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' OPER Ai^^S®lMftiHOljSE
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v ’ TODAY
Grace Ormand
AND ALL-STAR CAST IN
“What Every
Woman Wants”
KOBEKTSON=COLE SPECIAL
%
ALSO
Latest Pathe News
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“The Yellow Arm”
Shows start 3:30, 5:15, 7:00 and 8:45.
Admission 10c and 30c.
TOMORROW *
, MAE MARSH
IN
♦ 7
“THE LITTEL ’FRAID LADY.”
From the novel, “The Girl Who Lived in the Woods.”
SATURDAY
FRANK MAYO IN “THE SHARK MASTER.’
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TODAY
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" H Wilix T*m£%mm ,
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Hobart Bosworth in "A Thousand to Gru?*
\ . Ad Parker Read Jr. ftaducttoa
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TheJstory of a strong man’s
*
fight for love.
Also Christie Comedy “ASSAULT AND BATTERY.”
THURSDAY f
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Jesse L. Lasky presents
Ethel Clayton
in William D. Taylor’s Production
“WEALTH”
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
ALSO ROLIN COMEDY AND PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE.
COMING—“THE ACE OF HEA RTS.”
SOCIETY
EDITE |) BT
Telephone 900. ALFI.RT HILSMAN. 4 Telehope 188
(Notes received al The. News and between 10 and 12 a. ra.)
DEAD SEA FRUIT.
Together in the desert we will reach
For golden boughs and agate basins
filled
With silver coo'ness, telling over eq/ih
Mcst SuUght-for miracle, until we
build
Anew the hanging gardens and their
glooms
Of harp-like cedars. Panting, we
will run
Through porphyry-paven courts and
windy rooms
Where we can rest unanxious of
the sun. *
i‘
Here is no tortured harvesting of men
Threshed out' in blood and sweat
upon the sand.
The terraces and columns rise again
S.udnlessly. , t . . In the hollow
of my hand
Before the fallen house of one who
knew
The taste of tears from having
dreamed too true!
—Leslie Nelson e.Tnnings.
PRETTY BIRTHDAY PARTY
ON MONDAY AFTERNOON.
A pretty party of Monday after
noon was given by Mr,s. E. S. Hample
ton in hoonr of .Iter daughter, Theresa
the event being her twelfth
a color scheme cf green and pink was
carried out in the decorations am
the rooms were artistically arrange*
with cut flowers and potted plants
During the afternoon .a delightful ice*
course was served. The little honor
ee received lcvely gifts from her lit
tie friends. About thirty guests wer
present.
Mrs. Hamtflvtbn was assisted h
serving by Mrs. W’alter Popwell and
Mrs. Edwin Dart.
SCHOOL GIRL FALLS
FROM SWING; LEG BROKEN.
Little Mary Addie Simmons, daugh
ter of Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Simmons
was the victim of a painful acclden
Monday afternoon at the morning re
cess when* fell from a swing a<
the Glynn Academy playgrounds, sus
taining a fracture of leg betweer
the hip atjd The-'lnjured gir
wLs rushed to the city hospital, wher
Mpr Injuries were promptly attended
to by Drs. Greer and Fox. She wa*
removed to her home In the after
noon, and was reported to be restinr
easy. The friends and schoolmater
A-.-
Bijou Theater
Tuesday and Wednesday of
4t
Next Week.
Gloria Swanson
! IN
the Great Moment
Thursday and Friday of
Next Week.
ALL-STAR CAST
IN
Lasf of the Mohican*
The two greatest pictures ever
released in Brunswick.
Private
School
TWENTY-SEVENTH
TERM
721 Grant Street
PHONE 825
Fall Term is now open
FROM
Primary Grades through
College Preparatory
MISS JOSEPHINE SMITH
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
of the little girl will deeply sympa
thize with,’ her in her misfortune, and
Will hope ; that she may soon recover
!andj>return to her school duties.
L-V SCOUTS PRESENT ,V‘
ROSES TO CHIEF BURGESS. {
’ A delegation of Boy Scouts visited
the home of their chief, Phil E. Bur
gess, Monday afternoon and present
ed him with a bouquet of beautiful
rcses and the occasion was a very
pleasant one. Mr. Burgess is one of
those sick people who likes to see his
friends and the visit of the boys
cheered him up considerably.
; Miss Kate Dillon will return from
the mountains of North Carolina in a
few days.
Mrs. P. C. Roche, of Darien, is the
guest of her granddaughter, Mrs. R.
H. Strain.
Miss Alverna Rogers has returned
from a week-end visit to relatives in
Lulaton, Ga.
| Mrs. Tom Drew has returned from
ia visit to friends and relatives in Ma
!con and Birmingham.
Friends of Miss Pearl Hardy will
‘be glad to learn that she is recovering
from a slight case of lagrippe.
Miss Dorothy Fletcher has returned
to Jacksonville after spending a few
lays with friends in the city.
Mrs. E. L. Stephens will return this
week after spending several weeks in
Clayton, Ga„ and Birmingham, Ala.
Friends of Mrs. Alfred Christie will
regret to learn thaf she Is quite ill.
Her mother, Mrs. A. M. Maxwell, is
3 Iso very ill.
Miss Ethel Ingram, one of the Pur
vis school teachers, is pleasantly lo
cated with Mrs. Jr J. Wimberly, on
Gloucester street.
Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Aiken and Miss
Fannie Aiken have returned from
New York where they have been
spending some time.
Mrs. A. E, Long, of Douglas, who
underwent an operation at the hospi
tal Monday night, is resting easy and
<s improving satisfactorily.
A meeting of the W. C. T. U. is call
'd for Thursday afternoon, 4: SO, at
•.he residence of Mrs. M. C. Rowe,
corner Union and Monk streets.
•
Mr, and Mrs. T. J. McGiffen and
on have returned to Jacksonville af
n* spending a few days as the guests
of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Carruthers.
Mrs. J. B. Ferguson and little son
•dll return to their home in Savan
*ah Sunday after spending some time
in the city with Mrs. Y. C. Wright.
Mrs. 4. F. Wright and children, of
Eastman, and Miss Elia Wilson. havßj
returned to their homes after having
been the guests of Mrs. Y. C. Wright.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. James Cgr
michael will be glad to learn that
heir little daughter, Marie, who is in
Telfair hospital. Savannah, is some
what improved.
After spending a few days in the
city as the guest of friends. Miss
Edith Gunnels has returned to Mt.
Pleasant where she is visiting her
•sister, Mrs. Akin.
Miss Luella Bowman who has been
spending some time in Asheville, is
spending a few days as the guest of
Mias Irene Baumgartner, before re
turning to her home In West Palm
Beach, Fla.
Mrs. George Whitman left yester
day for Savannah where she will take
the steamer City of Savannah for her
home in New York. She has been
Spending several weeks with her par*
Vnta, Mr. and Mrs. W.B. Cook.
POLICE ATTEMPT TO
INTIMIDATE WITNESSES
(By the Associated Prees.)
Chicago. Sept. 27.—>l T nited States
District Attorney Clyne announced U*
day that he had poeitive information
that police sergeants and patrolmen
have been attempting to intimidate
witnesses called before him for exam
ination in connection with alleged
liquor deals in which policemen have
been involved. j
TENNIS “WHIZ” IS
CHAMPION DRESSER
Mile. Susanne Lenglen In one of
her Paris Creations.
New York. Sept. 26. —Mile. Susan
ne Lenglen, the matchless Susanne,
is not always the leaping whirlwind
she is so often pictured. Indeed, ev
en in “doing her stuff” on the tennis
courts, that frenzeied garter showing
leap is the least of it. With her feet
gracefully on the ground she seems
to win handy enough.'
The gorgeously embroderied and
thoroughly feminine affair she is here
shown wearing is one of her country**
latest Jashion Creations. The pict
ure was taken at the South ' Orange
Country club. Gone seem the days
when being an athletic girl was so
often that pre-spinster refuge for
“nice girls” who later kept house for
Dad or Brother Bill.
Your Cotton
* • v r'
- t. * * *
Is Collateral
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We have devised a plan to lend
money to the planter on his cotton,
through our correspondent banks.
Your cotton is acceptable collateral.
We lend 75 . per cent of the market
value of the cotton for four months,
at the rate of 7 per cent/ 1 per annum.
* ! |
This will permit the orderly market
ing of cotton, and at the same time,
will give you cash money to liquidate |
your debts.
It is; not necessary to come to At
lanta to negotiate this loan, which
will be handled by our correspondents.
y Ask your banker for full in
formation concerning this
offer, or have him write us.
W* .
f
* • t ,/
Fourth National Bank
j.-, w • . -*>•■ i: 1 ~p.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
drinks that leave ;
nothing to be desired
?• T
4 v r. *v; •
Simply because there’s nothing left to be desired—'ev
erything is complete—quality, taste, coldness, dlearjli
' t 1 1 j r.‘ •, .; >• ■•: i
ness, and promptness. Whether it’s the simple drink or
a fancy conceit, it’s the best type of its kind and it‘s serv
ed in the right way when served here.
CHAS. V. COLLIER
/ •?;, ;
Prescription Druggist
J
Telephone 116
Much Suffering Caused by
Waste Products in the Blood
' i
What Science Knows About the Matter and How It Is
Best Treated.
The blood is more important than
of the organs. It is thru the
blood that the whole human body is
directly or indirectly nourished. The
blood gets its nourishment from the
intestines. The intestines also con
tain waste products undigested
foods, acids, gases and refuse, which
sometimes get in the blood.
When waste products get in the
blood, nature will strive to cast them
out. If your resistance is strong
enough, nature will probably succeed.
But if you are “below par,” weak,
run-down, and nervous, nature will
begin to show signs of distress.
Asa result, you will have that
feeling of fatigue. You will lack the
energy you need for the day’s duties
and pleasure. Minor ailments will
begin to affect you—pimples, black
heads, and boils.
If the waste products are not gotten
out of the blood at this point, it is
possible a more serious skin eruption
or disease will begin to show itself.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1921.'
It is not infrequent for waste prod
ucts to settle in the muscles and joints
and cause rheumatism.
Listen to nature's warning. Youri
blood is' your fountain source of ener-f
gy—therefore keep your blood ficß
and pure.
For over 50 years, thousands and
thousands of men and women bavd
relied on S. S. S. to clear their blood
of waste products. S. S. S. will im
prove the quality of your blood by
relieving you of the waste products
which cause impoverished blood and
its allied troubles skin disorders*
rheumatism and a lowered vitality.
Get S. S. S. at your druggist. Be
ware of substitutes. Write Chief
Medical Director, Swift Specific Co.J,
D-720 S. S. S. Laboratory, Atlanta*
Ga. for special medical advice (with
out charge). He is helping people
every day to regain their health and
strength. Ask him to send you hit
illustrated booklet, “Facts About thi
Blood'* —free. S. S. S. is sold by alf
drug stores.