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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1905)
Qlewojitd&riful Mlomde 1m mffttii-m nf- Y ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo kflKItK are no beauties so careful of themselves TT I nil so niiu-h Riven to a study of fv-nnty as th I I beauties of Di-nmark. Queen Alexandra once M I said her mother, old Queen Ioiitse, taught her daughters th.it to be beautiful was the chief aim of woman. "I made a study of mv look from early girlhood." said she. "And It mas a study which paid." The love-licst worn in of Denmark is thp beautiful Mllp. Hole. She has a history, like nil northern beauties, and miny a dm I has been fought over her Hut the pa hp Is clear. "She Is as K'"'d as she Is beautiful." as they say. And thil Is saying a great deal, for she Is wonderfully lieautiful. The beauties of thp north, of Denmark. Norway and Sv den, run to the blond type. Thi re Is a brunette strain, 'nit it Is seldom seen. The blond type l the rule. A conspicuous brunette is iV'c n AN x.mdra. a native of li'iimark. and there have ten other Isviuties Just as dark. Hut the beauties of t 'open ha yen an n a rule light. Hip fair i st blondes. They combine the fairnss of the far north with tl hie of the French It Is wond-rfui to observe how Kr.a'b Ke y resemble the French, though they live in chilly I e.rrn.i rk Enhance Their Blond Beauty. The Danish woman Is exquisitely neat. Iler blond beauty Is so fair, so wonderfully kept, so rigorously cared fir In every way. that she rnlly looks lighter and fairer than rtiie 1. Mile. Hole, the prize iM.iuty of Denmark, Is a fair blond.-. Iler hair Is silver. In lo r plcturi she looks much darker, for the. rii.son that it Is necessary to throw a snadow upon her hair In order to photograph it at all. It Is so light that It would not catch the rays of the camera. Hut In real life It A" S . .',3r. A: 16 8 ' ' a t ' . v - i i ii w : t All t ill ' . O. "1 ' .-.-pa r-' 'H'a-.- 7 If f actually gleams with a silvery glow, a silver in which there Hre golden threads. Hor eye aro a drop, rich turquoise, almost liKht blue. The only thing that Haven them from being washed out Is a PPPPPPPPPPPikM,M V W N W W W W 1 9 pair of deep eyebrows, which arch lie iiitifully forohead. The preservation of these eyebrows which the beauty of Copenhagen studies well. Then the skin of Mile. Bole Is so fair that it is almost across the Is a thing dewd white; and H Is omly in moments of excitement that she has ajiy color at all. Then there Is a faint pink flutrti on cheek and brow. It ta a most charming flush. When she Is conscious of looking pale this fair beauty TW usk. ani veqebrian dict produce a clear tott complete idut wears black, for It sets off the whiteness of her skin won derfully well; and tfhe has a way of gowning herself In black and white that Is Immensely becoming. Her ornaments are pearls, and. like Queon Alexandra. he has a fancy for a gown of black velvet, while her neck Is wound with strings and strings of pearls. The beauty of Copenhagen preserves her skin by a rlpld application of sheep's fat. This Is th same unguent which here we cull mutton tallow. She makes It for herself and the clearest and whitest pieces of mutton fat are brought to h.r. She tries out the oil, scents It with a few drops of rose attar, brought from Japan, and pours the whole Into a OOOOOOCOOOChDOOOOOOOCOCXJOOOOOOOOOOOD little gland Jar which she kc ps alwa upon her dresser. Kaon day the beamy of the r.orth g.s for a constitutional. Hut before sh goes she plentifully anoints her face with this mutton tallow. She does not spread It on In a revolting mar ner. but takes a little In her taper finger tips and rubs I into her skin. She keeps rubbing It In until It Is all absorbed. At this time she uses no face powder, but. with her face filled with this cream, she goes out Into the wind. J J Spend Much Time in Open Air. Pivery mornln the pretty girls of IVnmark go out f r a walk. They make a visit to the nearest town; or. if th live in the city, they visit the shops and do their own buying They are taught that It Is good to be Industrious, and thev do not depend upon horses to carry them about. They walk a great deal aavd they consider the exercise the best thing that could befall them. All the Danish beauties get out and skate and enjoy th air. Thoy think nothing at all of being out In the open for hours and hours at a time. It is their exigence. It Is a pevere case of illness which kei ps tin in in the house at all. Mile. Hole, the prtxe beauty of Denmark, has a eertnin routine which she follows. It Is one well calculated to pre serve her beauty nod It Is likely that she will be a pret'y woman for many years if she continues It. " J Mile. Bole's Simple Diet. Bolng'a society woman, she can afford to take her ease. She gets up at 8 o'clock, which In an Industrious land Is con sidered late Imbed. Her orenkfast Is quite different from th" Uusslin breakfast, nor does she take the cold plunges of the Russians. She eats fruit In moderation, but partakes freely of the cereals. She drinks coffee and eats a great deal of lamb chops anri dishes made out of mutton. Indeed. 1-in mutton is one of her best foods. And this, with rice and po tatoes, and milk and crrara. Jus about constitutes her whole diet, with fish not forgetting flsh. Haw meat Is never oaten by the iHwiutiful women of Den mark. Their great culinary fault is In cooking foods too done and. If they make a mistake a all. It Is on the nid' of overcooking. Yet such a mistake Is pardonable. In all their cookery they cook and reoook. They bak" their bread. This they cut in tillces) and toast. They boil their potatoes; then they chip them and stow them In cri-oin. They cook their vegetabl s. reheating them in milk and butter. They have a way of bolHng a leg of lamb until it is tendiT, afti-r which they cut It from the bone and mine it and serve It In a lamb pie. which has a national reputati ei. They cook their foods twice and they become the better for the oooklng. Good Taste in Making Up. Th" beauties of Copenhagen have bee-.i criticised f r mak ing up. They have the. art of doing th eyebrows beautifully and know how to dye them to Just the right shade. They also have tho trick of tinting the choeks delicately, and they know how to apply powder. Dut they do It in perfect good taste. To keep themselves handsome, and to keep the hair from growing dark, is one of their main studies. A Parisian hair dresser who spent a season In Copenhagen declared the blond beauties of the north used bicarbonate of soda upon thp locks and that they shampooed thi m often. They also have a fad for keeping every particle of natural oils out of the hair, making It grow fluflier and lighter In consequence. A Danish woman, with a skin like a rose leaf, will return from her skating of an afternoon, prepare her facial bath of oatmeal and hot water, and wash her skin thoroughly with It. She will go over and ovor her face as carefully as though she were washing lace, and, when she has finished, there will not be one flaw In hor complexion. Sometimes she washes In bran Instead of oatmeal. They eat little candy In Copenhagen, and It 1s only re cently vhey have learned there are good, wholesome sweets. They eat honey and have good, clear sugar. And gradually they are getting Into pastry. Hut will they have as good a complexion when the pastry cook has invaded Copenhagen? That Is a question. From Near amid Fair HOL CANDLES. HARPOON GUN. SNOW. WOODEN GOGGLES. 'STRAIGH7 CP." in 4 ; .-tin r ; T v ' J ' i: A - 1 This gun has almost entirely superseded the hand method of throwing ihe hurpoon in pursuit of the mammals of the ocean. ESKIMO BORN IN CHICAGO. Kvery Catholic church In France has-usually Just within Its aoorwav-a candle Feller, who sells candles for worshipers to place upon the altara. IX SI. PETERSBURG. A OP SO HARD. A D C Can you draw this pentagon and ii diag onals without taking up your pencil and with out retracing a ing:e line? BIRD'S WING. The Tartar peddlers of St. Petersburg are walking advertlm-nicntii of their trade, for they carry their goods freely displayed upon their arms. HE AH PIRST. r i The sailors of the Discovery on their ant arctic expedition made wooden spectacles like this to shield their eyes from the blind ing glare of the sun on the snow. SEX BY WEIGHT. Snov drifted on a tree stump In Colorado marie this resemblance to a mushroom. CHINESE SPECTACLES. JoJW'' ii ,1 .11 II PI RSJ STEPS. CO -vl J L , i f.-ft 111 : ' .' .', jf.. ,.! a'" .-. .,.;,, In Italian s-ilk r.iotoiles they separate the cocoons containing males from those contain- The Osage b iby is kept on this board from ing females by means of a de licate pair of birth until (l months old. His hands and fei t scales. The females are heavier than the are wrapped tightly. This in baby " straight males. up." VISA VAN WE A VER. Spectacles were Hist used by the Chinese but they still were under goggles. This Is the way a dinner party looks photo- The picture to the right show s the wir " i f graphd from above. a bird and the one to tin left the urm of u nun. Nancy Columbia, a pretty Eskimo girl, who was born In Chicago In 1803. playinj with her 3 ytar old brother. How the baby should be beld when learn Ing to walk. The woman of northern Spain spends her sunny days ca the balcony weaving silk.