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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD. DUCHESNE. UTAH WOMAN'S WORLD New Bridal Gowns Showing Less Fullness By Ertta Haley THINK theyd pffiLSto WHO be June brides Instead pre-fe- Winter Bride r of January brides simply because the dresses look prettier, should take a look at some of the bridal fashions now being featured! They may find that theres nothing left to be desired in the new gowns, and the fabrics probably have more splen- dor than summery ones. If shes found the man of her dreams, planned the little home of her dreams, a girl wants the dress of her dreams, be she a winter bride or a summer one. Todays bride just like those of yesteryear pictures herself in creamy white satin with a train. Designers are well award of this desire, and they have indeed used their best tricks to create gowns to match those of the dream world. White satin, is of course, the traditional fabric for the girl being married for the first time, but other fabrics vie with it in fashion importance. Even though you may have your heart on the satin, take a look at some of the other luxurious fabrics and their styles if you want to choose the dress of your dreams. include The other materials white velvet which is soft and shimmering because it's transparent and very queenly. Then theres Bridal gowns show new slenderness ., white brocade for real dramatic beauty. You might even choose pastel satin which is shown mostly in blush pink and ice blue. I 4k vice-vers- f. For the girl being married this season, nothing could be lovelier than this white trans- parent velvet dress with a pearl beaded yoke by a New York designer. The elegant bodice features a tiny collar and buttons run down the back. Buckram stiffening at the hips shapes the graceful skirt. even those who have naturally The small waist measurements. effect is frequently emphasized neckline with a yoked and bertha collars of either fabric or lace. Some necklines are demurely high, and are finished with little round or rolled collars which are flattering to so many faces. On some princess style gowns, youll find what is called a Puritan shaped collar! with a snug bodice buttoned to below the waistline, and the skirt pocketed on each side at the hips. Both the collar and pointed flaps of the pockets are richly embroidered. Sleeves on the dresses carry out the theme of over-al- l slenderness. They are long, slender and pointed Many of the lovely bridal gowns this season combine satin with lace, much of the latter being imported and comparable in exquisiteness with great grandmothers wedding veiL One fabric may look better on you than the one youve imagined. The best way to tell is to try on different types, and then decide. Slimness of Line Is Main Feature The main impression which the mew bridal gowns give is that of yardage has been sacrificed. Youll slimness. This does not mean that be thrilled with the luxury of the gowns, with their opulence of fabric, but the over-al- l effect will be and beauty of line. that of trim lines. The effect of slimness is achieved at the wrists, and help to give the partly by keeping the hipline bride a willowy grace she desires smooth and giving the skirt re- when she glides down the aisle. In one dress seen recently, the strained fullness with wide unpressed pleats. Another way in white satin is overlaid with deliwhich this is done, is to point or cate white lace in tunic effect, and elongate the bodice into the skirt. the sleeves are entirely of lace. In either event, the waistline In another style, a e floor length dress of which remains small looking, should make all the girls happy, white brocade has a short jacket semi-form- , two-piec- -- THE READER'S COURTROOM - J By Will Bernard, , Mice Living In Penthouse t' o O a a e P J f a: c AT. X D W r: C Drama with sleeves, drama without sleeves. At the right shantung issued for a casual classic of distinguished design. Note how pocket flaps and close-fittin- g cuffs reneat the unusual collar design. The pointed cuffs likewise are used to give emphasis to the new bloused sleeve with flowing fullness below the elbow. At the left, is a look into the resort collections that are just around the fashion corner, a handsome checked linen, played on the diagonal to accent the magnificent clean-clines of the design. Even the absence of sleeves seems to add importance to the impression of line. ut r 4 ' - i rtCJ t - TIME MARCHES ON . . . Just on the off chance that anyone is wondering what a 1901 calendar looked like, here is an example, albeit partially obscured by a young lady in a bathing suit that definitely is not 1901 style. This also might make yon think, as the world moves on toward 1950, that its been a long time since things have been as simple as they were at the beginning of the 20th century. KATHLEEN NORRIS Home-Makin- g Is TNO GIRLS, OR BOYS for that matter, learn anything at college, and if they do not, is it important? My answer to both these questions would be No. I mean, of By learn anything course, from courses and classes, and professors and instructors, books. I mean learn anything of science, political economy, modern business methods, languages, literature and the cultural arts generally. Of course they dont They dont go to college to learn anything like that. Sometimes, in a third or fourth year which less than half the enrolled students reach, a boy will suddenly awake to the value of a genuine business course, or a girl will discover her coming profession in an advanced course in child psychology. Why College? But most youngsters go to college because of the charm and freedom of it, the delightful stretching of young wings, the golden opportunity of meeting friends of their own and the opposite sex. It is all too good to be true; no home restrictions, a smart new wardrobe, the campus, the stadium, the glorious library where they sit dreaming over notebooks they will not only not open next week or in, the years to come, but never again in their lives. After high school what? Idling about home, wishing something would happen? Taking a kindergarten or nursing course? Not for any girl or boy who can coax Mother and Dad into putting up the required cost of college prefery college. If they are ably a living in New Jersey, why not go to California? If they live in Oregon, then it must be Penn or Mass. College provides four glorious years, and after living myself withof a great col- in a stone far-awa- Great Destiny matters, and compose the probably temporary destiny of s of their number. about They have to learn that at home. Temporary. And glorious while it lasts; the beginnings of wifehood and motherhood, the kitchen, with all its scientific clean white short-cut- s to cooking and washing and drying, the nursery with its small tenants paying, and overpaying a thousand times every hour, every care, every anxiety spent upon it. If a girl doesnt know this, or feel It instinctively deep and perhaps unanalyzed in her heart, then she is not going to learn it in any classroom. Any girl with even an average intelligence knows that while she is distracted, busy, tiring herself in nursery and kitchen, her partner in life is having an equally tedious time in his office; taking snubs and failures. They are both working toward that better time when the harvest of business success, home happiness, fine children, smoother domestic machinery arrives. College women disenchanted with home life, dishes and babies and brooms? Well, the fact that something like 90 per cent of them take chances on these delights doesnt Indicate that. And another fact seems to me important in this connection. What proportion of successful business women and professional women are also married .women? But looking about the circle of my own friends in the varied branches of the writing arts magazine, book, radio, screen writers I would have to say that almost all of them are wives and mothers. A girls father, who had a suspicious nature, decided that one youth was taking advantage of his One morning, a farmer went to daughter. One day he confronted work digging up a dead tree. At the pair and told them in plain last the roots broke loose. The tree language that they must get came crashing down across the married. The youth was perfectly back fence just as a neighbor was willing but the girl agreed only passing by with a team of horses! because of her fathers insistence. Several big branches landed on the Soon after the wedding she filed horses, killing them instantly. suit for an annulment, pleading that Afterward the neighbor sued for she had gotten married unjler co". , . idling about home . . ercion. But the court rejected her In the very shadow of its imlege. request. The judge said the girl memorial oaks, I think it Is a good still had a mind of her own. thing for both boys and girls. Girls who are weak morally and Must Yau Step More who are naturally idle wastrels boys Carefully in the Dark dont get much out of decent friendThan in the Light? ships, freedom, sports, picnics and week-entheatricals and dances, An engineer was hired to check but then wouldnt anyway, no they the heating system of an office matter where they were. They building. While poking around in would be the scandals if village a he came the basement, upon large at home. stayed they metal door. Curious, he opened it. These thoughts are brought to Alas, it led to an elevator shaftl the value of the two animals, blam- Down he fell to the bottom, one me by an earnest article In a recent issue of Harpers Magazine, ing the farmer for not hollering a whose author is Dr. Mirra Komathat insisted farmer The warning. associate professor of sowas rovsky. what see the neighbor could ciology at Barnard college. The going on, and therefore should have What Should article is entitled kept out of harms way. But the Teach Women? and she Colleges farmcourt disagreed. Holding the quotes a certain convention of eduer liable, the judge said he should cators who recently accused colas he have shouted a warning leges of deprecating marriage as was the only one who could tell the an absorbing vocation. exact moment of danger. She also quotes Dr. Mildred Horton, retiring president of Wellesley was The owner of a female collie womens colleges as attacking outraged to discover that the city for treating their students as men license tax was $3 for female dogs In disguise." And she quotes Dr. and only $1 for male dogs. He in- floor below. Later he sued the of Mills College, as blding owner for damages, argu- Lynn White, dignantly refused to pay, and lightly suggesting that a beginning not the shaft to that all the matter the properly tias way ing fought in food preparation might the state supreme court. The man safeguarded. But tl.s court rejected course n be as "exciting as a course in the his trat 'discrimwas claim, the tax that eng.neer saying argued philosophy." was for himself unconstituand therefore negligent stepping inatory' Learn at Home tional. However, the court ruled uito an unknown darkness. Said the The truth behind all this agitathat the levy was quite legal. The judge: Darkness is nature's own Judge felt that it was all right t; warning to arouse the natural in tion being, of couise, that girls and from good homes dont come to discriminate between dogs so long stinct of aa there was no discrimination be- should be even moie convincing college to learn that cooking and and child-car- e are tween people who owned them! than a Danger' sim on the door!' Must.You Holler When You Fell a Tree? d - post-Kantia- . home-niakir'- g Rite nine-tenth- Future Homes May Fit Mood LL.B- - New Year Is Age-Ol- d Design Held Effective On Human Emotions CHICAGO The house of the future may be tailored to fit your emotions. In addition to seeing that the roof doesnt leak, the builders may also guard against booby traps for emotional complexes. The new theory is that the house you live in may slowly drive you crazy. A drive for a humane approach to home design and construction has been launched by two Government housing experts. Leonard G. Haeger, director of the division of standardized building codes and materials, and E. J. Herringer, a U. S. sanitary engineer, called 24 University of Illinois scientists together to discuss the problem. "A house must provde for some emotional needs," said Mrs. Harry C. Kehm, director of the association for family living, who participated in the conference. It must be a real home, not just a shelter, she said. ( Mere size and space are not Important in themselves, said Prof. R. A. Jones of the universitys department of architecture. He said a kitchen may have enough room for the kids to go roller skating and yet some people would be unhappy In it Social well being and mental health are not satisfied by mere material requirements In a house, he said. In use of radiated heat, for example, the scientists want to find out how it affects humans. Do heated Doois leave the same emotional scar as a hot foot? Does a draft through the living room leave the occupant with a pain in the neck? The history of the celebration of ,New Years Day takes one far back into antiquity, and encompasses ,many peoples, lands and customs. 'It is only In relatively recent times (that the New Year has been ushered In on January 1. This holiday has been a mobile ne and various races have marked it at various seasons. For example, the ancient Persians and Egyptians celebrated New Years September 22 at ihe autumnal equinox, while the Greeks did so at the winter solstice on December 21. The vernal equinox, March 22, marked the beginning of the year for the Jews. The famous Pope Gregory, In 1582, instituted what has since been known as the Gregorian calendar. Europe during the middle ages had observed New Years on March 25, but with the advent of Gregorys g system the day adopted for the beginning was Janof a new twelve-month- s uary 1. All countries did not adopt the change at once, but the Christian 'world accepted it generally in 1752 when the British Parliament finally established New Years Day as Jan- uary Dainty Shirtwaist Dress Tailored to Perfection PROVIDENCE, R. I. Mice in a penthouse? One wouldn't believe it but it's true. The rodents have taken up their abode in the luxurious penthouse atop the Arnold biological laboratory on the Brown university campus here. There are 3,000 ot the mice, along with several hundred rats, hamsters and guinea pigs which furnish the foundation stock for four separate experiments in disease control. Dr. J. Walter Wilson, who heads one of the cancer research programs and is in general charge of the laboratory, said the researchers were seeking to achieve the "perfect mouse through selection and inbreeding. An elaborate system of heating and air conditioning with constant humidity has been found necessary In research Involving these choser rodents. $40,000 h c a. Woodsman, Spare Those Horses -- u top with tight sleeves stopping below the elbows. Choose Veil to Fit With Wedding Gown A question which frequently arises when one chooses a wedding gown is whether the veil or the It seems gown is chosen first. much simpler to pick out a gown first, then to choose the veil. It Is not that the gown is more important than the veil, but it is much easier to thoose a veil to go with the gown, than You may have to try on as many veils as you do gowns before you fid one that fits with the gown. Should you fail to find a veil which fits both your face and gown, the veil and head dress can be made much more simply than the gown. If you do not trust your own taste in the choice of a head piece, be sure to seek advice. In general, these tips will help. The round faced girl should select a veil wh'ich comes to a point, rather than one which gives a round halo effect that merely emphasizes her round contours. Those with pointed or angular faces will probably do best to choose a veil and head piece which will help give a gentle roundness to the face. LIFE OF RILEY r Be Smart! 1. New Years customs always have had a Joyful theme. Few tears mark the death of the old year. Temperature Fixed Temperature inside the building will not vary from 75 degrees by any noticeable fraction. And the humidity will be constant at 55 per cent. Also a stand-b- y electrical heating unit will take up the load should the university steam system ever fail. The structure is fully insulated, the rooms being designed for a maximum supply of sunlight. A freezer unit in the basement will assure a full weeks food supply for the animal colony. The quarters are rodentproof to assure the purity of the strain and, when outside rodents from other laboratories are introduced they viU go through a period of quarantine in company with some of the less important mice who already are inmates. If the natives contract no disease, the newcomers will be admitted. Dr. Wilson said that the great precaution and large expenditure on the health of the inmates of the rodent house was made necessary to protect them for the experiments. The animals gathered there represent the product of between four and five years of experimentation. Their loss would set back the researchers almost Irreparably. . Each Mouse Numbered Brown's biology head Is investigating cancer of the liver. Dr. Paul F. Fenton, who brought his colony of mice with him from Yale university last June, is working on the relation of nutrition to cancer; Dr. Herman P. Chase, whose mice are alumni of the University of Illinois, Is studying the effect of on skin. Each mouse has a number series which means much to the researcher. The first number belongs particularly to the mouse; designates the number of the generation used In the experiment, and the third, and last, is the number of the litter In that generation. Liverpool Kids Play Soccer; Use Human Skull for Ball Tailored to Perfection VOUTHFUL shirtwaist dress thats tailored to perfection. Sleeves can be short or wrist length, an unusual shaped pocket makes a nice finish. Pattern No. 1830 comes In sizes 12. 14, and 42. bie 14, short sleeve, yards of 35 or 16. 18, 20; 40 4Va The Fall and Winter FASHION will delight you with Us wealth of sewng Information. Special American Designer originals. fabric news free tattern printed inside the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells 8t. Chicago 1. (II. Enclose 25 cents to coins for each pattern desired. Size Pattern No, Name " Address ? ? . ASK ME ANOTHER ( I A General Quiz P o- y - (v. v. (v. (v The Questions In badminton what do we call the object corresponding to the ball in tennis? 2. What is the pen name of Samuel L. Clemens? 3. To whom did Lieutenant Gen1. eral Arthur E. Percival surrender Singapore? 4. What was the first story to be published serially in a newspaper? 5. N a m e the United States Army captain who killed 116 Japanese in Bataan? The Ans wers 1. Bird. 2. Mark Twain. 3. To Lieutenant General Tomo-yuYamashita, chief of the Japanese Army in Malaya. Robinson 4 "'Janiel Defoes Cr t tain Arthur W. Wermuth. single-hande- ki LONDON. A kids game of soccer with human skulls touched off a big debate in Britain: How to go about cleaning up after the German New Years Day ushers In for luftwaffe. Americans an average of only 52 ( f The ghoulish soc eer game took yGuaranteed by working days. distenement a in Liverpool place Good Housekeeping trict where children used a blitzed No, thats not a misprint. The figure 52 is right, for all thd rest of cemetery as a playground. Mrs. the days are holidays somewhere in E. M. Braddock, labor member of tlie nation. And, to carry the hyparliament from Liverpool related pothesis further, if all the legal the story. fts Sniffed Sir William Darling, Scotholidays now observed anywhere GOOD HOUSEKEEPING were adopted generally, the aver- tish Conservative from Edinburgh: would week be an only The English have always been age working one day for labor, and six for rest untidy people. and play. Mrs. Braddock said German bombs tore up the graveyard durFor after you leave out the ing the war. Now, she said, the Sundays and legal holidays This tenement kids romp around 600 which will occur during the half burled bodies, use skulls as year, there remain 53 days on Cough footballs and carry human bones which no one can find any exSo Easy. No Cooking. around for toys. Big Saving. cuse except laziness for not You'll be surprised bow quickly and easily The discussion took place during working. can relieve cough due to colds, when debate on the government's war you Unlike almost every other counyou try thia splendid recipe It gives you measure The bill. sites four time, as much couch medicin. try, the United States has no nation- damaged local authorities to take .bout nd you!! find it truly for your money. authorizes al legal holidays. All the public wonderful for real relief 10 areas for of bombed Make s syrup with 2 cups of granulated holidays in the various states have possession to clean them up. No cooking of water iugar and one cup been declared so by state legisla- years in order docs not provide any money needed (Or you can use corn syrup or liquid it But tures. honey, instead ot tugar ayrup ) Then put to help pay for the Job. ounces of Pines (obtained from any The Presidents Thanksgiving After hearing about the Liver- druggist) in a pint bottle, and fill otup uhe for instance, Day proclamation, pinl commons gave the your ayrupwillThis manes a full makes the day he designates t legal pool cemetery, that please you by lU quick acnon in second a bill approval and reading Ustea never It spoils, holiday everywhere In the U.S. and without a record vote. love it. its territories simply because every principle This simple mixture takes right hold ot state and all the territories have cough It loosens the phlegm tonihea the Irritated membranes, quickly eases soreness that laws local Potato declaring Onion, Shipments passed and difficult breathing President the whatever day desigPine is a special compound of proven Cold Are Given Reception form nates as Thanksgiving Day shall be Ingredients, in concentrated for Its quick action in coughs and A minor tempest observed. BEYROUTH. if it refunded bronchial irritations Money up here when the doesn't please you in every ay All over the world January 1 Is was stirred pipeline company celebrated as New Year's Day excvtdi rnuur uirwrr TFT NFW cept in England. Northern Ireland, received 15 tons of potatoes and onions In a shipment of supplies Wales, In the Mohammedan coun52-- 49 from the United States. Local news- WNU-- W tries of Iiejaz, and In China. papers and officials complained because Lebanon western terminus Founding Fathers Joined of the oil lino currently has a seIn Spirit of New Years rious surplus of thousands of tons New Years Day long has, been of both onions and potatoes. Red faced company officials excelebrated enthusiastically In the United States, and from colonial plained it was a mistake in their times to the present It has been a New York office. They said a Are you going through the funcemployee there made up day of great significance. tional 'middle age' period peculiar of needs colonial usual basis on of the the list The spacious days to women (38 to 53 yrs )? Does this make you suiter from hot Hashes, America made an especially vig- at the eastern Saudi Arabian end feel so nerrou. hlghetrung. tired? no local are for there where the potatoes zestful orous and setting Then do try Lydia E Plnkham's rewas situation onions. The celebration of New Years Day and or Vegetable Compound to relieve such Compound solved when the company donated svinptoms Plnkhams the founding fathers were not bealso has what Ifootorn call a stothe shipped In foodstuffs to Arab hind hand In entering Into the machic tonic effect refugees of the Palestine war. , i vru r divvimm'C E'jfl?.8.'! spirit of the occasion. -- FOR 52 DAYS jolly So ecov Save Money On Home Mixed Syrup medi-cin- n Trans-Arabia- n rCllilKX'j well-meani- of LIFE? I |