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[ Milady's JVIirror Sports Help Good Looks. The best exorcises for women. says a physical director in a girls' coilepe. are those that are simply ttood fun and have no such special object as the winning of a match. I would not for worlds forbid women ? "IiI*fnntilo linnbnv ntld I IU I'lilJ K>>U1V^ line iviiuin. golf, provided that thev will not take thcin seriously. The two essentials of any form of physical exercise are that it should be enjoyable and that it should be rhythmic. If you enjoy thoroughly, your muscles may get fatigued, but your nerve force will not get exhausted. and if the exercise is rhythmic, if it goes with a swing that brings every muscle of the body into play, then the fatigue will he that glorious, glowiug laxness of body. The secret of that swing, of that rhythm, is this: The body must move the limbs and not the limbs the body. Watch a line walker, a fine oarsman, a fine jumper. It is always the body that lifts and impels the limb. There, indeed, you have the secret of grace in every action of life?you must make a gesture with your whole body, with your whole will. A great weakness of golf, as of most other games played with a handle, is that the clubs must be swung on the right side of the body. . Instead of eorrcliiig the unwise preference we give to the right hand, such games accentuate it whereby one set of muscles (and one part of the braim are developed at the expense of another. while the unvaried swing from right to left puts the body out of poise. Hockey, too. has this fault (though its rhythm Is more varied and continuous) and has the additional one of a low crouched attitude which cramps the organs and impedes the breathing. Tennis is some ways finer. This > > aU ' more man any uiuer uuu ^.uu<_- ?-aciKrery part of the body harmoniIts poses and gestures are many led: the player pets a quick eye. i?n?r flick rtf the wrist. the inonns sr???ed of a cat on the tlie power to hit with arm and arled or far extended, and. if he will and is wise, he may hold the -racket indifferently in his right hand or his left. Unfortunately, though the rhythm is continuous, it is jerky, and. though the -gestures are varied, few of them are noble?a tennis player rarely looks dignified?while. when the game is played well, the nervous tension (for women at least) Is apt to be too great. Fencing is too fine an exorcise to be ignored. It gives sureness of poise, lightness of limb, grace of carriage and quickness of eye and of wrist far greater man tenuis gives. it ivmmuu !y shares with coif the unwise preference for the richt hand (tbouch some are wise etiouch to fence with either hand), and it tends to overdevelop the muscles of the wrist and arm. As to horse riding, there is no sport more exhilarating. There is nothing in motion more splendid than the free movement of the brave creature under you. his quick response to hand or foot, the mingled sense of hazard and security. the sense of being launched In air. the flashing picture of the way and the -quick w histle of the wind. But riding may be overdone, even by strong women. The woman who rides to hounds is a fine picture on horseback, but she is not always graceful on foot. Woman's Reason. Women have more of what is termed good sense than men. They cannot reason wrong, for they do not reason at all. They have fewer pretensions, are less implicated in theories and judge of objects more from their immediate and involuntary impression on the mind, and therefore more truly and naturally.?Ilazlitt. An Explanation. "There are in the United States 17, 000,000 unmarried adults. Out of every 100 American men thirty-nine are unmarried. How to explain these dreadful figures!' Thus spoke, with a gesture of despair. a certain philosopher. "One explanation." he continued, "may lie in a dialogue I overheard at a picnic. The participants in this dialogue were a bachelor and a spinsterhe about thirty-five, she about thirty. " 'Men.' said the spinster, 'used to marry younger tnan they do now. -didn't they?' "'Yes,' answered the bachelor. 'But women used to be more willing to wasb Wishes then.'"?Washington Star. I The Ladies in tf i over Harmony Ilair I the hair lustrous, soft : and we sell about all t where near comes up ? Ask any one of t ! she'll tell you she "lov to us and get some yc HAIR [ . Is just what its name beautiful.?Just to make i gracefully into the wavy lin It leaves a delightful f Will not change or darken 1 hair sticky or stringy. Si brushing it. But first, make Harr ?A liquid shampoo to kee an instantaneous, rich, foai scalp. It is washed off ju moments. It leaves no him cleanlihess.?Just a dainty, ?Both in odd-shaped orna Harmony Hair Bca Both arc guar; These There is no class of women who them more beautiful than act re: enthusiastically praise bpth Hai 1 ETIIEL BARRYMORE Star in "Tante," Empire Thcatc ELSIE FERGUSON Star in "A Straugo Woman," York. LOUISE DRESSER Star in "Potash ami Perlmutter | Theater, New York. I Sold only at the more than 700( LA WOMANKIND. The beauty of some women has days and seasons and depends upon accidents wnicii uimiuisu or Increase it.?Miguel de Cervantes. In life woman must wait until she Is asked to love as in a salon she waits for an invitation to dance.?Alphonse Karr. j The woman who plays with the love of a loyal man is a curse. She may close ins heart foreA?r against all confidence in her sex.?Anonymous. It is difficult for a woman ever to try to be anything good when she is not believed in, when it is always supposed that she must be contemptible?George Eliot Maids must be wives and mothers to fulfill the entire and holiest end of woman's being.? Frances Anne Kemble Butler. No woman can be handsome by the force of features alone any more than she can be witty only by the help of speech.? John Hughes. A Winter Cough A stubborn, annoying, depressing fnnrrli hantrs nn. racks the hndv. weak ens the lungs, and often leads to serious results. The first dose of Dr. King's New Discovery gives relief. H. 1). Sanders, of Cavendish, Vt., was threatened with consumption, after having pneumonia. He writes: "Dr. King's New Discovery ought to be in every family; it is certainly the best of all medicines for coughs, colds or lung trouble." Good for children's coughs. Money back if not satisfied. Price f>0c. and $1.00. At all druggists. H. E. Bucklen & Co. Philadelphia or St. Louis.?Advertisement lis Town are Simply G leautifier. And no wonder, bee . and silky we believe there's r lie various hair preparations ma< to Harmony Ilair Beautifier. he many women in this town es" it. Just look at her hair, an rnrself. BETAS mLgfl Uknu H SK HO implies.?Just to make tlie linir gloss} t easier to dress, and more natural t< es and folds of the coiffure, resh and cool effect, and a lingering, d the color. Contains no oil; therefore < mply sprinkle a little on your hair e 5 sure that your hair and scalp are clean, nony Shampoo p the hair clean, soft, smooth and ber ming lather, penetrating to every part st as quickly, the entire operation ta ps or stickiness.?Just a refreshing sen pleasant and clean fragrance, mental bottles, with sprinkler tops. utifier, $1.00. Harmony Sham; mtced to please you, or your money bi Stage Beauties Endorse Them know better how to discriminate in the use of sses. Among the many celebrated stage beautii rinony Hair Beautificr and Harmony Shampoo LAURETTE TAYLOR r, New York. Star in "Peg o' My lleart," C< York. Lyceum, New NATALIE ALT Star in "Allele," Longacro The ROSE COGIILAN ," G. M. Cohan Star in "Fine Feathers," now tc States. I Stores. Ours is the Sto DDS~DR ?. CHER, i A BIT OF HUMAN NATURE. How a "Heart Throb Specialist" Got Her First Job. In the Woman's Home Companion appears a confession of a "heart throb I specialist"?a newspaper woman who after many failures made a success iu New York. .Following is her own story of her first success: "I had dropped into a criminal court room principally to escape the hcg^ot the street. A young girl was Itefng tried for attempted suicide. Perhaps because m.v own failure looked so dark I could read real drama between tin faltering lines of her testimony. "Here was an old story to the reporters. I knew they would turn in brief items, bare facts. I talked about the girl with the probation officer assigned 1 to the case, with the girl, with her em- j ployers, and I secured photographs, in- ' eluding one of the corner where she | ' tried to end it all. a cubbyhole much j like my own. Then I wrote as if her I ' story were mine. 1 "With the power born of desperation , I forced my way into the presence of j 1 a Sunday editor who had spoken a few 1 kind words to me. I begged him to I ! read my story while the girl's case was still in the public eye. "For a wonder he did read it while ' I sat beside him. When he finished he touched several buttons, and men fairly tumbled into the room. "After giving them orders he seemed 1 to recall my existence. lie turned and 1 stared at me over his glasses. " 'Lot's soo. You've been 111 nere oefore, linven't you?" 1 " 'Yes. I brought you a letter from ' Mr. Blank of the News.' " 'Ilumph! A story like that Is worth thirty letters of introduction. Con- ' founded nuisance letters are. Don't believe in 'em. Sold much stuff?' " 'Nothing unless you have bought that story." "Ilis eyes twinkled. 'Oh, I've bought it nil right. I for- ' got to mention we pay $o0 for a story like that with the pictures. I suppose that is all right?' oing Wild tause to make [Sgfc. lolhing else dc?that anyd you'll come % lustrous, more * , uitiful. It gives of the hair and king only a few se of cool, sweet lipP? re in this Town UG STOl \W, S. C. / "All riclit? I < "I closed my eyes. I saw a clean hall room, with a real window ledge over which I could look out upon a quiet city garden. I saw a telegraph operator clicking off a message to an anxious mother. And I tasted beefsteakthick, juicy, rare! "When I opened my eyes once more the Sunday editor was at the door. He flung ills order over his shoulder: " 'Wait till I come back.' '"In a few minutes he1 was seated beside me again, and I could hardly believe my ears. lie was offering me a position on the staff!" Expatriated by Mai de Mer. There is tragedy In the attempts made to solve the problem of seasickness by the late Mr. William Louis Winnns. the millionaire, who was an Involuntary exile in England for the Inst twenty-seven years of his life. lie was at heart nn American citizen, but his doctors warned him that a voyage across the Atlantic, with the probabili-1 ty of seasickness, would be fatal to him. So lie devoted the rest of his life to designing a vessel in which he could ?afely travel to America. But the fates were against him. and his invention never got further than the shelves ot the patent office.?London Opinion. A Tiny Death Dealer. A most agonizing death is caused by an insect half the size of a pea?a small black spider. It lives in Peru, in South America. This spider's venom scorches up the blood vessels and spreads through all the tissues, causing the most fearrui agony a numan neing ran have to bear. The worst of It Is that the victim lives at least two days, enduring unthinkable anguish the whole time. The spider is luckily not common. It is known as the "specky." and when a man who knows what the bite means is bitten he generally blows out his brains. j, Ireland. The population of Ireland in 1841 a was 2.~>1 to the square mile; now It is 144 only. J WHAT HAVE WE DONE TODAY? We shall do much in the years to come. But what have we done today? We shall give our gold in a princely sum. But what did we give today? We shall lift the heart and dry the tear, We shall plant a hope in the place of fear. We shall speak the words of love and cheer. But what did we speak today? We shall be so kind in the after i while. But what have we been today? We shall bring each lonely life a smile. But what have we brought today? We shall give to truth a grander birth And to steadfast-faith a deeper worth. We shall feed the hungering souls of earth. But whom have we fed today? We shall reap such joys io the by and by. But what-have we sown today? We shall build us mansions In the sky. But what have we built today? i 'Tis sweet in idle dreams to bask, , But here and now do we do our tusk? | . Yes. this is the thing our souls . must ask. - - ? J nil 9 "What have we aoneTouayr ?Nixon Waterman. ? A Capitalist. "That man is one (tf our leading cap* tallsts," said Miss Cayenne <? "Didn't know be was In that Una at JL What Is bis specialty?" . t; "The capitalization of the letter 1."* ? , -Washington Star. v? f C'