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Show THE Thursday, April 7, 1938 TIMES-NEW- NEPHI. UTAH S. PAGE THREE u Keeping Up WiinScien&e 5N Vj A e Science Service. Avt WNU Service. TT1 c i Y74-tl- r T"l the Building Up of -- Mental Health - By MARJORIE VAN DE WATER . New York. Paintings of modern schools of art and those by the mentally de- raneea are ,iieiv- xo De reoui- sive to many - judging their aesthetic merit. ... " 1 Tf 1 - 1 1 . But such artistic presentations have their value nevertheless. To the psychiatrist, for example, the aesthetic qualities of a painting may be of least importance. The physician of sick minds has come to realize that through the medium of brush and canvas, a tortured soul can find release for his emotions, a lessening of tensions and anxieties and a bridge for the unreal realm of his imaginings to reality. And a naughty boy who draws In the back of his geography a caricature of his stern teacher lets off steam which otherwise might result in an emotional explosion. Children treated by psychiatrists lor emotional disorders are encouraged to make such drawings of teacher and parent, because they not only relieve their minds but also reveal to the psychiatrist the youngsters' individual worries and suppressed troubles. Size, Design and Color. Dr. Edward Liss, New York physician, tells In the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry what the psychiatrist looks for as significant in the paintings of children and adults. In the first place, size is signifi cant as revealing inner attitudes. It is related to the individual's evalua tion of his own ego. ovt t a rioeicrn nr roftAi-T- i la 1m Good technique in all kinds p portant. 1 of art is the result of a certain balance between natural impulses and certain censoring agents which tend to bring them within approved limits or patterns. The more fixed the pattern, the more geometric the designs, the greater are the re pressions within the individual. Color choice is important. Brown and black, for example, are asso ciated particularly with deep unconscious components of a depres-sivnature. Dr. Liss has found. Finally the finished work Is Inter preted in much the same way that dreams are analyzed. Preference for some subjects and evasion of others indicates to the trained student the emotional impasses and fixation points of the artist. TkT Vi v Supercharging Diesels Brings Gains in Power Six Pairs of Twins in One Family Are Puzzle for Scientists Chicago. The six pairs of fraternal twins that have been born to a Connecticut husband and wife are some what disturbing to scientists. Prof. William Walter Greulich, of the department of anatomy and the adolescent study unit at Yale university, presents a study of the six pairs of twins in the Connecticut family In the Journal of the American Medical association. He has also looked into the fam ily history of the twins' parents. Only on the father's side can a rec ord of previous multiple births be found. The father's father, it turns out, had triplets by his second wife. The widespread belief that twin ning tends to run in families is sup ported by evidence here and abroad, and twin births everywhere seem to appear just as frequently on the father's side as on the mother's. Now this disturbing fact cannot be reconciled with the accepted theory of the genesis of fraternal twins. Fraternal twins, as distinguished from monozygotic twins (those of the same sex and physical charac teristics), are produced, it is usual ly assumed, by the fertilization of two ova derived from separate follicles either from the same or from different ovaries. Calls for Observations. Such double ovulations are excep tional and are generally regarded as the result of some upset in function of the ovulatory mechanism. The control of this would natur ally be with the mother and could not possibly be Influenced by the father. Professor Greulich appeals to sur geons and pathologists to make observations during operations and postmortems on pregnant women that will help find a satisfactory explanation of this phenomenon. The most reasonable explanation. in his opinion, was advanced 20 years ago by Dr. C. H. Danforth and recently by Dr. F. Curtius of Germany. According to this hypothesis, the sperm of some men causes the tubal ovum to form two cells, both of which are susceptible of being fertilized, each, of course, by a dif Such fertilization ferent sperm. would result in the production of twins who had the same heredity from the mother's side but different paternal heredity. Such twins might be of like or of unlike sex and would presumably be intermediate between identical twins in and ordinary double-eg- g the degree of resemblance that they would bear to each other. The Connecticut family, which has renewed the faith of physicians that phenomenal fecundity has not become a lost art, had its sixth pair of twins last June 12. and the The mother was thirty-fiv- e n when they were father born. Of the first pair of twins the boy died, but all others are living. fifty-seve- California Diamonds Washington. Supercharging of Do Not Justify a Rush" giant Diesel engines on motorships at sea offers two benefits for ma "Recent diamond Washington. rine commerce and naval vessels, finds at Cherokee Flats, near Ca mi- said E. D. Newel of the bureau of no, Calif., do not justify any rush to engineering. Navy department, in the area in search of easily-gottean address here at a joint meeting Dr. R. A. stones," says glittering of the American Society of MechanFoshag, curator of minerals at the ical Engineers and the Society of National museum here. "We reAutomotive Engineers. In naval ships, Mr. Newell Indi- ceive at the museum one diamond evfrom the Cherokee Flats cated, supercharging enables the ery three or four years. region Perhaps same engines to turn out valuable hundred diamonds have been extra power for special short time two found in California since the gold operation in emergencies. In bemarine installation, super rush days, the largest reported ing about seven carats." a to motorship charging permits The Cherokee Flats diamonds, exuse smaller engines, thus having more cargo space but obtaining the plains Dr. Foshag, are perfectly same speed. Or the cargo space good stones, their rarity, rather can be retained and speed increased, than any defect in them, making By supercharging Diesel engines the placer gold deposits unprofitable as diamond mines. Near the on the new streamlined railroad trains, additional power gains have creeks Is a dike of serpentine rock been achieved which, in one case from which the diamonds are behave amounted to 50 per cent power lieved to have been freed by weathincrease for continuous operation, ering during many thousands of Mr. Newell reviewed the use of years. Working this dike for diacost much more in supercharging in Diesel engines for monds would could ever product in aircraft and pointed cut that such labor than it not only permits diamonds, he believes. supercharging greater power for the size and weight of engine but makes possible Larger Army Airplanes engine performance at higher alti Have Many New Devices tudes where the air Is n com-mercia- 0JE3 1313)S Servants in 'After Life9 1 1 Picture rEAR DORIS DENE: I am St girl of seventeen and am kept very much at home by an over-stri- ct mother and father. They are C:!-.;-- :i kind to me in some ways and will allow my friends to come to the house but they have ridiculous Ideas about going out. I do not go out very often and resent it very much. Mother seems to think I am safer at home. As she has no Idea of what young people are like, it seems to me that It is unfair of her to interfere. She talks about the boys I know as if they are men she'd known all her life when real ly she hasn't the faintest idea what boys are all about. Mothers and .. h" 3 fathers might be expected to keep Not since the great King "Tut" was removed from his grave has the out of what they don't understand. little world of excavators been so excited. In Egypt the government's de- I. S. ANSWER Sometimes it's the partment of antiquities has made investigations at Saqquara, uncovering fault of the mothers and fathers the tomb of the wealthy Vizier Hewaka. that they seem to be such utterly fleshless and bloodless individuals. In their desire to bring up the young as they think they should they present a picture of their sterling virtue which would cause many children to regard them as less than human. Actually though, mothers and fathers are not so short on memory as they seem. If they could be persuaded to take oft the mantle of ultra respectability and virtue, M 4 ?fi I and show themselves for the human beings they really are, many a son and daughter would be amazed at how much the old folks know. Just because mother doesn't run around town with gigolos doesn't mean that she was always a settled-dow' ' K humdrum sort of person. She rememJ . bers what it felt like to be in love and she knows how near she came to WSStk v.v. way ?::ty-i-av,h :yyrtW-lfojrtitiiy making a fool of herself over the town's bad boy, and she can recapture aleven now the thrill of stolen joys Plaques and carvings, and dangerous pleasure. ways interesting because When she discusses her daughter', they tell a story when boy friends with assurance, she is rewere photographed membering her own suitors of the past, carefully by the expediand how much time she wasted herthen tion's cameraman, self in the wrong company. And she exfor future stowed away tries to steer her daughter away from amination. the mistakes and the follies she herShocked excavators were self committed. much more interested to Father may have turned out to discover that nine servants, be a monument of respectability but three pet birds and seven when he gives his son advice, he's dogs were slain when Vizier speaking from real experience. He's Hewaka died, and were remembering the scrapes he got placed in his tomb to into which gave him nothing but "serve him in after life." pain and humiliation. He's reliving Under the direction of Zaki the moments when he found that his Saad Eff, expedition leader, best girl was just a weak little liar 18 small rectangular graves who made love to everybody he's were unearthed, 14 of them tasting again the bitter gall of discondition. Nine in perfect illusionment, and he's trying to perv of the graves were like t suade his boy to keep clear of bad ? ' that at the right entanglements. Parade - Sfijw- p. liv r; Kiy A. w trrLJl J' ? ifSSph . ' 'i'nTf 1 Baltimore. Enemies of quail are usually thought of In terms of foxes rats, occasionally owls. But in the quail territory of the Southeast species of ant, the fire ant, has to be taken Into the reckoning as an important cause of quail life de V, struction, reported Bernard Travis of the bureau of entomology end plant quarantine. United States Department of Agriculture, speak ing here before the annual North American Wildlife conference. These ferocious swarming insects attack the eggs as soon as they have been pipped, or the newly hatched quail chicks while they are still helpless. The voracious insects kill from 4 to 16 per cent of the quail hatch each year. They are also serious enemies of citrus fruit trees It is very difTlcult to combat these ants. They detect even small con centratinns of poison in baits, and fumignnfi are costly. Dry sodium cyanide seems most promising. Washington. Four hundred and ten airplanes delivered by manufacturers to the United States army during the calendar year 1937 were twice as large as their Immediate predecessors. Brig. Gen. A. W. Robins, chief of the materials division, declared here. Scores of new devices, tested and found satisfactory, have been made standard equipment on new planes, while a systematic testing program is leading to Important improvements In military craft. The materials division is sponsoring tests of novel set of propellers. one mounted Immediately In front of the other on concentric propeller shafts. General Robins revealed. The propellers rotate In opposite directions. Controllable pitch con centric propellers are now being de signed, he added. Tires and tubes which will seal after being punctured themsclvt-by bullets are under development. Army engineers are studying a de vice which automatically brings back a badly operating machine gun Into full operation. 39-in- ch 39-in- Pattern Book. Send 15 cents for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book which is nrw ready. It conSpring-Summ- tains n Ay-. d, ?5' ' 1 . r Ik TAEAR MISS DENE: I have s dear friend, a man of forty-fivwho is being very kind to me, and taking me about a good deal. My mother and father disapprove of Mew? him and I cannot get their consent to my friendship with him. They know nothing about him. They do not appreciate his intelligence or i i I his experience. I take his advice on 1 a great many problems because I f-'-f know that he is old and wise enough to give me good advice. This makes my parents furious, although they might be glad, it seems to me, that I have such a wise friend to help "tJV TJ' 3 i i me." Jcanette. ANSWER How can anyone exwhy Jeanette's mothplain er and father, probably aged fifty at the outside, should be so utterly incompetent to understand and apritni ftUKsi'itititrtfi' preciate a man of nearly their own Around each man's body had been placed pottery vases, believed age? And why should their intellito have contained some kind of drink. Two smaller vases and ten gence and experience be so useless while the new friend is of such cylindrical containers which may have been cups, completed the "after life" equipment Five of the bodies were found with pottery bearing In- inestimable value? The very fact that poor old mothscriptions mentioning the name of the fruit or grain each contained. Zaki Saad Eff is commanding a large expedition at the excavations, er and father have always been among them many superstitious natives (above right) who prefer servant around, makes some children retasks to meddling with the tombs of their forefathers. gard their parents as useful household equipment, rather than as real mi i, iiii- -ii Miw)iwiii iiwijui mil human beings. Foolish boys and girls will submit e. er attractive, practical and 109 becoming designs. The Barbara Bell patterns are well planned, accurately cut and easy to follow. Each pattern includes a sew-cha- rt which enables even a beginner to cut and make her own clothes. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. iit- - i, " A CHARMING basque frock for that you can go shopping in it, too. growing girls, and a house-dres- s Make it up In percale, gingham, both broadcloth or tub silk. for large figures, smart and becoming, both easy The Patterns. to make. Even if you've done 1491 is designed for sizes 6, 8, very little sewing, these patterns 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 reare easy to follow. Each one quires 2Va yards of mateis accompanied by a complete and rial, plus Vi yards of bias fold to And a tour sew detailed chart. finish the neckline and sleeves. 1395 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 3 yards of material. For contrasting collar, yard, cut bias. ,Jj--vk- , - ARE YOU Alll If UNLY A Q 'A WIFE? Men can never understand a three-quarta wife who is lovable for three weeks of the fourth the month but a hell-c- at No matter how your back ache no matter bow loudly your nerrea scream don't take it out on your husband. For three generations one woman has told another how to go "amiling through' with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system, thus lessening the discomforts from the functional disorders which women must endure. Make a note NOW to get a bottle of Pinkham's today WITHOUT FAIL from your druggist more than a million women oara written In letters reporting benefit. Why not try LYDIA E. PINCHAMS VEGETABLE COMPOUND? wife through the shops will show you irresistible new fabrics to make them up in. Basque Dress for Girls. No wonder girls love a basque The fitted waist dress like this with its basque point in front gives them such a grown-u-p feeling. The full skirt, square neckline and puff sleeves are so becoming. - Make this dress up for your daughter in taffeta or silk crepe in time for Easter, and later on in printed percale or dimity. Large Women's Dress. The diagram shows you how easy this dress is to make, and it fits to perfection. Notice the raglan shoulder line, the waistline snugged in by darts. The roll collar, with the smart little tab in front, is very soft and becoming. Very comfortable to work round the house in, this dress is sufficiently tailored so I HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH 350 Batha - $2.00 to $4.00 - $1.00 Family Rooms for 4 penona Reminiscent S50 Room After the young singer had finished her second encore, the old Air Cooled Loans and Lobby Grill Boom . . Coffeo Shop . . Top Boom lady leaned toward her and said: "Thank you so much for your songs, my dear. They took me back to childhood days on my father's farm. There were times when you sang that I could shut my eyes and fairly hear the old front gate creaking in the wind. Montreal Star. Homo of Rotair Klwanio ExerntlTM Exchange Optima Chamber of Commerce and Ad Club, "20-3- HOTEL BEN LOMOND Com a ron ar T. E. Fitzgerald. Mfflk Hi: d ifur i. .m i il fafcMltjtifi ,rst '.- to discipline from outsiders which they wouldn't dream of accepting from their parents. They will hang on the words of an older man or woman who flutters them and flout the opinion of their parents who have lived and suffered and understood a good deal more than the youngsters ever dreamed of. Mary will shrug her shoulders lightly over her mother's admonition not to run around with the Urown boy but she will go next door to Mrs. C. a pretty widow lady who has a talent for attracting men and agree meekly to this lady's dictum that the Brown boy is no fit companion for any girL John will tell his father in so SrfriiiiHiK A 1 j ; k ? t. . t ' , 'try-.... j., ? w' m t s T ifj rmm r many words that he's a and doesn't know what he's talking about when he advises against drinking. But when John meets the golf champion out at the club who tells him solemnly to cut out liquor there's a big reformation in the making. As I say, it Is often the fault of mothers and fathers that their children can't take them seriously as human beings. But it is just as often the fault of the children who assume blandly that parents aren't people at all. Taking it all In all, most men and women want their children to be happy. That's what they're sim-in- g at And any boy or girl is safer in taking the advice of someone who is working for his or her best interests than in trying to work out their own salvation along s. lines approved of by indifferent out-idcr- m iV , r-- ,rMwigi :a"-ea- t: -- . im ,j t.nfjHnj r The tomh where wealthy Vizier Hewaka waf buried. .i-- i BOISE I rSM$ V FlPAHof n4 '. SOCIAL and BUSINESS ACTIVITIES CENTER at the IK back-numbe- . Tit The birds were buried more carefully than the servants, each being placed in a separate coffin and wrapped in linen. The coffin containing the largest bird (above) was inlaid with a remarkable pattern of ivory and ebony. Since it is Impossible to believe that so many people and animals connected with the household could have died simultaneously of natural causes, today's explorers readily confess that the only explanation Is a mass slaughter which followed the death of every rich man. The master needed their services and company after death just as he lid during life on earth that at least, was the popular belief. , 1 ii. ,i ra-efl- Fire Ants Destroy Quail in Southeastern States Don' Believe Parents arrow MindeT Until 1 ou now Them. Smart Daytime Fashions .i fc Bell WNU Servica. NEW HOUSE 6r In SALT LAKE CITY Thousand- - o repvat gueata yar altor yat attest th popularity of th fin hotel. W. "7-- 400 3 fk CAFETERIA ROOMS-4- 00 Ratesi $2.00 DINING ROOM to BATHS $4.00 Singh BUFFET All Loeatad off Main Lobby uimnu uah limb EVERY FRIDAY and SATURDAY Hotel Mr. i.wan.nr NIGHT ittrM wS'WV'. ltfEWXDtLJE J. H. WAT! J, fmidtnt CMAUNCfY W. WIST, Maxag.r |