Show I ( T THE HEB MAGAZINE SECTION MAGAZINE REmON AN SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY APRIL 8 1917 ALD-"EEPUBL- IC 99 ° i Beauty at the Beach Now Has a Favorite Pose as You Will Judge from at These Real Life Studies and Maybe Art May Find That This Gesture Really Is to Miss Gladys Ballard of Louisville Kyf Palm Beach A Become a ' rifa Fashion Mrs John E By Gladys Mercer course toti never show your ’ heels to the enemy but to friends O well! Thats differ-rnt Seemingly it is utterly differ- ent Tou might believe and not beconsidered at all fantastic that heelshowing had become a fashion You might think that of all possible beach poses of beauty a strange preference was felt for that position familiar enough among children which en- abled the subject to hold fast to the hospitable and yet display a pedal activity that gives animation to the effect The truth is I suppose that beach life is essentially a liberating thing The staidest of social creatures — women of the utmost austerity in the drawing room — unbend literally as well as figuratively under the spell of the sea Perhaps we should eay the spell of the beach or go further and say the Epell of bathing OP tlons of ordinary life and love to of enjoy liberty quite in the spirit v more of children Nothing has in it eer naturalness than sprawling in the sand the sort of thing forbidden by ordinary clothes To delve in the sand to feel the warm touch of the sun to laugh at simple fun and re- lax wholly under the spell of elemen- tal comfort Thus are we led directly to the heel pranks that repeat themselves e tw - rrv&f-- i - Th---ar- e - a to the eyes of e contem- - traveler'and that inevitably pleases the itin- erant photographer who is looking for the “characteristic” It delights the artist to find his “social registers” from different parts of the country illustrated fascinatingly in the beach groups Bpauty at Mrs William DeFerd in the Popular Pose play beauty out of harness beauty being com lortable and unconcerned naturally allures It is true that the social world speaking of it as ranstas from the Atlantic to the Pacific is reflected in beach life wherever fashion may place its stamp on that beach life whether it be on the white stretches bathed by the Pacific or those touched the Gulf or the Atlantic Take for example the persons glimpsed on this page Miss Gladys Ballard of Louisville and Mrs John E Leggett of New York are not to be surprised at any geographical paradox when they meet at Palm Beach And Coronado or and later the Great Lakes or Newport will welcome social figures as widelv separated at home as MissVirgiril Hylan and Bessie O’Neil a kind There interest of f among holi sojournersthat offers its own guaran- tees of high spirits and so- I':: x "4 -- rat erXT i ft m & Four of This Season’s Prettiest Beach Girls — Miss Bessie O’Neil Miss Virginia Hylan Daughter of Justice Hylan O'Brien and Miss Katharine Menahan THE en- thusiasts they are beginning to be comfortable and pretiy at the York at a with novelties of color in tafFlorida Beach feta and a grace of line whaievt-their material that quite effectively challenges any designs that planned for Neptune parti-There continues to be a wide ran:: for individual preference as to bathing caps and bats Strictly spear- ing many of the head coveringshould be called beach hats rather than sea caps for they are discarded for the water Bathing shoes however are another matter it seems readily to be adjusted to both sand and sea Latterly they have included high laced featMres quite in harmony with the sirwear fashions introduced by Thfall and bow funny the old bathing short skirts Nevertheless the suits used to be per holds its place as the more u:rO yes! Old bathing suits as you versally used element of the bathinc see them in former photographs costume r “one-piece- dimensions of heaven are stated in the Bible but are so great that novone yet has been able to reduce them to figures that can be grasped by most people However they do indicate that heaven is not a crowded place At least say thp sam-tim- clothes Bathing clothes! Yes I think there may be a hint there The clothes of convention naturally keep us conventional We act as we dress Even a man in a dress suit is a more formal person than a man in sports togs and 1 know a clergyman who admitted that when he got into his ” for bathing he always wants to “act like a kid” If this is true of men it Is Just as true of women In their free bathing suits the most conventional of women feel liberated from the exac- - i were funny Leggett of New 920000 feet or 1500 miles The cube of this must be taken in order to obtain tho total dimensions of heav- en which are 469793088000000- 000000 cubic feet With these figures before him one statistician has figured out Just how quires at least half the total space He deducts another fourth for streets and open places which leaves 124198272000000000000 cubic feet tor the actual dwelling place of the angels A room 20 feet square contains Miss Dorothy" resourcefulness You will not doubt that there is much discussion of clothes of what poor Paris is doing or how are to be built next - suming for the moment that this especially Mars are inhabitated Not number has always existed in the to leave out of account the possible world each day and that there are inhabitants of other worlds it is es- three generations in a century the timated that 99 of them could be number of inhabitants for each cen-- added trlvimr a total of 100 worlds tury would be 3000000000 lth nn 000 000 000 also world o the has that Assuming sli-plativ- e - Duast aikcl Its Dangers the clinic of occupational dis- INeases it is well recognized that dust of various sorts' is a men- ace to the health of a large number of wage earners For 1915 it has been estimated by Frederick L Hoff-man lhat at leagt 10 per cent of workerg Ia!)0red under conditIons more or less dctnmeatal to health and life on account of atmospheric pollution commonly classed as dust This impurity may be of the most diverse sorts There are insoluble inorganic dusts including metals in a state of fine division silica sand coal marble and similar powders Potter’s asthma grinder's phthisis and the siderosis among metal pol- ishers and others engaged in metal working are familiar illustrations of harm done by this class of dusts which usually produce irritation through being inhaled Others rep- resent soluble inorganic impurities are more readily absorbed after being swallowed and are dan- Serous because of their inherently Poisonous qualities A third class tb® organic dusts comprises such varying materials as saw'- dust’ fur’ ®kins’ feathers broom and ’traw- - graAnS and flours- - iu‘e' ®aI hemP’ WOOl CarPet sweepings tobacco-bo-x COtt0n’ dUSt dust 6treet hides and leather felts rags paper horsehair etc Typical of the dis-cieases caused by organic dusts are: piax dressers disease a kind of pneumonia due to the inhalation of particles of flax alkaloidal poison jng from African boxwood by work-skirt- s men engaged in shuttle making and malignant pustule and a febrile disease among rag sorters Most persons contemplating the of dust and its hygienic as- pects for the first time” says a con- -tributor to the Journal of the American Medical Association “assume that the dangerous factor lies in the s in distribution of the atmospheric contamination Dust thus is a convenient term which may lnclude a large variety of atmos- - recent analysis of the ‘dust’ toiler! ed in a vacuum cleaner from th: book phelves of the librar' of an educational institution disclosed cn microscopic examination hair green wool white wool cotton fibres fiv wings sand grains wood paper string celluloid pieces of tinge: nails metallic Iron and leather Th hair was probablv derived from so :T hats the wool and cotton fibres froa clothing sand from the mud tracked in on shoes and the gradual pulver- iziug of the floor fly wings from jead files and paper from book leaves The remaining articles pres-bent explain themselves In a water suspension of this dust no life could be detected with a lens magnifying y 32o diameters “A qualitative examination of th 'library dust" showed the presence the elements iron aluminum and calcium which are wear an accounted for the by easily i tear Gf materials of obvious One of chief of the jmity points interest was the finding of the ‘bacil- jug cou communis’ Rees suggests that jt may come from several KOUrcef5 the most probable one ing the hands while handling books Tfae jaCUS might also be present because of the coughing sneezing fe0dium 1 prox-Miam- be-Mi- nnH ss nniltla PTnfntiAn al micro-organism- FRENCH Investigator has looked Into the old question of the fate of the ordinary brass pin By a series of experiments con-ducted on his own estate he discov-subjeer®d that pins like human beings So their way and are resolved into ct dust Hairpins which the experimenter observed for 151 days disappeared at the end of that period having been converted into a rerrous oxide a brownish rust which was blown away by the winds months needles brass ta a -- T p r WUI4II1 AUiO' fStGQl inhabitants there would be nearly aed amounts as that which obtains pens at the end of 98 months were The length and tho breadth and the This statistician thinks that the rooms The present number of in- - amounts to 3000000000000 rooms 20 feet 6quare and five are of It height equal” in the distinctively dusty trades meeting place of the angels prob- habitants in the world is estimated Many scientists are of the opinion nearly gone while their woodeg hold- 20'foot a ETwelve thousand furlongs are 7- - ably is the most spacious and re-- at approximately 1000000000 ceilin5 for each angel As“Of what does dust consist? A ers were still Intact that other worlds besides the Arth |