Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 January 1911 — She Wasn’t Taking Chances. [ARTICLE]

She Wasn’t Taking Chances.

I know one 6f these commercial' beauty models whose likeness is seen, almost everywhere—in cars, in railroad stations, in drug stores, on fences through the country roads, in magazines and newspapers. Nature had! endowed her with a wonderful head of beautiful golden-brown hair, naturally wavy, thick and long. Before slut became a model and white employed as clerk in a wholesale drug business, a customer noticed her hair. She wore it simply. In two braids circling her head. He asked her to pose for an, advertisement of a hair tonic which be had discovered. She posed in a dozen different ways, with her hair down. “But of course,” she told me. “in each pose the artist retouched my face slightly—changed my nose, my chin, my eyes, to make it appear to the public that a number of consumers of this ‘hair-grower’ had testified to Its merits; to prove to the public that ‘Fakertna did it.’ " “And did you like the tonic?” I asked. “Like it?" she sniffed.-“I never tried) it! I think too much of my halrH And then she added: “I never use any of the goods I demonstrate."— Success Magazine.