The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 1, 1906, Page 6

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rnoons she an be pink. 'Make me like peaches and| pink, even though it never looks old. ! ke & pink wrapper. 10 hoste other cus a door which making m sephine’s mother will customer enters tended - for gins displaying the fac: that girl extracts om the wrong places. not be surprised to ve her disappear any minute through swinging door to the.kitchen and with nice w. >sephine just fresh from. the oven! 1 decide to-take the’ car youthful touch e color of babies. Ba K, woman in pink looks babyish. though she be 60, and as soft dellcate pi d som 3 sin, ng babyish about her if she puts on pink Pink is the becoming color. It is the color of backgrounds. The g here is some er sur- rounds his sitter with a pinkish balo, and the decorator, if knows is bus work a little pink into the ‘rench Kings understood the value of pink, and took care t in their roundings. When you the XVI rooms and the X1V 1 the rest plenty of pink. Blu is cold compared with P the boudoir color; it is the color of the atmosphere .on a pleasant it is the color of the sun when rays slant just right; it is the c happiness, and the bea popular, but it am getting people in tone for aid a beauty doctor the other ‘It is the only satisfactory ton but ho e to obtain Yt? 1 re to pink as applied to th this yea: every woman wants to cream,’ they e $1.000. her iife to have a pink and white look M me pink and ; she, ‘and 1 will give you & fortune.’, 1 have turned the corner into Post| street and mounted the steps of the| experience with | has prepared me for still the fashion with which L. D, Davis & Co. have disposed of the the ~Post-stret compels my interést. 1 part some mackintash portieres and myself in a reception hall. a couple of marble pedestals have been | the Venus de Milo Apollo Belvedere, who have, to all ap- | and have | been replaced by red satin fashionable | car at Turk and Van up the avenue Emporium. seems just a large 1 conclude | k again to ordinary be deceived. | built structure is and walk leisurely yawned until 1g lawns t6 the beautiful Venus| open wide her heavy lidded eyes. Upon these busts, guiltless of necks, | are tilted crisply trimmed sailor hats| enter the draw-|for side combs and other adornments. An onyx fireplace and mantel in one of the reception rooms holds, not Sat- | suma vases and rare bronzes, but bot- have made es of the block ve as a model for ing-rooms, draped with ket street, and underwear, the front bay s he used to d scented soap in gay papers as additional Then upstairs I go and bric-a-brac. oné of the attendants where I can | sash curtains. women are hats, and as I pass one cus- to the kitchen,” is the di-| gracious smile A waiting on her say “Kindly wait in the and I'll send the fitter where the some mon cook should up the avenue toward the City of Paris, the rapldly pleting buildings for Samuels, & Levinson; O'Conner & Moffatt, Schoenwasser and the White House. come at last to the wide stone steps of Hobart residence, finding myself The beautiful old home retains Ghost of the calamity! What next? I ask one of the shopgirls likes working in a private house in- stead of a regular store. floorwalkers manners of 4 perintending Lord Chesterfield and I can easily believe it, as 1 look through the window out upon the velvety lawns rough pine mount them and | around the old st grand!” ; when I've ¢ lunch I go out and sit under . and it’s just like the country:” vou feel like Walter Hobart, one of the other girls good- naturedly puts in. But as | walk down the pass out into the June sunshine I doubt ever had the feeling of affection for that tree on his lawn that It | the pale-faced shopgirl h had ever smelt one-half so sweet to metamorphosis that has taken | necessitates ls float from the wide, winding leads to the upper floor, on a seat heneath a stained glass | appropriately handsome sofa cushions. “I wish to buy some towel fide to one of the cle “You'll find the domestics In the din- | am politely seems the most rational answer 1 have |air morning to my question sounds as pped, white aproned | their duties. | innermost stratum of the Hechf hou displayed 1 hough a woman’ boudoir overlooking nails mani- downstairs I pass if Mr. Hobart ing-room,"” received all Retracing my steps down V avenue I come to a car line that takes me to Fillmore street enough bustle and excitement to satisfy even the jolly sa after six months at sea. It'is only on the surface, but for me 1s it desiructive to beauty. vegetables, cooked, or the raw green things of the table work well upon the health. give one a peachblow look, and every woman wants to leok like a peach. “I have a rich patient working upon her complexion and her her face gener She l=n’'t a you it has taken some tix are now apparent “Her cheeks look delicate skin of a peach. deep cherry, tips of her ears are a soft flesh pink, and she is as pink in the palms of her hands as one could “I believe in a touch of dye for the fingernails and I advise my patrons to go to the druggist and ask him to put | the slightest bit of, red in the nail pol- capes tell me that this room, on »stituted for might find white maids there attending to conservatory delicate green { fronds had been removed to make room | on shore leave maidenhair Van Ness | delicate shell pink tint. tone which blood color. pinkest of cherries. health, and it shows good living; | is very hard to get. grow animated their | match her nails <o its hue. who has been Int pink, a little deeper than while there lights under the eyes. This isn't pretty, | nd it takes a beauty doctor to remedy The dark shadows | 1 am working upan the f the skin, and it is neces and fine and it, once it is there. like the soft, “Pink cheeks should not be too deep Her lips are in hue or they cannot show advising spinach | eat celery or spinach or let- tuce for breakfast, with their rolls and | icoffee, and I ask them to cut out acid whole face will cheeks should be just faintly touched with pink the tinjest work well with stion of pin painter we :omplexion, and the resuit is a straw berry rash or a breaking out of some'ish and in the nail paste. NUMBER THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND. which he left about $100,000,000 to Ber- tha, representing the v sen works and properties. bara. and his vided for from other sources. a. consequence of her inheri the main Krupp estate the city became virtually Miss Krupp' In that city alone she 40,000 weorkmen toiling for with the employes of the large number of other Krupp holdings it is estimated that Miss Krupp When | persons dependent upon her for a liv- Miss Krupp's father died his wsqlth]inc. when the families of the workers of |are taken into account It is usually HER DEPENDENTS Germany’s greatest heiress, Miss An- “Queen Krupp” is one) of the title§ given her by her employes, | is known from one end of} Germanv to the other by her other ti- tle, a title which appeals to the whole nation, “Our Lady lue of the Es- ette Berth rupp, virtually owner » gigantic ordnance works at Es- an example which some Amer- His second daughter, Bar- e; | were well pro- er | compiexion | of the Cannon.”’ The income of Miss Krupp, who in- herited the works at the death of her father in November, 1902, is steadily in- creasing and will probably continue to increase yvear by year until the advent of universal peace. In 1905 she received a sum approximating $3,000,000 from and tms amount She is engaged to a coun und Halbac Gustav von retary of the Prussian legat Lne bride-to-be of age, a modest, | Ang woman. d|owns the entire city of | the Krupp works are 1 have been working upon her faith- | 000 inhabitants being aimost as much fully, for it takes time to get the pink | her subjects as though she were a, was e a customer who is worth | 00, and it is the ambition of | kind-hearted, She practically her possessions, has nearly ituated, its 100,- likely to be exceeded this year. established at $150,000,000, ) LTIOPY/ IZABETH H. S fi'n,or{c,_. s turday matinee mind one of a throng promenad edge of the burned district, in the very fringe of it, beautifully gowned women g0 in and out of the stores, buying. buying, with a lavishness that makes the mer chant's heart rejoice. What though their eyes view ruined buildings, crumbling wells ars debris that a big fire leaves. W though the car deposits them bloc away from their destination and that by the time they have reached home ey have walked as many miles as would constitute a long country tramp. And the walking ha en found to rusEsdness and endurance g. On that - many Wwamen never suspected traditions are modern tried to mak old dw mid air to rest upon bus the newest type. Crowded Fil of Weinstock & Lubin Brothers. L the fire, with the typt San had, and the them forget cuddled in lap of have ness stores of that such a trans- ve .occurred in the center—that necessity to Who would have a period of two months tashionable women In ment indulging in that cher- ustom. shopping along ore and Van Ness avenue—Van Ness r city fathers not long 1d be preserved as a ore street is the home L two da al energy of tr cted their bus *ness ir 2 w, like W & Lubin, they hay a building of own, stocked with a complete line of goods. Shopping in S is somewhat unic life of the be nore int riety s ns, con which eed she al highwa unmarred by traffic andgwhat the more fas- itizen would term the un- fronts of retail stores? Probably it would have been better Van Ness avenue had remained as il eX- | it was intended. but fate -has created Franci 18, but 1 ba It has excitement as a cou inconvenien: add to th 1 enced, but they citement of it all, exigenc it has willed that -dis- ! d with th \strous as n Francisco's fire may panies it. ave been women must have a place to e doors of the fashionable residences of that nificent highway, that were wont g open to the more aristocratic Western metropolis, have re- tly given way to the encroach- g tradespeople. hopping in new Sar already stated. is pos: niqueness, but t t all the more interesting. at > the woman, and m so when llies forth in her best gown to e article she wants. the conditions seem action is immeasura and the mas: he buildings 1 hore roughly bhilt barns than s No plate-g lisplay the latest Parisi nd if one is ve par ta the light she has to run into the st xact match so un with her with go ample while the clerk f is. But that is rather a wise and no sighs are ue and A tea gnce in three weeks,cso my is a poer on permanent. As the end sometimes justifies the 1 to bring out the p € LAt ANAT e NG f mmer. The wo who ne . consele ourselves i her. We try to get re- don’t always try to be t about how we do it 3 n't advise r patients to wear pink right next to the face, So as to t would be too extreme; but [ bring out the pink of the cheeks, and 2 to get in shape so that they the pinks of the chin and the ear lobes; can wear pink If they hgve to wear it. it is so very ning. Tc is a t color and rgakes you look K makes her opportunity for ; know what mist She do chance she is mi ng. “I advise my women pat “A wor - » into my beauty shop black sin ess your skin is th fitted for it rd of pink hair, €2id | «fpore is a French beauty writer hair pink as hair | qpo o 5 K dvised his readers to pale drab OSt| nink. ‘You don't w 1 00 the tan or the | g;iq phe, ‘but make ¢ nt to have pink vour ears shall be pink and your ingernails. Say that your lips shall be 1 looked at her head. It was indeed pink—a very deep, lively pink—and al elids,’ st color, but 1 a dust color. resolve that your cheeks shall be pink, is the matter” I asked. but a shade lighter. you been doing to your “Then for a delicate pink flush fan er the whole skin.' wrote he, ‘b was the reply® ‘It is alle: bes S0 faint t it 1s hardly per- its color 18 ugly. and 1 ceptible. Don't try to look -as though ged to a bright pink.” vou were breaking out with a rash. over her kead and I soon Then work upofi the palms of your could be made a delieate han P . if you want to call it so “Cultivate them, keep them soft, keep tihout & t deal of trouble. them lively by washing them in good ‘Go home a give it a bath in soap and plenty of water. and do not weak henna tea,’ 1 said to her, rest until they have begome a lovely then come back and let me Se deep pink. Lastly and for all time, lot head. the mouth be pink, for a mouth that is *“She dld as requested, and when she not a deep lively cherry pink is ruined. returned next day I the sctisfac “Pink, for beauty's sake. is the tion of sceing her hair a lovely deli- most necessary color there is. One cate red. just the faintest and most can get along without the other tomes, beautiful shade you ever saw. but the woman who isn’t pink at an, ! "-Ir glorified her whole face. There is in any way, might as well give up. no doubt that for as long as she lives If she can't be pink she must at least | the woman will have to dip her head in | pe pinkish.”

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