All Doors Open to Jell-o Recipe Booklet + attached sheet for Jello Ice Cream Powder

Published in 1917

18 pages

Measures 4-3/8" W x 6 1/8" H

There are three women mentioned in this booklet. The first woman is Ethel Barrymore. She is an actress, housewife and mother. The second woman is Merion Harland. For more than fifty years, she has been the foremost worker and writer in behalf of common-sense housekeeping methods. The third woman is Rose O'Neill - The Kewpie Mother. The fourth woman is Madame Schumann Heink - A great singer. Many great recipes. 

History - "Kewpie is a brand of dolls and figurines that were initially conceived as comic strip characters by artist and writer Rose O'Neill. The illustrated cartoons, appearing as baby cupid characters, began to gain popularity after the publication of O'Neill's comic strips in 1909, and O'Neill began to illustrate and sell paper doll versions of the Kewpies. The characters were first produced as bisque dolls in Waltershausen, Germany beginning in 1912, and became extremely popular in the early twentieth century."

"Rose Cecil O'Neill (June 25, 1874 – April 6, 1944) was an American illustrator, artist, and writer who created the popular comic characters, Kewpies. After the growing popularity of O'Neill's Kewpie cartoons upon their publication in 1909, the characters were made into bisque dolls in 1912 by a German toy company, and later in composition material and celluloid. They were wildly popular in the early twentieth century, and are considered to be one of the first mass-marketed toys in America."