OCR Text |
Show THE HERALiD-HEPUBLICA- SALT HAKE CITY, UTAH, SUND2IY, MAY 14, 1916 N, t4 i 7 .' jr.; ' ". . J .; K -- ' i 1 r ' 2 ? - ft' r 1 :V v. 'V. f . i : s. 4 . 4 -- At,- "IS T 4 - . If You Must Assist Nature, SaysMlle. Greuze, DON'T Do So as if For the Stage, But Remember That Unless Art Conceals Art it is No Art at All And is in Bad Taste In the Bargain. ,5 . (cry iFvn-- n f f V. J . . . -- J v V 1 .'. - . "There Must Be ITotMng About Uiq t Work of Making up the Eyes to Betray on Paris the Theatre Francaisc, may bo true that all of the world Is a etaffc. and all of the men and women merely players, but all stages are not alike. That fact is one that I would Wte to impress upon the "woman who "makes up." And what woman, does not venture come phase of make-upFrom time to time I have heard men with the silver tongue of flattery tell women about the lack of necessity for painting the lily. They have said this pretty, if meaningless, nothing to me. To those who cling to the doctrine that it is folly to paint the Illy, let me say that the average Illy does not live long; that It does not stay up late at night, and Its short life always closes with a fading process during which a little paint, in spite of the poet's fancy, would Improve things vastly. But my suggestion to women is to use judgment In making up. Know the sort of "stage upon which .you are to appear. Discriminate between the stage actual and the great stage of life, and learn the reasons why the sort of make-u- p that would do for the star behind the footlights will not do for the belle of the ball. The footlights themselves offer the chief reason. Ballrooms and salons are not light- ed from the floor. The rays come from above, or from the side. Make- effects must be applied with a view to keeping step with the light. Where the brilliant glare of the foot- lights, striking directly upward in the face of a star, would make her ? DON'T mako up for the street or drawing room as if you were going before harsh footlights. DON'T put red on your ' lips. DON'T make up so that it can bo detected. V ? v : - L. IK i eye for the soft effect never a black one, and I merely touch the lids. I blend the color with my fingers until the shadows are perfectly natural and lovely. The lashes come in for a little Hair Requires Exercise. Do Not Spare the Brush." grand iana8Cape in heavy oils and place u OQ an lntImate table. The paInt WotlM stand out ,n ridges Rnd creases. Hung on a wall, with a light and reflector that throws the rays pr0perly. the heavy daubs BOften in a pleasing, blend, Just as softens and corn-uthe stage make-upietes the theatrical picture, What the landscape is to art, the is to a woman. I am stage make-uwoman of society, of the epeaking For her it is the delicate art of the miniature painter, who works on ivory with dainty touch, that is quired, and who must conceal her art or make it seem no art at all, . - v -- 1 r: t- x t;f-M- .' . r J v - " - ir : v r-- - i :xlxvvW .v.s v ira ' r :; 1 Viv;;,v x, T,,"rf ri v- -v av -- ,1 - V s r hV - "V ; . df " - : 1 "T-r- c v . - ' T--- ; --. &V fi-- 1 1 r ' "'ff x.,4 V ' 5 :'V-- ' jti ill . - "r K J x ; IHI 4 p , . rfS: j&,3jJ&&K xlil- " p p s-.-?,. !"r' P . ; v : A. 'i I 41 - iI . 4 X ' " 1 i Madame Greuze, That Led Mile. Lillian Greuze to Adopt the Name by Which She Is Now Known. Eyebrows Require Careful Marking, Rather to Mend Than to Emphasize." and perform its part of the work, One need not be .horrified. It is merely a refinement of the ancient and homely Idea of usinlg a mustard plaster to increase blood, circulation in larger cases of congestion Nothing will do Nature's work so well as Nature, but she needs aid, and the Irritant gives it. I arrange my own hair., I brush 'it for an hour vigorously, keeping both of my arms In active play The hair not only becomes clossv and pretty but the arms are made round and supple. When I have had this exercise, again aiding Nature, I sit uerore my mirror and begin the de tails of making up. The first element is to insnect the face and see just exactly what Is needed and where it Is needed. One muskint is now considered to "piIE X be the most dangerous animal pest in Bohemia. It was introduced from America in 1903 on the estate of , and has Prince since spread over a region of 100 miles radius from Dobrzlsch, near Colloredo-Mannsfeld- x, It Was the Success of This Photograph, Made in Imitation of the Celebrated Painting by J alive means to exercise every part of the body and to see that nothing dies. treatment with the purplish pencil, Hair requires exercise as much as too. It requires practice and much attention. Eyebrows demand careful any other part of the body. Do not marking, rather to mend than to em- phaslze. With the eyes complete I pay attention to my neck and bust. If The neck is a perfect tattle-tale- . it is not treated with care it wants to act as a family. Bible, an almanac and a history of your past. It must as were the dis- be given a finish constantly. MARVELLOUS such The flesh must be kept full and monsters as the mammoth, firm I use an electric suction bulb and the mastodon ar.d the stegosaurus, I keep passing it over my flesh until they are now eclipsed by recent in- It glows and takes the fresh pulsat- which show the most . life Most beautiful. makes it that ing .A mi,.fl0 in fn- mod- with paint and powder. They should sil form. The ancestois of our be cured, and not burled. The secret ern infectious disease germs and miof beauty 13 to keep alive. Keeping crobes have been found in fossils of the earliest life on the earth. va ntarto v. t dfov- "ed in very ancient limestones col TrnukliVitrb lected by Dr. Charles D. Walcott, secPrague, where it was first liberated, retary of the Smithsonian Institution, The xnuskrat has developed a long in Gallatin countj-- , Montana, tor list of evil traits of which it is ap- - some time Dr. Walcott has believed parently innocent in its native habi- - that these bacteria existed, and men- tat. It has been especially destruc- - tion of the fact was made recentlytlve In connection with the fish in- - before the Botanical Society of Washdustries. Ington, when attention was called to Urrfko Ami'rnMticlrrnf li - ,? - - Hi - "v "ti I use a purplish pencil under the 'J ' - up." "71 , ? DON'T forget that the great secret of beauty is health. Lips Must Be Made up for tha Stage, but Should Not Bo Colored for the Street or Drawing Boom. ; Ar cannot go over the same routine every day without discrimination. I start with my eyes. The average woman devotes too much work to them and gets too little result. There must be nothing about the work of making up the eyes to betray on the street the fact that they are "made -- eI; i . ' re-witho-at p J i ftf By Mile, Greuze Treating: the Eyelashes with Purplo Pencils. complexion ashen,- - her eyes disap- roar and her lashes seem as nothing heavy paint that furnished a foil for the light, the same character in a ballroom would only and bad taste besides, of make-utend to make the user look like a Her exterior decorations must Stand close scrutiny. chrasp It Is the light, the distance, the Nature, Fay my critics, did not In- effect. , tend that women should make up. One would not care to take a Perhaps. But Nature did not invent - DONTS sealskin sacques, plumed hats, fur accessories or lingerie. "Womankind added these and many other artistic Improvements, chiefly to please and to attract men. The more art she has added the more she attracts. I have studied the art of improving upon Nature painting the lily, if you will. I use no rouge for my lips. That form of painting Is well enough for the stage, but It Is crude for the salon. I find that It is actively circulating blood that makes the prettiest Hp. So I take an irritant and apply it gently to my lips Just enough to make the blood tingle By Mile Lillian Greuze r ' - ... , of 4 spare the brush. Use it incessantly, To spare the brush, is to spoil the locks. I work on mine until it has no chance to be dead. I go into ex- ecutive session with my frank and pitiless mirror at all times and when I am through with the task, I know that no electric light, no sunny afternoon will pick a flaw in my make-up- . Marvels of Newly Found Fossil Bacteria pre-hislor- VPKtI-ation- ic s imria ' Rtrm;a -' rn their existence i: association with fussil alSal deports of the Newland limestone. i auciid- ucic xjuo uci.ot iiuu v,jnogt important factor in the dispc- sition of these ancient limestones was also mentioned by Dr. Walcott a prelimina; y publ tcation of the with the cells of micrococci, a form of bacteria of today. The world has believed that bac- . itim cic uiuut'i ..11 iOIlIJS OI. ... llie, DUt now we are made to realize that they existed in the dawn of world histcry, many million years ago. lime however, no definite bacteria hud been discovered, but in thin see lion? of 1: mas cone from the colleotions made, in 1914 the, microscope ow shows these very minute lorms Onions are excellent blood nurl-- ' flers. They are Nature's remedy for sleeplessness, too. An onion poultice is of great relief ia rheumatic pains. In many cases bad indigestion can te cured by an onion diet. 3 ' Institution ,t th:-.- - of life, some 20,000,000 to 20,000,000 of years old. The bacteria were discovered in three sections cut from an algal form Included under the generic name ual- latinia, named 'nftev he great Ahieri- can explorer Gallatin.. The bacteria consist of individual cells and ap- parent chains of cells which corre- spond in their physical appearance 1 . It is reported that Blumea balsam- ifera Which grows wild in abundance m the I'mlippires, has been found to be identical with the plant from which camphor is obtained in cer- tain parts of China. The commer- cial possibilities of this plant are now a being investigated. |