Show (- - jT' ‘ ' ' Jv MA n a ZTNB ‘ SEOTTOIt st y- ' -' "W- “ ? the ' HEEUIib-HEPOBUCA- MAGAZINE SALT JAKK CITY UTAH SUNDAY AlGUST 5 1917 N m rV An“ Impromptu" Portrait of Mme Frances Wearing One V Y-v of Her -- r Studio Gowns V - ff Who Artist bf Clothes ' Startled the Fashionable WorId with Modem V4 vY'" s ' ’ J - ) - i f W om Novelties and Beau- ties—Her Romantic Career tr Ul!nrriJLJllgssaLwrBggw!ilisglibJltvncsr‘r I n r iV i 1 ‘m3 r "“t - 0 n ' " and then the owner of a tiny hat shop From " designing hats she went' to designing gowns and her rise was little short of sensational Frances first attracted public at tention tq herself by bringing into for adult vogue 4he use' - Tams of velvet tarns of satin and tarns of sill? set her on tbehigh-wg- y to fame After tarns came the Arabian turban the swirling softly e which was popular foljea eh Tears am But she longed for the opportunity to create gowns Her first opporcame tunity through successes in effects for certain musical "creating” comedies a' success complete enough to establish her as a designer of gowns for the stage Those f whom she then designed frocks Included Ethel Barrymore Grace George Jane Cowl Kitty Qor-Mr Lealio Carter Frttzi Scheff Florence Reed Grace Rue Joan 8awyer Belle Storey Louise Dresser Anita Stewart PpspI White Alice Joyce Mary Pickford Mabel Normand Norman Talmadge’ Gaby- Deslys and many others It was after the stage bad set Its fPProyal on her that society followed its lead and her New By Ethel Thurston -- ‘ - often bays wondered you who wer tMUoMbte: clothe or you wbo looh at them where they begin You may guess that they don't just happen— some : one must dream and dare at tbe outset or else we should all stlR he wearing the ut nondescript coverings of the mo remote ancients Y' You are right they don’t Just hap-pen They are visioned fifst- Imag nation is the beginning - of every-- 1 thing imagination and the will to ex- press And to succeed the Imagine tion must' have behind it an under- Standing not only of beauty but of miiht add right here bmmity--yo OTJ many ineidents between comprise the wemlnslr Impowible romance of Frances—Madame Frances if you fashions gppstle of modes”- who by of dictator ptyle - - 41 sheer ability and an inherent sense Pf the fitness of tblngffhas lifted her eelftQtbe position widely regarded as that of Americas foremost ex- pojient of style in women's dress and has retired first aid from Faria to— well to that of second aid Frances is in her 30th year of pquil health exceedingly attractive possessed of an amazingly clever per :pQaamyt rides horses for recreation aPd spends the balance of her time when awake Jn making women-at- tractive by gowning them In strict wM Tew ®f pine charm v of femininity Russia Old Dress Is an art and only an artist Flight from — ' Bam In Grudna the daughter of a with the power to appeal to con vince can create clothes that will municipal office holder who was bridge 'thcr way to the imagination of threatened with the stem dlsciplin - V ary measures of the Romanoff dy the world : Better than a theory is an example of lese 1 trifling offense The1 force that brought about the h"y r 1 familv forms of tbe clothes you are wearing was AIM and brought today wa a personal force The form of pockets for example that adorn — your frock was invented by a worn- ad b a o be big NW fcead-drap- - ' : - V- MS S5bc'TSTTZ tuta (be mwterlou BWltlpIlcattoM ° Vt m ell oo mtla boot ban The Romnc of Franco From a child refugee huddled be noatb ooador ntw pHe swiftly moying sleigh streaking its the snow-lade- n steppes way aero of fashions of Russia to the arbiter for society and the stage is a far two taportanV -- $$£&? SSW for a chat with Theodore Roosevelt- then commissioner of police qf New head and assured her that some day she would he an important worn an In the store where she worked she was promoted from an appren tice’s position to that of a milliner v ryt There followed several successive The leap from a milliner’s appren tice to America's foremost coutur-- 'changes She became a saleswoman iere represents a considerable dls- then the youngest manager of a de taree still all these things and the partment la the big establishment : - LCfnfirTSganffTinif j inirTTfraOi nTFnfrnfrnrfagn Genius of Clothes Photographed in Her Charming' New York Studio iincrTini ini-Hhninr- "rance8 Of the Adriatic papers Immediately dubbed the frock Ule aMU“w Ul wmons a afternoon frock the suffragist gown" and tbe photo- e innovaUons have marked their with The pockets news capacious — i graphs girdled the globe Mme Fran ces stoutly averred that the gown was not a freak and that pockets had arrived as a much needed necessity They had Today 75 per cent of tbe afternoon gowns manufactured In this country have pockets in one or another A year later on a visit to Paris she attended the Grand Prix at l4ng- Champa wearing a short cape she had abroad from this country Photographers blocked her progress artists all but tore the cape from her shoulders The following season France contributed capes be Hinnbm f ? 5&OTS -- tam-q’rsbaui-er - : i wlX antf r Yet it is not alone by sheer novci-- ‘ yond number in their styles to this country and It Is quite possible that ty repeated Innovation that Frances their use will not disappear In this has made her fame Tho real basis -- generation The Sensation of Silver Lace A stage celebrity shortly afterward Insisted that Mme France design a gown for a forthcoming production that would attract immediate atten place Diversity must be given tion That gown was the first to be'tude But the basic reasonableness worn made entirely of silver lace of true dress art Is the factor that Tho craze for silver and metal lace distinguishes the creation that win dresses that followed amounted al- - carry Frances illustrates in a singu-take- n most to a mania The pannier was another innova-Sketc- h tion that first saw the light of day via Frances aa was also the Russian tunic and various other slightly dit-ferent details that have done much And at the same time every Inch to make American women lati-shap- e attractive woman by Electricity THE woman who cooks with an the remainder of the cooking opera ' tion range for the first time should be given careful instruc- utensils pre-ion in Its use for the art of cook- - nL 7no ins by electricity and cooking with porcelain ware for they conduct th2 coal differ widely An electric range heat better n°t use too much water This manufacturer offers the following S fiat-bottom- ed “rf HE fig is trae of the oldest fruits andVnce it has become n be grown known that Bg in pots and fruited in the conserva- tory or In tbe open' ground where there is three months warm summer i of water the fruit will ripen Vigor-know- n ou Plants will bavefruit lnall stages of development from ' the smallest grea (rult t0 the rtpe flgs readr ter v eating pjing Celeste hears rather small excellent suggestions for conserving the coneuicption of electricity wich apply to almost any type of electric ‘ fruit of tfgh quality but is not very produo-weathe- r ade has been Ischia has a green exterior the great tive there g varieties inside of the fruit being blood red mand for the by people anxious to grow fresh figs Hlrtu Japan Is an abundant bearer These varieties begin to fruit by the and Magnolia bears ' ' large peartime the young shoots are six inches- shaped fruit v long and form a fig at every leaf Un- - : One fig- enthusiast writes that his like apples peaches and other fruits figs stood zero weather last year of the kind the fig is more like the- 'though when first set out freezing in the: re- weather Would kill them As they1 raspberry or ' blackberrynot ripen all become acclimated the plants stand spect that the fruit does ut One time Figs : continue tode-- colder weather A gardener in Penn-velo- p and rfpen fruit until checked sylvania says her fig tree has stood 20 winters with protection The weather For pot culture the fig requires tree Is bent over to' the 'ground-i- n' with straw and about the same treatment as a 'rub winter "and covered ' r" ber plant and if supplied with plenty earth Do not ahow liquids to - quick-bearin- - - j ll This I entirely unnecessary By so doing you are merely turning the water of the liquid into steam where It is wasted No matter how much current Is applied the HnuiJ cannot be made hotter than the boiling point Many housewives believe that the food' is not cooking unless the water is bubbling furiously This Is a misIf the water is steaming it is hot enough to do the work and cur- take- Important watered Si heat It requires £ uu’uy wS In cooking vegetable theI not be submerged in the steam will do the cooklne FnJ1 stance--in boiling 7 enough Water to cover of the vessel— generally abont? a cupful This amomt of wa e? quickly boiled and the steam tho ' cooking nd -- Boiling is the most ration performed on’ expensive the electrir r: Turn current entirely off about 10 stove and tho above instruction! minutes before through boiling The carefully followed ut will cause heat stored in the unit will keep the material saving in your bill for iAn liquid at the boiling temperature for tricity with-byjco- ld saved ’ : Xaw VMtne ferric mi -- vF t y bubble-bo- etrmIv " on-rent-- is V |