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Show EFPECTSJF "RATS" j By DR. E. L. MACK AYE "y HIS first dolus P of tho hair is Indeed In-deed a matter for thoughtfulness. I may not be able to tell you just how to do It but I can tell you how not to do it. Do not torture your young hair with "rats" and cushions. Do not make your head misshapen by pushing it way up at the back. Do not frizz it until you look llgo an African. Do not put it up in puffs that will make one weary to look at, and which with Its roughing and turning will distract you to comb out straight again. You should have nice long braids at sixteen; six-teen; frame them around your bead so they will suit your face, 6iniply and prettily, and you will have solved tho problem of doing up your hair for tb' first time. 'THERE Is nothing so Injurious to th hair as tho wearing of the heavj rolls and cushions. They stifle th roots of the hair, which wither witli the pressure put upon them. The hair gets "tired" of being done In the sanw way, and therefore from timo to tlma the manner of tbe wearing of the hair should be changed. Roughing the hitf, by which I presume you mean combing comb-ing it up from the ends, is bad for th hair. There is no doubt about it; bul much of the trouble can bo obviated by careful combing when the tlm conies for straightening tho hair. |