Show -- w-w f Salt Sake TEcUmne- - ‘tTbc Sunday Morning- - March 23 1911 Utah State Democrats Await N' ’( r I ' I i 4 x X the moat ucefu! becom- ing and generally comforting Items In any modem girl’s wardrobe la her fur Jacket Correct for wear over suits ' afternoon dresses or evening gown it’s as versatile as it la - flattering It does duty in every season except the stickiest weeks of midsummer being as useful In spring as lq autumn or winter ' There’s a trend nowadays toward softer more flattering tailoring of the dressy fur jacket! with all varieties of the fox fam-ll- y holding the spotlight r The soft beauty of blue fox the richness of silver fox and tha bold splash of red or cross fox-- all are suited to tho brief fur Jacket which will be in the vanguard of the Easter parade : - T 4 i '1 1 v ' Seasonable Always One of s ' Versatile Jacket I Mra Scott F Stewart left and Mrs James II Wolfs honorary chairmen of the' Jack- - at 6:30 p m at the Newhouao hotel Albert B Chandler United States senator1 from Kentucky will be guest speaker of the evening Guestj will hear a broadcast speech of President r Franklin D Roosevelt Mrs Scott P Stewart stated vice chairmen of the Democratic committee and Mrs James H Wolfe Democratic national com- mlttee woman of Utah are hon- -' orary chairmen Hyman Guaa is managing director Also assisting In making arrangements are Mrs Stanley N Child decoration Mra William J Korth menu and Mias Paulit ine Polly Johnson ushers In the receiving line will be Governor "and Mrs Herbert B Mew state elected officials and their partners and state party leaders and their partners One thousand person are expected to attend the Jack eon to be held Saturday day banquet ” ' ' ' 1 -- Interested groups Kealize Need for Kindergartens C? f x 5 a - havior maladjustments gueh aa fear ahyneaa tantrums r i I ? Small Pembroke tables may be had boasting two drop leaves both curved to harmcvUae with the graceful legs of the itjrk Mrs CU D pox klndsrjsrtes chairman for Utah Oongreoo P-- T A cnt-Teach- bully- ing peculiarities In eating 'and sleeping are too often classed aa unavoidable difficulties by' parents ' The kindgarten provides a neutral ground omitting many of the environmental conditions which prompt these forma of behavior maladjustments Th child’s being with the group does away with the ministrations of overanxious parents The social situation forces the child to make desirable adjustments If ha Is to be a desirable member The kindergarten provides a place for parents to study chll- dren Study groups are organized for parents They are encouraged to visit the school and have Individual conferences and go over all records kept of their children’s progress Tn this way they are more fully able to cope with situations which may arise from time to time and thus help their small children over this difficult period of their lhrea s T able Pembroke By Mrs C D Fox' The importance of kindergarten I education la being more f ully The Importance of kindergarten realized each year? by the Par-- l interested citizens Even the first pioneers Of Utah understood and appreciated the values of early education' As early as 1874 Brigham Young I had a kindergarten in his private school taught by Camilla Cobb who had been trained-i- n Ger- many and in New Jersey in kindergarten philosophy j It jwaa 7 so important In the mLnds of these people that they i embodied a clause providing for kindergartens In their state con-- ! stitution Utah was one of the first In: the United States to do this :Many research : studies' and j much experience lies behind the knowledge concerning the ad- -i vantages of early childhood cducation The elimination ©f bs-- f association and ©th-- V er Interested citizens j ’ E9 er xxoexeceeeo X ' son day banquet to be given Saturday : evening at the Newhouae hotel ? j - 1 r- " Remember the Piper Must Be Paid By Kathleen Norris We all make mistakes in this queerj twisted life' Our parents and grandparents had their weaknesses and stupidities and wc pay for them As far back as the human family extends its story Is a story of crime and punishment for crime Sometimes ' the tinner foy a long long time escapes retribution but it alwsya ' catches him in the end : Unless of course we take In' hand very early In life and with prayer and thought and care train ourselves out of our inherited failings And few of us have either tho courage or the foresight to do that! For example I knew a rich and Influential woman once who was bead of the board that arranged a charity entertainment Five hundred of the school children of the city were in this klrmess which was a great success But m a newspaper reporter I knew and of course the knew that the city had condemned the hall in which the party was given as an absolute firetrap Nothing hapd pened and she seemed to be in risking thousands of lives for the sake of saving on rent’ Pspnest with Interest j But ’some years later a building this woman owned and rented collapsed The insurance company refused payments because she had been twice warned that tha jt oundatlon laid in all the burry of the earthquake-recover- y cost year were unsafe Damages this woman and her chlldren’-ev-erpenny of their fortune and she ended life struggling with ft boarding house she was completely unfit to manage Another case There was a ' careless slatternly girl in our town years ago whose car was always involved In smashes whose hats blew away and purses rot lost who never remembered tickets or engsgementa She was arrogant about lt telling ail her critics that that was the way she was and thera was no use scolding her A year or two after a brilliant marriage she hooked her heel in a torn hem fell down a flight of stairs and spent two la bed as a result years 1 Still others The cursing roar-ng Impatient type of man who backed his car out of tha garage and Over the body of his small aoru yba mother who left a sick child to a new maid who admin- Istered a spoonful of ammonia Instead of medicine The gun accidents always the result of a careless attitude toward other persons lives and rights? Jh drinking mother who tn a cheerful after dinner carouse with friends didn’t manage to aave the three babies’ asleep up-stairs although the grown-up- s all got out of the blazing house No Evading Natural lav Causo and offset It Is the nat- oral law You can’t evade it Sooner or later the piper comes for his pay j "My daughter Is a fine woman of 27" whites an anxious mother from Texas "She la planning to be married In August church wedding veil everything Her future husband is a dental sur- geon a splendid man fwho' has been In bur town only a few ' years j "My problem Is this Ells bad an affair eight years ago with a college boy They were both ' much in love for awhile than the boy graduated and went away ' and the matter ended She seemed to droop over It for a few months afterward recovering completely and going on into her work aa a psychopath with aucceaa She has a good posl-- I tion which she will keep for a few months after marriage at least but they both speak already of ' horns anL children and seem to be Ideally suited to each other "Eliae has not told Will—as I will call him— of her early mis- take But many of her friends know of It for the little crowd ah was going with in college days wak quite free In Its attitude Inward asx relationships and It a recognised thing X need - j our-elv- es justl-i-fie- i ’ i hardly say that Z would have stopped It had I been with her but she had gone to a western college and lt was only in sum- -' mr? vacation- that she took me ' Into her confidence - 4 t Must Confess Misstep Jt The boy has married and la living in a distant city She know nothing of him now But he has or had letters of hers that cannot be mistaken and I feel very strongly that she should make a clean breast of tha whole affair to Will She thinks It would hurt and annoy him without altering his determination to marry iher I must admit that he worships her making her his Ideal - of womanhood and that it would be hard for her to tell him anything that would lessen his: admiration but it seems to me un- safe to go Into marriage without I clearing all this up” It IS unsafe For these things seem unlmportant'lf Immediately admitted but more sinister with every hour of married life' If Elise had told her Will of this early weakness almost as soon as she knew that he W as In earnest ' about marrying her! it would probably have made small impression The first flush of fall-- ! lng in love with her would have carried it away But now with tha wedding date set it is little more awkward Still even now her own only safety lies in X telling him everything ! say this not because I believe this particular sin Is any more serious for a girl than for a boy like any other sin regret for It and a determination to weed out that particular weakness atones for it But It is the one sin for which women pay dear and Elise may be committing herself to years of nervou fear and expectation if she does not own up and go on from - - - - - ? j therex Barest Way If Will loves j 0-- i her enough to get the whole thing as he probably does then she can consols herself in the years to come with : the knowledge that he married her anyway Then If the early lover appears some day or a: blackmailing letter comes from ' the early lover’s wife Elise is on safe ground Ilsr husband know for- -' all about It gnd nobody frighten her If Will la shocked v and proachfui upon discovering that his goddess has feet of clay then he is something of a prig and perhaps Elise will be more fortunate If she wsits for a more mate "Well then he ought to tell her everything HE’S ever done!” the girls write me angrily when I say thla Certainly If Elise wants to hear the story But she will find that what Is shame and suffering to her sex is a matter of placid boasting to the other and she will get so angry Just listening that the effect will be to make him more pleased in his secret heart than ever with his gallantries If nobody else knows this of a ‘ girl then my advice is for her to keep her mouth shut and regard fault as she does the the long-ag- o tantrums And thefts and lies of nursery days' But! if the story may crop ‘up at any time then the only thing to do is face tha situation relieve herself once and for all of fear and pay the piper (Released by Bell Syndicate Inc) er- ? gen-ero- i L ua - c7 —-- l i ri' V v ' j i I - I-- O' ' ! V r-- x-' ' '- ’- $ j r : r " A I w ' ' Jyf suited to every taste and every occasion from the most casual to your most important daytime appearancesl Your suit has a new dressmaker simplicity that dramatizes your d hat accessories and plays up to your brings you the exhilaration of a perfect ensemble! It's i'll i Vi ' 7-- s herald the arrival of spring ) -- f best-love- I b "Bobby” Suit in soft Shetland weave Mountain gold desert beige or in qs lake blue 4- f Eastern Star Clara Barton chapter O E S entertained at a dinner meeting March 14 at the Bluebird In compliment to the worthy grand matron Mrs Blanch D Buck of Park City and the worthy grand patron Charles A Maly of Stockton and the associate officers The following received the guests: Mrs Paul M Dunn worthy : matron Leon Hardy worthy patron Mra Howard Dorst associate matron Mrs Harold Kepner conductress and Mrs Graham S Quate The dinner table waa deco- - r New Column Silhouette FOntETTE BI ABAND but flex-- ! Narrow y as Ibis iWa know no one who can give you both so comfortably as PolretteNote how inch by Inch this great American de-- 1 signer liaet supple fluid Biabands and ’the wizardry of 'counter tension to sllnai and flatten dla- -l phragm and hips! Polrette Biabands in your figure type from fit fine felt DOBBS "Dicer’ 1 rated with Eastern Star point colors Covers were laid for 73 guests The committee on arrangements ' included Mrs Dunn Mrs Aaron Newy and Mrs Harfy H Smith 'Following dinner the guests went to the Masonic hall for the r ’meeting a "suit season" c Sport Suit e Three-piec- 750 in lake blue desert beige or soft coral rust fn Sizes 12 to 18 6'JM Button Beret of rayon belt- 298 ing -- I V ? T 7 V ' i T( - -- V’j -- f r’J 'a C 'l' t i ! - ) ‘ - Look for tho eiiUnraiahing BlehaaS footoro proUcue hr patooi sad - roflMratloa a Three-piec- pastel plaid e I Sport Suit Sunrise pink lake blue desert beige in sizes 10 to 18 casual bonne! of line felt in canyon rose volcano red pony brown Hi-crown- ed 750 i i I - $10 V 4 WAYS TO PAYi e Cash e Layaway FOtntOATrONS— i second noon e e Chorga Budg Fiva months to pay for purchasoo of f 10 or moro mako (srangomonto at Crodlt Duk j f CO: i d Twill Dressmaker Suit navy or black in junior sizes AV75 —9 to 15 j: tho porioct Straw TSaitor” "suit hot” navy with rod trim 875 1 ' ’ r |