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Show "V Thursday, August 11, 1927 THE LEIII SUN, LEIII, UTAH PAGE THREE I : t Tf FASHION'S FAVORITE ENSEMBLE; MILLINERY TAKES UP FLOWERS WOMEN of fashion are Indulging In the luxury of all-white this summer. One has only to count up the cleaner's bills at the end of a "white season" to agree that It Is no misnomer to refer to the all-white costume cos-tume as a luxury. Somehow both madam and mademoiselle made-moiselle appear at their most charming, charm-ing, clad In pure white. Not only Is the allurement of all-white due to its becouilngness, but Its immaculate daintiness ever bears the appeal of the exquisite. So it Is that the vogue tor white Is with us, particularly so these late midsummer days, i White coats posed over white frocks, topped with chic white felt hats, such Is fashion's favorite ensemble. en-semble. Coats range from the simplest sim-plest tailored types of white flannel, also the knitted kind, to most elegant has only te view the Intest mortals from Paris to appreciate the fact that flowers are decidedly In the millinery picture, but hi ways most unique and distinctive. I The tendency Is marked toward flat flowers for they lend themselves so successfully to the Idea of being built Into the structure of the hat without Interfering with Its original contour. The method of applying trimming trim-ming so as to maintain an undisturbed silhouette must be observed, in order to secure a proper styling, according to the modern conception of good designing. de-signing. A flat flower treatment is carried out adroitly by forming a semi-crown of roses for the black straw hat shown at the top to the right in this picture. The little bonnets In this collection are quaintly flower-trimmed The one . . . J.' . .'. ,v.' .'.'v., Y ' V ; ;f i P , brV'0 f 1 1 The Allurement of All White. What's the Answer Questions No. 4 1 When was the United States weather bureau established T 2 What northern city was burned by what Confederate general during the Civil wart 8 Who Invented the three-element vacuum tube used in radio T 4 What is the funny bonet 0 Who is the national amateur golf champion? 6 Who was the culminating genius f the Renaissance? 7 Where in North America are the highest mountain ranges t 8 Where is Robert Louis Stevenson burled? 9 Who said: "Gentlemen, I would rather have written those lines (Gray's 'Elegy in a Country Churchyard') than take Quebec"? 10 Are labor strikes permitted In Italy? 11 What two famous British au thors were slaves of the opium habit? 12 Who is the heavyweight cham pion pugilist? 13 Who was President when Wash ington died? 14 What battle was fought after the treaty of peace ending what war had been signed and when? IS How much of the body la com posed of water? 16 What is the composition of air? 17 What comedian of the screen, most affectionately regarded by movie patrons, died before the advent of big salaries and world-wide publicity? 18 What is the highest point of land in Germany? 19 Who said: We must make the world safe for democracy"? 20 What proportion of the words used by Shakespeare are of Saxon derivation? modes, the latter frequently cuffed and collared with white fox. Meet, If you please, in the picture, Gertrude Olmstead, the youthful film actress, who Is of the newer generation genera-tion of stars, wearing an adorable all-white all-white costume Just such as is the envy and admiration of all who behold. be-hold. White faille Is the chosen medium me-dium for this ravishing model with a wealth of snowy fox fur. A bright red heel on a white kid pump and a smart petit-point embroidered bag are the chic accessories which enhance en-hance this lovely costume. The return to favor of the separate to the left fcttens a few velvet daisies against its side crown with outreachinssn)ax9.,pC. heather. Also note the fact that two wee ribbon ruffles becomingly frame the face. The other doche adopts an Intricate Intri-cate working of flowerets of every hue and kind from artificial to those of metal-ombre ribbon, touches of hand painting blending the entire Into an artful color symphony. With flowery print frocks whose mul titudinous paaels and jabots flutter and sway at the touch of every breeze, likewise with the picturesque frill- skirted organdies, which have reap i X Answers No. 3 1 It Introduces some virile, expres slve and picturesque words which may gain recognition. 2 General Pershing. 8 Antolne Galland. 4 Okeechobee. 5 Paul Whlteman. 6 In Greece, not later than 1307 B. C 7 The process of turning an insol uble substance Into a soluble one. 8 The specific gravity of any sub stance Is its weight In proportion to an equal volume of water. 9 Franklin Pierce. 10 Wyoming. 11 Kansas. 12 William E. Gladstone. 13 The Bible. 14 Asia, 15 William Chart Macready, 16 Twelve. 17 A traveling stairway. 18 Thomas A. Edison. 19 Louis XIV. , 20 William Howard Taft 8 -j- a- t .' J y o . ? 1 An Assortment of Summer Hats white fox neckpiece is registered this veason in the smart set's book of style. Even if one should perchance neglect to wear one's white coat one's white fox boa, never! White fox. women have learned, is too flatteringly flat-teringly becoming to be omitted from the picture. And the way to wear it la to trail It across the back of one's houlders, fastening it, oh ! so daintily ut the front, so that it does not en-i en-i umler the throat With the colorful sheer summery frocks, there's nothing more entrancing in the way of an ac-t-essory, than a snow-white fur neckpiece. neck-piece. Summer without flower - trimmed lints? Perish the thought! One peured upon fishion's screen, gauzy hats, hroad-b-immed and flower trimmed are toe natural accompani-nient. accompani-nient. There is. on the large hat to the left, the usual chiffon flange, which so gracefully serves to make this wide brim look wider. Flat flowers elaborate the crown with a summery transparent rose resting on the brim. The voue of hue brims has revived the fi-.filiion of posing a single large flower underneath next the face, as evidenced in the concluding hnt in this group. JCUA BOTTOMLEY. , 1921. by Western Nmrsptper Union. Man Using Both Hands Can Accomplish More Out of every hundred babies born, 17 are naturally right-handed, 3 are left-handed, left-handed, and the remaining 80 are capable of using either hand with equal ease. Yet, owing to our method of training the young, by the time those hundred babies are three years old all except the three who were left-handed left-handed will use the right hand for such essential work as writing, paint ing and the use of all tools. There are said to be over 400 dif ferent sorts of work In which the equal use of both hands is an advantage, but even in those in which one hand only Is generally used It Is a tremendous advantage to be able to use the left hand In order to rest the right Sir James Barrle, when his right hand failed him, had to learn to write with his left, but Sir .Robert Baden Powell, when bitten by a dog and forced to carry his right arm in a sling, went right on with his work, writing and drawing with the other hand, for he has been able to use both hand equally all his life. The great animal artist, Landseer, could paint two pictures at the same time, using both hand The famous Leonardo da Vinci was equally accom- ! plished, and so was Holbein, the por-j por-j trait painter. More wonderful seems the fact that the well-known surgeon, Mr. Simeon Shell, could operate equally easily with either hand. Sir Oliver Lodge Is another well-known man who uses both hands with ease. It is the left side of the brain that controls the muscles of the right side of 'he body, so by learning to use the left hand a person actually rests one side of his brain and Is therefore able to do more work at a stretch. Beautiful Church Tower Mary of the parish churches of England and Wales are beautiful, but the tower of the church at Wrexham, Wales, with its corner turrets high as medieval fortresses, its spiralets and crockets, intricate bands and graceful grace-ful cornices, is a thing of astonishing astonish-ing beauty and worthy to have graced a minster. As a noted traveler once said: "One cannot look at It without acknowledging a debt of deep gratitude grati-tude to those who built It so nianj epturies ago." Kilauea Volcano Performs for the Tourists rr- -.I "' i 1 " ! v 1 ' " ' i; I . 9 , - - - , - , , ' 2 4lir1ftiiiiVlwifthtftfffiiniwinr -iniinl Jj Tourists In Hawaii are having a chance to see a great volcano in action, for the Halemaumau pit of Kilauea Is spouting fiery lava and clouds of smoke. The photograph shows an active conelet near the .vast north wall of the crater. . - ' Captain Courtney's Atlantic Flight Plane -, , jJZZ &"'r'' " The Dornier-Xapler plane Whale ready for the flight across the Atlantic from Ireland by Captain Courtney, English aviator. . European Boy Scouts at International Camp Here are some of the 3,000 boy scouts, from almost every country in Europe, enjoying a hearty meal, at the International camp In Skansen, near Stockholm, Sweden. Motor Ship Battered by Ice Floes 1 3 yi The motor ship A. B. Carpenter is shown in the ice on her way to Nome, Alaska, a trip from which she recently returned seriously battered by the heavy floes. The Carpenter was in the ice from May 18 to June 15, on which date she reached Nome, more than two weeks late. Fireflies for a Princess Jjl '4'. : I'ii' ; l 'll I 1 M CZAR OF JAZZ j r There are film czars and baseball czars and now we have a Jazs czar.' He Is Julian T. Abeles, head of thf National Association of Orchestra Directors. Di-rectors. The function of the association associa-tion is to uplift and protect Jazz. PREMIER OF CHINA :: aw Bit iTik MAuKUhWSM Th two bowls in which !ire UMCi iirefiies captured by the Juvenile Red (:ss society of C.ifu. a oily f icrtr. l Japan, and presented to Princess Sliigeko Tcru. daughter of Hie empt n r. Pan Fu, the new premier of t: Niitionalist government of Hiiw. ;A , is making an effort to settle the ail Important financial prubk'? |