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Show , ' THE DEsgRET SEWS, Monday1 - -- .v Ndver;lbet, I9, 1947 , TovV'ntalkr Tidbits, ..,,0, , , , Mr. knd Mis. C J. Pearsall, now in Chicago; will welcome Dr. and Mrs. Clikford J. Pearsall and Mr. and Mrs. Allan Moffat , this week when the two couples make the trip east. The six will celebrate the 00th wedding anniversary of the C. J. Pearsalls, parents of Dr. Pearsall, of 1181Latirel. Ave. . ,,..... GOING EAST . . , are Mr. and Mrs. Charles A., Bilynton :r., 1153 Second Ave., on a business and pleasure trip. They will he leaving November 15 and will be gone two weeks. ' GET TOGETHER ', .. The executive board of the Utah Dietetic Association held a luncheon meeting on Saturday in the Empire ?loom of the Hotel Utah. . . . Outlining the year's coming events were Sybil Christiansen, Anna Marie Driscoll, Ethel An' derson, Margaret Pittenger and Mrs. Dale Swan. , TwENTT-Firr- a HEIR . . Mrs. T. A. Williams of 520 East Second South added two more over the week end to total 25. . . Dr. and Mrs. Scott Creer Sharp (Ann a tiny baby boy on Sunday at the Lankenau H01-- 1 , Felt) welcomed in pital Phlladetphia, Pa., where Scott is interning. Weighing in at five pounds plus, he'll be named after his Dad. . . . In Colo- redo Springs, Colo.,-- a 7 12 pound baby boy arrived on Saturday -. to Mr. and Mrs. Wirt Salthouse. . Mother is the former Martha Richardson. The new arrival his lots of red hair like his young brother, Wirt Jr.'--' ' BLUE BOOTIES . . . Eric W. Ryberg and daughter, Afton, left by motor for San Francisco on Sunday to greet Mr. Ryberg's new grandson. . . . His daughter, DIM and Hydie Adams, are the proud parents of the baby boy weighing over seven . . . , - ' , , ... .. Fashion's favorite coat .is the greatcoat, successor :to the reefer, the Chester.field'and all the other darlings of seasons past. The greatcoat is big, bulky and warm, and it is sometimes belt.; ed, sometimes flared widely to the back or all around. The best designers do it in many versions, and it appears In lower, priced , lines. , This winter the flared greatcoat is already established as a leading fashion, and as the mercury drops, you'll see these coats on 'the street in increasing numbers. Some have the flare concentrated to the back, while a , , , , forom 4 P.' , your own , fashion order.. The fleece, and 'fleecy fabrics arh in good statiding, and many att s tive coats are made of tw and plaids. The neutrals suc grak and beige are popular the dark colors, black, navy brown are practical and szriart. There are also goodirreens, vine tones and a few coats in bright colors. They're wonder f u I y warm and practical as well as smart, and you'll enjoy one a a basic costume in your wardrope. The 'flare and fullness of he greatcoat are seen, too, in die ler styles. Hooded coats, ftr. trimmed, are popular for- leiss I casual occasions. few have a swinging line, with the flare generally distributed all around. A few hive optional belts, or a belt that slips through the side seams to be wort front or back. Most of , them flare frankly, unbelted. Collars stand high on many of these new coats, or they are de- signed so that you can turn them up against the wind. They are peat and small, or wide, some of them to the shoulder tips, Sleeves are nearly always wide and loose, so that the coat can be worn over a suit as well as over a dress. Fabrics and cobra are so wide- ly I varied that you can write td '''i, ri::.PA,1.1f. -- .4,.:.,4,0 i, 1, 1 4 f i 0 ' nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Orval Adams. GALA EVENT The annual bridge luncheon date of the , - ' - ' Chairman Mrs. N. Sigma Nu Mothers' Club has been set. G. Hall announces that it will be held on Nov. 10 at the Ladies' Literary Club... Committee members include Mrs. G. L. Leaver, tickets; Mrs. Amy Rebholz, menu; Mrs. W. S. Barton, Also on the docket prizes and Mrs. J. A. Anderson, serving. for Sigma Nu Mothers is their luncheon meeting scheduled for Friday at the fraternity house. Phyllis Snow, who will talk on "Holiday Recipes" will present recipe books as favors and prepare dessert for the luncheon guests. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Esch are now the , BABY TALK happy parents of a wee baby girl, born last Friday afternoon. The baby, weighing in at 7 pounds 14 ounces, has black curry hair and dimples, according to proud grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Milton V. Backman. Mr. and Mrs Alan E. Brockbank, 618 TO THE WEST for an exciting vacation on Tenth Avenue, leave this week-en- d the toast. They'll visit with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hendricks (Gloria Rich) in San Francisco, and with Mr. and Mrs. S. Grover Cannel will be included as a stop-ovRich In Palo Alto. point before they returnhome in two weeks.. ; , er - , S 1110...MESKORIAMERICANSI Evelyn Martin wears an all greatcoat accented with gold black buttons. I Mrs. Roland M. Smith Jr., in a dressy coat with flared back and hood. IPISPEIMOOMSWONOOMPIMIMICrWlittliWAWSOIMINIMPRINNOVIIIIPSWOOMOMMINTri t , - 4 Cabins Popular Your Age Kids, Act Ski Teen-agewho are having their first big date should strive to look the part of sweet, un- lphisticoted young adults. Old Al the skiing season approach- age will creep along soon es SalL Lakers will ,be taking enough and it may not be the week-en- d toand Alta trips glamorous existencethat young Brighton, if they are lucky eople imagine. So why not to a own cabin amon; enough appreciate these days of youth the hills. you don't have to worry ' using wrinkle creams and Lawrence Birrell mud masks to - bring freshness Eleventh to your skin? Lawrence Birtell,-49Wear young, gay- - clothes and Ave., and his wife, have just cacompleted a bin of log siding that includes a large living room with a cut almost filling brick fire-plaone end, a kitchen, bath, two small bedrooms, and a dormitory on the second floor. Two young daughters: ardent ski fans Aibbie Lou and Lee Anna, skt6d last winter at Alta while the shivering parents waited for them to finish. The Birrells decided it was too cold to spend another year that way so they built a cabin by the new ski lift that-- will be watm and - comfortable While the daughters use their hickories. The cabin came as two prefabricated ones, but they were combined and finished inside with pine panel, , to make one comfortable winter w e e home. The Birrells played architect for their cabin, so although It came in two ready-mad- e parts the cabin is individualized and charming. Manufacturers claim the small cabins can be erected by three men in eight hours. Inside finSLICK SIXTEEN .. Charm- ishing does not come with the ing teen-ag- e coiffure perfect from cabin, and prices range for that big dance is worn by - $763 to $1,065,Thn houses come ar movie starlet , Marian-CIn sections, with one partition. However, they can be shoes that are becoming to by people erecting them. age. Skip the heavy that Mom and Sis use for te Cinder Block Is Used cessoriet. Cinder block becoming ' Whether it is school , a favorite building material for dance or "his." it your should be a ski cabins. The blocky is fireoccasion. Probably you will and termite- big proof, - mouse-proleave-hom- e in--- a burst of exciteproof,- and will look attractive "oohs" ment to the and "cabs" Most of when important painted. Mom and Grandpa and the all, it is relatively easy to o- of of the family who ogle your bi tabn in this time of building rest first long date dress. You should shortages. keep that Stewart Gardner, navy veter- attempt to look throughout the an, is building a lodge in the center of Brighton out of cinder evening. teen-age- rs Some who are block which will house the flood of skiing tourists. sports enthusiasts are likely to Philip Buehner has almost forget that they are not on the completed a cabin of cinsierWock lillaskethall...couct-whenthey-a- rr and at a formal dance, and may act Charles Woodward will be his accordingly. A ladylike appearbe yours at all neighbor during t h e coming ance should want to be invited months when his canyon home times if you is completed. again. During the evening you should rs , .!"- - take time out for freshening your face and grooming your hair. If you possibly can arrange it, take a tiny hair brush with you. You can get some of these which are about 4 inches long and perfect for a quick brush- WORK ROOM nd - u st of fresh-asa-dai- sy 105 East South TemRle l Take lipstick and face pow-he- n der with you also a- small corn-o- ut pact filled with. some pads of cotton soaked in good quality witch hazel. You can rub these over your face .to wipe off the )nice Ocalle STOCIt ' No. 7013. The prince, on his arrival in destined to be the first woman England a few days before his to reign over ber nation since marriage had been pale and h e r Queen Victoria was married in green from his plebeian disease Victoria. were 1840, royal weddings royal that knows no royal stomach. In addition to the train bearweddings. There was none of were seven And there were almost 40 persons in the procession that attended her bridegroom, Prince g. Albert of Princess Elizabeth and her father, King George VI, will drive to the Abbey on the bridal day in one state carriage. Queen Elizabeth will ride in And Queen Mother a second. Mary and her daughter, Mary, Princess Royal, will go by motor car. ' YOUNG FROM ANY ANGLE Sixteen Carriages set of front hair Ends ate ' Into ouritylocke ' curls. Side I But it took sixteen "full dress'!carriagesinQueenVic, to- - head. toria's royal stables to carry merely the principal members makeup. Take a fresh pad and of the bridal party and the roygo over your skin surface again, of both bride and wait until it dries, and then ap- al families to St. James' Palace, bridegrokm ply your powder' and lipstick where the wedding was , Sol- . , carefully. . This little refresher compact emnized., Londoners and country Englisb can also be used if your hands their-on who crowded capital perspire freely. Just whisk out Victoria's wedding day, Feb. 10, a witch hazel pad and sponge for their show a real 1840, got your palms with it. money's worth and their aching arches as they lined the route of the royal procession. -All this, and , much ' more, about he nuptials of Victoria is contained in the chronicle of a Saxe-Cobur- 4 , -- OVERC9ATS and TOPCOATS coal before lonaBefore you tood ft have it clocuted and prssed and pip in condition for another winter. gossipy - the whose acwedding is now British Information Service in Rockefeller Center. This anonymous, eagle-eye- d reporter even noticed that Prince Albert at he entered the chapel at St. James, no longer seemed to be suffering from the effects of sea sickness. , SAVE MONEY ,- ,,, messengers. Bride end Groom Deserted It will be recalled that at the wedding of Eleanor Roosevelt to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the bride and bridegroom suddenly found themselves deserted and standing alone at their own wedding reception. The bride's uncle, Pres. Theo- dore Roosevelt, had stolen the with orange flower blossoms. On her head she wore. wreath of the same blossoms over which but not so as to conceal her face, a beautiful veil of Honiton lace' wak thrown. "Her bridesmaids andtráInbearers were similarly attired, save that they wore no ells.' It took twelve "unmarried ladies,"- all beautiful and titled, to carry the young queen's train. Thus It can be judged that the train was far more voluminous, long and full than that which will:grace Princess Elizabeth, N show. Victoria - and Albert spent exactly four days honeymooning at Windsor. On that fourth day, they returned to Buckingham Palace, where Victoriabride or Al - noha&M -- buckle- - down-to-th- , e-- business of being a queen. 4 - 4 OECES? - Cam Service visas rag 4 days ea fily aids kmdly wash tier. are some of the tests made during this , examinations &Ms , - 4 t 2 day' , 1. Consultation, history, symptoms, blood pressure, etc.2. Otoscopic examinatior.Lpfilleartuppthalmoscopic', iiyetésts. - , - - - c . , 3. Blood 'count, hemoglobin determination, urinalysis. 0ther laboratory teits as indicated. , 4. Complete physical examination, including chest, heart and lungs, abdomen, pelvic organs, bony tures, etc: 5. Transillumination of the accenory nasal sinuses, nose and throat tests. 6. pictures as indicated, including series, Gall Bladder with dye, chest, sinuses. 7. At the completion of this 2 day examination, the Diagnostician explains In everyday language just what the findings are, and prescribes dietary and other advice. X-R- ay 'Oar Cash and I. Dr Reuben-- N. D, Dr. P. K. Ph. tlk an d, staff Of the DORM CLINIC. offer a penettatMg head to toe examination on the new LOW COtr, health plan. Thousands of patients in California and slew "then have acckLimed this splendid. eamomkal health service.'. ,- ,, gastro-intastin- al range:-Standarc- DOREL-CLINI- C Find-Th- e II , Duuni wrAls w Call and Deliver , - , 445 , Cause! For Appointment Phone , "hue tot I . Froo look10 tett aoutemple St., Solt LeksCity I ;', . : - , , . . . , eye-witn- count of yr.iWia'offt,7fc'; ., f Throyal bride, who lacked a few months of being. 21, is reported as looking "anxious and excited. She was even paler than ususg." It appears certain the chronicler was a man, as he spent so little time in describing the bridal dress and then rather ineptly. He said of 4 , - . - maids of ers, there honor, eight ladies of the bedchamber, seven women of tho bedchamber and so many super.numeraries, both men and women, as to turn the procession into a parade. The procession was headed by drummers, trumpeters, heralds and page boys. It also included ' pursuivants who, on consulting Webster, turn out to be state . 1 Vitylbousands of Doctors Proscribed nA Bride Was Pale her-wedding -- ' YORK--(INS)--W- cession! This rustic cottage may be heated with a central circulator or floor furnace or by living ti; 6, ;, ititilio, , room r fireplace a n d kitchen (CAUSED SY COLDS) . frame or ma sonry construction- tan be sub- ..1121OSSINaetsatonealtnoton1y stituted for the logs with stone relieves 'Rich Coughing.but elSO CLEANERS & DYERS chimney and foundations shown ' loosens up phlegm and makes it In the illustration. The house 4tas1er to raise. pumas (s) is 1160 covers an area of about "Salt Lake's Disiindive Cletmard eff ective for old workroom safe Mighty Pleasant oilI JILlici tasting! .)1U,IF the latter . 1 . 64 EAST 8Ill SOUTH '. . a. amounting to about 130 sq. feet It IPY), I' ' By Ines Robb NEW this austerity business about the good" queen's nuptials. There was pomp, circumstance and pageantry in those days, and plenty in the British till to pay the piper. As compared with the eight bridesmaids and two page boys who will attend Princess Elizabeth when she is married to Lt. Philip Mountbatten on Nov. 20, the young queen had more than' - 100 persont-is- t pro Cabin Plans Available The cabinplans illustrated may be obtained through the U. S. Dept of Agriculture, Division of, Farm Buildings and Rural Housing, Beltsville, Md. The plan II identified as Exchange Plan chocolate brown-beig- e plaid. Sleeves are wide, roomy, so coat may be worn over suit. -- I English Rpyal Wedding in 1840 Was Lavish and Expensive up. ce - This flared winter greatcoat, modeled by Markt Snarr, is made of handsome rust- - |