. Modern manners and social forms . tiff Hair 529 Greasy Hair 530 Glossy Hair, 530 Ringworm 510 Sallow Skin 513 Scalds 513 Scars 513 Scratches 513 Sensitive, or Thin Skin 514 Smallpox Pitting 514 Stings 515 Stains 515 Stippled Skin 515 Sunburn 515 Sycosis 516 Tan 516 Tattoo Marks 517 Thickened Skin 500 Varicose Veins 517 Warts 517 Wrinkles 518 520 Hair Restorers 537 Loss of Color in Hair 537 Lice 538 Parasites 538 Red, or Sandy Hair 538 Superfluous Hair 538 Switches, to Freshen 539 Thin and balling Hair 540 Tenderness of Scalp 544 Wigs, to Bleach 545 Hair Dyes 533 Eyebrows and Eyelashes 546 Th
. Modern manners and social forms . tiff Hair 529 Greasy Hair 530 Glossy Hair, 530 Ringworm 510 Sallow Skin 513 Scalds 513 Scars 513 Scratches 513 Sensitive, or Thin Skin 514 Smallpox Pitting 514 Stings 515 Stains 515 Stippled Skin 515 Sunburn 515 Sycosis 516 Tan 516 Tattoo Marks 517 Thickened Skin 500 Varicose Veins 517 Warts 517 Wrinkles 518 520 Hair Restorers 537 Loss of Color in Hair 537 Lice 538 Parasites 538 Red, or Sandy Hair 538 Superfluous Hair 538 Switches, to Freshen 539 Thin and balling Hair 540 Tenderness of Scalp 544 Wigs, to Bleach 545 Hair Dyes 533 Eyebrows and Eyelashes 546 The Eyebrows 546 | The Eyelashes 548 The Eyes, Ears and Nose .550 The Ears 557 l The Nose 555 The Eyes 550 I The Mouth and Teeth 559 The Breath 564 I The Lips 559 The Gums 564 I The Teeth 566 The- Hands and Arms 572 The Arms 584 j TheNails 582 The Hands 572 I The Feet and Lower Limbs 586 TheFeet 586 | The Lower Limbs 594 Im. Figure, The 598595007 ...595 Obesity 605 The Waist . 604 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS,. HE word Etiquette is of Anglo-Normanorigin and originally denoted the tickettied to bags and bundles to indicate theircontents. Generations ago our ancestorswrote or printed their chief rules ofbehavior on cards or tickets, and thusthe word came gradually to have themeaning we ascribe to it, Some code ofmanners has existed from very earlytimes, and in the ancient bokes of the Anglo-Saxonswe find directions given our ancestors what to do andwhat not to do. Every generation since has had itscode of manners, but we find our ideals constantlychanging. Could one of those old mediaeval Knightsbe introduced into a modern ball room, or a fashion-able dinner party, he would, we fear, cut a sorry of the rules laid down in the old books readcuriously in the light of our modern ideas. In oneof these works our fore-fathers were told they mightwipe their mouths on the table-cloth, but not theirnoses or e\es! They are also cautioned not to cleantheir t
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublis, booksubjectetiquette