A.H.S. 65; Wadesboro 0
A.H.S. 38; Troy 0
A.H.S. 7; Salisbury 21
Volume 20
The Full Moon
A.H.S. 31; Statesville 0
A.H.S. 39; Harding 6
A.H.S. 36; Barium 0
ALBEMARLE, N. C., OCTOBER 31, 1941
here & THERE
I CAN’T THINK; too dumb.
Inspiration—won’t come.
' Amen!—P. Meiffs.
■ OVERHEARD: Everett Ford
■ yelling at Salisbury game, “Bite,
■ team, bite.” ^ ^
» MISS HOOKER’S DEFINITION
of a lady:
“If she says no, she means may-
* be;
J “If she says maybe, she means
I IN 8:30 STUDY HALL, “Bo”
McCall had his chair propped back
j on two legs. The whole study had
been buzzing with a busy sound
, when suddenly “Bo” fell on the
, floor with a crash. He lay there
with a dazed look on his face, and
' Mr. Hatley glanced up from his
' work and said:
“Well, if you people want to
( lie on the floor. I’ll gladly remove
all the chairs.”
* HENRY SAFRIT WAS the
[, newly elected president of the
“ 11:05 English Club.
Henry: All in favor say “I”.
Everyone said “I”
Henry: The “I’s” have it.
ALTHOUGH SCHOOL HASN’T
J BEEN in full swing very long,
” Mis. Moore is quite proud of her
■^students; at least she was until
; last week.
It was Friday afternoon and the
E end of a perfect week. Most of
her students had been smart that
week, but a few—“Oh, well, that
' is to be expected,” sighed Miss
Moore. Then upon the scene
' little lad with very
> for quite awhile.
jL “Miss Moore,” he said, “I w;
you to tell me something . . . J
b what kind of liquid is in th
bottles that preserves the speci-
" Suddenly, before she could
I speak, the answer hit hir
rknow! I know! Surely it
L be vinegar.”
I (Secret) Everybody know;
y Formaldehyde.
‘ CHARLIE HESTER S. w
Cl) excited when the policeman asked
his name he said Harlie Chester.
r; 6:30 A.M. AND HOOCHIE AND
SAM A., Buck Me., Wheatie Me.,
IJ and “Fat” M. just coming home.
,,Why? Well, it’s like this.
'"Hootchie took his care to Lenoir-
Rhyne Friday and ran out of gas
" about 2 A. M. Saturday morning:
Sh-h-h. Don’t tell anyone.
I Hoochie doesn’t want it told be-
^ cau.se the boys will tease him.
thoughts about THE WAR
» MANEUVERS
Eris C.—Um-m-m! That’s all
*)j "•‘ght.
Mazel H.—Straight as 6 o’clock.
Viola H.—We gals are a-doing
all right.
■J they’d surround
/ Albemarle.
Helen C.—Dumbest boys
»r' ever seen.
Miss Hooker—The more the bet-
''ter. We’re studying Boston, Mass
as hard as we can.
"I’ete” G.—They’re beatin’ ray
time.
Norman T.—Oh, me! I’ll be
glad when they’re over, so I
get a date.
Students And Bulldogs In High Spirits
To Win Over Barium Springs Tonight
In the brilliant light of a big
bonBre last night, enthusiastic
students of A. H. S. filled the
Pep talks by Coach De Lotto,
members of the student body
and the faculty were given, ac
companied by yells and songs by
ed by the school
P.-T. A/s Combine
For Year’s Work
Albemarle high school and the
Central Elementary school have
combined their Parent-Teacher as
sociations, since there was such a
imall number that attended the
meetings of the high school last
The meetings will be held at
the Central Elementary school on
third Thur.sday of every month,
with the high school furnishing a
program for every other meeting.
Since most of the parents who
ually attend these meetings
have children in the Elementary
school and the high school, it is
believed that the combining of the
lociations will be suitable to
them, as they will have only one
meeting each month to attend.
President of the association is
Mrs. Duncan Allan; vice president
is Mrs. Claud Grigg; secretary is
Mrs. P. H. Carlton; and treasurer
is Mrs. Loy Gulledge.
Boosters Advertise
Game and Operetta
Projects already in progress by
the Boosters’ Club are publicity
for the Home-coming Game and
for the operetta, “Lelawala”.
The club is taking an active
part in advertising for the Albe-
marle-Barium Springs game and
doing its best to have a large
crowd present to witness it.
The game will be played at the
Albemarle athletic field tonight,
eight o’clock.
‘Lelawala”, an operetta to
^.jsented by Mr. Fry’s chorus
groups, is also being boosted by
the club.
The Boosters’ Club Members are
making posters to put in the down
town store windows. Handbills
will be put in cars and a contest
■ to be held for ticket-selling.
The motto of the club for the
operetta is “Full house”.
Seniors Order Rings
Members of the senior class have
given Mr. Bill Hise, representa
tive of L. G. Balfour Company,
Attleboro, Mass., an order for
class rings.
The stone is blue spinel with the
high school engraved on one
and a bulldog, school mascot,
the other.
One hundred and two rings \
ordered, which is less than last
year because of the smaller classes
this year.
The rings are expected t(
here by December 1, but another
order will be sent in January 2.
started in front of the school.
Students, marching in the band,
were waving banners and pla
cards on broomsticks bearing
such slogans as: “Beat Bar
ium,” “Bite ’em. Bulldogs,”
“Bury Barium,” and “Our Team
is Red Hot.”
V/hen the parade reached the
Square, more speeches, yells
and songs were given and the
band was playing its liveliest.
The public address system was
used for the speeches.
Between 1,500 and 2,000
handbills bearing the date and
time of the game have been
handed out. Post cards have
.nd urg
The biggest section ever to be
roped off will be reserved for
the students and the school col
ors, blue and white, will be cai-
ried out to the last detail.
The Boosters Club has laid
plans for the “A” to be formed
in the bleachers by students
holding cardboard, if possible.
The Club also wishes to urge
every student to sit in the
bleachers reserved for the stu-
Annual Will Not Be
Published This Year
“Crossroads”, the A. H. S.
annual, will not be published
this year, school authorities
have announced.
It was hoped last year that
the annual could be published
senior edition of The Full
jrned out, the
annual cost over
It takes appr
hundred dollars
wo hundred
Student Council
Attends Meeting
In Charlotte
Members of the Albemarle High
School Student Council are attend-
ng the annual convention of the
high school student councils held
Charlotte today and tomorrow.
Bill Rogers, Frank Little, and
Jean Lentz, official delegates, with
Reed Gaskin, will spend the night
in order to attend the business
part of the convention tomorrow.
Following adjournment today,
there will be a banquet, followed
by a football game and an infor
mal Halloween party.
The general topic for discussion
today is “Student Council Prob-
Tomorrow’s business will in
clude selection of a topic for next
year’s meeting, the choice of a
meeting place, and election of of-
Students Observe
Chemicals In Use
Miss Milling recently took her
students down town to see in ac
tual life the different subjects
they had been studying in class.
They went to the hospitals to
study oxygen and its uses in the
mending and saving of human
lives. The classes went to the auto
repair shops to study oxygen and
other gases in the use of metal
cutting, etc. They also visited the
fire department to see the use of
chemicals in fire extinguishing.
The pupils gained much valu
able knowledge and it may be said
that this unusual type of tutoring
was more than successful.
Plans For Play
Are Completed
Now that all members of the
cast have been chosen, practice for
‘Lelawalla,” the three-act dra-
natic operetta which the chorus
and dramatic classes are planning
to present during the latter part
of November, is being held every
night under the direction of Miss
Fitzgerald and Mr. Fry.
Members of the cast are: Wo-
komis, Claude Furr; Klolowar,
Charles Whiteley; Lelawalla, Vi
ola Hudson; Marpeetopah, Sam La-
ar; Hintola, Ann Sides;
Sowanis, Leroy Boone; Shun-
gela, Charles Kincaid; Wacootay,
Coleman Austin; Wamhehe, Craig
Eury; Wanyeca, Betty Jean Wolfe
Naponee, Lois Underwood;
Eagle Eye, Max Cranford; Ma-
r Wallace, Everett Ford; Mabel,
Anne Reap; Captain Bliss, Ben-
Bennett; Clarinda Bond, Hel-
___ Lowder; Sergeant Bilks, Char
lie Hester Smith; and Lord Tatler,
Coolidge Almond.
Music for “Lelawalla” was ar
ranged by Charles Wakefield Cad-
man, the book and lyrics by
George Murray Brown.
Students Enter
Essay Contest
Many students of Albemarle
High School have entered the ei
say contest on “Fire Prevention,
which is being conducted by the
city fire Department.
Prizes are as follows: First
prize, $5.00; second prize, ?2.00
in trade at Moose’s Haberdashery;
and third prize, five tickets to
Alameda theater. The judges are
one member of the Chamber of
Commerce, one member of the
Fire Department, and an ex-teach-
of Albemarle.
Results of the contest will be an
nounced Tuesday, according to Mr.
McFadyen’s report.
82 Students Make
First Honor Roll
Eighty-two students made the
honor roll for the first quarter, the
tenth grade leading with 24.
To make the honor roll a stu
dent must make not lower than a
To make highest honor he
ust make all A’s.
Eighth Grade.
Honor: Bevline Stogner, Bill
Mabry, Ramelle Thompson, Ellen
Dennis*, Ruth Jean Lisenby, Kitty
Jane Morton, Dorothy Swaringen,
Frances Biles.
Ninth Grade.
Highest honor: Mildred Reap.
Honor: Cabot Carlton*, Bill Mor
ton*, Jimmy Sifford*, Hazel Rags
dale*, Rhoda Russell*, Ann Sar
gent, Hazel Whitley*, Ruby Mae
Hatley*, Jeanne Palmer*, Dick
Morrow, Helen Perry*, Claudine
Dennis*, Louise Efird*, Betty Jane
Hatley*, and Patsy Ingram*.
Tenth Grade.
Highest honor: Carolyn Biles*,
Frances Mann*. Honor: Everette
Ford, Joyce Efird*, Madie Lee
Efird, Ticka Senter*, Margaret
Tucker*, Merrill Hall*, John Wil-
hoit, Marie Hurlocker*, Carolyn
Mills*, Betty Wolfe*, Blanche
Still, Jo Morton, Martha Ivey*,
Rose Katherine Morton*, Mary El
len Milton*, Freeman Russell*,
Calvin Blalock*, Gene Helms, Mar
garet Skidmore, Dottie Whitley,
Pearl Fesperman, and Genevieve
Ewing.
Eleventh Grade.
Highest honor: Eulalia Tuck
er*, Eunice Smith*. Honor:
Charles Whiteley, Reed Gaskin*,
Betty Jo Glover*, Idell Mauldin,
Ann Sides, Marcelle Whitley*,
Virginia Morgan, Arwilla Jones*,
Juanita Lawrence, Betty Ruth
Rogers*, Ruth Townsend*, Lois
Underwood, Bill Hartsell*, Ernest
Knotts, Gerald Mann*, Allie Ray
Boyce, Evelyn Dorton*, Betsy
Ivey, Jeanne Lentz, Rose Parker,
Carolyn Stone, and Elizabeth Wal-
Twelfth Grade.
Honor: Sam Andrew*, Steve
Boyce*, Rembert Rogers*, Betty
Sue Bogle*, Barbara Crowell*,
Rachel Curlee*, Anne Reap, Jew
ell Rogers*, Ninky Sanders*, Bet
ty Sue Underwood*, and Mildred
Crayton.
The students with stars by their
names have had perfect attendance
so far this year.
Band Will Wear
Uniforms Tonight
Band uniforms, donated to the
Albemarle high school band by the
Wiscassett Mill oificials, will be
w'orn tonight when the band plays
for the home-coming game with
Barium Springs.
The Band, wearing their
forms, led the students who
to the pep rally night down t(
Square, where the students led
cheers and songs, and music
given by the band.
There are 36 blue and white
uniforms, made military s . ,
with white stripes down the side
and with white belt and strap,
Sam-Brown style, over the shoul-
By Their Words
“I ain’t talking to nobody.
I’m talking to myself”—Hoo
chie Morgan.
for physic^’*-^Mr.'Hat"ry.***“'^’'
“I'm so hungry that every
time I draw a deep breath my
stomach rattles.”—Louise Efird.
“Charlie, children should be
seen and not heard, and speak
only when spoken to by your
elders.”—Miss Polston to Char
lie Hester Smith.
“We have a black girl’s purse
that was found in 1:10 study
hall.”—Mr. McFadyen.
“Give two girls to one book.”
—Mr. Fry.
ATTEND MUSIC MEETING
Misses Anyce Worsham, piano
teacher, and Helen Cunningham,
school music teacher; Mr. Barbera,
band instructor, and Paul F^y,
choral director, attended the
State music teachers meeting at
W. C. U. N. C., Greensboro, last
Monday.
Plans for state contests and clin
ics were made. The meetings
were led by nationally-known mu
sicians.
BEAT BARIUM SPRINGS!