Show I Ne 4 v 0 - IF IP Ir'vrP" I e 1 ir i VP -- to if v'4"-veNe4- it "iiieiliNe 10- -40 Aw- -) 4110' p 4 wIr lor If - slrlr VsevV 'fir It - 41 vi 1 - to fir '41f v 4 V V& w w vs vEt V' - 'v 4 4 v dt No v v - 4 1 IV w 410 'W 4I10 W v 1 I 1 ' 7 1 1 1 s 16 IV - - -- it ' ' :'''': ':J 4 - L 4t- h a 0' - : - H- - '' Of US Cities 014 '" "The Exploding Metrop oils" by the editors of Fortune Doubleday & Co ) i 1 Best — yrAing" I of - Ever- sell" the big black type and the bludgeoning approach-an- d I Jaffe Rona- by Eilmon and Schuster New ' :0:York WIC I the people The Drowning Stone" by Hugh Fosburgh WH liam York -- In Jaffe's book I 1 i - t i 1 1 i i heecharacters to But this story of men and caught up in a tangle of their own emoions is handled with such warmth and sincerity that the reader feels that the tragedy is all for the best and that happiness will be Its result It is the story of a young war veteran now a game warden who dislikes killing but is forced through a you circumstance to the leading part in a manhunt— not against a criminal or an enemy but against his Iilelong friend Clean and taut writing that is a pleasure to read ' i ReJliSetkr3 New York Times Service NEW YORK Oct 11—Following is the list of best sellers to be published Sunday by the New York Times Fiction I Lolita Nabokov 2 Around the World With Aunt Mame Dennis 3 Anatomy of a Murder Traver 4 nault lustre-Arm- y ow Marquand 10 Chez Pavan 1 2 3 Dryer Harr- Llewellyn Aku-Ak- Heyerdahl ti Baa Baa Black Sheep 4 ther 5 Boy- Inside Russia Today Gun- Affluent Gal- The braith Society 6 Kids Say the Darndest Things! Linkleiter 7 War and Peace in the Space Age 8 Gavin Eisenhower: Hero Captive Childs 9 Please Don't Eat the Daisies Kerr 10 On My Own Roosevelt 4e' ' 4 — Nov flo N - S - by com- I lb I xr e 1 Lk Sheila Birkenhead character is pile of But when a real hurricane suddenly appears on the scene both Adam and the polonel find in themselves ettrqngths they did not susriect and resolve their differdrices in a fight to save s of the threatened Top brick Peace In Piccadilly By Shelia Birkenhead Reyna' Co New York $I Vie-live- ii British have a great more affection for places than do Americans But the British have a great many more places and buildings whith deserve such atThe deal Admen" by Shep- °The Simon and erd Mead i Schuster New York $4 I ''The Admen" as its title )mplies is a novel about Veople who work in the adNertising business Essentially it is the story pranch Torry head of a ))1gacivertising agency who tOrrle up In the hard way— )an -- advocate of the "hard tention Some are very old like the Tower of London some like only moderately old Buckingham Palace others like the are relatively new Albany In London which dates no further back than the late 18th Century Lady Birkenhead daughter of one of England's "press lords" writes the history of the latter structure Lord Melbourne poured a Dates Piano Recital t: Karin Day student of Vera 'rey Beason will be pre- sented in a piano recital Mon-8:15 pm in the Colonial Hills LDS Ward todsevelt Ave (1160 South) 3:trict 17th East St p Miss Day Will play a proirarn devoted to the works i9of Beethoven Mendelssohn :Chopin Longas Guarnieri Z'ernandez and Ysals at fortune into the construction of Melbourne House Then It became the property of Frederick Duke of Yprk and favorite son of Albany George III Finally when royalty was strapped for funds I the mansion 111WAEI 31 SAIL OCTOBER For Cattiotat Dateas Contact AIDA FOX CLAWSON - EL S93811 A City NV ' ' In the years since World War II a great deal has been said and written about urban renewal urban sprawl and all the other problems which beset rapidly growing Amer lean cities A great many theories have been evolved for meeting these problems and in a number of areas the the ones are being put into practice How valid are the theo ries? i into the Albany a sort of apartment house and as such has been the residence of famous and near famous Britons for more than a century Samuel Johnson said that A A AftAAA 4AA AK AAfA tt to say: "The best way to plan for downtown is to see how people use it today There is no logic that can be superimposed on the city people make it and it is to them ot buildings that we must fit our plans" "The Exploding Metropolis" deserves wide reader ship May Overwhelm Them It is a book for people who like cities and unless those people wake up to what is going on the chaos of urban and suburban de velopment may overwhelm them It doesn't provide all the answers nor does it pretend to but it is effectively written and it is bound to stimulate thinking about a subject which demands the constructive approach "The Metropolis" is Exploding journalism at its best—TL French Music Fete Jean Preston local an-de- nt idea scious 7 I :: " ' ' :' :" i : li ' i :t - of parts artist ' tral Utah she years awards ional icipation in With for her former service as art the charming womWbehind the Elick signature — Ivy Baker Priest -- - the miner's daughter became Treasurer of the United States ::: - 4- GPtErl GROWS 11111 ' :''''''' ' ''4':'' ' ' i':! f: 1 1: rEM:i51::1 Aot Alk MGRAII " Ar" HILI 8001( I g ork " 4 7 post-Civi- ?: 0 1''':':'k'‘N: 1J : '1 '::: :'1':"': li :: 1 ':Y' 1 'N '' Ott i ::' — 1?$ t :: ':' :i::'':: :': ::: IrY::::'''f'':'': ''':':Z:'':41: '"'-:- - - ! i ':::': ' - ::!!''4 :::: '' " ‘ k ' 0" 't A : :::::: "i :5::: 1 ' ' 4 N Ir 'it :tz 4''' ' 1 z'1 ' - ''' ''41' " '' - 4 - '' ' :?: " 11''''''':::''4- ::' : -' : ' :''k: '': '' 1' ' '7'47-::- 44' 1' 14 " 4 - i ' - 10 - 5 New designs! New woods! New fabrics! The 1959 furniture is all now and it's all here new on display at Standard Furniture ‘'s New sectional grouping with the light look! Quality built upholstered with foam rubber and covered in beautiful new fabrics I z " i'le' e NOW 11 ai6 6 157 I ' it !!: "si 'i" "s —1 ' 1" ' '' ' yew 4-- '5 ' t VI ' "4'4'4 tPe'""'''"- :'s ''''' 80 - II 1 1 i ! I 0'- - -'''' see S et 44-- Ad' ! ' M 4r: '''' t' ' " ' ' - y ' 1' - ' 7 ') e i - -- i94' t 4 ' ' ' 1 'ts4 ' " '''''t''"':'1'4--"1-- w ? 11 - ' 114 '- -- - ' 01 '''' JC 4 --- I er:9 y 1 - 41444''' : 0 47"lIt'111114‘404 --- :s ' "1N 144 1 & -- 3 4 ''4 t " - ' ''''4 0 s"! c ' -II Exceptional Buys In New Modern Sofas ' have "100 foam rubber cushions Covered in smart black mocha or charcoal coy- ers 0 Reg All ' I ' - fr I -- 4 ' - ' 0004r " IN : '-- '" '':'"- 9 -t t J ' ' '4 i ' ' ?:1" ' ' ' t sk ss 4 :4 7:'::i - 7 —5: s' T' - ::'::i::r' ' f ' - ' " ! 'el ) - ' ' It"10 ' -' ' ' 5 '- 't' ' s ' :qL::::::' ' i ' ' ' '' 1 :'d 1 1 ' '' ' : e s'‘' "i ' ' ' ' ' I :' -- - ' - 17 1 ': i' '- " '—'— ts:'''''''—"""w ' i ' 'i- - 51W 4' I I t -- I Nt T11----- -( Y:' - ' i: 4::i fr ' i s 41 i' I 00 0 ''' '' ' ' — - ) r4:1 ' ' 1 ': it - ' e ' gor toolovi! ! li 1 - 1:i:it - - cc ::: - i7 :"'l :'i':- ii '! '''''''‘ 3i 71 Reg $59900 7j :5 : 'i ' : d:' t') KA 1 0 1 7:'?!-- J 0'5! ) :: 4 N 2'''k:":"1 ' ' 7 A ' e ' - 00) ': 1!— 't :1! ' ' - '':':'NA 4 '' "'A ::'!s1: '' ''7' 4 ' ' - s'?f::-- ' goc4' For Young Moderns 2 - O '":'''' ''''s"qA ee' ': e 0 r -- ) ' 4t:!'''0c-'47" 1°" -- '''''"' -- - 1: ° 1 0 ' ' ' ' '' ' ':''''' '' :: 7 1 ":'s:':-'''':''--:':-i::7-:-::- 4:!':'4: ' :4 '': :: :''' q 1 )0':'' 4 :''z: :' ' l''':'''''5jW''c '' '''''It' y k cl ' "i'''''''' ' i 4:i: iS"' ) (12'34i 4e 1 :' - '::'v'e'-'::::--''''1- it-- t '''': ''" "-3' ' - '''kf' 'ii ' :H ! ti'''' I ::' '1!t' 1 1 !' ki ': ' ''410:Z'110 ': :! -- ' A' '':::'—711 ::''7'::::'::''''':: ::—:::' :: f 'r" r'''' "" i - : 7 'I ':''''''''':i::':'-:r-7ezee"'"LiattokAA ' !':1:- - t:: ii ': ' ' :'' ::::'::' :i: ' f ' :!7: ': - '- : 1 4' '' :!''' ':::::'::1' ::''1 ft'''::t:--''::::::::::::::':7:-'':'1:1:::-''- !:: f - 4''': !" I'L ''' ''' 'si ' ''':7i ' pm z:::::: — ''' t ':i ::'i : V'':' ' i ' : :i: il! - ' 9 - 1 -: ' $320 All Now only '109" on easy credit terms Ask About Our FREE Decorating Service taxalt IftiDARD FUROITURE PUBLIC INVITED I A t:? t " i I1 i !: r-- :1:::::::: ii ''" :''''' ' i ''' - : 1: ! :' i' '''0 : 1c-- :''f 4 :aii-y1-- ' 1 Sq: !: ' 'ii t f ' in the ro:btrt By IVY BAKER PRIEST $450 now at your bookstore r vr 4 1 '' ' i: : 4:-- !: 1 I S s : 0' South Salt pm Lake Auditorium 2490 South State Street Mrs Gwen Jones will review "Sweet Promised 'Land" by 110 f - c !n 4 ' Moll 8:00 ij f ' "' Shop Monday Until ''t I Ili in the Midvale AuE Center Street Miss Helen Kimball will review "Seidman and Son" by 1953! flit engaging autobiography of 4 1'!k- -I :i t OCTOBER since ''''' to Nov 2 The massive group of 204 pieces - of Russel art includes oil paintings watercolors pen and ink drawings and bronze sculpture It has been' assembled from the collet ton of three public institutions and two privately ed collections The St Louis born artist who for many years lived in Montana is recognized as one of the greatest painters of 'the Western scene in the l War era i - continue will t r: FRIDAY money issued A l'' - It appears on every piece of paper 1 1 i pm 1 4: -- ' 1:30 ' 4 7: ' :s ::: i ditorium The largest showing of driginar Charles M Russell' art ever assembled will be held at the National Collec tion of Fine Arts Smithson'A Ian Institution Washington DC beginning Sunday and - - ' J vistas LIBRARY '' 1' 471? - L COUNTY t :t ": l' — i THIS WEEK day-- - ' ' :7' : 1 :4 This is example of Peter L Myers' paintings The artist a native of New Jersey has exhibited his work widely stamped envelope Lake City Utah Poems will be Board and is art director at Provo's Pioneer Museum She is a member of the - - Russell Showing i The each - poems—of 20 this column lines or less—to- °Poetry The Salt Lake Tribune Bog 867 Salt returned if accompanied by chairman for the local and district Federated Women's Clubs she at present is a member of the Provo Art sr t: it 919-15t- part- ' $ :08--1- - ii Pansye II Powell East Salt Lake City Tribune will pay $2 for original poem published in event the — Utah 1i 9::: - p !!' 1 Invading the forest reaches of the mind Where thoUghts like startled birds Go winging outward For the past four has received nat- Y' ! :7:':-:- - -- The Huntsman's Horn Music Is a huntsman's horn g -- :' t V Over ' i 4 I ae l t q groups women's schools hobbyists and business establishments joining In the drive The new Art Week director has served for a number of years as director for Cen- ' :4 —--'- ' i with clubs ' - — 1'- 'l : ' ii It 'N the state I ' i 2: - f it - 00lik :'? :: - - Utah f '''' ' :t4vtiZrit"'' 1 observance American Pen Women has studied ' art at Brigham of American Art Week Nov 1 through 7 were under Young University and with i way this week ! private teachers and has with the ap 1 t exhibited her work in many of e t pointment Utah shoW7s in California Eliza R Fill -i ' and in the Smithsonion In nioreProvo stitution ' as Utah direcDC ' tor in7ashington Mrs Fill more succeeds I Grayce Cutler 4 for — ' i' j ' — ' i':'-e7:4':'''':- Solomon Salt Lake City un- - tio044 der whose di Mrs Fillmot'e rectorship the state has won several national Art Week awards said activities for the week will include art exhibits and lectures in all in the United States - 7 :::: ' s ' ' ' A:4 ' '' i t - AKAlkA - - t 4 ewew k ''-- 7 i : ' ' — " ' - 'lr ' ' ' ':! '' - - I 1 'it -- ' : ' ' ':' ir t You see this signature every AAAAsiAAogA0A--A- i i' k in " - f:4A''''':::: S 'Phis book is i '' ' Eliza R Fillmore Takes 'tr Utah Art Week Position i vF f literature ' '4 t: hyper-emotionalis- ? he liked best the biographical part of literature 'Peace in Piccadilly" is fascinating biographical Though the central character is made of bricks and mortar the subsidiary characnrs are flesh and blood Indeed this book is far livelier and much more interest inglhan most contemporary possip columns 7 ' V' S-1- Plans -- 4 4 - In painting brought back the full cacophony of blatant color without the conventionally balanced restraint of strict complimentary hues Cheerful color scheming had by now deferred to the Moody effects of sour acid and even dissonant design Visible Aspects of Nature Whereas the impressionists were squarely confronted with the visible aspects of nature retreat to the realm of Introspection was begun by their immediate successors the postimpressionists—a retreat that may have been accelerated to some extent by realization of a parallel interest with the physical sciences Contemporary painters have in most cases elected to recognize scientific activity in the domain of the human sciences Prime motives in painting deal with the disquieting impact of the mechanistic age on the human organism in preference to the orderly logic of the more calculating realm of the exact sciences Albeit the trend for a time held promise for the latter direction through the art of the cubist Possibilities of renewed creative activity in the field of visual interest are presently warmed by a recovering interest in art of the period which achieved notable success in this venture On the other hand there remains the simple fact that the engaging cheerfulness of Impressionistic works appear to advantage on modern walls European critics have in general hailed developments of nonobjective painting on the American scene but there are some indications that the abstract idiom in painting may be enjoying an austere position that is slightly Out of focus with a slowly rekindling interest In the warmth and Intimacy of visual experience to 4 4 & The trend Landscap For the past two Mr Myer has bees teachinft : in the New Jersey schools and in St 'George Utah HEC i has also recently completect1 a tour of duty7- with the US Army: 7: Exhibits in East Mr Myer has exhibitec1 paintings in New York New Jersey and Utah and won ribbons for his painting "Tocatta" in the 1958 Salt Lake County- - lair and his metal sculpture "Brazier" in the 1958 Utah State Fair t He has studied painting' In New York City and at present is working on his MFA at the University of ' - I where unconventional color 4 tones are successfully em77 4 ployed to achieve a rhythni s of contrasting form New Jersey Native 4 Mr Myer originally frorn — 1'4 New Jersey was graduated from BYU with a BA'degree'"': In 1956 He was prominent: In art circles prior to gradUation being Art Editor: of the Wye Magazine foe- -' three years He won thot'7:4 Brockbank award for Ida oit: painting "Christ Before late' - cubist-abstraction- ist shapes One among many his "Violet ' ' half-centur- - prano and Carl Fuerstner pianist and music educator will present a concert "An Evening With French' Composers" Monday at 8:15 pm in the Assembly Hall on Temple Square ' The concert is a benefit for the building program of the French mission of the Church of Jesus Christ of Letterday Saints Brigham Myer t -- so L Peter Young University graduate art student will be shown through the end of October In the art gallery on lower camptis at BUT - The authors of this book are most skeptical about many of them As William H Whyte Jr writes in the introduction "Too many peo pie today who could be giv ing leadership are so intent on working for the millen nium that they are passing up great opportunities to get action on problems that could be met now It is the we believe who layman must take the initiative Time And Again In our research time and again we noted a surpris ingly close relationship be tween the appearance of the city and the degree to which the layman had been in volved in its plans—not merely as a supporter of a plan handed to him but as a person deeply involved in the planning itself" Such views are heresy in the opinion of some profes sional planners But Whyte and Co are not talking to As laythe professionals men they have the layman's their book is viewpoint written for laymen Arresting Titles The chapter titles are Cities Unarresting—"Are American?" "The City and the Car" "New Strength in City Hall" "The Enduring Slums" "Urban Sprawl" is for and "Downtown was transformed Ph IN 44017 Garden Inc $395 a: Included in he show are various styles and media from watercoior encaustin to oil This versatile young artist shows a great deal of skill and strength in his manipulatiorl of contrasting An exhibit of the works of By George Dibble 10 years works by Impressionist and past During painters have increased steadily in value Major examples are no longer procurable and are reportedly 1 rbecoming more and more scarce Renoir's "La Serre" brought $200- 000 in a recent transactkon Gaugin's "Mau Taporo" sold for ' $180000 and Monet's "Woman in a Garden" went 'for $92000 The impressionist label was ' 41 4 applied by a French journalist In derision of works of younger art- t ists which did not conform to conventional styles Artists of this school were fascinated with the A' corresponding movements of light and shadow These were tran ' t scribed into color relations amount ing to atmospheric envelopment of subject matter Local or natural color in a landscape tended to beProf Dibble ccime obscured by the interplay of cool and warm colors Black pigment disappeared from the palette because there were no observable values in nature which corresponded Black unlike white pigment tended to ameliorate the brilliance ot natural lighting Impressionist Georges Seurat turned his attention to simplified forms As a forerunner of the abstractionists his concern with geometric volumes and successive planes in space promised another revolution in painting The same aura which clothed forms in nature had engaged the efforts of physicists of the latter in a scientific analysis of the properties of light By the turn of the century however the painter had definitely turned to other directions Ushered In Movement Emphasis on geometric analysis ushered in the movement and color served only as a drab handmaiden in low earthy key Black pigment was reincorporated into the palette The more austere phase of cubism was nurtured ib a degree by mathematical studies of art forms and a resulting attempt to link the problem Whatever the of aesthetics to mathematical formulation aegis under which the movement prospered the avant garde were soon to explore the deeper provinces of the subcon- Noted Building History Makes Excellent Story - ttollpt Se Tempt Salt take City ' j 4-:iig::4'- the People" In the latter chapter the author Jane Jacobs has this General Only in America Golden Ingion upiclity t: Everything 8 The Image Makers 9 Women and Thomas mending the motley group oftvorkers and technicians on- the island And who is "Lazy Ethel?" She is a hurricane dreamed up and doodled on a weather map by Adam Smith as an exercise to help him forget the colonel's nagging As could very easily happen the hurricane is regarded as the real thing and Adam appears trapped and ready to be ground between the cogs of ponderous government - Of Jaffe some var-case unex- career Best The 7 lives and reactions of just ordinary humans—as done so well in his "The High and the Mighty" has taken another group of average citizens and turned out another novel which builds up to a mighty climax Mr Gann's characters are an assorted lot dumped on a small Pacific island which is an outpost for atomic blast project some hundreds of miles away The protagonists a r e Adam Smith- - an ordinary guy whose job is weatherman on the atoll and Col Herbert Zebulon Pike Brig Gen USA (retired) who is climaxing a notably lack - Doctor Zhivago Pasternak Enemy Camp Weidman King Must Die Re- 5 The 6 The Ernest K Gann who has shown his ability to describe and make interesting the 1 of chain take ous—and in one peeted conclusions ' i'The Trouble With Lazy Ethel" by Ernest K Gann William Sloane Associates - Now York $395 - ! Stone" Drowning women desires of woman carefully ttnd expertly delineated There are three main in the story: characters Caroline whose family lives In the suburbs and who could afford to support her if She did not insist on being on her own and working to help forget an earlier love affair April who came from Colorado and entered a world of glamor and night clubs entrapped by her beauty until she finally escapes to what she really wants and Gregg who thinks she wants to be an actress but actually wants to domesticate a famous pro-- ducer with whom she is in love The strengths and the weaknesses of these three young women are laid bare by Miss Jaffe who follows- i New & Co $3 "The it 1 Morrow Hugh Fosburgh's fourth novel is a story of tragedy and misunderstanding set in the mountains and forests of the Adirondack wilt find the business world seen from a woman's :angle with the hopes and I ) Miss and out in of his agency whose lives he dominates What could have been stock characters are ex pertly handled to make them live and the story is power fully told here have been umpteen about the gray flan-el- set—the men who set Zed to conquer New York flijhe field of business but much has been written tsibiut the young women ot Nev York -- the bright Itititty girls who make up 4o Much of the business dis- trict s population Now comes a New York girl to remedy :the situation in her first -riey'el "The Best of Every thieg" And Rona Jaffe :should score a hit with it 'here you wil find the typ- :Ists the stenographers the young women fighting and Working for the minor execuive positions but working 'aid fighting actually to pass their time while waiting for at they really want — a Jitithand and a home I 4 Book' Probes Problems ' Tribune Sunday October 12 1938 Lake - ' ' It-t4 4- I Salt The - ADMISSION FREE No II 01t 01A0A-PA- A 0 9 South Main 0410 LAIk A AMP Ak ANk APIPIIP r Op44441141444P "41 |