The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, December 27, 1928, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5
'ruqnsnu, DECEMBER 27, 1928.
‘The King of Kings”
Now Playing Palace
The total cost of producing
Cecil B. De' Mille’s great picture,
“The King of K ngs,” was $2,500,-
000. In point of expense for g'-
gantic sets,”'eostumes, properties
and the salaries pa‘d more than
5,000 players and extras appearing
in the various scenes, no other
p'cture ever pdoduced is compar
ab’e to “The Kirg of Kings”
Players—ln addition to 530 ac
tors of reputation appearing °r
the cast, more than 4,500 extrar
were employed. The task of pro
vid ng this vast army of men and
women with innumerable accesso
ries ‘n addition to the costumes
ranging from beards to money
bags and from shawls to phylac
ter'es, was trémendous.
Settings — Several enormous
sets were bui't especially for the
production. The larpest was the
Temple of Herod, built at a cost
of $190,000. P'ate’s Hall of Judg
ment, a magnificent creat’'on, cost
$170.000. The set devoted to Gol
gotha cost $70,000. In order to ac
commodate these big sets, two ex.
tra stages, one 300 feet square and
the other, 165 by 220 feet, were
constructed at heavy expense.
Costumes—Approximately SIOO
000 was expended for costumes.
of which six bundred were worr
by the princ’pals and the rema'n
der by the extra p'ayers. Srorer
of women ";f?gmployed in the
v‘gpvfl“flhe denartment for many
nonths in ?h@.m‘eparation of the
costnmes St
" Properties=~The properties used
in the pro ‘on were prepared
at a eost of pear'y $250,000. The
furn’ture sfiifli in the various in.
terior sets were made ‘n the De
Mi le stud o from old veriod paint.
ings at a ¢ost of $55000. More
than $20.000 worth of an‘icrue iew
elry, weaponé-_%nd the ll'ke were
mannrfactured for the prodvction
The live stock uti'ized @ the
picture included panthers, zebras
camels, leopards, ' zehnses, cow:
bu'ls, sheep and other domesti
an'mals, the cost of maintenance
of which was enormous. The min
{atnre of the Tembvle alone cost
$5,000 and ‘approximate'y $50,000
was spent for preliminary draw
ings. The lumber, paint, paster
and other bu'lding mater'al used
in the various sets cost manj}
thousands, the Temple ‘set alone
costing $44,000.
SPORTS
MATTER
By JAMES S. SHEEHY
Un't~d Press Staff Correspondent.
PASADWNA, Co1'". — (UP) -
Golden Bears of Berkeley, Ca’if,
are out to make it four straight
victories for Pacif ¢ Coast foot
ball in 'nte opal games so
the curi'enfw@s%n when ~ the
cash with the Golden Tornado of
(Georgia Tech New Years Day.
The Oregon-Aes'es started the
far-western uprjsing by taking the
a 25-13 upset at Yankee Stadium
Thanksg ving Day. Two days-ia
ter “Pop” Warner bewildere:
Armv 28 to 0 with a fancy assort.
ment of reverses, passes and pow
er plays. [@he same day 80,00¢
persons saw the champion Un’
vers'ty ofy ‘Seuthern Ca’iforni
team take {Knufe Rockne's dash
ing e'even so &27 to 14 defeat at
Los Angel g 59
Coach CHirénce “N'bs’ Price o'
© 2 »;,"'hr“'“fi_nst h's tealn
with the idea that Pac'f'c Coas
i @ - aepending on the
Bears to 'A‘?‘A-_ tinue the victory
habit. e ]
e Victor'es
The gam@ wll mark California’:
th'rd appearance at Pasadena
rince the inauguration of the en
ture ‘n 1916, "It will be the first
appearance for Coach Bill Alexan
der’s Georg’a Tech ieam.
Ca'ifornia’¢ se-called “wonder
team” of 1921 defeated Ohio State
28 to 0 at Pasadena. The teom,
coached by the late Andy Smith,
had the great “Brick” Muller and
Bob Berkey at ends and Muller’s
65-yard pass to “Brodie” Steph
ens for a '“touchdown remains a
reenrd hurl for Rose Bowl games.
However, some may ar se to put
in a b'd for the long distance toss
of “Johnnie” Mack Brown of the
Crimson Tide of Alabama. Brown,
now of the movies, sent a scoring
lurl of 60 'to’ 65 yards in Alaba
ma's 20 to 19/ v’etories over Wash
ington in 1926,
In 1922, on 'a mushy fie'd. Cali
fornia was he'd to a scoreless tie
by Coach "Greasy'’ Neale’s fine
Washington:.‘and Jefferson team.
flence the! Beard go to Pasadena
this New Yeéars Day w'th an unde
feated record in Rose Bowl en
counters and incidentally unde
feated 'n conference games this
season. )
Californi&>fs not I'kely to un
derrate Geprgia Tech. Southern
footha'l is too well known. Wash
ington thought Alabama wouid be
easy ‘n 1926 and the Tide took
Bagshaw’'s men 20 to 19. The fol
lowing year Stanford was notve
too honnedzn @ Alabama and a
7to7te #su }
' Outetanding OM Defense
Records show that California
and Georgia Tech are two of the
outstanding defensive teams in
the country. In n'ne games the
Bears have held their opponents
to 28 ponts while Georgia Tech in
elght has held opponents to 27
poiats. ;
But in'g”ense the Golden Tor
nado has a)tremendous advantage
aver Ma'forn’a. Tech has ro’led
up 193 points in eight games The
Bears show but 134 markers in
n'ne encounters.
The apparent edge in offensive
in ‘lech's record may be the de
¢'ding fattor nt Pasadena.
The Bears have in Benny Lom
a ercat kieker-and one of the fin.
< = - g e e
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Energy Foods For Winter
73 HERE’S a way to accumulate
{, energy this winter and at the
same time save the expenditure
of it. That way is to use canned
{oods. Their food value is equal
to that of the same foods, home
coked, and is even greater, since
n the scientific cooking in the great
ranning factories, less vitamins are
ost than in the slow cooking in
the home in open kettles,” exposed
io oxygen. , And cooked foods,
which are canned foods, are easier
to digest. G
Use Saves Energy
Their use saves energy because
‘t obviates the need of peeling-or
eeding vegetables or fruits and of
kinning or cleaning chicken or fish.
\ll of these time consuming and
:xhausting operations have been
thoroughly done before the food
‘omes to your kitchen. In addi
tion, the housewife is spared the
necessity of standing for long per
lods over a hot stove.
Canned foods are always ready to
serve. For cold dishes, such as
salads and desserts, they need only
to be mixed with the other ingre
dients, and when they are to be
served hot, a brief heating is all
that is necessary, because the food
in the can has already been thor
aughly cooked.” They save time as
well as labor, and perfect steriliza
tion renders them absolutely safe.
st forward passers in modern
foothal, There are those who
ontend that Lom ‘s the best
passer in the game. Certainly he
can throw long, fast -and accu
rate'y. i
The complete record of the
Tournament of Roses games fol
l1ows: i
1016, ‘Washington State 14,
Rrown,o; 1917;, Orgeon ‘l4, Penn"
0; 1918, Marines 19, Camp Lewis
7;.1919, Great Lakes 17, Marines
0; Iv2o, H\ard 7, Oregon 6; 1921,
California 23; Ohio State-0; 1922,
Cal fornia 0, W. and J. 0; 1928,
Southern California 14, Penn
State 3; 1924, Navy 14, Wash ng
ton 14; 1925, Notre Dame 27, Stan- I
ford 10; 1926, Alabama 20,-Wasbh-~ |
ington 19; 1927, Alabama 7, Stan
ford 7, 1928, Stanford 7, Pitt 6. ' |
Builder of Le Bourget
Field Picks Site For |
fts Expansion |
LE BOURGET—(AP)—The man
who bu'lt France’z great airport
has found a new hbme for it.
General Girod, president of the
Chamber Air Committee and crea
tor of Le Bourget field during the
war, proposes to -move it next
door, He has found a new site to
the east, on vacant lots across
OUT OUR WAY—
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LATRT G THE LOST TRAWL. g@e fmg,‘r?;»"s%;‘*‘? ‘ 126 A
! REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. : : 1928, BY NEA SERVICE, INC, |
~ The chiei office of the carbohy
drates (sugar and starch) is to fur
nish energy and maintain that heat,
30 necessary for the coming cold
winter days. They are found to
some extent in vegetables and fruits,
practically all of which can now be
obtained in canned form. Corn is
one of the best of energy foods, and
may be obtained at any season in
delicious canned form. Peas are
also an excellent energy food, and
may be obtained in canned form.
Other energy foods are breads, po
- atoes, rice, the cereals and all forms
of sugar, cane sugar, maple sugar,
and honey. The chief office, too,
of fats and oils is to furnish energy
and heat.. They are stored as the
adipose tissues of the body, and are
present in abundance in canned
milks, meats, olives and vacuum
packed nuts,
- Canned Foods a Resource
With all these sources of heat
and energy to draw from, canned
foods afford a resource to the house
wife to keep her whole family
happy, peppy and warm, and at the
same time carry on her outside so
cial activities, follow the news and
devote more of her own energy to
the higher needs of her husband
and children. But let's get prac
tical and present a few recipes which
will help to keep everyone's cheeks
rosy these frosty days. Take corn,
the Flanders road from the pres
ent feld.
Experts. have been look'ng for
a new flying field ever since i*
was. found that Le Bourget had
outgrown its facilities.
Op'n‘on has been divided as to
what could be done to remedy the
sitnation. Some favored separat
ing the civil and military fields
altogether. But ne'ther c¢'vi' ror
‘miltary authorties: have been, will.
ing to move. L w
" Certain experts ‘recommftended
“deéstroying everything in ors °r t
buld all over aga n.” But i. has
been pointed out, one must first
have a' place to build on.
Girod himself has declared that
he’ would never have chosen a
“spot so restricted and so marshy,
that permits pilots to "take Qff
only ‘n one drection, the north,”
if. he had rea'ized that it subse
quently ‘was to become a civil air
field ‘as well.
" Girod recently flew over the
whole, Par's regon in search of
open space large enough for a
fyving field. He was obliged to
return to the point from which he
had started. The best he could
find was just across the road.
He 'proposes leaving the pres
ent f'ying-feld entre’y to mili
tary aviation. The civil aviation,
which cont nues to grow at an as
tonishing rate, would be moved tc
the new site. . :
A great field, two miles long
_T 7T AW RANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
for instance, combined with salmon.
Here is a carbohydrate aplenty to
gether with fats and oils.
‘ Hot and Hearty
‘ Corn and Salmon Pudding: Mix
2 number 2 can of corn with one
tablespoon melted butter, one-half
‘teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon
pepper, one small can of salmon
(being careful not to break it up
too finely) and one tablespoon of
‘heavy cream or evaporated milk
‘Bake in a buttered baking dish in
a moderate oven, 350°, for thirty
minutes.- 'This will provide energy
and to spare for more than half a
dozen people.
Or, if you want something more
exotic, here’'s a Lobster and Green
Pea Newburg, which will help an
equal number of people to keep
peppy in zero weather:
Make a white sauce of one and
one-half tablespoons butter, one and
one-half tablespoons flour, and one
and one-half cups light cream. Sea
son with salt and paprika, and add
the contents of two six ounce cans
of lobster, leaving it in fairly large
pieces. Add half of a number 2
can of peas and one slightly beaten
egg yolk. Keep the liquor drained
from the peas for use in soups or
sauces. Add one tablesnoon lemon
juice, and two tablespoons of Sherry
flavor, and serve in heart shaped
patty cases.
by a mile and a half wide, could
be laid out here, wth concrete
runways .or take-ofts, modern
hangars, off ces. hotels, and res
taurants. A subway line to the
Place de ’oOpera wou d connect it
wiih the heart of Paris.
Everywhere It is sa d that for
the neWw Le Bourget, things “must
be undertaken on the grand
sca'e.”
- The principal #rport of France
must be adequately equipped to
meet the needs of the future. It
is certain that the vacant land
across the Flanders road ‘s ideal
for an airport. By subway, it
would not be too far from the cen
ter of Par’'s, and in any case it
would now be impossible to find a
site nearer the gates.
SIOO PRIZE OFFERED
FOR BEST ONE-ACT
FPLAY; ANY SUBJECT
A SIOO prize ‘s to be given by
the Augusta Litt'e Theatre Lea
guwe for the best one-act play on
any subject, The contest s onen
to anyone except those connected
with the League. The contest
closes at midnight, February 15,
1929,
The winning play together with
two others ‘receving the next
~BY WILLIAMS
high@st § %d;iwfll be- produced in y
the ,m,‘,{‘; /the Augusta Little
Theatre League.
. While the judges will be in
"Structedto make -aAWardsTUsolely
upon. the merit of the ser pts sub
mitted, regard.ess of subject treat
ed, t is hoped that the contest
will prompt many authors to dra
matize incidents of the South, es
pecia ly those of Georg a.
Plays that have been designat
ed as prize winners n other con
tests are not e igible. i
Rules {
Each contestant shall choose a
fictit ous name wunder which to
write and dentify himsell in this
manner only.
In a sealed envelope, attached
to h.s script, each contestant shall
wrte the title of his play, his
‘ficitious name and h s rea! name,
When the, judges ‘have. reported
their flndings, the sealed envel
opes shall then be opened by the
committee and matched with the
w.nn ng scripts, thus estab ishing
tue identity of the actual win
ners.
Manuscripts must be typewrit
ten and properly bound. They must
reach the committee not later
than midnight of - February 15,
1929. - i :
The Augusta L’ttle Theatre Lea
gue reserves the r ght to produce
the winning scripts, free of roy
alty. i .
For further information address
Henry G. Howard, Chairman of
Playwriting Contest Comm'ttee,
Southern Finance Bui.ding, Au
gusta, Ga.
PALACE.
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Pathe A By Jeanie Macph
“The King of Kings” is a screen attraction of supreme merit. It has triumphed
with unmistakable emphasis wherever presented, and it has evoked mere comment
on the part of the press and public than any other metion picture ever presented.
It has withstood every criticism and in every city in which it has been displayed, it
met with unqualified endorsement.'
PRESENTED WITH MUSIC BY METROPOLITAN OPERA ORCHESTRA AND METRO
POLITAN CHORUS CHOIR ,
STRAND Tomght
PAULINE FREDERICK
“THE NEST?”
' January Sale -~ -
DRESSES
2 DRESSES G 5 GO
2 DRESSES §50,00
Davison-Nicholson Co. Inc.
‘NOW <PLAYING
—Family problem play with Miss Frederick in the role of a
mother who fights to save her children frem the punishment of
their own selfishness.
—All Star Cast includes Holmes Herbert and Jean Acker.
PAGE FIVE