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Show WOMAN'S WORLD. A REGIMEN FOR ROSELEAF TO OBSERVE OB-SERVE DURING THE WINTER. Woman as a Peacemaker College Girls and Marriage A Woman's Building;. Women In Iceland Belts and Collars. Taxation Without Representation. This is the season when the complexion complex-ion specialist smiles happily in anticipation anticipa-tion of a golden harvest later on. This is the season when breakfast griddle cakes and dainty bits of sausage begin to appeal more to Miss Roseleaf than grapes and oatmeal, and hot rolls and smoking muffins sednce her heart from graham bread. This is the season when she does not like to venture forth into the wind, but sits near the register instead in-stead and lets the coa! gas begin its I deadly work on her skin. This is the season when she stays up late o' nights and lies abed late o' mornings, when her cold sponge does not seem inviting, and when she opens her bedroom window win-dow just a crack before she goes to sleep. All of which means that Miss Roseleaf will be Mis3 Sere-and-yellow-leaf if she continuee in her reckless course. In the first place, she must sleep with the fresh air pouring into her room as much as possible. Extra covering on the bed and a screen at its foot to prevent pre-vent a draft will render ithe course a perfectly per-fectly Bafe one. Oxygsn is even more potent than cold cream 'to bring the lily and the rose to their proper places. Then she must not abandon that cold sponge each morning. It is something with which no young woman can toy. She cannot stop taking it jfor a week and then resume, unless sha wants to leave the world gracefully in an attack of pneumonia. But by taiting it religiously every morning and nibbing down after it she can send the blood dancing through her veins, snap her fingers at the cold and make her skin hard, firm, and healthy. Occasionally Koselefjt.r-- Jhotbrp- K:rrt)74 uf " federally fed-erally she had better cfcto grains and fruit. On the days wien the fieshpots of Egypt tempt her and she falls a vic tim to her fondness for frid things, she should indulge in a double amount of outdoor exercise. I Every day, rain, slow, dust, hail or sunshine, Roseleaf nnrtit go forth and cultivate her complti n in the open. She need not also culr ulte chapped lips and cheeks, though, j -,i may wear a thin, spotless veil. At night the oatmea -'mg should come"0 into play. Roseleaf' Ij'ace should be washed thoroughly irt sibt water with soap or oatmeal. Tl'j (i it should be rinsed in hot water in -tich benzoin has been dropped. Then she should dry her face and throat gently, dip her fingers into cold cream and begin a gentle massage. mas-sage. Her forehead should be firmly rubbed with the tips of her fingers. The place where the little frown leaves its mark should be stroked up and down. The place where laughter leaves it3 mark in wrinkles about the mouth should be rubbed up and down with the thumb. The lines beneath the eyes and the crowsfeet Bhould be stroked from the nose outward very gently and very firmly. Then her chin and throat should be massaged back and forth, up and down, until she knows that not a telltale tell-tale crease can remain. After which Roseleaf may say her prayers and go to sleep happy in the consciousness that she has done what shecouldfor her complexion. com-plexion. New York World. The cortege bearing the remains of Mrs. Anna K. SmoOt frbnr the residence resi-dence of M. C. Newell of the Fifth ward, where the good lady died, to the stake tabernacle, will lisave the residence resi-dence tomorrow at 12:30. Funeral services will begin at 1 o'clock. Friends are invited. ' |