V Good Taste and Cleverness. This is especially true if the Kroman herself has that most useful gift bestowed by the birth fairies, good taste. More often than not the woman who needs to study economy is the one who is most richly en dowed with this faculty, and It Is apt to be combined with clever, prac tical ability to either do the neces sary work of making up home gowns, or to direct the home dressmaker In her labors, so that the finished frock has an air of style that makes It "go" in many more places than tor simple home use. Measurements. A perfectly formed woman will stand at the height of from five feet three to five feet seven inches. She will weigh from 125 to 140 pounds. A plumb line dropped from a point marked by the tip of her nose will fall at a point one inch in front of " her great toe. Her shoulders and hips will strike a strlght line drawn up and down. Her bust should measure from twenty-eight to thlrty-slx inches; her hips from six to ten inches more than this, and her waist should be from twenty-two to twenty-eight Inches In circumference. Worries. If you fall to see beauty and good ness in life look in your own heart for the cause. We invite all that comes to us. Put the small worries where they belong, at the foot of the list, wys the Woman's Maerazlne. Do not nl- low the cook and the milkman to be J the bell masters of your soul with 1 power to make your days unpleas ant. If you find that you are getting panicky over a condition or an in dividual or a bit of gossip or a dis appointment of any sort, why run away from it if need be, but main tain a serene view ot life and see things as they really are. if Vanishing of Costly Favors. "Women who spend many thou sands of dollars on a cotillon are happily few," says a cynic; "else the sanltoriums, which already are crowded, would have to reconstruct their walls of rubber in order to hold the patients. But several shining lights of the plutocracy manage to reach that goal of the 'spender.' At a recent cotillon the favors were costly that many young women le moved to tears when, at home- g time, they couldn't find the s. Yes, many of the trophies had been carried away most mysteriously. The young men, especially, "lost" many of their choicest favors, but of course they took that bad luck good-naturedly. New York Press. Chemical Blushes. A dermatologist has solved the iystery of converting a faded so ciety woman into a study in pink anVl white. The beauty doctor has already made several successful ex periments with his fountain of youth. He Y'raply tattoes a blush on the cheeVs without injury to the flesh or s.jn. He declares the process does 'not cause pain not even a wince because the needle only enters the skin one-sixteenth of an inch. He uses vegetable coloring to produce the schoolgirl blush. This is Injected under the skin. The fluid is said to be quite harmless. Two sittings are necessary for a complete operation, and the effect for a few days is not pretty. The completion changes from pink to red, and finally to a delicate pink. Pittsburg Dis patch. Dntcli Girls Lucky, In Holland girls have exactly the same privileges as boys when it comes to a question of higher educa tion. There are no special courses, universities or preparatory school for girls in the land where Queen Wil helmina rules. All institutions for higher educa tion are open to men and women equally, and on the same terms; stu dents of either sex are treated in the same way and have to pass the same examinations. After having left the primary school girls and boyB who wish to enter the university go to a public grammar school, into which they are admitted at the age of twelve cr fourteen, on passing an entrance ex amination. Kipling a Feminist. A French writer who 1b a great ad mirer of Rudyard Kipling, has dis covered with surprise and some ap parent Joy that Kipling is a feminist. Kipling, who mocked his own sex with caustic pen, he finds bestowing on woman the admiration he is un able to feel for men. The discovery was made at a dinner, where Killing said the women govern Africa, and there would not have been a war if they had not said to the men: "You go and fight the English or you will have to settle with us." The men did not want war but they did not dare to stay at home. The women in Africa govern all, not as in Eu rope, where the pretty ones swayed too world, but by sheer maternal force. A fat, hon?e!y mother of many In South Africa knew how to make herself, obayed U not how to please. 1 A Women to the Front in Science. Two ot the most famous scientific bodieB in the world the Royal So ciety of London and the University of Paris have Just, by a striking co incidence, bestowed remarkable hon ors upon two women for original and unaided discoveries in science. One ot these women, to whom an audience of grave and learned professors as sembled within the walls ot the re nowned Sorbonne, in Paris, has been listening, with the attention and hu mility of pupils in the presence of a recognized master, is Madame Curie, who is usually spoken of as the co discoverer ot radium. The fact Is, however, that, while Madame Curie labored together with her late hus band in unfolding the surprising properties of that substance whose strange behavior has required a re laying of the bases ot physical sci ence, she herself was the sole original discoverer. It Is in consequence of this fact that the Academy of Sciences has given her a professor's chair, and that now she is a lecturer at the Sorbonne an accepted authority at the fountain head of French science. The English woman who has just won a recognition, not less signifi cant, in the scientific world, is Mrs. W. E. Ayrton, to whom the Royal Society has awarded a much-coveted medal for her original researches on the electric arc; and also for her studies ot "sand riffles," a subject that probably appeils very little to the Imagination of the average reader; but then . science has Its arcana, wherein everything is very clear to the elect, and this is ot them. Everybody, however, appreciates what it must mean, in these days, to throw new light upon the problems ot elec tricity, and this Mrs. Ayrton haB done so successfully that British men ot science bow to her words, and contest that she has clearly distanced them. It is true that Mrs. Ayrton, like Madame Curie, has worked side by side with her husband, and there may he some obstinate upholders of thq old doctrine of the supremacy ot tha masculine brain who will be ungener ous enough to put stress upon that fact, as if it were of particular im portance. But they will fail to make their point, tor the testimony Is over' whelming that, in both cases, thes women were absolutely original in their work and needed no helping hand. Two swallows do not make a sumi nier, ot course and it is not to be expected that woman will suddenly tuke her stand beside man in the forefront of scientific advance. No body would wish that she should. Man is quite content that she shall remain behind, amid more agreeable and pleasing surroundings, where she can enjoy the fruits ot his discoveries. He has always been willing to work for her, and he is willing still. He is also quite ready to take any credit that may come from his work. But, as the action of the representative scientific bodies ot France and Eng land has just demonstrated, the man ot science, at least knows when he is beaten by his sisters, find is not averse to sitting at their feet when he is sure that they have something to teach him. New York American. Huge flowers ot 'silk and velvet are used on he hats. Wide bai .a of braid are used on both Jacket and skirt. All pleated skirts are stitched down to below the hips. The principal millinery trimmings seen are wings and feathers. For everything except storm coats and strictly tailored waists, sleeves are three-quarter length or shorter. An oddity of some evening gowns is that the short puff sleeves are of different fabric from the rest of the gown. Brooches r.nd br.cklea of carved coral are quite the thing, and young girls especially find them very at tractive. The brownish gray of moleskin Is a leading tone among dress fabrics, both in sheer stuff3 and heavier cloths. The fashion in sleeves leaves little to be desired, for they are generally of medium size, and either trimmed lavishly or, made quite plain, accord ing to the garment tbey complete. . The velvet hem on filmy gowns is one of the reigning fancies and an exceedingly pretty one. The slight dragging of the heavy hem adds to the slender appearance so desirable. The bolero makes its appearance in the realm of lingerie in the night gown yoke of allover embroidery, bolero-shaped edges with ribbon-run beading and finished with a soft ro sette in front. The chief point of difference in style between gowns of cloth or vel vet and those of diaphanous material is in the skirts which are often quite plain In the former, but both skirl and bodice of sheer gowns are most elaborately trimmed. There are 73,000 Baptists in Massachusetts. DECLINE OF HYSTERICS. EVEN THE PEARL-LIKE TEAR IS OUT OF FASHION. Cables no 'Longer Squall Moderns Resort to Strong Language Rather Than Exhibit Emotion As for Swooning, She Doesn't Know How. Human nature being largely made Bp of motions, It Is interesting to observe how different' generations have stood with regard to their de velopment or suppression. In no iway, indeed, is the change in woman dur ing the last fifty years more appar ent than in this matter. . In the Early Victorian Era, when every woman was overwhelmed by her emotions, it was considered the correct thing for her to weep and shriek, to faint and have hysterics on every possible occasion. We have only to read the novels ot the per iod to Bee how tears exuded from the heroine like water from a sponge whenever she was touched, how she Invariably, on the receipt of bad news, fell into a "death-like swoon," or sank "lifeless" into somebody's arms after emitting a series of piercing shrieks. To the present generation, which prides Itself on nothing so much aa its sense of humor, there is some thftig eminently ludicrous in the ah normally developed sensibility ol these heroines of' fiction; while to an age in which both sexes limit the ex pression of their more painful emo tions to the comprehensive word "damn," it is absolutely unintelligible not only why the hysterical Fannys and Bwooning Amelias were ever tol erated, tout haw they actually managed to lose consciousness in the way de scribed. The modern woman not only never thinks of fainting when she is thrown over by an unscrupulous lover, but she is" physically Incapable ot doing so. She may faint as the result of a blow on her nose from a hockey stick, or be picked up In a swoon from among the debris of a motor-car; but she could no more lose consciousness on receiving a letter than she could get concussion of the brain on accepting a proposal. The difference between her and her grandmother, far, however, from be ing one of physical constitution, is in reality, nothing but a difference in attitude. Our emotions being based upon the senses are largely a ques tlon of habit, and become intensified or iweakened as we cultivate or sup press them. The very fact of thes Early Victorian women never con trolling theirs, undoubtedly led to their over-development, Just as the modem custom of repressing ours is gradually leading to a general petri fying of the emotions. Women are proverbially said to live fn extremes, and certainly in the mat ter of emotionalism there would seem to to a good deal of truth in the re mark. With the decay of sentimental ity and the decline ot hysterics we seem to have embarked on an era ol feminine importurbiUty. which is al- Act as Club Secretary- ffigfeL and Furnish Your Home FREE! HAVE you a Htttle spare time? If so we want to buy it and will pay you handsomely with beautiful furniture for your home, or fine wearing apparel. We are appointing Local Secretaries for Walker Clubs in all parts of the country. We neod a Secretary rint in your locality. Some wide-awake woman is going to get the appoint ment why not you? It is very easy to organize Walker Clubs. We are dcing an enormous amount of adver tising and women everywhere have heard about Walker Clubs and want to join. It takes only a Very little time and no ex perience whatever to act -as Club Secretary. In fact, there is nothing to do but tell your acquaintances and friends .that you have been appointed Club Secretary. .- , Now tha way we pay our Club Secretaries is this: ' For every Club they organize we give them their own celection of furniture, wearing apparel, etc. You can organize just as many Walker Clubs as you want to. There is no limit to the num ber of useful and beautiful articles that you can secure by giving your time to this delightful work. ,Some of our Secretaries have charge of as many as ten Clubs. Others look after twenty five or thirty Clubs. The Club plan is so attractive that it is no trouble at all for the Secretary to organize a number of them. W. & H.WALKER, Club Department 19 c moatasunnaturaraa tne swoons and "vapors" of a previous age. Tears are out of fashion. No self-respecting child ever sheds them nowadays, while a squalling baby is only met with In the lowei orders. Not to be able to control one's emotions is to be guilty of the worst possible "form." The greatei the shock we sustain the tighter we shut our Hps, and the more we suf fer the less we betray It. Here and there. It is true, you will find traces of feminine weakness lurking in un suspected corners, women who can still "turn on the waterworks." and know how to sob and how to harrow the hearts of their husbands and their lovers, but these women are rare. The generality, if they ever shed a tear at all. shed it in secret, and if they should be found with a sus picion ot redness in their eyes wll! hastily attribute it to a cold in tha head. Philadelphia Record. 8AWING WOOD WITH COMPRESS ED AIR. Cutting Cord Wood With a Simple Pneumatic Engine. Compressed air has not been so ex tenslvely applied to the operation ol railway cars as was once expecte electricity having proved a more con venlent, if not a more economical agent for that purpose. But It is still generally used for drilling holes in rock, preparatory to blasting, and foi riveting -boiler plates and the ma terial employed In bridge construe tlon. The pneumatic hammer can be carried wherever the end of the hose (for a supply of air) will go, and it works very much more rapidly than a hammer manipulated by hand. Still another class of service to which compressed air is devoted is sawing wood. In that class of work it is only necessary to produce a recipro eating motion, like that of a piston, and so the principle of the pneumatic hammer can hero be turned to ac poumt. An exceedingly simple en gine, constructed of brass and steel tubing, will suffice. According to "Compressed Air," a monthly periodical devoted to the in terests which its name suggests, the chief feature is a tubular valve, which will work equally well In whatever position the machine be placed. The general appearance of the device is admirably shown in the accompany ing illustration. The mechanism com. prises a frame, resting on the log and equipped with a hook to grip the same; a Blender cylinder with an os cillating piston, and a flexible pipe to furnish the air. The cylinder (and consequently the saw) can be shifted from one side to the other ot th frame, without freshly sotting th iatter. The-distance between the tw- positions regulates the length of th cut, which is either sixteen or twenty, six inches. The former would usu ally toe preferable for stove wood and the latter for locomotive fuel. The frame weighs eighty-five pounds and the engine sixty-five. The saw is an ordinary Jive-inch or eight-Inch drag saw. The capacity of the machine is put Si. At five hundred logs In a day of ten hours, or twenty cords of four-fool wood in that interval. A pressure ol seventy-five pounds to the inch is tha ordinary one employed. Though tha saw can be driven at the rate of on hundred and fifty strokes a minuta sixty-five is the natural speed. 60,000,000 PERSONS AIDED. Under German Accident, Illness and Old Age Insurance $1,656,750,000 Has Been Paid. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the late Prince Bismarck's announcement In the German Reichstag, at Berlin, that the Emperor was determined that the State should systematically as Blst the working people, male or fe male, by accident, illness and old age Insurance, was commented on widely In the German press, which general ly approved or disapproved the re sults, according to the political opin ions of the commentators. The so cialists, following the policy which they adopted when the laws were passed, found fault with the Insur ance as being Inadequate and not rad ical enough to really provide for the "casualties in the industrial warfare and the disabilities of those worn out In the service of capital." But the whole body of liberal and conservative opinion appeared con vinced that the laws are beneficial. During the last twenty yeara $555,750, 000 has been paid out for Illness; $232,750,000 for accidents and $13, 500,000 for old age. The law also provides for compulsory contributions by employers and employes. In cases of illness two-thirds of the expenses are paid by the employe and one-third by the employer. In accident cases all the expenses are paid by the employer, and In cases of old age pensions half the amount Is paid by the employer and half by the employe, the government supplementing eacS pension, with $12.50 yearly. The sum of $312,500 was expended dally on the combined Objects, the total of the various funds Is $375,000,000, the total amount paid in since the law was passed is $1. 656,750,000 and sixty million person have profited by this legislation. The official Imperial Gazette pub lished a decree on the anniversary of the message of Emperor William I. on Btate Insurance, pointing out the great ideas contained In the message, which not only had' unrivalled success in His Majesty's own country but was spreading beyond the fontiers ot Ger niand.'and adding: "Unfortunately the accomplishment ot its highest aim has been retarted toy the continuous opposition of those thinking themselves entitled to repre sent the interests of the working classes." The message concludes with ex pressing the hope that the Insurance bills may guarantee the inner peace of Germany ,and announcing that it is the Emperor's will that the legisla tion shall continue until the task of protecting the poor and weak is ac complished. New York Herald. T TALKER V y already We have a capital of $5,000,000 in vested in this business, which has been estab lished for 69 years. 'We have 15 acres of factories, and manufacture and import nearly everything used in the home. If you take up thi3 work for us, you will be ' astonished to find how easy it i3 to get anytlting and everything you want furniture for parlor, dining-room, bed-room, kitchen, laundry wear ing apparel of all kincb, musical instruments, rugs, draperies, jewelry, china, cut-glass, etc., without paying a single penny for it. You can furnish your entire home FREE with the articles you receive for your work as Secretary. Our Club Secretaries can choose their pres ents from a list of 1400 articles, which arc illus trated and fully described in the lare book which wa will be glad to send you FREE, postpaid. There isn't any doubt in the world that you can do this work, and we want you to write and tell us that you are ready to begin at once. This is a big opportunity one that you can net afford to miss. --w Don't let anyone in your neighborhood get in ahead of you. ; Don't even wait to write a letter, but simply take a postal card and say on it "Please send me full particulars of your liberal Secretary Pro position." We will reply by return mail, giving full details. Address The American Cow. There are nearly 25,000,000 dairy cows in America, and enough other cattle to make a total of over 60,000, 000 head, Including bulls, oxen, young stock and the "flocks and herds which range the valley free," and all con demned to slaughter. There are less than a million thoroughbred cattle in the country and more than 48,000,000 scrubs. The rest are half or higher grades. About 20,000,000 calves are born annually. The average value ot a cow is $22. - .The average value a cow is $22. In Rhode Island, a dairy ing State, the average is $39. The cows of the United States yield about 9,000,000,000 gallons of milk a year (watered and unwatered), the butter product is nearly 2,000,000,000 pounds (all grades), and the product of cheese over 300,000,000 pounds. Our cheese industry is making enormous Btrldes. In a short time the output will be 1,000,000,000 pounds. There is one item, a by-product, -which Is never alluded to when Mistress Cow or Sia Cow is considered. Our gold produc tion is about $31,000,000 a year at present. That Is a vast sura ot money. Yet the raklngs of our cow yards and stalls for the fertilization of crops are estimated to be worth in cold casl eight times as much, or $G48,000,000! Such figures are bewildering. They stagger humanity. New York Press. Paper Making Matrrlnln, New materials from which paper can be made are continually being discovered. Recently pine waste hag been successfully manufactured into that universal substance without which so many features of modem civilization could hardly survive. Fine paper can be made from corn stalks and from rice-straw. In addition to spruce, pine, fir, aspen, birch, sweet gum, cottonwood, maple, cypress and willow trees nil contain fibre suitable for the manufacture of paper. Hemp, cotton, jute, Iudlau millet,' and other fibrous plants can also be used for this purpose, so that there seems to be no danger of a dearth of paper. The director of the Breslau Hygienic Institute has announced the result ot his mosquito war experiments. The first object was to destroy egg-bearing femnles, which were found in large numbers In Breslau cellars. Fumiga tion was used, and the number falling on the papers plnced on the floors often ran up to over 2000 mosquitoes. For destroying the larvae in pools of water fifty grains of "larvlclde" was put into a cubic metre of water and poured into the pool. This kills nil the larvae Titliin half an hour, but does not harm A-ogs and fish. Germany's shipments of cement to this country are dwindling notlcenbly. This country has cement of its own to sell nowadays. Last year it shipped abroad 1.0G7.000 barrels of cement, valued at $1,484,000. "Up to 1897," re marks Consul Harris (Mannheim), "the export trade in Amerlcnn. cement amounted to practically nothing." CLUBS ara very popular and have over a million members. Rtlshsirg, Pa