Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current, February 17, 1935, Home Edition, Page PAGE THREE-A, Image 11
. FEBRUARY 17, 1935. OUSEWIFE PUT ON HER METAL ENDLESS VARIETY OF GLEAMING PLATED FURNITURE AND FIXTURES REPLACES PIONEER IRON BED Y MARGARET M:BRIDE vice Staff Correspondent. YORK.- The \\'hilu—i‘nam— g ~ nineties, dreadful ' 4 seem to the decorator "ot played a useful role ¢ ancestor to all the metal b which 18 now displayed nodern house from parlor e turers have learned a ta] since the iron bed jp the interim, thousands < have been spent in lab . work out alloys that pliable a 8 well as stain i.proof. The result has tained in the main din ¢ the home. hows Damage Less roct that decorative au are exclaiming over has tained in the maining din !‘, of one thirty-two room v means of a table and v the frames of which mium-plated steel. The he table s made of a syn ‘hite material and in the . o frosted glass plate hts underneath, so that r illumination is needed At_{‘, The table was espec hge, but the chairs, each ur tubular legs and up of gzreen leather, were built, yet are so well de nd executed that they fit lnxurious scheme. in glass shelves and a of macassar-ebony wood ite lacquer constitute the or furniture of the room. tal note is repeated in the andles on the buffet draw sea-green glass bricks, in the dining table, furnish modern decorative note. ghout this house metal n used in many of the especially in the case of ables with glass or metal portant for serving not ffee but tea and cocktail. L these cases has the ad os being unbreakable, pd impervious to ashes, er or alcohol. Also, the metal alloys have been d ot such an extent that an be worked into many teresting shapes than even st pliable wood . hostesses go to the lengths who had her ancient solid ea set chromium-plated in husiasm for the metal, but mm, copper and chromium tainly being used a great r coffee, and tea services. trength Favors Metal tructible mushroom lamps NERANT TYPIST OFF ON * WORLD-WIDE JOB HUNT S TO GIRDLE LOBE THIRD TIME RY MARGARET McBRIDE Service Staff Correspondent YORK—Whatever the cal nd the weatherman may il James, who’s ~on her work-her-way trip around rld, can smell spring in the she's already begun to to Neill, pretty, southern and stil in her twenties, is the time to be off from er she is, on the road to ere else, in search of ad . She pays every cent of trip by work en route. . since she left Mississippi 's State College, she has round the world by way. of nama Canal, and another he tried the Siberian route Xt she wants to go around ™ with a stop off at Waster where the monoliths are ere you can't set foot with 'mission from the Chilean ment, t Jobs With Government a 4 queer thing,” said Neill, back on her heels in front battered bag that, along I typewriter and a few odd €S, serves as her sole lug n her jaunts, “but sure as 'Y, there was no traveling In my family,. We were Uy Mississippi cotton plan- U'd never been out of the until T was graduated from = Never zlept on a train ight, I'd always kept maps cand two weeks after com ment I set off for Washing - €. Luckily T had taken the Sttvice examinations, just f more as a happenstance amvthing else. You see, 1 o be an artist until T that artists seem always tol poor. And T didn't want to! Poor. ‘Well, anyway, the Service inspiration got me in the Wa, Department, and 0 had the forethought to Shorthand ang typewriting. Washington T took a map ’frked out he farthest-away I the United States. It was ® Wash. So 1 went there, her, at my request, the gov- Tt sent me there. And then I got there, Uncle Sam de to economize and 1, being oßt comer, was lald off. limbed 211 the mountains in DParts ang then looked over !‘fi.)d and decided it was a lime to g 0 to Honolulu. No, " have a Job there. .Pve It hest to ‘go witheut nd ]"Ok around.” g '“_—* Selling Ice in Hawaii {onoluly her luck held and OWh-eved Neill persuaded an "Paly to ereate a Job for Ste took charge of the “t department and set Making~ Yivew whote - district - - -t g 3 R? ’ 1R f'»'~. % o o 3 y . g 3 ie 8 S ROy e eB2 g B EET AR 3 3 R I".:""-l-":_l-"‘.'.’ i Bt R Y L. so R e & Fo o e 28 g\% e 5 S e er. s@T R R S 9 RR X R ' B SRR 0 INNRE e TR R LLe § 5 N TEE v P EE S & 3 :s e P & 2 S > R R, s N g S ST o % ‘\' s, RS e | TRRGCR o o L e e . Y e & o <oi ? i RB¢ W y e e i S i % v 2 B § : g B = gREME T O g . ¢ SRR i 5 SRR MR T SAN ST » eel SR LA G £RN Al e e set T Kitchen and table utensils have followed the trend toward gleaming metallic surfaces, as is shown in these articles designed by Russell Wright, At top is a tea set, multiple double boiler and (right) an in-, ulated ice cube container. Below are a copper candle holder and table lamp. > & of copper, shades and all, provide colorful and practical lighting for places like children’s playrooms or adult game rooms where much activity goes on. And then, of course, there are innumerable aluminum serving and hors d'oeuvre trays, capacious, yet light as air and a boon to the hostess who must serve her own. Its natural strength is the greatest virtue of metal in house - et e . eet .- g l EERE ] N g || R S s) | L w l WS e e \&\ b o SRR S FomERRR R G TR T R R SR ol SESSEERRLT S B R & : . R o R R R o 3 B R s e Sog . andet o| f R B R SR ’ Wy = B o S ) QRN e e 3 e :g e ) B R 8 SouNE e l =e R R DN G SRR SR R L ;._ R A R RN BR i e NVR RN T S e R RR R R e S VAR e R o R O R B s AR R R RN R SRR R R SR ' B oomene e S T & TN TR 2 c SRR T R R e = R R SRS RBRRRR N R \"t‘:\\ MR \‘-5\'55 a 3 Ee e e e s ?<:-._§\2§\\j:_\~z' SRR e RSt PR .. S Q\--o&\.w- R R SES IR N \;‘:”‘N:fi-:fi':::\.\\}:"':\ B 1 RN SR 0 \,.-\\v.\\_Q-‘Q_.»\:_\:;.;:g-:-x:&._\3l{-:»;:»:::_:». s XAEONY: R BT S R FESE R s R SRR S SR ;:*:sx\}';;\l\‘-25:;:3:;:;,;;5-;:5:;::5:;:;:;::;'-‘:;:;;; ;S IR %XR & ' e BN 3 & o SRR LR 3 E}‘\':?'i SRR ‘ . B 3 R . Reae b % 1 ¥ s i —————————————————————————— - U —— | Neill James . . . a typewriter isi her key to adventure, l ice - conscious. Succeeded, too. | Then, as she says, seeing the ships go by all the time sort of made her restless and she decided to go to the Orient. The ice com pany gave her a six-month lea.vel of absence gnd she set out for Japan. This time she landed a newspaper rich and never went| back to the ice company, whichl was desolated to lose her and ca bled her a raise! ‘ “I haven't been a lot of places,” says the indefatigable traveler. “There are so many countrieg and even a lot more ways to gol around the world. I want to try them all.” . The country where she found the most jobs was Russia, Miss James says. Only, because of her visa running out, she couldn’t stop to‘ take any of them. The time she felt most useful was on Pitcairn Island, where she started a new industry. | “You know Pitcairn Island will only support two hundred people,” she explains, “so when more than that get -on lit, the inhabitants draw lots to see who will leave. Well, I noticed they all went bare footed there, because, of course, they have no leather. I had Japan and they had bamboo on the hold design, says Russell Wright, who has used alumium exten sively in casseroles and baking dishes so ornamental - that they may be used for table service. Mr. Wright points out that so far it is difficult for Americans to take their metal straight.” They still like it oxidized or covered with colored enamel—a slightly degenerate taste which Mr. Wright trusts will pass. girls to make sandals, and now they're doing it.” Excitement Pursues Her It was just by a lucky fluke that Neill got to Pitcairn Island at all. Ship don’t usually stop there, but hers did on account of an SOS from the island. Somebody was very ill. That's the way things happen to her. Volcanoes erupt just after she climbs them, rev olutions dog her but she's never thurt by them. She has worked ‘as a stenographer and typist in many lands and nearly always has found good jobs in the diplomatic \servlce. She has promoted newspaper circulation campaigns and once nearly took a job in Mongolia as agsistant to a missionary. The only time she was ever broke was in Florida when a bank closed. She's philosophical ahout that ex perience, though it wasn't so nice at the time, “If you've ever actually been broke, why, then you can never be afraid of it or mind it again,” she says. “So really, it was worth it for that bank to fail just to show me.” She's never afraid of anything —says the only place she ever locks her door is in New York City, by the way. She expects to travel until she ig too old to get around. Then she'll sit in the sun on some remote island and write her memoirs. Sk Al BAKED PORK CHOPS Six pork chops, 2 cups tiny white onions, 2 tablespoons but ter, 1 tablespoon minced parsley, yolks 1 eggs, 1 lemon, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon pepper, 1 cup coarse buttered crumbs, Peel onions and cook in butter over a low fire until soft and a pale straw color. Put in a shallow baking dish. Beat yolks of eggs with lemon juice, parsley, salt and pepper and pour over onions. Cover with chops lightly seasoned with salt and pepper. Sprinkle thickly with buttered crumbs and bake in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees I") until well browned and wvery tender. It will take about 1 hour. 4 HUUUL . ‘. GINGERBREAD WAFFLES | One cup molasses, 5 tablespoons‘ shortening, 1 1-2 teaspoons s;oda,< 1-2 cup sour milk, 1 egg, 2 cups pastry flour, 2 teaspoons ginger, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon bak ing powder. | Mix and sift last four dry in gredients three times. Heat mo lasses and shortening to. the boil ing poin{. Remove from heat and peat in soda. Add sour milk and egg well beaten. Mix well and add dry ingredients. Stir until smooth and make on a hot waffie jron. 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The chairs are green leather up holstery on chromium plated frames. : i isc( ? ~ New Joy, Or Discontent! I R e | BY HELEN WELSHIMER l Mrs. Elizire Dionne’s life has been a succession of babies, just babies, !untll recently. . Provision of food, clothing, shelter have been major lmtvr(—sts in the barren little house in Callander. . The 26-year-old mother who has borne 11 children knew that somewhere there was a world of gaiety, brightness, and ease. But untij she started on her tour in midwestern cities the other day her roadg were hard roads for -the | most part. | Now suddenly she has found a world as strange as the one that lconf!‘onfed Alice when sio stepred through the looking glaiss Peopde are doing things for her, instead of asking her to do things for them. | Undreamed conveniences are presented. The miracles of modern sci iem-e and architecture tower on her horizon. ! Somewhere, far up the snowy, ice-strewn trails that wind northward ;!\ the house from which she came. The house heated only by stoves, iwhuse fires are replenished by wood of her own hands’ carrying and i her husbands’ hands’ hewing. The house into which water, too, must ibe brought in pails. The house whose illumination against the dark | comes from oil lamps, which she fills. . I How Will New Expertences Affect Her? ' The new world she has entered is wonderful as an Arabian Night's dream. We wonder how it will influence hey life when she goes back to Callander again. Will it change her perspective? Will she want to make that small crowded house gay and shining and more liveable? ! Will she begin to plan easier methods of work? Will something of the glamor that the city is giving her linger with her for a long time, per ’ haps forever? ‘ Or will she decide that there is a line of demarkation between the | two worlds, a line which she cannot surmount, and go back without | desire m\brighten the house where she lives? Wil] she decide that the ' task is hbpeless as she fills coal-oil lamps, puts logs on the fire, and ! carries water for laundering? i Danger in Delights of World, ¢ There are countless women in pioneer districts who bear many chil ! dren and work bravely to rear them, yet never are given a glimpse of ‘an easier world beyond. Mrs. Dionne has been fortunate. Because of ] some quirk of nature which is responsible for the birth of the quintup lets, she was given a place in the public eye, and taken to the worl!? that lay beyond Callander, That desire for development of personality and mind for which she has not had time during the vears devoted to child care may be awaken ed through contact with people who, not being oppressed by hard physical labor, have had time fop cultural advantage. Maybe she will decide that Ernest, who is eight, should have a cornet, and Rose, seven needs a piano. She may catch a vision of a wider life for the children back in Callander. Iler own life has been so bounded by cplld-bearlng and its attendant possibilities that she had little time to think of the future possibilities of these children. There is alwayys the danger when one presents a wider outlook to people who must go back to narrowed fields again that dissatisfaction, rather than a mental enlargement will take place. Mrs. Dionne has been fortunate. We hope that the cities she gees will give her more than a giimpse of a magic Bagdad. 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All London has been humming with this gossip for months and the i's were dotted and the t's crissen when Queen Ena firmly! refused to attend the recent wed ding of her daughter the Infanta Beatrice to young Prince Torlonia, whose mother is an American. Queen lna could not have achiev ed more publicity for her state of feelings if she had advertised in the newspapers: ‘“Notice to the world: things have c¢ome to such a 4 pass between Alfonso and my self that we have definitely sep arated.” Some people foolishly believed she did not go to the Rome wed ding because her daughter was marrying a “commoner.” But that will not hold water because there are two precedents in her own family: Frincess Mary, only| daughter of King George and Queen Mary, wed Lord ~ - ~wnod, and the Duke of York wed Lady ’k;mws-l,yun. Moreover Queen Ena }:u:vr-ntuzm-d the state of affairs ’wlwn queries were sent te her by the press. The usual diplomttic gfih was not forthcoming. Instead, her secretary stated: { “Queen Ena does not wish to make any communication pecor ! ing her private affairs.” ‘ LOVE MATCH LIPTON f CLAIMED AS SPONSOR | Thus has gone on the rocks what started out a<« ~» rea] royal lovel match. Princess Victoria Kugenie Julia ¥Enn was the daughter of Princess Beatrice, youngest child of Queen Victoria of KEngland, and of! Prince Henry of Battenburg. She was therefore, a niece of King kKd. ward Seventh and cousin of King George. Back in 1906 she was a 19-year-old, handsome, laughing. fair-haired, blueeyved girl full of the joy of life. About that time the 24-vear-old King Alfonso of Spain hobbed up in London. He was a posthumous child and heir of his father, King Alfonso XII, and was, therefore, a king from the very minute of his birth. He met Prin cess Ena and was attracted at once. Old Sir Thomag Lipton, a!' great crony of King Edwayd, al-! ways claimed that he was responsi ble for the match. Some years be-' fore his death, Sir Thomas said tol the writer: “l made tha: romance. Ena andl Alfonso were on my vacht. T saw the young King wag strongly at tracted by the British princess and knew the royal family of England ‘was not adverse to the match even m meant Ena would ha.vs’ to become a Catholic. I slipped a e e R s E N SO i e AT W LSTU O s o :,_._fi.;:fa Ty e o “‘.'lw:.,k SOF B e N AP LW Feny De W Y, TR % i 4J‘ Vi 1 ’%& s BSR e et b A B B 3 b T g ook Re g g Tl e T TR o MR ST SRR T N o Wt comEERETY ] AR o ] e ; i g PR 335 § e e i G e S Qo PR R B - TR G RN R ; gigmaseL. 0 e ‘%%} P # @ & G & R 3 #R . i ¢ T e e e e e v 3 e g Sl Sl e 5 o 2 S i "':.:ii\b&&\; e s LRt ‘3@\ S e LR A R s 0 e R SR A B 3 B R e O, et S e S ,'-? g 5 o »{“Q\,‘(& R lSpnin's former rulers, Queen Sna‘; and King Alfonso Xill, shown in [ posed portraits. ‘ lwnrd into Alfonso’s ear and the rest was easy. ‘ mt— l !HAPSBURG CURSE CASTS SHADOW ON JOY } But what started out so beauti fully fair and romantic was soon 'shadowed by tragedy. On the day of their wedding in Madrid, May ‘3l, 1906, as they were driving away from the cathedral amid the plau dits of the massed crowds, a man rushed out and tossed what was believed to be a bouquet. It was a bomb, aimed at the King. By a miracle he and his bride escaped, Lbut some of the footmen and out riderg were killed me royal pair were literally spa with their blood. Alfonso showed the cool PAGE THREE-A pieces shown here are a part. Engraved in the silvep are scenes from Wash ington’s life— Crossing the Delaware, The Declaration of Independence, his coat of arms, and the birth of the American flag. nerve he always had during ~the many attempts on his life. He got out of the carriage and tenderly helped his bride out, They drove rapidly away in anethep carriage. Then Queen Ina found ' the shades of the royal prison house close around her. The ceremonial of the court of Spain was the stiff est in the world, KEvery move was regulated, every gesture prescrib ed. To the young princess, used to the free and independent life of Britain, it was like being chain ed. Next came the birth of her first child, Frince Alfonso, heir to _the throne. It was soon discovered that he was a victim of that mys terious disease known as haemo= philia. Those afflicted with it are in constant danger of bleeding to death, if they get so much as a serateh. Women ordinarily do.- not suffer fram it, but the seeds of the disease are in them and they’use ually pass it on to their male off spring. The same disease was in the blood of a kinswoman of Queen Ena. : JUAN IS ONLY HEALTHY SON Queen Ena bore five more chil dren, the Princes Jaime, Juan, and Gonzalo, and the Infanta Beatrice and Maria Christina. The girls were healthy, but Jaime was deaf and Gonzalo wls always sickly. The only boy who was sturdy was Juan, who is at present a midship man in the British navy. . As the years passed the Spanish royal couple became estranged. Alfonso, black-haired, black-mouss tached, Hapshurg-lipped, liked soft lights, sweet music and lively wo men companions. Queen Ena's ideal was the model home life practiced by her cousins, King George and Queen Mary. For. rea sons of state. the Spanish pair kept up an elaborate facade. But Ena escaped to London as often as she could and spent happy hours of freedom with her mother, Princess Beatrice. Since the Spanish revo lution, the ex-King has no longer bothered about keeping up appear ances. He established a home for his family at Fontainebleau. near Paris, but was mere often away from it than _jn it. Paris saw him and London, Vienna, Rome and Scandinavia. Then Alfonso = es tablished a residence in Rome. But there will be no divorce nor legal separation. Their Cathoelic faith forbids these things. - And also in the British royal family there are things that simply are not done nowadays. One otthem is to take marital troubies to = the courts and ask for redress. What makes the Queen’s sqrow double is the position of the children. They adore their mother, but their fath er holds the purse utrintgg§ ey have to dance to the tume of his