rheuniatiz
Recitation .. William Stineheomb
Drill 2nd and 3rd Grades
Piano Solo Rosalee Doyd
Reading Ossie Sue Malcome
Minute
Recitation Ruth Maleoine
Song Jolly Pickaninnies
Hat Drill
Piano Solo Mildred Dial
Drill 7th and Sth Grades
Reading Louise Day
Piano Solo Kathleen Dolton
Song Ruth Fite
Play. “Aunt Mehitibcl’s Scienti
fic Experiment.”
Monday Evening, May 19, 1919.
Play.
“Standing Boy.”
Mr. Carey—(Wealthy American)
—Myron Wright.
Mrs. Carey Lyndale Weldon
Ethelind—(His daughter) Louise
Daniel.
Mrs. Walton . .Lauree Treadwell
Capt. Hobby Walton. Lonnie Crow
Max Martin Chandos llaynie
Mrs. Oakley Ruth Whitman
Rosa Walton. (R. C. Nurse) Maise
Whitehead.
“Polly” (Ethelind’a Nurse) Vel
ma Cody.
Henry Hersehel Lowe
Dr. Brighton Otis Hale
v ACT. I.
v Home of Mr. Carey.
ACT 11.
Home of Walton’s.
ACT HI.
> Hospital in France.
ACT IV.
Scene 1
Same as Act 1 two weeks later.
Scene 2
Walton Home one hour later.
In Everyday Life.
Tt Is well to remember that exceh
mt things are rare
Make your feet smile —
Ever have a pair of shoes
©n your feet that make them
mutter “ouch” every min
ittte they’re on? And
squeeze and pinch them
“‘here” and “there” and
“‘everywhere”?
The fault is partly yours
partly the man’s who
sold the shoes to you. We
insist that you let us do our
part in seeing that you get
comfortable shoes. And
we help all we can in seeing
that you get the style and
kind of shoes you’ve got
your mind made up to.
THE WIINDER DRY GOODS
STORE.
Q ”' s '
BEACON ™"™SHOES
WASH YOUR HANDS
By Betsy Doolittle
Dear Readers:
1 told you last week I would be
plain and pointed and tell you
who would like to he clean.
Some years ago in Paterson,
New Jersey, papers were filled in
a divorce suit by Mrs. Helen Sei
del. who alleges that she has to
wash her husband s face and
hands. No woman ought to be
forced to live with such a filthy
hog as this man, and our sympa
,Now, one of the very filthy hab-
Now, one of the very filth hab
its we have is not washing our
hands. This habit is not confined
to the lowly and ignorant, but to
all classes—from the highest to
the lowest—to men and women.
To a close observer of personal
hygiene and cleanliness it is as
tonishing to know how few per
sons wash their hands except at
stated periods morning, some
times in the evening and occasion
ally between times.
The idea or notion seems preva
lent among the vast majority of
people that if their hands look
clean and are not soiled by dirt,
or some other substance which is
very perceptible, there is no neces
sity for washing them. They lose
siglil altogether of cleanliness.
I have known beautiful young
ladies and charming matrons
bathe their faces and hands on ris
ing in the morning and never
wash their hands again during
the entire day.
I have known them to clean up
their rooms,make up the beds,dust
the furniture and then go to tlid
(lining room, handle Ihe bred, set
the table, etc., without washing
their hands. This is done by
young ladies and married ones
who think themselves clean and
tidy.
I have known them to nurse and
fondle eats and dogs and then pre
side with queenly manners at the
table without washing their hands
The queenly bearing could not
overcome the revolting thought
of the filthy hands to the close ob
server.
I have known them by scores,
go to picnics, church dinners, all
day singings and other entertain
ments with their baskets filled
with ham, chicken, mutton, bread,
pics and cake, shake hands for
A Builder of Health
Aside from the essential compounds
necessary to life that are present in |Kll||||Bb
Schlitz Famo—protein and carbohy
drates —the acids, aromatic
carbonic acid gas, exert a very bene-
They have a specific antiseptic prop
erty to suppress the development of yJk
harmful bacteria that may be lodged j- k
They stimulate-refresh—and assist ■■■HSramM
digestion by replacing to a certain fe.‘
extent the hydrochloric acid ot the ■■)
stomach—cause it to How more freely
—increasing the secretion of the pn
digestive juices. . gg
Drink Schlitz Famo freely—it is a
worth-while cereal beverage, non
intoxicating, healthful and satisfying. pt H'^s
Good and good for you. MgJ) ff*, '
On sale wherever soft drinks MttSA
are sold. Order a case from
Made Milwaukee Famous
hours with all sorts of people,
then open their baskets, handle
these eatables while spreading
them out for hungry guests, and
not one in twenty of them would
before doing this, wash their
hands. Gan you imagine any
thing much filthier than this? Yet
these women would he insulted if
charged with uncleanliness. The
concourse of men and women who
eat on these occasions no not wash
their hands and are equally as
filthy.
I have seen women let their chil
dren play with eats and dogs, put
their fingers in the mouths of
these pets and never have them
wash their hands before eating, or
even teach them how filthy it was
to do this. Mothers have much
to learn about cleanliness.
i have seen stylishly dressed
and well educated ladies, who
thought themselves the very per
sonification of purity and clean
liness, go all day without washing
their hands, who had shaken
hands with different men and
women, who had gone into sick
rooms, shopping establishments
and other places which at least
ought to suggest the propriety of
a little soap and water.
I have seen filthy cooks, who
also performed the duties of chain
ber maids, who would after clean
ing up the room go direct to the
kitchen, make up dough for the
breakfast or dinner bread, pre
pare the other things for the meal
and never wash their hands. And
what a pity it is. that there are so
many women who have cooks and
never teach them cleanliness, nev
er look after them to see if they
are clean, never know whether
their hands are washed and their
bodies kept clean and who seem
indifferent and not to care wheth
er they are clean or filthy.
In the conclusion of this letter
on the importance of washing
your hands before eating, before
cooking or waiting on the table
and not to be sparing with soap,
1 wish to say, that if we are guilty
of these filthy habits and customs,
bow can we expect to have clean
men and raise up clean hoys and
girls? We must be clean our
selves if we expect them to he
clean, and if we are, we can de-
mand them to be so.
Men are more inclined to be fil
thy than women, but I have al
ways had sympathy for the man
who wanted to be clean and whose
wife was just the opposite. If a
woman is slovenly and unclean,
her husband is most sure to be,
for it invariably follows in the un
ion of the two, that the wife
brings him on a level with herself
whether it be a lower or higher
standard than before he became
her husband.
These letters are for your good
and the good of all of us. Look
for next week’s letter.
Betsy Doolittle.
PENTECOST NEWS.
.Mr. and Airs. Jobe llaynie, of
Tyro, spent Sunday with their
aunt, Airs. H. A. Hardigree.
Alisses Zora Hammond and Ed
na A\ illiam'-'on were the of
Aliss Rosa Lee Chandler Suadav.
Mr. and Airs. W. E. E'der spent
Sunday with Air. and ALs. Jim
Wood.
Air. Afarvin Couch spent S in
day with Roy Priekett.
The ice cream supper given re
cently by Aliss Rosa Lee Chandler
was very much enjoyed by all
present.
Air. ( has. Hardigree spent Fri
day night with Air. AN illie Lee
Priekett.
Airs. John Giles spent Saturday
night with her daughter, Airs. W.
E. Elder.
Aliss Alarie llaynie was the
guest of Aliss Grace Priekett Sun
day.
Henry Hardigree spent Friday
night with Alarvin and Chester
Couch.
The Sewing Club was entertain
ed by Alisses Pearlie and Zora
Hammond in a delightful man
ner Thursday afternoon. Lovely
pink roses and carnations were
used throughout the house for
decorations. After an hour spent
in work, and plans for good times
Make Your Bathroom
Clean Looking i j
Keep the bathroom well painted for J ;
With Certain-teed you can cover more | j
surface with the use of less paint, owing 5 j
to its qualitv. The best basic pigments I jpOT © 4L _ ul (^v
only are used in its making. They are |M I Ba £ ro ° m J h n I ?f 1 I M
ground to the utmost fineness and | ' 1 Oil
mixed with pure linseed oil in the | Pff filßlKa. -
proper proportion to secure the best : jjgllipk. .fafawSflij
results for each purpose. Modern ma- f wSc*— J
chinery of the highest type, insures |
uniformity. Every ingredient is tested A
and weighed before using, and the ;
paint is submitted to rigid tests during
manufacture to prove its quality. *"
If you have your paintim; done, ask the painter to use Crrtain-tred —he will ret it for you. If you do the painting yourself, you can buy Crrtain-
Urd in any si;e can. and in all popular shades. Certain-uti Paints and Varnishes are made for every eitertor and interior surface, tach la specially
prepared to give the best and most lasting results for its use. Ask for Ctrtain-terd wherever paints are sold.
Certain-teed Products Corporation—Offices and Warehouses in Principal Cities
Certain-teed
% # a. r-> gk| | U P
\ PA I INI | 'ls OT-* V -K IN Is® r*' t 1 ■*• /•■ ■<■ •,■.*--?•,;> .-. *
. • --.■ - r _
throughout the summer, delicious
strawberries, cream and cake
were served. This was one of the
most interesting and enjoyable
meetings of the club.
Cleaning Gilt Frames.
Gilt frames may be cleaned by wash
ing then with a small sponge moist
ened with oil of turpentine, the sponge
being only sufficient wet to take off
the marks. The gilding should not be
wiped off, but left to dry without wip
ing. Varnishing with the best copal
varnish Is advised for gilt frames, as
they can then be washed off carefully
with a sponge.
UPHILL WORK!
HliipSi
Makes Every Grade Easym
With inferior oil, or oil of incorrect grade or “body”
for your motor, will show first signs on “heavy” roads, or
going up hill. Your engine gets red hot; expansion takes
place; your engine busks, and grunts and knocks like sin,
and you’ve got to “grind” up the hill in low gear.
Then you “get sore” and say things not found in reli
gious publications, and all the while the fault is primarily
yours; because you weren’t specific or concerned in what
sort of motor oil you were using.
If you’ll always *’oii up” with “GREEN FLAG’ you re
going to get the longest wear and the greatest service and
the most pleasure out of your car.
The following well-known and reliable dealers in this
county, are exclusive agents for “GREEN FLAG’ MOTOR
OIL. It will pay you to go out of your way to reach one
of them, when you need motor oiL
Woodruff Hardware Cos.
Wanted Coanpany.
Professor (in chem. lab.) —“This is
a very explosive substance and it
might blow us all sky-high. Come
closer, gentlemen, so you may be bet
ter able to follow me.”
Composition of Mica.
Mica, so named from its being easily
divided into glistening scales, consists
of silica and alumina, associated with
magnesia, soda and lime In varying
proportions. Thus there are potash
mica, consisting or silica, alumina and
potash, and magnesia mica, in which
the alumina is partially replaced by
magnesia, passing—as the proportion
of magnesia increases—into soft talc,
which Is chiefly composed of silica and
magnesia.