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12
RINGING UP FATHER
BY GOLLY ~ JIGGS = YESAND | (T
| MAVEN'T SEEM YOU HAVEN'T HAD
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From Albany to Missouri
ALBANY, GA., Feb 18.-~John D. 1t
e, of Atlanta, will ship 86 head of Here
forde from his Powliston farm, near hurl-,1
8 the big round-up sale of Hereford cat- |
Be to be held at Kansas City March 3-6 '
e oattie will be londed here late this |
crnom and a big orowd s going 'uf
track Im anticipation of sceing the fin |
Wt collection of purcbred catthe over as-
THE HOME OF SCREEN SUCCESSES
R I g LT 0 Open Continuously
11 to 11 o'Clock
as ‘'The Lone Wolf"”
ALL in story jammed
with big moments.
——————————————————————————
Gripping Story of
Da.ngemEnmunwrwi“THE FALSE FAGES”
in Defeating Huns
——————————————————————
See ''THE LITTLE COLONEL" at His Best.
You Can’t
- Fool Atlanta
ATLANTA, HUNGRY FOR REAL ENTERTAINMENT, HAS
ADOPTED “THE HEART OF HUMANITY” AS ITS VERY OWN. IT’S
A GREAT SHOW AND ALREADY THE TALK OF THE TOWN —— THE
TOWN THAT NOBODY CAN FOOL TW.CE IN THE SAME PLACE.
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B e——
FOUR SHOWS DAILY '11:30 A.M, 2:30,5:30, 8:30 P-M.
SPECIAL MUSIC BY BIG SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
ALL SEATS ON SALE IN
ADVANCE
SAVE TIME-—BUY NOW
e e, et e e
THE ATLANTA GEOBGIAN - % Wow (. * __A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes Mmoo TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1919.
TELL ME - IVE ALWAYS J T .
1 WANTED TO KNOW (T Eop RYAN - THE
HOW YOU GOT
(P o ¢ RICHES T MAN IN TOwN
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sembled in Alhany,
The Litthe herds are all purebrod Hero
fords and have won numerous priges at
livestock fairs, and were highly praised
by the editor of The Hereford Journal,
who recontly made a visit to Albany for
the sole purpese of visiting this livestock
farm. The round-up sale in Kansas City |
will be under the auspices of the Ameri
can Hereford Cattle Breeders' Amsociation. |
HE PLOWS IN JANUARY, ‘
(By International News Service.) |
DES MOINES. IOWA. Feb. 17 —lowa
TU DOR
BEHOLD “Twe REC qu:}:;[: h
TODEAT wanln C'OA3UMEDI : //Z ‘
SomE. OF Tne LIQUID deM&@/ ~
AS 1T wERE NU 7/
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can boast of weather rivaling that of
California or Texas, say friends of
Charles F. Keeling, a member of the
Folk County Board of Supervisors.
Keeling went to his farm, near Amei
one day in the latter part of January
and with a gang plow plowed up four
teen acres of pasture land which he
thing unprecedented in the history of
needs for other purposes.
Old timers here say this is some
the Stats during the month of January
L SRAND |
Continuous | to 11 ¢ )
Afternoon 10.15 Night 10.20.50¢
JOSIE FLYNN
And Her Nis Minstrel M
5 Big Vaudeville Aots
Harold Lookwood The Great Remance
.¥. Keith lvnlc Daily 2:50
Y sudeville 7:30, 9:15
MARSHALL MONTGOMERY |
Always-welecome Ventrilogoist
Five Ldanis. Metor Boating |
and Others |
The best there is in vaodeville !
—Every Father
—Every Mother
—Every Mother's
—Bon and Daughter
—SEE--
“The Heart
of
Humanity”
The Picture That
Will Live Forever
No Seats Reserved-—But
Every Ticket Entitles
Holder to a Seat When Se.
cured in Advance.
Copyright 1918, International Feature Service, Lae.
Registered U. 8. Patent Office.
‘opyright, 1919, Newspaper Feature Service, Ine
Registered U. 8 Patent Office.
Jopyright 1918, Internatiomnal Feature Service, Ine.
licgistared U, B..patent Office.
GRRRRRRR |
GOTTA GET EuEN
ON THAT FOOR,
FLOSHIN' BOORB'
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"Heart of Humanity™ Moves
Qreat Audiences to Tears
By MARY PADGETT.
Tears wer started in the eyes of
ne and w er ike as they witnessed
the grim tragedies of war with its trail
{ of disrupted homes, broken hearts and
| splendid sacrifices a sportrayed in “The
|
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KN SUY ICOULDP:_;FN HELP :v "
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DALY —10:45, 12:05, 1:258, 2:45, 4:05,
0:25, 6:45, 8:08, 9:25.
he Most Benatiful Star in the
Movies,
M. D .
As the Salvation Army lLassie, in
THE BELLE of
NEW YORK
From the Masical Comedy Suaceess
Same Name
Fhe cast inclandes the famous Zieg
felds’ Beunuty Choras,
STRAND)
THE MISTRESS OF EMOTION
WHO THRIVES ON THRILLS,
Pauline
Frederick
PERILS LOVE I'OR (Ol NTRY IN
“The Woman
on the Index”
ALSO GALMONT WEERLY
AND CHRISTIE COMEDY
ATLANTA’'S BUSIEST THEATER
Biggest iltoll
Film Hits FORSYTH o'Clock
DOROIHY GISH
Griffith’s Famous Star; ‘The Little Disturber’’ of
‘‘Hearts of the World"’ and of Other Big Plays,
Helps Country €€ 99 Supported by
\Xn‘loig m BOOTS Cast of Stars
AL3O A BRIGHT SUNSHINE COMEDY
[ [ EVERY TIME HE MADEA [+
MILLION DOLLARS~HE GAVE |. .
ME A DIME - . ;~:
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‘* s\ QA AT Ay, / FIB
Heart of Humanity” which opened Mon
{day for a week's showing at the Tudor
Theater.
The story begins in a little Canadian
village where live Nanette, the ward of
Father Michael, and John one of fiva
sons of the Widow Patricia. News of
the beginning of the Great' War comes
on their wedding day and John leaves
{ his bride to enlist, with his brothers,
| in the couse of humanity.
Drawn to France by letters from her
hushand telling of the terrible condition
of they refugee Giildren, Nanette leaves
her l?t!e son with her mother-in-law
and takes up Red Cross welfare work
l:ummg the homeless French and Bel
gian children
Attacked by Hun,
While attempting to save her charges
from a village about to fall into the
hards of the Huns, Nanette is caught
by the advancing gray wave and is at
tacked in the Red Cross house by Lieu
tenant von Kberhard, whom her hus
band had known *in Canada as Oscar
Strang. She is rescued just in time
by her aviator-husband who has Just
escaped from a German prison, but not
il)efnre she had plunged a dagger into
ATLANTA THEATER
"Night onty. WED,, FEB. 19
HENRY W.SAVAGE
Offers The Elaborate Musical
Spectacle
b g)@”"’fi%%‘
‘l' RNQUESTIG U ,s,’
Seats Now on Sale,
Thur., Fri, Sat., Feb, 20-21-29.
Mutinee Saturday
R
N u'('w"véffl“.‘;»:s. tindacos -
R LT T L LSt
FRIENDL
ENEMIES
i APLAY FOR THE NATION
S 0 N DTN B P A
PRICES: Nights, 50¢ to $2.
Matinee, 50¢ to $1.50
Seats Now on Sale.
By George McManus
Pa Will Now Talk to Ma
Shrimp Is in Bad Todayl
her breast to escape Von Aberhard. She
later recoyers in a base hospital and is
demrated’vby the French military au
thorities for distinguished bravery. The
reuion of mother. father and son in
America is touching.
__ The fighting scemes depicted in “Thg
Heart of Humanity” are so realistic
that they might have been taken from
‘real episodes of the war. When the
boys go over ‘the top, closely following
and even merginf‘ into their barrage,
accompanied by the vicious little Brit
‘ish tank after a vigorous bombardment
o fthe German positions by big Cana
‘dian guns, the impression grgws that
here is real war!
} After seeing this picture, one is
moved to wonder what, after all, those
' of us who had no sons or brothers or
husbands or sweethearts directly en
| Fn:ed in the mighty struggle, have real
1y sacrificed? What those of us who did
~our bit with mere money, whether the
financier with his almost unlimited re
‘sources o rthe humblest scrub-woman
~who drank her coffee without sugar
‘thnt she might buy Liberty bonds, real
1y know about the horror of war What
those of us who know only the fellow
ship of the ciab or the fraternal order
really know about brotherhood as com
pared with comradeship in arms, in the
face of danger? What we know about
“ecarrying on”’ as eompared with those
who “Carried On” with smiles shining
through their tears?
No Mushy Pacifism.
. Despite its clear })nrtmyal of war as
it really is, “The Heart of Humanity'
is no appeal to mushy (Faviflsm. but a
¢larion call to manhood and strength
to rally to the cause of right. It is a
challenge to Amerleca to take stock of
herself; to put her house in order and
to use her powerr and influence over
mankind to see that these splendid sac
rifices of the men who sunk their all in
a holy cause shall not have suffered in
vain.
And that the sole result of the war
shall not be the mere addition to this
or that nation of a few more miserable
acres of land and a few more toil-worn
workers to tax; but that the hope of the
world, a Society of Nations, founded on
the eternal principles of humanity and
brotherhood shall emerge to make the
recurrence of the great tragedy now
fading into history an impossibility, :
60,000 ACRES OF TOBACCO. ‘
MACON, Feb, 18.—According to James
. Downing, Georgia "‘F club agent, who
wf‘a in Macon for a few hours today,
fifty counties in South Georgia are plant-
Ing a total of 0,000 acres in tobaceo this
year. This is in contrast with 6,000
acres put in tobacco in 1918, }
“It seems that South Georgia is Trent—
ly interested in this particular plant,’
declared Mr. Downing, ‘‘and has em
barked upon the production of It with
enthusiasm and on an extensive scale.”
JUDGE PAYS WOMAN'S FINE,
MACON, Feb. 18-—Judge DuPont
Guerry, of the Macon City Court, im
posed a fine of 1 cent on a defendant to
day, and then paid the fine himself
The novel punishment was Inflicted in
the case of Mary lLou Johnson, who was
convicteg of vagrancy. She had been
in jail for six months, and Judge Guerry
thought she had been sufficiently pun
ished. He had to inflict some “‘punish
ment,” however, and imposed a fine of 1
cent. When the defendant could not pay
the amount he produced a penny himself
and handed it to the clerk.
D i f E
T went to Johns Hopkine H:Onl I
went te several docters. | other
vmedios. | thought | weuld die. D.D. D
cured wme after | had given up all hope
te rm"fl well again on earth - Mre,
Emma Wise, 345 Franklia St Baltimors
We ourseives have seen D. D. D. beal v meny
cases of severe skin troabie that we kpow it
will help you too. In fact we guarastiee the
Srat bottle. Boc, Boc and §1 00
D. D. D.
Th, 2
L 5 Lotion for Skin Disease
IACOBS PHARMACY
KRAZY KAT
Atreme’) / Ves
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New Year's Eve Scene
‘ »
Features ‘Everywoman
“Everywoman,” Wednesday matinee and
night, and “Friendly Enemies,” for three
nights, beginning Thursday, with Satur
day matinee, are the week’s offerings at
the Atlanta Theater. Seats are now selling
for both.
Perhaps the greatest seeme in “Every
woman” is the wonderfully realistic repro
duction of Broadway at the approach of
midnight upon New Year's Eve. Upwards
0f 100 persons appear en masse. This
scene is the best achievement in modern
stage-craft, and perhaps, never before
have expenditurs in this bhalf been so lav
ish. “Evrywoman” is intended to delight
the eye, the senses and the soul.
Everywoman, portrayed by Paula Shay,
secks love as the greatest treasure life
POssesses. She leaves her hom in her
youth and blossoming bauty and goes out
into the by-ways of the world as many
another woman has done. She seeks love
through passion, through wealth, through
society, but finds in each case a shoddy
pretense, an alloy which mocks her first
purpose, and when her soul is bruised upon
the rocks of solid, ugly facts, she is led
by truth, ugly old truth, whom in her
y?th she despised, to find love at last
waiting for her at her hearthstone.
Every character in the play is symbelic
of some abstract virtue or vice or condi
tion with relation to the life of woman |
An entire symphony orchestra aceompan
ies the organization, which is Henry W
Savage's finest Mail orders are now be
ing receinved and filled in the order of
their reeceipt.
. . Y
Josie Flynn Minstrels
~ .
Feature Grand Bill
Josie Flynn, a clever little biack-face
comedian, has a company of singers and
dancers as good almost as can be found
anywhere. Her “1919 Minstrel Revue” is
the big attraction at the Grand the first
of the week. Unfortunately, however,
the management placed the best act as
the last number on the program Monday,
and those ever-present persons who find
it impossible to wait until an act is over
before rushing out, practicaily speiled the
performance for the rest of the audience
There are three dancers, as graceful
and pretty as any seen in Atlanta in a
long time. One of the big features of the
act is The Dixie Military Ball, Josie
Mynn and her blackface partner, furnish
!hg fun and jokes, 4
S R TT. ee,
Christie and Bennett have a whole trunk
ful of brand new omes. Here's a sample.
“Say can you tell me the meaning of this
word ‘propaganda’?”’ “Sure, I'll illus
trate. Your father has a farm. He has a
lot of geese, but there are no little gos
lins, because he hasn't the propaganda.’’
The Alvarez Duo perform wonderful
feats of skill upon a flying trapeze. Lowry
and Kathryn present ‘“The Razor Sales
ml:‘in- which barely comes up to the stand
ard,
Jimmie Britt, former lightweight cham
pion, gives the publie the opportunity te
look him over, and then recites a poem,
a very pathetic little thing. Aside from
the faet that it's Jimmie himself, who
does it, the act isn't a world beater. But
Jimmy's an old hero.
Harold Lockwood, a favorite always,
especially with the women, is featured in
“The Great Romance.” The plot is not a
new one, but the very presence and the
splendid acting of loekwood would maks
the picture interesting anyway.
Plenty of Novelty
. .
In the Lyrie Bill :
1 The bill at the Lyric for the first half
of the week lacks the usual wholesale sup
ply of comedy, but it presents a lot of
novelty that éntertained the audiences at
the opening performances Monday.
Marshall Montgomery, recognized as one
f the clevereat ventriloquists on the stage,
]N the headliner and scores a hit. He was
aided by a young woman, whose beauty
added much to the aot.
Billie Burke's ‘“‘Motor Boating” act,
‘bnnlln‘ into action a quartet of enter
tainers—two girls and two men——proved
pleasing, especially its series of clever im+
itations.
The Five Idanis pretty feminine equi
librists, Jrrnm-n(od an act that was thor
oughly ainty and was replete with re
markable features,
Zeno and “Manden appeared in a come
dy skit, and Cerve, a splendid accord
lonist, rendered a delightful series of se
lections, \
‘ . . y »
)Frzendly Enemies’ Hit
In East for 10 Years
“Friendly Enemies” has proven the hit
of the pust ten years in New York and
Chicago It comes here under the diree
tion of A. H. Woods. This comedy of
German American repentance and reforma
tion has taken the country by storm and
there seems no danger that it will lose
its popularity for a long time to ecome.
The theme of loyalty superimposed upon
German-American crackling dialect will
continue to have its appeal.
The cast being sent here by Manager
Woods fs a noteworthy one in every de.
tail and coming as it does at this time it
I 8 indeed most timely, .
FACES FEDERAL CHARGE, \
MACON, Feb. 18.-—Btate and Federal
charges have been brought us-.xinst John
MeKinney, a negro taxicab driver, who
s alleged to have driven an automobile
into a mail wagon at Clinton road nnd‘
Gray street, The mail wagon canght
fire and geveral letters were burned. Z.‘
H. Fitzpatrick, a mail “tirrier, was
hemmed in the wagon for several min
utes and narrowly escaped burning to
death. Pitzpatrick had an oil stove
and this ignited the wagon when the
automobile struck it
COOTIE SENT AS GIFT.
WAUKEGAN, ILL., Feb. 18.—There is
one less cootie in France and one more
in Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. David Rr
win have received from their son, Ser
geant Jack Erwin, a package contain
ing a cootie
Copyright 1918, International Ul '93IAJE Suny
Registered U, 8. Patent Office.
CAN"r'Vou‘ 5l
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e
WITH THE MOVIES,
Tuesday and Wednesday,
(‘RITEHI()N;—M&{ion Davies, im *The
Belle of New York,
RIALTO—Henry Walthall, in “The
False Faces.” i
TUDOR~—"The Heart of Humanity,”
STRAND—Pauline Frederick, in “The
Woman of the Index.”
FORSYTH—Dorothy Wish, in “Boots.*
VAUDETTE—Tuesday, Dorothy Daiton,
in “Quicksands.” Wednesday, Bthet
Clayton, in ‘““The Mystery Girl,”
ALAMO NO. 2—Tuesday, Olga Petrova,
in “Tempered Steel.” Wednesday, Corinne
Griffith, in *“Miss Ambition.”
SAVOY-—Tuesday, Madeloine Traverse, in
“The Danger Zone.” Wednesday, Tom
Mix, in “The Golden Thought.” 3
. .
Marion Davies Stars
. . .
In Criterion Film
In “The Belle of New York,” which im
being offered at the Criterion the first
three days so the week, Marion Davies
has the best role in which she has ever
appeared on the screen. Sh has a chance
for real acting and makes the most of
it ‘*“The Belle of New York,” which 'is
a film version of the big musical comedy
Success, i 8 givem elaborate production and
has many features which commend it to
patrons of the Criterion. One of these is
the introduction of the famous Ziefeld
beauty chorus, the New York produces
having loaned "the members of his eom
pany for several of the scenes. The musi~
cal numbers offered by the Criterion or~
chestra as especially good and add matere
ially to the presentation of the picture,
. N
Dorothy Gish in
. )
Boots” at Forsyth
If you were a slavey in a London Loarde
ing house, and your job was to take or
ders from every one who had lodging there
and if one of the boarders ordered you
to feed her pet mice, and you did, and
one of them got out of the cage, and ran
right at you—-—! Well, now, just what
would you do?
That is the situation that confronted
Dorothy Gish in “Boots,” her newest
Paramount picture, at the Forsyth. And
to make matters much worse Miss Gish
knew that the horrible camera was being
turned every second and that all the
attempts she might make to get away from
that mouse would be indelibly registered
on the film,
Walthall Great
‘ ’
In ‘False Faces :
It was a delighted audience that foltow
ed the fortunes of “The Lone Wolf” in
Thomas H. Ince's tremendous Paramount-
Artceraft special photoplay, ‘“The False
Faces,”” which had its premier at the Ri
alto Theater yesterday, and will be shown
again Tuesday and Wednesday along with
a new comedy Henry B, Walthall, as
Michael Lanyard, “The Lone Wolf,” who
has reformed and becomes an Allied in
telligence officer with a secret mission to
revenge himself upon a Hun who has
brought his wife and child to death, was
excellent and his portrayal was most artis
tic.
The story of “The False Faces” jg ab
sorbingly interesting., -
Strand Shows Big
.
Frederick Feature
Pauline Frederick, newly come under
the Goldwyn banner, makes her initial
Appearance at the Strand this week in
“The Woman of the Index.” The picture
is a typical Goldwyn production, finely
staged, admirably produced and highly in
teresting as to plot and development. The
Bolshevik problem enters into the story,
and is sure to awaken keen interest in
thope who see it. Miss Frederick takes
the part of a woman with g police record
whe, after a happy rnurrvniv, s made lie
able to betrayal at the hands of a police
official who desires to use her in introduc.
ing certain Bolshevik propaganda into this
country. The denouement is thrilling,
sttt ettt
“The stars incline, but do not comped, ™
HOROSCOPE,
TUESDAY, FERRUARY 18, 1879,
While Neptune and Venus are in benetie
aspect today, astrologers behold sinister
signs in the heavens, Mars and Jupiter
are strongly adverse, while Saturn, gler-
CIIJFY. Uranus and the Sun are all in ovit
places,
It 8 held that there will be a preat
Seothing of thought that affects all classes
of persons, during the next few weeks,
angf he who is wise will be stoadfast and
cofffident that the world (s slowly re.
covering from its supreme crisis,
Mars is still in a throatening place
that may affect business interests unless
co-operation in which every one is inter
ested is assuread,
The seers declare that the planetary
sway makes for uncertainty, furebodlm:
and perplexity, which should be overcome
by faith and courage.
This should be a fortunate direction foe
lawe affairs, which will multiply,
Again the stars seem to favor the
young and to presage retirement or the
ending of life for the old, for, a 8 the new
era advances, all that belong to the past
must give way,
Women should make good use of the
hours of this day, which Promises bene
fits in business undertakings,
Today's configuration is not auspiciowms
for seeking employment and the stars in
dicate that rumors which are discourag
ng will multiply, even though there is not
just cause for anxiety or dr-armndcmcy.
Much enterprise on a scale that nvolves
large interests is foreshadowed. New o
cupations and the development of hithertn
undiscovered resources are prophesgjed. .
Uranus is in a place this afternoon thast
is encouraging to scandalmongers and
trouble-makers, who should he cares)
however, for there is quick punishment
indicated.
Persons whose birth date i is should
not - waste time in pleasure op compay
during the coming yoear, Attention ¢
business will assure prosperity,
Children born on this day will be elover
artistic and accomplished. These oui
Jects of Pisces also partake of Aquarius
characteristics. Neoptune is thelr "prine;
pal ruling planet .
(Copyright. 1919, g Metdus RSI ed Sl . 40. a