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Copyright, 1513, by the Star Company. Great Britain Rights Reserved.
Mme. Lina Cavalieri, the Most Famous Living Beauty
No. 233..—Secrets of Your Complexion.
♦ HE palimst reads your hand, only such softening ingredients as
♦ n/Mmts vmir nulse the following.
Olive oil 250 grammes
Rose water 250 grammes
White wax 15 grammes
Cocoa butter 15 grammes
Oil of roses 10 drops
Melt on a slow fire the wax and
cocoa butter, mix in the rose water,
stirring constantly. Last put in the
olive oil and oil of roses.
On the contrary, persons with
fatty skins should use an astringent
cream, such as this one:
Oil of sweet almonds.30 grammes
Rose water 100 grammes
White wax 30 grammes
Tincture of benzoin 20 grammes
Powdered alum ... 5 grammes
Oil of bergamot.... 1 gramme
After cleansing the face with
warm water, spread the cream
with a bit of damp cotton, and rub in
“Never
let your
white mice
run loose
at the
seashore,” says
Mrs. Ehrlich.
desirable woman or not. Later on
other things may cause him to re
vise his opinion, but first impres
sions usually stand, and they are
usually right.
A man thinks he is attracted to
you because you are pretty, but It
is much deeper than that. Pretti
ness or beauty usually means a
foundation of good lungs, heart,
kidneys and liver, a well-balanced
nervouB system—in short, a healthy,
normal woman who would make a
good mate and mother.
A bad complexion usually indi
cates that the liver or kidneys are nose t
not doing their share of the work, pies a
The burden of their neglect, falling hard,
upon the skin, makes it sallow, oily should
or ruins its texture. All these are the et
warning signals to man, who is re- chin,
pelled without knowing or caring Dry
■why. powde
Absence of wrinkles, fineness of cloth,
features, velvety skin, all play a Cue
part in our estimate of facial able t
beauty. And, really, a woman has cordin
so many different ways. of being Pure axunge 100
pretty, even if it be only by the Fat from veal kid-
general expression, that we are al- neys 25
most tempted to say that there is Cucumber juice ...150
no ugly woman. Powdered starch .. 8
Morover, even though we may not Melt the axunge and
alter a crooked nose, or change a then add 75 grammes of
distorted feature, there are. many her juice and mix well
ways of modifying and helping the stand for a day; then ai
effect. of the cucumber juice.
over :
with a bit of cotton
with a puff, not wl
Very New Humane Movement Which
Aims to Give Every Dog His Day and
to Relieve Psychologically the Tedium of
the Lives of Cats, Horses and Birds
W OMEN of wealth and promt'
nence connected with the
Humane Society of Phila
delphia are earnestly and persist
ently advocating the enactment (4 a
law requiring the owners of animals
to send or take them away on a
vacation each year. As earnestly
and persistently Mrs. Jacob Ehrlich,
president of the Horse Aid Society
of New York and founder of the
Drivers’ Club of New York, com
posed of 500 teamsters, whose pur
pose it is to help the horse through
teaching the driver humane treat
ment of the animal, advocates an
animal vacation. The society is do
ing excellent work in this direction,
at its new clubhouse, 37 Seventh
avenue, New York.
Mrs. Ehrlich believes your horse,
your dog, your cat, your pet monkey,
your parrot, even your pet pig and
white mice, need a vacation as
greatly as you yourselves require
the annual letting down, the yearly
relaxation from toil, or change from
surroundings. Take them to the
country for a month, if you can; for
two weeks at any rate.
Keep them away from the sea
shore. They require the grass and
trees and fields.
Give the horse a field of lush
grass for his stomach and soaking
pots for his burning, tired feet. Take
his shoes off.
Be sure to take the cat’s own
cushion along.
Put the birds where they can see
the trees and carpet their cages
every day with fresh grass.
Provide them with companions of
their own kind. Animals need so
ciety as greatly as we do.
The dog that has lived in a flat
all Winter and has guarded your
house from burglars and against
fire is "all tired out.” He is on the
verge of nervous prostration from
close attention to duty, and should
go where he can be quite free from
care.
Tell the monkey’s boarding mis-
Mrs. Jacob Ehrlich, Who Believes
in Vacations for Animals.
tree in one corner of the field, for
the horse needs to avoid the direct
rays of the sun as surely as we do.
He suffers as much from headache
as do we. The water in the soaking
tubs should be changed at least
once a day. So should the mud.
“The soaking tubs may be made
of a vinegar barrel cut in half. Sink
them into the earth so that the up
per part will be on a level with the
grass. The horse turned out to grass
will show improvement in a few
days. An old horse with fallen feet,
the hoofs loosened from the legs, be
came a different-looKing animal and
was worth twice as much to his
master.
“Animals have the same psycho
logical need of rest as their own
ers. The dog that lives cooped in a
flat with us continuously grows as
tired of us and is as greatly in need
of a vacation as are husbands and
wives. Husbands and wives get on
each other’s nerves. So do we upon
the nerves of our dogs. The dogs
duties have taxed him. He has given
alarm in case of fire. He has slept
with one eye open for burglars. His
nerves have been taut. He needs a
complete change. He ought to be
sent away from the family and
boarded in the country. He should
be sent where he can have dog
companionship and where a family
will be kind to him. He should be
allowed to play at will in a large
yard or field, and if he can go hunt
ing, all the better. He should have
twice as much to eat as usual, for
he is rebuilding his body and renew
ing his strength.
“Monkeys are nervous animals and
need a change from their human as
sociates, so it is well to send them
away in the Summer. Instruct their
boarding house keepers to give them
double rations and let them play,
among trees and grass. Tell their
feeders to never give them a cup
more than half full of water or milk.
Invariably a monkey will spill half
the contents of the cup. Why do you
suppose they do that?”
“Perhaps they’ve seen their mas
ters spill soup or beer over their
shirt fronts, and monkeys strive to
be neater than their masters.”
“I think it is a throwing back to
the time when their ancestors used
to brush the scum from the pools
in the ancestral jungles.”
"What of a vacation for white
mice, or guinea pigs, or rabbits, or
snakes?” •
“Ugh! I love animals, but don’t
understand that any persons but of
decadent taste could bear the so
ciety of a snake. Normal pets should
have normal treatment, the grass,
the trees, the fresh, sweet country
air, and double the amount of food.”
Mme. Lina Cavalieri,
Every bird needs to see the
trees and stretch himself.”
It is really the triumph of art, and
where the face is concerned we can
never know too much about helping
ourselves to overcome defects.
Use of Creams and Powders.—It
is not enough to buy a fashionable
cream or powder, no matter how
broadly advertised, as bringing back
lost youthfulness. Before you se
lect a cream or powder to be put on
your face, see that it is adapted to
your skin. Besides It is necessary
to know how to apply creams and
powders with discretion and skill.
For instance, if your skin is dry,
select an oily cream, containing
cruelty to the beast. Suppose that
any middle-aged man or woman
were told to. run two miles. If he or
she were not accustomed to running,
the effort might kill either. The
horse’s Sabbath should be one of
rest. He has enough exercise dur
ing the week and should be allowed
How I Really Cured My
Grey Hair
of a zealot. A millionaire’s wife, she
spends all the money that most
women would pour into society chan
nels for alleviating the condition of
animals. A tiny woman of eighty-
seven pounds, she looks like a
smaller edition of Maude Adams.
She drives a touring car of her own,
that usually has one or more animal
passengers, for if she sees a stray
dog or cat she picks it up and en
deavors to find a home for it. To
applicants she always says: ’’Do
you live in a flat?” If they reply,
“We do,” she replies, “Then I am
sorry, for I cannot let you have this
little beast. No animal should live
in the confining quarters of a flat.”
Last year she picked up three hun
dred such strays, and to those for
whom she could not find homes she
administered chloroform. Like cer
tain other notables, she was “born
in old Kentucky,” and the habit of
love for, and companionship with,
animals persists.
"Prescribe a horse’s vacation,
please,” said an interviewer from
this newspaper.
“It should be for a month if pos
sible,” she said, "though I am only
agitating one for two weeks, for,
given that, a longer vacation will
follow. The horse should be taken
to a farm and placed in a field where
there is a marshy corner, or, if not,
soaking tubs should be sunk for
him. You won’t need to lead him to
the marsh or the soaking tub. He
will stand in it of his own accord.
His instinct, and tired, feverish legs
will lead him there. Before placing
him in his pasture his shoes should
be taken off. The relief is as wel
come as when you remove your hot
street shoes. When you do this,
what is your first instinct? To plunge
them into water. The horse has the
same instinct.
“If he has fallen hoofs, the wis
dom of his own instinct will lead him
straight to the mud. If his legs are
swollen and fevered, he will seek
the tub of water. Better if it have
ice in it. There should be a shade
I Will Tell You Free How To
Cure Yours by a Simple Sure
Harmless, Home Treat
ment. Age No Obstacle.
Don’t tw liar infill Dyes dial make Your
Hair Look I.Ike a fainted Mop
LET ME HELP YOU FREE
Rose water 60 grammes
Cocoa butter 100 grammes
Plain wax 60 grammes
White spermaceti .. 50 grammes
Olive oil 200 grammes
Tincture of benzoin 10 grammes
Tincture of myrrh.. 5 grammes
Melt the wax, the white sperma
ceti and the cocoa butter in the
olive oil. Then place all in a marble
mortar to allow it to congeal, after
mixing well. Add the rose water,
tincture of benzoin and tincture of
myrrh, stirring all in thoroughly.
Put into jars.
Here is the formula of the famous
Bully Vinegar, which was invented
at the beginning of the nineteenth
century:
Water 7 quarts
85% alcohol 1 quarts
Oil bergamot 30 grammes
Oil of lemon 30 grammes
Oil of bitter orange 12 grammes
Oil of rosemary . 2e grammes
Oil of nerolt 4 grammes
Balm-mint alcohol. .500 grammes
I \ >l \ WOMAN
maturely grt»>-Iwired family. Mv father waa grey
brt.-re he «u.s .*0. and two of m> brothers as
well as my sinter became grey early m life. Be
fore the age of 2.*» I developed grey hairs, which
became quite embarrassing to me socially an-l
also in busmens | |,nsT THREE iiOOl)
POSITIONS for n. other reason than m\ fad
ing hair. The greyneea increased with alarming
rapid it > a lid at | I OOh| II LIKE \
W OM \> OF* 15. One day i w.«> sen ;>'•>
thinking of t Ming cue of the many Grey Hair
a m.dhod he had per
fected which by certain chemical action on the
pigmentar> coloring cells restored the hair to its
natural color. In reply to my enquiries he as
sured me that the method was not only abso-
\ strong
4M» in: % I I III I, GROWTH OF
If X III. My frond wrote out is prescript in.
which I had made up, and alter following the
instructions fer a few days, 1 was surprised and
dtlighted to find my hair tiecoming richer and
darker in tone. The recoloring process continued
until after some few weeks my hair actually once
aja:ii pressed the natural shade of my girlish
i HAVE BEEN IN-
I MltTEI) WITH KMll HUES from
friend;- and also persons unknown to roe. who
• . m Hat
\
K1MI IM OF EXTHAORD1N \RY
MERIT,
full details fne to any man or woman who finds
Grey Hair to be the same serious handicap it
was to roe. It is a Guaranteed Reparation and
I OFFER \ REW Will OF if t
will not Kiotore Grey Hair to Original Natural
Fhade
Sinipy write your name and address plainly,
state whether lady or gentleman, and enclose --
tent at a my > for postage, etc., and 1 will send yon
full details in a plain sealed cover. Address—
■*frs. MARY K CHAPMAN, Suite A
Grosrenur Building, Prprideoce, K. L
“Dog* get as tired of their own
ers as wives of their husbands.”
Sunday, especially for a pleasure
jaunt, when he would have to break
his gait. If the day is hot, the fam
ily want a breeze. The way to get
a breeze is to force the horse to trot.
And if he isn’t used to trotting, this
is arrant cruelty. I would have
every one sent to jail who makes
an animal break his gait.
“When Summer comes, the horse
should be sent to a farm. Not to
the seashore. The horse that is
forced to wade In the surf loses
more by his shivering fear of the
waves than be gains by having his
feet washed. I see no healing in the
seashore for animals. The sea air
is overstimulating to them. Dogs
seem to lose their senses at the
shore. They go crazy, as it seems,
and because they jump wildly about
their owners seem to think they are
getting the air’s worth.’ We should
instead remember the physician’s
injunction: ‘Twenty minutes a day
for four weeks are enough for con
secutive sea bathing.’ The limit of
endurance for human beings is a
fair gauge for animals.
“Horses, dogs, cats, monkeys, birds,
even white mice, need the grass and
trees and the healing of the earth.
When I turn my dogs loose on the
ground in a yard in the country
they actually eat the earth. I have
seen a spaniel devour two teaspoon-
fuls of earth. Cats need grass. They
Woman Tells the Secret of Sler Com
plete Cure So That It Never Returned.
sufferer who wrili
-end her name and.
address (statin*
whether Mrs. or
Miss) and a --cent
stamp for reply,
adressed to Mrs.
Kablryn Jenkins.
4G8 B B Went
worth Bui 1 ding,
Boston, Md.4
Give the monkey freedom and only half a cup of milk.
to stay in his stable on Sunday.
When he awakes, a bucket of fresh
water should be ready for him and
he should have his breakfast of
four or six quarts of oats. He should
have a second meal about three
o’clock in the afternoon.
“There should be a law prevent
ing taking out a working hor^e on
weeks in 1 the country during the
Summer. Owners of horses can get
more than the equivalent of the ex
pense in the increased value and
efficiency of the animal. Some
horses work sixteen hours a day in
a peddler's cart aud then take the
family for an outing on Sunday. He
is forced to break his gait, which is
Mrs Kathryn Jen
kins. for many years
was aleading society
leader of Scranton, Pa.
Fhe tells Free how she
was cured of her Hair
Blemish so that it
Never Returned.
\\l
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• H
1
ITT
777
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