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Woman and the Home .f # * • ELABORATE USE OF FUR MARKS baby and mother. STYLING OF, THE FORMAL ENSEMBLE Palestine Arabs Returning Loot More and more clearly la a line ^fc>f distinction being drawn between c,othea an( l those for formal ^^^wfternoon wear. Wherefore the per* fectly appointed wardrobe most per force Include this season, not only a swagger suit of sturdy tweed for sports, but an elaborately styled en semble. preferably of broadcloth, be comes a necessary luxury. As to the rery formal cloth suit or ensemble, fashion declares that there Is no possibility of going too far In the matter of elegance and ornate- nesa. There Is no doubt but what the designer of the handsome costume In the picture has "caught < the vision" as to the rich details In matter of furring and such, which constitute a really and truly formal afternoon en semble. For this gorgeous outfit Patou se- * Iccts tbs finest of broadcloth In a de- lecfable roee-belge tone, the fox fur being an accurate color to match. B* cause of the dignity of the new styles, all the prestige formerly accorded to broadcloth has been restored which again proves the gentility of present modes. Another (nominating style point Is the lengthened hemline stressed In the full-plaited skirt. As to the elnb orate fur treatment, there Is much to be gained as to the new fashion trends. The collar, for Instance, flares so decidedly and becomingly away from tbe face, which la • feature made much of thla season. The lav ish fur bordering, too, accenting tbe shapely hemline of the coat bespeak* a detail of outatandlng significance, for luxuriant and masalve fur bor ders add to the elaborateneaa of the better coats. Last, but not least—the muff! What • vista of opportunity this fanciful muff reveals to those who are planning their autumn sod winter costumes. ^ m ■ Perhaps that which this costume proclaims, most of all. Is tbe fact that tbe Individualised mode Is the thing. It Is plainly to be seen from fashions such as this, that there Is In prospect an era of rj^l elegance In drees, wWeln the afternoon costume enfers a career of greater formality, which Invitee the heat efforts of creative genius and which encourages fabric and fur elegancies detailed to a nice ty and with that versatility which tunes each costume to the wearer. JULIA BOTTOM1.ET. (A ItSS. Wrstcrn Newspaper l/oioa ) ... SUCCESSFUL HOMEMAKING • y C t AC I VIAll C R AY Wool Flower Embroidery Adorns Slip-on Blouse HOT ROLLS Oi Where Is the person who doesn’t like hot roll&J And yet knowing this to be a fact, many women never at- empt making hot rolls for their fam ilies, thinking it Is a difficult process. Making hot rolls Is easy. Once a housewife starts making them, she will always make them. Her friends will demand them wbeu they come a-din- iug. and almost over night she has a reputation for making roils that fair ly “melt in your mouth." The recipe I am going to give you requires little kneading and handling and only a short time of mixing until ready for the oven. TUe secret of this u b ti Every Member of tha—Family -Wel comes Hot Rolls. quickness lies in the fact that we use soft wheat and plenty of yeast. We call them Parker House rolls, and you make them as follows: 2 cups scalded milk C to 7 cups soft 2 tbsp. sugar wheat flour 2 compressed yeast 1ft tap. salt cakes 2 tbsp. fat Scald the milk, add tbe sugar, and let cool until It is lukewarm; add the yeast and stir until if is dissolved. 'Aien beat in enough flour to make A soft batter. Add the salt and fat and stir In enough flour to make a soft dough. Place on a floured board and knead just enough to obtain a smooth dough. Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover with a cloth, and let stand until the dough Is double In bulk; cut with a large biscuit cutter, grease the tscult with melted butter, crease through center with knife, and fold one-half over the other; grease the top of each roll and place on a well greased baking sheet to ris* When tbe rolls double in bulk, bake la a hot oven (400 degrees F). These delicious rolls require only shout 1% boors. ADVERTISE in The People-Sentinel Wool flowers embroiders all over the slip-on blouse give this crepe de chine frock its charm. The work-it dene bt soft coarse yarn so that it goes r Idly. The skirt ta plaited In front a attached to a bodice top. A jolly red and white color beheme would prob ably appeal to the younger pat In school and business. For those who do not care for this color combination the frock would be charming In soft beige embroidered In brown. Designed by Hellen Refry Curtis In the Wom an's Home Companion. Knowledge of the protein and the moisture content of wheat aids In determining the wheat to store. Wheat containing less than IS per cent moisture can be stored safely. (By Helena V. Brown, 9 Years Old.) The little stream is flowing, The roses are growing, a-** The flowers are waking up; The mpther-dog is under the steps Feeding her little pu>p. Baby is sleeping, Little chicks are peeping From under the hay To see if the weather ig fair And if to'have a glorious 4ay. The sun is high in the sky, The birds are flying swiftly by— They are flying ~ ~ To their babies in the nest— While morther is cooking for baby the best. % Mdther is ready for baby to wake,' She has breakfast of milk and ap ples, stewed and baked. Baby puts on big clothes And out of the house Just as quiet as a little mouse. Mother says softly, as baby goes out: "I have guesses only two— I think baby is sweetest— Don’t you?” GIRL 8 YEARS OLD, IS MUSIC PRODIGY English Maid Has Composition . Published. Bexhill-on Sea, England.—Life Is becoming Just one child "pbenora* after another. Novels, poems, long stories, short stories, biographies, fake biographies and what not from, or alleged from, the hands and beads of child M pbenoms,’* ranging from four to sixteen years, are being pub lished every few days The latest child “phenom" strike* a new note, or a whole cord of them. . Her name la Ruih Glppa. She la eight years old, whl^h Is rather aged compared to most of the child prod! gles who havf broken Into print, but she was making berseif beard, lit erally and figuratively, when the was three years old and the demonstrated that she was a true child "phenom" when she submitted a story for pub II cat I on at seven. ** ^-IF^EBCT Having bad her career as sn an tbor checked by a rejection slip, Ruth turned to music and Is having a mu sical composition printed. It la a lit tle piece In the thdhmghly modem style called the Fairy Shoemaker, and she suggested tbe design for the cover Her publishers have a high opln loo of the work which they accepted on 4ts merit, and It was awarded sec ond prlxe In the Brighton Music fe*tl- vnL All the other competitor* were adults, and the Judges were unaware that they were giving tbe prise to a child. Ruth comes of a musical family. Her mother, who Is Swiss by birth, and her roofher’a six brother* and sisters are all in the tuualcal profea alon. There Is nothing of the “prodigy” about Ruth’s temperament When she was Introduced to her publisher she was In a bathing costume, playing with a bucket nnd spade on tbe sands at Eastbourne. \ With tbe return of peaceful conditions In Palestine tbe Arab# have been compelled to return the loot they took from the Jews. Soma of them are here seen carrying bundles to police barracks. : SEND US YOUR ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING. FRUIT CAKES • . * v . . e\ •?. ; The Finishing Touch for Thanksgiving Dinaor. Claussen’s ~ j 1 —r • * — Sleee 1841—Scuth’s Favorites. SPECIAL! "Mikado" Pencils: 6 for 25c. Par doz. 45c The People-Sentme Barnwell, S. G Sword'of Franklin Is Discovered in Paris Paris.—The long-drawn-out polemics and discussions as to whether Benja min Franklin ever wore a sword at the courts of France and England iuLva been solved by the discovery of the weapon In the private collection of M. Honore Hecquest d’Orval, a de fendant of P. J. Cnbanis. It was presented to M. Cabanls by Franklin shortly after the conclusion of the treaty of peace by which Great Britain recognized the independence of the United States of America. A^tnrfqttc fe« ture of the sword Is that it Is not similar to those usual ly regarded aa a “courtier’s sword," being of full military length with a triangular blade of the finest Shef field mottoes nnd the elaborately chis eled hilt and guard—the gift of Louis XVI—it might hove been the sword of .an officer. The blade bears the inscription: "Sword which was carried by Ben Jamln Franklin In tbe battles fought In America for the cause of Liberty. Be «ave It later to bis friend, P. J. G. Cabanls." Tbe discovery is due to M. Girodle, curator of tbe museum established In the historic chateau of Bierancourt by the citizens of the new French repub lic, shortly after Franklin , bade his final farewell to the soil of France. The Special Combination offer, whereby subscribers may get The People-Sentinel a and The Augusta Chronicle one year each for only $3.95 will he withdrawn a November 20th, 1929 after which date the regular subscription price will be charged. Those wishing to take ri 1 ™,,r, 1 —- ■ — ■ -■ - — ■ - - r -- — advantage of this special offer should not delay sub scriptions; ■Sr- ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO People-Sentinel i Secretary Gat* $5,000 New York.—Tha Merchants’ associ ation announced that It had been making a surrey to discover what sal aries clerks, stenographers and secre taries made In New Yark and that the highest salary la this class, paid ta a aiaa who was principal stenographer and secretary to an officer of a hank, was *\U)U. Barnwell, So. Car.