BATH OF MILK.
WHAT HAPPENED AFTERWARDS [“Sydney Sun" Cables.] (Received this day at 9.30 a.m.) LONDON, April 2A.
Tho “Weekly Dispatch’s” Paris correspondent stated that Prefecture ol Police is investigating fashion’s latest craze, a famous beauty specialist, whose prescriptions and recipes are borrowed from the records of ancient Rome, and recommended equably to a famous millionaire dancer to take milk baths, resulting in a farmer daily delivering two hundred quarts at the dancer’s house, in Etoile quarter, where the milk was heated by electricity and emptied into a hath, the tanner later returning and collecting the cans. Society was merely tickled by the dancers’ expensive habits until a dismissed valet revealed that the cans were not empty when they were recollected. The police are now inquiring whether the milk was resold tor human consumption to unsuspecting residents of tbo fashionable, avenue near the dancer’s house, or merely used to feed pigs and calves.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19260426.2.26
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Hokitika Guardian, 26 April 1926, Page 3
Word count
Tapeke kupu
153BATH OF MILK. Hokitika Guardian, 26 April 1926, Page 3
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
The Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd is the copyright owner for the Hokitika Guardian. 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 Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.