Newspaper Page Text
6
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To Ward Off Winter
. r
Complexion I
e e ————————————————
Ts keep the Yzco smooth, white and
veautiful all winter, there's nothing quite
e good as ordinary mercolized wax.
iteugh, chapped or discolored skin, inev
table in this weather, is gently absorbed
by the wax and replaced by the newer,
fresher skin beneath, The face exhibits
ne trace of the wax, the iatter being ap
plied at bedtime and washed off mornings.
i'reams, powders and pouges, on the other
hand, are apt to appear conspicuous at
this season, because of alternsating expan
wien and contraction of the skin, due to
hanging temperatures. You are advised
ta try this simple treatment. Get an ounce
of mercolized wax at any drug store and
ise like cold cream. This will help any
complexion at once, and in a week or so
the skin will look remarkably youthful and
nealthy. ——Adv.
Dexter Washing Machine Co,
of Warren, Ohio
A Mr. B. 1. Knapp, 602 Markot
treet, 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 friende were alarmed for fear of
» physical collapse. We had heard so
much of Nu Vim, and I concluded to
take it, and did, and my improve
ment was wonderful. 1 was fearful
of its lasting qualities, as I had made
such rapid improvement. It is now
ojght months since I took my first
dose, and my health stays with me.
It is all medicine, and easy to take.
[ ean’t express myself too strongly in
its favor. This statement 1 give un
solicited, and the company has my
permission to publish it for the ben
efit of others,” Readers: Letters like
thig are coming in daily, that it would
be impossible to publish them as fast
a 8 received, and we select them from
different parts of the country go 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
paid one large bottle, On sale at Ja
vobs’ nine drug stores and all drug
gists —Adw,
MANY folks suffer from
IMPOVERISHED blood with
ITB tell-tale signs of pallid
OHEEKS and physical
EXHAUSTION or from
FAMISHED nerve cells
ACCOMPANIED by loss of
APPETITE, sleeplessness,
LACK of force and vigor—-
WITHOUT knowing the real
AND true cause of their
TROUBLE. In all such cases,
A short course of Parto-Glory
I 8 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-
GLORY has been used by run
DOWN, weakened men and
WOMEN with amazing success
FOR MANY years. So sure
ARE the manufacturers that
THIS remarkable preparation
WILL GIVE you renewed
STRENGTH and vitality that
THEY guarantee complete
SATISFACTION to every
PURCHASER or money
REFUNDED. Parto-Glory is
SOLD only in concentrated
FORM by all druggists
Fat Folks!
I You Want to Reduce Ten
* .
to Sixty Pounds Easily and
. .
Quickly, Read This.
Most fat people would like to anjoy
healthful, normal weight After un
pleasant experiences with starvation
Heting, drastic drugging and tiresome
exercising, most of s¢ burdened
with surplus weigl give up hope of
aver finding rellet
At last a me treatmen 1& been
swolved, which . SiMmpie il some
miay doubt its eff ) wr that reason
alone. RBut n't pass judgment until
ou know mo
A very easy requirement f this
unique gystem of fat reduction is that
you take ten deep breaths each morn
thg and evening in the open air or
standing by an open window Take
one oil of korein capsule after each
meal and before retiring at night;
also follow the other simple directions
that come with the capsules
This treatment often shows a no
jeeable reduction in a very few days
its consistent use shouald greatly in
yrove the general healtl vercome
slugrishiness ar reducst our weight
o nm‘g- HBeautify figure add to
.uai:‘(:m-; efficiency: become genu
inely Rappy! The oil of korein cap
sules may be obtained at the drug
Store, n u mfllnli' a hlgzz m!&s
THE ATLANTA GYORGIAN
t
. “POLIYANNA.”
(At Atlanta Yheater Tenight.)
Pallyanna, the play of good cheer, has
been heartily wélcomed everywhere. It is
universally cailed the “glad play,” and
when a stage ?nr{ormnnce Justifies that
clle it is obvious that it has been
weighed and not found wanting. The
epither “glad” means a lot when rightly
used and In this case, it seems to be per
tinent.
The story, in a nutshell, is about a lov
able girl, who, quite unconsciously, through
sheer personality and quaint philesophy,
thaws out a oommun!t( where the milk
of human kindness has become pretty well
frozen. 'She knits up a raveled romance
of her eclders, and feels the thrill of her
own joyous first love.
“Most generally there is something about
everything that you can be glad about,
if you keep hunting long enough to find
it."” That sums up the spirit of “Polly
annn,’”’ a play of merry quality and
cheerful sentiment Viola Harper, who
personifies the gentie heroine of the sun
ny pu{. is both charming and convincing,
and the other characters are naturally
presented by George Alison, Garland
Gaden, Mary Hampton, Helen Gurney,
Katherine Rober, Fanny D). Hall, Gertrude
Rovers, A. W. ¥, Mac Collin, Harold Mc-
Arthur, William Blaisdell and Charles 8
Turner
The vogue of “Pollyanna” and its glad
epirit has spread to uplift secial, trade
and ethieal circles, so that its “sunny up”
suggestion ls used to interest and expiain
many purposes outside of the theater
Giad Clubs, Glad Puzzles, Glad Culta,
Glad Sundaes, Glad Dolls with the Polly
anna label of promotion are heard and
read about In a day's experience. HEven
pulpits have beem given up to discussion
of the “Pollyanna Treatment.” All of
which means that the cheery gospel of
Kleanor H. Porter's widely upgullnr play
will keep the lunr burning brightly and
leave a world o ryful thoughts long
after 1t 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 ‘ Tclnl matinees 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 noveity acts,
another miniature musical comedy “Mar
ried via Wireless,”” as the headliner.
“Married via Wireless” is presented by the
Pollard Musical Company, six people, and
ja termed a nautical musical comedy. It
is sald to bp the most elaborate mechani
cal scenic production in vaudeville, num
bers of startling electrical effects being
used, The company includes talented mu
siclans who entertain with comedy, tune
ful songs and “swappy’”’ dancing num
bera.
The popular musical comedy star, Jessls
Reed, f 8 nlso on the bill. Her charming
gowns and her manner of putting over the
popular songs of the day, always make
her a welcome attraction on any program.
Other features are the Three Gregorys
tn “Novelty Land.” Pearl Abbott and
company in “Sfiver Threads’' and Gray
and Klumker in musical specialties. On
the soreen Madelaine Traverse s starred
fn “Lost Money."
AT THE LYRIC.
Birmingham newspaper critics are en
thusiastice over the mnew bill which
opens at B. F. Keith's Lyric with the
Thursday matinee. The eminent violinlst,
Rae Bleanor Ball, is featured in top po
gition. This 18 Miss Ball’'s first appear
ance in Atlanta since she headlined a bill
at the Forsyth. Bhe !s assisted by her
brother who alse i a musician of note. }
Kix people, most of them sprightly T‘fl."
are starred in “Around the Map,"” a lively
musical comedy on the bill. The Four
Pals will offer something mnew in mirth
and music. Demarest and Doll will ap
pear in & niftv song and dance turn and |
Jerome and Newell will qualify as unusual :
| :j
!
{
i _
CRITERION -~Norma Talmadge, i “The
Isle of Conguest'
RIALTO-~'“The Eyes of the World."”
TUDOR-~Erie Von Stroheim, in ‘“Biind
HGsbanas.'
STRAND-~Enid Behnett, in ““What
Every Woman Learns.'
VAUDETTE--Billté Burke, in “The Mis
leading Widow,"
FORSYTH-—Kthel Clayton, in ‘More
Deadly Than the Male,"
SAVOY-—Dustin Farpum, in ‘“The Man
in tf\e Open."”
{ ALAMO No. 2—June Caprice and Oreigh
| ton Hale, in “The Love Cheat”
14 : ’
Blind Husbands :
At the Tudor
The famous old mission of Bt Bernard
in the Tyrolean Alps, from whence the St
Bernard dogs are known the world. over,
i used to good advantage in the photo
drama, “Blind Husbands,’”” which is stil
drawing tremendous crowds to the Tudo:
in its second week.
While the scenes of “Blind Husbands'
are laid In Burope and the principal char
| acter is a libertine Austrian lieutenant, all
| the sction transpires before the world war
and it {s not in any sense & War picture.
| Rather is it p pitiless expose of the man
Swhn neglects his wife and of tho sort of
! “jove vultures'” who prey on the purity
{ and happiness of women
Erie Stroheim, playing, the villain's role,
is one of the most repellent and at the
same time ope of (he must [ascinating
characters ever keen on a tocal sereen.
They call him 'the Satan of the screen,’”
and everyone in‘m has seen “'Blind Hus
‘l\muln" at the Mudor will agroe that the
| title fits him, 1
. 2
Male and Female
Here Next Week
The Rialto next week will Have the lat
est and greatest of the (Cecil DeMille pro
ductions, “"Male and Female,” screened
from: the famous play, "“The Admirabic
Crichton,” by J. M. Barrie, and the only
Barrie play ever permitted by the author
to be shown (n plcture form-—Mr, Barrie's
permission having heen granted after he
saw one of the tremendous DeMille pro
ductions
It is needless to recommend any DeMille
picture to the Atlanta public And the
two leading anctors also are weall known
here-~Thomas Meighan, star of “The M
racle Man,” and the beautiful Gloria Swan
son, star In "Don't Change Your Husband'
and “For Better—For Worse.'
In this ramarkable play, an aristocratic
and snobbish British family and somse
aqually snobbish friends are cast away on
A desert islund., The supposed leader of
the party falls down completely when con
fronted with natural perils and conditions,
and in the pinch the hutler, Crichton, steps
to the front aml assumes the leadership
because he is 4 real man and & rea! leader
As absolute monarch of the little king
dom, Crichton is loved by the Lady Mary
and h{ the maid, Tweeny, wiio are on ab
solutely equal termia. In & stupendous
though brief series of scenea, the glories
of ancient Babylon are portrayed as the
former butler reminds Lady Mary of wha\
they might have bheen—and then comes
rescue and & return to clvilization, with its
artificial standards, What does the butler
do then? Does the Lady Mary still leve
him? And Tweeny?
™e solution {8 worthy of a very great
play .
T
Norma Talmadge
Nk ba ik
At the Criterion
Normas Talmadge, the talented screen
star, hias never appeared to hetter advane
tage than she does in the chief role of
“The Isle of Conguest,” whigh is attrset.
ing crowds to the Criterion this week. Ro
mance, adventure and a charming love
story are outstanding features of this great
pleture The COriterion Orchestra, an
amusing Mutt and Jeff comedy and Fox
News are other features on the program
O ™ ‘ ,
Ethel Clayton Is ‘Deadly
1
At the Forsyth
Opening. at the Faorsyt} today for the
rest of the week, Miss Ethel Clayton may
be seen by her admirers in one of her
most unusual plays, s new Paramount-Art.
craft production bascu on the poetic state
ment by Rudyard Kipling that the female
of the species is “More Deadly Than the
| Male.” Miss Clayton in this play is called
on to prove Mr. Kipling is right-——and she
does 1t \
. The play itself {8 an c4d one. Your first
idea of Miss Clayton as Helen O'Hara is
vampirical in the extrame To all appear.
ances, Helen, & married woman, is vamp
ing Richard Carlin furlously And rather
getting by with it, for she induces Richard
fto give up a long, long journey he g cone
templating.
The situution works ujg nto a dye in
which It} supposed husband of Helen ‘a
wounded Things grow worse rapidly, and
Just as you ean't sev any way out of the
l;\!M-— beng!~and a grim melodrama sud
La.my awitches to a roseate and happy
comedy of a distinetly romantic type. gt’a
B¥ES OF Wit
PACKING RIALTO
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5: i O
“Eyes of the World” Harold Bell Wright's remarkable phctoplay, is
groving a yroat sensation at the Rialto, and the theater is being packed
y movie fans at every showing.
The managemant 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.” :
bert Hayes, Hallam Cooley and TPeggy
Pearce.
Miss Clayton wears some royal gowns in
the play, Including one composed entirely
of animal skins, which is said to be set
ting a new fashion with the dvs|vers of
women's apparel.
A Briggs comedy runs with the feature
picture.
.
Enid Bennett at |
The Strand |
Amy Fortesque gives some exceptional
{ opportunities as a rele for Miss Enid Ben
net in her new Paramount-Arteraft plelure
'at the SBtrand today and the rest of ¢
woek--Amy, taught by her gay old granda
i father to live for gaiety alone: marrying
. the gayest man o? her acquaintafice; dis
| covering him to be a fearful rotter; and
learning the grimmest kind of a lesson as
the plot unfolds in “What Every Woman
Learns,”
Amy has a good friend, of whom the
husband (8 insanely jealous. Amy is made
to act as an unconscious accomplice in lur
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“A coated tongue indicates the need
of calomel.”'—Mr. Aaon.
Liver
Tablets
' “Axon Your liver”
ul‘lns; the bloom 1‘11« k to sallow ¢ 'he("l-'\ mui « nl-»r to the
coated tongue by stimulating the liver to its normal functions
Vegetable ingredients act as a purge and sweep the druy
om the system
At your druggists’—2s¢ a box
AXON MEDICINE COMPANY
Atlanta '
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il )
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: :‘ :‘-’;m ‘ .A...,«\\»‘ x‘\“'\_‘ (: f & a«v.. S
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! Cam N P "
] Girls! Your hair needs a little “Danderine”—that’s all! When
| 1t becomes lifeless, thin or loses ¥s lustre: when agly dandruff
' appears, or your hair falls out, a 35-cent bottle of delightful,
| -dependable “Danderine’ from any store, will save your hair,
I | “ .l, I | Y I sea _gbich 4
A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes
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 hus
band does not—and Amy has learned well
the lesson that pleasure and gaiety are not
all of life.
A Gaumont Graphic and ‘‘Ambrose's
Bungle Bungalow,” a comedy, are on the
same bill. X ¥
| . .
’Bllhe Burke
' At the Vaudette
’ Today is your last chance to see ‘‘The
| Misleading Widow” at the Vaudette, with
| Miss Billie Burke doing the misleading to
the kin's taste. She does some scandalous
| things in this picture, sending herself u
| telizram that her absent husband is dead,
|BO slio can collect his insurance, and all
gorts of things. Tomorrow Dorothy Dal
ton come s to the Vaudette in “The Markat
of Souls,” with two other pictures, Town
Topics and a Sennett comedy, “Ladies
First.” Restivo, the accordionist, plays at
every performance,
Macon Seeks Larger
Budget for Rivers
MACON, Dec, 4—While the Rivers
and Harbors Committee of Congress
hag recommended that $51,000 he ex
pended improving the Ocmulgee and
Altamaha Rivers, the appropriation
is not regarded as half large enougl
and during next year an effort will
be made to have thrée timeg 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.
gl
31
Savings Department Closes 4P, M.
The Lowry National Eank
Pryor and Edgewood
i X -." ; L[| . [ i
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-. : 7
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 2 training that will qualify
them for supervisory positions.
2 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 positidns are supervisor, assistant chief operator, chief operator and in
structor. In an exchange like Atlanta these positions pay from s£6s to $l5O per
month. ‘
To acquire the skill and knowledge to qi«!ify 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 pcrforfn
ance, except where a man may get more pay because he is being trained for a job
a 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 who are not content to serve
always 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 rosms are bright
spots of cleanliness, and the kitchens are among the most sanita.y in Atlanta.
The food is of the best quality, daintily served at less than aciual 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 o” sickness. : :
You salary begins when your application is accepted and you report for
duty.
Visit one of the exchanges with your mother or friends and investigate the
work and surroundings and then apply to Miss Nell Prince, 25 Auburn Avenue,
for enrollment in our next training course.
Southern Bell Telephone ¢ g\\
Py : ( p
and Telegraph Company e
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1919.
posed of shippers 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
I'nited States engineers visited Ma
con a few weeks ago and made an
inspection trip down the river from
Macon to Brunswick. They were
serit here from Washington by the
Rivers and Harbors Committee, The
exact nature of their report is not
known,
Ellllllllllllllllllllllll:’
= Wanted At Once! =
B i |
E Boys as Bundle Wrappers, x
N Cash Boys and Cashiers E
g Apply Immediately ’E
|
o . "
i J. M. High Co. :
a 3
WSO W S Y
We Do What
RNy " BRI
We Promise
—because we only promise
what we KNOW we can do.
You may always come to us,
confident you will get the best
work at the LOWEST
PRICES.
Palace
Dental Rooms
S W. Alabama St.
Phone M, 1946,
Open Daily 8 to &
’ ~
g"\ : l
4‘ £ Bae 5 ’.
) aat
| e AT
} Made and Dol?v-n: N::“m D-3y
95 09
r Go
sBB wa TS
OLD PLATES 1 to $3
e