roller-skating, with their atmospheres almost as filthy as their morals, are closed or torn down.
There ought to be a first, second, and third prize in every school, public and private, for such accomplishments as walking, swimming, running, jumping, boxing, and climbing. Our scholars should be taught to cultivate body as well as mind; to breathe as well as to calculate; to know that strength is as sure to follow exercise as knowledge to follow study. Then they will truly know the meaning of the wise man (Johnson), who said: "Such is the constitution of man that labor may be said to be its own reward;" and of the eloquent man (Cicero), who said: " It is exercise alone that supports the spirits and keeps the mind in vigor."
IX.
CORPULENCE, DIET, AND SLEEP.
"Physic, for the most part, is nothing else but the substitute of exercise and temperance," says Addison.
"The only way for a rich man to be healthy is by exercise and abstinence, to live as if he were poor," says Sir W. Temple.