Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, January 28, 1924, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
tlti'ou '&e 'etts We ”
1 ' ’OSSSsS?®? T'-ie ' ,eau, U i* *0 American that she rrill
I » ~ p.rwiif none but American perfumrt and
|> ■•’•JwQ'') ' w"'.J®sk toilet accessories on her dressing table.
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By BETH JEFFRIES ... . ZV H j»L
[fsTJi g-~j BEAUTY fiat has gone
or^'L ‘ So one linovvs
I I where these things start
from, but the\ arc
obeyed. It is only a
s * time since the
flappers of America, as
if of one mind, dropped
their skirts Io their ankles and
then took out their sleeves. What
unseen authority pronounces
these decrees is beyond human
ken- but there it is.
Along with the short skirts—
wluch are now said to be coming
back because of the freedom of
action they give—the same qual
ity of sense has decreed the ban
ishment of the make-up box,
except in its proper pl.ace which
is behind the footlights. Fare
well to the juicy too juicy—red
lips; to the pink —too pink —
cheeks; to the pencilled—too
poorly pencilled—eyebrows; vale
also ,the white—too white—nose.
In place of the painted lady,
we are to have the well-groomed
woman in all walks of life. That
is the dictum, and when even the
chorus girls of Broadway the
Follies Beauties and the Winter
» Garden houris —band together to
j eschew the tinted lipstick, the
< mussy eyebrow pencil and the
ever-ready and germ-laden pow
der puff, and go in for perfect
J grooming if means that nil ti •
; feminine world will fl’
GEORGIA
(Continued from Page 1.)
coqjii^ fcM i,og;etlu,r .with suVeral slab?
leaders from other counties, organ
ized the republican club of Georgia
elected Robi rt N. Tumlin, president
of the dub of Caev Springs, Ga.,
temprary president, and Frank A.
Ploughman, Atlanta attorney, tempo
rary secretary, pending its penna-
HkH
IS , .
THERE
A •
EABY v ,‘A\
!N t ,
YOUR ,I \ > I '
HOME? A A / /
BABY EASE'
A Safe Liquid Treatment l or f
Sick Fretful Rabies anti Children?
Bowel and Teething Troubles t|
No Opiates No Dope Sold by Druds*istsJ|
Z 2 ’ 77
M TAz/yZar?
I
WE FOIL THE BURGLAR
LOSS
You can be assured of com
plete protection from loss if
you take out a burglaryin
surance policy in one of our
companies. Don’t take a
chance of great loss from a
midnight visit of thieves.
The cost isnt great.
There is said to be a Dorcas So
ciety doing all this and bringing
in the beauty that com?, from
good health, sound sleep, exer
rise, proper diet, sensible bath
ing and good grooming.
There’s a world of meaning in
that -word “grooming.’’ It sug
gest", at once the beauty of ♦)»<•
sleek and shining coat of the
thoroughbred horse, with the
wonderful muscles rippling be
neath the satin skin, the very per
Bonification of physical beauty.
Pass up beauty feature, of
line or contour. Let the plainest
of women be well-groomed, clean
and not smeared with cosmetics,
redolent of personal care, and in
that one thing alone there is a
beauty that will turn men's
heads.’
The campaign against red
gashes for lips, hectic flushes for
blushes any black smears for eye
brows is but the natural reaction
against the misuse of cosmetics
by the inexperienced and inar
tistic. Hereafter you will have
to be a pyschoanalyst or else a
vocational expert to be able to
tell an actress off the stage from
any other well dressed, modest
woman of refinement.
With lhe advent of the new
dispensation come, a revolution
in lhe toilet table ; ;.n ■•’•i to
beauty. If the rcuc. pot is
go, -
nent organization. This meeting
was held in the Ansley hotel.
JUDGE LANDIS TO
VISIT ATLANTA
ATLANTA, Jan. 28.—Judge K.
M. Landis, fri; h commissioner of or
ganiiMid baseball will -be in Atlanta
on March 28 and will be the guest
of President Jack Corbett and thy |
Atlanta Baseball association at the
opening of the local exhibition se
ries. whi n lie Crackers meet the D -
troit Tigers at Ponce de Leon park.
.Along with the announcement -
that Landis will be in Atlanta conies
another interesting news item con- j
earning Atlanta baseball fans, for
President Corbett has made it known |
that Jack former star hull- ■
er on the University of Georgia'
baseball nine, has been signed to
an .Atlanta contract for the season
of 1924. Slappey was a free agon J
and Corbett has been after his serv
ices for several days.
ATLANTA CAPITALIST
DIES SUDDENLY
ATLANTA, Jan. 28.—John E. |
Murphy, one of .Atlanta’s most prOm
inent citizens, capitalist and leader
in financial circles, died suddenly
•it his residence, •‘Hillcrest,” at
Always Take
CASCARA £ QUININE
Relieves
yncOLD IN 24 HOURS
GRIPPE IN 3 DATS
All Druggist*—3o cent*
- '
W'/' i
Never
neglect a cough
1 )t IT an end to it at once with
1 Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar Honey.
Loosens hard packed phlegm,
soothes inflamed tissues, restores
normal breathing Made of the
1 same medicines your own doctor
prescribes, combined with the
good old standby pine-tar
honey You’ll like its taste, too.
Keep Dr. Bell’s on hand for all
the family.
All druggists. Be sure to get
the genuine.
DR. BELL’S Pine-Tar Honey
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Kcjrfone View Co.
Not too mud}, nor too Utils. But just
enough from toilette table.
puff, applied in public, ns freely
ns in private, is passing into the
limbo where rest the -toothpicks
of other days, along with ,t!"'
.inrrr bow I and the bustle In
l.s place, ir’ndlo ly would rep sir
. i c ss of too |,fj- .’in ,;b-
Peachtree and Fourtenth streets at
I! o’clock Saturday nght. *
Mr. Murphy was a victim of heart
.ailure. He had just finisrted din
ner with his family and had entered
the sitting room, when he complain
ed and went out on the porch so?
fresh aii‘. IL reentered the house
id was stricken in the hallway.
awwss
•‘GOOD MORNING DEARIE”
GREAT MUSICAL COMEDY
"Good Morning Dearie” which
ran for over 406 nights at the
Globe Theater, New York, will be
seen here Friday, Felt. 1 at the Ry
lander theater.
There is plenty of local coloring
work-room of the Toddless; ,
in “Good Morning Dearie,’ the work
room of the Toddle Shop, where the
• ewii.g girls ply their trade; a
glimpse of Chinatown; Hell’s Bells
RYLANDER theatre fri. FEB. P
THE WORLD FAMOUS MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS—
p, 11 To be presented here intact
IpI.VT take offense at ibis seem- ■
>■* ing familiarity: . v-rybody will 11 f> ■* g IA t* Q
be saying it n.st week. H’s the title Sfl€3 | 9 VI Uvl 3
of the biggest musical comedy sue- -
< ess New York lias enjoyed in many Mg-tyi
wars ano comes here direct from IHV wv
12 months al the Globe Theatre with ,
the entire original production.
p.: I ..in ay chorus, churning dance £ nc l ose self - addressed
numb is. a -lore of song hits by
,i. mm Kern.' ci.nnpimer .-i -.- ally. Stamped envelope for re
uril tin- u nowned London Sunb-am c *• ! *
fiiils. H's one slu'ft y<m have been turn OI tickets.
wailing fox* and it's called
MAIL ORDERS
v w[ 9 ■PrS Will take precedence over
jjjk a a 1 k ikl re B u l ar t>°* office sale.
MMldy PRICES
■’ ; A 50c to $ 2 - 50 Plus Tax
Seat Sale Wednesday
POSITIVELY THE ONLY COMPANY PRESENTING THIS
ATTRACTION IN AMERICAN CITIES
' ~.~C.
THE SHOW THAT STIRRED NEW YORK FOR OVER 400
NICHTS—BREAK ANY ENGAGEMENT TO SEE IT
f
JL. v ' 'ivith the RED BAND 'y THUUißorutKr .r«Tssr
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER
sence from her dressing table,
there is the tiny tube of clean
cold
finger and wipeil off with n piece
of chamois.
'Toilet wtoers . . .rm-si W.m
...ci. p • ...m .-.u b.i..,_ die
Dance Hall, a resort of ahe slums,
and a really elaborate exterior at
jthe close of the play the: terrace jf
palatial cauntry home.
i Americus will see the original
! production intact, as this organiza
i tion is the only one playng this
great popular success in American
The scenery, costumes
and effects are transported in two
extra sized baggage cars and it re
quires a small army of stage hands
to handle it behind the scenes. The
company numbers over 75 and ow
ing to the magnitude of the whole
enterprise it is a most expensive
thing to maintain. That is tre prin
cipal reason why it is' impossibly
to play many of the smaller stands
i and why very few, cities of the size
of Americus will be played.
| ‘
•‘ANNA CHRISTIE”
TAKES LONDON
On its tour of England the
American play “Anna Christie” took
London by storm and the following
blood rushing to the surface,
have already sent the hare's foot
running to cover and eyes dre
made brighter through being
"closed for a time in sleep rather
than being -~ Je to look like two
burnt holes.in a blanket by some
thing closely resembling lamp
black and grease.
There's an interesting story
told about Aaron Durr, who v.“is
so’r.ftfiioL of a fop. A Vaile.'.
<> ..wii.uy I .... ~y „i:.. ~f
article is taken from the letters and
art page of the Literary Digest.
Ap. American play and an Ameri
can actress have subdued London ’n
a manner to which theatrical history •
seems to furnish no parallel. Eu
gene O’Neill’s “Anna Christie,” in
ahe hands of Miss Pauline Lord,
has been familiar to American audi-*
cnees for two years, and it is nt)
surprise that the merits extolled
here should be recognized abroad.
London, however, quite completely
outdoes all our own papers in the
extravagant terms of praise lav
ished upon both the play and the
player, and there are endeavors
in some quarters to discount the ef
fect of this chorus, they are seen i
to be the efforts at steadying them-1
selves felt by those who have be in |
carried from their equilibrium far ;
further than comfort relishes.
“Anna Christie” has been made
into a motion picture by Thomas H. |
Ince and is the attraction at the !
' “Anna Christie”
. —By—
Eugene O’neill
A Thomas H. Ince Production *
The Greatest American
Drama In Years
Eugene O’Neill’s great play for which Thomas H. Ince paid
SIOO,OOO for the screen rights—a drama that won .the Pulitzer
prize in 1922 and a play that took New York and London by
storm—interpreted by a cast including George Marion, Russell,
Blanche Sweet and Eugene Besserer.
•
TODAY AND TUESDAY
RYLANDER
1 *
♦
•
for the street sought to make an
irnprefriiim by getting off the
copy-book sentiment and asking
the great man if it was not true
that "clothes do not make the
man.” “Quite true, my lad,”
said Burr. ‘‘But when he’s
made, don't you think he looks a
good deal better if he's well
dressed?” ‘
V. ivcT 'ipplies with equal force
<l. the *.„n.ili's .oilci table of
(a. ~..i oa rfhicii the perfume
Rylander Theater today and tomor- with Blanche Sweet, William Russell,
row. George Marion of the origin- Chester Conklin, George Seigman
al stage cast is in the picture with and Eugene Besserer.
MONDAY AFTERNOON JANUARY 28 ,1914
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bottle holds the most important,
place. It is not that perfume’
makes a woman beautiful but
that even a beautiful woman is
more attractive if she smells as
good as she looks. That is the
function of a perfume —to add to
and to underscore a woman’s in
dividuality,—to waft a delicate
odor wherever she goes that is
in harmony with the spirit of
her being.
Whereas grandmother was
wnnt to carry a fragrant piece
of shrub or bergamot tied in the
corner of her handkerchief, the
modern woman exhales the subtle
essence of flowers from her
whole person. It has begun with
her bath in which the toilet soap
has been fragrantly scented with
the odor that is her own, and this
is associated with the appro
priate color which pervades all
things that are intimate to the
person.
Not so many years ago the
choicest perfumes all came from
I'.urope—mostly from France —
but to-day the perfumer’s art
has been developed in this coun
try to the highest possible de
gree. All the world may con
tribute the essences of flowers —
France, Italy, the Orient or Far
( athay —Arabia its spices, Si
beria its musk-ox and even the
depths of the ocean gives up its
ambergris, but it is in the blend
ing of these that the perfumer’s
art lies. Therefore, the domestic
odor compositions are largely re
placing those of foreign origin.
Why not? Can you express the
individuality of a thoroughly
American woman, vital to the
very core, with a French per
fume?
Not very long ago a test was
made of the taste of American
women in the matter of perfume.
One hundred and three women
were brought together for the
test from all walks of life—from
society, the stage, the home,
business, the college. Six per
fumes —three foreign and three
American were offered for
choice and, choosing by the name
and reputation, sixty-one ex
pressed their preference for the
foreign. A second test was
made, when the ladies were
asked to choose by the sense of
smell alonb, the different per
fumes being dropped on num
bered slips of tissue paper.
Eighty I hen chose the American
perfumes being lhe :..ost ex
j.'.xYSA.: •;» eiicir ta.sie.
Dudley’s Qpera House
TODAY
Fox Special »
‘ MY FRIEND, THE DEVIL”
Comedy—The DeHaven's in
“RICE AND OLD SHOES
Just Married
Fox Ivientieth Anniverysary Week
Prigram This Week the Best Ever—Prices Regular
All Shows for the week’s schedule begin
Matinees, 3 P. M.; Main Feature, 3:30
Nights, 7 P. M.; Main Feature, 7:30
? Z W
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! ’’s
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And in coth
elusion: Any
path to Beauty
•makes a long,
hard climb.