The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1920, Page 21

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Science Gives Women’s Faces The Eternal Bloom of Youth; Away With Powder and Rouge! The Latest Fad Is to Electrically Tattoo a | Permanent Complexion or Blush on. | Milady’s Sailow and Pallid Cheeks. By Fay Stevenson Ovprright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Worl) i deauty only “skin deep?” | Well, it looks as if beauty doctors and scientists were going to | make it so, for lo and behold, here comes a cable telling of the popu- tarity accorded to a new fad in the English city—that of electrically tattoo- ing a permanent complexion or blush on the face, The report goes én to Say that pallid and sallow faces of London “women are being permanently brightened and given a rosy tint by expert tattooists, whose electric needle applications can be made to suit any physiognomy, giving it a delicate pink, a brilliant red, or exactly the shade most needed. Away then with your vanity boxes, mirrors, rouges and lip sticks, Milady needs them no longer. Woman has found her Fountain of Youth in her eternal bloom. What can be done in London can be done in New York. “What do you think of this ‘electrified’ eternal bloom?” I asked Miss Barbara Burke, assistant editor of Beauty Culture, an A. A. of Oxford and a student of the art of Helectro- lysis. “I think it is perfectly ripping!” laughed Miss Burke, “and the sooner we can get such an electric tattooing treatment over here the better,” ANY DESIRED TINT WHILE YOU WAIT. “But isn’t tt extremely painful, andjthing to effect a transformation, but ism‘t it dangerous?” I asked. these methods involve constant atten- “Most Hkely it won be a wee bit|tion and care as well as frequent re- painful,” admitted Miss Burke, “but|/newal think what a reliaf it would be to the} “Ladies of average woman never to Ihave to , Make up again! Think how delightful it would be to appear as fresh and fair at the breakfast table as at the dinner) table. Now, as to the dangerous end of things—it would be decidedly dan- serous if not done by a proper person. You know yourself there are doctors and doctors, some doctors you would trest and others you would not trust, and so ft is with using the electric follo y par-|art said his pr © hi velo} : neotie. In London they ee MAR s . ae sag Pots oped to tleular about the art of ¢lectroly hte lad a GGL No one is allowed to use the needle} en come to my studio to have per who has n& studied at least three/nent complexions tattooed on their we are as particular here in New]on “when the clectrig nesdio’ hoa York there will be no danger. I should}qdone its work they never look tired Mike to have the perpetual bioom my- all classes have flocked to the tattoo doctor to have the tint of a blush rose permanently stamped on their features by means of roseate pigments worked in by the electric needie.” Such an outfit comprises an Clectric tattooing needle operated trom a battery and supplied with cur- rent through a flexible wire, says the Electrical Experimenter for Decem- ber, while a small rubber tube leads through the needle proper to which- ever complexion is selected by the customer “A leading Lon ; ti on follower of the Lae or wan; they get up in the morning looking as fresh as flowers, Many of oat” them improve the color of their tips ‘{t_seoms strange that the London}yy having them tattooed a. brilliant women, who have always been noted|red.’” for their splendid complexions, should] | ney es iy oqed fee can stow ‘i Inieled,”” s ling erfect be the first to adopt this tattooing] ost ind th a fell sgetem,” I remarkod. Perpetual youth “An, but Ihave been told by Ameri-} “Only to-day we yreceived a Paris ; : cable stating that the apparent eter- can beauty doctors who haw» made| i, t i et a fying trips there that the war has] JGMIn of Ch fant ro ala ali played havoc with their complexions,” aniia the senia, ala wae en rdvoeated by the Academy of Medicine So you see womun need not grow old.” And 1 did sec have been unable to. tell from her sixteen-year-old grand- danghter (that is when their backs were, turned) ndma learned how replied Miss Burke, “Thousands of women who are unacctistomed to d@ty toil were engugtd in work of national importance during the war, and the close atmosphere of office or workshop has taken the bloom from grandam their cheeks, and rendered rosy com-|to diet (au fleure Ham plexions pallid and sallow. ‘They say] ¥ears her a pern ar NtiGas tipi nent (Mave; petual bloom, and, fave creams and rouge sticks, lip|Nent way perael Bioge salve and powder, have done some-|cing her prais The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1020, by The Press Publishing Co. (Thi Mr. Jarr Has a Cold and Takes Absent Medicine Treatment With Success. New York Evening World.) > GETF you-had only listened to met") "Undress and go to bed, that's a whimpered Mrs, Jarr, “you! dear, sald Me J ay 2] woase you ’ ing there fey. {Some flaxseed tea. Grandma always woulda’t be lying there fey. |fome fiaxsecd tea. Grandma always erish and sniffing with that terrible} hover had any cold at all cold you have!" “Wode do it,” said Mr. Jarr stub-| “1 did lisded to youd so lod I god born | aia Ak afr tobi “phen y setting worse ard} sere eards,” said Mr. Jarr feebly SOTO AES Se Naree a “Listened to me till you got sore said Mr. Jarr plaintively ears?” repeated Mrs, Jarr, “That's| “Leah mo alode," said Mr. Jarry a nice way to talk!” [teh am \ ot a code,” said| Vil just let me rub your nose ais, 3 Fe a eon a cote” S881 with camphorated oil 1t will take av “Leave you alone? Just listen tof ie | Jon like magic,” said Mrs nim!” cried Mis. Jarr, 1 mel! Ne clisidealiiliong EMBL making a perfect gave Qt myself and|, Mr Jare answered not but ay an| waiting on him hand and ot, and Lah ont a een Pot paged ; goodness knows whether he's going to [ ke the aspirin then: only G Nave the flu or not! There, ‘you seo,| five grains” sald Mrs, Jarre, “Take 1 you're sneezing! You are taking a fresh cold!” “Get oud ad led me Mr. Jarr, ‘Akachoo! “You've got to Mr, Jarr did not answer, th took the proffered talle Mrs, alo How Drugs Help, When she was gone Mr. Jar ‘at It would break|#"4, putting his fingers under fix another mustard | (ensue, brought out WSograin | u and put another hot|@sperin tublet, which he dropped by ‘at your feet and wrap] hind the sofa to join a hot-water bh nets." mustard plaster, six quinine ¢ jl sules, a bottle of cough syrup, sm The Nose Knows. tre waite, igh he wherenpon alode,” said Ke your 4 hot | “If you co! aspl rrose | his two antipyrin powders and “Won'd dake ady aspirin,” pro-ja few other rei bought and Mr. Jarr, “Head's awd goid| home made. 7 he went to sleep rw frod quidide and woke wp sound and whole. hy did you take quinine then?.1)) When he s arose Mrs. Jarr ex id you to take aspirin,” said Mvs.|¢ rr. “Don't be a cross old bear!" wed me alode and ged to sleoo,” Mr. Jarr, turning around on the where he was lying. med in triumph: ‘There! If you'd had your way you wouldn't be cured, would you? “I knew you'd be all right if you'd take your medicine—pow you eee For a long time we | Poor Little Income Oc by The, (The New i York Brening a ¢ Wort) By Maurice Ketten ul WE COULDN'T BLUFF MOTHER LET's BLUFF EXPENSE Ler’ 4 S CHEER T Won't BE HAPPY Tek Poor LiTTLe INCOME S$ Bracer THAN EXPENSE COME HERE TTLE INCONE OTHER up SEE How )'} BiG INCOME HAS GRown | Copyright, 1 called the game, n vaudevi STOP FOOLING? WITH INCOME, HE IS Too FRAGILE } what cheaper. Bet plenty of change—every week. to it. Youcan't CAMOUFLAGE THAT LITTLE |] thoy? Yes, acts may come and acts may acrobats roll on forever, And somer the kind of applause that cheers, cheering until he takes a bow. Actors talk of breaking in, but world between actors end burginrs, months, act every fifteen minutes, Two performances, folks, which ts why some actors are starving. The kind of applause that is drink to an actor is} And keeps on mean they're burglars. All the difference in tho ful in breaking in he's sure to get six or eight Which sounds like a burglar after all, Yop, vaudeville is snappy and vaudeville is fast— the three-a-day THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1920 _ THE VAUDEVILLIANS The Vaude Folks See Most of the Big Towns and ALL the Small Ones—An Acrobat That Works His Muscles When the Show Starts Is a Poor Fish—-He Gets $75 a Week, but the Who Works Her Muscles Next to Closing Is a Classic Dancer—She Pulls Down $1,500. : , By Neal R. O'Hara by The Prom Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) ITY the poor vaudeville actor. He works eight hours a week and pays no union dues. The big-time guys play twice a day and eat three times. They're the only guys in the wortd that eat more than they work except ball players, who ¢at more than they play, even on days of double-headers. Big time vaudeville is called the two-a-day. And small time vaude is Three dollars, The small time is the route of all evil. But it’s all im Dame A small time beginning gets a big But there are guys lle. time ending—some times. hat have played 500,000 gallons of tank towns without seeing the big time yet. And yet they keep on playing. The race belongs to the swifu But the hams DON’T. The hema belong to the Swift in Chicago, ‘The vaude actor fe here to-~lay and gone to- inorrow—unless there's a Sunday concert, His life was one of hops, skips and jumps tilt they took the hops away from him. The vaude folks See most of the big towns and ALL of the etal ones, They stop at the best hotels and often wish they could stay there When a vaude guy registers at a swell hotel, it's always a protest he regis- ters. And then he goes round to Jake's Place, whére the rates are sothe- + eo, Vaude actors hate a split week like a Dutchman hates sp! Split week means yon work three days and loaf three days, It's except you don't collect 56 for the three days you loaf. Still, half a loaf is better than no work at all—that’s the way they figure the split week, The booking agents are the guys that work cight hours aid sleep eight honrs. The same ef¢ht hours if possible, Big time theatre gives you a $5,000 bill for a dollar bill, and you atso In a small time house the rate of ex- go, but the ‘sault off, that doesn’t} “ . Burglars} On Trying to Get Thin’ By Sophie Irene Loeb #, 1920, by The Prove Publishing Os, (The New York Evening World | % It’s Better to Be Plump and Healthy Than to Try Endless “‘Methods’’ of Reducing Merely to Meet a Fashionable Whim. HE other day I was talking with | a friend Who has been on the! brink of the valley of the shadow of death. For months see her. in the hands of nurses and, to say a narrow escape. things she urged era me to do was to write an article against the prevailing effort to get thin, especially among young girls. 8 told me the whole story. § Ss very young and beautiful girl and was very slim In appearance ft seems the e began to get weight and grew very nervous about it, as $ certainly unfashionable in her s it is in all sets, to be fat. She begun asking questions on how to grow thin and followed the ad vice of almost everybody she met She read books on the subject of how to diet and to keep @ sylph-like fis ur. In a word, she went into the business of getting thin, and daily Watched the saales as she followed the various prescriptions. Soon she begun to lowe—and she wus very hwppy about it, She stil! continued ‘her efforts, andl it was not Jong until she began to grow so thin that she made up her mind to let-up. About this time she began to feel somewhat weak, and when to parties and 1 why she ust light her wont Somehdw ty got home merning she found she could not get up. ‘Then « medical man was eum noned, Tt was a very graye matter. Her strength was at low ab. It was not now a matter of how little she nid edt but of how much she could went | won until been aul affairs, she sould not Muay went out, as had st a was glad And one or other, and to 1 the least, #he had) thin, One of the first] of all the schem: T In a word, she was broken ip heath and spirit. She had neglected to se- cure enough nutnition to. keep ‘the wheels # She properly. | The process of building ar Up Was very show and tong. And sometimes her family despatied of ever seeing her roxy cheeks aguin. I venture to say that if chis young and! Woman had not been surrounded with months we did not|@! that money could buy in the way of nurses and doctors she would She Was) never have lived to tell me this tale. She was very glad indeed now to doctors and trained | See the scales rise every day, and she watched them even more” eagerly than when her ambition was to be She begs me to suggest that I Urge young women to be very careful that are suggested "®} all und lect who understa to_you. very for getting thin, There are “fifty- seven varieties” fh every little group, and some of them are very dangerous warning people | indeed such provesses, the world is to consult a physician The follow What cures one kills another, well to friends and hooks, advice pet to prescribe the proper diet ruitable tr Many a girl who does not feel well complains of weariness migit well think of this young wonmn and if she is not really suffe ”m malnutrition, which is danger- ry easy to get run-Aown by safes? plan én 8 ent s of but health is the and low in strength ; While it behooves us all ty look as most important thing in the world, and you cannot play with it. The strongest person in ths world can become the weakest if he comes careless, Ask any dyotor, It is much etter to have a httle fat and ‘be yourself than td be a» lean a A post and at the same time languid well as we can, the safe and vane plan is to safeguard one's physical welfare. Not all the adcairation oy monry in the world wil! compensate for a broken body and consequent broken spirits, It is worth while considering in the p en era of fashion, or rather fac for being thin. Maxims of a Modern Mai Copyriht, 1920, by The Pres Publishing Co. HE most interesting thing in life most interesting thing thing is his meals. Another difference-—on the “Babe” Ruth. is his me right side By Marguerite’ d Mooers Marshall to a man Is. etween N ow his meats, (the New York Rvening World ) and the second and the third. most nteresting Hoxton is A woman Wants a divdrce from her husband because he will not “expand "And the hearts of many other wymen have been wrung—B. V (before Volstead) de use their hus were altogether expansive socially Once you yielded to temptation and Satan got you; now you are the vietim of suppressed desires and the psycho-analysts get you! A beautiful back is its own exctse for being bare Every really good woman'a hundred per cent. thrill is « ny on that she “has it in her’ to out-Suome the day f Herodias “Will you marry me?" he wrote, She answered: "Passed—with reserva tions.” Changing one’s mind may be listeds among feminine prerogatives, but, like most of them, it ia usumped by men oftener than tt is used by women She has beauty of Grecian Helen, the bruins of English Elizabeth, the lure of Egyptian Cleopatra, the evening gowns of a screen vampire, the clinging tenacity of a wet bathing sult--and she o om ALL, for she married a professional bachelor ' Secret diplomacy may be in bad odor politically. but ana do meatic consumption it is popular as ever Sometimes a cat says “Miau!” and sometimes shi “ e gon ff so terribly since (he last time she met you human machine going Peace motto for every home: ‘Wever Say JLie!’” 4 _ _—— x" ——— Made Easy—If You Know How! | Nir Oliver Lodge, toho ia considered the greatest scientific exponent of Modern Spiritualism, explains to readers various methods used in communicating with loved ones who have passed “beyond.” “ | ones are still active and useful and interested and happy—move alive than ever in one sense—and to make up their minds to live a useful life till they rejoin them.” That is the uncompromising advice offered to “them that mourn” by Sir Oliver Lodge, the greatest scientific exponent of Modern Spiritualism, who ina few days will tell us in person why he belie¥es in individual im- mortality and in communication between the living and the dead. To Sir Oliver thie communication is a boon and a blessing which all should enjoy, although he admits that not every one has the time to give the subject the exhaustive study which he has devoted to it Copyright, 1929, by The Press Publishing Ce, (The New York Rvening World.) Others, however, can and will re ne aapeee saree ceive the benefit of his investigations, |@bly because this subliminal portion And in view of the misunderstandings [Of the person is in touch either tele- of Modern | pathically or in some other we y one whould tbe intelligences not ordinarily distinguished seien- | ble—with living people at a distance and incomplete knowledge piritual y with sf wm, ¢ Interested in thi tist's own explanation and definit al | “Another methe and one that f the various methods of communi-| turns out to be still more powerful cation, aa he has set them down in| ts for pho automatist not only to take “Raymond, or Lifé and Death," pub-| off bis or her attention from what is u being transmitted, throug Doran Company her » commonest and eas-|organism, but to become comprehen ext method of communteation,” he|aively unconscious and go into a $s, 49 what is called ‘automatic | trance, writing’ —writing performed through| "But the messages have to be re- t ey of sub-conscious intelli-|ceivéd and attended to. by another the writer leaving his or he:| person; ter in such cases, when gen at liberty w wi entranced pe atever | uine, t on on waking | time to what ix being | “In the tra tate a dmatic [ehareterization is umiatiy imparted | wil nile ocaaelt edings by t une Orke’ the the autonintigt in bling, in this way is obvious; the| the ap 8 of Its custom rermari ing ts that fer-lary manaxer, ‘The duty of coniol sons ar noble to get and n Nd transmituin mes | H Von auch i aite their normal ranged Ai DOCS ALTE oh Va “ihe hand bably worked by| r f ut, in the best case ta usual phy Al mechanten: lear also are the statements of guided and « re nerve cen ndly transmitting their me } ordina employe egion of the 1 to ace thelr assertion jerais | "The process. of regular commun [BPRS i jeation--apart from | the tional } “But when the message turns out tolmore direct privilege occasionally be of evidential value, it is presum- vyouchsafed to in extreme sor- Communication With the Dead RECOMMEND people in general to learn and realize that their loved and the the other *‘Medium," nt of | the medium. strur mmunicat more direot ters than w an intermed side, . ‘The words in Uh he method tages, but it |tages which | balance t or | consciousness originator of id side. Ing used, And, ‘sitter’ @ rather the and answer ors ly her in s wa bors: to a plece of wood, unc Then person whose is in finally mess nt is employed the ostensible say that they feel touch with the sit- they operate through or ‘control’ on. their st of spelling out under change is almost even—you get a dollar bill for 75 cents. Every act on the bill has @ letter of introduction like A. B,C, D, E. The bum acts come pn first, and the customer that knows his A-B-C’s is the guy that comes in late. Acrobat that works his muscles when the show starts is a poor fish. He gets $75 a week. But the dame that works her muscles next to closing Is a classic dancer. She may be a poor fish too, but she gets $1,500 for the week. The janitor opens and closes the theatre unless the Sheriff beats him And the acrobats open and close the bill, so they get ‘em coming and going. They do the same stunts year after year, and why shouldn't, Only a few people have seen "em yet! it introduces a new Only thing faster is the Ant!-Saloon League lobby. Which introduces a new act every TEN minutes. Anti-Saloon guys is that they've ruined all kinds of big time. Trouble with the Trow—thus sé¢ems to involve normally a double medium of communication, activigy of several First, there is the ‘Communicator’ or As and messages on there is tho normal abeyance but | Whose physiological mechanism 4s be- , there is the bsurd name—the , Who rea them, and for trouble is taken. eis also present a all that is said, whether by sitters or by or through people. When @ table or similar rowgh tm- 8 a slow one, and disadvan- ms to possess advan- some extent counters a pene’ ‘One thing It is necessary cloarty to rea and admit, namely, that io all cages when an object is moved by direct contact of an operator's body whether the instrument be 1! or onscious museulas and the |euidance must’ be allowed for, Janything that comes through of a | bi known to or suspected by must be discounted.” | ADVERTISEMENT. |Carried a Tube of | Tooth Paste for 3 Years | Many uw the t harden. {children | ‘The experiments of Prof | Stebbins proved will | weather Kupfer of [ken N. J, | Albodon t person has stopped brush th heevuse of tooth pastes It is especially true of of Albodon harden Three New or dr years Dental y out in » Mr, € James B. York long ago Cream any Itto 1) Hudson Street, Hobo- took two dozen tubes of o South Ame On his }return war had broken out and he to dl enlisted in { France. He } and in unpac tube of Albo our was recently dise s found , three years old, stili ki do} in perfect condition Albodon is caleium carbonate, sapons | ifled nt eucalyptus It is and went ind mixed with the well-known eptic oils of clove: cinnamon and ectly made and effective and so safe that children can use it satisfaction Advt, or mohey refunded—« It sells under a guarantee ‘ef a nen 2 re a

Other pages from this issue: