ef This is a candid word on Face land that i have so for come upon.” Powders. There are all sorts in the shops. To start with, there is the fact that all are sold indiscriminately for all sorts of skins, which is absurd” Some skins are dry, and some are moist and oily. Impossible to have a powder to suit both.. Mile. Helen;’ Rubinstein, the famous Viennese Complexion Specin teste, has introduced two perfect face powders. NOVENA POUE/RE is ;; “fatty” powder, for dry and normal, skins. This has another curious quality r it is the only powder on earth which is also a slcinfood. Then there is the VALAZE COMPLEXION POWDER, for gre;u-y skins. To dust a fat powder over a greasy skin would be as though on--should attempt to quench a fire with petroleum : while to put . absorbent powder on a dry skin would he the merest waste or tinw. It would not adhere, and if it did, it would aggravate the dryness. This is one of £hose matters in regard to which women have ik--u long astray. Powder, yes —but only the powder .that, suits Both those mentioned above are sold in boxes. 2s od. Mile. Rubinstein’s other specialities are : H Af. . DESTROYER, which instantly removes superfluous hairs from i'< face neck and arms, without detriment to the skin, <«?. NOVENA SUNPROOF AND WINDPROOF CREME, safeguard the complexion from the ill-effects of the sun as well as of cold an-; biting winds. In jars, 2s and 8s 6d. Of leading chemists, or direct, post free, from W'.ie. Helen;’ Rn'.iustein, 28 Brandon Street, Wellington.
The first contingent of the season’s mutton-birds will (writes the Otago Daily “Times’ ” correspondent) leave the Bluff on or about the 20th inst. for Long Island, South-west Cape. They will be conveyed, t-o the number of twenty, in the fishing craft Britannia, the arrangement being that tile craft makes at least- one interim visit during their stay on the Island. Ituapu'kc islanders, who are versed in such matters. state that the birds in their flight afford sure indications of a plentiful season, and that the few cauglit by them prove that the season is well advanced towards snaring time. Speaking, at Christchurch, on Friday evening, on the need for a Labor party in Parliament. Mr. T. E. Taylor said that the average man was apathetic as to what the Government was doing until he got- out of work. Of late years considerable dissatisfaction had arisen with existing conditions. The speaker strongly criticised the Land Bill, stating that principle had been sacrificed to party, and that the followers of the. Government were bound to uphold the Government, which had such a speckled fiock that it could not toll the Sheep from the goats. A Labor Party was needed in Parliament, the members of which would be pledged up to the hilt not to sell the freehold of another inch of Crown lands, and would also be united in insisting upon the municipalisation of necessities of life. Mr. Taylor urged that the land platform drawn up at the conference of members of Parliament the previous day could only be fully endorsed by a Labor party.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19100318.2.6.4
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Gisborne Times, Volume XXVIII, Issue 2763, 18 March 1910, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
528Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Gisborne Times, Volume XXVIII, Issue 2763, 18 March 1910, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
The Gisborne Herald Company is the copyright owner for the Gisborne Times. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of the Gisborne Herald Company. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.
Log in