9 Verbs to Use for the Word cologne

Mrs. Delano poured some cologne on a handkerchief, and bathed her forehead, while she said, "You were excited last night by the tune you used to hear your sister sing; and it makes you nervous, dear.

The fact that the girl has acquired the habit of dropping a little cologne on a lump of sugar and nibbling it when tired or depressed gives an indication of the struggle that the children have before them, a struggle of their own, in the midst of their luxurious surroundings, more vital, more real, perhaps, than any that Mr. Chambers has yet depicted.

"Myron used to like good cologne, but I can't afford to buy it, so I make it myself, and use it Sundays, and it's all blown away by the time I get to church.

You had much better go home, however, and not take any foolish risks, and put your feet in hot water, and rub cologne on your temples, and do all the other suitable things" "I remember now," she continued, without any apparent emotion, and as though he had not spoken.

Mrs. Bowen, in a square pew, sobbed, and snuffled, and sopped her eyes with a lace pocket-handkerchief, and spilt cologne all over her dress, and mashed the flowers on her French hat against the dusty pew-rail, and behaved generally like a hen that has lost her sole chicken.

"It will steady you nicely for waltzing, and some eau-de-cologne in my room will take off all the smell afterwards.

Have you tried eau-de-Cologne?

When she asperged the warm water with cologne,it was her secret delight and greatest effort of economy to buy this cologne,she always had one little moment of what she called faintnessthat faintness which had veiled her eyes, and chained her hands, and stilled her throbbing bosom, when as a bride she came from the church with him.

Ol' time we use that Tahiti cologne.

9 Verbs to Use for the Word  cologne