Newspaper Page Text
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
Val. XXXIII. No. 4.1
•.e
ijnet-nf the bigge*l theatrical
•' trAXs.*>rT»--reAl patrons of the Capital
ThCtscr in Atlanta will begin at
ij'tbat Imirte. on Sat unlit y find rutt
“tlvrhugh vseek‘‘Cviuvvu.viCode ‘
a-.exl
the great s r ecn drama, staring
,Walter Huston, will be on tire
Aicn-en, and the A. B. MarCti«Cotn
p'any wifi present their fifsC'scrip.’’
o]jiH, “Good News,” a rollicking
-"Atage presentation, ensemble ot
'’Civentv-four beautiful youn'g' • girls
and augiMitented by a dozen or
snore - Atlanta college boys.
.- /'Good News” is a furcecomedy
willi-ttm-bc, its setting the campus
AH: ft iinttleru college, its tuu deriv¬
ed tromjihe antics of rhe average
'liea^by ioollege crowd .and its music
kdjitb the. -rhythm of fiiodern j iz/.
1 -,-wi 1 present Faye Hammond,
Ben Me A tee. Elmer Coudy, Margie
l.usch. Dorothy Coudy, Celeste
. Btmcfi and the rest ot the big
>,*s-c,m. One of the innocently
ridiculous and hilarious scenes ,*
luut.iu a bedroom and at. evening
inotrverit is when a tootball game i
xiaged right mi the stage.
Waiter Huston, in the part of
/.the district altoruoy (and later the
warden of a great prison) does
s ->tBe of the most dramatic work <>f
tps career as a screen favorite in
• •©ricmtifti Code. ’ a story which
bait been v-hw-cd as “dramatic dy
aiumte, ,> and which furs a plot
that keeps interest keen from be¬
ginning to end. “Criminal Code
19 rbe story of 1 young boy who is
convicted of manslaughter when he
kills a young man over |a woman
whb i> no better than she should
be, jud his convict ton is due ul
spod <vholly to the ambition of the
yoOng district attorney to make a
name lor himself politically and be¬
cause be is-.a-shre\vder lawyer than
•that of the- -young and liieudless
kov. Philip Holmes plays the par!
ot file bay, und the f act - that the
'district attorney is made warden of
the prison where ibe boy is incur
c.erawd and brings his young
.
daughter with him to live nt the
prison, where the iwo young peo¬
ple meet and tall in love compli¬
cates the plot and makes up u
beautiful lave -buy at a back
ground for as tense, u drama as
scrceii has ever shown.
i be Capital program for next
week is said 10 be one ol the best
that theater has ever presented,
with the. stage -how a rollicking
force und tire screen offering a
great drama.
A recent occasion was 1 1 1 e as¬
sembling ot a group of relatives
and friends honoring Mrs. Loilorn
Uoifcv on bet sixty-sixth birthday.
The guest- gathered at the home
ol Mr. E. M. Uollev, 70b Oak St..
11 ape v ilie. bn., with whom site rc _
sides.
The room- were decorated with
jonquils and carnations. Music
v, ho the feature of the evening.
Nlrs. Colley was honored in
ing the fourth generation present
at this celebration. These were:
Mrs. Lenor 1 Colley. Mr. C. A
C< ev, Mrs. Richard Paula and
Ma-tcr Ricbard Colley Paula.
\trs. (Jo’dev was the recipient ol
lovely gifts, greeting Card- and
telephone calls. She _is affectiott
nU ’ne know n to nunt v a- ‘•Grand¬
ma Colley. Ijenoru
Those pre-ent: Mrs.
Ci’ -ey. Mr. ittd Mrs. C- W .
ley; Mi. and Mrs. I . 1 *. Colley,
Mr! E. M. Colley, Mr. and Mr
C. C. Harvey, Mr and Mr-. Rich
nrd Paula. Mis- Grady Gray, Mi
Rnib Colley, Mi-s Eiiz ibeth Col
ley/'ML- Mary Helen Colley,
Mildred Colluy, Mi—’ Marjorie Co -
lev. Mr. E. B. Colley, Jr. at
Master Richard Colley Ratlin.
'i he AtSunta Journal,
Ajivorti-Irvg l f ,c lat luliri
Cates liie machinety vt Lusiuc*-.
Try it.
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
0 AKE 8 CHAPEL
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stovall
son, Raymond, spent Sunday with
relatives in Atlanta. Miss Aim
who who lias been visiting
several weeks in Atlanta, retained
home with them.
Mr, and Mrs. Hubert McCollum
and children and Mr. Price Mc¬
Collum, of Clarkesvillc, were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mc¬
Collum and family Sunday.
Mrs, Ross Sosebce, of Nacoo
chee, spent a lew d tvs last week
with Iter patents, Mr. and Mis.
\V. 11 , Freeman.
Miss Carmel Chambers was
dinner guest of Miss Connie
j j Curtis last Sunday.
^ H S(ov ,, u !nul RaJim , tu
jn Corndi;1 ,
| Our health record is not so-good
j as last week. Several s idler
j "»B from lhl n " a colds ; uul Mr.
Qjtillian Cantrell’s baby is very ill
with pneumonia.
Cornelia, (ia,. March 7.—(AP)
Posses Saturday night
the hills of north Georgia for
men believed implicated in
blowing of the safe of :ite Baldwin
State Bank early Saturday A
third captured after be was shot
both legs, was in Habersham
at Clarkesvillc.
The captured man, deputies said,
admitted participating in the sale¬
blowing and told ol another rob
bet y io which be took part in
Tiger, Ga. He gave Ins name
Torn Henson. Rabun county.
cold officers be was wanted in
North Carolina for bank robbery,
also.
The Baldwin bank sate was
blown about J a. m. Saturday. Six
j charges pf dynamite were used and
I the explosions wrecked (be safe and
jibe inside id -the -hi nk. Money
wax littered over the ii >or and bills
jin the safe were burned and torn.
Cashiei E. U. Addy reported ap¬
proximately >125 missing from the
j safe of the bunk. Robbers were
frightened away by persons who
rushed to the bank after the ex
j plosion, before the’ time vault of
(the bank was molested. A bag ol
1 money, dropped by the robbers in
heir flight, was Found back ot the
bank.
Near the bank ollicers found an
automobile with .1 flat tire, which
they believed was abandoned by
the robbers. It was identified
one stolen a week ago in Thomson,
G,t. Bloodhounds brought heri¬
tor the in in hunt, could noi
used because rains had blotted out
trails.
Henson was arre ted earlySatur
I day by officers and a posse ol chi
j zens following a chase that
j li,rou g h Cornelia, Baldwin and Al-
1
to.
Holcomb Bros. Htiwe. Co.
GOOD HARDWARE
Seremi w ire, fixes, paint and
varnish in small cans; plow
stocks, gee whiz. don hie
stocks, drag harrows and 1 id
ing cultivators. Plenty ol
plow repairs and hoes .and
j rakes
We sell for cash and sell for
j ---«(■*»——
■ Canton Water Clock
; ! be wahq mad 01 J 1 '!”-' 1 ' '* ‘ h
j Canton dates back some -><»• years and
j has been destroyed and rebuilt many
times. It is composed of three copper
v^sspis placed one above tbe other on
^toHt°with In the bottom vex
an Indicator scale
pas-ina through it, which, a* the
fill* the'lower vessel, rises and shows
the time.
it liys been calculated that between
19t4 and 1918 the Turks shot, burned
aiiw- or caused to starve to death
snore than 800,000 Armenians.
CLEVELAND. GEORGIA. MUG. 13. ITU
SHOAL CREKIv ITEMS
Mr. Mart Nix, of Lumpkin
county, visited Mr, Jttle Leans of' .j
this district Sunday.
Mr. M ilford Ash, a school teach*
er. was in this district l«5't week. - .
“Uncle slid” Parker took dinner |
i
with Mr. Joint AndeA<.m Sunday.
Mr. Charlie Etris pps-ed through
this section Saturday on his way
from Gainesville. Mr. Etri- t* one
of those well-to-do fanners oi Town
Creek district and hr ami his
family are choice citizens ol the
| county.
Mr. John O’Kelley lutd as visit¬
ors Sunday evening. Messrs Uestei
West and iohti and Steve Ai.der
Mrs Caroline O’Kellev retut tied
home Sunday evening from a visit,,:
to her sick daughter. Mis, Bertha
Dorsey, of Mossy Creek.
Col, Torn Underwood was
present a. the Justices Court of
this district last Saturday.
Woodchoppings have been the
the order ol ‘lie day lor the past
week.
Mrs John Davis, a ; former resi¬
dent of this district, is confined to
her bed in Lumpkin with fever.
Mrs Bill Pinker, who is in h.ei
nineties, is growing very feeble,
She was born in South Carolina.
Mr. Albert Dorsey, accompanied
by his daughter. Miss Leone, and
Miss Wilma Miller, ol MofisyCreek
spent a lew hours in this part lust
Sunday.
Missionary News
The. Methodist. Woman's Mis
-iormry Society held an interesting
I meeting with Miss iiln Ailfsoti
j Wednesday afternoon, March 1 1
The devotional and Bible study
was led by Mrs. II. A. Jarrard in
Mrs. Rutland’s absence.
The socielv was glad to enroll
Mrs. G, C. Adams as a member.
Folio w i ng*t he business of the
day ibe hostess served lovely re
> fresbments.
St. Patrick’s day was very evi¬
dent with Shamrocks, pipes arid
queer high hat-. Green and white
1 predominated in the green salad..!
i green and while sandwiches and j
| cuke served and also the mints in
j little green cups.
The hostess mother. Mrs.Allison,
j assisted in recei ving the following
j ladies; Mesdumes Ben Allison, j
G. C. Adams, C. H. Edwards, A.
■ U. Henderson, C. E. Head, Bob]
[ohnson, H . A. Jarranl, Robert
j Kenimer, f. H. Telford and W.A. I
j Whitmire. The meeting for Men.
j will be with Mrs. Bet) Allison.
-----———- — . - -------------
■
Mechanic.t, power, accotdnig to ;
1 prominent electrical engineer,
will in time “win a bloodies* 'vie
I lory over poverty.” He added
: that electricity may be regarded li¬
the worker’s new declaration of in¬
dependence.
! That i- a nice prophecy all right. I
slid there I- hardly any I hi ug more j
desired by humanitarian- than the,
abolition of poverty—-which Cer
.tainly is possible a* well a- de-1
’ -iruble—but those who have beer: j
matching these electric power poo-!
, p : e in recent years can hardly have -
j very high hopes in that direction.
They have beet) abolishing their j
,, WIi poverty 1 very rapidly, 1 but u- 1
iong as they charge from three to
i ten times 11s much for current as
they should—_:*k Senator Nnrrit— 1
they are not helping ibe oistomeisj
,_r d very far from hi- poverty.
all thi- great mechanical power!
that i- being developed were dis¬
tributed 1 quilubly and fairly i
among u- it would be v ery helpful j
indeed.—Editorial in The Full'.-1
fiuder,
Fur-B«&rers Wiped Out
by Forest Destruction
Eur-Jtearing animals are naturally
creatures till forest anil stream, anil ir
IS interesting to note Ike effect forest
destruction, either try fire or lumber¬
ing, lias On the fur-bearer.
Animals like the valuable pine mar
ten anti fisher are simply lost without
green timber, and you will rarely see
tVaclts of either of these animats in
tntvnl ov'er lands or slashing.
Poxes had coyotes as a rule quickly
return to hurnt-over areas, for the
Si ingle mason that forest, destwivlion
generally results ill a new growth of
light brush and grass, which afford*
a great breeding ground for mice and
oilier rodents. The same can be said
of moose and deer, as file new growth
of tender shoots from aider, birch, cot¬
tonwood. etc., makes good feeding
.ground for (lo se animals.
Bui. on the whole, forest destruc¬
tion marks a wide devastation of the
I’liv-bearlng species, ft is known ot
several instances in northwestern Pan¬
ada when rival trappers, in order t*>
drive their enemies out of a certain
suction, have stooped to the nefarious
practice of living large timbered areas
Wide Belief in Virtues
of Peony as Medicine.
The peony is credited with mortict
ntil power by peoples ns far apart as
the .bt panose and the inhabitants of
countries of western Europe, Accord
flic 1 o ancient herbalists it was an
herb of tile sun, and consequently pro
scribed for maladies caused by the
moon. ft was good for niiiimilares
ami nieiutkholy and a preventive of
insanity find convulsions, 'the llnwor
probably came from Japan and trav¬
eled in ancient times by way of Persia
to Greece, where js gave the land of
Paponia its name, and was (ho origin
of (he word “paean.” which originally
meant a chant of delivery from Illness
or wounds--another indication of ilie
belief tliat the Itower had rare heab-ng
properl i(*s. Tim penny appears to have
found its way Io England by about
U5U0, 11 Inis frequently been made
the subject for a poem, of which one
by Bliss Vawmot Is .probably the best
known.
Romantic French Cajtle
A castle wtiich suggests the romance
arid magic of 1 In* age when knighthood
was in itovvor should stand boldly on
the summit of a precipitous rock or
hide mysteriously among the shadows
of a mighty forest.
t.’lmmliord. near ttlois, for this rea¬
son is one of the utosl romantic of
the I 1 'reneh chateaux mi the Loire. It
is sumunuled by mossy walls -4 miles
around mot ils foresl lias nearly 3,(MNi
acres.
The dozens of piimades, lanterns,
end towers are vi-tble for miles —
looking on the dim horizon like a
misty 1 ndenial cily. ‘Die grami dreu
lar .stairway which, winds upward in
two directions at once Is Ilie glory ol
its tnlerlor hut there are bI blatr
cases In all.
Origin of Mayas Unknown
tVImiv the Mayas came from is on<
of .tin* world's ancient mysteries, lie
fwacell is now amine on in tin: Vatican
fit,i.-ary in rite Impe of fraclny' maim
scldpls of priests w!m visited Amen a
nt tin* tiftia of the Spanish conquest.
It is hoped Dint 1 lie.se may prove a
key’ to the Mayan hieroglyphics
which have heen found. At the time
of fin* conquest tin* Mayas had a vast
literature on. scrolls of pa
pyrus. The sc were sat heved and
burned by the Spanish invaders. !>o
ppfte the fact that the Mayas had
etui veil a coinpicx i-ivilizEition and
had deveUqied ttstvonomy and mufhe
otalics to a stage not surpassed by
tin- ancient Egyptians, tin* source of
■(Ii!* clviUzfttiou i* unknown.
Canal Would Be Costly
The cost of the proposed Meant
"nan canal would in* several t.ime.
the cost of the Panama canal. The
Nicaraguan canal would he about, IS.”,
miles in length. 7n mile- of which will
f)e in Lake Nienvacua. '*! miles atony
'he San J cm: river, and the remain
dor through the mountain section. Tie
region of Lake Union in vhe Panama
■ana! jy S3 feet ,‘d.io' e mean sea level
The level of Lake Nicaragua Is lit".
Dei. The great elevation of I.tike
■ levivtcun is one of the main features
of the added eo-t of the Nicaraguan
canal.
Psychology in Matrimony
David Seabury, famous consulting
psychologist, says psychology can well
be applied to the field of marriage.
Ue names seven kinds of love: mate
love, based on natural compatibility;
romantic love, the kind that Is in love
with love: sex love; home love; intel¬
lectual love: propinquity lava, hi
tvlm-h two persons have the same
background, and self-love. The first
kind, says .Seabury, is (tie only kind
to build marriage on.—Cupper’*
Wtekly.
■ jl
.....
[I'HIC . * 1.80 A YEA I. IX ADVAXIM
\j;
Printing
% % is the master key ot . our civilization,
the means through which we have
h achieved art, education and industry.
^ efforts it is well of worth craftsmen. the very highest
7 its
\ The Cleveland Courier
i Commercial Printing of Eivry Description
Urn Siaiplii How
r r ADVERTISING is like liniment. I 1
cant be applied effectively with a
powder puff. It needs rubbing in
And the harder the rubbing the better
the results,
RUB I F IN HARD—Increase your aevertis
ing—put in the sales pressure—create enthusi¬
asm and enrgy and optimism throughout your
organization—and watch the progrssyou make
umaw:.w mm.
Subscribe For The Courier
/. .at' 1 .■ mm ^ Mw
% -s,. ■wir
.
MSmi, ? All the
emm r»A»z or Toutr Home Garden
TU^ROM asters to zinnias a
wide range of delightful
annual flowers - tall, dwarf,
(Vagrant - all of them colorful.
otne bloom early, others late,
many bloom all summer.
Select your packets from
rVorthrup, King 8 C Co.’s seed
[•■ox at a nearby dealer’s. No
better seeds at any price. .
‘T«$©
TfT
Hhstoftke standard size per
{Lowerpackets packet ,
%r^nf,Iin 0 £hCo !8
Seeds