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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1922)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE-ROTOGRAVURE SECTION To guard your complexion learn these simple facts Just as an artist can work too hard on a picture and spoil it, so a woman can work too hard on her complexion and injure it. How many skin troubles come from too much massage, over-manipulation, improper cleansing methods, or the use of unsuitable soap, only physicians know. Here arc a few simple facts you should know about your complexion: The skin of your face is full of tiny pom which throw off moisture and impurities. Your face has also a multitude of what scientists call sebaceous glands which secrete natural fats and oils. Without these the skin would he drawn and rough. It is easy to understand, then, that if by mistreat ment, or by the use of unsuitable soap, you fill up the pores or dry up the glands, these little organs will cease to wort properly and trouble will result. In order to remove dirt from pores and the skin surface, soap is necessary, for the dirt that accumulates there combines with the oil and cannot be completely removed by any other method than soap-and-water washing. Wash sensibly with pure, mild soap and health ful, refreshing cleanliness will result. IVORY SOAP 99o PURE IT FLOATS Ivory Soap cleanses thoroughly without needing to be rubbed in, yet it also cleanses gently with out robbing the skin of its natural oil. Daily washing with Ivory Soap and warm water, followed by a dash of cold water, is the very best cleansing treatment for your skin. Ivory Soap is both thorough and safe because it is a pure soap, made of the very finest in gredients blended into a bland, neutral, mild soap of creamy whiteness just such a soap as the best medical authorities recommend. Ivory's difference from all other soaps is quickly re vealed after a few days of its use. PROCTER & GAMBLE ffSrfUEB v y i J of on Chapter CLXXVII of the Professor's heavy tome on "The Development of Civilization in America" be gins thus: "On a December morning in 1842 in the City of Cincinnati, the first running-water bathtub in America was used for the first time. On a day in August, 1879, in the same Gty, the first cake of Ivory Soap was made it was pure, and it floated in the bath. ' i "These two events, combining to make daily bathing convenient, safe and pleasant, helped ma terially to raise the standard of living and health, and must therefore be given great credit for the amazing strides taken by America in the last half century ." Sob. Sob. Sob. "Why, Mrs. Folderol, what is the matter?" "Oh, I wish I hadn't listened to that Mrs. ProwL Oh, wish I hadn't used that beauty soap. Oh, I wish I hadn't massaged my face with it." Sob. Sob. Sob. "Oh, I wish face didn't sting so! Oh, i wish I wish I could go the dance tonight. Oh, I wonder what Jack (husband, course) will say when he finds I'm not going because my face is red!" Next time, Mrs. Folderol next time just a gentle, natural washing with I-v-o-r-y Soap. f V. JL V- J X l ' V '1 A. ----- w A m. ., , . .,. . -x rvv x 7 M TV ; x V I "Hurrah for Mother!" What might look like an undignified demonstration by the Jollyco family it really a celebration of Mrs. Jollyco's election to the School Board, as announced by the evening paper Mrs. J, went into the contest on health platform and promised that if elected she would do everything in her power to provide larger and better washrooms, more shower baths, and plenty of pure soap for the school children. The paper i headline is, "Mn. Jollyus Floats In Winner on Cake of Ivory Swap." A Vide J Sup uhiih mats tht imjH rUnt safety tot tVti )it ttuti ih.i tini due Utum to tuf hm m ) hum, a imuullf itunr up m Jnt mutd It ihit w HIt uk ' A ( ti.. K it .i m j Krf ,ta Itot It It a i HI,', ht t 4 lM I Lkrt it tuiij i lu Vwp ill Hi iim. Of , ii (.!! Hum (Kit imp i4 t,v Nikc, yiir itti 1.1, jrtiilif, lntf hit j ' i , v i I it. i lt.it j it hju. I nl Itiilliimt t'l ixiixi tm,i It.'t I ' k ' H "t t itti m'fi ' ) l4 . it lilt tKt i I ftlO'tillt ! u . ii M.i .'.S. " i.' IlltH I, 4 fll, I M .