Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 19, 1912, HOME, Page PAGE NINE, Image 25

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NEXT WEEK IN THE THEATERS ’ . JjLJBL .jhßßt*? \E* > 9F - Iw /jBK -ME • ~ • nr> TV' ' - ■ W- isK 1K MLkI IMP // W JSHmI m\ «gMhk< . / jtedß/ " W.O ' « HP 7; s*M. SK ■■MK 89/ / ... JUMP Xaßi HHHK /// ■ I v / w' BR «taA .>- ten? /& H ■« ■’ > ■SO ■■k 111® WM< J 4 ' » \ H& > \\wb * W-Wyum z^^^iHßi-/ *■ \\WB» wh •'UkiBBBBf' /^» ♦ \9 s w ’ SaBRBK. -i wkyL«<,■xw3t .’ \y I w ■■ X jaw ‘ O X.. w.'® rWh/V' l\\wV; a ’ K \ 1 1 \\W ■’ 1 "r^ xX A f \ an '-<5= = =^> x I IW; .11 w I h 4" “1, ® ■ K f>:- S i ■ X " V;|S| " 111 ” L.i" h;i.!.-. 1,-.,. ’at ill.' Atlanta. October •>. » / I *- OlLlfe - ,l ■'"'* ■’’*• W/ j ' LOUISIANA LOU’ IS ON HER WAY TO THE ATLANTA uisiana Lou" is coming to the mtn lor three days, beginning 'I - October 28. It is one of rile puzzling pleasing productions in own particular sphere that has yet - <n its fascination around this ■ ar'» theatergoers. Popular as are 'true! Liebert and Anna (’handler, i-y could not have brought about this ' satisfactory result had th- y not a g ound and a vehii le for the dis - i piny of their artistic wares. The New Orleans and Mississippi scenes in Louisiana Lou" are charming. The story is surprisingly good, and the inusii of iltat sense-lulling Quality that defies analysis. The Richness of 'be costumes is superb. To the chorus must be handed a heaping measure of l-ra se. They a’, e tine dancers, good - rgeis and exceptionally pretty. Hthel Br'l is more than ordinarily beautiful. 11 ('c ilia Novasio has a vivacity da.'h recalling Fritzl Schiff in Mille. Modiste." '■'’r an evening's entertainment, •oi.siana Lou" will hold its own in an nii«iia : comedy society. LOUIS MANN IS COMING IN NEW PLAY TO ATLANTA ■ p aygoers who have been look er forvrard to the coming appearance Louis .Mann in his new play. 1 t.i’mg a Husband." are to expe- Mils. WILKES’ BLESSING Her Dearest Hopes Realized Health, Happiness and Baby. Plattsburg, Miss.—“ Lydia E. Pint:- ham > Vegetable Compound has proved ' '■ beneficial to me, for now lam well Mid have a sweet, healthy baby, and our I'Jtne is happy. " 1 was an invalid from nervous pros tration, indigestion and female troubles. IS - think I suffered every pain a woman ' i before 1 began taking Lydia E. ham's Vegetable Compound, and I ’ 1 k it saved this baby's life, as 1 lost j n ‘y first one. My health has been very good ever ►'m-e, and j praise your medicine to all ?L V friends. Mrs. Verna Wilkes, R, ' ' , Jk No. 1, Plattsburg, Miss. 1 he darkest days of husband and w'f* 5 ■ v. hen they come to look forward to 11 hildiess and lonely old age. Many a wife has found herself incapa ■■■ of motherhood owing to some de gement of the feminine system, often ’■able by the proper remedies. In many homes once childless there "‘ e now children because of the fact ■ t Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- Jnd makes women normal, healthy , '"..von want special advice write to ’’dia L. Pinkham Medicine t'o. (confl '•itiali Lynn,Mass. Yonr idler will ' p opened, read and answered by a "”uia.u and held in strict confidence. 1 | rience a pleasant surprise, for in this new comedy by Clara Lipman and Samuel Shipman the distinguished ac tor is sun in a role very unlike those in which be has appeared previously. In Elevating a Husband" he is seen as a young and ambitious flve-cent store merchant, the hero of an inter filing love story, whereas in the past .Mr. Mann has usually been seen an eccentric and lovable old man, ent- I cloying his excruciating dialect. .Mr. . Mann's play remained for six months in New York, and so great was the demand for seats that before complet ing his run .Mr. Mann had appeared in four theaters, the Liberty. Criterion and Carrick, with an overflow week at the huge Grand opera house. He comes to the Atlanta October 31 and Novem ber I. "THE MAN FROM HOME" AND WILLIAM HODGE ARE COMING William Hodge, in "The Man From Hoim," comes to the Atlanta, com mencing November 5. Daniel Wor kers Pike, attorney at law, from Ko komo. Ind., has now become a house hold word, while the scenes, incidents, characters ami quaint speech of Pike have actually become familiar to thou sands who have witnessed the per formances. BEST BILL OF SEASON COMES TO GRAND NEXT WEEK Now that cool weather has come in i right season, interest in vaudeville inis become wide awake and the predictions that the Grand would not be quite large enough to accommodate the growing crowds will be fulfilled. The bill this week has <■. nil ibuted much to this con i dition of affairs and has served to draw kbig mat in e and evening attendance ! daily. It is one of tin st) mgest cards that the Grand has presented. I The program for next week is indeed I a quality show. There are headliners of i standard ability, and there are features I that will become magnetic. There is no i -onflietion in the bill of any sort, and there is the sort of novelty that has al ways been most acceptable in Atlanta. W. L. Abingdon, an actor of rare per sonality and ability will be one of the headline features. Mr. Abingdon and his company will offer a sketch called "Honor Satisfied." It has won admira tion from every sort of audience, and here in Atlanta it will be one of the features of a season that has great promise. Another feature headliner will bo beautiful Lilian Herlein. late of "The Net er Homes" and the prima donna star of "The Rose of Algeria." Miss Herlein lias been held in New York for nearly all of lust season and the start of this season, but the demand that has i been made by out-of-town managers I for tit' big slurs sent her on a tour of i s, >... p-il citie’, and Atlanta has been I included. i Will Dillon will b. another of the I features. This singer is in a class all I alum He is the eieutoi of parodies on I tile popular songs ofc the day . and he I ha- held ihe stage of some of the New York houses for nearly an hour, and ven then audiences have not been satisfied to permit him to retire. Adler land Ailinc. in a song and dame spe- I < Salty : the Musical Gordon Highland era; Onri and Company in acrobatic ideas, and another big headline feature, "Fixing tlte Furnace," will make up I the bill. EMMA BUNTING PRESENTS "LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY" Little Emmn Hunting and her play - i - co' imeiici tile third week of the , -manctit winter stock season at the I'oisyth on Monday evening, j->;. -rnt • oic Little Lord Fauntleroy," one of THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1912. |//> w ■ /JKB (' I ( J /WJMR' !' : ,a (i O’A \ ~ .. „■ w • / - Mrw w- i , *** whHHmW/ V ~ " K vW/ Ay-4) wy J C J/ / A < i. ci ;i Hei'iien on the Vaudeville Bill at the Grand ,\i..\i Week. i s the sweetest plays ever prepared. Emma Bunting has endeared herself , to thousands of local theatergoers, be- J, cause of that charming personality that has made her the greatest footlieht favorite that has been introuuced to the ? playgoers of this city. Her summer _ time engagements attracted interest and attention, and the clientele built I up then has remained, it is conceded (. that iter present week's performance of "The Little Minister" is the best ’ success that she ’has recorded in At . lama, and those who have had a peep at rehearsals do not hesitate in the Geelaiation that in "Little Lord Faun tleroy” she will surely record a suc- ! Miss Bunting will play the title role, I a boy part, and because her followers like her in this type of character, there has been more than ordinary interest 1 at the box office. The advance sale is s heavy and the permanent reservation roll is growing all the time. The reg ular evening performances will be gjiven ami there will be matinee performances on Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday 1 afternoons. 5 i MADAME X WILL PLAY f ALL NEXT WEEK AT LYRIC j 3 Eugenie Blair, wiio will be remem s bered for her elt-vet work in "Zaza” f and tiie "Kreutzer Sonata." will b<- the 1 attr.i' lion at the Lytic next week, when | she will be seen for the first time in I - Atlanta in tin- title rde ot that grip- | I ping play of real life, '’Madame X." ! For tii’ 1 information of those who arc I not i i ltilltir with the ; tory. "Madame X" is that strong, gripping play with a ' wonderful moral from the pen of Alex-1 , aiidre Bisson, the famous French dram- . i atist. who has created a furore on both r continents. Tlte story is wonderful in I theme and well told, and in its unfold- I Ing lends to the stage on ■ of the best i dramatic offerings ever pre.■••nted Madame X. like many of her sex, makes one false step mid. repenting, re turns and seeks iter husband’s forglve ' ness. He. having been a judge of the court of assizes, has become hardened to missteps and turns away from his wife, banishing her. She seeks posses ’ i sion of their baby boy, which is re . 1 fused, and finally sinks lower and lower I until, tin absinthe tb nil. she finds a ' paramour with whom she travels from pla ,, ’( to vim ", Two blm kinailets, liav ' ling an inkling of her past, seek her l I lover and leli him who they think sb- is. and make a compact with him to find out if their suspicions at;e true. Upon tinding them collect, the love: intends to seek her husband and extof t hush money from him,' but is prevented from so doing by Mrfdame X. who shoots hint with his own revolver in a struggle to keep him from betraying her She is arrested, and, having no mon ey. a lawyer (her own son) is appoint ed to defend her. The young man does not know bis mother, but his father, who has been invited to a seat with tlie justices on the bench, recognizes his wife. She is acquitted through the boy's pleading of her case, and ms fa ther tells him whom he has defended, but too late, as a greater Judge takes FULL OF SCABS What could lie inure pitiful than the condition told of in this letter from A K Avery. Waterloo, N Y : We have been using your Tetterine. *. It's the best on earth for skin ail ments. Mrs. S. C. Hart was a sight to see. Her face was a mass of scabs. Tetterine has cured it. Cured by Tetterine Tetterine cures eczema, tetter, ground itch, ringworm and all skin troubles. Its ■ ftect is magical 50c at drunglsts or by mall. SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH. GA. (Advt.» ■ 1 1 i I WUTOX JELLICO COAL ■ $4.75 Per Ton The Jellico Coal Co. I 82 Peachtree Street Both Phones 3668 her into His custody almost imme diately after the verdict is rendered. An excellent cotnpany supports Miss Blair. The production is identical with that seen at high prices last season. BIJOU HAS A FEATURE HEADLINER NEXT WEEK The Bijou announces for next week another good bill, offering as its head liner JDlck Thompson and company in his own playlet, entitled "Erin Go Bragh.” The company includes the Irish singing comedian, Dick Thompson, whose rendition of Irish songs will be a delightful feature of the act. Miss Maude Viny>n. the Irish beauty, will ap pear in charming costumes and will also sing. The other acts on the bill will be Austin & Carvfn, a singing and danc ing act: Cleary & Tracy in a bit of nonsense and Raphael Gualano, an Italian accordion soloist. Motion pictures, especially selected, will open and close each performance. Matinees are given daily at 3 o'clock, except Saturday, when two matinees are given at 2:30 and 4. Night shows at 7:30 and 9. ~ ■•--Ygjgk-.. fft-fei-wflK X Mr x \ R9w*wrk Mblßs?*sP¥ e\ \ My' | # Z r ■ Sks* 1 '<■''' ,-' ' il il / w / w / 7/ ' ’ J / ■ Eugenie Blair in “Madame X’’ at the Lyric next week. - Si A’-'i"' y '■ WpWf ■ i • xtM 1 ■ Ai • 1 >■ * ; Dow 7 . V Guess r I 1 tv’ • > U- - .KA- I in v I Buying Your I Corsets. Wear CORSETS I o Be Had Only at Keely s—s3.so to $12.50 Things Worth Remembering - . - There seems to be no limit to the in genuity of inventors. The latest novel ty is what a Paris contemporary terms "un berceur electrique.’’ The berceur is fixed to balance, and this is connect ed with a phonograph. As soon as the baby cries vibrating tablets of the ap paratus are set in motion, and these in turn affect the phonograph, emits a lullaby. The rotation of the cylinder causes the cradle to rock, and this pa cifies the baby. As soon as the baby's cries cease the cradle no longer rocks. By this means the domestic occupa tions of the mothe are not interrupted to look after the infant. French farmers find snail culture a profitable undertaking. As many as 500,000 •■fii.gt quality" snajls, the price of which throughout the year averages $2 per 1,000, can be reared on an acre of land. They have to be fed only once a day, preferably in the evening, and though extremely voracious, are by no means fastidious. After a fall of rain, which seems to sharpen their appetites, a bed of 100,000 will demolish a barrow load of cabbages in a very short space of time. A contractor with a head for figures and building estimates has worked out that the Cheops Pyramid, in Egypt, could not be duplicated sot less than $100,000,000. With modern machinery and the employment of 40,000 stone cutters, haulers, quarrymen, masons and laborers, a duplicate of the pyramid could be erected in two years. It has been calculated that the work really required the services of 100,000 men for 30 years. The Cheops Pyramid occu pies a space of twelve and three-quar ter acres, and is 746 feet high. A Rutiienian deputy. M. Baczynski. who began an obst uctionist speech in the Austrian parliament the oth<A night, sat down at 11:30 next day hav ing spoken fc -thirteen hours. A census of the Japanese empire is taken every five yea's Os the 3,000 languages and dialects on the earth, the Bible has been trans lated into 180. In Tasmania, an island off the coast of Australia, there are only a dozen Americans, of whom one is a mine manager and the others doctors and dentists. To protect their feet, geese reared at Bulpham, Essex, when driven to the various markets, are made to walk through sand and tar. thus forming "shoes.” In all fishing districts in England and Walts and in Ireland a license to fish for salmon is necessary, and in PAGE NINE J—MAGAZINE SECTION. most Eglish and Welsh rivers a license is also required for trout. King George pays income tax on his private estates. "Hymns, Ancient and Modern.” first appeared in 1860. Knives which smell of fish may be freed from the smell if rubbed with tea leaves before they are washed. A man of twenty in good health may expect to live 40 years longer: a man of 40, 27. On the Western railway of France, which is owned by the state, there is a deficiency exceeding $15,000,000 for the past fiscal year. During the last twelve months 1,118 girls between the ages of ten and six teen were reported missing by the Lon don Metropolitan police, and of these 1,102 were traced. "This seat is provided by the vicar for old people and children, and not for men who are born tired," is the in scription on a public seat which has just been placed in the pretty Sussex town of Midhurst. A man recently inserted the follow ing rather remarkable advertisement in a Halle (Westphalia) newspaper: “Re quired, house in the neighborhood of Haile: size, rent, situation, length of lease no object, provided the door is large enough to admit my wife’s new hat. Whfn bearing it she can not get through the door of my present resi dence." fwo men have been arrested in Vi enna for smuggling saccharin into Austria with the involuntary assistance of twenty performing cats. The cats at rived at the frontier in a large cagr. and. after being inspected, were passed as being destinted for a Vienna music hall. A message was afterward re ceived from the German customs in spectois to examine the cage closely. This was done when the animals ar rived in Vienna, and a large quantity of saccharin was found concealed under a false floor of the cage. A NOTRE DAME LADY’S APPEAL. To all knowing sufferers of rheumatism, whether muscular or of the joints. sc : - atica, lumbagos, backache, pains in the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to hei for a home treatment which has repeat edly cured alt of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all suffer ers FREE. You cure yourself at home a; thousands will testify -no change of cli mate being necessary. This simple dis covery banishes uric acid from the blood loosens the stiffened joints, purifies the blood and brightens the eyes, giving elas ticity and tone to the whole system. T the above interests you, for proof ad r* rnca Mr».M. Summers. Box R, Notrs Dame, Ini