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Show Mrs. Bradley Is Hostess To Cadmus Club Mrs. Beulah Bradley was hostess host-ess to Cadmus Club Monday, Nov. 23, at her home. President Carol Jaynes welcomed welcom-ed members and guests, Mrs. Glen W'adley, Mrs. Ray Merrill, Mrs. Lloyd Gray, Mrs. Garland Clark, Mrs. Ruel Adams, Mrs. B. C. Line- Daugn, and Mrs. Cliff Hales. Prayer was offered by Mrs. Rose Hillman. The creed -was read by Mrs. Beulah Bradley. Mrs. Dorice Rogers gave a report re-port on Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt's visit to Salt Lake City when she talked about the United Nations and urged everyone to support it. She then introduced the program xor me evening, me Magic ot a Women's World." Mrs. Faye tielllston gave us a very interesting history of the making of fine china and pottery. China is the finest species of earthen ear-then ware, originally manufactured manufactur-ed in China and Japan, but now made in several European countries coun-tries as -well as in America. All earthenwares which are white and semi-transparent are called china or porcelain. She exhibited some beautiful pieces of Lenox, Delft, Bone, Wedgwood, and Noritake, also some Bavarian and English china and some Franciscan pottery and china. Mrs. Lurena Warnick presented a "Study in Lace." She said the Egyptians were the first to make lace but now fine laces are made in all parts of the world. She had lovely samples of hand made and machine made laces, Cluny lace from Italy, Alencan, from France, rose point and chan-tilly chan-tilly and Irish lace, a modern Mexican Mex-ican lace mantilla and Battenburg laie like our Pioneer women wore. All of them added grace and daintiness dain-tiness to the wearer. Lurena said and none were prettier than the hand made laces on handerchiefs made by Dorice, Rose, and Carol. Mrs. Phyllis Thomson told of the "Old and the New in Furniture ' in a delightful and entertaining way. She had fine illustrations of period furniture, reproductions of antiques, provincial and modern furniture. She said after 1650 the Colonies began furniture manufacture manu-facture and these pieces mere copies cop-ies of old hand made pieces. Then in the 1920's the original and modern mod-ern styles came about. Nowadays much of the furniture is built right in the modern homes, and she asked, ask-ed, "Would you really want the good old times or the contemporary contempor-ary styles of today?" Tasty refreshments were served by the hostess. The next meeting of Cadmus will be the Christmas Party on Dec. 14, with the husbands as guests. |