LATEST FOR MEN
| FA,OE-LIFTTNG POPULAR. . iLOX'DON, September 26. Jt is not that they are vain—they particularly insist on that—but men am finding that face-lifting, as practised by many society women, is an excel lent idea for them also; of course, purely as a business asset. To satisfy the demand, plastic surgeons have uegun to specialise in masculine facelifting. One patient explained to the “NewsChroniclo” that lie, was not specially Vain, but liis nose gave him a ridicuibuisi a/ppepra.neo. A specialist matte a small incision under the nostril and filled the depression with' a special compound. He thus made the nose perfectly straight. . The operation took half an hour, and no trace of a scar remained. A Glasgow merchant with heavy “'bags” under his eye and overhanging eyelids had 'these defects painlessly removed. Another had his “donkey’s ears” neatly flattened against hjs head. The lowest fie for facial alterations is twenty guineas*.
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Hokitika Guardian, 5 October 1932, Page 2
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151LATEST FOR MEN Hokitika Guardian, 5 October 1932, Page 2
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