42 V PARIS. Auk. 2. (Special Correspond ence of The Sunday Oregonian.) Half of the most famous Paris beau ties now boast that they wear no corsets. Among; them are statuesque creatures like Hatto, of the Opera: Cora Lapar ccrie, wife of the poet Richepin, fils; de Hally, who is supposed to have a simply perfect figure: Dleterle, whom they com pare to a Sevres porcelain figurine; the voluptuous Doll Darnley; the classical little Maud Amy and big Anna Held, little and big, slender and plump, they form no particular noncorset type, but cem to-be just so many splendid women rejoicing a new-found grace and freedom. "The corset Is the special enemy ot feminine health and beauty.1' says the divine Hatto. "In future ages they will not be able to believe that women ever could endure such Instruments of torture for the pleasure of deforming their bodies! The stomach and liver become crushed: the lungs cannot dilate to take in enough air to renew the blood; the diaphragm find the intestines, brutally pushed back, protest In spasmodic contractions. What they used to call 'the vapors," sudden lushes of "blood to the head and frequent faintings, had no other cause; and the neurasthenia of today finds its start In the corset!" "There Is a steel corset of the 15th cen tury In the Cluny Museum." says Cora Laparcerie. "Look at it. It is an un yielding metallic cage and seems atro cious. Vet it was only dangerous by ex cess of compression: it followed the femi nine form and ended ' above the hips. The present straight corset is far worse. It Is a rigid scabbard In which we lose our natural form. The abdomen is so to speak suppressed; the croup is thrown back, and the bust Is thrown forward so that it is still a wonder how we keep our balance and where we put what we eat!" At present they are giving a symposium in the Paris press, these beauties with out corsets. The dainty Dleterle com menced it by an Interview in which Bhe told an awful sight she saw at her own corsetmakers'. It was a stout old lady of 55 years trying to get Into a corset that had been made expressly "to her measure." "She took her poor old abdomen in her two hands." says Dleterle. "and pulled It up! You understand, the corset had rieen put on her fairly loose to start. Then Usefulness THE woman who consigns her old silk petticoats that, to all appearances, have outlived their day of usefulness, worn silk handkerchiefs that have served their legitimate purpose, and other odd3 and ends of soft silk to the rag bag. has In very truth, parted with friends in need. Nothing makes a better dust cloth for rianos and other highly polished furniture than a piece ot old silk. For wiping the dust from silk garments, eilk or chiffon hats, and similar articles of apparel a piece of old silk will prove so satisfactory hat after one trial a brush, no matter how fine its bristles, will be discarded. Black cotton, silk or lisle thread stock ings that are quite hopeless from the darner's point of view still have not served their day, for" they may be trans formed into moat excellent polishers for Jiardwood or oiled floors. They should be laid smoothly one upon the other until several thicknesses are formed, then rolled, beginning with the feet. Into a compact roll, and sewed se curely. The woman who delights in the reflect ing surface of her floors will find in this home-made polisher, which leaves abso lutely no lint in its wake, a worthy rival of those In the market. Then, too, which is always gratifying to the housewife of strong economical tendencies, she has the comforting assurance that she Is putting a seemingly worthless article to some real practical use. Nor is the usefulness of old black stock ings confined to floor polishers. They make No. 1 dusting cloths, and have no rival when It comes to giving the finish 0 as her maid stood ready with the strings, the sufferer reached down and pulled up some abdomen. The maid began pulling tight. The martyr fetched some more up. And the maid laced tighter. And so, in time, she got her abdomen displaced miraculously, In a word, transformed to bust!" This was enough for Dieterle, whose doctor had already shown her some dia grams representing the compression of the organs by the modern straight corset. "When one stands straight, one is com pressed In a disgusting manner," she tells, "but the second diagram showed how the slightest movement forward still in creases the compression. Ouf! I took my corset "off!" . "Up to IS years of age," says the volup tuous Doll, "I wore no corset and I posed for artists. It is the consecrated phrase, you know, seize ans et pas-de corset! I know from those -days that artists will not look upon a model whose form has been nioditi?d by corset-wearing. Their ideal of beauty Is the Venus. of Milo and the Winged Victory." "Yes." replit'3 the divine Bresil, "we have all been told about the Venus of Milo. Once an artist friend told me about her once too often. He had a fine, life size copy of the famous Venus. "let us dress her!" I said to teach hirrt a lesson. I put a skirt on her, and a shirtwaist and a nice bolero and she was a sight, his Venus of Milo! 'Would you walk out In the street with such a thick-waisted creature?" I asked; and his silence was eloquent!" There you are! Looking at those beau ties without corsets, listening to their boasts of suppleness, of natural grace and freedom and of bouncing health, one might come to think easily that the love ly specimens had hit upon a wondrous acsthetical as well as hygienic reform, until Until you hear the sarcasms, the pro tests, the explanations, reasonings and appeals to experience made by their sis ters who cling to the corset and until you see. that those who still wear the "instrument of torture" are statuesque of Worn-Out Garments ing shine to lamp chimneys, and for cleaning the dust from walking shoes or pumps no better means can be desired. Knit underwear, no matter how badly worn, should never be discarded as worth less so long as a piece six inches square can be obtained from it, for it makes tiie very best of wash rags, being soft 'in texture and easily kept sweet and clean. The cloths should be cut Into pieces of the desired size, then neatly hemmed. The comfort derived from having al ways at hand a generous stock of these indispensable articles will more than re pay one for the labor of making them: Worn tray, cloths, dresser scarfs, and similar articles of linen have only half done their duty when too shabby for the use for which they were originally in tended. When this stage of their ex istence is reached they should be con signed to the storeroom and kept for pol llshing glassware. The good portions of worn tablecloths Sunlight and the House Sunlight is Nature's most health-giving scavenger. A house without sunlight Is unhealthy and unsafe for human occu pancy, and it is necessary not only '. to have some sunlight, but to have as much of it as possible. It is, of course, not fea sible to admit the direct rays of the sun to every room of a house; the typical plan of all houses is square or rectangular, and at lewst one side of the house is entirely beyond the reach of the sun. The other three eldes, however, can receive more or less direct sunlight, and the problem of the plan is thus reduced to arranging the THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND AUGUST 19, 1906. 53 t Mm iSSt' should be cut into pieces of symmetrical shape and hemmed. These cloths will prove invaluable in the storeroom for covering bread, cake and similar food stuffs. Flannel garments that can be worn no longer -should be ripped apart, washed clean, folded neatly, and stored" where they are easily accessible for use in sickness and other emergencies, when, as the improvident housewife has realized more than once, a piece of flannel is practically worth its weight in gold. A piece of flannel should always be kept In the storeroom or silver closet -for rub bing th silver. Another thing the forehanded housewife does not fail to husband in the way of resources is her stock of worn sheets, and other bed linen, for she well knows that when sickness takes up its abode in her household, as it does sooner or later In all homes, she will have great need of them. various rooms so that the amount of sun light is adjusted to their uses, and it must be sunlighted, for mere light itself is not sufficient. The rays of the sun have cura tive and cleansing properties that nothing else has. It Is generally admitted that a southern exposure is the best for all houses, and should be obtained whenever possible. It is immaterial whether the entrance be placed on this side or not, so long as the rooms most In use open onto it. In dwell ings of average size the entrance front will also be the front on which any Im portant room opens; but in large country- 5x 1 - ;"V houses the old distinction of a front and back to a house has disappeared, and, in stead, we have the entrance front and the garden front: the service and servants" quarters, so long regarded as characteris tic of the "back" of a house, may be rele gated to a side end or placed in a wing that abuts directly on the entrance front. In such cases it must be well screened and its purpose thoroughly subordinated American Homes and Gardens. Be My Sweetheart. Eugene Field. Sweetheart, be my sweetheart When birds are on the wltiK. When bee and bud and babbling flood Bespeak the birth of Spring; Come, sweetheart, be my sweetheart , And wear this posey ring. Sweetheart, be my sweetheart In the golden Summer glow Of the earth aflush with the gracious blush Which the ripening fields foreshowfc Dear sweetneart, be my sweetheart, As into the noon we go. Sweetheart, be my sweetheart. When faMs the bounteous year. When the fruit and wine of tree and vine Give us their harvest cheer; O, sweetheart, be my sweetheart, -For Winter it draweth near. Sweetheart, be my sweetheart. When the year is white and old. When the fire of youth is spent, forsooth. And the band of age is cold; Yet. sweetheart, be my sweetheart, Ttll the year of our love be told. - A Thought for the Day. - Wordsworth. When I have borne in memory .what ha tamed -Great nations; how ennobling ' thoughts depart ' When men change swords for ledgers and desert The student's bower for gold, some fears -unnamed I had My Country . . . and What wonder if a poet now and then. Among the many movement of his mind Felt for thee as a lover or a. child! . They Call " A ''A r 4 FEW DONTS FOR THE THE picnic girl is the jolliest, brightest and most good-natured of all the large family of Summer girls. In the first place, she starts out to have a good time and to have everybody else have one, and consequently she leaves any little pet dignities she may have at home with her starched frocks and her long gloves, and forgets herself completely. She does not worry everybody on the way by wondering if it will rain. Certain ly rain is not a Joyous addition to a pic nic, but if it comes nobody can help it, and the party must make the best of It. The person who predicts rain and then self-righteously exclaims, "There! I knew it!" when the drops begin to fall, de serves a ducking in the pond. Don't make the mistake of wearJhg your good clothes to a picnic, nor yet of wear ing a frock that is soiled or sloppy, with the idea that anything will do. Wear a dress that you won't regret tearing or spoiling. Have it fresh and clean, and, whatever you do, don't go in pumps and openwork stockings. The woods are swarming in August with every sort of insect that lives, and they are Just waiting for a foolish Summer girl and her exposed ankles. It is now a scientific fact that mosquitoes carry many kinds of disease, You can fight them off elsewhere, but it's a risky thing to leave your ankles uncovered or unsupported when you are tramping through the woods or climbing hills. Leave vanity at home and wear high shoes. Wear any kind of a funny hat you like. It will add to the enjoyment of the occa sion. It has been known to break the ice of many a difficult situation, and it It an Instrument of Others Cling to It as Women's Best friend. v. N. 1. CO9 and classical, when they desire it, and as free and graceful at all times as any .un corseted one. In a word, when perfect beauties like Rence Desprez. Jeanne Pierat or Iucie Clairval declare that their bodies have never suffered a Jot from compression, you begin to get mixed up. And when you study the plump perfections of a Louise Mante or a Mauruerite Bresil or a Tariol Bauge, you come to think that the corset certainly embellishes. "It is all in the making of the corset," says Clairval. "Of course , it must be made to order by a skillful corset maker; ready-made corsets are simply ruinous devices except for women so slender that they do not need them. Also, as one's figure changes constantly, you must have new corsets made for .you continually at least once every three months." This she said for women of moderate Incomes, naturally. It is beat for such to economize on no matter what other article of dress or object of luxury. "As to the modern straight corset," she continued, "it does nothing but good when it is properly adjusted to the body for which it is made. The old style corset did more harm by pushing in the stomach which the present style one protects and leaves free. As for the rest, it all romea back to the question of the bust, we pee artists' models who grow up with out a corset and possess fine busts; but what we do not hear about , are those who grow up corsetless at the price ot the breaking of the fibers. Going without has ruined their busts. It 1 a questiton of taking risks for a young girl even de pending on the strength of the fibers and the weight they are called on to hold." This brings us to the famous "throat sustainer," which, if Louise Mante is not mistaken, is the secret of the suppleness of many a Parisian beauty boasting that she has given up the corset. "Their pretentions make me smile," says the plumpest grand star of the grand opera ballet. "No one will accuse me." she explained arrogantly, "no one will accuse me of not being always in condi tion. I have two hours daily of the hard may come In handy for bailing out the boat before the day is over. The girl who is afraid to enjoy herself had better stay at home. The real picnic girl with a joyous heart will run races with the children, climb over stone walls, lie fiat on the ground and drink w.ter out of the brook when it is discovered that the cup has been left behind or broken, and will not mind if her dress is stained with grass or berry Juice or her arm scratched from rescuing some child's ball from a . prickly blackberry bush. There are almost as many kinds of pic nics as there are girls, but the spirit Is always the same. Have consideration for other people. If you are driving through the country don't insist on stopping and getting out to pink every pretty flower you see growing along by the roadside, and don't get off by yourself or some other to ciimb hills or explore some unknown spot. It always makes trouble to have the party separated. , Don't try to row unless you rally know how. and whatever else you do, never stand up in a rowboat to charge seats with somebody when you are in the mid dle of the lake or river. If you are not afraid yourself, some one else may 'm. Don't take along a lot of things for some poor man to take care of. such as parasol, fan, book or sketch Tad. You don't go on a picnic to read or work, and the lunch is quite enough to be carried. Other belongings will only make trouble. If, however, you feel the necessity for printed .companionship, put a tiny Pook into your pocket. If you have a small handbag the book can go in there, and it would not be a bad idea to slip ih also a tiny pair of manicure scissors and a nail file for remedying any possible dam Torture, While jirwrmt est kind of muscular exercise the essen tial daily training of a danseuse. at tin bar, like any beginner. Kvery muscle o. my body is at my command. My wai.t must be flexible." ' - Kor this reason she claims the right to peak of corsets with authority. "When they have busts of any volume be sure they protect, them with the soutien-gorge." she says, speaking of the boasters and using the delicate Paris phrase of "throat sustainer." 1 The device Itself is something in the style of a bolero, very short and high, suspended from the shoulders and clasp ing and sustaining the bust. "These same women who do not wear corsets also keep their waifts by means of a. whalebone girdle," laughs the solid corset-wearing dancer. "And there you are," she concluded to the interviewer. "The soutlen-gorge may be compared to the upper part of a corset. The whale bone girdle may be assimilated to the waist of a corset. Yet they wear no corse!." For that matter some of the non-corset group admit the use of substitutes "I use the soutlen-gorde." says de Hally, "while for the waist I llnd myself well off with an Ind'la silk girdle. Sarah Bern hardt Introduced Jt many years ago. I was a tiny tot then. It is a baud of the finest. lightest silk, five yards long, often. Someone must hold its extreme end. Then, holding the other tight against the front part of your waist, you must turn slowly like a spinning top and wind and wind It round, always pulling on it tight and always adjusting it, with your two hands, to the form of your waist above the hips." It Is the Oriental woman's waist-preserver and may be as tight as any cor set. Indeed, I am not sure that it is hygienic; and it certainly reminds me of the latest and most extreme corset-wearers' device described by Dleterle. She says she saw it worn by the stout matron who "fetched up" her abdomen to get It Into the straight corset the instant be fore her maid pulled the strings. "It is a corset in the second degree." explains the sprightly Dieterle, "because, you know, there are forms that will buls out of any corset. Now, when the corset Is straining to hold the form, what shall hold the corset? There Is a new device. It Is a corset-cover of the most resisting kind of silk or taffeta, simply moulded over the corset so tight that it must be buttoned with a button-hook! it Is the latest thing," says Dleterle. "a corset for a corset!" STBRL1.NG HHILIG. PICNIC GIRL age to the hands, and a little bottle of camphor, with an extra clean handker chief fnr emergencies is not out of place. Better leave the wild flowers and vines growing In the woods, unless you ire cer tain of what they are, and remember that you arc not called upon to eat pick les and ice cream Just because both av provided. Take simple food and lots of it, but above a! take a happy spirit and a determination to help along the good time. Jrn' H'nltln'. Chicago Pafly News. Down by tne orchard gate dressed In my best New dotted muslin, a rose on-my breast. Heart slngfn' like a lark, joy ous and gay. WatchJn' the leaves an' the shadows at play, Llsten,ln' for footsteps Shucks i No use in statin' V. What I was doln' there, waitln. jeV waitin. Whlppoorwill's rallin'- across from the dark, I.lghtnln' bugs showerln' spark after spark. Somebody whlstlln' a tender refrain S Settln' my pulses a-quiver again 1 Knew he was longin to tell me, yet "natin'. That's why ha caught me there, waitin', jes' waitln'. "Sweetheart," he whispered so close to my ear. Voice, sort o' huRky an' trembly with fear, Stealin' my fingers an' holdin' 'em fait (Thought he was goin' to ask rae at lat.' "How that old gate on Its hinges !s rratln'!" Was all he said an' I'm waitln'. still waitln'. Some day, I know, when the odors of musk, I.ilac and Jasmine are scentln' the dusk Softly he'll whisper the story so old, ' An' should he kiss me I'd surely not scold Noticed today that the swallows are matin' But till he asks me I'm waitln. Jcs' watting. mm th.Xhlfh