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Show ' ' . r i ""'" "" IL"" "" ' 8-- B . " '.m, SUNDAY HERALD j SUNDAt. SEPTEMBER County. Utah U i " ' I t I I ' i 'Hi u nT"?- - r ' " t I 1 I - I :i ,ttif y I 1 J j I ' aI . i f t I i i i j lilt r i .1 eft ' i it!.., : a lll,L8L' m i.i m.'-tf- i wiwiK.f-r- ; "S j Club Leads Year With Book Review . y -- First performance on Literati Club's "TV for 1953 and '54" theme, presented Mrs. Cullen Christenson as the performing artist. Mrs. Keith Ercanbrack servedas the l'; show "sponsor" being hostess at tie Ercanbrack ranch in South , Fork of Provo Canyon Wednesday evening. 11 Mrs. Cbrwtenson gave a fascinat jft ing review of the book "The Troubled Air" by Irwin Shaw. which was a story of the infiltration of communism in, the radio world and its effect on the lives of people. A door prize for promptness Was Twarded to Mrs. Christenson. .Mis. Grant Fisher, club president presided and directed a discussion of the coming open session which the: club will sponsor. Later, delightful refreshments were served by the hostess In a setting of dahlias. Mrs. Marjorie Peterson was a special guest and club members attending were the Mesdames J. Fred Ahlaoder. ' Erie Boorman, Thomas Bullock. Grant F:sb?r, Frank IK Gardner, Arnold Graham, RoyCI Henderson, Ray Ivie, Allen M. Johnson, Reed Nils?n, Ted Schofield, L. Grant Hansen, Boyd Erickson, Lawrence Ashcr, J. Robert Bullock. Byron Johnson. Cullen Christenson, Victor I. Robert Q. Strone. Keith Ercanbrack, D. Rossv Urie and x- - ; . A ' f 1 ! v ? t 20, 1353 - I I ' i I , ... ' - iki V Hi X ' ' ! f I - .1 ',. i w i Cart-wrigh- L i vi-- . - ! t.. - Alfred Ridge. : IN SMART FALL STYLES, this couple is prepared for brisk Noor all wool A few drops of kerosene and!: vember weather. She wears a double breasted coat a little bluing added to the soap-- ' 'zibeline in deep gray, with a cowl roller and foativing sleeves. His suds will make your windows double breaster polo coat is s'.jled in fl;ccy ve'.our, wi'Ji a belted j sparkle. Use a bottle-washiback and dcep-tjj- t lape.'s. IV s light t3ri wj:h a faint datk broua brush-fo- r the corners. Polish with ' overpiaid. clean, cloth, STEP UP PLEASE Smart Joiccn L'o.e does not need a second in- vitation to step up when she h.is such chirmin;: pumps to wear from a senior at Provo Miss Iven's Women's shoe department. ;; suede pump. High School jwears'a button hint Louis Heel py Accent." She is holding Accent s braid on suede ' - pumps, - y - ALL THIS AND COMFORT TOO Combining fashion and good styling with solid comfort are these shoe department. Enjoying the thrce.strap Joyccs in black Ruff glove carried. by the Klothcs Kloet B U coed, who observes that the is of these charmers and Carolyn. Bagley, Joyce style practicality ' slunnin ncw shoe styles help, to make autumn sh ipping lots of fun. ... - "Shapely-Shapely- blank - ......V il'..-'- ... . ... Sure Men 's Suits Change, a Notch at a Time FiowerShow, riuubt: introduce pointed tailoring firm. "Just a little. You; War If. and the fashion plates vpy'-jthe tailors Br KKHARI) KLEINER C t tnemseives in padless GI never never noticen it. Here tryingt h nto.touna Staff Correspondent dpnr, crad.i.iiiv mpn L l n fn r m c o clir it nvof-nI Ul iho men Frnm itinn n n shoulder! JLHUU' NEW YORK-(NEyou think know wnai nil unem- ana inejrii,,. hic,u. nntrh lnnk: neater, hut naris melted awsv. Tnriav there's . . ri J your r.ew su.t; is Jhe same cut as be swearing by pointed sleeves in we can't do it all at once.' just a nint of padding in most: W1 n the T.mpanogos a; or five four . be,.hc'd shoulders. years. your rid suit, ynu should look more u all suits had on' a now. to Kinht revolution there's ear. men's Grandpa's on From has flaps of kind That closely. carrying ijcar 6:30 and 9 p.m. sponsored by the a the a and o slash in in fashions. most men's in pockets progress slowly that stlcs change--sNotjbeen the rule for Generations.; b3CkjTimr)a noE0S men never notice. sleeves, but something else.Tailors keep finagling around with of- the coat, technically called vent." For a long time, A pict'ure uh!rh is That's the general idea. Men that's being changed ever so a simple suit of clothes putting a "centerwith preflaps on his pockets. sentcd bv the PTA to being in the shoulders, taking; anybody Jon.'t like radical changes in their sently each year. That's the notch the school padding was from in And, the strictly lt out, putting flaps on the pockets, jacket lapel. c'othes. If, all'; of a sudden, tailors bp unveilcd at g pm Flow. same time, the center vent will w.m off; lengthening the "We've been raising the notch aUakimj-the- m be sbown' in th;- audi. c( inc out witi suits 'with pointed it's ; went. But, look .around .you now.jtorjum and will be arranged bv sleeves, men ill avo.d them hke httle each year." says Spencer! jacket, shortening but head of a top New York ways done so sneaky that you'd: Everybody who is anybody is flip- - the chiIdren and contributed by they were contaminated. ButMf Wittv. over and is ' same the is Pmg flaps swear this year's suit, handsomely th ...chudren and their parents. renter-vente. . r i . as ia. All patrons of the - school are a had "look to Grandpa back attend and for invited at'. anyone else kicks, Jusjf whatl's happened to men's suits jacket, came tne Fnnce of Wales interested. r did more to influence men s since, say. 1900. Over 53 yearsT!" anyDoay except out asain In '41 bv government the changes become fairly obvi- - tasnions man umu- - eaict to conserve material, ana ous. compare mis years oapper,-1'-'"- '. l'ucuul, Dracon with grandpa's sorry Sun-- ! crncea tne jacket, now they're back once more, The model became! And buttons. Grandpa had .four day; serge. Start at the shoulders. Grandpa omf nTaT' f.' r?!'e. Rrecisely. old on his jacket. During the Prince l,,c of Wales, or double - breasted. would have thought padding in'8""But of 'ate. ;men have been; nod. there are three. Buttons on Lhe shoulders positively indecent;! his suit, he had the manly more interested in comiort than jacket sieevcs nave Deen equany onape of a linip banana. It wasn't ,m the Prince of Wales. The' unpredictable. bressted jacket has ab- - All these changes were slipped until after World War I that men double over on. the poor man. There'll tarted .developing colossal shoul-- , dicated. ' Use more to come. As Witty says. ders. Pants cuffs, since the 19th Cen-- , Fashions have always changed Between. World Wars, shoulders irew bicser. It cot so. at the zoot tury, have been in and out more'so there's no reason to think they zenith, that it was difficult to tell often than a relief pitcher. They, won't continue to change." whether man was wearing a suit wer.cworn in the 1870s, taken off The only thing any man can do or two landing strips. Came World in the 80s, came back around 1910, is keep a stiff upper lapel notch. NEA r u-i- K 'If j i J i M - i "'l.uc' parent-Tcach- - n er . socl-j;ijo- - at-th- e al-- it-- ... n -- jui t"?l 1 &INIARX I , A - 1 HART SCHAFFNER i single-breaste- d . -- t. ( : - :f aouoie-breaste- d. single-breaste- d - - "c -- - WUM ii j HA- , KEEP y s - I iN STEP WITH k ' y MARINE Because it's College Bred MIRON'S COURIER CLOTH SHOES Because jt's Rochester Tailored exclusively by Michael-Sterbecause it's the most suit in our fashion and customer entire experience for satisfaction. Wear the coat alone as a sportcpat, trousers as lacks. FORMENA s n; record-smashi- trend-maki- ',. S SOLES $65 SIZES TO 12 OPEN MONDAY NIGHT 9P.M, y I (C l nH MONDAY ' AlfiCi-Q.rrfV" '. PROVO W " ! 1 ' J y NIGHT 9f. UTAH ' M. 10 WEST CENTEIL- - y BLUE... right for any, important date RED ng ng yJ' ) c Women agree that a man looks-hiparty best in blue. And men agre that a blue suit is exactly right for important dates on the office calendar. Conclusion: every man needs a 'blue suit. Blue is basic And --when it's s MARINE Especially tall, trim, see if you ... BLUE by Hart Schaffner & Marx' distinctive, too. in the newest Trend model handsomely tailored for th and athletic look that's top style today. Just try one on . don't agree. , |