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BEAUTY CULTURE

HAIR TURNS BLUE

Women arc smiling at an English Judge's dismissal of the subject of beauty culture as *'clap-trap." Ho made this remark' (states the "Daily Mail") when giving judgment in a case at Westminster County Court,, m which he awarded £27 damages to a woman who sued' a hairdresser because her hair had turned blue- under treatment. Miss Doris Zinkeisen, who "grooms" the women stars for a big British film company, laughed when she was asked if sho thought hair culture was "clap-trap." "If a woman finds that her appearanco needs just a little fillip," she said, "she luis her hair tinted or-dyed, and in nine cases out of ten sho is. all, the better for it." Lady Bridget PouTctt, always one of the loveliest and smartest girls at any fashionable gathering, said: "I do not like dyed hair myself, nor would I dye my own, but I am all for the woman wiio seeks to perfect what looks she has already, even if it means changing the colour of her hair. Hair is still woman's crowning glory, even though it be dyed." Dr. Heywood, the Bishop of Hull, speaking at Scarborough, said if women painted their faces to attract men they succeeded in doing exactly tho opposite. They made themselves repulsive, and men cordially detested it.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19330529.2.139.6

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 124, 29 May 1933, Page 11

Word Count
220

BEAUTY CULTURE Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 124, 29 May 1933, Page 11

BEAUTY CULTURE Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 124, 29 May 1933, Page 11