The evening world. Newspaper, January 5, 1911, Page 3

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RATS AND PUFFS WILL GIVE WOMEN HAIRLESS HEADS Domes of Next Generation May Resemble Ostrich Eggs, Says Dr. Brownell, WEIGHT STIFLES ROOTS. Blood Has No Chance to Nour- ish Scalp Held Down by Heavy Switches, When Dr. rose to actress the Rainy Day Club on “The Hygiene of the Mair’ at the Hotel Astor yestecday afternoon the two hundred of4 women present ex- pected a matter-of-fact tulle on the care of the scalp. But when the physician declared that if the excessive use of falso switches, rats" and colffures is con- tinued the next generation of women ‘will commence life with ttle or no hair @t all, his auditors were filled with amazement. When he had finished his thirty minute discourse Dr, Brownell, who ts &@ scalp specialist, was approached by several members of the club, who ®eemed greatly concerned about his ‘warning. Ie told them that they had better heed his advice and give their scalps a chance to breathe, or be pre- pared to suffer the consequences. Baldness Increasing. ‘At his office in the Ormonde, Broad- way and Sixty-ninth street, this morn- ing Dr. Brownell told an Evening World reporter that within the last five years, when the false hair has sprung into sudden prominence as a popular adjunct of feminine beauty, especially where it nas been unneces- sary, the tendency to baldness in women has steadily increased. ‘ “The women who spend most of thelr @ays motoring or playing golf stand leks of a chance of suffering the conse- quence of choking up thelr scalps with wads of false hair, for they have the benefit of the fresh air. But the office workers and girls who are In stuffy stores all day long must surely soon find their hair falling away if they continue to hamper its healthy growth by welghing down the scalp to such an exentt that the circulation is stopped and the excessive heat thereby gener- ated destroys the cushion of fat under the scalp. Overweight of False Hair. ‘Tho hair gets {ts nourishment from the blool, and if the overweight of false hair stops or partly prevents the blood from reaching the roots of the hair baldness must eventually be the result. For women who are given to using wads of falso hair and who have no outdoor Ife there ts little chance to retain a healthy scalp very long. If the nothing will be left but the false curis and colffures and transformations to ‘ heir scalps. “This is a weakness the ‘seriousness of which present day women do not appreciate, and {t may not take long to realize that they are stifling out of thelr hair by weighing down its source of nourishment. The wads of false hair they are using act as literal “sweat-boxes” and are really a dangerous evil.” Phe Doctor closed his remarks with a list of Don'ts. He said: “Don't wash your halr oftener than once in three weeks, ‘Don't use hair dyes, halr is becoming gray. “Don't wash your halr with prepara- tions just because Mrs. Smith has ad- vised you to do it. “Don't forget to massage your scalp frequently. “Don't wear rats or puffs or switches.” peelieel Nenad SWIFT JUSTICE FOR SLAYER, Even even {f your Swenton Sentenced To-Day, Though « Juror May Have Slept. Convicted in the swiftest murder trial which criminal lawyers can remember in this County, Charles Swenton was sentenced to-day to dle in the electric 13, © pronouncing ed the motion of former Swenton's lawyer, tone senten Mag! for an of the Sweotser, rate round th w trial on the 4 court officer, had seen such letter published by a had not run down the ton shot and killed Isaae Lee at y West 5! first street on Nov. quarrel ¢ The World Has Big Lead in “Horse and Carriage” Advertising 11,783 “Horse and Car- riage" advertisements were printed in THE WORLD last year— 5,092 more than ANY OTHER New York News- paper. World Advertisements in 1911 for Results Everett Garnsoy Rrownell do not provide the necessary venti- | lation they will find that after awhile | | assign each member to Inspect the fire- | and helpless workmen and the women |! live toget | who work at home in the tenements | Raym No Woman Can Bea S One or the Other Occupation Must Become a Diversion, and Motherhood Can Never Be That, Declares Mrs. Valesh, Clubwoman. Nevertheless, She Would Have New York Women Vol-, unteer as Factory Inspectors and Put a Stop to | Unnecessary Child Labor. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “A clearing house for women,” {s the descriptive phrase employed by Mrs. Eva MacDonald lesh to define the purposes of “The American Club Woman,” a magazine which made {ts debut this month with Mrs./ Valesh as its chief sponsor and a notable group of New York women as associate editors | “We alm to make the magazine the spokesman of 3,000,000 members of women’s clubs in the United States," Mrs, Valesh told me yesterday, “to print what | all the clubs are doing, and sometimes to point the) path of usefulness by showing what th might do. “It seems to me,” Mrs. Valesh added, “that the club. women of the West have a better idea of what woman's influence can accomplish for civic and industrial reform than we have here in New York. Out West no board or commission for municipal iinprovement is considered complete unless {t has a representative of the woman's club among {ts.members. Nor can any movement be very much of a success unless the clubwomen support it. “In New York, though there are more Women's clubs with larger memberships $00,000 chithw than in any other American city, the %!™" to make women have not made themselves feit| “omen—* to this extent, Could Accomplish Much. j “There are somany things they might) accomplish if they went about It to-| V; gether. mings § “Think of the potentialities of power, | Mrs. Clar: the tremendous unused energy of th Women of the leisure classes in New] York! Why shouldn't {t bo turned to benefiting the city and tho State?" “But how?" I asked, “What reforms, for instance, would you suggest the club} women of New York might accomplish— what specific things ———— And pene accustomed to the vague] SSE22e AND DETECTIVE. TO CATCH HUSBAND thing. The club women of New Mrs. Ring Tells of Seeking Evi- ‘York could prevent the repetition of such horrors ag the recent fac- dence Against Miss Raymond Who Sues for Slander. lar ‘lem,’ but for all ‘ems’ in which help of my believe I will suc- | tors to whom Mrs. » William © © editors I ‘are at N stre tory fire in Newark, where so many young women lost thelr lives. It's quite accidental and the merest luck that we don't have such fires in New York every day. Perh: five per cent. of the fac- tories are equipped with adequate fire-escapes. The city's force of building inspectors is much too small. It is absolutely impossible for them to see that the is carried out, Why shouldn't the club women of New York volun- er as factory inspectors? = ae “Let them take a map of the city and | Mrs, Naome Dunscombe Ring, the wealthy Moun sued escapes within the territory allotted to her and report on them? Could Force Reform. “The report that could be made up and published from this disin- before Court Morschauser ‘by 5,0) damages f ess stand to-day tn Mrs, 9 wi her fense of axe whom s the city’s inadequate in- Justice " « day ne pwn de nse. Mrs is nearly ellity years Ke. Her hhsba J vi with she has ved f 5 jis fifty-et 1 7 a J witness for Miss Raymond : . | w fo ter of employ-| Mrs. Ri Her, ‘husband ‘got Surope is away} her to bu unt Vernon Oper specting force cannot hope to do. Surely protecting the lives of fac- tory girls is a fine work for women of leisure to undertake. “Then there's the ers’ ability Jaws. ahead of us in this respect. Here maimed House, After ail, sie after he got “K prop went y he could from me,” “Mr, Ring mo rou: what sald Mrs give me lof my and children dependent on them are thrown back upon c! ttable individuals | for maintenance, when the industry | Hing which has rendered them helpless should | ny be charged with their support. j opera “Then there is child labor, We have) & it in New York in the form of children| afd would not after he got ho e declared she a shirt wal Nad found a skirt belonging to Ring's a When Miss Miss before and after school hours at the, te © making of artiflelal flowers, &c, Women | had ever cajled could stop that.” names she replied es, but the parents of such children are unable to support them without as-| sistance. ‘The father cannot make money enough. What are you going to do about that?” “These children are usually born of foreign parents who work too cheaply, for wages more approach- ing the scale paid in Burope than that necossary to existence in the United States. The parents should be taught to dem:nd a fair com- pensation for their labor. ‘They should be encouraged to join trade unions which will got it for them, When a man works for union wages ke can support @ family without the assistance of wife or children so long aw he keeps woll, "As God is my | bad names for two in a box In bh Did 8 dud N Morseh: Mrs, I BOY KILLED PLAYMATE, HID BODY SIX WEEKS. “When he is pacitated I bel though I am not a Socialist, that the State should re for his ehit nm. After all, the welfare of its childre should be the State’s most vital con- cern, The Real Work at Home, “ana X do not believe ir. the Woman in industry, I believe that women aro bound to leave indus- try and dovote themselves entirely to their life work—the only thing in which they defy competition — the bringing up of children, I am not speaking of profossional wo- men, We will have them in in- creasing numbers and in widening ‘There will always be wo- who need a wider scope than the home can give. But I think no woman can be # successfnl mother and follow # profession successfully at the same time, One or the other occupation must A quick relief for coughs, colds and hoarse- ness is become a mere diversion, If it is e’ oO the profession that is relegated to Hal Hi y the minor role, very well. But S ne Of Horehound and Tar Contains no opium nor anythinginjurious motherhood can never be @ diver- sion. “These are only a few of the things clubwomen in New York might do," Mrs, Valesh concluded. “Perhaps 1 have dwelt toa much on my own par- tloular ‘isms.’ ‘The American Club- woman’ doesn't stand for any particu- Try Pike's Toothache Drops HE EVENING WORLD, Mme. Curie, Discoverer of Radium, THURSDAY, JANUARY 65, _1911. SRR PIR, «oR Mere om uccess asa Mother Barred by the Institute of France| era and water-tender vente the r had a rday, when as Wight leave thelr ing to confirm the r force of str for ation Into r P Their te a the men. was vod sked If felt th When he was to mean that he strike the Commiss 1 do not care to « further at this time Phe have of discussion It conferring almost been was 24 not want clever women, fedus ull the Commissioner in want any kind of women. ances which they have aske f 90 to 62 It has ves not | remedy, but they say these her me @ | if any bearing upon the ik ‘i from The discharge from nember of tho Academy of idemy, }Hst of James Smith on one of tho five academies coms / notw natitue }e@use the Board of Fstim the [provided pay for onl rine eng when th turle was a member ption ne two at work follow The late Prot, Late To-Day. Calvin Tomking tow probably be definit ve Engineers’ Ass dec Commis. neers as well as the NEW FERRY STRIKE. If She Seeks to Succeed in a Profession | HANGS ON CONFAB NOW IN PROGRESS {Engineers on We Municipal ] Boats Settle the Question | ference nmissloner minittes of rybouts clare a out with them the fire i talk with ¢ ike breakers declared that iy emergency, e ranks a atrik this was taken the threat of the pied | not be permitted to return to work: It has be learned from William Seaver, No Sih Bast Fifty-sixth street, Waa eK hal fel a bullet fired in an unusual way. vdinit thy A 38. Park West near Sixtieth street was ploded by a truck wheel and the ane he stood on the curb. Man Was struck and ki songer traln early to-day, i by @ pass the wound and sald it was ¢rivial | Seaver went to bis home, “ Just West of |} Thirty-fourth Waldorf « | Street THE LARG WAIST HOUSE IN THE WORLD. 4 Continuation of Our Great January Sale y known | | | Wash Waists, $2.25 Regular Price $3.50 5,000 more, fresh from our laun- dry, will be added to-morrow— white and colors, sizes 32 to 44 Annual Clearance of y changed hie attitude from Women’s Tailored Suits | ‘Seale Unchanged. Afternoon and Evening Dresses, When ¢ missioner Tonkins was asked this afternoon whether he thought ot Coats, Wraps, Etc. ; 1 an somos te sane AT : sees "ahcs | SWEEPING REDUCTIONS winemaneny sn « 90" H 9904.96 John Forsythe west sith se. he matte - ‘amous Suit House” ie remen daily. with vation to griev- | “him to have lHttle 4 6 engineers? th Ave. Corner 17° the Acade! . and w overdose of a mixture to allay neu-|engineers’ association that t Most Important is Bu 50 ¢ pains caused the death yester- | missioner would have more trouble on posed for . nineteen, of | his hands than he did when the fire- | November there has b hot de- Tuesday | Warns the mpainaars: | an utable tradition ry vers « ie Pe. the aS a# foolish and unneces- wine Payee ET eR Pics Gok airalles LUBA Nee eaNlAl| Cc Choice of more than 3,000 coats of every kind and description dress or service wear at prices which have never been as low | Jered in this sale. « OPPENHEIM, GCLLINSZ@ || Stor 9 & i Fancy material coats... $ 00 ie = Cheviot long coats. i Caracul cloth coats..... a 34th Street—West a Seal plush coats... Silk velvet coats....... $ 50 f e “ The Greatest Clearance Sale ie ee ' Fur trimmed coats..... ‘ 7 en Braided | ronnie Women’s and Misses’ Tailored Suits, i prea din ; ps | Sailor collar coats...... $ 75 ‘ | Furs and Fur Garments, Embroidered long coats. ya . , Se Velvet trimmed coats... : | Misses’ and Children’s Coats and Dresses, Polo cloth coats......., Automobile coats....... : Offered at a Great Reduction | Outdoor sport coats... a 15 : | Dressy broadcloth isa eo | | Furs and Fur Coats — Reduced Prices French Seai Coats, High Grade Fur Trimmed Coats; Pointed Fox Sets, Black Fox Sets, Skunk, Lynx and Mink Sets are offered at decided reductions. son Seal (Bisam) Coats sal Coats (Chapelle 110 00 y Silk Lined, 52 inches long. g dye), Value #2 omens Coats Reduced Prices $32 Women’s Coats. Reduced to 20.00 $50 Women’s Velvet and 4 Velour Coats . « 35.00 The balance of the hich grade Coats at greatly reduced prices ceepeentncasirarenereneranensmenites ater en teae ster) esterase OES Heavy storm coats... . Money Cheerfully Refunded on all Unsatisfactory Purchases JOHN MINDER & SON HUDSON TERMINAL MARKET Hudson Terminal Bdg., Fulton St, Entrance. PABOO444 620244 444544454666 E SEES Steeaaeencacesaas, 4912-4513 Cortlandt WE COOK YOUR ORDER FREE OF CHARGE Can you imagine anything more tasty thana Smoked Ham Roasted Virginia Style 18¢ Ib. SPECIAL NOTICE Cut out this advertisement and bring it with you and we will roast a ham for you (on Friday only) at 15¢ lb, PFVVIODIVOVIDIOS veovessopoooovens eee eae, an elevator man of wounded in the right shoulder to-day by allbre cartridge lying in Central — flew acros athe street and hit him ae An ambulanee © surgeon from Flower Hospital looked af French Model Gowns, | —————— SOAASEROIEAEE ODE AIEBEAABA SEAR ESOS Ccccesesenesenens & \

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