The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 27, 1938 Page: 7 of 8
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IY 27, 1938
;.W:
THE MINEOLA MONITOR
PAGE SEVEN
'he Golden Rule
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF GOLDEN SCHOOLS
Williams — Editor-in-Chief
Fay Dickey Assistant Editor-in-Chief
Murdock Senior Reporter
Junior Reporter
jgins Sophomore Reporter
Jane Littleton Freshman Reporter
Underwood - Sports Editor
*EL PROGRAM
chapel program was pre-
by the ninth grade Fri-
January 14. The opening
closing song would have
the truest pessimist
i, all because Benny Bayne
the leader. A short negro
was presented by Ernes-
Davis and Lula Van Har-
They pulled some very
clever Jokes on the teachers
and got away with it! Several
interesting speeches were given
by the ninth grade students.
The program was one of the
best presented this term. The
senior class will present the
next program.
*****
AN INTERESTING PLACE
There is a little colony near
HATCHING EGGS
Wanted
for
Monday, January 31st.
HEAVY THOROUGHBRED
AND
HEAVY MIXED EGGS
FULL LINE OF NICHOLSON'S BULK TESTED GARDEN
SEED, POULTRY SUPPLIES, POULTRY & DAIRY FEEDS
Mineola Hatchery
Phone 128
the town of Arthur, 111., that
consists of about thirty fami*
lies. It is a colony made up of
a religious gjroup who call
themselves "Dutch Amish."
They live as our ancestors
did hundreds of years ago. The
women wear long flowing skirts
and big concealing bonnets. The
men wear trousers something
like the Dutch of long ago. No
one is allowed to enter their
colony as they keep themselves
excluded from the world.
Their social life is limited.
They do not believe in pictulre
shows, dancing, music etc. They
cling so much to the past that
the horse and buggy is still in
vogue.
*****
EXAMINATIONS
Were examinations a trying
ordeal? Well, ask any student
and you will find out. It seems
as if all the teachers' New
Years Resolutions were to give
hard examinations and they
have surely lived up to them.
This comes from the geometry
class.
*****
JOKES
Try, Try, Again—
Mr. Simmons:—"There is no
difficulty in the world that can't
be overcome, If you try." '
Wymon:—"Did you ever try
to squeeze toothpaste back in-
to the tube?"
***
Mr. Haynes:n—"And so we
find that X is equal to zero."
Oearge Kay:—"Gosh! All.that
work for nothing?"
*****
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB
The Home Economics club, al-
though we haven't mentioned
them lately, has been swing-
ing out. The night the P.-T. A.
presented "Spinisters' Conven-
tion" the club gave a "Sox
Supper." The profit amounted
to a great deal more than had
been expected. We want to
FORD OFFERS IWO NEW (ARS
and keeps their PRICES LOW
*• —tkt
Bi Un Fwi*r Mn
iiiii
THESE are two new Ford cars for
1938—the De Luxe and the
Standard—differing in appearance,
appointments and price—but built on
the same dependable Ford chassis.
Both bring you the basic advantages
of a V-type 8-cylinder power-plant—
smooth performance and compact de-
sign. The De Luxe Ford has the 85-horse-
power engine. The Standard Ford pro-
Tides a choice of 85 or 60 horsepower.
Both new cars are economical to oper-
ate. The Standard, with thrifty "60"
engine, costs less to run than any other
Ford car ever built.
And both new cars are priced low.
Low price, like economy, is a Ford tra-
dition. Ford founded the low-price field
30 years ago and keeps Ford prices low.
The De Luxe Ford costs slightly more
than the Standard Ford, but provides
more style with extra room in the closed
sedans. Both cars, in proportion to price,
represent unusual values. Both are built
to the same high standard of mechanical
excellence. There's a dealer near you.
A. W. FULCHER & CO.
Authorized Ford Dealers
ioI& Phone 235
thank everyone for their co-
operation with the club.
*****
EX-GRADUATE MAKES TALK
When called upon to make
a speech in general assembly,
one of our ex-graduates, J. W.
Hagler made an excellent talk.
He stated he was interested in
public speaking; well, we think
he has made a good start. We
feel like the beneficial advice
he gave is being seriously con-
sidered by the majority of the
students of G. H. S.
*****
HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Eleventh Grade-
James Williams.
Tenth Grade-
Wanda Dickey and Shirley
Williams.
Ninth Grade—
None.
Eighth Grade—
Rosana Cathey.
***
WARD SCHOOL HONOR ROOL
Seventh Grade-
Bonnie Mae Galusha.
Sixth Grade—
Billy Hagler, Glenn Reuben
Simmons, Margaret Bass, Mary
Louise Hamill.
Fifth Grade—
Vernell Scott, Intha Ma!rie
Wright, Mary Frances Christo-
pher, Mildred Pike, Dorothy Lee
Darden, N. H. Gibson, Jr., and
Grace Caldwell.
Fourth Grade—
Billie Joe Galusha, Billie John
Harpole, Charles Heniry Smith,
Billie Coston Wright, Mamie
Frances McQueen, Danny Lou
Lankford, and Grace Williams.
Third Grade—
James Carlton Cave, John Tarn
Cox, Florence Hughes, Betty
Joe Pike, and Wanda Lynn
Robinson. .
(See GOLDEN RULE page 8)
Mineola Lodge
A
NO. 502 — A. F. & A. M.
Regular Stated Meeting
Second Thursday Night In
Each Month—7:30 P. M.
SAM HANNON, W. M.
J. L. HARTSFIELD, SEC'TY.
OOEsTW C6ASf
■f H6me-mape oJIl)
C&Sif TO MAKE WITH THIS SIMPLE Qebhaldt RECIPt
2 n bMl «
3 T«bUapooa< Flow ' 2 T<
4 Tibhapoou Shortening jjj aum* hot
Cu Gabturdfa Spicad Bmu (li oMfc*d)
Ckop or cat th. imwI In null chaolta Sm> waB li
akoriawno Add G.bWC, Chm Powim . aah ud
w.te,untii tend« X3d fcSTtetkictoo ,
• law mtnutaa bafor* m I iij
ITS
QUAKER OATS
Great
Breakfast,'
says DICK MERRILL, Trans-Atlantic Ocean Flyer,
who holds thm All-Time Record for two
successful Atlantic Roxmd- TripeI
• You can't beat a Quaker Oats breakfast
for that warm, friendly lift on a cold, cheer-
less morning ... It's rich in food-energy,
rich in flavor, and costs only Vt cent per
Sortion ... Besides, Quaker Oats is abun-
ant in Nature's Vitamin B—the precious
vitamin that doctors say you should have
daily to combat nervousness and poor ap-
petite! Give youngsters this Breakfast of
Great Americans.
Rich in food en-
ergy. Rich in fla-
vor! The one and
only Quaker Oats!
TOUCAN GET
THERE.ON A HOT
BREAKFAST!
BRACESUP NERVES & DIGEST/ON
I'm so Proud of My
Snowy White Clothes
A Nickel's Worth of
Electricity Does My
Entire Week's Washing
m
- A, -
"I'm so proud of my snowy white clothes. It's no effort at all
for me to hang out a line of fluffy white linens. My electric washer
gets them thoroughly clean. The swishing action of the water com-
pletely eliminates rubbing, and my garments are much cleaner
and whiter than ever before. I can do a week's washing in no time
at all. A tub full of clothes is spotlessly clean in from five to seven
minutes. My clothes last twice as long, too, since I've been using
an electric washer."
Doing your washing is just one of the many distasteful house-
hold tasks that electricity does for you. It irons your clothes; cleans
your rugs, and washes your dishes. Electricity is cheap and
dependable. For all the work electricity does for you, it costs you
very little . . . Only a few cents a day.
A nickel's worth of electricity does your week's washing;
refrigerates your food an entire day; or cleans every rug in your
house. Electricity is cheap. The more you use, the cheaper it gets.
Let electricity relieve you of your housekeeping drudgery.
Electricity Is CheapI
SOUTHWESTERN
GAS & ELECTRIC COMPANY
J1-38
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The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 27, 1938, newspaper, January 27, 1938; Mineola, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth286283/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.