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Show THE MAGAZINE SECTION '? . " V- -. - HERALD-REPUBLICA- v 5 , i 5 . '1 - v .i"v. 17 MAGAZINE SECTION SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 6, 1916. N, a in 'C' ' Jr-'- Mix - 7 Mil" ' - - .x . r ' y - ; V A- lev !( 5 ' "-.-.- fy-: Mi3 Helen Moller and Her Society Girl Nymphs in a Pool Dance at the George Potter Estate, Allendale, New Jersey. if I.I U U i' l i(V U Viw is fl 1 1 t 1 S nine kv. r - or 11 r u u u By Barbara Craydon. 5 Out-Doof Spectacular Popularity Dancing and How Society Girls Are Taught to Be fx noi 1 J JJ n'rlrfi ) f - left side of this pasre. or loose, lig and flowing like the costume de- often offered criticism that manded by Miss Helen Moller. lack the develop- - 'Miss Moller teaches the society ment of an outdoor life seems PTlrls of the East how to dance in the as classic that is described Ifkrly before lonff to have little appli- - freo style , .. i i Miss the rpstrictions nre often of military i certain ways from those of nrinta. wm.noiuidi iiiuwid jui niuii, n,,t. CAtfrm to American women, bureiy ln Bunimer. Mies Moller Is an Moller, but the point of emphasis In severity and they must early to bed. no summer of the past saw more doorg in her art. She was brought tho present furore is for "natural" Thev will generally be found with autocrat ?iriB and women entering with en- - up on prairies of the West, and freedom without the clothes restrlc- - good appetites and seldom do they Bne wants elbow room and no tailor- - tlons or the cramping dancing for- - complain of insomnia. Z.u man Iiiikr- Iufpn uupcnra m iim made or modiste-madconventions mulas that once made outdoor danc It is claimed that nothing gives a summer of 1D1C. when it comes to clothes. All of her lng an academic affair. a finer drawing room poise than girl Of all the manifestations of the pupils, mites of The word dancing often sounds study and practice in the free expres- girls and stately ,w. .m., u,a...u luc oeDuianies ana matrons, an must anomalous when to the sion of her physical body ln the great present summer none has been more kIck off shoes and stockings and hie flights over field, or applied nool the nlunees outdoors, oanpriaiiv whpn M. Impressive or at times more start- - them forth to m6adow or pool in a that mark these summer art expres- - pression is made disfree a fully by ling, than the developing of the danc- - gimple Greek "slip." sions. When music is added, whether missal of all conventional notions expresing spirit and the (Jreek-uk"Some one else will have to teach it be allegro or allegretto, the mean- - about fashionable clothes. A girl sion of the "Hark to Nature" idea. how to manago clothes." de- - Ine Is naturallv dppnenpd The you with tM evneHono i n,-- . "Dack to Nature" requires an aban- - ciares Miss Moller. "I'm to teach you pressions of gayety in the faces of willing to wear shoes that make hr donxent of conventional clothes. One how to manage your body. If you the dancers is often to be explained hobble, and when she has rsranpd cannot go back in the e t rr or in have a strong, clean, healthy, pliant by music not translated in of shoes she' will add one of evil pictures. the tho restricting garb of fashion. To body you are well started toward exSummer schools of "physical the highest charms of a woman a get close ' to the grass and to the happiness. are often free stride and accompany- pression." quite logically natural, water, to give vent to freedom of How to get this sort of a body, how found under the supervision of a Ine nllant artlnn nf th limh. to leap, sing with gestures. to flnd joy In expression, how to physician. Outdoor freedom, ideal as Above all,. outdoor.. art is likely 'to . , , run sneed. with n i Mnntirv illvp with erace. t., mcoc DiJJ .' nft us opportunities iar excess, De neaunrui as well as healthv nrt miuia n . . , ,,, t v. oi vspietBion, utcuuifs .uiss .viouer s iori,nazaras or exertion or exposure. No one truly solicitous of a nation ",l"'e triumph of the amazons effort. The first principle of all physical ex- - health will regard without sympathy . t . , rvriitT-who stmggle for honor in diving and of . . not K n1.iolnoi ntitHnnr Othpr tparhpfR " fuui ai vo gei ,DaCK....to nature s j iracztnn Duuuuucoa, eve imjciuii uiuol jjujokoi swimming, like the ambitious mer- - of motion and in hundreds of cen- - and soundness must be earned or simnliriiv nnrJ whniecnmn, maids shown in the picture on the treg, throughout the country there preserved by reasonable care as to daily when the conditions are made are Dusy classes ueoiea seauiousiy all practical conditions. Outdoor pu- - happy enough to reflect the best inThe Most Grecian of All to the study take views varying in pils are closely watched as to diet on fluences the health of the mind. "Out-Door- " Women Are the On the Right, Mis3 Moller Dancing at the Edge of a Lake. Below, a Group of Miss Moller's Amazons Who Compete for Graceful in Grecian Robes THE - - e v 1 e 3 n-ii- " ,7s M i M - i - rt. S H o, i - 1 tne-piec- - ,V- JIi -- ..... ? - - - . t - ' L ' -- 'Hi';. : . Diving Honors. - . -- . Younger Pupils Being Taught to Enter the Water Gracefully. :: V. v1!?-r- x rv - jf- ( h T. ' : - ,4 ' 7..: . J i'imj. via uji -- -: ;sTs'SiTAr-?S- :?A 1 " v M;ifeVJ :.v;'4 -- r . - '" '"" ' 'i tf- - Photographs Gbpyryfyt iy Lndeiccooo' &Urderaood r.-w;- V p-'-- a v-- ' : ysyk ri ri : t ... - A ' ..' '' -- - - ' - i'" - - I r. . ,r.rr4 - 1 - t -- i v, i jA-t-- r JvVr - ,iZ 1 - r-5- ! i -- -.-- TV v VtJ: - i.'..40 vr mn ami""" """rr'iii -- "V! T,- - " . t .... ve . ''' ..... !.vW v.. v.-..- . :'v-.- ' rs V Y f |