The Sunday Record (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 49, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 8, 1942 Page: 3 of 4
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A
IT IN MINEOLA!
The Sunday Record, March 8,1942.
Paere Three
JACKET
Continued from page 2)
It's a red suede horse with
fringed mane and tail.
J)by Hala wears a patriotic
e, it haval anchor.
Peggy Coker wears a silver
idle that any cowboy would
aire.
5ris Lipsey wears a small
leather football helmet with
dangling football shoes attach-
ed.
Lois Thomas wears crossed
bayonets that must have come
off the hat of an A&M cadet
(identity suspected but un-
known).
Jimmie Drew Burnett wears
a silver elephant set in bril-
liants.
Harriet Blandford also wears
a gold anchor with the initials
USN on it.
Jean Rule wears a gold pin
with the letters OK on it.
Grace Landers wears a pearl
pin with her name written on
it in gold (we hear that it
ane from a soldier. Is that
right, Grace?).
Dorothy Jane Blalock wears
a little gold pin with army
wings on it.
Betty Stevens has an A&M
pin set in pearls that she wears
on th& lapel of her coat.
Sue Metcalf "wears a
iloid Bucking Broncho.
iTullos wears a wood-
lead that is some-
time (incident-
ally that's her middle name).
WE 0£
FOR
CONSTIPATION
• Some "Juices are natural aids for
•onstirafton. PRUNOL which contains
{Ksh prufceJuice, combined with taste-
fcss mlnefifoil and other scientific in-
ttedients. relieves even the most stub-
born cases of constipation through gen-
Be. yet thorough lubrication and stimu-
jttion of the intestines.
All good drug stores htvt PKUNOL
i* Ike generous 60c end SI ?«.
CCNTLE IN ACTION
TMOftOuCH IN RESULTS
nrvice Drug Store
Uncle Sam said:
TE NEED
MOttE GAS
for WAR INDUSTRIES*
...and they are getting it!
«r and faster move the
wheels of war production—the call
is for ever more machines of war.
Dependable United Gas Service
is answering this call swiftly and
with abundant supplies of Gas
wherever it is needed. Today this
Gas is helping to make Navy destroy"
ers, ships for the merchant marine,
gun barrels, other materiel.
There shall be no slowing down
for want of Gas. Night and day, our
trained employes are on the job, ask-
ing only to go on serving their cus-
tomers and their country . • • with
quiet, sure efficiency. They
will keep the service going
to home and industry alike.
I ...Good
| citizenship
>QZ> GAS SERVICE PIUS -SgrJET
production
...1,300 train-
ed employes
...$1,100,000
annual tax*e
29.500.000
year dlstri-
" locally
Jacket Buzz.
f Bobby didn't like it one bit
that Doris went to Nacogdoches.
He thought that he could take
her old home town's place.
Jimmy had better keep an
eye on Murl. We saw him with
Mary Evelyn one night last j
week.
H. A. can't seem to 71^ 1 j
his mind. He goes with Gaye, J
Betty Jean and Billie Sue. j
Which one do you favor most, j
H. A.? Or do you like them
all?
What did John T's mother
say to him Saturday night be-
fore last? (He had a date with
Billie Sue.) Is that any help?
We hear Billie Frances is
writing to some boys from At-
lanta. Do you happen to know
them, Harriet, especially one
of them?
We were sorry that Miss Biz-
zell had larynigitis this week.
She's over it now.
Gloria is also writing to a
boy that worked on the crew
here.
Patty seems to be interested
in a certain out-of-town boy.
He certainly is cute, Pattie, we
envy you.
George seems to think Gwen
is kind of cute. Isn't that right,
Georg^?
Wonder how James Hubert
Thomas would look not chew-
ing gum?
Does Jean still write to Seat-
tle, care the U. S. Navy?
We hear that R. L. Hendrix
and Elmer Bunn have finished
their study course and are now
waiting for further orders.
Stagging it Friday night were:
J. O., Clifford, Truett, Pete Dean,
John Bass, Everett Nix, Jimmie
Brotherton, Gary Curtis, Gene
Bright, Gene Mallory. How
come?
Several girls were stagging
it that same night. Why didn't
you get together?
Mr. Prim and Mrs. Willis had
personal reasons for enjoying
the Ward School operetta—
their daughters were in it.
Winona was with the Wills
Point boy again Sunday. What
did you do, J. O.?
How is John Thomas get-
ting along with the Quitman
girl?
n v i
The New Hope Hornet
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF THE NEW HOPE SCHOOL
Editor-in-Chief I Maevon Belcher
Associate Editor Mary Lee Zager
Sports Editor Billie Phillips
Clubs and Assembly - Olean Laminack
Reporters __ Forest Turbeville, Paul Sanders
Photo from Acme.
MRS. DWIGHT W. MORROW
Mrs. Morrow, wife of the former U. S. Ambassador to Mexico,
heads the new "Home Front Division/' national women's group
of the Fight For Freedom
UNITED GAS
CORPORATI ON
Frank Balk was home again
last week-end, wasn't he, Bet-
ty Jean?
What made Charles Ray
act as he did Friday night?
Rather a stubborn case, don't
you think?
Does Charles Ray like Doro-
thy Murl?
Frances Ann and Jean seem
to be interested in sophomore
boys now.
Murl reports that it's his
old steady Mary Frances who
interests him now.
Dates Friday night: Frances
Ann and George Hannon, Bud-
dy and Jean, H. A. and Betty
Jean, Gaye and Doodie, Grace
and Pete, Doris and Bobby,
Reba Fae and Charles Williams.
Noticed sitting together in
the study hall: Mary Lou
Roberts and John Sewell.
Who is that Jack Lindley
calls ''love?" All the girls?
Is Gene Mallory's laugh nat-
ural? We believe so, and he
admits it, too.
Frances Ann seems to like
Peytie as well as she used to.
The feeling seems to be mu-
tual.
What other girls are inter-
ested in Commerce or East
Texas?
Does Mary Jo have Buddy
hooked?
Who does Everett Nix like?
The new National Honor So-
ciety pins are here. They are
most attractive.
Why do business arithmetic
students think it is so hard?
Sociology class has been hav-
ing some debates. Two teams
debating Friday were Mary Jo
Hudson and Charles Holbrook
against Jean Rule and Pleasant
Craver. The whole class seems
to enjoy the debates.
It seems that Doris Lipsey
has her tale mixed concerning
the Annice Cage-Horace Wells
"Redland Case."
Has Dorothy Shaver quit the
senior class to marry. That's
what we hear. My, Cupid has
been doing a lot of work here
of late.
Romances like always: Doris
and Bobby, Don and Betty Jane,
Gaye and Doodie, Winona and
J. O., Gregory and Peggy.
Gaye, Jean, Frances Ann and
Betty Jean were in Tyler again
last Friday, and cordially they
brought back Clifford and
Truett. What's so interesting in
Tyler to WHS students?
Sitting together in assembly
Wednesday were the following
couples: Charles Brown and
Erline Barkley, Clifford Wil-
liams and Frances Ann Cole-
man, Buddy Blandford and
Mary Jo Hudson, C. G. Shaver
and Dimple Stewart, Pete York
and Grace Landers, Gregory
Brooks and Peggy Coker.
Whose bracelet is Charles
Brown wearing?
Isn't Billie Sue's red dickey
pretty?
H. E. II students are making
pretty blouses.
o
Stabbed John Brown.
The man responsible for the
surrender of John Brown at
Harper's Ferry in 1859 was
Lieutenant Israel Green of the
U. S. Marines, who stabbed
Brown and forced him to give
UP-
Editorial.
The hot lunch project of our
school deserves the coopera-
tion of every pupil and patron
of the school. The local P-TA,
sponsors of this worthy project,
recently paid a, considerable
sum to the county garden pro-
ject in order to insure our par-
ticipation in next year's lunch
program. This action has left
the P-TA treasury in a deplet-
ed condition, and make more
regular and substatioal contri-
butions on the part of the pay-
ing students absolutely neces-
sary. It is the hope of the
sponsors that more students
who are not eating hot lunch
at school will start doing so
and help keep the project in
successful operation for the
remainder of the year. It takes
some finances to keep anything
worth while going, and the hot
lunch project is no exception.
Gene Autry Delights
Methodist Home Kids
Gene Autry, screen star and
children's idol, is welcomed by
Hubert Johnson, superintend-
ent of the Methodist Home in
Waco where he was guest of
honor at a special dinner Mon-
day night. Sharing honors with
the singing cowboy was At-
torney General Gerald Mann,
who spoke at the dinner, and
the actor's wife, Mrs. Autry.
To the delight of the Home's
400 children, the actor played
and sang such favorites as
Rancho Grande, Deep in the
Heart of Texas, and Back in
the Saddle Again.
o
Lost An Eye.
The late Floyd Gibbons, fam-
ed newspaper correspondent,
lost an eye covering the battle
of Chateau Thierry with the
United States Marines.
Civilian Defense.
In a recent mass meeting held
at the school building the peo-
ple of the New Hope school
district started an organiza-
tion for Civilian Defense. All
of the details for successful
operation were not worked out,
but air wardens were chosen.
Mouzon Fletcher was confirm-
ed as chief air raid warden for
the district, he having already
been appointed by the county
officials. The following men
volunteered their services as as-
sistant air raid wardens:
J. V. Hooks, E. C. Fouse, Her-
man Williams, R. E. Minick,
F. M. Stokeley, Hubert Lee, C.
L. McClenny, Oveal Belcher, L.
S. Sanders, J. C. Shields, Clyde
Wilbanks, C. J. Haley, Wallace
Weaver, Harvey Skinner, Hor-
ace Palmer, Herman Phillips,
Jack Hopper, Lonnie Wilson, J.
E. Perdue, James Wood, Ever-
ett Phillips, H. J. Smith, W. M.
Wilbanks, A. McReynolds, Vir-
gil Hooks, Gus Chreitzberg,
Ben Huffman, Hoyt Maclin.
These wardens will be ex-
pected to take the necessary
required training in the near
future and at a designated
place.
Honor Roll.
First grade: June Greer, Doro-
thy Lee, Mary Elian McRae,
Sue Mize.
Second grade: Bertha Hor-
ton.
Third grade: Jo Ann Bel-
cher. Peggy Chreitzburg, Alma
Earle Hooks, Lonzo Martin,
Johnnie Paul Perdue, Harold
Phillips, Kenneth Paul Richey,
Billie Bob Richey, Patsy Wil-
son.
Fourth grade: Dorthy La Jane
Chreitzberg, Billie Louise Haley,
Vernice Skinner, Wanda Jean
Weaver, Ruth Lanell Williams.
Fifth grade: Junior Barnet,
Beatrice Skinner, Dalphine Wil-
son.
Sixth grade: Billy Belcher.
Seventh grade: June Belcher,
Valerie Belcher, Juanita Smith,
Patsy Ruth Palmer.
Eighth grade: Cordia Mae
Dickerson, Wesley Wayne Fouse,
Mary Louise Greer, J. D. Haley,
Billie Marie Huffman, Imogene
Maclin, Billie Faye Wheeler.
Ninth grade: Rayford Bar-
nett, Paul Sanders, Jerome
Stokes, Juanita Wilson.
Tenth grade: Maevon Bel-
cher, Edna Faye Phillips, Billie
Phillips, Mary Lee Zager.
be glamour. Several of the
girls plan to attend an Jut
show at Fort Worth Monday,,
March 16.
Assembly.
Mrs. Duncan's room present-
ed the assembly program F"e4>-
iuary 20. It consisted of a read-
ing by Paul Meek; Lincoln
Acrostics and Wonder, by nine
boys and girls; Washington
Song, by the fifth and sixth
grade girls, and a short play,
A Call to Service. This was
an enjoyable program.
Mrs. Vaughan's room present-
ed the program February 27.
It consisted of the following
numbers: Songs, Oh, My Dar-
ling Clementine. White Cliffs
of Dover, and The Old Apple
Tree; playlet, The Women ot
Tomorrow; reading, Harold
Philiips; playlet, The Student
Band; reading, Vernice Skin-
ner. The program was enjoy-
ed by all who heard it.
Girls 4-H Club.
The New Hope girls 4-H club
met in the library at 10 o'clock
Thursday, February 26. Miss
Grace Patterson, county home
demorstration agent, met with
the girls. Poultry was the main
topic for discussion. The sub-
ject for the next meeting will
Ideal Girl.
Eyes, Lorene Palmer; hair,
Ruby Lee Chreitzberg; smil^
Olean Laminack; figure, Mary
Lee Zager; personality, Rtfn*
Phillips; studious, Billie Phil-
lips; lips, Maevon Belcher.
Ideal Boy: eyes, Forest Wayne
Turbeville; hair, Tommis Hooks;
smile, Paul Mize; studious, Dai-
ton McClenny; personality, Ken-
neth Smith.
Guess Who.
Is six feet tall, has black hair,
brown eyes, weighs 160 pounds*
wears brown and green zipper
jacket, and is a sophomore.
Is five feet, eight inches tall,
weighs 126 pounds, wears brown
shoes, has very good personal-
ity, and is very intelligent.
Tenth Grade Surprised.
The tenth grade had a great
surprise February 12 at the
noon hour. One of its popular
members, Miss Mildred Wal-
lace, surreptitiously left the
campus with the fiancee, Curtis
Laminack, of this community
and proceeded to get marrtedL
Mr. Fletcher vowed that he
would keep a closer watch on.
the rest of the girls.
The Farmer Builds A Bulwark!
MM
/
*
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The Sunday Record (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 49, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 8, 1942, newspaper, March 8, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth299084/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.