Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / April 16, 1936, edition 1 / Page 11
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i| Murphy . I ne' SENIORS TO GIVE RECITAL By Ellen C. Axley Moselle Moore, a pupil of Mrs. J. W. Davidson, will {five a piano recital Thursday evening, April 16, at 7:30| o'clock at the school auditorium. She will bo assisted by Winifred Townson and Ruth Deweese. Special seats will be reserved for the Senior class of which Moselle is a member. The program is as follows: "Kam. ,nnai?Ostrow"?Rubinstein ? Moselle Moore. -Little Bey Blue" -Eugcr.e r.du ?-Winifred Townson. "Adagio" from Sonato opus 10 no. 1?Beethoven. "Fantasia" from Sonato no. 18? Mozart?Moselle Moore. "In the Jordan of Tomorrow"? Deppan- Ruth Deweese. "Rustle if Spring" ? Sinding? Moselle Uoore. Reading?Selected ? Mrs. Arthur Barber. "Fantaaie in C. Minor"?Back. "Black Key Etude"?Chapon? Moselle Moore. "Lullaby"?Brahms ? Saxaphone and corinet?duet?Miss Hilda Fuller H. W. Baucom, Jr. "Prelude in C Sharp Minor"? Rachmaninoff?Moselle Moore. SENIORS TO BE EXEMPT All Seniors making an average of B or better for the second semester will not be required to take final examinations. VALEDICTORIAN Anne Hill is valedictorian of the Senior Class, making an average of 91.5 Moselle Moore with an aver, age of 90 is salutatorian. JUNIORS' ADOPT RINGS By Winifred Townsend The Junior class of the Murphy High school has voted to adopt a standard ring for all future graduating classes. The rings arc to be bought from the Herff Jones Jewelers and the or. ders are to be placed with Mr. Ed Moore, local jeweler. If a deposit of one dollar is made by July 1st the students will receive their rings at the beginning of the following school year and the students will also receive a memory book or a belt buckle. HONOR ROLL?5TH GRADE Phoebe Caldwell Wanda Bowles, Charlene Bowles. Evelyn Jane Simons, Wanda Patton. j Edna Patton, Edna Crisp, and Char- I les Sneed. Mrs. H. M. Bowles and Mrs. J. C Townson the grade mothers of the r.th grade visited them PVidnv Mis Toxvnson brought a contest, and Mrs. | Bowles gave them a treat. The 5th grade was very glad to have them. | FORTISSIMA SUNT BELGAE Evelyn Morrow See how great Julius Caesar's hand hath writ, Of a new nation struggling to arise Long centuries pass, yet while she bleeds, and dies, His judgment stands time dims nc word of it. The Belgians were the bravest of the nations in "Caesar's day and they still are the bravest today. HONOR ROLL 7TH GRADE Mrs. Meroney's Group Boys?Willy Kinney. ' Girls?Pauline Vandiver, Helen Hampton and Mary Lee Roberts. DR. E. L. HOLT Dentist - X-ray Specialist Hill-Parker Bldg. _ Murphy, N. C. Quinn & Humphrey quick ambulance service Funeral Director. St Embalmer. Day Phone 74, Ni(ht 97 and 77 COPPERH1LL. TENN. j SAtVF UUU COLDS LiouiD.TAm.rra pnce SALM?" 5c, 10c 25c ' . TheOwrol School j ws | f 88 0mco?O??>??O??O?O?O8O'? 6TH GRADE HONOR ROLL By Cecile Davis I Justine Johnson, Maurine Lovin 1 good, Martine Moore, Jessamine Vestal James Abbott Hyatt, Billy Taylor ' and Mary Barber. MURPHY HIGH CHORAL CLUB < Arrie Lou Stalcup The Glee club met again on Mon- 1 day of this week. We arc still practising for the songs we shall sing for ' I the commencement exercises. The tiub wiii meet again this week. HONOR ROLL By Dora Graham 1 Eleventh Grade Moselle Moore, Katreen Stand- ' I ridge and Blanche Young. Tenth Grade Lorcna Ledford, Beatrice Howard, ' Charlotte Trotter and Mabel Hall. ' Ninth Grade?Sec. I ' Billie Jackson, Kathleen Roberts and Joe Elkins. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON (1850-1894) By Frances Barr In 1850 Robert lx>uis Stevenson ( came to live on earth. i He was a sickly child. And frail from his birth, In Edinburgh, Scotland. He spent much of his childhood in bed f While to him his favorite stories His mother told and read. Alison Cunningham His devoted, beloved nurse, Gave him a taste for drama From the very first. In a child's Garden of Verses' We learn of childish,happy things Of the shadow that goes in and out 1 And the children up in the swings. He went to the University of Edinburgh To study engineering antf law. But no regular studying was possible this his father saw. So he lived in a beautiful country home Or journeyed with his father, a civil engineer, Inspecting lighthouses and harbors. Or seeing if the coast was clear. Then he saw images Of isles, moor, and mountains. Instead of reading stories Of lighthouses and golden water fountains. He spent several years traveling In Germany, Scotland, and France. You should read his accounts of his voyage |If you ever have a chance. I The records of an inland vovacn Appeared in eighteen seventy-eight; And "Travels with a Donkey; A year after above date. His delightful conversational manner Charmed his readers very much The graceful easy flow of his style Charmed them like a crutch. I In eighteen eighty.three 'Treasure Island appeared; Tn eighteen eighty-six, Kidnapped, adventurous and vvierd. Stevenson did not concern himself. With problems of society and life. Or the mysteries of thought and eonduct Into which George Eliot and Thomas Hardy put a strife. I He returned to Scott's romanticism? The love of a story for its own sake, The delight in adventure. The external youth awake. Stevenson's romance Began in France in 187B. There he met Mrs. Osbourne And wanted to be her husband. She moved to San Francisco. Stevenson heard that she was ill. He sailed to her right away Because he loved her still. Hard times and suffering Nearly killed him in San Francisco. By then he must have wished He was in Montevista. He got tuberculosis And surely would have died. But Mrs. Osbourne nurVd him back to health And stayed by his side. In eighteen eighty they were married does bladder weakness WAKE YOU UP In four days your druggist will return your 25c if not pleased. Drive out the excess acids and waste which cause the irritation resulting in sleepless nights, frequent desire, scanty flow or backache. Use buchu leaves juniper oil, etc., made into little green tablets called Bukets. They work on the bladder similar to caster oil on the bowels. Get your regular sleep. It's nature's greatest restorative.?Parker's Drug Store. feec Scout, Mhtphy, Noctl And he returned to Scotland with his wife. They were welcomed to his father's home To live the rest of their life. Lloyd Osbourne, his stepson. Collaborated with him in some stories And won considerable distinction as i writer. On account of his own later glories Stevenson could not stand the climate of Scotland \nd for years he wandered from jlace to place. [n search of a climate where he might live \nd work and love and write with grace. \t last he fettled with his family 3n a Samoan Island in the Pacific. Here he lived his last four years. In good health, rather than in the traffic !n eighteen ninety.four The brave end suddenly camr Je was talking gaily on the veranda He did not act ill nor lame, ie had a stroke of apoplexy Vnd consciousness he never regained, 3ut in the heart of the natives, ic ever lived and deigned. The natives carried his body to Mounl Vaea, Cutting a path with ax and knife. \nd now he is up in Heaven )ut of this world of strife. FORESTRY FILMS SHOWN SCHOOL Anne Hill Mr. Gilbert Skyride of Andrew* old us of Forestry laws and thai >ne fourth of the money made goe* o the State and part of this money joes back to the district from which umber comes. Four short shows were given in chapel. There were scenes of forest fires, lumber camps uid how forests services, and preventions to take with fire. o Vuestio.i: Unn silage be fed tr dairy cattle on pasture? Answer: In summer or spring feeding, silage is used as a supple, ment to short pasture. When the :attle are turned on pasture, it i.< well to feed a reasonable amount ol : ... jFZ&ui mmmm {! : :'y ':UU>W!8< "The For oil for t any othe AND ITS U1 Enthusiastic sales tc and ends with gasoline salesmen would like yoi the whole story of auton But drivers ought to kn the fact is, it's way dowi The big items of car ei first cost, low up-kecp c preciation. Savings her great deal of difference i Gasoline mileage is mo point than an economy f Check up and you wi difference between 17 s *25 A MONT b Carolina 1 silage in the morning for several days. This will prevent the cows from gor1 ging themselves on the tender, watery grass. If this is not done the animals are likely to develop scours. This trouble will naturally mean a lo^erint in the production. Question: 1 am informed that iodine is necessary in poultry feeds? could you advise me about this? I I ' I H p new nncis \ as low as " $135 FllEE:; MO MONEY Af*T^\ pri? *- , .ill!! *"j "liLty* ""' *" ! ' WALTER Phone 124-J : i r FOR E( / W if ymnrltttir I \ \ / | ^ 'X / d V?8 uses less he power it gn r car we have e^ y-KEEP COST IS T ilk often begins gallon is less th mileage. Some average driving i to believe it is a gallon). Her mobile economy. make the Ford i ow better. For, More val~% 1 the list. Lower cost conomy are low Long life. $ ost and low de- Quality mean e can make a Ford V-8 give! n cost per mile. than any other re of a talking car under $164! actor. other low-prici ill find that the Riding, safe, sur ind 19 miles a Safety Glass all Hwith usual low down-pay: v-8 car on new ucc /,% p Thurs., April 16,1936. Answer: It is reputed that iodine has a value in feeding chickens, but as yet, very little research work has been done to determine its value. A deficiency of iodine leads to goiter, but no goiter has been reported in fowl. Practically all poultry mashes contain iodized salt and oyster shell contain a certain quanity of the iodine which probably accounts for thw lack of goiter in fowl. SpT STANDARDS FOR H REFRIGERATOR ,J> BUYING II PROOFS ' !| 1. LOWER OPERATING COST .1 2. SAFER FOOD PROTECTION I 3. FASTER FREEZING ? ; ] MORE ICE 4. MORE USABILITY I 5. FIVE-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN COLEMAN : Murphy, N. C. U13A) ^ ' " ' I' - momy sc'-x i \ j f 11 f 1 (i n H JL V? V A M 11 V4. / e s than /er made HE LOWEST" an $10 for a whole year's ; (8400 miles at 18 cents e are the big items that the most economical car: for every dollar you pay. ft r repairs and service, ilow depreciation, s economy and the 1936 i you mere real quality low-price car. No other 5 has a *'-8 engine. No s car has Center-Poise e mechanical brakes and around at no extra cost. WENT. BUYS ANY NEW FORD ER MONTH FINANCE PLANS.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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April 16, 1936, edition 1
11
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