rMEYES OF THE WORLD" Great Film Show for Lake City Next Tuesday. "The Eyes of the World," the photoplay from Harold Bell Wright's truly great novel, shown at the New Theatre, Lake City, S. C., Tuesday t and Wednesday, May 11 and 12, is a ^ big and intensely interesting production. J The photoplay follows the author's story with exactitude and the characters on the screen are the characters from the pages of the novel to the life. fag It is unnecessary to say anything about the plot?let it suffice that it V concerns a group of the most interi enting characters ever presented. A prologue gives ample explanation of the story proper, accounting for the actions and the punishment of the various characters. Monroe Salisbury, as the cynical . LeGrange, is easily the outstanding character in the photoplay. | A Complete Lin |fe Boilers, En gin H gines, Gas Engines, I Mills, Planers, Edg Mills, Cotton Gins, Mills, Wood Saws, ] We also have listed with u hand machinery. Let us fi? Hyman Si Mill Supplies a WILMINGTON, N.C. * I GR In I Be Sur Protec byh Life, F Kingstr Phone No. 8! Jack Livingston as the struggling artist; Kathleen Kirkham, as the desinging Mrs. Taine; Jane Novak, as the pure-hearted Sybil; Edward Peil, as thp sensuous Rutledcre: Lurline Lyons, as the pitiful Myra Willard; Arthur Tavres, as her prosecuted brother; Jack McDonald, as the disgustingly crippled Taine, and Fred Bums, as the likable forest ranger, all do colorful, vividly splendid work in big roles. The exteriors are things of beauty. The rugged, towering mountains of San Bernardino county and the orange groves and rose gardens around Redlands, the locale of the story, have been exquisitely photographed into scenes of rare charm. It took eight months to film "The Eyes of the World" and the photoplay shows it in the careful working out of the smallest detail. The picture is one of the best ever shown in the city. Its story is big and vital, but yet full of the human interest of every-day occurances 1 among every-day people. e of Machinery S es, Crude Oil EnSteam Pumps, Saw ers, Trimmers Lath Corn Mills, Feed Dumps. g all sizes and types of second- |? ure on your requirements. upply Co., I nd Machinery, NEWBERN, N.C 17 A1 nsura BEGIN e to Get C Uf ATI riAij t your gro ail storms R] ire, Bonds W. H ee Insuran 5. DIAMOND IS MODERN JEWEL G eautlful Stone We Knew It Today j! Was Unfamiliar to the An- ?| cient World. The perfectly cut and brilliant dla? ? inond the world knows today Is not very i much more than 50 years old. says a ^ writer In Popular Science. The an- . ^ dent world knew little of dla- r monds. From the first Pharaoh to * the last, through all the pageantry of h SI dynasties, diamonds were unknown In Egypt. From the dawn of history, Babylon remained unfamiliar with * them for 40 centuries. * The conquest of Alexander across ? the Indus in 327 B. C. acquainted * Greece vaguely with their existence. The patricians pt Rome In the days * of the early empire rarely owned them, w Byzantine supremacy, the rise of Ven- * Ice to maritime power, the Moorish j? conquest of Spain, brought only a i * trickle of diamonds into western Eu- I * rope. A fashionable Jewelry store in . ? America today carries more diamonds > In stock than were in all Europe i r when Columbus sailed from Palos. |h r Henry D. Morse of Boston, In the * last century was the first to discover J the balanced proportions that devel- ? oDed a diamond's highest reflective and refractive possibilities. Since brilliancy ^ Is the crowning glory of a diamond, ha ?| did not hesitate to sacrifice whatever weight was necessary to achieve It 3 Retaining the 58 facets of the earlier Ji cotters, he found that a diamand la J at lta sharpest climax of brilliancy R when the depth from table to cnlet p la six-tenths of Its diameter, and that r| a little more than two-thirds below, U Cnt In this style, a diamond not only k flashes light from every polished facet g surface, bnt seems alive with corn* H eating Inner fires. g Morse's proportions are the rule of g the world today, and they mark the K final triumph of the art In the achieve g ment of the perfect Jewel. jH Take Care of Good Books. j J At spring cleaning time every hook k should he dusted separately and a fine, 3 soft brush whisked In all the crevices |*l where dust may lodge. Keep In the g library, also, some transparent adhe- *1 slve tape and a pair of sharp scissors; 3 you can mend a torn magazine cover Jl In a Jiffy, or a book page that some' one has tonj. You <-an mend with the adhesive tape, pages of music, and 3 can straighten out hent corners of Jl playing cards, putting a tiny section of the tape tiiidet the comer. 'a 0 *i Avoid Affectation. J Affectation is an awkward and *| forced imitation of what shonid be genuine and easy, wanting the beauty ^ that accompanies what Is natural.? ri Locke. 0 ' RI nee Ui NING APF )ur Rates L INS wing crops in the Hart EMEMBER >, and all ( WELC ce, Real E ? TiT>TiTITiTiT>TITiTliTITITtT> Mechanically Right Thoroughly Modern Beautiful in Design N The Series 20 Cars for sixty eight years ha fair prices. They are of competent engineeri] t duced in large, modern mentally sound enginee design, and resourceful, hire. t Studebaker's reput or the making of substit / cars contain none but th grades of steel, leather, cessories. Studebake Next Door to Eellahan 1 iDUl n Ant UL 15th, Before Inst URAN > this year hfnrd Fire 1 WE WRITE )ther Kind H, Mans state and KINC perpetuate the Studebake s stood for high quality, 1 the creation of the Studel ng and manufacturing ex plants unexcelled in the ;ring principales are inc< ripened experience guid ation precludes the buih utions to lower costs, am e finest materials, ineludi upholstery, finishing pai " vr [' tV :r Sales C( CI lotel J. \ I n nn ? / L 1 K omob 1920. jring' ?lse\ fCE! against ds f s of Insui ig'er, Loan Con iSTREE, SOUTH C yM. ^ I I r reputation which S > E lonest dealing and ffi 3aker organization E :perts, and are pro- Qj industry. Fundax ^rporated in their X es their manufac- ji si X 'i ling of cheap cars X si rl, therefore, these jjr ng the best-known gr ; /m info fir>oc ann a o-' DC 1 LJL1 tOf til VO Uiiva v%v ' ry - 0- ? >mpany, m aude I. Truluck, ft V. Jeffords, Bj$ Managers. H- j )N 1 iles ; j i i j vhere. J image | Co. I ranee. I f lpany. f AROLINA . 1 =J