here are few subjects of greatâ€" importance toâ€"day in Canada "an the preservation of the counâ€" ry‘s forest wealth. Never, probabâ€" &y, has the question been broughtf mome to the people at large more emphatically than during the preâ€" sent season, marked as it unfortuâ€" nately has been by a series of most destructive forest fires which have wrought so many millions of dolâ€" lars worth of damage. How to pre-' vent such devastation in future,; how to preserve this great asset to. the country and improve it for fuâ€" ture generations are questions of camount inportance. It is timely, | @re, that the study of the seiâ€"| art of forestry should be d developed. I a school of forestry, id a year ago in unc Toronto under the f Dr. B E. Fernow,‘ sisted by a staff of nd one assistant. _ | s well equipped for : Camadian Universities now Trainâ€" 24 ing Forest Engineers. . If the chancellor were responsibla €o the reichstag the emperor would not be so much of a menace to the yeace of Germany and of Europe as he is now. He would not be so dlikely to blow up the powder magaâ€" zine. His indiscreet words would not have so much significance as ‘they do now. â€" Manifestly he has worn out the patience of many of 4his subjects. His latest mistake comes at a particularly bad moâ€" ment. The people are facing inâ€" «creased taxation and that irritates them. If the outcome shall be the curbing of the autocratic power of the empsror or if it shall teach him «discretion his extraordinary inter-l view will have been a blessing in «disguise. ' The German Emperor is being asked to hold his tongue or to get out. Not long ago such a request, even when more delicately made, would have been lese majesty of: the worst kind. One German ediâ€" tor calls on the emperor to abdiâ€" _ eate, other editors copy his article, ga.nd still other editors protest‘ _ against imperial absolutism, but as yet there have been no prosecu-‘ tions: ~Where there are so many| , offenders, probably all wil escape.[ E‘&s\interview given by the Emperor, o a retizred English diplomat conâ€"‘ tained matter which, though not so intended,. might have â€" offended France, Russia, Holiand, and Ja.-t an. It has greatly irritated (}er-‘ ans. It has caused the German! nservative party to express the reverential wish "‘that the emperâ€", â€" may display "greater reserve‘"‘ | h making statements which may bring the foreign politics of the country into a difficult situation.} Even these devotedly loyal subjects bhave come to the conclusion tbatl an irresponsible, indiscreet ruler is a danger to be guarded against. | This latest and most serious imâ€" perial indiscretion may result, as t ought to, in the establishment of the principle of a responsible minâ€" istry. The emperor is not responâ€" sible to the reichstag and nceither 4s the chancellor whom he appoints. German indignation is about as ‘rm against Chancellor von Bulow; against the emperor. The forâ€" mer has admitted that ho did not ‘read the emperor‘s interview when 1t was handed to him in manuscript. If a British prime minister were 4o have been guilty of such an overâ€" sight the House of . Commons would anake short work of him. The reichâ€" stag cannot turn the chancellor out ‘of office, though there is no doubt that it would like to do so so thai there might be room for a less negâ€"| ligent man. _ _._ _ ' TEACHING FORESTRY. C URRENT TOPICS. 3 a graduate of the y at Muenden and additional training ty of Koenigsberg, ich country he is a blve years (1886â€"18958) ition of chief of the stry in the United nt of Agriculture, become head of the try connected with ity. â€" Later, after ssed as consulting] he organized the nt of the Pennsylâ€" ige, leaving there take the organizâ€" ty of Forestry at B.YS.F.), obtainâ€" ars‘ course, and aduate degree of F.E.), to obtain of the forestryv of Toronto conâ€" Bachelor of Sciâ€" pracâ€" other universities and agricultural collezes. A third school is about to be esâ€" tablished in the Province of Queâ€" bee, and courses in forestry or preâ€" paratory thereto are offered in This fall the University of New Brunswick has inaugurated a four years‘ course in forestry, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Sceiâ€" ence in Forestry (B.S.F.). The department has at its head Prof. Rt. B. Miller, M.A., M.E., a grqâ€" duate of the Yale Forest School, one of the foremost schools of forâ€" estry in the United States. s | The fading flower of his glorious beautyâ€"Elements of social decay and disintegration were already evident on every hand. _ 2. XA mighty! and â€"strong one â€"= gReferring to the Assyrian power which was to be the instrument in Jehovah‘s hand for inflicting chasâ€" itis‘(-‘z'xpc‘:nt on his apostate people. tical experience and submit proved thesis to the faculty Will Jehovah of hosts become a crown of gloryâ€"A beautiful proâ€" mise in figurative language to the 5. In that dayâ€"The day of judgâ€" ment and desolation. 4. The firstâ€"ripse fig before the summerâ€"It is a familiar fact that in Palestine, as in other fig producâ€" ing countries, the main crop of figs is preceded by a few scattered first fruits. These "firstâ€"ripe figs‘"‘ are still esteemed a great delicacy. Hosea, Micah, Nahum, and Jereâ€" miah, as well as Isaigh, refer to this early fruit (compare Hos. 9. 10; Mic. 7. 1; Nah. 3. 19; Jer. 24. 3. Trodden under footâ€"By the inâ€" vading army of the enemy at the time of the fulfillment of Jehovah‘s judgment against the nation. With the handâ€"Or, "with vioâ€" lence." Drunkards of Ephraimâ€"The disâ€" solute aristocracy of the capital city. Crown of prideâ€"Samaria, the capital of the northern kingdom, crowned the summit of a low hill, the sides of which were terraced with vineyards and gardens and about which lay a fertile valley. Verse 1. Woeâ€"The Hebrew word thus translated is a simple interjecâ€" tion indicating distress. Lesson IX. World‘s Temperance Sunday. Golden Text, I. Cor. 9. 27. : It Is Hard to See Further Than Our Own f Dusty Corner in the Struggle of Life THE SUNBDAY SCKOOL In a few years our cities would crumble to dust, our gold and silâ€" ver would be valueless ; indeed, all that we have made, all that our hands have so painfully fashioned whoels were all to stop, if, in a moâ€" ment we must take stock, what would the universe have to show as the product of this great mill of humanity 1 8. 4 Man must be here in time for something other than building citâ€" ies, for something better than simâ€" ply making the life of those who may follow him more complex â€"and arduous. _ If suddenly the great We have learned how to work; we have learned how to make things kut have we learned why we live, aro we sure of securing the real product of life 1 § Even those who get the profits of the modern pace, seem to be none the happisr; they may sit in more luxurious offices, but they are even more completely ens‘aved than Have we simply acquired a habit of hustling, of hard work, which has so possessed us all that now, willing or unwilling, we must keep up with the rest, we must maintain the pace or fall beneath the feet of the onâ€"rusaing toilers!? Do we know just why we have to take life so seriously and find it so stern an affair t ‘"For the sufferings of this preâ€" sent time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed.‘‘â€"Romans, viii., 18. WHAT IS IT$ FRUITAGEK ? INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 29. THEIR OWN TOILERS an apâ€" 11. Nay, but by men of strange lips and with stammering tongueâ€" Or, ‘"for with stammering lips," ete. The quotation has ended and the prophet replies to the mocking interruption of his hearers by pointing out that his unwelcome and oftâ€"repeated .message will be followed by a severer word spaken by Jehovah hims=lf to this people in a still more uncouth language, namelyv, fhe harsh and harbarous accents of the Assvrian i1vaders, | 12. Thisâ€"Ths eaurea of artion adâ€" vacated previous‘y by the prophet, is not entirely certain. They are intended to imitate the mocking, stammering words of drunken men as these mock the wearisome repeâ€" tition â€"of the prophet‘s warning speech. The meaning of the whole retort is:â€"‘‘Who are we that we should be lectured by this man? Are we newly born infants? Is it recessary to repeat over and over again to us this message as one would teach a child ?‘ 10. Precept upon precept; line upon lineâ€"The Hebrew if this verse gives a series of repeated monoâ€" syllables, the exact sense of which _ 9. Whom will he teach knowledge 1 =â€"The prophet is here quoting the mocking retort of the nobles and priests whom he has thus sevely reâ€" buked, and who apparently interâ€" rupt him with their seoffing replies. The quotation continues through the next verse. 8. Full of vomit and filthinessâ€" Literally so, these words of the prophet reflecting vividly the awâ€" ful state of things existing in arisâ€" tocratic social circles of the capital city. We are reminded, as we read these words, of the similar state of affairs in Romse shortly before the downfall of the empire many cenâ€" turies later. ‘ Err in visionâ€"Deceive themselves with regard to supposed divine reâ€" velations which they claim to have received. Swallowed up of wineâ€"Perhaps better "confused with wine,‘"‘ or ‘wholly absorbed in their carousâ€" ings.‘‘ The meaning in the originâ€" al is not clear. Reel with strong drinkâ€"Judah, on the whole, still contrasted fayâ€" orably with Israel, but even here the besetting sin had_ for a long time been drunkenness. 7. And even theseâ€"The men at Jerusalem among whom the priest and the prophet are especially reâ€" ferred to because of their being the spiritual leaders of the people. It was they who opposed Isaiah in the name of Jehovah, and claimed to Eave the authority of divine reveâ€" lation back of them in this opposiâ€" tion and in the support of the poâ€" liticians. remnant or residue of the faithful whom Jehovah shall redeem and to whom he himself will become a source of beauty, strength and joy. The struggle goes on, but because he hasâ€"a capacity for the divine, because he has learned that at the heart of all beats a father‘s affecâ€" tion, man has faith to live for the goal that such 1m‘¥s before him. The glory of the higher life is thav it gives glimpses of the life yet to be and sets the goal ever clearer before the eyes so that men press on for the fuller life set before them. ; We cannot think that the reptiles look forward to the coming man. It takes faith for man to look forâ€" ward to the coming being. Yet he catches glimpses of a glory yet to be, He feels the living is not vain, for somehow there is more than heartless, flawless nature at work here. Through toil and trouble, happiâ€" ness and love, weariness and woe, in the mills of earth, the tools of eternity are working. It is their noise we hear in the city‘s dull roar; their keen edge we feel when we smart with some strange pain. Here is making that which is finer than anything that can be cut in marble, the glory of character. If all our work is but making taols what‘ is to be made with the tools? What is the product of eterâ€" nity ? The measure of any age will be the extent to which it produces and perfects this product. ‘ The rightness of every social form and order may be measured by this ; this is the final test of every life. There is the same story in the travellings of modera business, in the sweat and agony of modern livâ€" ing, as we read. looking â€" back through the times before onr hands began to write history. In sandâ€" stone and in granite is the story cut, in the marks of reptile and quadruped ; MANKIND IN THE MAKING. Geology has written the first chapâ€" ter. Civilization writes the second in that story of humanity coming into ever larger living. 7 through all the centuries, is valug able only ‘&s furnishing tools for further work. The end cannot be in the things that we can see, for none of them has any intrinsic worth apart from the service they can render. HENRY F. COPE. ] In cattle the dissase is called the > |_slows"‘ or the "trembles," the| _ He had gone to ask hor fa‘gher {latter name being given because of for her hand in marriage. ‘‘Well, io peculiar muscular tremor which| sir, what is it?" snapped out the |is a conspicuous symptom. The J old man. "Remember, I am a man |animal agpears listless and refuses cï¬ few words." ‘‘I don‘t care if lt.\; graze, but drinks eagerly if | you are a man of only one word, water is offered, and keeps by it if it‘s the right one,""‘ replied the self away from the rest of the herd. | suitor.. He got the girl. : This is a disease affecting koth dairy cattle and man. It formerly prevailed extensively in some parts cf what was then called the West, â€"Ohio, Indiana and Illinois,â€"but more particularly in the northern part of Ohioâ€"the Western Reserve. The disease disappeared with the growth of the country, and in later years doubt arose whether there ever was such a malady. Recently, however, an affection, presenting the very symptoms described by the older medical writers as those of mullkâ€"sickness, has appeared in New Mexico. Toys for Convalescents. â€" Moâ€" thers are often at a loss for playâ€" things for children convalescent from a contagious disease, as they must be burned later on. Cheap play materials, such as wooden beads to be strung on shoestring, colored pegs to be fitted in peg boards, paper chains, etc., may be obtained at the kindergarten supâ€" ply houses. For the Convalescent.â€"Whon reâ€" covering from sickness and about ready to sit up practice sitting straight up in bed if only for a moâ€" ment at a time aud then lean back on the pillows. Do this every fifâ€" teen minutes if possible and you will find when able to get out of bed that the giddiness or uncomâ€" fortable feeling in the head has enâ€" tirely disappeared. ) A splinter can be extracted withâ€" out any pain in this manner : Nearâ€" ly fill a wideâ€"mouthed bottle with hot water; place the injured part over the mouth, and press tightly. The suction will draw the flesh down, and in a minute or two the splinter will come out. Fall backward â€" Retreat from their haughty position and be cast down. Broken, and snared, and takenâ€" Defeat and capture and utter deâ€" solation will be the inevitable outâ€" come of the conflict which their apostasy from Jehovah will in the end bring upon them. paqqpARLAenqnqpcoqqrhopnkogqadd 13. Thereforeâ€"Because the warnâ€" ing of the prophet has been disreâ€" garded the punishment and destrucâ€" tion foretold will surely come upon the city=â€" _ e "a is the rest, the only means of avertâ€" ing she impending_ disasters; and this alone is the one possible means of bringing refreshing to the exâ€" bhausted nation and city. If the writer eats very rich food and U@rinlks alcoholic liquors, she must gradâ€" ually reduce her dict, and her color will fade as the stimulants no longer euter !her system. If sho laces too tightly or Jwearfl very tight collars, she must to be.. But if you are not willing to pive a simpler, saner life, and to persist for weeks or even months in the use bf remedies suggestel, you cannot exâ€" pect improvement. Please bear in mind that this departâ€" ent, as I said before, does not preach {r)lxe working of beauty miracleg, It Flmply tries to show you that by means of commonâ€"sense, a healthful life and erslstent use of sane, simple remedies, fou can improve your appeararca, minriâ€" Ize your physlcal defects and be as ttractive as Dame Nature intended you Twenty years of right living will roâ€" ult in a new and fine race of children, ut untll thet time comes, most of us i!1 be secking means of softoning E’hysica.l defects which cannot be enâ€" }irely eradicated. Honce soms of the tequeats which reach me by mail would e farcical if they were not so pathetic. Women who have defied nature now Wwant remedies with which to outwit er. Women with physical dofects hich would defy the surgeon‘s knife ant to know how to dose themselves ind outdo doctors and surgeons in wentyâ€"four hours. COMMONâ€"SENSF VFERSUS BFAUTY MIRACLES HIY department does not offer a short cut to physical beauty nor is the writer‘a worker of mirâ€" cles. In fact, the days of physical erfaction and miracles alike are past. he present generation is trying to ndo the evils of modern living conâ€" tracted by n.any preceding generations. We have passed through an age of dosing and false living which has reâ€" duced seadly the standard of physical being. We are just gotting back to the reallzation that plenty of fresh air, not steam heat,â€"plenty of outdoor life, not _ hothouse existence,â€"plenty of simple food not French catering, are needed to develop physfcal teauty. MILKâ€"SICKNESS. â€" HEALTH HINTS. the’ He had sone to ask h>r father e of for her hand in marriage. _‘ ‘Well, hich| sir, what is it?"‘ snapped out the The J old man. "Remember, I am a man ‘You say the officer arrested you while you were quictly minding your own business (" ‘‘Yes, your honor. He caught me suddenly by the coat collar and threaterned to strike me with his staff unless I accompanied him to the stationâ€" house." ‘"You were quictly attendâ€" ing to your own business, making ne noise or disturbance of any kind ?""_ ‘None whatever, sir.‘""‘ "It seems very strange.. What is your business?‘ â€"""I‘m a burglar." You‘ll never catch on if you don‘t try; and aiter catching on, don‘t ke afraid to let go if necessary. A doctor practises on his own patients, but an amateur musician practises on the patience of others. Within twelve miles of St. Paul‘s Cathedral, London, there were 391 railwayâ€"stations. There is no _ special treatment, and cases have to be managed by meting the symptoms as they arise, and trying to maintain the strength of the patient and to increase the natural powers of resistance. â€" Youth‘s Companion. The dissase is more fatal in catâ€" tle than in man, yet in man it is very serious, and death is not unâ€" common. The cause of the trouâ€" ble in cattle is unknown, although, as before mentioned, it is believed to be an infectious disease, someâ€" what similar to tentanus. In man the affection is believed to arise from drinking the milk or eating the insufficiently cooked flesh ' st diseased animals. The symptoms i1ia the human being are loss of apâ€" petite, nausea and yvomiting, intolâ€" erable thirsft, extreme. muscular weakness, and somet‘imes trembâ€" ling, obstinate constipation, a peâ€" culiar sweetish odor of the breath, and dull pain in the abdomen. There is little or no fever, and ofâ€" ten the temperature is below norâ€" mal, the body, and especially the. extremities, feeling cold to the. touch. | The malady prevails especially in marshy districts and along the borâ€" ders of rivers with low banks. Postâ€" mortem. examination_ of animals dead of the "trembles‘‘ shows a condition ¢cf the liver, kidneys, heart and muscles similar to that caused by certain poisons, namely, fatty degeneration and peculiar celâ€" lular changes. It is believed to be due to the action of a special bacilâ€" lus, that is, to be a specific infecâ€" tious disease. Soon the trembling comes on, the };‘;:‘: into animal is no longer able to stand, lsotties of its breathing becomes slower and land serve slower, its eyes are dull and glazed;â€"{more sugs its legs cord, and death follows in | Giaret P two or three days. Constipation is lmrte lem. usually marked throughout th<==>â€"}o this or tire course of the discase. s‘ iL hen‘ oae _ Try first to trace your wrinkles to some ache or pain whigch can be reâ€" Maved. If this doos not exiet and It !s & question of years, then perhaps you are using the wrong face lotion. The woman with a dry skin should never use a lotion containing an astringent like borax of banzoin. Her skin reâ€" quires a cream that will soften, not draw It. If the wrinkles are very proâ€" nounced, the fiesh can be fed with the following cream, but this must not lo used when there is a tendency to a growth of halr or down on the face, as lanolin will encourage this growth: . TannIn. soriecvrns cesicrar .. 1=2" gramme Lenoline...............«...$0 grammes Oll of sweet almonds..,...20 grammes Melt the lanoline and oil in a double boller with as little heat as possible. Remove from the fire and beat in the tannin as the mixture cools. Speaking of superfluous hailr, the woman who has a soft down on face or arms should not attempt any violent means of removing this. The Xâ€"ray is used to remove the halr, but it often leaves the skin as dry as parchment. First learn what causes your wrinkles. It may prot always be time. You may have some other allment whish is digging wrinkles into a skim which ghould ba flawless. Porhaps your feet ache. That will cause a drawn look which will end in wrinkles around your mouth. Perhaps your eyesight is fanâ€" ing. _ Squinting will cause wrinkies around the eyes and crow‘s fook, Have your eyes examined and rolleve the strain. The woman who has been years acâ€" quiring wrinkles expocts that a "real beauty doctor" can @1 them aut in a fexw wesks, provided the prtiont has the price of the treatment. This i8 a cure which money cannot buy. It Hes in the patience and disposition of the patient. Excossive ;ers@}rauon is Mer physical defect of which maky women complain. This often comes from merâ€" vousness, and can be reached only by trosating the nerves, by gaining solfâ€" sontrol, by cultivsting leng elcoping hours and by avoilding that sonse of driving one‘s self every moment of the day. To secure temporary rellief and avo‘d unploasant edors, bathe the affecâ€" ed parts with warm water in which baking sode has been dissolved, balf a teaspoonful of the powder to c quart of water. loosen her corsets and buy larger, lower collars. If she has had her facs skinned, hor case is bopeless. I simply refer to this os an instaace of the penalty some women pay for subgutâ€" ting to the teauty specialist who reâ€" moves the upper cufleie aeptiraly, In 1830 the world contained only socmeâ€"210 miles of railway; there Ire now over 350,000 miles. &n Turkey, heiresses do not come into control of their private for« tunes until they marry. It was afternogn, and thus spoke the teacher of the village school : ‘‘Now, boys, the wordâ€" ‘stan‘ at the end of a word means ‘place of." Thus, we have Afghanistan, the place of the Afghars; also Hinduâ€" stan, the place of the Hindus. Now, can anyone give me another instance?‘~ ‘‘Yes, sir,‘‘ said the smallest boy, proudly, ‘"I can. Umbrellastan, the place for umâ€" brellas."" I could suggest nothing for you to do in the matter of wearing your hair, exâ€" sept to wear a tiny bang below your pompadour. ‘This should be quite thin and should be about threeâ€"quarters of an inch long. Just‘a little frill of hair round the top of the forehead. Run & pin through the outer edge of your pompadour after It is up and pull down a few hairs now and then. This is the only way in which it is possible for & person with a high forehead to wear a pompadour I would like to know what will make anâ€" kles thin. I believe that wearing low shoe® bas made mine thick. I have a very high forehead, so that I cannot wear my halr off my face. Can you help me? VANITY FAIR. As to your first question, I can only »uggest that you wear high shoes again, for they are the only things that will reduce your ankles to their proper size. Df course they swell when you wear low shoes. PFruft Punch.â€"Into & large bowl pu orne Reaping cup of medium dark brown sugar, and pour over this two cups o rather strong hot tea. Let this stan until the syrup is perfectly cold.â€"Ad to this one cup of orange juics, on cup of lemon julee, a small can of pre served strawberries, a small can o shreddod pifteapple and a bottle 0 cherrics. Mix the fruit and the syrug well. . Into the punch bowl from whic! It is to be served put a large block o ice and then add the mixed fruit. No# }cpen two bottles of ginger alo an _ Claret Punch.â€"-»’rnke‘the jJuice of tw l?arge lemons and the grated rind, ad 0 this one small glass of sherry and hen oueâ€"grart of claret. For ever ruert of claret, aad one buttle of son vator or apollinaris. Pour over t7: mlock of ice and decorate with apgfg:‘ f geranium or lemon verbena, _ â€" Thin Anklesâ€"High Forehead rpou:‘ into It, then two orithrae lafg- botties of apollinaris water. Mix w;li and serve. If not sweet enough, add more sugar to suit the taste. Tempitng Beverages j for Afterncoon Functiong Will you kindly give me something to keep the end3 of my halr in place? After I have It fixed the shont ends all straiglc down over my face. MOLLIE &. I am giving you a recipe for a brilâ€" Mantine. Put a few drops on the palms of the hands and rub them together and then smooth back the hair with them. It takes but a singlo touch of the brilâ€" fantine to keep the hair in place. I am sure you will find it very satisfectory. _ _ Duilâ€"colored hair, muddy hair, Hfeleat bhairâ€"thato all worry middieâ€"aged wor men. Do sot resort to dyes er tloazche Bu} ascertain the shempoo best sï¬-’t@? to the coloring of your heir and us) thet feithfully. For helr that flfo:i be goldenâ€"brown use a little peroxidj of hydrogon, say a haif temapoorful t the rinse water. Nover use ammeonigq or boraex on dark hair, but a pal} green goap shampco with plonty of clean ringe water. For red hair 4 hay a Special shampoo mixture, which for mulg I will be glad to sexd on recelp of stamped and addreszed en=â€"elope. Sweet almond oll.............. 8 fluld ounces AICOhOL ..........r......ses..... 4 fluid ounces Glycering. ... .oâ€"osrrevines .o Auldâ€"ounce Oll of rose geranium......... 12 drops Have this put up by a recponslb druggist, and after using it every righl fer a week, you will find the epot fading. 3 â€" _ Moth patches, which next to supere fasous hair, count among the cemmones‘ feminine trials, are often due to a tore pld liver, Eat quantities of fruit, pars ticularly oranges; take exercise in the fresh air, and, internally, use salts under the direction of your physician of & rellable druggist. If the pstches arg very deep seatod, while taking thi above treatment, touch the raots with a camel‘s heir brush dipped in the fe}y lowing bleach:â€"â€" ‘ White precigitete...............1 @ra Subnitrate of bismuth..........1 draz Benscinated lard...............1 ou:wj recipe very good for softening and whitening your skin. strained) M eeoeroaies Alcohol . ctomaennaner Oxide of zing....as... Bichloride of mercury Glyceringâ€" .rsslllslnl Electrolysis, or the electric nee'd!e. is used to plck the hairs out, bet It 1g palnful and almost impossible In cas@ of the soft down. Better far to bleach the tiny hairs by en applisatlon °§ peroxiMe of hydrogen, nine parts; aqug emmonie, one part. Apply with a carjai‘s hair brush until the hailrs are so light that they do not show againag the flesh. { My complexion is dark and sallow, and although I have tried all the usual things, such as peroxide of hydrogen, lemon julce, etc., I can see no improvement. What would you recommend as a good softening and whitening lotion for both hands and face? e i7 Apply with absorbent cotton. I think you will find the following Brilliantine for Brilliantine for Hair. To W hiten the Skin Lotion for the Tace. »srarssrarecses 1 quUart sassses.ee..... 80 dropm *rirsrr«csscee, _A OUNC® Y .cnenlkl se 8 graing rersirrssrss».. 20 GTOp® bolled and Hair