Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1932.
BOOK s SCREEN NEWS
GO SSIP
About -
New 800k5.....
Do you know that a young seal
has to be taught to swim, or that
¢here is in existence a prairie dog
tcwn 250 miles long and—99-miles
wide that con
e tains 400,000,000
inha bitflnt_s, or
g @ that a small deer
e s always spptted
P until K’fggw old
b -.,_“ enough 6’ develop
owa speed? Neither
L Tor Sl did we until Rob-
S ert Mcßride sent
b M us a few of the
e interesting ifacts
R revealed in one of
i their Fall publi
@ ? @ cation, “Survival
40 B or the Fittest by
G Henry Smith Wil
e gBl liams. “This vol
- ume deals: with
Jack Flatau wild animal} life
jn North America. And w@#e on
the subject of Robert .- Mcgride,
pere are two of the t!;t-k;s <under
which icopies of ,W)'lfrfi_@h;f?mk's
pook of light verse, “Lighg-Lines
and Dears,” has been “t!quested:
vpate Lions and Deers,” ‘#nd Jight
Lines and Gears.” s
Harper's has just refqivgq_ the
manuscript of ~Aldous “Huxley's
new book, “Texts and Pretexts,”
an anthology of poetry. Nothing
quite like this volume, the pub
lishers say, has ever appeared in
Pnglish. The book, it seems, Trep
resents the sifting by Mr, Huxley
of great masses of poetry in
search of the fundamental experi
ence of life which, he: eontends,
never changes but needs decoding
from earlier form of expression.
Mr. Huxley contributes fully” one
half of . the text of this book in
kis own highly provocative 'discus
giors. This is the first darper
published book by Aldous. H§k}(l9s'.
who vou remember is the vounger
trother of Julian Huxley ° who
spoke here recently as the second
of the Barrow lecturers, and is the
fore-runner of & number. which
thes will publish. . Harper's also
publish Julian’s books, . *“Texts
and Pretexts” is announced. for
early January. . . |Bs}
THORA S e s
While the last of a s}er‘?&sf.of ar
ticles on . Housing ,apflred i
“Fortune” this summer'it\l;f-“li‘or
tunes” office was § w dm ped
with telephone calls, inquiries, let
ters, and newspaper n}ghtlppmgs.
The newspaper clippi , [ ~Har
gourt. , Brage . saYa..if. piled all to
gether would look like Broadway
after Gertrude Ederle (or was it
Dino Grandi?) went past;™" 'The
telephone callers, if laid end to
end. . . . At any rate, the articles
have been collected, edited, illus
trated, and published by Harcourt,
Brace under the title “Housing
America.” “Fortune” is the maga
zine which costs one dollar per
issue, and is published monthly by
the same company which is re
sponsible for the perennially pop
ular “Time.”’ 4
Walter Lippman, at forty-three,
is the youngest man ever chosen
for the position to which he has
just been called—that of chancel
lor of Union College, Schenectady,
N. Y. Mr. Lippman’s comment on
current affairs in the New York
Herald-Tribune are syndicated and
read in papers from coast to coast
and some of them have been col
lected into book form under the
title “Interpretatinns, MagEE932"
(Macmillan—s2.so). The eugrent
issue of “The: Bookman” is@ects
this volume as one of the te oks
“highly recommended,”. oes
on to call Lippman j“ ost
acute of American torial=ob
servers” and to ecall attention to
his “brilliant clarity” in these in
terpretations of the events of the
past year, .
Robert Mcßride has _organized
something new in the Wa%’“é?‘f ook
clubs. We've had a Firgé l;gli{tirf“
Club” “Limited Edition Club”,
“Book League of America,” “Lit
erary Guild,” “Book-of-the-Month
Club,” and others, but nbw ‘&dmes
the crowning achievemgntf, the
Laugh Club. The promoters of
the club calls for the publication
every other month, of a book of
rollicking-good hhmeor arolealthy
irony, anything that will help re-
Dair America’s normally optimistic
frame of mind. The Laugh Club's
books are selected by a l]g?.}’q of
Weli known editors, and’ the club
IS being directed by Robert M. Me-
Bridv and Company. Which sounds
lke 4 good idea, since theyymre so
Many really funny books publish
€ which never get the'!@adience
they should. :
Among the books to be reviewed‘
on this page shortly ' 'aafl-pbhn
Maserield’s new book. of poems:
“A Tale of Troy”; *“Son of the
Morning, a biography of Fried
rich Nietzsche, which . will be re-
Viewed by Rabbi A. Sh t'ffi'a"?
“Nationhood for. Indi‘a."i}t\ e
Viewed by George Conolly, of the
University of Georgia; “John Han-
Son” a plography of our first,
President, reviewed by Dr. J. H.
2. McPherson, of the University;,
ind “Chaucer”: by G. K. Chester
©n, which Prof. B 4 Bveritt, of the
University English - departusent,
Wil review.
_E. V. Lueas is one of the few
MMormal essayists of yésterday
¥ho are still writing as délightful
¥as evér. In the story -of his
Visit to America, “Reading, Writ-
Ing ang Remembering,” he says:
If T were asked to name my most
™e mosy cherished gouvenirs of
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Paul Muni, (left) who will play
the chief role in “I Am A Fugitive
From A Chaingang”, at the Palace
tomorrow and Tulesday the story
of Convict Burns who escaped
from the Georgia penitentiary, Up
per right is Mitzi Green who will
be in “Orphan Annie” at the Strand
Thursday and Friday. Lower right
handsony: Gary Cooper, who will
be seen at the Palace Thursday
and Friday (in, “If | Had a Million.”
iany - years ago a hungry
man, like many millions are
today, stole a few paltry dollars
in the state of Georgia and
was sent “up the river” for it—
very .properly, perhaps, but
after a few months of confine
ment he escaped and became
lost and forgotten as one of
those minor criminals ‘who
weren't worth the trouble of
hunting down. Very probably
he had been forgottem by even
the guard and the warden
charged with his safety . , .
nobedy cared. But it happened
that this ex-convict came to a
big ecity, became prominent in
business . . .‘'edited a civic
magazine . . . rode in a liv
eried limousine . . . married;
well .he at least lived in a
married state . . . and then
ther came another woman . , .
jealousy. He had told his
story,..in moments. of love anl
confidence . . . of his escape.
fle was a criminal . . . jeal
ousy . and criminals are not
very good friends and soon
one escaped convict by the
name of Burns from the state
of Georgia was: again in the
hands of the Jdaw . . . be
trayed by the woman he had
confided in. He was toppled
from his position of honor in
Chicago and returned to serve
his centence on the Georgia
chaingang. He came back . . .
was brought back . . . and
all his influence and all his
going straight could not se-
\ cure him a respite or a par
don. But it was back on the
. chaingank , . . HuE not for
. long. He escaped again; fled
to a brother’s protection in
New Jersey, eruding sleuths
and detectives everywhere . . .
and then he wrote his STORY -
+ » o bold Burns, « .. It was'.
snapped up by the movies and
has been made into a stirring
picture, “I AM A FUGITIVE
FROM "A CHAINGANG.” Of
course -Burns does not appear
in the cast but is represented
by Paul Muni, and there is
also Helen Vinson to help the
story along. The picture is
showing at the Palace Mon
day and Tuesday and if you
want a thriller, a heart teaser
and a true story, it hasn’'t been
denied, of Georgia prison Ilise,
see. this picture . . . and
Burns is still a free man—from
“Jastice™ .0, .7
Wednesday, Herbert Marshall
and Sari Maritza — Walter Win
chell says her real name is “Pat”
Nolan—will bring a social comedy
to the- Palace, “Evenings for
Sale,” and listen—
That Thyssday and Friday
picture has been . pronounced
the season's biggest hit and
how .the Palace got it so soon
is beyond us. It is no other
than, “If I Had a Million,” and
the cast contains Gary Cooper,
Wynne Gibson, Jack Oakie and
Frances Dee, a cast about as
popular in the movies as “The
All-American Girl” is on the
radio and if you're tired of that
you can Substitute “Minnie
the Moocher’s Wedding Day.”
« And what are they doing? Tak
ing song titles and making movies
out of ‘em! Saturday is coming,-
two ‘days after Thanksgiving, and
what's on the program? Nothing
!mt “Cabin In t?e Cotton,” with
eet e e e
the inward eye—l should say the
blue Vermeer in the Metropolitan
Museum, the Lincoln Memorial .at
Washington, and the fireflies in 2
garden on a hill above the Hudson
River.” He says, too, that on both
his visits to America he had dif
diculty in making people believe
lthat he had not come to lecture,
not to amass dollars, but to dis-.
pense them, and he explains:
{“Such is my horror of public ap
pearances that no bribe could lure
{me on a platform, apart from the
| tact that I have nothing to say.”
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INEA
Richard Barthelmess, Dorothy
Jordan and Betty Davis. Those
who do not go to see Tech and
Georgia play have a treat in store
for them . - --—and - there's-- the
Strapd . .. .. .good .old . reliable
western Strand! : ;
et g add
Just think of the Strand
featuring Robert Montgomery
and Tallulah Bankhead . . .
just like a comedian going in
for tragedy. But there they
are all billed in for Tuesday
and Wednesday in ‘Faithless,”
but then first must come
Monday. Yessir, Monday is
okay ' with Buck Johes with
“White Eagle,” and Thursday
and Friday are plastered sat
isfactory also with Mitzie
Green taking the comic part of
“Orphan Annie,” awu Wwhat
have we next but a ' split
week-end . . . it's no joke
Saturday and Monday . « «
that's another week, it's John
Wayne ih “Ride ’'Em Cow
boy!lt . ... & ARG NOW 4 o'
we'll see you at the Georgia-
Tech game next Saturday!
College of Education
Students Will Present 1
Piay on December 10th
The cast for “The Godse Hangs
High,” a play to be presented De
cember 10 by the Dramatic club
of the College of Education, Uni
versity of Georgia, has been an
nounced by Miss MaNita Bullock,
director. |
' The cast follows: Martha Holt,
i(_‘ollege Park; Dicksie Penteco,
Winder; Cornelia Arvenite, Cor
‘dele; Jesse Thomas, Montezuma;
Ella Parks, Newnan; Bess Dun-|
ican, Buena Vista;~ Gwendolyn
iJones, Macon; Virginia Dillard.‘
' Athens: Margaret Ozburn, Mach
en; Mary Burton, Hillsboro; Beryl
Coker, Cordele; Margie Caldwell,
LaaGrange; and Helena Joubert,
Savannah.
- The play, written 'by Lewis
| Bea¢h, portrays a crisis in the .life
lof a typical American family, in
which the children coming home
from college for the Christmas
!holidays find their father nearly
rankrupt, as a result of his mak
iing sacrifices for them.
'PROHIBITION OFFICER
| RATES WITH HOOVER
| HOUSTON, Texas—Deputy Pro
ihibition Administrator C. H. Kel
logg rates himself with Hoover
| since his experience ‘of a few days
ago. ; Gadin
l ‘Kellogg was driving <hrough!
town with a load of whisky and
peer which agents had seized. As
’he stoped for a red light & youngl
‘man who had heard the rattle of
bottles asked him what he had. !
“Oh just a little whisky and
‘Leer, said Kellogg. : we
«You better look out or old man
Kellogg and Kuykendall (po}_ice
vice squad leader( will get yo'a
and take your car away from you,”
#he youth said. g : &
“Who are se‘y? I haven't heefi
‘here very long. They wouldn't
take my car, would they?” Kfln@%
wmeked. : %
| “Take your car!” the youth de
clared. “Why those old men
would take President Hoover's
cars” - . ‘1; ’ g -By
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“l Am a Fugitive,”
Big Headliner For
Monday at Palace
One of the most heralded mo
tion pictures to be presented in
Athens in many a moon, opens to
morrow at the Palace theater, It
is “I Am a _Fugitive From a
€haingang,” starring Paul Muni,
with Helen Vinson, Glenda Far
rell, Preston Foster, David Lan
dau, Sally Blane, Noal Francis, 87
other important roles, 53 ‘“bit"
players and more than 2,000 ex
tras. ;
Not only is “I Am a Fugitive
From a Chaingang,” said to carry
more thrilling and sensational epi
sodes than any other picture made
‘this year but it presents a triple
romance of strange and glamorous
loves, against a background of in
credible prison. chaingang .brutali=
ties.
The; story, which,was authored
by Robert E. Burns, who is still
in hiding from chaingang police
shows men driven to desperation
by the tortures of the whipping
post, poor tood, K excessive labors
in broiling “heat and other cruel
ties. Paul Muni, as the fugitive,
makes a sensational escape and
crosses into another state. After
years of struggle, he makes good
under an assumed name, but a
woman who discovers his past,
betrays him. He is returned to
‘the chaingang only to escape again
in one of the most breath-taking
episodes of the current ceason.
There is no more touching fige
ure than this fugitive a man
yvearning for love and home, an
ex-service man skulking from
place to place, not daring to show
his face, unable to marry the z:h;l
he loves devotedly. Truly, a man
without a country. He is vividly
and dramatically portrayed by
Paul Muni, who left- the New York
‘stage success “Councellor At Law”
to make “I Am a Fugitive From a
Chaingahg.”
BUCK JONES THRILLING
WESTERN STRAND
MONDAY ONLY
Buck Jones' latest picture,
“White Eagle,” is at the Strand
‘theater Monday only, was filmed
on location in the San Francis
quito Canyon, about fifty miles
from Hollywood, where the col
lapse of the St. Francis Dam in
1927 drowned between 200 anl 500
persons. it was one of the most
terrible disasters in America's his-
How We Got That Way; ‘TangledWives’
“A NEW DEAL” by Stuart
Chase; N&a,,‘v‘York: Macmillan, 258
pflw; by 4 Ejs
Stuart Chage is a rare person.
Writers like him are seldom. found,
and any perusal of the literature
of the past hundred or so¢ years
rroves it. Of all the books on
economics published = then, how
many are as sparkling, and as vi
tally interesting as Mr. Chases?
Of course, the fact that Chase's
volumes deal with topics with
which we are all familiar, adds to,
their vitality, but aside from that,i
their invigorating ~analyses ‘OT‘
forms of governments, their fall
[ing's, arld | p@ssible remedies, are‘
the sort that, as Gilbert Seldes
rut it, “moves one to political ac
tion.” ,
“A New :'Deal”” Mr. Chase’s
latest volume, contains discussions
and descriptions of the present
depression, its cause, and factors,
both theoretical and g,ctual, lead
ing up to it.. And in the course
of this, the author succeeds* in
putting across economic principles
that have remained befogged for
many, and putting them over in a
painless fashion. Painless, ~ how
ever, is a poor word; one “might
rather say, joyous, for one leading
factor about Mr. Chase’s writing
in hig ability to make his reader
enthusiastic about anything he
}cares to. (Goodness knows I never
’thought 1 could get worked up
over little things like Laissez-faire
end deflation.)
~ The whole theme .of *“A New
Deal” is contained in the first
\chapter, where the author -at
tempts to answer the auestion:
“What is an economic syStem
for?”
«1t is (he answers) to provide a
means, without excessive waste
and loss, whereby those who live
under it may eat. It has a func
tion, and the function is to provide
food, shelter, clothing and com
forts in as dependable and ade
quate quantities as natura. re
sources and the state-of the tech
‘nical arts permit, just as the func
tion of human physiology is to
supply every cell with enough oxy
gen and nutriment. When used as
a channei for personal aggradize
ment, @a system's function and
meaning collapse. It becomes an
industrial whirlpool, throwing out
a certain amount of goods and
services as a byproduct, but a
susceptible to frightful -stoppages,
reverse twists, and even complete
draining out. "We have come in
1982 perilously close to the last.
“From the functional \point ol
view, economic activity takes on
an entitely new meaning. It be
comes 4t once more serious and
less omnipotent. ~ Order, discipline,
the consclousness of definite social
aim are needed to insyre a de
pendable flow of goods from the
eirth to. the ultimate consumer
but when that discipline—and it s
largsly one .of englfesring—is c:-
tablishéd, econome aétivity, with
its four to six hours of work 2
day, becomes, if not a minor, al
lleast a subordinate consideration.
More important will be the prob
lem bt Bow to Uve: how ¢ U
"’Athenian Addresses
| Chemistry Students
. “Chemistry as a background for
‘medicine” was the subject of a
tatk given by Dr. John Hunnicut,
rrominent Athens physician, to
members of tha University Col
lege of Education Chemistry club.
“L._know of no field promising
greater hope of reward then the
field of medical chemistry,” Dr.
Hunnicutt said as he summed up
his discussion of our present de
pendence upon chemistry.,
- Dr. - Hunnicutt inmx;{entioning
ra,d;um said that it had great
value but was often overestimated,
tory, as the waters, eighty feet
ligh, burst over the heipless vic
tims as they slept. Hundreds of
those believed to have been lost in
the flood have never been found
and are though to be still buried
beneath the earth.
AT THE MOVIES
THANKSGIVING WEEK
Palace—
" Monday and Tuesday (Special)—
Robert Elliott Burns' sensational
story with Paul Muni and Helen
Vinson, “I Am a Fugitive From a
Chaingang.” Musical Novelty,
“Radio Row.” Latest News Events.
. Wednesday (One Day Only)—
Herbert Marshall and Sari Marit
za in a Society Comedy Drama,
“Evenings for Sale.” . Comedy,
“The Bride's Bereavement.! News
Views, = -
Thursday and Friday (Extraor
dinary) Thanksgiving Day Special
—=Specia] Pre-showing, Gary Coo
per, Wynne Gibson, Jack Oakie
‘end Frances Dee in delightful
comedy drama, “If I Had a Mil
dion.” Musical Band Novelty,
“Smash Your. Baggage.” Neivs
News Events. .
. Saturday (Special Drama)—
Richard Barthelmess, Bette Davis
and Dorothy Jeordan in Comedy
Dramatic Sensation, ‘‘The Cabin
in the Cotton.” Comedy Novelty
egExtx‘a). . :
‘Strand=—
Monday (One Day Only)——Buck_:
Jones Western . Drama , “White
Eagle.” Final Showihg “Shadow o!'l‘
the Eagle.” l
. Tuesday and Wednesday (Spec- !
ial)—Robert Montgomery and
Tallulah Bankhead in Daring
Dramatic . Sensation, “Faithless.” |
Song Novelty, “Sleepy Time Down |
South.” N !
_Thursday (Thanksgiving Day)!'
and Friday Special—Mitzie Green
in the Newspaper Cartoon Comedy
Drama, “Little Orphan Annie.” |
Song Novelty, “Romantic Melo-l
dies.” .
“saturday and Monday (West
ern)—John Wayne Western Dra
ma, “Ritde ’'Em Cowboy.” - First
showing Western Serial, “The
Last of the Mohicans.”
fruitfully - one's leisure time: how
to improve the biological stock;
‘how to educate; how to love and
marry without the emotional mis
‘eries which now beset us; how to
develop the arts; how to get the
most out of life. These are the
real problems of a civilized peo
ple who have yoked a billion of
mechanical horse power. To go on
stumbling through economic pits
and mires, under a sky recurrently
biack with the horror of insecurity
and even starvation, is tragic and
needless waste.”
The rest of “A New Deal” is an
attempt to explain why the peo
ple have fallen into the morass
mentioned jn the last part of the
above quotation, and how they can
be rescued, While Mr. Chase's
book contains’ matter which will
provide food for thought for econ
[omists and politicians, it is by nJ
.n:eans difficult for the rank out
sider. to understand, for the au
thor, writes so clear!y and explaing
gO, -beautifully, that his book can
be easily digested. :
A copy of “A New Deal” was
found among the campaizn contr!-'?
butions to the Democratic fund |
and the donor, to show his belief
in. Mr. Chase's plan, pinned paper
money to various pages. All thats
is left to say is that it wouldn't
be a bad idea if our next President
' took the hint, —J. F.
: TANGLED WIVES -
“TANGLED WIVES" by Peggy
Shane; New York: Claude Ken-|
dall, Inc.; $2.00. 1
Reviewed by Mary Fred Broughton
: “A taxi-cab, a man, a girl, the
Biltmore Hotel, and a pretty young
bride who remembers absolutely
rnothing are thrown into the midst
of a series of incidents which
make gay reading, and would
make a splendid movie.
. The only trails to her past ly-|
ing in a wedding ring which in
forms her she was married that]
very day, and baggage with the|
initials, D, V., on it, the bride~is}|
ready enough to believe she Is
Mrs. Du Val's daughter-in-law,|
particularly when the lady herself;
admits it. From this point thefi!}
stofy moves fast and furlous;|
murder. rears its head, and a wild|
trip to Chnada, in which Doris|
is kept in the dark, leads to anj
exciting conclusion, which, hoav-|
ever, somehow lacks the pace and|
cnvineing powers of the preceding|
chapters.
Light and. fhntastic, this book!
has a contagiousness,‘ which, even;
with its poor ending, carries tnei
{reader with it. Don't start tms.x“
Lhook at night ynless you are pre-|
pared to stay wup until you're
thypugh with it, because the “vw,\'t{
':h?g;g_er" scems short compared toj
'fhe impoitant news it may. bring|
| It _Miss Bhane had kept up thel
'tempo with whiéh &he started, ana\
|had_ prévided an ending as snappy
|as the body of her novel, "T;mgledt |
| Wives” would be one of the high- i
lights of this fall’s light fiction.
As it is, it Is just another Yook:|
'highly entertaining, but not partic- |
|werly. unusual - ot
f w 1
RABBI TO BEGIN l
This morning at®the Stern Com-i
munity House, the first in a se-i
ries of bi.weekly meetings will be!
held by Rabbi A. Shustcrmun.‘
These meetings will be held in‘
two groups: the first, conducted‘
by Rabbi Shusterman, will con
prist of talks on “Jewish: Thought
Movements of Modern Times” and
will be open-forum discussions led
by specialists in their own flelds.
These will begin December 4th at
11 o’clock. following Rabbi Shus
terman’s talks at 10 o'clek.
The first of the talks on Jewish
thought will take up the TFalse
Mdssiahs: . Sabbapin Zevi Jacob
Frank and David Reubeni, Follow
ing this, an open forum will be
conducted by the Rabbi, whose
topic will be “If I Were a Layman.”
Among the speakers who will
lead these” open-forum discussions
will be M. H. Byran, professor of
economiecs at the University, whose
tople will be, “Jews and Econom
ies”; Dr. A. S, Edwards professor
of psychology at the University,
on “Religion and Mental Health,”
and Harold Hirsch, prominent At
lanta lawyer, after whom the Har
‘pld Hirsch Law bailding is named,
will discuss “What Should a Lay
man Demand of Religion.” | The
public is invited to all of these
meetings, the complete program of
which follows:
“Jewish Thought Movements of
Modern Times,”
. November 20—~The False Messi
ahs, Sabbatini Zevi, Jacob' Frank,
Davia Reétbeni, :
December 4—The Dutch Here
tics, Unel Acosta, Baruch Spinoza.
December 18 — The ' Chassidic
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““ 14 “
Make the word “Home” really
]
mean what it should!
The scene above shows you what your home should really be like—a
place of rest and comfort where every member of the houschold can
‘build up new energy and courage with which to meet the problems of
the next day! Your home can be a symbol of rest and joy to every mem
ber of the family if it is properly furnished and this becomes a simple
problem with present sile prices in effect! :
A FEW OF THE.-MANY OPPORTUNITIES
FOUND IN OUR ‘
ovember Prosperity Sale
ey ong! Chain $8.79
e wiechn . 31345
SSt 0N
Sovvenry oy .. 917.95
e Rugs for only 916.95
B I SO AN
Tey R
M e
NEW
NUMBERS
Up
MONDAY
| Movement in Israel to the Present!
\Day. ! l
January 8 — The Enlightment,l
Moses Mendelsohn,
January 22—S8ocial Thinkers of
Israel, Karl Marx, LaSalle,
February s—Reform Judaism, its!
strength and its weakness, Al)ra-‘l
ham Geiger, Isaac M. Wise. [
February 19 — The’ Nationalist‘i
Movement, Territorialism, Zionism,|
The Jewish Culture Movement, ‘
March s—What We Should Ex
pect of the Future? :
! Open Forums. |
| November 20—Rabbi Abraham
‘Shusterman: “If 1 Were & Lay
man,”
| December 4—M, H. Bryan, “Jews
‘and Iconomics.” I
l December 18—Dr A, S, Edwards:l
“Religion and Mental Health.”
! January #8 — Harold Hirsch: :g
| “What Should a Layman Demand !
! of Religion.” |
Arrangements are being made for[
lsneakors to follow those who have
;’.h'oady agreed to conduct the open|
| forums, : ]
HOW TO BE HAPPY,
ALTHOUGH MARRIED
‘ -HGUSTON, Texas—Having ma
‘l-tfimonial difficulties? Then take
I'the! tips of Mr. and Mrs. N. J.
'McClellen. who recently celebrated
their 60th ‘wedding anniversary
| here, :
| “Look around for a long time
land pick out tie best girl yoy can
A find,” is the 81-year-old husband’s
ladvice. “Then don't wait. Go
ahead and marry her.” ~
« Mrs. MecClelland’s advice to
voung girls is:
2 “Remember that men arae sort of
| funny and sometimes they are
hard to get along with. Just held
i wour temper when they get mad.
i Don't get mad at the same time
land evergthing will_be all right”’
BERNSIHN BROS.
etter ilt
Furniture
s ; . el T
ew Head of Music- -~
Department Chosen
By Monroe Schools
MONROE, Ga—Miss Dorothy
Armstrong, former ‘instructor of
piano and violin ‘at tHe Brenan '
i(_‘.onsm'vn,tory, has = been nnmea
‘head of the musie d»epa'rtméili.‘fiffi’
Ethe Monroe public schools. She
isuvcwls Miss Helen Gordy. .
I’ Plans are being made by Wox‘ldfT
| war veterans nhere to orgaqize 5
‘:‘v'v'niton county post of the Amer
licun Legion. Prince A. Diekinson
i 8 chairman of the committee to
i.jn»'estigztte) the proposal.
| With 22,050 bales, Walton eoun
'ty comes third in Georgia in the
;nmouht of cotton ginned up to
)November 1.
| The young Methodists of Wal=
ton county have organized into a
Walton County Methodist Young
Peopleyg asscociation. Paul Paschal,
president of the Epwotrh League
of the First Methodist church, has
been elected president.
The wedding of Miss Kate Har
ris and Dr. Phillip R. Stewart will
be a social event of next Wednes
day aftdrnoon, taking place at i
5:30 o'clock at the First Metho-
L dist chureh. : f
| TO WATER THE PLAINS
. BUDAPEST—A $100,000,000 irri
gation project has been drafted by
iHum;‘;.ry‘s five leading cham‘bver;t'
of agriculture. If this plan meets
the approval of the government,
the River Tisa, will be used to.
water the “Great Plain,” ‘Bun\gn
ary’s 9,000,000-acre granary. A
gtart made over 10,000 to 150,000
acres would be within the badge
tary capacity and would creatg a
Igreab- many jobs. %
Lincßoam Selte . $49.50
WLk s $49.50
Liing Room sute. 93900
room Sute. oty . 929:50
i i
Bedroon Suite. i< $46.75:
Suite in Weinat. . 999.90
Dinivs Room Suity. 91000
PAGE ELEVEN
SIOOO.OO
IN FREE
MERCHAN
DISE!