Newspaper Page Text
6
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To Ward Off Winter
Complexion Ills
e e emeeee—————————————————————
Te keep the face smooth, whits unl“
reautiful all winter, there's nothing quits |
g 0 good us ordinary mercolized - wax.
Rough, chapped or discolored skin, inev
*table in this weather, is gently absorbed
By the wax and replaced by the newer,
iresher skin benssaih The face exhibits
o trace of the wax, the latter being ap
plied at dpedtime and washed off mornings
Creams, powders and rouges, on the other
hand, are apt to appear conspicuous at
tlis season, beecause of alternating expan
siom and’ contraction of the &kin, due to
changing temperatures. You are advised
to try this simple treatment. Get an ounc.
of mercolized wax at any drug store and
use like cold cteaom This will help any
vomplexion at once, and in A week or ao‘
the skin will look remarkably youthful anc
healthy.—Adv.
Dexter Washing Machine Co.
of Warren, Ohio
A Mr. B. I. Knapp, 603 Market
street, said: 1 had been going down
hill for fifteen months, and nothing I
did in the way of doctoring and tak
ing medicines did me any good. I
was a nervous wreck, and my family
and friends were alarmed for fear of
a physical collapse. We had heard so
much of Nu Vim, and I concluded to
take it, and did, and my improve
ment was wonderful. I was fearful
of its lasting qualities, as I had made
such rapid improvement. It Is now
eight months since I took my first
dose, and my health stays with me.
It is all medicine, and easy to take.
| can’'t express myself too strongly in
its favor. This statement | give un
dolicited, and the company has my
permission to publish it for the ben
efit of others.” Readers: Letters like
this are coming In daily, that it would
e impossible to publish them as fast
as received, and we select them from
different parts of the country so they
will be as near local as possible, and
f you can‘t get Nu Vim at your own
drug stores, or in your town, write
to Nu Vim Drug Company, Colum
bus, Ohio, and send SI.OO and 4 cents
war tax, and they will send you pre
patd one large bottle. On sale at Ja
cobe’ nine drug stores and all drug
gists —Adv,
MANY folks suffer from
IMPOVERISHED blood with
ITB tell-tale signs of pallid
OHEEKS and physioal
EXHAUSTION or from ;
FAMISHED nerve oells
AOCOCOMPANTED by loss of
APPETITE, sleeplessness,
LAOK of force and vigor—
WITHOUT knowing the real
AND true cause of their
TROUBLE. In all such cases,
A short course of Parto-Glory
IS recommended on account
OF its blood and nerve building
QUALITIES it contains the '
INGREDIENTS necessary to |
ENRICH the blood and {
RE-VITALIZE the worn out
NERVE cells and through its
UPBUILDING effect on the
WHOLE system it may quickly
GIVE you a sense of power
|
AND VIGOR such as you have |
NOT known for years. Parto- 1
GLORY has been used by run {
DOWN, weakened men and ,
WOMEN with amazing success l
FOR MANY years. So sure ‘
|
ARE the manufacturers that
i
THIS remarkable preparation |
|
WILL GIVE you renewed ]
STRENGTH and vitality that
THEY guarantee complete %
SATISFACTION to every |
|
PURCEASER or money |
REFUNDED. Parto-Glory is
SOLD only in concentrated
- FORM by all druggists.*
Advertisement. |
Fat Folks!
If You Want to Reduce Ten
to Sixty Pounds Easily and
Quickly, Read This.
Most fat people would like to enjoy
healthful, normal weight After ur
pleasant experiences with starvation
lieting, drastic drugging and tiresome
exercising, most of those burdened
with surplus weight give up hope of
ever finding relief,
At last a home treatment has beer
evoived, which is 80 simple that some
may doubt its efMieacy for that reason
vone. But don't pass judgment unti
u know more
A very easy requirement of this
nique system of fat reduction is that
1 take ten deep breaths each morn
ng and evening in the open air or
tanding by an open window. Take
ue ofl of korein capsule after eac!
N and Dbefore retiring at night;
v {ollow the other simple directions
t come with the capsules.
This treatment often shiows a no
esble reduction in a very few days.
nuistent use should greatly ime
¢ general health, overcome
css and reduce your weight
I Beautify figure; add to
o nd efliciency; become genu
appy! The 01l of korein cap
na be obtained at the drug
» ' siore. It iz ecertainly a happy feeling
’ } lithe, natural ".riy'* Adv
THE ATLANTA GEUKGIAN
“POLLYANNA.”
(At Atlanta Theater Tenight.)
Pollyanna, the play of good cheer, has
been heartily welcomed everywhere. It is
umyversally called the ‘glad play,’ and
when a stage performance justifies shat
tigle it’ is obvious that It has been
weighed and not found wanting. The
¢pither “glad’”’ means a lot when rightly
used and in this case, it seems to be per
tinent.
The story, in a nutshell, is abowut a lov
able girl, who, quite uncoefsclously, through
sheer personality and quaint philosophy,
thaws out a community where the milk
of human kindness has become pretty well
frozen. Bhe knits up a raveled romance
of her elders, and feels the thrill of her
own Joyous first love.
“Most genarally there is someéthing about
everything that you can be glad about,
if you keep hunting long enough to find
it That sums ugl the spirit of ‘‘Polly
anna,’”’ a play o merry quality and
cheerful sentiment. Viola Harper, who
pergonifies the gentls heroine of the sun
ny play, is hoth charming and econvineing,
and the other characters are mnaturally
presented by George Aligon, Garland
Gaden, Mary Hampton, Helen Gurney,
Katherine Rober, Fanny D. Hall, Gertrude
Rovers, A. W. ¥, Mac Collin, Harold Mc-
Arthur, William Blalsdeil and Charles 8.
Turner.
The vogue of “Pollyanna” and its glad
gpirit has spread to uplift social, trade,
and ethical circles, so that its “sunny up”
suggestion ls used to Interest and explain
‘many purposes outside of the theater,
Glad Clubs, Glad Puzzles, Glad Cults,
Glad Sundaes, (ilad Dolls with the Polly
anna label of promotion are heard and
read about In a durn experience. ¥ven
pulpits have been given up to discussion
of the “Pollyanna Treatment.” All of
which means that the cheery gospel of
Kleanor H. Porter's widely appealing play
will keep the lamps burning brightly and
leaye a world of jfoyful thoughts long
after it has finished its engagement at the
Atlanta Theater which begins tonight and
continues for the balance of the week,
with the usual Saturday matinee. There
will be a special matines on Friday at 2
p. m. for the benefit of the Actors’ Fund
of America.
AT LOEW'S GRAND.
The new bill at Loew's Grand today
brings in addition to several novelty acta,
another miniature musical comedy ‘‘Mar
ried via Wireless,” as the headliner.
“Married via Wireless” is presented by the
Pollard Musical Company, six people, and
f« termed a nautical musical comedy. It
\s #aid to be the most elahorate mechani
enl secenic production In vaudeville, num
bers of startling electrical effects being
used. The company includes talented mu
siclans who entertaln with comedy, t‘yna
;ul songs and “‘smappy’ dancing um
ors.
The popular musical comedy star, Jonsle
Reed, is also on the bill. Her charming
gowns and her manner of putting over tha
‘;opullr songs of the day, always make
er & welcome attraction on any program.
Other features are the Three Gregorys
In ‘“Noveity Land.” Pearl Abbott and
company in *“Silver Threads” and Gray
and Kilumker in musical specialties. On
the sereen Madelaine Traverse is starred
in “Lost Money.” ¢
AT THE LYRIC.
Pirmingham néwspaper critics are en
thusinstice over the mew bill which
opens at B. F. Keith's Lyric with the
Thursday matinee, The eminent vieliniat,
Hae Eleanor Ball, is featured in top po
sition. This s Miss Ball's first appear
anee in Atlants since she headlined a bill
at the Forsyth. She is assisted by her
brother who also I 8 & musician of note
Rix people, most of them sprightly girls,
are starred in “Around the Map,” a lively
musical comedy on the bill The Four
Pals will offer something new in mirth
and music. Demarest and Doll will ap
pear in a nifty song and dance turn and
Joerome and Newell will qualify as unusual
comediang. 4
CRITERION--Norma Talmadge, in “The
Isle of Congueat ™
RIALTO—"The Eyes of the World."”
TUDOR—Eric Von Stroheim, in “Blind
Husbands."
STRAND-—Enid Bennett, in “What
Every Woman Learns.'
VAUDETTE —Billle Burke, in ““The Mis
leading Widow."
FORGYTH-—Ethel' Clayton, in *“More
Dudly Than the Male,"”
SAVOY—Dustin Farnum, In ““The Man
in the O&en.“ 7
ALAMO No. 2—June Caprice and Creigh
ton Hale, in ‘““The Love Cheat.”
‘ 3 ’
Blind Husbands
At the Tudor
The famous old mission of St. Bernard
in the Tyrolean Alps, from whence the St
Bernard dogs are known the world over,
is used to good advantage in the photo
drama, “Blind Husbandg,” which s stitl
drawing tremendous ocrowds to the Tudor
in its second week.
While the scenes of “Blind Husbands”
are laid in Europe and the principal char
acter is a libertine Austrian lieutenant, all
the action transpires before the world war
and it {s not in any sense a war picture
Rather is it a pitiless expose of the man
who neglects his wife and of the sort of
“love vultures” who prey on the purity
and happiness of women. ”
Erie &trohelm, playing the villain's rale. |
iy one of the most repellent and at the
same time one of the most fascinating
characters eves seen on a local screen
They eall him “the Satan of the screeh,
and everyone who has seen “Blind Hu»n
hands” at the Tudor will agree that the
title fits him. 1
. ’
Male and Female |
,
Here Next Week
The Rialto next week will have the lat
est and greatest of the Cecil DeMille pro
‘duotions, “Male and Female,” screensd
from the famous play, “The Admirabic
Crichton,” by J. M. Barrie, and the only }
Barrie play ever permitted by the author
to be shown in picture form--Mr, Barrie's
permission having been granted after he |
saw one of the tremendous DeMille pro~‘
ductions. i 4
It !a needlosd to recommend any DeMille
picture te the Atlanta public. And the
two leading actors also are well known
here—Thomas Meighan, star of “The M
racle Man,” and the bsautiful Gloria Bwan
sgn, star in “Don’t Change Your Husband"”
and “For Better—For Worse, " |
In this ramarkable play, an aristoeratic
|nml snobbish British family and somn
| oqually snobbish friends are cast away on
A desert island. The supposed leader of
| the party falls down completely when cong
fronted with natural ‘wrlln and conditionsS
and in the pinch the Butler, Crichton, steps
to the front amgl assumes the leadership
' because he is & real man and a real leader,
. As absolute monarch of the little King
idnm. Crichton is loved™ 0¥ the Lady Mury
and by the maid, Tweeny, who are on nh
selutely equal terms. In a stupendous
though hrief series of wscenes, the glories
| of ancient Babylon are portraved as the
former butler reminds Lady Mary of wha!
| they miight have been—and then comuos
rescue and a veturn to oivilization, with its
artiffcial standards, What does the butler
do then? Does the Lady Mary still love
him? And Tweeny?
i ll‘h¢e golution is worthy of a very great
play |
|
Norma Talmadge
. .
At the Criterion |
‘ Norma Talmadge, the talented screen
’flur. has never appearsd to hetter advan.
| tage than she does in the chie! role of
“The Isle of Conguest,” which is attraet.
| Ing crowds to the Criterion this week. Ro
{mance, adventure and a charming love
|#tory are outstanding features of this great
picture The Criterlon Orchestra, an
| Amusing Mutt and Jeff comedy and Fox
Newn are other features on the program
$ . ’
Ethel Clayton Is ‘Deadly’.
'~
‘At the Forsyth
Opening at the Forsyith teday for the
rest of the week, Miss Ethel Clayton may
b en by her admirers in one of her
most unusual plays, u« new Paramount-Art
eraft production based on the poetie state.
ment by Rudyard Kipling that the female
of the spaciea is “More l\nul\y Than the
| Male Miss Clayton in this ¥iay is called
{on ‘“' prove Mr. Kipling is right—and she
does 1.
| The play itself is an odd one. Your fire*
idea of Miss Clayton as Heélen O'Hara (s
vampirieal in the extrame. To &ll appear
ances, Helen, a married woman, is vamp
ing Richard Carlin furiously-—-and >ather
getting by with it, for she inducea Richard
to give up u loug, long journey he is cone
templating
The situation works up into a duel,
which the supposed I\un%vxnd of Helen ‘s
wounded, Things grow worse rapidly, and
Just. a& you ean't see any way out of the
plotw-bang —and a grim melodrama sud
denly switches to a rorcate and happy
ocomedy of a distinctly romantic type, It'a
all wery Geftly presented by & small but
select oast, (naluding Bdward Hoxen, Mo
EYESOF YWOREL) l
PACKING RIALTO
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9 ! SEeN R o N(T o R b o 4 {f 3
“Eyes of the World"” Harold Bell Wright's remarkable photoplay, is
proving a ’uat sensation at the Rialto, and the theater is being packed
by movie fans at every showing. i
The management of the Rialto has announced the picture positively
will remain here only three more days, and those who wish to see it are
advised to “go early and avoid the rush.”
ik & St e
bert Hayes, Hallam Cooley and Peggy
Pearce. ¢
Miss Clayton wears some.royal gowns in
the play, including one composed entirely
of animal skins, which is said to ‘po set
ting a new fashion with the desighers of
women's apparel,
A Briggs comedy runs with the feature
pieture.
.
Enid Bennett at |
The Strand N ;
Amy Fortesque gives som& s xceptional
opportunities a¥ a role for Miss Enid Ben
net in her new Paramount-Arteraft pleture ‘
at the Btrand today and the rest of the |
week-—Amy, taught by her gay old grand- |
father to live for galety along, marrying |
the gayest man of her acquaintance; dh«-l
covering him to he g fearful rotter; un‘l‘
learning the grimmest kind of a lesson as |
the plot unfalds in "“"What Vvery Woman |
Learns.” |
Amy h(;! a good friend, of whom the |
hushand (& ingancly jeatous. Amy is ma«h-{
to act as an unconscious accomplice in lur- ‘
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' d di‘fi“]_,' ‘,rh ,
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neglect ‘the- Liver”:
¥ i i ~'l\‘.‘T’" NG A N A by i
“A coated tongue indicates the need
of calomel.”" —Mr. Aaon.
Liver
Tablets
“Axon Your liver” ’
Bring the bloom back to sallow cheeks and color to the
coated tongue by stimulating the liver to its normal functions.
\'eglflfl}‘lc i'n_crc‘lu-nls act as a purge and sweep the Jr‘us
from the system.
At your druggists’—2s¢ a box,
AXON MEDICINE COMPANY
Atlanta '
S 0
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G U ORN R
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\ G'irls! Your hair needs a little “Danderine”—thats all! When
it becomes lifeless, l‘hm' or loses its lustre; when ugly dandruff
appears, or }\"gur h;u.r m'ns out, a 35-cent bottle of delightful,
dependable “Danderine” {rom any store, will save vour hair,
g it's s g ¢ * . .
also double it's beauty. You can have nice. thick hair. too.
A Liwean (vewspaper 10or dDouLnern raomes
ing the friend to his intended death at the
hands of the husband, and a terrible scene |
takes place in which both the friend and
the husband are shot, the latter by Amy
herself. The friend gets well, and the hua
band does not—and Amy has learned well
the lesson that pleasure and gaiety are not
all of life.
A Gaumont Graphie and ‘“‘Amhrose's
Bungle Bungalow,” a comedy, are on the
same bill.
17
Billie Burke ‘
At the Vaudette ba
]
Today Is your last chance to see “The ‘
Misleadlng Widow"” at the Vaudette, with
Miss Billle Burke doing the misleading to}
the kin's taste, She does some scandalous ‘
things in this pieture, sending herself a
telegram that ler avsent hushband is dead, 1
0 she c¢an collect "his insurance, and all |
sorts of things. Temorrow Dorothy Dal- |
ton comes to the Vaudette in ‘“The Markat
of Souls,” with two ather pictures, Town
Topics and a Sennett comedy, “Ladies |
First.”” Restivo, the accordionist, plays at |
every performance. 4
Macon Seeks Larger
| .
| - Budget for Rivers
‘ MACON, Dec, 4—While the Rivers
'and Harbors Committee of Congress
i nas recommended that $51,000 he ex
| pended improving the Ocmilgee ard
{ Altamaha Rivers,” the appropriation
gls not regarded as half large enough
|and during next year an effort will
be made to have three times this
amount appropriated. The Altamaha
River Improvement Association, com-
The Lowry National
All deposits made before Decem
ber 6th draw interest from Decem
ber Ist, payable January Ist, 1920.
SI.OO Starts An Account.
Savings Department Closes ¢ P. M.
The Lowry National Bank
~ Pryor and Edgewood
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A7kl L ISR
Ty o R T RR B e R e T
Opportunities For Young Women
in Telephone Work
: !
The Bell Telephone Company needs a large number of young women to
serve as telephone operators in Atlanta and to acquire a training that will qualif
them for supervisory positions. .
3 Young women who hesitate about entering telephone work because they are
ambitious to be leaders in whatever profession they enter, should bear in mind that
one out of every nine women in our service occupies a supervisory position. .
These .positions are supervisor, assistant chief operator, chief operator and in
structor. In an exchange like Atlanta these positions pay from 865 to $l5O per
month. j
To acquire the skill and knowledge to qualify for one of these places it is
necessary for the young woman to have the training and experience which can be
developed only through actual work at the switchboard.
Women have equal opportunities with men in the Bell System. There is
equal pay for men and women under like conditions as to ability and perform
ance, except where a man may get more pay because he is being trained for a job
a 2 woman cannot handle.
The opportunities for advancement for women who enter telephone work are
equal to those in other professions to which women are adaptable.
We need high-grade, ambitious young women whe are not content to serve
alwavs at the switchboard, but who have a serious purpose to learn a profession
and rise to the higher positions. "
Women of superior education need not hesitate about entering telephone
work. Their advancement and remuneration will be measured by their ability,
as is attested by the many college women now in Bell Telephone service.
The conditions under which telephone work is done are ideal. The operating
rooms are clean, well ventilated, well lighted and well heated.
"The rest rooms are attractive and comfortable. The dining rooms are bright
spots of cleanliness, and the kitchens are among the most sanitary in Atlanta.
The food is of the best quality, daintily served at less than actual cost.
Well known and experienced women act as matrons and devote their effort
toward safeguarding the health and comfort of the young women.
Annual vacations are given with full pay, and there is protection from finan
cial loss in case of sickness. .
You salary begins when your application is accepted and you report for
duty. ‘ i
Visit one of the exchanses with yor mother or friends-and investigate the
work and surroundings and then apply to Miss Nell Prince, 25 Auburn Avenue,
for enrollment in our next trainine course.
; ‘/ 373
Southern Bell Telephone / _
and Telegraph Company. (&2,
THUNRSUAY, DEUEMBRK 4, 1919,
posed of shinpers of Macon and points
along the river from Macon to the
tidewater, has been organized. .
The object of the association is to'
promote navigation. A party of
United States engineers visited Ma
con a few weeks ago apd made an
inspection trip dowg the . river from
Macon to Brunswick. They were
sent here from Washington by the
Rivers and Harbors Committee. The
exact nature of their report is not
known.
Wanted At Once!
Boys as Bundle Wrappers,
Cash Boys and Cashiers
Apply immediately
J. M. High Co.
We Do What
We Promise
what we KNOW we can do.
You may always come to us,
confident you will get the best
work at .the LOWEST
PRICES. 2
Palace
Dental Rooms
S 5 W. Alabama St.
Phone M, 1946.
Open Daily 8 to &
‘B§ A : '.‘
o LT
| Made and Delivered Same Day.
' Set of Crown
“$5 T $3
Teeth Bridge
Silver @ Gold $
Filling $1 Filling 2
OLD PLATES l t
made like new o
All other work low in prepertion
and all work GUARANTEED.