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r THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., MAY 21, 1920.
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: : : :: : :: : : » : ; :! n v H r riotous rugged London The society, luxury tht* of ft
yyv grandeur of
V a tropical Island,
- and the glory of old
r*"£i Babylon, welded to¬ /
v” gether In tlie master
v t drama of inasfe m
>• V, a
* producer. drama
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:<£*• w c4m j ot nature’s 11»< an 1 ..
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JESSE L. LASKYpresents
^ Jr
DeMILLE PRODUCTION '2
*
HAL and
F AL
Found'-rd on J. M. SARRiE’S FAMOUS PLAY
THU ADMIRABLE CRICHTON" 4
AdaDted tor the screen byJEANI£ MAcPHtkbON
U MALE ■ FEMALE II
THE CAST
Crichton, a butler. Thomai Meighan
r Lord Loam Theodore Robert*
Hon. Ernett WolleyRaymond Hatton
Lord Brockelhurst ,R>bert Cain
Lady Mary La*enby Gloria Swanton
Tweeny Lila Lee
The King’* Favorite Bebe Daniel*
Susan Julia Faye
La.ty Eileen Dun Craigie Rhy Darby
Aga tha Lasenby ... Mildred Reardon
Lady Brockelhurst Maym Kelso
Treherne .........Edward Burn*
McQuire Henry Woodward
Thomas . Sydney Dean
"Button* * 1 Wesley Barry
Fisher Edna Mae Cooper
Mr*. Perkins Lillian L/ighton
Pilct of Lord Loam’s Yacht Guy Oli
ver
Captain of Yacht Clarence Burton
o
SHIPWRECK, terror, despair, and
thrills of heroic rescue.
INTIMATE pictures of below
stairs life in wealthy British house¬
holds.
PICTURES of love and strife in a
primitive land where conventions and
classes are forgot.
GORGEOUS spectacles in the pal¬
ace of a king of ancient Babylon.
BEVIES of beautiful women; pomp
of power; excesses of a profligate
court.
IDYLLIC scenes of a happy home
on a little farm in America.
Humor, pathos, colorful drama,
vivid contrasts, dazzling pageantry
enacted by hundreds of players, with
an all-star group of principals.
All the passions and yearnings of
the race, fused into an inspiring sto¬
ry that beats with red blood.
NOTICE
Admission For This Picture,
25c and 40c
War Tax Included.
LEADER-TRIBUNE ADS PAY •
You’ll never forget
a HE AND FEMALE >i
Founded on J. M. bar
rie’s Famous Play
it THE ADMIRABLE CR.CH
TON >1
Adapted tor the Screen
by
neanie fDacphcPson.
THURSDAY
- AND
FRIDAY,
20
21
♦ ♦♦ + + *♦♦*♦*♦ ♦♦♦♦ + **♦♦*♦ + ♦ 4 4 4 4
♦ 4
♦ ♦ SOCIAL + *
4 And
* ♦
4 *
* 4 Personal. ♦
* +
* Reported by <JMrs. C. N. ROUNTREE, Phone 275-J 4
4 *
******♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 4444444444444 4 4 4
Mrs. W. A. Wooddall is at
from a trip to Washington.
* * +
Mrs. Susie G. Sutton of
is visiting Mrs. 0. D. Williams.
4 4 4
Miiss Louise Williford of
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ralph
ton.
* ♦ ♦
Miss Elizabeth Beall of Perry
spending the week with Miss
F'agan.
* * *
Miss Carrie Fulwood of .
will be the week end guest of
E. M. Fagan.
* * ♦
Miss Lena Jones is on a ten
visit to her sister, Miss
Jones, in Atlanta.
* * *
Mrs. Mildred Bryant is visiting
sister, Mrs. C. R. Culpepper, in
botton this week.
* 4 *
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Toney
tained a few friends at a dinner
ty one evening recently.
* 4 4
Mrs. Frank Vance and
left Wednesday for a visit to
atives in North Carolina.
4 4 4
Mrs I. H. McGrady was called to
Dothan, Ala., on account of the death
last week of her grandmother.
4 4 4
Mr. W. H. Edwards of Perry is
spending this week with the family
of his son, Mr. Houser Edwards.
4 4 4
Dr. and Mrs. C. C. Pugh are at
home after attending the Baptist
Convention in Washington, D. C.
*P + +
Mrs. Alma J. DeLucia of Atlanta
will be the week cna guest of Mrs.
Annie Murchison Williams.
4 4 4
Mrs. Jesse Davis of Mossy Hill
Farm has returned after a visit to
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hiley.
4 4 4
Miss Mildred Green will return to
her home in Albany Saturday after
a visit to Miss Nettie Kate Marshall.
4 4 4
Mrs. Russell Edwards and little
daughter, Maude Brown, are visiting
Prof, and Mrs. Jere Pound in Athens.
4 4 4
Misses Ruby Houston and Ger¬
trude Bush are now with Mr. and
Mrs. C. G. Gray,Jr., on Anderson
Avenue.
*3* *!• *!•
Mrs. N. H. White of Americus is
spending several days here, 1 the
guest ox Mrs. Annie Murchison Wil¬
liams.
4 4 4
Little Louis Prator entertained a
lew of his friends at a spend-the-day
fourth party birthday. Wednesday, celebrating his
«|» sts s|>
Mrs. 8 . T. Marshal] and Miss Helen
Marshall stopped over in Nashville,
Tenn., for a visit to relatives enroute
home from St. Louis.
4 4 4
Miss Marie Spann and Mr. Nor¬
man Spann motored from Dothan,
Ala., and spent the week end with
Miss Eulalia Fagan.
4 4 4
Mrs. George Mathews is at home
after attending the South Ga. Mis¬
sionary which Conference at Waycross, of
she was reelected president.
4 4 4
Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Marshall and
Miss Helen Marshall have returned
from St. Louis where they went to
the Wholesale Grocers’ Convention.
444
Mrs. J; H. Allen returned Monday
after a visit of a month to her sister,
Mrs. A. D. Morrill, in Chicago, stop¬
ping a week in Atlanta on her re¬
turn trip.
4 4 4
Mrs. A. J. Evans has returned
from a visit to Mrs. Max James in
Keysville, Virginia, and to the South¬
ern Baptist Convention in Washing¬
ton, D. C.
T V 4
Mrs. Eugene Hiley has returned
from Washington, D. C., where she
was the guest of her daughter, Miss
Mary Hiley, who has a government
position there.
4 4 4
Material is being hauled and pre¬
parations made for remodeling St.
Andrews Episcopal Church on Cen¬
tral Ave., which will be an attractive
addition to the town.
4 4 4
Rev. W. F. Quillian went to Mar
shallville Tuesday to conduct the fun¬
eral services of Mrs. E. M. Edwards,
who died in Atlanta and was brought
to Marnhalville for interment.
4 4 4
Mrs. Julian Webster has returned
from a visit in Atlanta and while
there was the guest of honor at a
bridge party given by Mrs. Whit Dur¬
den at her home in Inman Park.
4 4 4
Messrs. Paul Murray, Harvard Eu¬
banks, Clarence Fagan and William
Turner of the High School Set went
to Montezuma last Friday night to a
party at the home of Misses Christine
and Louise Lewis.
4 4 4
A congenial party that motored
to Atlanta Tuesday, returning Slappeyj Thurs
day, as guests of Mr. George j
Mrs. Stella Slappey, Mrs.
Oscar McKenzie, of Montezuma, Mrs.
W. M. Blewster, Mrs. Neltie Miller,
Miss Carrie Riley, and Messrs. Lynn
Fagan and Geo. H- Slappey.
i Friends of Mrs. Andrew Wright
will be pleased to know that she is
improving for under treatment in Macon
appendicitis and that it is thought
an operation will not be necessary as
was first thought.
4 * *
Mr. Will Bahrenburg, who is well
known here, having been here every
fruit season for many years, was
here Sunday enroute to Florida for
a few weeks before returning -to
Fort Valley for peach season.
* 4 4
Messrs. F. 0. Miller and Axel
Economou attended the Grand Com
mandery of the State at Albany
Wednesday and Thursday of last
week, representing the Fort Valley
Commandery. Mr. Miller is a past
grand Commander of Georgia.
* 4 *
The Senior Class of the High
School here have issued attractive
invitations to the graduation exer¬
cises to be at the auditorium on the
evening of May 28th. There are
fourteen twenty-one members of the class,
girls and seven boys.
+ + <1
"The Love Feast” at the Method¬
ist Church Tuesday evening was well
attended and those present were pro
profoundly moved by the stirring
messages in talks and song. Scriptui-e
quotations were given which were
characterized by a tender presenta¬
tion of the gospel of love.
4 4 4
The last meeting of the History
Club for this club year will be held
at the home of M>-s. Ralph Newton,
Tuesday afternoon at four o’clock.
In continuation of the study of
France, the subject of this program
will be “France in America”. As long
as folks continue to find interest in
the annals of the past, the story of
of tention France and will command especiai at¬
in the hour can of we ever forget that
our direst extremity,
she helped us to establish our liberty,
and take our place among the great
nations of the earth?
o
STANDARD THE WORLD MEEDS
High Moral Example Set by Robert
Louis Stevenson Well Worth
Living Up To.
Robert I .on Is Stevenson, refusing to
lake all that was ottered him for a
poem be did not think his fiest, wrote:
"l do not live much to God and honor,
hut I will not willfully turn my back
•>n both."
In the modest wonts lies deep the
only standard by which a man can
hope to satisfy himself with his life
It Is a standurd the world today sore
ly needs. We hear of unrest and shall
hear of It. Why not, with so muiiy
men and women trying to live up to
a standard set by someone else? If
they succeed, there is no happiness in
It, for it has no sanction from their
own hearts.
The man we count successful In
material affairs and expect to find
happy is never who has reached
n certHin place. Gut whim a man
has set <i mark for himself In posses¬
sions aud has kept that mark In view
until he reached It, we call him suc¬
cessful. it may have been a $10,000
home; It may have been one million
dollars. But It was his own goal.
It is not less true of his Inner life.
We do not expect much of a innn who
lias no standard for himself of right
ind wrong And lie cannot claim any
right to .contentment. If his only mor¬
al standard is the law, he earns Steven-| only j
i he minimum of satisfaction.
son, refusing money which he needed |
because lie thought tie had not earn- be j
ed It. is a thousand times more t.o
envied than the man who takes u hun¬
dred or a million dollars he has not
earned, because no law will punish j
him.—Milwaukee Journal.
TO EXTERMINATE CROP PESTS
Scientist Plans to Use Flame Throwers
and Other Methods to De¬
stroy Enemies.
In 1018 mid 1910 the territory near
tlie delta of itie Rhone suffered greatly
from swarms of the Morocco cricket.
which multiplied so excessively as to
be of great Injury to the crops. At a
recent meeting of tlie French Academy
of Sciences a report was made by M.
Vayssiere on the use of the “flame
ihKwers,” employed In the war for
throwing liquid lire, to exterminate
these pests. With an apparatus hold- j
ing about twelve liters of petroleum an i
extent of 200 square meters can be so
thoroughly swept with flames as to kill i
•II the Insects. Asphyxiating gases j
had hut little effeci hut applications I
of powered ehloroplcrin were much :
more satisfactory., While vegetation
suffered somewhat the effects were
only temporary, Lastly, M. Vayssiere
made use of poisoned bait with a basis
of arsenic like that employed in Italy
and in the Unllcd States and obtained
good results. He proposes to utilize
all three methods—first the flame
throwers to exterminate the hordes of
young larvae In all cases where their j
use docs not involve danger of fire; j
secondly, chloropicHn powder where j
flame throwers would he danger- !
and thirdly poisoned bait In Irrl
*8^ meadows where no cattle are
pastured.
Headquarters for INSURANCE
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FIGHT THE WITH BOLT WEEVIL 1
CALCIUM ARSENATE
AND
SPRINGFIELD / WE HAVE DUSTERS BOTH J
ALSO LIMITED NUMBER
Peach Crates
STILL FOR SALE I
GREEN-MILLER CO
FORI VALLEY, GA.
I