THE ; OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY " MORNING, MARCH 6, 1910 n v.- it "tv rr-"vrr ,tiow J uaits 0 When Fas Interfere With Their Feet Mud . Pi'--? ti -0' fe4 fr y is,.'' 1 1 ' vc But If shs aid Jt. h made much mort obvious the Important detail that she att(rcd up to the ultra edge of fithion. So, ahe did It. That'a all. Various mhnor eceen trlcltlea, Including the three Inches of hump on either ahoulder. carried ti . fair alonr ttntll - th neat .. most noticeable "walk," known aa the kangaroo, which, awept the country some five yeara ago. It did not longr endure, for the fascinating dlrectolre gown was already being moulded by destiny and. ' atk moit men agreed sub aequently, destiny waa inking a mighty good Job of it. The germa of votes for women and rivalry with man In all thlnga were. however, sending the love liest of their, sex into ath letics, and the great, big, long-legged, mannish atride gained many ana magnlfl- phyatcal disability perhaps a ' moral triumph, but scarcely to be applauded as an artistic one. But the prime purpose of fixing attention It al ways accomplished. Besides, It 'was peculiarly suited to the alender girl, not to speak of the skinny one. who doesn't exist during these days of gallant admi ration. Gradually It spread afong the New England coast resorts, there beginning to be Identified by Its now general title, the Boston limp. Last year It crept Into New York and. -to an extent, into Philadelphia. " WITHSTOOD THE SHEATH GOWN The eheath gown couldn't quell It. Those male Ignoramuaea who philosophised over the rigidity of the Iron-clad corset reaching to the knees reckoned without our llmpers. They managed to get an effect of alnuoaity Into their walk which proved that, next to the human conscience, the feminine figure Is. the most elaatlc thing on earth. Its general spread In the East was. however, coin cident with the advent of the long topcoat, which haa about a twelvemonth of popularity to lis record. That coat waa conspicuous for Its "alouchy" At. r . There waa about It an epitome of the social "don't- care-a-hang" atti tude toward every body, so extensive ly cultivated of late years, which made . following suit. It appears possible. If not completely probable, that the limp may be universal throughout the eastern and middle western states by the spring. But with the advent of summer Its harmful effects will be materially mitigated by the Influences of country, mountain and seashore especially seashore. However ardently and universally the Venuses of the boardwalks may glide along In their wriggling sinuosity, all experts agree that the minute they daztle the admiring multitudes In the effulgence of their bathing aults, they will return to the normal loveliness of their natural walk. The Paris limp Is pretty close to the original American one, but it la modified by,the latest skirt acheme through which Paris hopes to claim full credit for the invention. The polonaise, or apron skirt, which has berome the rage In Paris, Is Just now fettering the feet of Englishwomen as a novelty. It flsres widely at the lower extremity, but Is almost tightly tied In below the kneea. The woman wno could get along In such a lasso noose would have to be something not very far removed from a disembodied spirit. If the very latest polonaise of Paris should have :be success of the dlrectolre, the world will gasp twice JT TPOiV lovely and suffering womanhood i J in the United States, at least a . fresh affliction has fallen. To the rest of the feminine world it is imminent. Paris has it; London dreads it; Berlin stares at it-askance; and America, more than all of them, has caught it. . That is, it may be heralded as the affair of the United States especially, whether we like it or not. For it is the new and startling woman's limp. It dales hack at least a couple of years to staid and conservative Boston, of all places. So priority of ittvention and adoption belongs to this country, whatever the amount of credit attaches to it. It is now widely known, if less widely practiced, as the "Boston limp." But such is the jealous care and such the eternal vigilance with which Paris seeks to guard its pre-eminence in matters of fashion that already cable dispatches have come from both Paris and London announcing the setting of the new fad in Paris, and adroitly trying to account for it by reason of the latest changes the modes. In this one instance, historical accuracy unquestionably fixes Boston's claims' to prior ity, and the clothes have followed the woman for once in a century, in spite of all clamor to the contrary. But, when all is said and done, one grave question remains: 7 T . I 4 f tl a$ inc American woman, VI tier tnven- ins. where milady didn't hesitate to pass a tether tion of tllC Hmp, done anything tO be proud thonS between her knees from back to front of her r,p gown, In order to compel her exceedingly attenuated I ' Fklrts to the display of all the curves she had been able to persuade nature to donate to her. Now. while these wars of fashions were raging, de mure Boston, with no fanfares or pronunelamentos, was cultivating the limp. The first exponents of that more than erratic art date back as much as two years ago. They were without any exalted honor, even in their own city. Lone Innovators, they were mostly women who were Inspired to secure attention, whether the means they used were beautiful or not. Indeed, popular opinion instantly assumed that the limp wasn't beauti ful; If anything, it intimated heroism under grave ' 1 t J 1 ' : M J. lUrious Facts T cent specimens wherever gentle womanhood was reaching the conclusion that it didn't pay to be so very gentle, after all. So the hearty, almost husky swagger had Its innings, and that In vigorous conflict with the first, mincing steps of the revealing- dlrectolre and its alluring cous- LET us attack that last, mogt serious feature of the. subject with no terrors or hesitations. What is the limp? The exponent of the limp, instead of walk ing with the axis of her body in plumb that is, hon estly upright so that a plumb line would fall straight from tbe crown of her head along the middle line of her body has transferred the axis to one side, usually the right. She stands and walks with the right shoulder pro jected sidwise and forward yes, and upward so that she Is continually In a condition of unstable equi librium. That is the strictly scientific analysis of the limp. With that projocted shoulder hump upward and forward, she, carj't walk otherwise than with her left leg and foot in a measure trailing after her. Her ambulatory movement is accomplished with a sway and a dip which suggest, above anything else in the world, the limp of an energetic paralytic. Observe, however, that she doesn't mean it that way. Her permanent mood fnspirlnar the limp is on of aggressiveness, rather than of apology. She has exaggerated the swagger, and has fallen into the Cli.irybdis of the limp. The result is an anomaly in walking. There Is al ways the suggestion present of the mannish stride, but the limp is necessarily only one-half of it. If the limper could only hike up the other shoulder and trail the other fdot with every alternate step, she would attain perfection and the Impossible. She has tried It tried it In front of home mirrors, tried it along ancestral halls, tried in side streets. But che can't. So she is doing the best ahe can with the available ha.lf of it. THE CONSEQUENCES Hence follow various inevitable consequences. Her expression takes on a curious blend of the drawn mouth and neck muscles which is plaintive rather than assertive. Her hips operate unevenly, the right one maintaining a steady elevation at the expense of the left. Her spine, notwithstanding the undulatory wriggle with which she alms to progress, is prone to assume, a distinct tendency to curvature, , which per sistence in the limp is liable to confirm. And those who nave most closely studied the new walking fad unite in the averment that a degree of nervous disturbance, attributable to the continual contortion of the spinal area, is Inevitable. It may be considered the final evolution in a evele of unnatural walking styles which it has taken more than thirty years to complete. - In the seventies the Grecian bend, with Its camel like hump to the figure behind, became the universal rage, dictated, not by the exigencies, but by the oppor tunities of the bustle. A woman didn't have to stoop nnd enormously empnasize uie "h' curve of ber spine sro-round as a ride in the realms of ineffable bliss. in order to bring into prominence the rear elevation To the child who' can go everv dav. and who does go of her figure. The bustle did that for her. until she frequently without difflcultv, the lions and antelopes presented the appearance, of a human gargoyle of are as commonplace as the cattle In oastur t a Venus Calllpyre country bov. It quite ultra-fashionable in Its air and gave It an ex tensive vogue. The more it wrinkled at the back the more ultra It was. All a woman had to do was assume the Incoming limp, and her uplifted shoulder and accompanying hip aet the long topcoat into an attack of epilepsy. An Impressive feature of the advance of the limp Is that thus far. In its pure estate and undebased by the contamination of the vulgar. It has not been seen in combination with a tightly fitting coat. EFFECTS SLOW TO SHOW While the effects upon the limper are sufficiently obvious within a few weeks, it takes from one to two years to bring about radical consequences, probably more important than the tendency to spinal curva ture and nervous irritability. The most Important Injury is fo the chest, shoul ders and lungs, for the bent and contracted position seems to sink in the upper torso, making a "hollow" chest, which, once acquired, Is extremely difficult to remedy. With the Indorsement of Paris, and with London as much, and the police will be liable to take to the woods. While It has a more than discreet train In back, It is so short in front that the wearer will have no discretion whatever as to showing all her shoes and, what is more, several inches of whatever may overtop them. So much for the lower end of the limp and Its ar riving gowns. At the other, milliners are already HKHK Is a proposal to establish farms for valu-f able fur-bearlng animals In thp forest of Canada. " L'pon experiments in aerial navigation for mili tary purposes France spent $238,500; Germany. $1.30.000; Austria-Hungary, $27,500, and Great Brlt-j aln. $2,350. in 1908. I Bled eight feet from the ground, a rubber-yield ing tree of fifteen Inches diameter gives threa pint, of liquid. - On an average a man requires 1S00 pounds of food per annum, a woman 1200 pounds and a Chili. 800 pounds. f Of all places of Importance, Sydney, New 'Boutfc Wales, is farthest from London as the crowfllea KJ420 miles. ( In Ceylon the manufacture of salt la a govern ment monopoly, and yielded in 1908 1.760,551 rupee l585.000 to the revenue. '. j Boys over 14 and girls over 12 are legally titled to get married without the consent of tbe( parents or guardians In Scotland. Prison rations in England give 51 2-5 ouncea food dally to the prisoner doing hard labor, bii only 4$ 4-5 ounces In the case of a prlaoner dole light labor. .J Alpine Idyll f-j-HE monstrous Alps toss up their peaks like cloud I To kiss the sun orgllmnier with the stars, Man seems of nature less than these mute rock That scorn his step and echo, laughing loud J When shrieking he, precipitate, plunges deep , ( Into the silent, echoless abyss. Ixok. where the Schneeberg with eternal snow :' Streaming like age across his wrinkled brow, " , Keeps silent sentry through the centuries! groaning under the mental strain of figuring out what. , ' 1 , , . 'm,T arK"" " s X- The slow procession of the Pleiades, it will do to the chanticleer hat. Will the roostervAnd make these crags partakers of our bliss ...... . . With vows and kisses thrown across the world , feathers have to perk themselves up or droop thera- Has life for us no guerdon but the roar " ' selves down Of fate that thunders in' the path of death. ' , With silence and the laughter of the gods? Alas, poor woman! W. M. is London.! L ONDOX, the old rascal, a dozen -centuries older than New York, is certainly getting as giddy as young Broadway. The staid landed folk of England's worthy middle class are simply scandalized. All the world smiles or frowns, according to the measure of charity, when stories of pups in evening dress and lapdoga in velvet-lined kennels emanate from the old me tropolis. Extravagance is always fascinating, es- ttiDortiaa pecially to those who cannot afford to be spend thrifts, for it simply bores the plutocrat. Alonte Cristo would not have found the 'account of his own expenditures good reading. The follies of one capital are only interesting to another in their sug gestiveness. Fortunately mighty few of 113 are Croesuses, so we have the normal appetite for Monte Cristo tales. We. should like to know, along with Uncle .Teptha from the crocheted-muffler counties, "just to what pree-cise extent them wealthy folks, with more'n's good fer Honest people, has asccuded the height o' folly." Uncle Jeptha may now put on his spectacles, for, without a doubt, we have some startling evi dence of the way our fplks and other folks in London "are going it" more than he can digest in thoughtful moments with the aid of a whole peck of assarted "scraps." OufFollies T HE rich, as well as the poor; rilust be amused. The idea that the superwealthy man can get all the enjoyment he needs out of life by fondling- his money sacks and holdinar down the lids o his various chests and strong boxes is painfully fallacious. There is just one other feature about amusement (before we chink the philosophical side of it), and that is. it must come hard. The youngster on the famous East Side of New York who saves up for a whole winter in order to take one trip to the park finds the lions and antelopes encnantea creatures, and enjoys a spin on the merry- Now, Che rub of it lies in the fact that with enough money at his command nothing comes very hard to the rich man. If he owns a horse and wants something swifter, more thrilling, more expensive, he has but to buy an automobile, the price of which does not make an impression upon his bank account. When the automobile fsils, he may turn to yachts or even aeroplanes but they all come so easily and their charm is necessarily short-lived. When all legitimately adult joys are worn thread bare, there is nothing left but to start all over aKaln with the kindergarten sports that tickled his childish fancy. It is really a pathetic situation. London society women, who have all they can possibly spend on their own attire, which, by the way. is no mean sum. are dressing their dnps to match Foor. unsuspecting dogdnm! It must bear its share of humanity's foibles, because humanity cannot carry enough on Its person to be novel and original. In the fcreat English metropolis the pet doggies, the little fellows wno are not too hwivy are never permitted to walk on the street. They are dressed up furs, silks, velvets or broadcloths, according to the occasion, and carried in the aims of their ultra fashionalile mistresses when they appear In public. When there Is a demand the supply responds In a hurry, and London now has Its dos tailors, dog bar bers and 1I0K maids. The latter are persons of no little responsibility, for their duties include a thorougn knowledge of the lady's wardrobe, so that the dog mav be decked our In clothing to match. There are Norfolk suits In Scotch plaids and die. ks for outing: occasions. The unfortunate pur must wenr hit velvet xmoltinj taeVot ffidonr. anit when allowed out of his kennel after dark neve:, falls to appear in a black evening garb, stiff ahir ' and all. There are goggles for the automobile, anS shoes of patent leather and kid for all occasions. And all this aa an outlet for the play spirit tK human beings who have overdone sports, fashions! social functions, and have come back to the primitive doll craze after the Monte Cristo fever had W0rk4 Its blamedest. j On our own side we have not beard much Off tiddle-de-winks at Newport, but when It come ti racinf? turtles in a bowl, as some Baltimore chappie recently did when everything from polo to poker haff become a bore, we begin to think how. long, lonr ii?o. we used to watch potato bugs chase one anotheij about the edere of a bucket with feverish interest, -j At the rtaltimore club two large, vigorous terraplrf were selected and dubbed Otello and King Leopold, A( tank was prepared, snd half the clubmen In thej Maryland capitnl turned out with bets and real racing enthusiasm. All were frleeful at the prospect Of brand new diversion. As it happened. Leopold wot out. but orly because Otello became frightened as h'f neared the finish, and drew in all his members, thUf sacrificing the advantage of a fine lead. At ptesent Jt is not considered altogether eon slstent with dignity for millionaires and their wive" to roll hoops, spin ops and Jump rope, but with In-creaslna- wealth will come final desperation, and tic one need be surprised if. on his visit to Grosvenni square in 1920. he finds' the millionaire residents doing these verv stunts to while awrtv the wearv hours. Is l: (rld llness? Is It all fltv thit 1 tak!nf ue? n errlp on London's society folk' CharltaM phllos' f nhers miuht claim that It I onlv manifestation 1 the Inful burden of wealth. At any rate. ha mafll festations themselves ere aMddv and clownish noith English journals bewail the decadence of time j honored English manners and conservative aimplieltvj Thev Jav It all at the door of wealth, and sr5. s. athinarlv of American and South African mllllo'i t aires, stock broker and newly rich merchants In tb' same breath. "OenMlitv In the best sense ha glv wav to folly." thev sav. - -. t Instances of dukes and marquises refreshing the? -fashionable rssemblle with sandwiches and clart ; cud are cited in pontrnst with the extravagant, din t nrs of he present s-Iddy swirl, wherein wealth Is th standard f .eligibility, ; ,y The patron r-e"iis of Tendon Is no longer the e!at conservative, old fellow he once was: tbera I t duh ef that Me ie a alddv frnMpkm eh trle f the pursuit of now enterintn-ntX View thrM!,jrf , n generally the cndsl '-us ; atanth . Ear' 1 nnla -at tr mlMl ! wh rnt tb t' which rnnnev frnni the enlonle and America 1 ting their titled representatives. a, i- 1