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TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4,
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS. GEORGIA
Chemist' on Weeding Eve Offers Himself f
In Test to Prove Own Drugs Are Pure
Old Fatrfarcns Hear MCicnf Voice of isrdfel
liff’Kind of Bow, Just
A 6on, now a year and a half old.
was born. Father and mother had
a falling out. They went into the
divorce court The judge granted
a decree.
Follow* d then a dining accident.
Sayre wna seriously injured. Mrs.
Sayre ftrd the bfihy called oft him
in the hospital. Old troubles were
forgotten and reconciliation was
'clerk^urned her down.
young.” he explained.
WHICH
BEOIN*-
•IIA MIS-
ABOVH FILM VERSION*OF THE \
PHAROAH FORCED THE ISRAEf.IT K
NINO OF THE EXOnt’S. BELOW,
SES THE MAGNIFICENT."
SISTER MARTS
KITCHEN
t-Mosfs, the ml-
tlirough the Red
,nU tempo of their
clpient revo’t again*
raeulou*’" deliverance
gca,* have the tenor i
Biblical recital.
speaking English. As if by pre-con
cert they moved together. Above th->
bfest of sheep and the lowing of cat
tle, haltingly at first, then sure, swell*
ed the ancient Hebraic chants—"Fath-
ef of Mercy," and-^llrar, O Isreal, the
Lord our God, the Lord is One.”
I watched JPe Mine's face, oddtr
contorted. Tn'-s was not In the
script, not in rehearsals. Here was
something flaming from the heart
of a people, a sharp echo of old tra
vail, under emotional stress. An. old
woman fell to her knee3, turned and
shook a fist at the gates of Fharoah,
Wiping, matin sand upon her grnp
head. Old men's beards were wet
with tears.
Behind them,- save for a space of
time and -a geographical meridjati.
was the agony of their forbears and
Its symbol. In an instant a mob of
fio-a-day extras had been tram-
ported into a nation breaking its
trammels. Its infection was irresisti
ble.
ICES AND SHERBETS.
Instead ftf baking pies and cakes
during the hot summer weather,
tvhy not make ices and sherbets?
Every one likes a frozen dessert,
and It’s » infinitely easier for the
cook to prepare than to have an
ovep going for an hour o.* more.
Fruit ices are economical and re
freshing. They require little effort
"None of us have escaped the
filiation of It,” said Theodor*? Rob*
who gives an inspired perfortnanc*
“iiotKS.” This fervor not only
vested the filmed episodes wi
majesty, but showed l
markable esprit of the camp
It shortened Ahe work or
queues by weeks. It broke
kinds of self-sacrifice nmhl
ora of particularly "hard
where player* trudged thro*
and from work through k — -
suffered the whips o' lrnrsh weather
and returned at nlglit without whim
per to the "promised Uind" of tents
HOLLYWOOD.—-Traveling 200 miles
by trhln and auto to ft Wild atretch of
i’aciflc beach where Cecil R I>e Mills
warn filming the Biblical prologue to
his "Ten Commandments," I expected
to see sumptuous spectacle#'technic
ally compassed. Instead, I beheld
something of deep spiritual Import.
transcending the mere making of a
motion picture.
A sund sled had deposited mo be
low the great r«d Egyptian pylon
with its avenuo of sphinxes where the
"Children of Isreal," 2,500, were mnss-
ing for the Exodus. They shivered
under n sharp wind. The melancholy
dunea lay In somber shadow. A hush
held the multitude as tho cameras
took range.
Theodore Roberts stepped out. lifted
a hand in majeetic gesture nnd be
came Moses, leading his people out of
bondage. The straggling mass follow
ed, dancing, shambling. mc-n, women,
children, In the rags of shivery, flow
ing out Into tho sai^l hu>mocks to
ward the far glisten of tV» sea.
[COPYRIGHT 3Y M^CALtlSj
oration,
miles t
questions wet# wiped away by the ap
pearance of all sorts of bows, lace,
moire, organdie and ribbon.
l.fftlo bows at the neck, butterfly
bows on the Arm, bustle hows, tiny*
ribbon how?* ftucking5thO skirt-bows or
all i*»rts,ar.4 sizes hr* used as trim-
The only rule the fashionable bow
adhersn to la tho first principles of
smartness.
*** There’s the gown ah'fl there’s the
how. For somn frocks one seems quite
necessary to the other If the costuma
Is to appear In fashionable society.
A bow at tho back gives the bustle
silhouette,-a how fin the front gives
the Indo-ChfBfSj! effect.
When tho styld for bows begin,
the question came up. “How large, of
What material and how tp bo. worn?"
All these seemingly momentous
WOMAN, THE MATERIALIST,
NOT MAN, IS VIEW
Together with "Roberts an "Moses.”
tho principals.in this <*Hy pert of tjio
"Ton gommandmewta” include:
.Tamos Nr!!! (Aaron), Charles Dc
Roche (Ramoses the Magnificent).
Estelle* T.-.ylcr (Miriam). Julia Faye
(Queen of Egypt), Lawson Butt (Da-
than the Discontented), CHno Corrado
(Joshua the Faithful).
The modern sequence is being
filmed in San Francisco, with a dif
ferent case, and is designed to point
mixture. Turn Into freezer and
freeze. f
Watermelon 16V.
Three cups watermelon pulp, 1
cup sugar, 1 orange, 1-4 teaspoon
salt.
Rub melon -through aleve. Add
sugar,-juice of orange and salt.
Turn into ffeezer and freeze.
Pineapple 8herbet.
Two cups diced pineapple, 2
oranges, 1 lemon, 2 eggs (white*), 1
cup sugnr, 1 tablespoon gelatin, 1-8
teaspoon salt, 1 1*2 cups boiling
water, 1-4 cup powdered, sugar.
Squeeze Juice from oranges and
lemon. Add to pineapple with tho
sugar nnd let stand two hours.
Soften gelatin In 1-4 cup cold wa
ter. Put pineapple mixture over
fire nnd bring to the boiling point,
r.et simmer ten minutes. Removo
from fira and Htir into gelatin. Rent
egg white# till stiff and dry with
powdered sugar. Fold in first mix-,
, ture and turn into frezer and
I freeze, <
Grape lee.
Two cups, water, 1 cup sugar. 1
cup grape juice, 1 orange, 1-2
lemon.
Boll sugar-and water for ten min
utes. Add grapo juice (home
made, undiluted juice is beat), and
Juice from orange and lemon. Turn
into freezer and freeze.
often smothers happiness In their
home life. A woman wanta every
thing to be hers!
"Woman’s materialism has led her
to use the wool •sacrifice’ all these
years, nnd 'made her really believe
that there was vlrture In what she
has considered sacrifice. f
"However, she Is 'beginning to
reallzo this la an empty, over-used
word, cowardly but conventional im*
plying a self-imposed maytnrdom.”
Ma n’o AeMsvsmrfnlt;. ’ ? | *
That men aro idealists is cosily
proved, she believes, »y ttieifr con
tributions to civilisation, . by their.
Giving of Your Baby Consigns You to a Living Death
MURIEL DRAPER.
' Children inspire.
When asked If she considered
children an impediment to a business
career, she replied:
"I get so tired of hearing this. A,
child is never an obstacle to any
creative work one really wants to
LEFT TO RIGHT: ima. MARGARET DJQ L1UNY, JOSEPHINE HUHAS, MRS EDGAR S3. THOMAS.
•st inspiration.
"Woman nowadays doesn’t have
to sit by the fire to make a child
realise jt has a h<yr>e. Just because
n woman becomes a. mother, she Is
not necessarily tied to tho actual
facts of making clothes, cooking food
and teaching tho A B CJs to her
Children. • ATtjrjflJ. there are people
actually trained to do tide,
"l hard' found a business career
thrilling pr.more way* than ohe. I»
ther* a greater 4hriil titan receiving
fur your work a few places of silver
nnd somo strips of green paper, then
turning that' about. Into a steak or
chop to help sustain the human be
ings for whom you aro responsible?
if there li^ I hava yet to find Jt."
Yellow poular.
Yellow is enjqying tho greatest
popularity of Its- career this season.
It is used for complete costumes and
wraps, bnd in combination with
black, whit* and brown.
/Daily Fashion Hint'
BUFFALO, N. Y.—"Die with your
baby, If you have to, but don’t let it
be taken from you and placed In a
private home! For it is better to be
dead thap to live a living death with
out y»ur child!”
That I* Mrs. Margaret De Ltgny’s
experience-born advice to young
mothers, who for one reason or fnoth-
er feel they must give up their chil
dren.
Pho has just finished a dramatic
court fight for custody of her child,''
6 year old Josephine RMias. Opposing
her were nn elderly couple, Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar 8, Thomas of Wellsvllle,
K. Y. .
When Josephine was about •
months.old, MA. De J.igny felt she
could not support the baby. She de
clares she received no aid from her
husband. So she gave the child to the
Thomas family. ,
Mother Return*.
They reared her; grew to love her
deeply, Sho was their own child, ex
cept fpr the blood tie.
Then—four and a half year* later—
Mrs, De Ligny returned. She could
stand It no longer. But the Thomas
family refused to give her baby up.
They front to court.
"She is my child—God knows I need
her," tho real mother told Justice Nor
ton.
"She Is more mine than yours," Mrs.
Thomas replied. "I love her, too. I
watched over her night after night
and smothered her baby tears With my
kisses. Have I no chance?"
The judge listened, his heart touch
ed for both women.
He saw Thomas break down com
pletely. on the witness stand, overy
come, by his emotions.
He knew the love Mrs. Thomas hfld
for the child was genuine nnd thor
ough.
"God Sent Her,"
But he wav convinced by the .Im
passioned outburst at the conclus on
cf the hour's plea of Mrs, De Ligny:
"God ncant me to have her. That
Is why he sent her to me!" Then she
fainted. *
"The rul'ng factor I* the natural
mother love," the wlilte-halred judge
said. Then be awarded the child to Its
real mother. *
She’s ‘Too Young’ to Wed
Her Divorced Husband
HOUSEHOLD
HINTS
LABELED PRE8ERVES.
Cut short length.* white passe-
* “ them the
partout and print
FROCKS-8T ARRESTING
/. LOVELINESS
.1 Soft-little ' froefc* of Georgette
trepe trimmed with ribbon are among
Iran pf%e 0 thc r icit ba
Inodel in gray, with polka dots of
(freen silk * The keck is finished with
k round.jfiilltr, sclUopcdLat the lower
edge and bound with riMkgj. This
W . correspond* w*h the treat-
:he edges of Vic short sleeve*
gathered skirt. A girdle of
names, of the Jellieu, prtplrveg and
pickles yoq have put into jnrs. Be-
. .—w.» they are, easily, at-
KIMGNO MODES FOR KIDDIES
The rompers pictured to the left
are smart not only because they are
, in kimono style, but because they arc
l ! trimmed with embroidery. The side-
i i closing bloomers are gathered to
I straight bands and buttoned to the
I i waist Straight bands finish the lower
' edges of ihe bloomer*, and two kitty-
i. cats companionably appliqecd upon
) the front of the bloomers form the
' t pockets. Medium size requires 2)4
rard$27- or yard 36-inch material.
inp gummed,
tached. , .
SMOOTH SAUCE,
Instead of stirring. yque thickened
soup or grtivy With' *‘»po*m,' use a
Tork or a rmall egg h ater, and the
Eauce will b*/freo from, any lumps.
iMARGARET fiilOTWELL
N*>. wonder ftll the bob-haired dies*
tel* is so excited Nowadays- *
' OMAHA.—A flarper who admits it.
fhat’e Margaret Shotwell, 16-ycar-
old daughter of a prominent Omaha
PERSPIRATION STAINS.
- To remove’perepfration staine fr^J
your clothes, ecmk them to-strong •***
water before laundering them,-
• ■ »■
CLUING CLOTHES.
When yotfsbloe Jour ttolVe, In JJJ
water, add a cup of eweet eklmmH
milk to the water b*fo»4 you put '
attorney.
And she’s capitalising on Jho fact.
A ’’professional flapper" ahe call* her
self. **
Margaret^ hftwfited ttS.000 or. the
death of a friend of her family. Im
mediately, she betook herself to. Hol
lywood, capital ot Movieland.
Out there she got a job as a movie
extra. And now she’s gathering ma
terial for her book, “A Flapper's Im
pressions of the Motion Picture
Stars."
Her aistcr flappers here in Omaha
can't iturdlv wait nntt) tt comes «>ut.
The dress fastens at the tide and
is deeply slashed to accommodate a
bias facing of self-material. •This
model is extremely simple and makes
a serviceable play-time dresi devel
oped in gingham, chambray,’percale,
sateen or. lincnc. For dress-up wear
it is .Affective in the crepea and soft
silks; Medium sizc rcquircs 1)4 yards
36-inch rar.trrfaL
First Model: Pictorial Review
Dresi No. 1518. Sixes, I to 5 years,
Price 25 cents.
_ Second Model: Dress No. 1524
qsi&'marrifwiiil
Stifie.'6flien9li!WfSlSv ^
“nrd the verdict, Mr*.
De Lumy rust ed across the crowded
codrt mdm to vrhere Mrs. Thomas sat
with the child on her knee. She al
most wrenched the girl from the older
'woman’s grasp and fled from the
Self-material.is used for the sash.
sir die. Medium sire requires 3ft
pards 36-inch tripe and yard ^fi
nch tilting. .... ,
First Model: Pictorial Renew Drcst
Bprinkle.on of pennyroyal about
tbo placet that an Infested with
That’s the peculiar predicament
of Mrs. Bertha Seal Savrc, ji.etty
2^-year-old girl mother, living
Iwre.
And all because of a strange trick
Court attendants had' difficulty in
restraining the loser from following.
"My heart aches for her, but the
child is mine." Mrs. De Ligny said, as
•he took a train tor New York City,
never knew before! At least, that’s the
word they received from AUrgsreL
* .Already the ^profeesforfet flapper"
COLD STARCH.
After using a bowl of cold etarch
et It settle, pour off the .water and
« ”rrr PRINTED VBfrVttT,
Btratfhtline frocks, without
with long sleeves anA Jtftny
in the oven. It will be.
ha* interviewed some of the screen’s -—
Sites. 2tojy»rs,,]
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