The Athens daily herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1912-1923, September 11, 1913, Image 6

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rTi'va.-,,^;jaiami.nK •••■« THE IDEA F?E THIS N9VEL « PRACTICAL DESIGN ms ORIGINATED BY “WINIFRED WORTH" ths strictly tailored woman does not carry her TO TBANfttEB THIS DESIGN. . -- ----- - ------- - - - _ ■ - - r « . ... . . - ^ut some oogp in a pint of hot water, stir and remove scap Saturac* Certainly you'll admire simplicity of this design since It la eometmng you can make dainty at little coat \ou will gatn time by puncturing the eyelets over a cake of hard, n e sign ..lth mixture, then remove excess moisture bv partially drying De. p soap Only one eyelet shdSld be made at a time Never knot the thread Do not use a double thread but embroider closely to give a compact form You also gain time by ff gn pi ace material on a bard flat surface and lay the Design face down* ning the long tendrils on the sewing machine, using floss on the spool^ Thejnachlne^stltehfng Is oft?n^uaed to* oatline the buttonholed extreme edge before applying the button- upon th * material. Cover with two folds of newspaper and with a tablet# *“ V * fc " “* * spoon rub, pressing hard, until the Design is entirely transferred hole edge It Insures extra strength that fragile portion which often tears whetv a garment has no placket opening. The ribbon eyelets may be enlarged if you desire Many prefer, the three-quarter inch ribbon eyelets since ribbons are a decorative feature, and the narrower varieties are not so durable as a better .grade of a ide ribbons This pattern can be used on chemise, corset cover nightgown and by ellmingtifig tho portion for holding the initial it could be used Cfcorsttvely on the prlnceaa aflp, petticoat and union suite Sincerely vours France to Have Directing Signs To Guide the Touring Aviators Brindejonc des Moulinais, Champion Long Distance Flyer, Says Finding His Way Is Aviator’s Greatest Trouble in Flying. New Method Been Authorised. Paris.—Brindejonc des Moulinais, the champion long-distance flyer, says • that by far the greatest difficulty to the touTlng aviator is that of finding hla way. After several years of study and experiment the National Aerial League of France has devised a meth od of directing signs which will re move thia trouble. This system has been approved by the French Ministry of Public Works, and the League au thorised to put it into practice. Many devices were considered but the one which appeared to meet all requirements in the best and simplest way conslts in painting the figures representing the latitude and longitude of each town in huge white letters on the top of the gasometers in every town possessing --fi gas plant. The latitude will be to the north and the longitude underneath, to the south. Thus an aviator flying over the town will know not only what the town is but also if he Is on his Tight course, and if not, how far and in what di rection he has deviated from it. In other words' he will be supplied with the same information as a chip’s cap tain would obtain from taking an ob servation with a sextant. The managers of the gas plants at Amiens. Toulouse and Nancy have al ready undertaken to place the signs, and the recent congress of gas com panies has pronounced in favor of the request of the league. As there are 830 gas companies in France, every town of any importance will in the near future have itff aerial sign-post. The league, however, will not be con tent with this; it contemplates plac ing signs in every village. As the system is applicable to every country using the ordinary numerals, it is hoped that the initiative of the French League will be followed by ery similar organization In Europ NOT TO ANCHOR HAS A T F£ELING AT QUEENSTOWN Say It’s Dangerous for Maure tania and Lusitania to Enter Harbor to Embark U. S. Mails. London.—The board of trade has agreed with the Cunaifa company that it is dangerous for such large vessels as the Lusitania and the Mauretania to enter Queenstown harbor to em bark mails for the United States. The pof»tmaster general has, therefore, agreed “with the greatest regret” to the omission of the call at Queen.*'- The consent Is conditional company agreeing to a reduction of prMl , den '. 5 tho I the mall contract from *340,000 $32,950 and the postponement of tl; league, has devised a series of flgu: after exhaustive experiments conduct ed from the summit of the Eiffel Tow er. The outlines are somewhat dif ferent from those of ordinary numei nls, notably in the case of the normal hour of departure from Liver pool on Saturdays to 10 p. m. Even with this modification, the postmaster general points out, the facilities 9 and « ALL IMPORTS TO FRANCE MUST BEAR INSCRIPTION OF COUNTRY OF ORIGIN late posting at present enjoyed the public in Ireland will be curtailed by periods varying from about 7% hours in Belfast to a whole day in Cork.” The homeward call at Queenstown was abandoned in January, 1910. FOR HIS HOSTS King George Hereafter to Pay For Private Post Established At Temporary Besidence. Paris.—An antiquary In the minis try of finance has found laws of 1814 and 1892, never enforced, under which importations bearing trade marks, must'also bear the words “Import© des Etats-Unls d’Amerique.*’ If, for ex ample. the importation should be from the United States. A ministerial or der has been issued declaring the law* In force as from January 1. 1914. The inscription showing the country of origin must he stamped into the ma te! lal In the same way as the maker'a other marks.- Consequently in the cJ^e of agricultural machinery, of which great quantities are brought from the United States and Canada, every part of the machine must have the phrase In French cast Into it showing wh-*re it came from. Some of the$>e machines have ns many as 3,000 pieces. Into each of which, according to the ministerial decree, the words must be cast. The obvious effect of the ministerial order is to exclude absolutely all me tallic articles bearing marks, because within .the rlx months allowed It would Even If 5 ful whether loreign companies selling j Brother In ‘Movies* machinery In France would find it j _________ profitable to remako all their patterns j g Him In “Quo Vadis”. Rs- nd would not prefer to : . - . . . . . i remake their patterns and molds s allowed it is^ doubt- j Recognizes His Lost^ Londofl.—To the great relief of his may hosts, King George has decided that in the future the cokSt of the temporary private post and telegraph office always established at any house he visits for more than twenty-tout hours, shall be met out of his own pri vate purse, and not borne by hla hosts as hitherto. This temporary^telegraph office generally costs about $500 to the ho?*, but of course this sum Is a mere “drop In the ocean” as com pared with the entire, cost of a fairly long royal visit. The late Duke of Devonshire, who entertained King Efward in such kumptuous style, usually spent about $15,000 on a long royal visit. The grounds at Chatsworth used to be Il lumined every night and whole hotel# were taken for the accommodation of the servants end retinue of the huge hous>e parties assembled there. Tfcos* days have now passed for ever. , c The prsent r kJ«g has effected. ,,enormou3 econdmies both at Buckingham Palace and at Windsor Castle, and he . M strongly against the spending pf large sums by his subject?, however exalted or rich they may be. In the entertain ment of members of the royal family, j Unlike his father, King George shuns ’ rgther than courts the friendship of rich magnates of obs*cu*e origin and the gre3t “merchant princes” have to take a Lack seat under the new re- and molds and would abandon the French market. Protects have already been lodged with the foreign office. It is under stood, by the German, British and Swiss governments, and the matter has been brought to the attention of the state department union Anticipated. London.—A. remarkable story of a man’s ‘recognition' of his long-lost brother in a moving picture comes Washington. | frOTO White*table. ALWAYS. “There are two sides to tlon,” snapped Mrs, Gabb. “Sure, there are,’’ replied Mr. Gabb “The wrong .«lde and y cinnatl Enquirer, Woman In Bathing Suit Slit From Hem To Waist Is Res cured From Mob Atlantic City.—-Two . policemen res cued Mrs. Charles Lenning, of Bur lington, N. J„ fronfa mob who pelteA her with sand when s*he appeared on the beach here wearing a purple silk bathing suit with an abbreviated skirt hich was slit from hem to waist. The mofi wap so large and hostile that Mrs. Lenning fainted before the officers arrived. DISCOVERY-OF SOME HISTORIC INTERE§T Paris.—A discovery of some- historic interest has been made on the French coast to the south or Cape Finisterra At low water the outline of the shat tered hull of the French irlg-ate Le Droit d’Homme has become clearly visible.* This vessel was sunk by an English warship in an engagement which took place about 1789. Tugs have been' sent to the spit and divers have gene down and havV discovered several interesting articles from th* wreck. Says President Vilson’s Plan Wouldn’t Have Effect On Pacifying Mexico Signor Miguel Diaz-Lombardo, European ■ Representative of ' General Carranza, Leader of the Mexican Constitutional ists, Speaks Interestingly on the Vital Situation. lying Mexico even assuming that Gen eral Huerta would consent to it. Tho election.-; would be carried out under the ^present government and it was hardly to be expected that they would allow themselves to be turned out if they could help it. In other words. change whs tutionalists cepted follow Pari*.—Senor Miguel Diaz-Lombar do, European representative of General Carranza, leader of the Mexican Con stitutionalists, directs the work of propaganda from the luxurious apart ment looking over the A\’enue Bois de Boulogne, which he first occupied as President Madero’s minister to France. Ready to his hand he keeps a map of Mexico, upon which he marks out in black 'each part of territory wrung j Zapata, who though from the forces of President Huerta, operating with the reported by cable or letter. have the same socif Senor Diaz Lombardo is a quiet, I economic program, earnest man, neither given to invec- | Senor Dinz-Lombard< tives against his adversaries nor to ex- j that many of the custon aggerating the successes of his friends. Uhe hards of his party, and tha He does not believe that General Hu- jof the other sources of revenue erta and his party are going to be (able to General Huerta are c overcome with ease, but he Is full of by the destructh confidence that ’Senor Carranza will triumph eventually, though the mo ment of his triumph may be a long rofttica off. EXHIBIT DRAWING WORK Washington.—Drawing work from public SChOOll lected by the IJnited States Bureau of jtion, would Education for exhibition purposes, and is now touring the country. The fol lowing are among the cities honored with a place in the exhibit: Los An geles and Stockton, CaL; New Haven, Conn.; Nantucket, Newton, Reading. Somerville, and Springfield, Mass.; Minneapolis, Minn.; St. Louis, Mo.: While expressing the greatest ad miration for President Wilson as a man of uprightness, a frlond of peace and of Mexico, Senior Diaz-Lombardo considers that the step he advocated, the resignation of Provisional Presi- has been se- •(dent Huerta, and a clean-slate elec- have the effect of pacl- of The 400.000 per month. • the < tha work of administration. If the troops are not paid they will desort, an eventuality which cannot be staved off indefinitely. In view of the prohibition by the French government of French loans to Mexico, upon which the Hu erta government had been counting. Japan’s “Sarah Barnhardt” Died Recently at the Age ol 70 Years Tokio.—Madame Kutnehachi Ichi^a- , a. the “Sarah Bernhardt” of Japan, Jersey-City and Newark, N. J.; Buf- ; died recently at the age of seventy, falo, Elmira, Schenectady, Solvay, :a ft er spending nearly half a century Troy and Utica, X. Y.; on the etag e. Like Japanese warriors, who are proud to die on the battlefield, Japa nese actors and actresses hope Kumehachl was Cleveland. Ohio; Laurium, Minersville, side.”—Cin- [bxford, Pittsburgh, and Rankin, Pa.; and Westerly. R. I. s The whole Importing Interest in j During ,!l « exhibition of, the -Quo France is excited over the govern- 'Vadis” film at the local picture palace, ment’s decision, and the minister of | a visitor became greatly agitated, and finance finds on his table every mom- [was s6 overcome by emotion that he ing piles* of protests. It has all grown (fainted, and bad to be carried out of out of the desire of the French auto- -jthc biding. mn1,IU #,r ** ‘ When he recovered It was ascertain ed tbat In one of the actors In the scene depicted, the visitor had recog nized a brother who wwi/t* Italfc be |rr possible for tha manufacturer* * debonair,”—Christian Register. ' MRS. TWICKEMBIJRY. Tv* always* edmired that charac- j twelve years ago, and had hot been ter, Rupert of Hentxau,” remarked [heard of since. Mrs. Twickembury; “he had such a J A reunion between the brother* is j anticipated Paris Society Folk Crowd Around Stalls to Buy Lettuce, Silks, Etc. Paris.—A new diversion has been found at Trouvlljf’ Every Wednes- or:bargains. ■.. ^Uda "'•Thef eotierctfay among tii^ crowd round the stalls piled with "lace, silks, vegetables, and other goods,'two com- te.?ses, a vincomtesse, a corr.te, two marquises and a duke were seen mak ing, coupled with her personal attrac tiveness, made her more and more fa mous until one evening Danjuro, the actor of the era was greatly im pressed by her genius and asked her to join his company. ■ Kumehachl belonged to the old the stage. Kumehachl was no (school. but her wonderful adaptability ccptlon ana her prayer was answered. jMmbl( . d ber to carrv her role . succt ,*,_ ' while performing pne of her fav- ln ..„ ew .. plays , lnclud lng a te dances at the Mikuni Theatre, | number of Shakespearian tragedies. Toklo._rtp„collapsed on the stage She „„ virtually the only actress of and never -ecotered. ■ the old school, for at that time Japa- j Madame Ichikawa was horn in a Inese feminine roles were always play- ing numerous purchases. , An evening paper, gives a few .ex- 'Fstmurai family, and . commenced her led by tracts.from, the .society intelligence of theatrical training at the early age of the futures "Mine, la Duches*se de F—- six. She soon proved hervelf a,n on to be seen visiting:.the stalls in ! sr«arbh. ^yesterday^ bought a magnificent* let- chanting dancer. At twelve she had —*'— •- joiTrem ark ably fine green tone, .'many pupils, some of them her seniors His Excellency the Prince R—bought . in ago studying Japanese dancing* a perfect duck of a lobster, bright- [with her. But it was at the age of eyed; with very fine claws, and of an'two-and-twenty that she made her Incomparable chic.” The possibilities .first appearance on the stage as a pro of the idea are limltlere, Ifeyslonal actress. Her thorough train being brought out, and Kumehachl gave willing assistance to the training of young girls recruited by the Imperial Theatre of Toklo. A bronze panel has been unveiled at I.ugor, Ayrshire, Scotland, in mem ory of W.V.am Murdoch, one of tha inventors of coal-gas lighting gjgj