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Show , - . - . .. , 1,- - i W4-.Wodeoul- .. October 26, 1949 tri, r41R1164,Pe4P.I.W1 , , , . , , . i , , , " - ,,,I . A , , , - ' , i f, i i , 1 tt 1, ( 4 , ' 4.,t A . ., 1 -! . i 1 - b i v. A , - i - t, I i ill ..4 ' ) , ' ; a i: t I I ,0 '' - ). , '4 ,.,1 , VA elii 4 - ; , 1 ' i't , i 't , 1 , ,,,; :- r, ''' i t . ' I. i - ", , , 141;; . , . i ,- ----) 1 .. 1 ' , 0 , , ', k .., 1 , , . ' , -- . 4 e BUSINESS GIRLS , ,, 4' - - - - Ginger has done some Interesting sidework. During the long type-settstrike in Chicago, she worked with a group, of students doing some pasting on of the Chicago papers. She met lots of Interesting people and as she said It was like "a ers party every dal." ; glom Ginger, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. W. H. Ellis, 1493 Marilyn Drive, Ogden, has doggedly pursued the field of art since a young glrl. In fact, when she wan only a very small child, bee mother would draw ear. toons for bar . and no doubt it was then that her interest was Since then completely aroused. she's taken - everything she Could get in the way of art training. In high school she took the one art tours that was offered, then attended the University of Utah to go into the subject further. From there it was the Act. Institute In Chicago from which she received her B. A. degree, and now she's working towards bet IL A. degree at Northwest. ern University in Evanston, Illinois. 'Modern ort , Ginger's interest and love is modern art, and she's a great admirer' of even the abstract work of many of the modern painters. On the other hand she cares not a pittance for tom. martial art and cares never to , go into it She rather Plano to teach art where she can stick to the art she so strongly li priniciples During the past year or two - - Snit :SAVE SAVE! THE WASH WORD IS - WESTINGHOUSE LA IU1nDQFAT - - IgT1 u' Mit Th411"1"111 11 Weithosheest Automatic Washer - .1mil.ott,.. I ' with Obi Infinite Witte Sever 44 veer It itiierwitto to the tooled steel bestialities,. tiStA tietalog 4 Kw liokist 11notiou t Femme . to the lingse4 flowse wesithog 14- et-ti- ts that tots clothes oloaset. 4.1 Gosisiat holly entomotie - 1' ONLY LAUNDROMAT lad et Stoottet sr dal? fay 07:4 Discoulit$50 Carla trarkola anowswas veer aid ataullat. CaN war 40 lend tar free fa& - Me! Stclisfler's ALL .APPLIAI10E :Co. 122 EAST 3rd 'SOUTH Art expensive art education Is expen-;.--is An sive, as Ginger has found, and she has worked part-tim- e throughout her Chicago so-tu-rn. Ginger's advice to any aspiring young artists Is to prepare themselves for a long atrunlo firtandalln academically and professionally, for all In all It reouires-a-ibt of fortiIn tude and fact her famous last words were "Better take up mountain climbing: you'll reach the top much quicker." - Here's a i L'rt 1 sheep on my father's ranch, MM. Stewart but the main Idea was the same; and by Saturday night my three young men were as shorn as my fath- s,.; iN came. wonder 1- - lambs! Now, there is only one drawback about discovering such dormant talenls. My husband wants me to share them with the world. "You could go to barber school in your spare time," he insists, "and when we retire we'll have something to fall back on." I'm going to have a birthday right away, and there's a huge package in the basement rm not ouPPOSed, to open. I don't think it's 'a siew stoker; and I'm fairly sure it isn't a new hot water heater. I, have a sneaking idea that it's a barber chair." Bruce lagers 21111 Country Club Blvd. Ames. Iowa "I would like to see more young people going into the teaching profession. That is, if they are qualified to teach a dignified -s ' s'i way of living! I"--A way that t would result in s F1 : 5 t,1 students ...j their developing into 1 , ',7 ,,, 4 mbodreividgrallio0u: 11111 Ideal time. I 1 A sheer whits all over the ruffled windows in no the houseand two rooms need look alike. It's up te you. If you are on your mettle as a gal with ideas you'll think up dozens of ways orof taking those ready-madinaries out of the class. This is one trick. Track down big and handsome round fixtures, a pair for each window. Attach the pair at different heights on the window frame, one high and de same-oldthi- A., .,..' Mr. Rogers -- In 1773, John Singleton Copley chose blue and whit. striped mattress ticking on which to paint his portrait of Gov. and Mrs. Thomas Mifflin of Pennsylvania In the more than a century and a half since then, the ticking has remained in good condition and the painting today is an American art treasure. Modern ticking b not especially recommended as an oil painting medium, but pome of the modern floral and stylized tickinp are as pretty as pictures. Improvements have also been made in the manufacture of present-da- y ticking' so that their wearability and strength are much increased, and they would compare more than favorably with Mr. Copley's long-weari- ng piece. , I 1 L.L.,.L6 I I :.". ! 1 g :: 1 --.... - .. ; , ... WOO about A, , 1 .' .. ih,,,,..,,,,,f-1-4,-- z..,..--.- ., I) L. .te. ' vomooll..., ' ii,,,,,, 1 in g I 2 '. ..:;,;. c :... , N''''4., ,4"' it ; .2 ,. t.:k ,,,,,,-- ::, ..11.04: ter a kg, 2 ''' life:4,t , t' - r Sr a ins,Y-'- ' N..... SII AW ..,........ PA FA S.,oe. 1.!......., . 7 4 .9... 0 0, bad a .... r ., j) , . .. , i, , , ,, . ,., - " e ;,'..;-t- .. .. -- - n , , ,f .., . t , ; . . .. - , t - , ' ".,14iliroottit, , , .,,,; . .,,,. ..1.;; ,.. 1r0 ; 4 : ' ,!' ' ,..1.-- , s,- '!,..i., k ,..., ., ' . v. ,''. k ' -- -,... 746:',,, ' t? ' I ' : N tO.4. A, , fecl"? 0. ,L AIP; 114 . ,,, , !' , .t.,ft -- ,,,,1 " , ," ,4, t- 1,k t 1,,,,,, ,.1,-- .. z ' ,. ,,,,,,.. A , .', ' ' , ,..,., ,., r .' "Oak Pt ., , , , . liat,AdesL:AiC115;40e2;43.3:UoitA4t, ,, ,,L , ', ''',.' Nofik,,,,,,..,,,,, :, ' .,.. ;. . .. . 4 , ,,.....4-- ,, , .' !,..-- 4., , ..'.....,.., , ' -. , , , -- g - Ar43.11604-60- s . ''''. ' NOTED HUNTRESSFrances Collier, 011 Military Drive, heeds the deer hunting season bogging herself a buck and also an extra chance of rare elk hunting with her permit. one low. Drape the curtains on themit's as simple as that to give the windows a different look, and the curtains need not be extra wide and full. A pair of windows is especially effective this way. Give them a center of Interest with a plant stand or a small table topped with the small objects you collect - R I $(4 ' ' ' a dining table that's hardly gat h e' i brit By Virginia Woolley In Salt Lake City, people are talking a 't ,,,,, '47 ill ' TRICKPlace in wall New furnishings and a new color scheme have brought up the style of the room so much that the curtains seem to lag far behin.J. Here is an idea for keeping the curtains you have and really making something of the vtindos. Build a box-lifram1 for the top and sides of each window of thin plywood or wallboard. Make the new frame wide enough and deep enough to close the window frame and curtain rod. End the frame aides at the bottom af the apron below the sill. Cover the frame with heavy fabric in a room scheme color. Then, just inside the Inner edges of the frame, tack a ruffle of a lighter fabric. The ruffle softens the hard edges of the frame. makes it suit the tains. ruffled ke 1 ';iKitt: '"-, I terpiece n 1 ,''',t' '," - -v,4:'?, ,....... , ' WALL - 1 01, Have your centerpiece --anti eat comfortably, too. If yours t 4W6, 1 10 1 WALL. CENTERPIECE Is for plate settings, top space with a that puts the centhe wall. Make big enough save table shadow box terpiece on cen- for table. the shadow box deep enough to hold favorite vases and there's room for as important an arrangement as you'd plan for a big table, without stealing a square inch of serving space. The shadow box is anidea for solving I problem. but you it for no more reamight like son than-- Its good looks. It would be handsome in hall, especially where there's little room for furniture. or for the living room where you might otherwise hang a big picture. Economy is careful buying Arrangemeats in the shadow box can be changed as often as you please. FRAME CURTAINS When you first furnished the room you hung white ruffled ready-macurtains at the windows end called it a day. But now you're not satisfied with this pleasant but all too ordinary window treatment de Careful buying is the smartest kind of economy. Few homemakers could afford to let their household possessions go to pieces long before their time. Few homemakers are that well off. Only a family which has "money to burn" can afford to do without vaccuum cleaner, or to keep on using a wornout one. Only a family of that kind can let its floor coverings grow grimy and filthy. Only it can let its upholstered pieces and AWE, AND THE 1KINDLY EARTH SHALL SLUM- BER ',Apr IN UNIVERSAL LAW." people are talking about; Halloween; about the marvelous new Video shows, the new, and classic; the symphony programs on Sunday night, truly. great hours of the best music. the University Theater's agenda for the coming season that begins Oct. 36, along with the three splendid choices of stage plays for the Young People's Theater; the coming "Mourning Becomes Electra" and "R e d Shoes", "La Traviata" (the Loa One) that is being currently shown at the new independent theater in this town; the Operas that are soon due, and the opening night program of the Utah State Symphony. people are talking aboutthe results of the primaries, the chill that now seems so pronounced, in spite of the weatherin the event you are found supporting the wrong .1ki, si" .., b ...... SKETCH PLANSSketch your own plans for your studio bed.. This arrangement gives added space to small room. , I draperies deteriorate in the same way, and replace them every few months. I new 7i1IencuRY with NEW tubthiskiti kTGNL.....L, $olosilm weed sonbel No Ugh, if Wald I j waft two torard Remo kit Names lohlh wk. .. 25-YEA- FACTORY GUARANTEE. R , 'A.,.... ArA1111111.11111111111.11 r. , Iv I destined-to-be-Americ- , . . ' ,,2 .. - n .. o - ?!!.11.-', ,:..L, : , ' ) , , 0 - 1809-189- - - 1 IL 1k s . the fourth birthday of the United Nationsappropriate it this portion of a poem written by Alfred Lord Tennyson it is called "Locksly Hall". So impressing with Its strength of prophecy it clearly indicates the world events of the past ten years. The words, "federation ot the world" might well have been called The United Nation Charter". "Men, my brothers, men the workers, ever reaping something new; That which they have done but earnest of things that they should do: For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see, Saw the visions of the world, and all the wonder that would be; Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails, Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bails; Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rained a ghastly dew From the Nation's airy navies grappling In the central blue; Far along the world-wid- e whisper of the Southwind rushinE warm, With the standards of the people plunging through the thunder storm, throbbed no longer, and Till the war-druthe battle flags were furled In the parliament of men, the federation of the world. THERE, THE COMMON SENSE OF MOST SHALL HOLD A FRETFUL REALM IN '141,,Apt. .I PP." ,,'aga,....7'7hStifittlfltahri .."1 64 egg . , t J . mostv,....:::: ommirlrip,;r4.1.7 . 1, 1 1 A g (., F---- -- full-leng- th ay. i 0 : 4, Portraits on mattress ticking ng Well, sketched above, is borrowed from a photograph of it, with his drawing, that makes bed frame building easy for you. This drawing is for a bed that is 74 inches long by 33 Inches wide and 21 inches high. The individual bed must be checked against these measurements and dimensions changed if they don't match. But when adjustments are made the rest of the job is easier than you think. Do as Gerry Miller did, take the drawings to a lumber dealer and have the pieces of the frame cut for you from inch plywood. Accurately cut parts are half the battle and with them ready-cu- t You have skipped the problem of where to put lumber and where to find room to saw. All materials for the bed frame:plus the cutting totaled only .$33 for the Millers. Mary Ann Miller made the smart cover for the bed and cushions of monk's cloth and plaid ald helped paint the frame a flat finished deep green. the budget expend& But before theytve lived with it long, every bright young couple gets an idea, perhaps tha day 'a friend of her mother's paid them a call... Why not build a frame for the pocir studio,bed, ono of those room units that put cushions behind the backs of people who sit up straight, and settle the end able problem while it 'torts bedding and bnaba? It's a long way from the idea to the actual- ! ity, though, and few amateurs make it The someom who be unless can't done building knows bow designs the frame and lays out accurate plans. One especially able bride- groom could do the whole job himself' and proved it Gerry Miller's fine finished job, , , , tie-oa- ck for your studio bed A studio bed is many a bride and bridegrooins first piece of furniture. It is bought because it is needed for sleeping, but can double as a living room seating piece until I, A z bV You can use condi- - Plenty of good teachers would help bring them about." : ..; NO - r ' 1 4 ,. Draping tricks make much of curtain treatment we all hear speakers and writers ad- vocating these 1 '' - , , si 401 f47 Deer games Mho Shirley Seel leer 161 McClelland Ave. Salt Lake p in cll.-tai- w - - salons. Inside was her " Lady Red" hunting gear! t , ,.. '' - 4t i 4. or ' ' 77'4. v 1 Ideal conditions er's frame-u- theirI rit e,,, . si ' ' ; , , , ., kitue. ... hoe if they were Miss Seeholzer born with an instinct for knowing how to play tag . . . or did they catch on to the game when they were down looking in on .. ." i our 4ves Isst winter shearing ;!si,,1 - Ny Manley Merrell It's refreshing indeed to talk to vivacious Ginger Ells about bar favorite subjectart She bas definite ideas about what she likes and what she wants to do with itfor she's chosen it as her business and proies- j , 1 - I ; J. It wasn't exactly Ilk. , zagt4tOrtimrstkel - ; . ::, ..... ,.., sit seems natural y, , - ,,,, , -- , 0-- 4 . 4 Lif'411' She works with modern art , ' L . - , , MODERN ARTISTtole. nted Ginger Ellis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. W. H. Ellis of Ogden, pursack her art1 studies. - , 3 r( , kr Accurate aim to Frances for every woman to be an accurate marksman. She ' began hunting with her father and two brothers when in Junior High. She admits that she did have to overcome 'fbucklever.". But now that she is an office engineer for the U. S. Smelting. Refining and Mining Company, she doubly appreciates her opportunities to "get out into the open." Feminine weaknesses But despite her hunting prowess Frances, still has her weaknesses. She loves to tramp through rain One Minute Interviews: ' and snow in early morning - hours. And she thrills to the opportunities for good marks, manship. But dressing her kill Is a problem that is ciulte beyond her "Unless I'm hunting 116ne, I just have to leave that up to other members of City. "No one can tell me that By Margaret Muter. the party." she frankly admits. , deer don't play organized Mn. Robert Stewart, 7594 L do. children as games just Classy steak State St.. Midvale, Utah. From my window I watched "The barbers hillVf to eat, I As the mother of a noted ' r v . low Of them guess, but so do we; and with t a gams of .'..itx , 1 play huntress, it's easy to under- three boys using three doltag last winter Mrs. Estelle V. Col- ."')Ii-, lar's worth of haircuts every in th e gar- ; illitae:,diws 7".411 to serve venison able two weeks, I figured the baden below. :' roasts until stood in steaks, chops, r- , - a a .1t berg were eatThey 1 I ) ''... 1 : a sort of square. int better than ,1 June of each year. And as the ...4 ;:doa. , we were. So One little deer ,.. t .,...,,,'""' ' brother of a noied huntress one Saturday i1 would ',0,,,,: leap its :v :4,--, easy to see why Robert Cola i n k,. d . I around , iir, morning ...9' t!.rwil ,.'',e h t down lier sent Frances a fashionable i,l,,t ; traipsed r,, ts1 I 1 would others wait ex- a and bought li from. one of New ,i.cii., 4$,..!''''. '' package : cnrgt id,!Or--- - pectantly Until Fifth trpaticr doifppeemieYork's Avenue, dress time , - I -- . is .3,- - ,,,,,,,, t ,,-.- 4 4,, Homemaker does her own- barbering . t 6,1,, breaking through brush at the head of the north fork of the Provo River. A ten mile hike a day meannothing to Frances as long as she's tracking deer trails. - '' ',4 '. - , , t; i 0 I . ., ,, . - ,.. tt'ifit,,....131,1 4' f ,,,.., K,..., ' 4. 1,,' , c--ir. ,1 ..f 41,4 of,. Frances Collier is noted huntress By Jean Ward , ,,i" t r . -- 1,' .' - , --- f, ' ",.e g, irt'''. - - -- , I 1.:07':'1' 111144140kgetileglOWakrie4,4-4- Frances Collier, 911 Military Driiyar might be known is "The Lady in Red.' ,,, Decked out in her red hunting cap and 7 y, - - .,,,I- ' s, red Jacket. two pairs of trousers, three pairs . fo. i , ' , 1 of woolen socks and one pair of short rubber ' ' I ! boots she makes a colorful picture. :,, it,. A seasoned huntress, she keeps company ) a heavy caliber rifle during the deer with t 0 ' 1 '' ' , . hunting season (and was a bit baffled when ,, , ,, , , she first learned of her selection for Woman ., of the Week.) : .,' Among hunting circles Frances is noted s 9 ',' for her marksmanship and feminine endur' ' ance. Right now while you and I might be -, , toasting our toes by the fireplace grate, she's , . 11 - ; i 1 ' '.'r '"'''' 3'''- - - I! 'I - cif, . si 1 , , i, i , ,,A, 11'w.- 4 .. I ' 1 111., k N, - , r' it.,,,s, a it , , 1,., a , , ,:rr:.7, ; rtfm.,1 ;:15 ok.t. Solt Lake City, Mali , , I ,, ...r., -- )04 114 ,AI , t - , , b ' :411 ' ' I 4 I e 'I - ...,. ,,. 1: , '. 1: '' :4' , '' -- - , , ' WOMEN OF WEEK 1 - 11 (41 , ., , - , THE DESERET NEWS . . ,, , , Ir. ..,"- . 4...4'n ,,,,,, -' ''''',. - . , , ' V --- - - , . 4 , ,, , 4 ,,,- --'- 1. 46 ,, 4 i. 4 , 4 . . - , ',....74.4101.. U.. A t - I - - . ---- - -- -,-- , , SEE AND TRY THIS OUTSTANDING MACHINE FREE DEMONSTRATION NO OBLIGATION It has everything to offer and still costs less than other Inochin- es of ,similar construction. Liberal terms and trade-ins- .. Complete sewing course included with each 1 , machine. WILLIAMS SEWING MACHINE CO. 159 SOUTH STATE Phone S4651 |