AW Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 6, 1893. NEWSPAPER. THE BY LINUS DIBFLE, OF SAYBROOK. God bless the man, who invented the plan, To give us the news of the day. if they were mum, we'd all be dumb, If some folks had their way. Pause and conjecture, list to my lecture, As you take up the ink-smelling sheet, How could you part, with the life-giving art Amid life’s burdensome heat. To you he comes, or gladly runs, Alike in joy or sorrow, : While you're asleep, that he may greet. With good news of the morrow. Blot out the press and bring distress, With nought a soul to cheer, The light gone out, you're left in doubt, A reign of terror near. How oft it cheers and kist the tears When all was dark and black ‘When damp of death, left all bereft, It brought the sunshine back. Tho’ words were few, like early dew, Those words lay on my soul ; Till morning came I blessed the name That did console. Some hate the paper, nor care a taper, It’s a bad habit they have got ; Better go back, se an old quack, And lay in theifarrow and rot. They find Hfarlt with the news, insut and abuse, There's nothing in papers that's real ; We'll blow out the taper, by stopping the paper, And send them all to Sheol. Sometimes we hear a clergyman swear, Denouncethem to-morrow :and sich ; Then weifeel sure, with slight demure With disreputable papers he'll hitch. ‘The'man let me say, who reads the paper Sods Yourcantell a mile away; : The girls are brighter, their burdens lighter "Theyimake better wives, they say. A tombstone man from his own funeral ran, wD rmhal do you read,” I cried, “MyiBible, begor, and nothing more.” And:he sighed. The'bible, read it with your eye "You cannot prize its sacred truths of yore, ‘Onee read it with heart, ’twill then impart, Joys unknown before. ‘What ? sir ? we must know thoughts as they go, dIf'we would be happyand see That our spirit keeps, with the life blood that leaps {In'the genius of 93. A paper to read iswhat we need, “To solace our weary hours ; JAnd pay for it too, without a boohoo ‘While here amidst sunshine and showers. HIS WIFE'S ALARM. «It Was Caused by the Lies of a Rascally Jani- tor. “I tell you, boys,” I said, “if I was not a married man, I should go to the races on Monday and put all I'm worth -on Razzle Dazzle.” Bik don’t you?” asked Tom Mur- + y. » “Why ?” said I. “Ob, I'm a mar- ‘ried man, and my wife has a horror of theraces, I've promised her to keep away from them. A promise is a promise.” “And good enough you’ve made it, sir,” said our old porter. Honest Jim we called him. “Many a man has .gone down to ruin and degradation on account -of them races. The lady is wise. ‘She is wise. I'm telling you ‘what {I mane. Obey the lady, and you'll never see yourselt in difficulties.” ‘Honest Jim was fond of giving ad- vice, apd he broke up our chat with these words. Murphy and Wiggins went away to get a glass of beer before ‘they parted, and I took the train home. A brooding storm broke just as I reached my cottage, and glad enough was I to escane it. We had supper together and wenc into the parlor as usual. "What a night it was, to be sure! A wild nignt, a bitter night, a night when their seemed to be strange voices in the wind, and those within the house were likely to fancy knocks up- on their doors and unbar and unbelt them and ery : “Who is there?’ when it was only the blast that had caused them sto rattle. Yet it was on this night.that my wife, my little, delicate, beautiful wife Fleda arose from the ireside;and telling me that she would return shortly, left the room. To leave the room was nothing, but when {I beard her leave the house I could scarcely believe my senses. She was eo timid—she who— Why, mo, it could not be. I went -about the house calling her. I grew -alarmed, and, fearing to find her lying in a swoon somewhere, carried the lamp low :and looked in the garret, the cellar, the little kitchen where cooking was doneiin summer—everywhere, in fact. She was gone, and so was the cloak, that usually hung in a certain place, -and a hood she woreabout the grounds on cold.days. What could have tak- «en her out? Had she heard our pony fidgeting iin his stall or the peep of some siray chicken? Was she anx- ious about the day-old calf? We had all these rural belongings in the small ‘boundary of our little sammer-home. If so, why .did she not mention it to we? It was, no doubt, that cold of mine, which I had made too much fuss about. She went herself rather than expose me. I tossed on my waterproof coat pulled an old hat over my ears and went out upon the porch. The lantern was gone, “Fleda!” I cried, lifting my voice, “Fleda, I say! Where are you, Fle- da?” I heard no sound, but shortly, far along the road, I spied a yellow blur waving near the ground, and knew, when I had watched it for some time, that it was a lantern carried by some one to light ber steps along the irregu- lar foot-path. I say her,” because shortly I could see the drapery of a woman's dress. It was my wife, re- turning home. I was certain of that now, and I called to her at once : Fleda, why on earth are you strag- gling about in the storm? Why didn’t you send me to do what you wanted done? The wind is strong enough to car- ry you over the hille. I've been wild about you.” She came up to me as I uttered these words. Her long, light hair, usually as smooth as a piece of satin, tossed about her face and shoulders, her hood hanging down her back, her cloak twisted about her slender figure. She turned to speak, but could not; her breath failed her. I put my arm about her and helped her to the house and eo far as the sofa in our little parlor, on which she dropped gasping. “All this,” I said, “for some chicken with the pip, I suppose!” “J did not know the wind was so strong.” . And I asked no more questions. My anxiety for Fleda swallowed up every other thought. However, she was perfectly well next day, though curiously depressed and abstracted. I have not yet introduced myself. [ am Henry Carrington. My business was that of cashier with the Dayton Brothers. My wife and I lived simply in a tiny out-of-town «cottage in sum- mer ; in a tinier flat in winter. I had never been extravagant, and my only great folly had been to risk a certain sum of money, left me as a legacy, at the races. I backed the favorite and lost every dollar. Fleda was very much distressed when I told ‘her the news. “Not at the loss of the money, Hen: ry,” she said, ‘but ‘that you should risk it at the races. My uncle once employed a young man who became dishonest and was finally arrested be- cauee of going to the races and betting and all that. Pray, pray, be carefal.” I laughed at her, and told her that I had sufficient warning and punishment in losing the snug nest egg I had striv- en to treble. This was ‘the previous summer. Now the races were going on again. They were, I own, my great- est earthly temptation. The week passed quietly. Pay night came again. It often happens that the same night is stormy for several succeeding weeks. This night, how: ever, was not as ‘bad as the one on which my story opens. However, it was much more comfortable indoors than out. And yet, just as I wasin the middle of a paragraph 1 was read- ing to her from the evening paper, I looked up and saw that Fleda had van- ished. Again I searched the house. Again found that she had left it. Again the yellow light of the lantern told me of her return. She was not «out of breath this time, but she was pale and trembled a little. She shook her head when I asked her where she had been, and said : “Nowhere. The house felt close. T wanted alittle air. That is all.” “You did'not find what I was read- ing interesting 7" said I. “I assure you—'’ she began, then broke cff suddenly. “Don’t talk about it" she cried. “Don’t! Don’t I pray, don’t'talk about it!” I did not talk, but I thought a good deal, and I had reason to think. Day by day I noticed that Fleda was grad- ually growing thinner and paler. Her -8pirits were deserting her. And when the same day of the week came around, she left the house as mysteriously as before. The presence of a guest pre- wented me from following her; but I discovered that, in order to keep the knowledge of her absence from the house from me, she entered the store- room, climbed out of the window at the risk of her neck and returned in the same manner. Moreover, I dis- covered on the gill a few scattered coins —a iten-cent piece and two pennies— which told me that she had dropped a portion of some money that she had taken with her. All this made me very ‘unhappy. I detested mysteries, and it was evident that one of the sort which iI had always thought unnatural when introduced into the pages of nov- els bad arisen 1n my quiet little home. { remembered that I had met my wife by chance; that our introduction was brought about by a chance ac- quaintance, who really knew nothing of either of us; that she was alone in the world, without any living relative, or claimed to be so; a teacher of mu- sic, with few pupils, making a hard struggle for life. Very possibly a dis- reputable father or brother had turned up, to whom’ she was obliged to give assistance,.and whom she did not wish me to know. It was a pity, but I would have no more of this. I would get at the truth and help her if I could. Then a terrible thought oc: curred to me, What if it should prove that she had married early in life; that a worthless husband bad re- turned, and that she was trying to get rid of him? In that case what a goose I would be to meddle and force upon myself a terrible knowledge which I might avoid. : It was cowardly, perhaps, but I lowed Fleda so dearly that I had rath- er he deceived in such a way—1I never doubted her utter itruth for one mo- ment-—than to be undeceived to my misery. And, hoping against hope, I permitted two more weeks to pass by without doing anything whatever. Then came an hour when graver doubts possessed me. My wife had sold her diamond earrings which my sister had given her upon her wedding day. I came by this knowledge while examining her desk for letters, and I believed that she intended to give the money thus raised ito the mysterious persons who had the power to call her from her fireside when he pleased. The might on which I followed her was as beautiful as night could be, The air was warm and full of the breath of flowers. My wife wore a white dress and a pretty hat with dais- ies around the brim. She had told me a deliberate falsehood, asking me to stay at home to receive a friead who might call while she went to the dress- maker’s house. A wild hope that she kad only been to this dressmaker before, and that the jewels were sold to pay some ex- travagant bill, filled my heart, but it vanished as I followed her, and saw her leave the road after going a few paces, and take a by-path which ran back into our own orchard. It was a small place full of old apple trees. The moonlight failed to fill it, but I saw amidst the shadcws of the foliage the ' darker shadow of a man’s figure. “Ye've kept me waiting,” be whis- pered. “I could not help it,” my wife re- | plied. | The man gave a low growl. “Ye've got the money?’ he said, “For your own intherest you've got the money, the five hundred dollars.” Where had I heard that voice be- fore ? “No, my wife faltered, “not 80 much; the jeweler would only give me three hundred, but I have that.” “Ye must raise the other two,” growled the man. “Oh, you'll do it, it it won't be a great dale to pay to save them we know of from twenty years in jail. Produce} it and tell me whi, or afther all, I'll tell the truth; it's my duty anyway.” “Oh, good Heaven! I've given you all I have!” cried my poor wife. “I can get no more.” She seemed almost to faint. What- ever this mystery might be, it was my duty to defend her. I strode out of the shadow, and with- out warning, stood before them. “Fleda,” I cried, “what does this mean ? Whom are you talking to? I must know! I will know! Do you fan. cy I have been blind to your meetings with this scoundrel ?” “Oh, don’t speak so, dearest!” she cried. “Don’t anger him. Go away, You don’t know your danger.” “Danger !’”” I cried, clutching the collar of the man, who strove to rush past me. “Come; let me see whom I have here.” I dragged him into the light, and saw our porter, Honest Jim, and no other. “Jim, by all that is comical!” I said. “And what is he to you, wife?” “Oh, don’t! Don't!” cried Fleda. “He knows alll He knows all! “Fleda,” said I, “whatever he may know about you, have no fear. You are my wife. I love you. Nothing can alter that.” “Oh, it isn’t I, Henry! It is you! He knows all about Razzle Dazzle, and what you did to get the money to bet on him. [It was such a temptation I know, my poor husband! And he swore he would not betray you if I gave him five hundred dollars. But I have not been able to raise it. I will, though. Spare my husband, and I will! Yes! Oh, Iwillearn itsome- how !”’ cried Fleda wildly. “What confounded blackmailing trick is this?’ said I shaking Honest Jim furiously. “P’lase, let me go!” groaned Jim, “You put it into my head with your talk of your missus fearing you'd go wrong. I was up before you the night of the storrum, and she met me, and wus aisy tuk in. An’ I tried it ag'in. You an’ the divil put it into my head. Here's the money back. Don’t choke me! Here is the money back.” “What did be tell you, you silly child ?” I asked Fleda. “That you had robbed your employ- ers to get money to stake on Razzle Dazzle,” said she. ‘My only thought has been how, to save you.” “Go!” I said to Honest Jim. “Show your face in the office again if you dare!” I dismissed him with a kick and took Fleda in my arms. “So you'd be true to me it I were both fool and rascal 2’ said I. *‘Poor little ‘goosy T” “And you'd love me if I had some strange story in my life?” said Fleda. And we were very happy as we walked home together, arm in arm, my wife and I.—M. Cady in N., Y. Ledger. He Washed the Tiger. When Pezon, the lion taher, was at Moscow with his menagerie, he hired a Cossack to clean out the cage of the wild beasts. The Cossack did not under- stand a word of French. Pezon tried to show him about his work by motions with a pail and sponge. The moujik watched him closely and seemed to un- derstand. Next morning, armed with a broom, a bucket and a sponge, he opened the first cage he came to and quietly stepped in. He had seen his master step into two cages of harmless brutes, bot this one happened to belong to a splendid tiger that lay on the floor fast asleep. At the noise made by opening the door the creature raised its head and turned its eyes full on the man, who stood in a coraer dipping his big sponge into the bucket. Atthat moment Pezon came out and was struck dumb with the sight. What could he do to warn the man? A sound might enrage the great beast. So Pezon stood still. The moujik, sponge in hand, coolly approa- ched the tiger and made ready to rub him down. The coid water on its hide pleased the tiger, for it began to purr, stretched out its paws, rolled over on its back and of- fered every part of its body to the treat- ment of the moujik, who went on scrubbing with might and main, All the while Pezon stood there with his eyes wide open as if nailed to the spot. When he had finished his job, the Cous- sack left the cage as quietly as he enter- ed it. But he never did it again.—Lon- don Million, cece ESHER 7 or. Bicycles Not Availal le For War, The use of the bicycle for military purposes, after having developed with great rapidity in France, has suddealy received a check. General Loizillon, the minister of war, has, it appears, lit- tle faith in it. He has issued an order that the cyclist corps are only to be used on prepared ground. In time of war, he says, their use, even if no account is taken of the lia- bility of the machines to break, is likely to cause serious miscalculations, and they can only rarely be substituted for ' men on horseback. The cyclists hence- | forth, therefore. or until some successor to General Loizillon more favotable to them is appointed, will be reserved, by his instructions, for garrison duty, for the great maneuvers and in time of war for certain easy communications at the rear of the forces.-—London News, Fortunes From Waste. Discoveries That Have Recently Been Made in | Utilizing Refuse Substance. i The discovery that the leaf of the: pineapple plant can be wrought into a serviceable cloth is one of those newly | found facts that are constantly proving | how much there is yet to discover in nature, says the Philadelphia Press. As the plant is extensively grown in Florida a new industry in time will gpring up there, and the producers of the delicious pineapple will have a new source of profit at their command. But it does not speak well for the boasted inventive genious of Ameri- caus that the pineapple fiber cloth has been manufactured for some time in Central America, and that is now an article of export. This is, however only one of the dis- coveries made in recent years by which waste material is being utilized. It would puzzle any one but an expert to go into a store to-day and tell from what material a percentage of the goods are manufactueed. Grass, tim- ber, sawdust, and other products that were once rejected as useless are now saved and put to practical use. The Hollanders have even discovered how to convert the peat from bogs into soft wools which can be spun into cloth, rugs, and blankets, at half the cost these goods can be made from wool grown on the sheep's back. Such a discovery ought to open before Ireland. and some other countries the prospect of a great industry which will increase their prosperity and commercial im- portance. A generation ago there was hardly a mill of any kind that was not troub- led with a heap of rubbish or waste material that it did not know whal to do with. Silk manufacturers saw the rise of this heap with annoyance, and they took it as a tavor if anyone would cart it away and use it as a fer- tilizer. An English inventor guessed at the possibilities in this pile of retuse and set about inventing machinery to utilize it. To-day, as a result of his forethought and genius, 5,000 persons are employed in making the finest seal plushes, ribbons, and velvets from the refuse pile of silk mills, and the inven- tor has grown rich. The cottonseed oil industry is a better illustration of economizing waste, but the dimensions to which the industry has grown are not generally known. The annual product in oil, cake, lint, and hulls from cotton seed, which a generation agogwas allowed to rot, is $27,000,000, and it could be made greater if there was a market for the product. The great decrease in the price of paper comes from the discovery that nearly everything that grows can be turned into this useful article. Cotton stalks, tobacco stalks, the stalks of the sugar cane, corn stalks, and sawdust that used to cumber the ground are now made into cigarette wrappers, water pails, car wheels, and even build- ings for temporary purposes. The ex- traction of dyes from coal tar and the refuse of refined petroleum has for a dozen years been one of the wonders of the chemists art, but they are not the only things that are obtained from coal, and science is constantly widen- ing thelist. The slag of furnaces is now turned into asbestos, cement, pot- tery, and fire-brick, and when pulver- ized becomes a base for paints. The refuse from woolen mills, which has contaminated so many streams, has been found to be valuable for the oil it contains, and its extraction will not on- ly profit the inventor but do away with a nuisance. The progress made in utilizing waste material is probably only a be- ginning of what will be done in this way. There should, in ‘fact, be no waste, and invention may yet realize that wish. It should be an instructive lesson to those pessimists who imag- ine that the facilities at the command of man have been put to their best use and that no further developmert is possible. It is more probable that the resources of nature are as yet only un- derstood in the crudest way and that in a mastery over these forces lies the advancement of the human race. Why He Never Married. Not long ago a mature spinster call- ed upon the famous after-dinner speaker Mr. Depew, and asked him to give her some information about real estate. He said there were two things he knew nothing about, and they were women and real estate. This reply amused her, and she asked him a number of questions about people whom they knaw in common. After she pro- pounded the following questions about a stammering bachelor she asked no more, but went her way. “Where is Mr. Blank, Mr Depew ?’ “He is in the city,” replied the only Chauncey.” “Does he stammer as much as usual ?" “Oh, yes; worse, I believe,” said the orator. “Strange he never married.” “No, it was unot-strange, dear lady. Blank courted a lovely girl. He told me about his courtship several years after it occurred. He proposed in t his way : *¢¢D-d.d-d-dear a-a-angel, I 1-l-l-love you!’ “You need not proceed further, Mr. Blank. I do not care to be wooed on the installment plan,’ said the proud beauty.” — Washington Post. ——The revival of the overskirts is creating some attention in the fashion world. They are being made to fall in long points, nearly covering the skirt beneath, one point extending down the front and another each side of the back. Skirts without overskirts' will, however, still remain in favor, and are being worn plair at the front and sides, with all the fullness at the back, ——Mrs. U. S. Grant has completed ber memoirs, to which she has added notes on the Harrison administration. The book.is not to be published during | them respecting the usefulness of the the author's lite-time, A Sunflower’s Usefulness, How the Flant Is Profitably Used by the Rus- sians, In return for the corn which Uucle Sam proposes to teach the Russians how to eat, it is seriously suggested that we shall adopt a few hints from sunflowers There are regions in the West which might be most profitably utilized for the cultivation of this plant, which has been found so valuable for food purposes in the Empire of the Czar that 750,000 acres in that country are annually planted with it. Two kinds there are chiefly—one which bears small seeds used for making oil, while the other produces big seeds, which are consumed in enormous quantities by the common people in the same way that peanuts are eaten here, except that they are devoured raw. There is hardly another plant in the world which serves so many uses, every part of it being valuable for one pnr- pose or another. The oil is so nutri tious and agreeable in flavor that in Russia it has to a considerable extent superceded all other vegetable oils. It is obtained by passing the seeds be- neath mill stones, so as to crush the | shells, sifting them to separate the ' kernels and finally pressing the latter in bags of horsehair cloth. The cakes left after the oil has been extracted are excellent fodder for cattle. The shells are employed for heaticg, special ovens being made to burn them, while the stalks have almost replaced fire- wood, being gathered and dried in stacks in the fields. A ton of the lat- ter is obtained from each acre cultivat. ed. They make a very hot and quick fire. The seed cups are utilized as food for sheep. A big one when ripe will yield 2,000 seeds. The largest aad finest seed cups are selected in the autumn and hung by their stalks in a dry place. In the following spring the seeds are shaken out of them and dried in ovens for planting. At harvest time the flowers are gathered as fast as they are ripe and spread upon the ground to dry. Then the seeds are beaten out of them with a small stick by whipping each cup. Finally the seeds are dried in the sun or ian kilns and are sorted by means of screens into different sizes. An acre planted with sunflowers yields 2,000 pounds of seeds, from which 250 pounds of oil may be ob- tained. Ten million quarts of this oil is produced by Russian mills. Who knows that the time may not yet come when small boys in this country will gobble sunflower seeds at the circus just as they now consume the festive and odoriferous goober. Franco-Prussian War Losses. [n discussing the German army bill Militaerische Wocheablatt contains a statement which is said to have never been published so fully before relative to losses in the Franco-Prussian war: According to this paper there fell on the battlefield or died of their wounds on the German side 1,881 officers and 26,397 men ; the number of wounded was 4,239 officers and 84,304 men; of the missing, 127 officers and 12,257 men, aggregating a total loss of 6,247 officers and 123,453 men. Among the missing those still miss- ing or as to whose fate no certain in- formation has been obtained up to the year 1892 must be counted among the dead. These, numbering about 4,000, and the 17,105 who perished from dis- ease, bring the total! up to 49,000 Ger- mans who died for their country during this memorable war. On the other side it is estimated that the French lost 2,900 officers and 136, . 000 men by death, of whom 17,633 died in German hospitals. There fell of infantry, at its average strength, 4.47 per cent. ; of cavalry, 1.40 per cent. ; of artillery, 1.28 per cent., and of the pio- neers, 37 per cent. As tothe separate contingents the Hessians paid dearest with their blood for the restoration of the unity of the German empire, losing 5.97 per cent. ; the Bavarians 5.58 per cent. ; the Sax- onians 5.40 per ceat.; the Prussians 4.85 per cent.; the Badeners 3,76, and the Wurtembergers 3.51. A very large number of German sol- diers had to be placed upon the invalid list after the war, numbering 69,895 subalterns and men who were in active service in 1870-71. This is 6.28 per cent. of all the German soldiers who went into the field. The pension appropriation ot the German empire amounts to about 500,- 000,000 marks, or $119,000,000, out of which the wounded and dependent survivors of the late war receive their pensions, Needlessly Embarrassed. “I must tell you a rather amusing predicament connected with a rash ven- ture,’ says Robert Bleim in hig account of an artist's experience in Japan in Scribner. “Right on the edge of the lake is a little summer house, into which I pop- ped, pulled off the kimono I was wear- ing at the time, and plunged into the water. While I was fooling around, I saw two Japanese figures take possession of the pavilion. Fancy. The water was cold enough before that, but I imagined it about ten de- grees colder at once. The Japanese friend who was with me had gone, and here I was alone to work out this rather peculiar problem. Well, I couldn’t stay in all day, so finally I came out. Don’t ask me how Idid it, but I did manage to make it. I managed to work my way to the pavilion to receive my belongings from the hands of the pleas- ant and polite gentleman, not to men- tion the towel I had to take from the little woman—needless to say without fiinding time to use it just then, “The whole affair appears ridiculously simple now it is over, and I am afraid I made | an amusing ass of myself generally in | their eyes. You see I'm too much of a | barbarian yet to fall into their fine nat- ural unconsciousness—too full as yet of what might be termed artificial West- ern prudery. The Engaged Girl, Her First Meeting With the Parents of the Man of Her Choice. “It is all very lovely to become en- gaged to the man of your choice and enjoy those blissful moments that come only oncein alifetime,” remarked au elderly lady to a writer for the Louisville Post, “but when the young fiance has to go through the ordeal of meeting her intended husband’s parents then, indeed, isa trying moment that very tew girls pass through without remembering very vividly. The bride- to-be may have been known to the family for years, and yet when the son announces to his parents that she is the girl of his choice and the one whom he wishes to make his wife, she at once becomes in a certain degree a different creature and is criticised ac- cordingly. No son ever yet married a woman whom his father thought. quite good enough for him, though the outside world may think quite the contrary. The girl is always looked upon by the mother as an interloper who has come between her and her son's affections. When, therefore, the young girl is brought in contact with her fiance’ parents, knowing the innate antagonism that reigns against her, she is seldom, if ever, at her best, and is more apt to court distavor than com- plimentary comment from his relatives, simply from the fact that she is half scared to death, In my experience I have noticed that much of the trouble between a mother-in-Jawand her son’s wife has been due to jealousy, and if at the very beginning these two could form a compact of mutual admiration for the son and husband and mutual forbearance with each other there would be fewer family jars.”} Physical Perfection In a Woman. The greatest and first essential to physical perfection in a woman is a figure without an angular line. Na. ture avoids angular lines everywhere, but in the human figure especially. A perfectly formed woman will stand at the average height of 5 feet 3 inches to 5 feet 7 inches. She will weigh from 125 to 140 pounds. A plumb line dropped from a point marked by the tip of her nose will touch at a point one inch in front of her great toe. Her shoulders and her hips will strike a straight line drawn up aad down. Her waist will taper gradually to a size on a line drawn from the outer third of the collar bone to the hips. Her bust will measure from 28 to 36 inches. Her hips will measure from 6 to 10 inches more than this, and her waist - will call for a belt from 22 to 28 inches. The arms of the perfectly formed woman will end at the waist line, so that she can rest her elbow on a table while standing erect, and her forearm should extend to a point permitting the fingers to mark a point just below the middle of thigh. Her neck and thigh should be of about the same cir- cumference. The calf ot her leg and arm should measure about the same. Her legs should be about as long as a line drawn from her chin to her finger tips, or about one-half her height, say from 2 feet 7% inches to 2 feet 9% inches. She should measure from her waist to her feet about a foot more than from her waist to the crown of her head. Her neck should be from 12 to inches. around, her head erect and on a line with the central plane of her body, and her feet should be of a size and shape to conform with her hands.—New York Advertiser. The Best Kind of Exercise. Now, why not be exercised? The Turkish bath is one step in that direc. tion, and the “floor rest” is another.| Any woman who is fortunate enough to command the services of a lady’s waid or who can call in an attendant at stated times or can secure the cof operation of one of her own family can receive exercise instead of exercising. When a long and hard day of social or serious duties is before or behind her, this royal way of resting the muscles and stimulating the respiration is good and most efficacious. Have a warm blanket or drugget, kept especially for this purpose, spread smoothly on the floor. Then get into loose garments and place yourself at full length on this hard bed for half an hour’s manipulation. While you lie as limp and indiffer- ent as a rag baby your attendant, whom vou have previously instructed, gently rolls and kneads your body, lifts and drops and twists and swings your arms and legs. The head—the body’s fifth limb— receives much the same treatment that is given the legs and arms, but should be handled with special gentleness. Your own duties consist in first as- suring yourself that your breathing is full, free and controlled by the dia- phragm, and then in surrendering your- gelt to a nirvanalike indifference to all things.— Marianna McCann in New York Press. The State of Alabama Finds New Em- ployment for Prison Birds. The State authorities have devised a . plan for the employment of the State convicts sentenced to the penitentiary, which meets with much approval. For years the convicts have been leased to mine operators and others, who worked them unmercifully and treated them cruelly. They came in competition with free labor, and great complaint was made by the miners and others who had to work with them. The State has now purchased 2,500 acres of fertile land on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, 15 miles north of Montgomery. The State proposes to buy more land of the same character. Temporary quarters for the convicts are being built, and the men will be put at brick-making. The bricks are to be used in constructing the permanent prisons and other houses—first, in jrais- ing a food supply for the prisoners ; sec- ond, in tilling the land for the profit of the State; third, in operating industries of varying characters whereby raw ma terial may be converted into marketable form within the State.