Ofld'l pom) thou: cosmetics was un- munluly lost. A volume by Crlto, tho Empress Plotma's secretary. was imam! the ï¬rst of the nanny boon mm on thin subject. Ml the revolution rouge went out m m It was the fashion to be polo. A pillar was pro- .ma of cold cream tad In the middle 130! every woman painted and powdered. Even the nuns and I great deal 0! “make-up" and corp-ea ward roused to give them a lifelike appearance. Both the Greek and Roman )adies tried to Improve their complexion. In Ann-tut rein only women of high birth were permitted to use white lead. M fortitude which has encountered no danger, that prudence which has cur- movrnted no «acumen. that integrity 'hich In been atncked by no tempta- tion, an at. best be considered but as uvu, an: an. no ~ .n; \vuu-u». gum not yet brought to the {281.01 which theretore the true value cannot be mined. The love that survives the tomb ls the nobles! nltrflmte n! 1hr cool. If it has woeo It has llhewlre its delights; and when (he overwhelmlng hum of plot la lulled into the gentle tear of recollection. then the sudden anguish Ind convulsive agony over the present rolls 01 oil we most loved are softened Iwoy lute peoslve medlutlons of all (hot ll was II the days of Its loveliness. Who would root such a sorrow lrmn (he hurl? Though it may somemnes throw I pawn; cloud over the bright hour 0! solely. or spread a deeper wadâ€" neu over the hours of gloom. y" who would exehnge It for the song of pleu- ure or the hum of rerelry‘.’ No; there ls A voice from the tomb sweeter :han sou; there is a remembrance ol’ the deed to which we turn even from the charm of the llvlng. n M undue- "at makes lup‘u capa- mane. bloc-om and pllnu mom with (heir cheering hum and enacts "mu with their invigorating flagrant». Whuher It 'qlls on In superiors. or Int-Mm m It: lam-Ion. or din-vans use" will It: equals. It: tori In maria! cm: a moms-my thin: the strictest discretion cum“ Mano. TM man who owns Ibo Bmlo Illh a menu. â€Imam cover have to close I! IIIMNI bolas taunt. Whenever tho Nmm door man be. 1m lbo rum-mu. II In tun In may talk throng; ll vrllp (rum. I! um lone um: - km. tlmo In and out that may as newr Income m-n by unplug I" may pl. Tho warm who vunuu Ilunon IIIMM. would no. to u (in MI and don no! go to "on. Duly II I synonym of Mppllmu. led man do not know opvoflunlly when It cum them In the lace, Who. Jun: roman to main up his )ovola. he will and mum at m. brightâ€! In In dark plans. Whoever throw: n «om air-13b! M We am. will! Ml tome highly mucu- ubh nun In nu face. AI noon u a man in convlru-d of no. be In convinced lhll ht cannot be awed “(bout God'- brlp. Th0 nun who I- not ro'tiglmw at home. often Ir!" hard lo b!» no con- Ildrred In churvh. No matter what nppnnm-«v may be. the fold God tells us to lute In alt-n (be but. Whenever the cloak tk-kn. ll bring! Ibo lime nearer when â€:9 door of mercy will shut. Ind {or a tow hours“ writing are very serviceable. Bamboo pens have been used in In- dl- for over a thousand years. They In made like Inc ordinary qulll pen. 81. Morltz. Switzerland. has the champion toboggun slide. It ls three- quarters of a mlle long and has been descended In a whlz o! seventyâ€"one sec- onda. There is a shellï¬sh in the Mednrr- ranean whirl: produces a good quality 0! silk. l-‘abrh-s have been manufac- tured from It. but only as aux-insides. The foundation or a church at San Como, Guatemala. has been shifted seven inches by the growth of two large white gum trees. At the battle 0! Gettysburg the aver- age age or the soldiers of the federal â€my, including the ofï¬cers, was 2:: years. Although 400,000.00!) passengers have been curled by the trains ol the Brooklyn bridge, only one fatal accl- dem has Occurred. Lines are more easlly seen than small squares. A line 14.900th of an Inch thick can be easily seen by the unaided eye. V At Great Falls. Mont. electric power ls so cheap 1pm. all public and domesuc work is done with ks aid. _ Dénver is the only ctty with natural streams of water flowing through the gutters In the streets. Postmaster Bartlett of Suncook, N. 8., has a continental $8 bill, payable ln gold, Ind dated 1776. The city or London puts upon {he market in one ye'ar ovvr 310,000,000 worth at umbrellas. mun anon; : "4.18019. THE USE OF COSMETICS. I, mum a munn NOTES OF THE DAY. GRAINS OF GOLD. RAM'B HORNE. :Iu mt out wumnx nut. 891p vu u: an. TM. 1: the «My direct lineâ€"caves dun! hour am to Crmfle Crech- In! at full tumultâ€. 10H" SEBASTIAN, â€an†AM cum A may m m On April 7 lid 21. and Mny 6. tick- ets will be sold Iron nclpol cities. towns and villages of t a north. to on pointe on the boulevllle c Nuhvllle ntlrold In Tennessee. Alabann. Nip slalom, florid: and a portion 0! Ken- tucky, at one single fare for the round trip, Tickets will be good to return within twenty-one days, on payment of 82 to agent at destination. and will show atopâ€"over at my point on the south bound trip. Ask your ticket agent about It. and If he'mnnot sell you excnrglon tgckeu write to C. P. ‘7 74â€"Aâ€"4- A_‘A K‘ialoET-é-e'ï¬rii Passenger Agent, Innhvfllc. Ky., or J. K. hugely, N. W. P. A.. CMOICD. I". Then I: money to be made In Cripple creek. When you to take the “Rock “has! Mtg" to 70019;“? ï¬ning.“ are for the round trip. Tickets will be good for return an my Tuesday or Friday win-In menu-oh days from date of Illa. For rates. than of trains Illd further details Apply to any coupon ticket “am In the But or South. or ad- dress Geo. H. Hanoi-d. Genet-u Pum- ger Ind Ticket Agent. Chicago. IIL in orda to give ever] one tn oppor- tunity to nee the Western Country and enable the home seeker! to seem n home in time to commence work for the season of 1896, the Chicago. lii'nnkeo 8t. Pm] 11:“wa has nrnnged to run a series of {our home oeelen’ neuro- ionl to various points In the West. NorthoWeIt and Sunni-Went on m ioiloving’ duet; April 7 and 21 and May 5 n the low rate of two dollars Inoro _ (inn one â€"n_u_-.- in I pbyninlogiral sense. nae brain union the man. it is {be cenmi om oi his bodily functions. leevlse. "no mind dctnmines the lam-II, spiritual pine or me. It in : unity and a uniâ€" ner. We are ruled by idea. Now a man "no depends on what idea- In in his mind. Tim! I man's belief is im- pomoi. it is his manor. It is not nlvan what he subscribes to. but what he thinks. that determines him. Even the coincience toilet: Intelligence. 3nd is (ruined to right Iciivny by corâ€" rect ideasâ€"Rev. H. P. Dei‘otest. It for “em you". ï¬t. Alan‘- hm an ion edmted It Kenyon College. Gambia. Ohio. Ind Inner“ the lane mun Ifld can" am an char-dorm um mum. mm the new Nod that "cm the urn. added u the long Incl- nnn not-rm of "to senior member. then In no doubt (an this lumu wlll continue In prosperou- career. This company he always enjoyed l I'Ide mutation and mm. nmong In mn- Iomen me of the largest udvcrllsen In no West Mid South. The old In- ol Aldon A Futon has hon well known to Ibo now-ply" fra- ternity for a number a! nun. and You «mod a mutation for fair dun-p cm: the unsuper- nnd my! nd mun ml" with (M dunno". It. Pun bu not but con-519d with Punt ll. Aldon. Ibo would"! of lhn nowly {armed company. who but ban widely known "no" Nu- nut-p.90" and autumn for (In In! manly-Mo non, com: o! the good am John Al- dnl. of Inn-var stock. MI mm bo- Inc the eighth John In dlrm aim-root. Ho has In M- pom-onion numbers a! cation. nlm "an have been bladed down tbmugh mg tqglly._ The well known llrm of now-paper mlrrrtlllnu hunts. Alden A Fuon. (‘lnclnnuL 0M0. bu chum! Hu- style 0! the Inn-Inna am. and will hemflrr be known In the Funk ll. Alden A Som- (‘ompnmn Pram: ll. Al- don ldfllfll lulu two mu, Prank Walla-r Aldon Ind Clarence lllmlllou Aldon, lo lhe Inn. Dog Eating In lulu-o. The dog meat business continues, deâ€" spite the stern examplen that have been made of its vendera. A policeman seized a men named Genera Perez. passing through ihe alley of Lon Guchu- pinel, who bore a suspicious-looking bag. which. on cumin-lion. disclosed the skinned cart-nu of l large dog with the lower part. of the legs cut on so u to prevent the easy recognitinn of it: uncles. )1. Perez was alien to the police union to the third Demu- cuion to be examined In to [he unlo- cedenu of bin doa meat. which. it is shrewdly nunpecled. was destined to he made into savory dishes told at Ilse pu- mice under ihe arcades. W. In getting fut to be like (‘nnlon Ind oiher biz Chinese Iowan. where do: in mid with out cub-me umi pertain-n of with gun- to.-~Muican lieruill. You will hardly do yourself justice It you do not thoroughly investigate their line. before placing your order. No line ni' 30011:: has grown so rapidly in demand or given such general salinâ€" {actlou as the fencing manulaclured by this company. Their steel web picket fence for lawn and yard purposes. their cabled ï¬eld and bag fence {or [arm use. their cabled pouliry, garden and rabbii fence {or its use. are all they claim for them. The Do Kllb Fence 00.. of De Kalb. 11].. has the largest and most com~ vleto line or smooth wire fencing of any plant In the country. We desire Dal" ticularly to call your “nation to their goods and write them for a catalogue which they will mail you tree. A '01-: Input-n: Quoflh- wlth Int- on 3.11 mil!- Just How. Probably there is nothing that Inter- act: the land owner lore I! this tune of the year than fencing. They are de sinus of murln‘, the very heat "1ch they can for the purpose they desire to me It. (or and it the cheapest prlce solng. While thlu In good buslneas, Price Ihould not [aim the place of quality. In bulldlng n smooth wire lance you do not build ll for temporary nae but. expect it ,to last you (or year- and to set (hls hum of an article lt mulm a certaln amount. or good mn- terlal to make it. HOW ARE YOUR FENCES? nc... m trunk-I- Sc. Advorlhl-l 'I'- "A mm or woman whoiuincerely ntâ€" tulmd to a dog In an anxious that he mm hl'b decent burial or disposition that damn as It It were I one of a child. TM! mly seem absurd to people who «not enter Into tho feeling of mutant um exist- between dog- .“ at man". but It 1. true. nevu- "But it is hard to ï¬nd Inch 3 spot. The cemeteries rigidly close their [rounds to dogs and other anlmals. and the city ordinance: pmhibit the burial of dogs mthln (be corporate lines. A man cannot even dig a grave In his own back yard without making himself lilblo to Arrest. I know from my own experience and the statements of my friend: that this condition of nun-s bu often become I much more crying problem thin people who care nothing for dogs can appreciate. "The stray dogs, the curl and the wretched outcasts o! the canine tam- ny genenfly are today carted away without care or regard. But no one who In: A pet dog surrenders him to the dead animal contractor. to be con verted on Bar'ren Island Into tertlllm. The dead pet Is caretuny lmrted tn mime spot when the mnthcrmes cznnot tn< teflere. lav-mere. interred in the remetary. Any one 'ho knows that the true love of a ’ dog in. how attached his owners become Ho him. can realize that a ought mm ironic) very gladly he paid (or his ‘ proper disposition alter death. "I am one 0! those who believe that dogrâ€"good «logeâ€"move eonie. it some dogs that i lmov don't go to heaven liter they die. than it in because true merit. true virtue. rount for nothing. i know lots and lots at dose that are inï¬nitely better and 'more steadfast in their friendship than ninety-nine m pie out oi a hundred. i ion dose and It in as much on this account as it is tint i need a vocation that i have gone into this business. 'hich at present is perhaps unusual. but which in the (more. i am note. will become just ea much In institution as the hurini of human beings in it not the name way today with the human family aa with the dose? The poor. the wretched. the miserable and the iorealren are buried in trenches in Potter’s Field. They are all mixed together penâ€"men, and no one known or cares to know one from the other. But there of us who have loved one! see to it that they are tenderly ieid away amid pleasant surroundingz. ‘ "I am golng to go in." salll she. ‘-'nol alone as a prom-letress n! a dog vemtn tery. but also as a do: undertaker. Why not? Do we not read every day in the papers. or almost every day. of pet dog» who are put away in exponslve caskets. but for whom there ls no resting place in the remelerles devoted to man. beâ€" cause the regulations prohlblt the burl- al of the lower animaln‘.’ Now. I am goln; to provide a place for dogs that shall be u nttrnctlve as are the ceme- term for men. There will be. of course, only good dogs, dogs tlnt have been chm-lobed during their lltetlme by thelr HEN the greater New York becomes a polltlcal fact. it wlll have wlthln Its territory the only dog cemetery In the world. The proprietor 01' the cemetery. whose plans are now be- lng completed. is a woman, and a new woman at that. She does not (are just at present to have her name nor the location of her proposed place of In- terment made public. because she fears eomplittatlons regarding the» purchase of a plot of land that she has In mlnd may rvsult, But to a reporter for the Sunday Journal she spoke freely at her hopes. plum: and nmhlllons. in fuel. she feels certain that a fortune ls ahead 0! her. for (Ir-v" of Clnlno I'ctnwl’ooplo Who than†The" Dogs. Mai-:3. Will no "or l'nlronl â€" Prunes-ll Burying (Brenna. CEMETERY FOR DOGS. A NEW YORK WOMAN TO START ONE. PROPOSED Pear!- a 0m: Price- The queen of England has a servant,» of pink pearls that Is worth 380.000. and tho Dowager Empress of Germany one made of thirtyâ€"two pearls that would bring easily $125,000. The Rothschild women have. however, gems of this sort that far exceed in value those of royalty. Baroness Gustave de Roths- child possesses one made up of ï¬ve rows of penis, the whole chain being mined at â€00.000. Celebrated anyer: “Nov, then. ten ma honestly. did you rob that bank?†Client (In disgust): “Of course I did. Do yer s’pooe I‘d be able to retain you Illdldn't" |, I, ,:_, spun the Alla-"m "l hare observed rathvr a Purim. thing in you, Mice," said a pmilrman to his niece. "You mm to live in the superlative degne. Wht‘n you have a toothache it is the worst you over had. The young man who was hora last night was the ugliest fellow you w" saw. According to your statement a little while agu. It took you forever and a any to learn to make sponge rake. Th9 honor. you any, is full of flies. You have just declared that the room is as hot as In oven. you have up dreadfuh ent headache you er" had in your life and the boy across the road is making the tearfuleat racket a boy Pyor made. Don't you see. my child, this sort of thing won't do? Some time in ycur life you will really haw an oxperimw requiring strong words. to desrribe it and you will not be able to wnvoy any idea of it. You will have used up all your adjectives. That in all, my dear. A word to the wise is aumcient."â€"Ex- chonge. Impenllllonn negro". who )mk upon Tlllman as a “man 0! ulrst‘my“ and hence not In be 0::li with any mm: poet 0! 1“le Tillman} lmk has be- mme pron-rblnl In South (‘amllna am! his friends nay that he has never known defeat ln nny undorlakin' sinre his boyhood. Hls nan-n and dunmina- "on have carried hlm lhrough many plans whore another man would bar- lllled mlsenhly. "e ls ln his am. your and llved on the old lamily .‘nrm up M 1590. when he was elm-led governor. the ï¬rst olllce he ever held. He lml one of hla eyes in a realm of an avrldent while awlmmlng when a boy.â€"-EI- change. XE‘V CEMETERY FOR PET 0068 IN BROOKLYN. 'I'Illmnn'a "selnn 'I,¢Iwn" Lm'k. Senator Tillman ls known to â€I? no- groes of South Carollna as a “when 'lrben chtle"~that In to say. he is the eleventh child of his rather. who was the seventh child of Senator Tillman's grandfather. This (-ombtnation is re- garded as superlative†Xuvky by the “The grave 0! each «log will he mnrlmd with a headstone. :m.l if peo- ple choose they may erect such monu- ments as they see ï¬t. We have often heard 0! monuments vn-otml to noble dogs, and that there has not been marc- ol this in due very largely to the I'm-t that it has not lmPn convenh-nt to timl :I place for these manumonts to ho erected. l will make my {mant‘ss known as anon as I am read}: to :‘XJtt l-y IZEK‘ILXIS of rlrvulnrs that I will t-(lld around to all the dog owner: in this .-:t.\. l will got the list of .ln: nu‘mr? from the Rough Soclety. whit-1'. : ' Mum liu‘nses for all dogs: that .19 umrh having. This will give Inf :1 pn-‘ty comnlete list 0! pmmlo v." :lrlnk enough of their dogs to m. .zznt (Tm belle! that they would want to bury 'hnm dm-ently utter tlmtlz." "Just outside of Lung island t‘ity, not far from Calvary cemetery. I am negotiating now for a piece of landâ€"- about. an acre altogether. i will have it neatiy fenced, and then laid out in plots. whtrh i will sell to dog owners. My undertaking establishment will he in the city. I will begin on u very modest scale at ï¬rst vâ€"just get a little room somewhere where 1 will keep :1 iew caskets of different sizts on hand. The cemetery will he planter! will". flowâ€" era and made as pretty and attractive as possible. v “Where are you going to locate the cemetery?" melon, um! I am sure of doing a very proï¬table buslnm as soon as I get my cemetery and undertaking establish- ment started." There is one nohle means of aveng- ing ourselves for unjust criticism; it is by doing still better. and silencing it solely by the Increasing excellence of our work. This is the only true way of triumphlng. But If, instead of lhls. you undertake to dispute. to defend or to criticise by way 01‘ reprlsal, yon ln- valve yourself in endless troubles Ind disquietudea. disturb all healthful innâ€" quility and waste in harassing contest: that precious time which you should enumerate to your regular dutlel. Both our menta! and moral acquisi- flons Increase by their communication to others: which gives an Illustratim of two truths~ï¬rsn that we are framed to carry out the law of love; and sec- ond, that the possesxlons which multi- ply in the Imparting are naturally the most valuable. The knowledge of the world which ls so much admired. but which. nflcr all. is but a poor attainment. Is really nothing more than a knowledge of the the defects. foibles. and weak points of men and women. Hold on to the truth. for it will mm weâ€. and do you good thmugh eter- nfly. - insytmne goes into greater detnil. It phat: that 1.1 mm but not one woman. Mame insane through disappointment in imp during the, six yearn. One man Hunt insane heroine his wife «loved. but the women who lose their husbands in like fashion most have taken a more sensible View of the matter. for not one was sent to on nnylum. More rc- marknbk MI" is the fact that madm- the head of "domestic trouble," them we" registered 59 men and not one woman. Six men. but. not one woman, became insane through tright. So, too. hair dye turned the baton as wen u the hair of two men, hot not one woman. Megan-inn nieo elected one man. but no normal Jealousy was the undoing at one mun. out of no toman. 0n the other hand. overwork by itself de- stroyed the minds of 44 women, but of no men. Overwork and tntemperanco combined. however, landed 134 men. but not one woman, in the â€Home. In- tcmperance alone called for 976 men and 610 womenâ€"this out of a total of 9.146 mm and women admitted to the asylum: during at: years. Overntndy deranged the minds of 1! men and no women. Koch's lymph ruined one man. r I An Anny-II ol the Cue-of In: the" undo at “all... Rarely can one and I more depreuin. story of human ills than that which it told in the sixth annual report of tho 3 state commission of lunacy. recently given out by the state printer in Albany, eays’ute American Medical Review. In the table showing the causes which sent 16.208 people to the county asyluma dur- ing the six years covered by the statis- tics may he found some curious state- ments. Thus in spite of the supposed deleterious influence of cigamatte-tunoltw in: but one womnn and one man were driven insane by the habit. but exces- sive smoking of tobacco in other forms um 19 men and -3 women to the asy- lunis. One woman became insane through the extraction of her teeth and one girl lost her mind through fear of punishment. An intempcrate desire to acquire knowledge forcver stopped the studies of 20 men and 12 women. Over- wcrit broke down the minds of 252 men and 43“ women. lutempernnce in nico- hcilt' drinks accomplished the undoing of L22? men and 1'12 women. No other curt't- (laimcd so many vi-"tims among m4 2:. lir-sidcs these thcra were some 200 who im-anw inst-He through drink mm- piEa-atmi with sonic other munc. and it is u rurinus fact that one of those was u than who drank csecm-c of pepper‘ mint. 'i‘im opium habit claimed 17 men and 23 womcn. Under the head of â€moral causcs" arc grouped Sllt'll trou- Mes as loss of friends, religious and po~ iitivszi ext-itemcntn. disappointments. and so on. Those causes crazed 90’: men and L29! women. it seeing rather strange. but one man become insane through "military hardship." The use of a hair-wash uneeatcd one wom- . an'e reason. One man became insane} because of the heat of thoI furnaces un< ‘ der the boilers he was tiring. The table of causes compiled from the New York wnv PEOPLE “no MAD. GRAINS OF GOLD. To“ my a Trappc-r. One Vermont trapper. hailing from Honshtonvme. has trapped during this mason 1,600 skunks. 175 (oxen, 7o mints, 200 mush-at: and 100 coons. The record seem pretty high but it It vouchgd‘ for by a local paper and Vermont has a gre'at reputation for (in. and trapper; It In among children. haven-r, that the most mtlsfarcory "sum can be ob- tnmed ln face massage. Their flesh. bones nnd muscle: are more yieldlng thin they will he later in We. nature let-ms more wllllng to lend her ald, and I: Is pmlble for n pallent. intelligent mother to transform some of her “ugly duckling" Into pretty white swans. A good deal may he done, hrs-74v". In the same way toward repairing the reckless lnroarla mad:- by the hands upon the hoe. If. after long years. you have succeeded In knemllng your (are Into the semblance cf 3 comlc mask, you may, after more long yum. knoad it Into something not altogether nn- comely.‘ Patient and intelligent man- nge may do something totnnl roundâ€" Ing out hollow cheeks. a turned-up nnsc an be brought Into wry good shape in n surprisingly short tlme and a short upper ltp will be lengthened a: the name tlme. Thor. will in "w mun. Inn «nu n Inn and llll'l" Mun. yrt with I [an no hollow that ytm run I'lllli m the print: or any-n of tho list ha hm: hm thrust Inlo it Ihom hull his loin-arr mn- monu ntnn be In! a amnii rhttsi. it you watch him uthlie ymt tn}- cairn him In the M1. Thrw Iiii him he that individual whom unmro has 'nrhlfll .tith a digniï¬ed Roman nm. thiv-h he has tendon-l moat "idifl‘n‘lfl by mshlnu it upward with M.- handhorrhivf whom not his ratarrh troubled him, until it Mn nmuimi a laury. tum-rd mt. You will be sure to err thr ymtlh Ii": mm« pant an anti you may aim a" ma My with him has! "mm! in one m- "h' M: face. He has a chronic mid In in: .50an and is in the habit of frequently app!) - in: his m to his right 1mm sinuw. Who that viii roflui can «Io-1M that if the hand he homily moaned Imn tha flnhy part of Hw law. Mtveon the up- per and later in". for no morn than an hour each day. that hoiiow rhmks wizl. in a few years. he the imvltnhia mutt? The ears. the none. and the lips may become diaï¬gnrvd in an inrredlhzv short time, by kneading [bun with the ï¬ngers, and "on the [around and mm. ii begun upon in (any youth. whan tho- hories are more ytemln; than int in life. may he made to rerede hr tha rrr- mant and persistent heavy prorwxrn of the hand or arm. It is a troll-known fact thtt n slender waist may be no- quired by systematic lacing hetwean (ha, ages at 12 and as. \ i TM next llmo the vault-r Ila-ll him- nll alone In I vroml lot hlm nn-n Mn eyes and look about Mm. In th- {mm o! lbw about Mm he rnnnot (all to um- de prlnlu o! the ham: and 12m pillow. There Illl b0 many â€or. deep I‘mkrn eye- thu lure lwrn lbw-t In: lam-k lnlo the had by lnqmnl MM mamâ€. The crowd wlll hr rlrnlllully mmr- wand tllh IM Alum r-l'l â€romanâ€. running from â€In M-l lnlm llnn on In. turn 0! "no you“ to ":0 duo low: nl’ ll"! ground (ho mouth-I and noun 0! ll"- old. nut among no ollwr loan-m wlll ho llnd Inch vnrlrly ol «uni-m- unllmn on Among um um. TM am at Int-Mn m ulmml “can but. chapel": lumps nt '0" nlnllr ml run In molded lnlo wry urmmm- foraâ€. lln will no mom mathI all. 1'â€de lhnrp. "mm "pr-n}. pulled do! ntnrd. yet have these peculiar future’s in n much-less-mnrked degree than their elders. and. lndfl-d. many of them do not hlve the slanting eyes I! all nnd only urqulre them as they grow older. I! the reader will experiment upon him- ulf a little with one of these curiou- woodeu blorlm any doubt wlll vanish. The leather pillow is a most fruitful source of wrlnkied. ill-shaped no". To its ouâ€"valwuyl ably anal-ted by the Q'Qf-Rldy binds-4n†he Ivtribmod the Icrumuiation at most of tho i‘lorh or the {are around thr month and now. giving the Appearance of hlgh rhnk hon". and forming mound thn mouth thou concave llmu railed by Iha Amo~ cut at the llrraktnnt Tabla "lb-r paren- lhmum." block of wood, which, when tlw ar-apvr Hes upon his sltle~ lht' usual no 4 on“ presses strongly against the lowm' par! of the cheek hone, forcing tlxn flesh toward the outer x-crner of 1?.» 95'". May not the peculiar {min} char-.1 'H‘l‘iiw Nos of these poopk-«high «heel: bonus and slanting eyesâ€"abs owing in this small but powerful agent? Nn'wllh- standing these rates have DOPR in it stole of soml-clv‘lllzntlon for ages. (lur- ln: which time we may suppos» 'hose head rests have been mm]. the (‘hlltll‘t‘n 0W often are seen youthtnuacei lined with wrinkles and ï¬gures retaining the pEumpzies‘. of few years cr-iwned with the visagas of age, says (ha New York Herald! Srie-miflc lawsui- gnlion has [mini-ed 1hr- hc-Hei’ that those prematurely old hcnds on young ah'iuh dora are in a great measure due no that. luxury of modern 1m», the pillow. The (‘hlnvse and Japanese in!0 in rho place of a pIan.‘ a limo hn!’ "vol-in PILLOW WRI N KLES.‘ LINES OF AGE TRACE!) TO THIS LUXURY. I... of the Good Itaulu cl Hannaâ€"- Illnllnx Eye. ut the one-ul- Ar. Du to Their Wooden llo-d Bantuâ€"- l’lcnlI-rulu ElpI-Iuld.