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Show TIIE MORNING 2 uf the sun after her hair had been washed with petroleum, and she died from the effects, a great, uproar was made; but soon afterward women be- Copyrig'jt, 3901, by Curti Broun. a mi supposed London, March 12.- -It at first that London society' sudden re- fondues for white fcuir was only a mil against colored wigs and dyes, and tbai it would result in giving astute a chance at last, ushering tu u era of U- -s paint, jiowdcr aud cnanvl and maybe a little less artificiality and dt viaio'i generally. haa happened la a Jin wlip--t manlfesi ailon of feminine human nature queer enough to he- worthy of the a'lenUcn of future historian. No a.mn ;r waa II known among the rlri-that whit hair had become fasbioiihble titan yotiug women whose hair scarcely had begun to turn gray, got on tht truck ef a 1'arl chemist who had discovered cf making ih ha.r white tint tri-nrtificiaiiy, and nowr that cttutUt is in fair wuy of heroming a millionaire. It va the genuine atlractivencMt ol fashion the lash iun led he g by the smartest Amcrirau women in abouf Jxnilun society 'hat lirotifiU fad. With their gray this "while-hair- " hair artistically dressed the beauty of handsome society women will on iu the forties was much enhanced. Under the Influence of aoflly powdered hair suggestions of wrinkle or little lines about the eyes faded away, leaving the face smooth and round and nft. Mrs. George Cornwsllia West (Lady Randolph Churchill), Mrs. Jack l.fslie and Mrs. Moreton Freweu. well known as the three Jerome Listers, and now ; greater favorites even than when their mother lint brought them over from New York, are all tn the swim of the ' latest fashion. Their hair is beautifully and naturally white, laxly Coleridge, widow of the lord chief justice, 1 sisteranother of the white-haire- d hood. Though not more than 30, Mr. ; Hall Walker also wean her hair white and look like one of the beautiful marquise painted by Jacquet. So many eel. followed others In the ultra-smathe fashion that when It began to be 'known that hair could lie whitened ar- t 'a ray-ha- ir ' rt tificially there was a rush for treatment. , . the COSTS 130 A TIME. Not In London, but in. Baris, is the fashionable blanching done, and at the rost of $30 a time. Arriving In the French capital, the woman of fashion must go to the ealou of the coiffeur-cliemi- st end there spend the greater partofadayc First her tresses are unfastened, well brushed, cut and singed. Then they are washed with egg julep so that no other ebemleal preparation ahnll clash with the fume which come later. The hair is slowly dried by fanning and the client then passes into n email boudoir, done n long wrap which rovers up her gown and takes a seat tn n large arm chair. The coiffeur-chemis- t places on her r, head n large bag made of which fits closely around the nape of the neck, up over the ear and acrosa the forehead. This bag la fitted with a thermometer, which the coiffeur watches carefully, as it registers the heat of the fumes which enter the beg by means of a long India-rubbpipe from a wonderful apparatus that contains the chemicals. For exactly one hour and a half Is the fair client under this treatment, the chemist busy nil the time regulating the fumes and testing results. When the beg Is at last taken off the heir that was dark and rlrh with coloring le found to be as white as snow. But the patient Is not yet free. In another room she reclines upon a couch with her hair spread out like a huge fan upon n table at the head of the couch. In thle position she le required to drink milk and to rest for two hours, with her maid In constant attendance. At the end of that time her hair la dressed, and her maid Is Instructed how to put on the wbiie paste at the roots when coloring again begins to make Its appearance in the growing hair. Warnings are given as to the disastrous effect of using heated curling tonga or wavers on the newly blanched heir, and the superiorIs ity of soft white tissue Impressed on her before the client leaves the salon. What the ultimate effect of this halr--b lunching may be time alone will prove. For the present It is considered dainty, chic, extremely smart and becoming, and that to the fashionable .woman, la more than sufficient. Trifling with nature in the way of has invariably a bit ot danger, which, to the woman of fashion, makes it all the more attractive. When, a few years ago, the hair of Mrs. n Samuclson, a London society woman, caught fire from the heat India-rubbe- er curl-pape- rs hair-colori- well-know- gan tu hate their dyed hair washed in the same old way. No other method was so good. HAD HER FACE SKINNED. For fashion and beauty woman has endured and risked far more than this. Nut. long ago a famous British artres aud beauty, as well known in Amerb-bk she Is In England, risked the complete skinning of her fare, neck and shoulders. Even on' her matchless complexion age. had begun to tell, and rather than lire In the .world of fashion as a beamy passes ahe decided to submit to bring skinned alive. Doctor were found to undertake the work, ami ibu skin pf her fare was cbem-liall- y burned off and detached bit by bit. jitsi as the paint Is removed from a frour door that needs repainting. Fur seven week ibis pruceM wee la opera! lou, tevru weeks uf uninterrupted agony nigbt and day and without any certainty that the desired result would be whirred. At the cud of rather more than two mouths it was found that iu plats of the well worn complexion of the woman of fashion was a skin ns rosy, thin aud teudrr a that of a new Imrn baby.-- . In fact It was too baby-lik- e for even a girl In her teens, and ihn actmta In her rejuvenescence was obliged to stay in retirement until the akin had lost some of Its piuk- - Disasters occur EXAMINER, even sometime, with the best kind of cuamclling. A world-famewoman, abuse youth seems perennial although she baht long since been a grandmother, was horrified to find when ataying at her seaside home last summer that her d J.ips had turned a brilliant green. Instant retirement was compulsory. The enanieler came in post haste from Paris, and the effect of the sea air upon some of the chemicals used la the enameling was removed. THE NEW EYELASH. Another new device In the feminine torture chamber is In the line of additional eyelashes. The old system of sewing hairs through the eyelids Is being superseded. By the old method a needle threaded with a hair pierced the outer edge of the eyelid where the natural eyelashes grow, the hair was drawn through and tied and the tied cud cut off close to the eyelid, so that a row of these aewn-uhairs made a deep dark line at the edge of the eyelids. The ends that formed the lashes themselves were alwaya the points of hair and not clippings, and the hairs had tn be must minutely and carefully adjusted so that they kept well in Hue, curving and narrowing according to the pattern of a natural set of eyelashes. Whatever the bufferings of such a treatment. It was silently en- refreshener. dinary If a society woman in willing to undergo the agonies of having her fate and neck enameled, extra laches sewn on to her eyelids, piece of flesh rut from her scalp, aud the bleeding pane sewn together again, so as to tighten the ekiq of her fare and take away ugly puckers and wrinkle, nr to have vaseline Injected under the sin to alter the molding of different parts of her fore, then her sojourn with the beauty dortor la of far longer duration and the fees are multiplied accordingly. Fearful are many of the results from attempts made to enamel the fare, hut the risk of being disfigured for life hy accident or by some hideous skin affection seemi to make the torture ettll more alluring And torture It In, for although the secret of enamelling the face nttcressfully Is one of the- most zealously guarded secrets In the world, there has never yet been n denial that the nufferlng endured Is Intense. With enamelling, an old wizened face, yellow and thickly lined with wrinkles, ran he made to appear as fresh as the complexion of the girl of eighteen. TORTURES OF ENAMEL. . At one time enameling was merely the rubbing of a thick cream over the face. The coloring of veina, the tinting ot lips, the roues of the checks were painted ou afterward with the enmoat minute rare. But ameling la of a different sort. It la put on to stay. The natural face, once enameled, now secs the light again only at Intervals of some months, ant) then only for an hour or so. Moreover, the process costs $200 each time. It requires the courage of a surgeon and the delicacy of an artist to apply the new style enamel, for recourse must be had to some biting acids, which give hours of pain to the patient. A trifle too much or too little and all the misery has been In vain, for the coating of enamel is not firmly fixed. Fur days together the patient lives In utter darkness while some specltl part of the treatment ia going - pink-and-wh- on. In a great deal of the enamelling that la done the enamel hardens and ta like a stone mask, holding every feature of the face In ita relentless grip. The fare, of course, is like a picture with iis alabaster brow. Its softly rounded contours, Ita fascinating curves and tha purity and loveliness of the complexion; but It ia always the same; no animation can flit over the features, no look of sadness or Joy be seen thereon, for acaree a muscle can be moved. All the victim can do la to roll her eyes shout and draw back her lips into a weary, sad little attempt at m smile. But to one or two of theao ensmelere la known the precious secret of making an enamel that does not harden and from which little wrinkles around the mouth and eyes, should they appear, could he smoothed away by a careful maid specially instructed in the work. The tinting, too, la also an matter, for time will put Ita mark on the fare of enamel hy fading the pinky coloring, and aa enamelling 1 several only wholly renewed every months the maintenance of a certain amount uf coloring la absolutely necessary. Besides this, some Is apt to wear off. tn the course of Ita daily ablutions with a special sort of thin cream. after-- 7thesale PARCEL DELIVERY AT m dured. But now eyelashes And If this process la ient moment. These eyelashes aro sold In seta, the hairs being fixed on singly to a tiny little rim of silk net which the patient, after two or three lessons, puts on herself. A set consists uf four little strings with a fringe of pointed hairs hanging from them, each string of silk and ita appendages being differently shaped. Two of tbo atringa aro for the under lids uf the eyes and the other two for the upper lids. They are placed up so closely to the already existing row of eyelashes that in some cases at least the presence of these artificial aids to beauty are not disa cernible. Naturally each net of has to be specially made according to the length and coloring of the natural eyelashes. They are supposed tu stay on safely for two or three days, after which time they should be regummed aud put on freshly. Aa fur eyebrows, richer, fuller eyebrows are so much desired by some folk when nature has been especially meagre that the natural brow la often shaved off entirely and a thick eyebrow on a silk net foundation gummed Into position. It la the smooth, natural shaped eyebrow that la fashionbriubed-u- p able now, the atrocious thing of a few seasona back having faded Into oblivion. But suffering In the rauae of beauty ia not always confined to the face, or even the figure. There are fastidious people 111 contented with their finger nalla. Such will Buffer excruciating pain hy having their nails Their hope ia that wholly removed. new nails will grow In better shape and texture. Sometimes each nail on a woman's hand ia drawn, though no accounts are revealed aa to the fearful agony the patient undergoes. Deep down under the flesh at the root of the nail acids are hmahed In that they may lmrn through the nail and make It easier to tear out. The poor, maimed hands are, of course, utterly useless for a lung time. Then, as soon aa a new nail begins to make an appearance. It la cultivated according to the fancy of the owner. LAURA FRANK MURCHISON. are York The Japanese In New amused by the difficulty presented to English speaking persona In the geographical and other names of Japan. The Rueaian names that bristle in the dispatches from the seat of war. the Japs admit, may very properly present difficult iea and may be hard for English speaking persona without a cold in the head to pronounce. But Jian-ea- e, they think, .ought to present no serious difficulty to Americans. Barring the fact that the spoken and the written forms of the Japanese tongue are very different, the Jape profess to discover a good many resemblances between their own language sound and English. The forty-seve- n elements of tha Japanese tongue are about the same aa the number recog-ntxe- d In English. The genders of Japanese nouns are three, and the numbers two, aa In English. Hiere are also three cases of nouns and three degrees of adjectives. Verba are active, passive and neuter, and they have five niooda, as in English. If It does take five syllables to say la' In Japanese, and If the language la pretty rich in polysyllables. Japanese numerals seem simple enough to an English speaking person, and any one who has learned the numerals finds the names of the months simplicity Itself, la fact, tho Jam nay that any Industrious American of average ability ought to acquire a pretty good knowledge of the spoken Japanese tongue in about a year, and might do It In a good deal less time It an Intensive method of study. To acquiro of the an easy reading knowledge language, with ita immense vocabulary. In part borrowed from the Chinese. ia a much more serious matter. Thus puzzling Japanese geographical names become simple enough for the most part a hen resolved into their elements, and translated, aa many of them ran be. Most English speaking the name person do not associate Japan' with the name Nippon. that of the largest Island of the empire. A a matter uf fact, however, the name Japan" is an English attempt to reproduce the Chinese name for Nippon, which is The name means The Island of the Hiring Sun. Shikoku, or Sikoku. a it is mme-tiine- s spelled, the name of the Inland southwest of Nippon, means merely The four proiinces," as si" is the Japanese for the numeral four. "tero." the name of the large island northeast of Nippon, means "the barbarians of the shrimps." Again, the group of Jaiurse islands usually called the Kuriles, bears that name her cause the islands are so numerous, for it means the thousand islands." Formosa, which the Japauese .acquired front China after the war between the iwo countries, is also called Taiwan. which means the gulf of tho tower. Tusinia, nr Tsushima, as it ia spelled, on some, mapa, an Island that may figure tn the war new, for it ii- -n In the straight between Kitishiu and eye-lashe- The Success of The Conquest HAS CO. WM. R. MILLER, Managor. Street. Office, !6fi Twenty-fiftTelephone No. 3?9 Z. OF SALES 0 MARCTT 14, 100 f. Autombile SILVER PARLOR LED THE PUBLISHERS TO ADD TO THE LATEST EDITION OF THE BOOK A Wonderfully Jmpressi-oFrontispiece in Full Color RESTAURANT e OPEN CAY AND NIGHT. Extra fine dinner on Sunday and Wednesday, from 12 to I p. im. 25 cents. We give nice lunch all day. m HOWELLS Short orders at all hours, fresh ters. game and flah in season. oys- After a Tainting by Charlotte Weber, SIS 25th Si. boo( All Our Salesmen Have Been Instructed as Follows James Ballards SELL EVERYTHING If you want eastern corned beef go to Ballard's. 'Rhone 127K. S31 24th Street. From THE CONQUEST la now MEAT MARKET recognized everywhere as the Most Remark, able Contribution to American Historical Literature of Recent Years the Cost Mark. SILVER s This means everything tvho too rent to St. Louie especially for the purport of studying the bietorie eeenes so Dhlidly portrayed in the Props. Charley & Hong;, NO. n are gummed on. less painful than a llCKH. After the rush ot a season in Ion-do- n the other, it probably brings greater many women are prepared to give anxiety aa to whether the gumming themselves into the hands of a clever will nut give way and the row of eyeParisian beauty doctor for tm days lashes begin to pool off at one end or obtaining ui the induf that a renew- drop off enlircly nt a must inconvened appearance of yoilth for the price of $.VtO. This is. of course, for an or- UTAH, MONDAY MORNING, OGDEN, A. C. McClurg & Co., KING SALOON Publisher MURPHY. A GIBLIN, Props. First Claaa Wlnss, Liquors and Cigars. in our stock Groceries Included Your Patronage 132 Solicited. Twenty-Fift- h St The greatest opportunity that the people of Ogden and Weber County will have for some time. We will also include in this J.G. REED &. BROS. and Sadd'er Wholesale Harness We call your attention to Sale all Something; New AFOOT WARMER Com; and Try One Spring Goods Free of Charge. Arriving during; sale, purchased before the rise in prices in cotton fabrics. We Must Sell This Stock a . . By March 1st to enable us to Rebuild our Store Room. Terms Cash. a typewriter that la out of repair. It pays to keep a good machine, and that ia the kind that we are selling. We will sell you a new one or an old one fixed up to do the work like new. If you do not want to buy, we will rent Reese Howell & Sons. We will keep It In repair aa long aa you want It. Perhaps you would Ilka to trade thr typewriter you now have for one that la la better order or for some different style. If so. let ue know and we will call and see what we can do for you. you one. i anna i Examiner Telephone Numbers: Day, night, 33-1X- ; EL, ..SENATOR SAYS: PE-RU-N- L. H. BECRAFT 56. COR. 24Tt MALLORY DOES WHAT IT CLAIMS.11 A AND GRANT, Appeal to men of good taste, who would naturally gotoa high pric- ed tailor. You would be sur- prised if you knew how many of your swellest dressed friends are wearing Hub Clothes, and they are not paying Ours fancy tailor prices. are a third to a half less $ 1 0 to $30. . ." t Continued on Page Six ) Peruna ia the only absola Known From the Atlantic omnipresent. lute safeguard known. A cold ta tha to Ute Paclffo. beginning of catarrh. To prevent colds, Dr. Hartman Is ReccMal Hundreds of to cure colds, ta to cheat catarrh out of Ixttera of Congratulation and Ita victims. Peruna not only cures caCammendatlon Dally. tarrh hut prevents it. Catarrh affections may be eento c AH Classes Write These Letter!, Fram chronic, mild or severe, ephemeral the Highest ta the Lowest. stubborn, lasting or flleetlng, painful o man who wishes perfect health trivial, but they all have one origin, one ANT be entirely free from catarrh. nature --catarrh. They all have one cure Peruna. Catarrh ia well-nig- h universal; almost Pc-ni-- 2 40 . . . WASHINGTON AVt. OGDEN. Underwear UTAH. Sale . . . Beginning Saturday. March 12. we will place on sale 250 suits of underwear. This underwear is what we i all second. aa it is the goods on which our nw hands are taught to knit. For this reason we are cloning them nut at what the labor lost ua to have them made. The quality Ih of the highest, hut the finish la not up to our standard. We have them in Saxony. Worsted. Wool. tottorf and Mercerized. Come early and get your pick. Be sure you come to the right pin e, as there are two factories In town. Our fartory Is between 22nd end 23rd streets first door north of Consolidated W agon and Machine company. THE OGDEN KNITTING 2274 Wash. Avc. Ogden. 3JCSD 06DC WORKS QG222EZ DCS9Q For.Courieous Treatment Stop at The Dew-Dro- p CLEARY (SL 8 Iran ASK YOUR FRIENDS AS TO WHERE THEY HAVE BEEN WELL 0B3C22S2D Your Peruna having been recommended to me as a remedy for catarrhal diseases, and having been greatly benefited by its use, I cheerfully testify to Its efUcacy, and give It a most emphatic endorsement for accomplishing alt that Is claimed for the preparation. "Amos fi Lewis. A Commodore In Our Navy Endorses A Host of Witnesses Pe-ru-- C- that Rests on the Unsolicited Testimony of Thousand. This ia an age when theories have little Commodore Nicholson, 1837 R street, or no weight on tho average mind, hoi N. W, Washington, D. C writes: The Your Peruna has been and ia now actual demonstration Is demanded. time have neither used by so many of thy friends and busy people of and tnrn nur inclination to acquaintances as a cure for catarrh with distrust from speculate, that docs everything that I am convinced of Its curative not plainly bear the stamp of fact. qualities and I unhesitatingly recomsnrb uni mend It to all persona suffering from The reason Peruna has gained the confidence of the people of bold veraal NicholCommodore that complaint. as Kcatarrn cure ta because all statements son. Hare accompanied toy fact. When men of Tha day was promi- concerning book A specimens selected containing nence hesitated to give their testimoni- at random from adond of witnesses wno als to proprietary medicines for pub- have been cured of chronic catatrh by of lication. This remains true Peruna sent free the Peruna Medicine atarrh Cure y to-da- y KINNEY. Props. TREATED. Amoa E. Lewis, Private Secretary to Senator Mallory, of Florida, in a letter from Washington, P. C., says : 9 most proprietary medicines. Bft Peruna has become so Justly fatuous, its merits are known to so many people of high and low standing that no one hesitate to see hi name in print recommending Peruna. Over fifty members of Congress have written their endorsement of the world-famo- catarrh reauay, IVraum. hy Co. Columbus. Ohio. If yon do not dorive prompt and satis factory result from the use of Perrins, write at once to Dr. Hartman, piviUr full statement of yonr ease and he will be pleased to give you his Valuable sd . vice gratia. Address Dr. Hartman. President The llartman Sanitarium. CUlnmbnG |