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Lucknow Sentinel, 1892-11-25, Page 3r e 1 LAUGE AND We lightly slept she on the threshold of her live - and -twentieth year. She had yet the world before her -naught of past dread or fear. And she looked with happy longing, as the years before her sto lEticher, brighter. better. broader -heritage of womanhood. Past the w .vering, girlish fancies, past the future's fearful gleam, Por her heart had found its double -settled now no mere to roam. So she dreamed of happy home -life in to -mor- row s fancy day - llama where she could- sit in silence, sit and love her 11143 away ; Where the joy of loving deeply brings no thought save that of bliss, Where the sorrows born of living flee at touch of husbands kite, Where the strung arm is protector, and the Wherewle heart strong alway„ cynie% snarl is vanquished by the )4. sunburst of loves day. Blessed thought of home -life, sweeter than ever thought beside could be - Horne where two shall build their heaven, lov- ing ever perfectly. Would the home -life be kept empty, naught e4trebeside e'er enter there! they fearful lest the hearth -wealth scanty prove with three to share! Blessed thoughts of baby fingers. patter Soft of baby feet, Ah 1 there's room ' for child and husband Women's hearts are wide and deep. The Gulf Stream flows at the rate of four allies an hour. 'any cooks hive peppery temper, but tr are ever committed for assault. "1 hear Lollypop has given up using tobacco!' " Yes ; he smokes cigirettes now." "Did you find it very expensive at the beach?" " Awfully ! Even the tide was high." Miss Flirt -Who is going to give the bride away ? Mies Pert -I could, but I wouldn't be so mean.. iktus"Didsthat engagement of Hawkins and i Hicks end in a tie ?." "No. It ended in a draw. She drew out." Turner Van Newleaf-I am going to teen over a new leaf. Jack Binthayr-Better turn down the corner so you won't lose your place. "Who won that long distance walking match ?' " Spriggins.' " Ile did; who was his trainer V' " His 10-montm-old bade" , Jack -Priscilla has made George happy. Clara --I'm so dad to hear it! When are they to be marned I' Jack -Never. She has • refused him. Buggins-There goes a man who never lest & bet. Mnggins-You don't say. What is the secret of his success! B He never made one. "le football a gambling game?" •er -Well, Dodger lost $5 in gold yesterday. "Why didn't he leave it at home ?" "Re couldn't; it was in his teeth. under her I!! with -By Jove 1 Samiallh.RINfi ever have me Here comes yoi.JN 4 Buxoptur--Oh, heavens 1 Where can i hide ? McSmith - In there, quick! Bumpus -Has she gone? McSmith -Yea. Bumpus ---Well, what did I tell you! One of the names given to the infant daughter of the German Emperor is the homely Englieh one of " Jenny," and thus the baby mica will be known in the family circle, Victoria, Louise Leopoldine Gisela being kept for company and state occasions. -Who shall say now that grand; sons William doea *not like • his mother's family and its English aesociationa. .• She -la there any real difference between hope and expectation? Ile -Oh, yes, I can't define the worda, but I can give you an illustretion ehowing you the distinction between them. She -What is it ? He -I am living on expectation and my tailor is living on hope. In a Bowery museu' there be a "Con- gress' of Lady Pie Eaters," and they are depicted on the "oil painting " outside as eagerly devouring great segmenta of pie, without the aid of either knife or fork, a fact that ought to settle the vexed question of etiquette, how a lady should eat pie. "Yes," said the laecUedy, after a fruit less search for her gueat'a silk umbrella, " I thought it had been atolen, and now I am satisfied that it was." " You may be satisfied.," replied the guest dryly, "but I'm bleat if I am." A chureh member iu a western town recently attempted to have his pastor dis- ciplined for using the slang phease " not in in it." But he was crashed when the clergyman produced the manuscript of his sermon and read this sentence from it : "In a word, my Christian hearers, the Ark was a miniature world; there was no form of lite that was not in it." "There are no bones broken," said the sturgeon after a brief examination of the inanimate form that lay on the cot in the drug store, where it had been placed by willing hands immediately after the run- away accident,' but her shoulder is dislo- cated. It will have to be pulled in place by main strength. That ie all there is to it." With a sudden expression of pain the young woman from Boston opened her eyes. " I think 'that is all there is of it' is the cor- rect expression:' she said, and fainted away Maio- • " It's quite a heavy. shower we're having," he said, cheerily, to the man who had entered with his clothes soaked and his umbrella crippled. "Yes, sir," replied the stranger, testily, " it is a heavy shower -but you haves failed -to -remark also the interesting bath that the shower is falling downward from, above, that it's a wet shower, and that it is raining on both sides of therstreet. Also you have neglected to observe that this is the year 189-2, that the earth is round, and that there are four seasons each year. But Pia obliged to yon for your information about the weather.' "1 always knew it was unlucky to uitt And the stranger walked away, with a glitter of vindic triumph in his eye. down to dinner with thirteen at the table," remarked Chumpley, as the other twelve 1 The new h tmeht for pulmonary filed out aed left him to pay the bill. disease, that of freezing out the consump- Prunella-Leander Smith is the meanestt tive bacillus, has very grave disadvantages.' Living in bare rooms, almost fireless in the fellow I ever heard oL Priscilla -Why do you think so! Pranella-elle severest weather, may prevent the growth saved my life, and then didn't ask me to marry him! of tubercles, but it would probably engen- 'I der as fine a case of rheumatism as goes on Judge -Didn't you tell this lady th--t-t -if ' record. The theory that cold is dew h, and she clid_not hand yon over her parse she i heat is life, is one that physiciens advo- would have to die? Prisoner -What harm !mune this "freezing treatment :, will find was that?s Haven't we all to die some 1 lam Zoths both wai:. if one ra' nat die_ time land that seems to be the fate of most people " We doctors have the ad -vantage of you -it would be preferable to pass hence coin- ' clergymen ; we practice. while you only tortably, ' rather than to endure those preach." "Very true ; we Can only tell physical features associated withpecuniary people to go to heaven, but you send thee' privation while trying to live. However, there." Itheworidisas full of facts and theories as " What makes old Chief Son -of -a -gun so happy to -night ?" "He robbed a travel- ling opera troupe lest night and scooped s trunk full of wiga. He thinks they're scalps." the sea is of fish, and perhaps freezing to death is as good a'catch as any. 3 There is one very interesting article in the last " Popular Science Monthly" by Allen Pringle on "Reasoning Animals," in "Hello, Shanks! Did yer hear dat which some astonishing incidents are given, Jimmy Jinkees' dad is dead'" "No. Did iwhich lead him to the following conclusions: he. leave Jimmy anything r • I drinno ; " The conclusion I have reached is this: but I guess he didn't leave him nnthin' but The horse, the cow, the dog, the honey bee a orphan." I and other animals ave aa certain degreeof Millet -Did you notice there are certain reason and intelligence, as well as instinct, tones in Miss Thrum's voice that deeply move people? Monett -Yes, indeed, pretty nearly everyone in the room left as soon as ase began to sing. Mother -Didn't I hear a kiss as Mrs and also have, some of them, strong social and domestic feelings, and are therefore entitled to greater consideration and kinder treatment at the hand of man than they sometimes get. I have also come to the conclusion, viewing the multitude of mis- Hiliat was leaving last night? Mabel- I takes and follies of the higher animal, man, Well, if you heard it you mast have pretty ! that his superior reason and more exalted good ears; we thought we were doing it as faculties are not on the whole turned to as qnietly as possible. good account as the inferior reason and Mother -Didn't I hear a kiss as Mr• faculties of the so-callei brute beasts.'" Mihaat was leaving last night! Mabel- A drop of oil and a feather may make the Well, if you heard it you must have piettty difference between misery and comparative good ears ; 'We thought we were deint it as comfort Where have I heard the delight - quietly as possible. ses ful story of the feather that cured, the The following advertiseenent appeared 1 nervous family ? HOW the door creaked rently in a French paper"Wanted.. a1 and creaked, and the delicate wife shivered distinguished and healthy -looking- man to and was miserable, and the tiara, over - be cured patient' in a doctors waiting worked husband fidgeted, and then growled, room. Address," etc. and then snarled., and finally swore, while " I thought you said your bothe children whined and fretted and guar.ys nurse wan reled ; and all the while no one knew wbat a colored girl, Mr. Hicks," said the visitor. was the matter. One day the husband, led " I saw her to-dav, and she's white." "Oh, well, she looks white," said Mrs. Meks, " but in reality she is very green." by a eelf-defined impulu', took a feather 1 Jat aaiith (worsted in a discumion)-I and a drop of oil and oied the binges of always notice that everybody about the place ceases work or play, as the cam may be, to watch the train. The farmer plowing in the field never fails to stop his horses and tarn around so that he may gaze after the whizzing owe although they go by ,with monotonous regularity day after day and month after month, and even the smaall boy in quest of beach-nuta stops when half way over the fence to wave his hat at the passengers. Some philosophical mathema titian who has nothin4elee to do might ,r out a few intexeraily statistics eaueernmg the time spent and money lost in gazing at the iron horse." All the weeping willows of America are said to spring from a slip sent from England by Alexander Pope.. This is not incredible as the willow takes root in damp soil with remarkable ease. Cawker (entering store) -Let me have a bottle of arnica, pease. Dealer -This isn't a drug store. Cawker-I know that, but you have it aign in your window which says, Bicyclers' supplies." Little girl -Papa is makin a awful fuss a a aniffin' around the home, and examinin' the drain pipes and everything. Mainline -- Mercy me! I mint have left my otter of roses uncorcked. Ran, get it. They have got things down very fine in England. At the foot of every hill the driver of a certain Yorkshire omnibus debuts, "First claass.passengerts keep your seats! Second class passengers get out and walk Third class passengers get out and push !" Magistrate -I seem to know your face? Prisoner -Yea; we were boys together. Magistrate -Nonsense! Prisoner-Yus we was. -We're both about the same age, so we. must have been boys together. " I'm going to put a police.man's c.honis in this opera," said the composer, "if I can only get a good characteristic effect." " Oh, that' easy," replied the critic. "All you have to do is to put plenty of rests in it." Mr. Gotham -Talking 'about nuisances; the worst of all is the man who slaps you on the back and says, "Who will we elect this time, old boy?" Mr. Backbay (of Bos- ton) -Horrible ! horrible! He should say " whom." Mr. Gotham -And eo your father is a stock -broker in Boston? Is he a ball or a bear ! Boston child -Sir! Mr. Gotham - Does he deal for a rise or a fall in pricers ? Breton child -Oh! Well, sometimes hest an optimist and sometimes pessimist. Customer -Yon told me my drew :Shirt wonM be done to -day. Laundryman -I - know it, sir. But the trouble is with my chief assistant. Customer-Whata the matter -is he ill? Laundryman -Oh, no ; but he is just your size, and he had to go to a full-dress hop Last night. Chairman (caanpaign committee) -Yes, we need some good writers for our literary bureau. Have yea had any experience at campaign literature? Applicant -No, sir. I am a writer of rummer hotel advertise- ments. Chairman -Glorious! Take that desk there alongside of the gentlemen who need to figure up newspaper circulations. The wife of the young Methodist minister was taking up her carpets and otherwise making preparations for moving. "We've only been here for a year," she said, "and Wesley and I had so hoped he would be sent back to this charge for another year - I try to be resigned to the Lord's will, but I tell you, Sister Wayland, if ever I get a chance to talk to that Bishop rn make his ears tingle -now you mark my word!" The bicycle has been broken and twined kir domestic purpeeee. The old bicycle of a few years ago was as tricky as a broucho, but the modem wheel is as tractable as a lamb. The old-time bicycle, which would run away with Its rider and then throw him off and kick him in the neck, is now superandal by one which is ridden by a baby. It is no strange sight to see a proud father bowling along with his heir strung in front of him, and chirping contentedly from its place behind the handle -bar. The power of ashes to absotb heat is not appreciated or so many housekeepers would not so uniformally allow their servants to empty the ashes. A stove that is kept free from ashes and soot not only burns better, but gives out more heat for the amount of fire. A mass of ashes under a grate absorbs a large amount of heat, and for this reason, if not for the sake of neatness, the ashes should be removed systematimilly every day. A bright stove sends out far more beat than a dull one. So it is not only a matter of appearance, but a matter oftnee to keep the kitchen stove shining and polished as well as fres from aehes. ONCE UPON A TDIE. Little maid Pleas -Int mile;„ Dude neat, Dre-,---ed tztyle. Dude he bows Maid Are smile., Married now, Fight in three " No, Mr. Timbers -heel," said Mise she thought, the door. When the wife saw him do it won't' 2.1rgne with a f4."1- Calin (eh 'I'fallY) "How kind and considerate , T lL "ow thst 1" 1..4t -Wu ted Elder, kindly but firmly, " I cannot marry is wieinm,h3 you, but Di be a—" " Thanks, Misa and her nerves no longer I n-- • llst JaYernitb teas essaPed- rasfied by the odious creaking, she greeted 1 Pranells,-Did you tell him I was out, Elder," interrupted the rejected one, ,Ipite- 1 him with a smile that Made him feel 1 Marie ? Her :Maid -Yea, ma'am. Pro - fully ; "but I have two grandmothers. like Milne doors all day ; whereupon he: neila-Did he seem to believe you! Her Gunter-Henter intimated that he was a ' ensiled too, and said something pleases; I Maid -Not until I said that you told me to • noted collector. Has he any unique collec- 1 and was answered cheerfully, and the I ton him so - Lion at his house' Bunter -Yes, his collet-- ' children exied that too, and straightway 1 Summer Hotel Doctor -I hope them will tion of autographs of private secretaries of , found the day pleasanter than they hecl ' be no Mistake in administering these medi- celebritiee is the largest in the world."' I thoughts and resolved to go out and play canes. Serrant-Rave no fear, doctor. I The Empresa of Ruesiaa court dreas, together. And the next thing, this whole am a professional nurse and madani is a pm- asehich is valued at £3,000, hes only been family was going to a concert together, iesaional invalid. • worn on one occasi in, viz. : at the «irons- all welland cheerful, and jure like any- i It's no use for a man to try and 'enjoy •'. tion of the present Emperor. It is covered body elEe- ! looking at the priceless treasures off an art " Probably nothing in the world,- said a with magnificent embroidery in real silver. ! gallery when he has a big hole in the toe of thoughtful condnctor on the Grand Trunk, his tight stocking and can feel it while he is Husband (irritably -Can't 5 on remember 's more feseenatmg than a railroad train In where I said I left my glasses at breakfast I . p . calking SW/Wand. motion.People who work in ehops alo this morning ? Wife -Pm sorry, dear I to drop their tools and run to the doors or es never fail " 1 thli it's pretty ramatia" sighed Tommy, " that the beat firsa baseman on really can't. Husband (psevi•stily)-That the track° 113 tc"rus" and vilhb just shows thd forgetfulness of you women. gaze out the windows whenever a passenger the nine hits to be kept in school and miss Stranger- Why do you fish in this lake ? teen eiiiie by. There may be a dozen of the game just bemuse I said that the North There are no 'fish in i-. Fisherman -1 know them everyday in the year, but that doenrh, PIA' was in the North Sca'" there are no fish here. That's the very matter. , , Every time the bell clangs work "There, dear." mid Mrs- McBride, when reason I do all my fishieg here. It doesn't ceases and the windows are filled with the curtain went dawn, as she handed him worry me in the -least when I don'tget a faces. It is the same in the country. 'While a eoaple of cloves, " Their, dear, you won't bite. being whirled along at the rate of 30 miles an need to go out between "' a to -night. Another engine fitter with liquid fuel has hour, the traveller often sees a house located Wama your lit" - been running on the Great Easter Railway, England -one of a clam of ten similer ex- press emg.nes-and as compered with the other nine engines dolree the same round of duty, is reported as doing efficient service. near the tratke Somebody is always steed- Mr 1' ing in thc deer or locking ant the winaci. to are the train tat pass The same may live there for years - traveller may ' • ! 1 arn the -as and Little away, ins of. ,011•6.11•111•1111 Nervous Jenkins --I haven't felt well for months, and the worst of it is that the doctors don'tseem to know what is the matter. Cheerful Stiggins-Never mind, old man; the autopsy will reveal every- thing. Alexandre Dumas, the novelist, has sold his house in Paris to a member of the Chamber of Deputies for 450,000 francs, making a profit of 330,000 franca. He will reside in a fine place in the forest of Marly. Theeloctor had jest madaa..profeessirouse visit to her husband, and she overtook the physician as he was leaving. ” I wish you would cure his cold, doctor; tut don't stir up his appetite until marketin' gets che.aper." First Temperance Advocate -Old man Staggera is Worse than ever to reason with now. Second Temperance Advocate -Yes, he says it is of no use to sign the pledge now that a specific for the drink habit has been diacovered. Strong Minded (to a relative who has called on her) -My husband har's now got a position in the orchestra. He playa first fiddle. Relative -Not at home, does] he ? " Yon bet he doesn'e• play first fiddle at home." " That's what I thought." The Rev. Dr. Rainy, head of the Five Church, recently made an address in Edin- burgh on the subject of "Betting and Theatre Going," in which he asserted that "there are three things which still stick to the theatre -they are orange peel, sawduat and vice." Upson Downes --Why do you avoid me ? You don't owe me any money. Cynicus- No. Upson Downes -And doa't owe you anything. Cynicus-No. Upson Downes -Then why do you avoid me! Cynicus- So that neither of us will ever owe each other anything. Edward Atkinson writes from England and Scotland that there is nee difficulty in preventing the escape of smoke from fac- tory chimneys where the municipal authori- ties insist upon, it. The coal smoke question may be considered a burning issue, and Mr. Atkinson paha, the way to a better abate ef things. What can be done in Europe can be done here.. Mother (to her old -maid daughter) --Why, Julia, what do you mean by using the- b.mily Bible in that way! You are scratch- ingheut figures in the family record and in- serting others. Julia -It is a record of my birth, ts it? "Yes it is." " Well, I int lowering ne reciord." The residents of Hamburg refused to eat fish during the cholera scare, and the fish- ermen of-Altona were compelled -to seek a market .elsewhere. They found it in Eng- laed,and found it to be so much better than the home market that they cling to it, had give only their surpluis to Hamburg. Whenever a hen lays an egg, so set up is she in self -glorification as to feel that the whole universe mess be summoned to take note, of the momentous event. Joidins. com- manding the sun to said still in the heavens till he bad got through with his little local fight was modesty itself to the hen's private consciousneea. More shill and dexterity are required in carving roast fowl than in ordinary jointa. begin by inserting the knife between the leg and the body, so as to cut through the joint ; then turn the leg back with the fork, and if the bird ill young the joint Will give way easily. The wing should next be removed in a similar manner. After these four quar- ters have been ;removed, enter the knife into the top of the breast, and cut under the merry -thought so as to loosen it, lifting it with the fork, then cut long, thin slices from both sides of the breast. Next turn the fowl back upwrixd, put the knife inter the bone midway between the neck and the rump, and on raising the lower end itwill 'separate readily. The breast and wings are considered the most delicate part of the fowl. There is one young gentleman in London who is determined that marriage shall not be a failure with him at least. He took the young lady he was , engaged to to the Lyric Theatre on Monday evening and installed her in a box. In the next box was another young fellow, haudscme and dethin. g, with whom the young lady. establiAed a lively though surreptitious flirtation. Young fellow No. 1 protested in vain, whereupon he left the box, reappeared at that of the masher and told him that the youteg lady in the next box wished to make his acquaint- ance. Young fellow No. l was delighted and accompanied young fellow 'So. 1 to the presence of the fickle fair ore, and young fellow No. 1 introduced them, say-Mgquietly "This gentleman will see yon home." He then left the theatre and the young lady has never seen nor heard of him since. All parties are well known in good society, and consequently the affair is much gossiped, about. oatericas Exhibit ta Chicago. , . The first consignment of Ontario exhibits for the World's Fair arrived in Chicago yesterday. It consisted of 2 0 barrels of I fruit mid 0 large cases off vegetables. The ! Algoma exhibit will reach this city on Thutsday, and contains many specimens of: grains, some exhibitors sending as many as 34 eampbe- where it will be examined. repacked and catalogued. The eatuilatis of vegetables which have arrived have been badly packed. ! causing those in charge a great' deal of 1, trouble in putting them 'in order. The ' fruit exhibit that has been sent 'to Chicago Ideas not include keit in jars. an cassiorme naves Aintetion. 3 Robert Chisholm, of Oakville, a crary man about 43 years of age, was arrested on i a warrant on York street; Toronto, Last night by Detective Davis He is charged with attempting to kill his mother and brother by.putting poison in their bread and tea a few &eye ago_ When arrested he carried a reroh-er, which Davis quickly se -caured„ He will probably be sen: to the asylum_ • More violent deaths occur from drowning . ban from any other cause_ The Wife of the,Coreen Minister at Wash- bageon hes jeined the Presbytetaan Church, and most//e f the memberof the legatica are &peeled to its:lee...her very Sitordy. A dieres-aen 15 beieg c medenin relation to the tele pie tee ceble caenecting Faselandi and France es to whether it is more eceeno- mica] eerry canreesation over tae lire in English cr 15 Frezeb. The tell is atectie $-2 for three rninetes* use. MOW TO GO TO SLEEP. Mypuorlze Yourself and Cure lour • somata. Vie of the technical words used in scien- tific descriptions of the phenomenon of hypnotism is " tranefixion. This relate to the position of the eyes just heifer hypnotic sleep comes on and it is be- lieved, though not as yet fully explained, that in adjusting the eyes to this poeition some nerve centre of the brain is affected, producing All effect. like, awitAiag off electricity froth a keyboard, and Limon- sciommeas follows almost instantly. It is a common observation among nurses that babies "get cross-eyed just before they hill asleep," and this can be easily verified wherever there M a baby in the honest by closely watching the eyes of the little (me as they are closing in sleep. Almoat in. variably the eyes are directed inward and generally downward. True hypnotic sleep, if undisturbed by 'suggestion, soon turns into what we ,m3 ll natural " sleep, aa 15 shown by the sleeper awakening refreshe d as from natural sleep. A writer who was formerly afflicted with chronic insomnia, effected a permanent cure by means of what he terms the hypnotic method, and gives his recipe for the benefit ot the many sufferers from the tortures of prolonged wakefulness. Its worth may be easily tested by any one with strong will power. That many eminent men -Napo- leon, Horace Greeley, William IL Seward, for example-poeeeeeed the secret of going to sleep at will is well known. In using the following directions,the only caution necessary is that before to hypnotic sleep merges into natural dumber, the sleeper is apt to answer unconsciously any questions that may be gently asked,- and thereby reveal secrets that might perhaps cause domestic disturbance.. But the inno- eent need have no fears. Lie on your right aide, close the eyes gently. Forget that the lids are 'barriers to seeing end turn your eyes inward and downward, so that you can see your breath as if it were vapor leaving the noetrila and curling off M. the air. Then watchat return up the nostrils and then out again. Con- centrate your powers of vision until you seem actually to a& this --then you are asleep. Origin or "Lyneh Law." Webster's aictionary,title ." Lynch Law," says: " The practice of punishing men for crimes or offences, by private, unauthorized persene, without a legal triaL The term is said to be derived from a Virginia farmer earned Lynch, who thus took the law into his -darn hazidea" These Care the main facto in regard to , the origin of the celebrated "law, " which as a matter of facts is not law atall. Ofimpbell county, Virginia. some of the rankest and moat obnoirions Tories were taken care of by law, but there were many othera not reachable by the statutory enactment. Thil being, the case, CoL 'Charles Lynch, CoL Rohept Anderson, his brother-in-law, and one Calloway, a neigh- bor, determined to rid their part of the country of, its enemies They accordingly seized the leaders of the several Tory fac- tions and flogged them so severely that they were only too glad of :the chance offered them to " leave and leave for good." Thia. summary treatment having proved so effec- tual in Campbell county, it was soon tried in other counties where King George had the strongest following,. Such procedures soon became known as "trials by Judge Lynch ", and the " jratice " obtained 'in such courts as " Lynch b.w." A very popu- lar eoug of that day had this for a chorus : " Hurrah for Captain Bob., Colonel Lynch and Calloway; Neverlet a 'fairy rest env] he criesont liberty." John Lynch, brother of Charles, was the founder of Lynchburg, Va. The last male descendante of Lynch of Lynch law, Charles Henry Lynch and his brother John Pleaa- ant Lynne bate both died in Campbell county since the close of the War of the Reisellion.-SL .E.G41114; Reps1Zic- , Readisiz the Lidos at the Wrist. The raseette, or magic bracelet, ise ac- cording to the authorities on palmistry, to be fund at the haat, of the hand, and forms the line or lines which mark the junction of hand and wrist. -One such blase if unbroken, deep and !strongy marked, is suppeeed to foretell a happy life and to indicate calmr nese o Idiaposition ; if the Inc is ambled, that is, creased and recree.--eed by numerous small lines, the indication is of a life of labor_ Two anal lines indicate happineas and long life, while thrre form the magic bracelet, adding great riches to the i:eriner blezengs. The addition of the third Lno to the other two is rare. Desbarrol-, the great authority en pahnisa-y, found it in only three cases, ai all of which the oat - ward indications seemed to comfurm the • omen. There as a large factory at a small event neer Chicrgo, employing about 100 or 150 workers, which is wholly given over to the manufacture of reee&fnl articles from waste animal blood-, , At certain season* of the year this unique factory lases from 10,000 to 15,000 gallons of fresh blood' every day. It is first convrted into thin' sheets by evaporation an chemical protegee" and alter rsbsw�rked ap into a variety of useful articles such as comae, buttons, ear- rings, belt clasp, bracelets, etc. Tons of these articles are sent to all parts of the world every year from this " bloody " Sucker State tominfactory. Her fetther-I believe yea wish to speak to me about marrying my daughter' Her, adorer -Yes. And I also wishedto ire quire concerning the amount of money yen save each year, arid to ask if you tanak you can make me happy. • • There have been many cases record of persoas who have never had any teeth- " One secret of the Chicago packers' great fortunes is 'simple," raid a resider; of that city to a Cincinnati eager teen te.-ently. " They don't waste anyeaang., The meat, the entrails, evearthang Cs made tee of 'bat the eqaeaL Tbey can't cetch that, so it iswastej. Fazine ;hing what thee- do with :he aleret. :AU mega t agiea• t tank and after tz do5 is cartel of to a stamping hauge w -firt machines are bray stamp:- .eo . Yes, but:en-I of I;lood &re rar :-. at castle at one stampof ae.-- e a a a sea 7:: 1%('ad that they neer r -ax' -Te11. Te.ey ar a.sn:y peareaea desk red celor. '111111.11.111•11nel r' a