' ' . Lofty Plumage OGRESS o WOflLD SOME THINGS TUB BUSY WORKER tS DOING FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OP CIVILIZATION mm Make Boy oper Training, Says Sidis, Will Produce Race of Mental Giants. )W BOY WONDER GREW UP Ither of Twelve-Year-Old Harvard Student Whose Amazing Precocity Has Startled Educators, Telia of His Training. I We are drifting Into national de ne racy. Wo aro becoming a crowd well drilled, well disciplined, com- traplace Individuals, with strong Phil- line habits and notions of general bdlocrlty. We have clever business en, cunning artisans, resourceful pol- Iclans, adroit leaders of new cults, it no artists, no scientists, no phl- pophers, no statesmen, no genuine lent, and no' true genius. IBorfs Sldls, one of the leading ychologlsts of the times, says we e blind to the barbaric evils of our Ivlronment In fact, he calls us bat Bind, stock blind, mole blind, and one blind. Sin his essay, "Philistine and fcnlus," recently published, Sldls ap- :als to the fathers and mothers of e country to wake up to these evils the times, to strive for the cduca- on of genius, and not the training of aillstlnes. As the father of William tmes Sidls, the twelve-year-old boy ludent of Harvard whose amazing 'ecoclty has startled staid educators o world over, he Is peculiarly quail ;d to speak with authority on sys ms of education, since he claims Rat the boy's remarkable development not In the least due to heredity or jinormallty, but is entirely a result careful training. Hero is what ho fcys of him: "As fathers and mothers, it may ln- brest you to learn of one of those E)ys who were brought up in the love id enjoyment of knowledge for its vn sake. At the age of twelve, when ither children Of his age are hardly Ible to spell and read, and drag a liiserable mental existence at the Ipron strings of some antiquated cbool dame, the boy is Intensely en- pylng courses in the highest branch- 13 of mathematics and astronomy at ne of our foremost universities. The (lad and the Odyssey are known to Ilm by heart, and he Is deeply inter sted in the advanced work of classl al phiology. He is able to read lerodotus, Aeschylus, Sophocles, puripides, Aristophanes, Lucian and Ither Greek writers with the same est and ease as our schoolboy reads lis 'Robinson Crusoe,' or the produc- ions of Cooper and Henty. "The boy has a fair understanding If comparative philology and mythol gy. He Is well versed in logic, an ient history, American history, and kas a genera insight into our politics Ind into the groundwork of our con titutlon. At the same time he Is of Brazil Aids Important law enacted to GIVE THEM CHEAP HOMES. Government Grants Land on Gradu ated Rentals and Will Loan Con struction Funds and Provide Plans for the Houses. Recently enacted legislation favor ing the construction and maintenance If cheap homes for workingmen In Etlo do Janeiro has lust been promul gated by the president, of Brazil. The principal features of the new law are bxemptlon from payment of Import flutles on material for use in construc- ftlon; autbprizatlon to the municipal I government to exempt contractors from tho payment of municipal taxes for a period of not less than 15 years; a specified percentage earning to de- Itermine the rental to be collected I from tenants; the graftt of available .1 i . r . . . i a. diuuu unueu uy uie leuerui government I not necessary for other purposes, to be used for building sites, and au thorization to- the executive to loan I building companies funds from the na tional savings institution for the pur poses cited. Building companies to receive these special favors must contract with the municipality to Insure the exemption from all municipal taxes on the trans fer of land, construction, holding and transfer of houses built thereon. Houses must be built on sites ap proved by the government as being bygenic and on streets not less than enlarged to that minimum. Provision must be made for sewerage, water and light connections, and each house must be so constructed as to have an Independent entrance. ino government win uruw pinus iur tho construction of the houses, mak ing provision for different styles and Fizea and specifying the kind and amount of material to be used, the total cost of same and the maximum a Genius an extremely happy disposition, brim ming over with humor and fun. His physical condition la splendid, his cheeks glow with health." - At the, time that the Sldls boy, then eleven years old, gave his lecture on "Four Dimensional Bodies" before Harvard's Mathematical club, when seventy-five erudite professors gaped at the youngster in knickerbockers glibly wrestling with Euclidian theo ries, his father gave out a few Inter esting facts about his early training. When the child was but a few. months old he was trained to Identify the ele ments of sound by means of alphabet blocks that were held up before him and named, day after day, either by Dr. Sldls or his wife, who co-operated with her husband enthusiastically in all his educational theories. After a time 'he learned to spell by means of these same blocks, which were formed Into words on the floor and the corre sponding objects pointed out to him. Thus, before he was two years old fie was able to read and spell easily. He was taught to count in much the same manner, and when he was Ave years old be had devised a method to tell on what day of the week any given date would fall. Seeing his father operate the type writer one' day, he at once recognized the superiority of this method of ex Helping Merchants Provide Means Whereby Sightless People Help Themselves. PROVES A GREAT SUCCESS "Blind Section" Where All Blind Peo ple In Country Can Send Their Work to Be Sold Is Wonder ful Help. A few years ago a department store In New York undertook to help the blind to help themselves. After dis cussing methods to obtain the best re sults it was decided to start a "blind section" where all the blind people in the country could send their work to 'be sold. Every kind of work from literary efforts to needle and bead work was to be accepted, sold, and the proceeds sent to the maker. The store furnished the space, paid a clerk to wait upon the customers, 'and the contributors received the entire amount of their sale minus any ex pense charges that had to be paid. Nothing was charged for the space or the clerk. The effort proved satis factory and the store still retains Its "blind department" The venture In tho east was watch ed anxiously by the Illinois depart ment for the blind and last fall a Chi- Workmen price at which the respective houses are to pay In rentals. No house may be built for less than $1,625, and in no case may the annual rent charged exceed 15 per cent of the cost of construction and price paid for building lot The building company must oblige Itself to sell, either for cash or on an Installment plan, any bouse which a tenant may wish to purchase, at a price not to ex ceed 10 per cent. In excess of the original cost The concessionaire must issue provisional title to any tenant proposing to buy a home, tak ing as security a life Insurance policy issued to the tenant by a company recognized by the government as com petent, the amount of the policy not to exceed the official valuation of the property, Consular Reports. No Chance for "Cold Feet." By means of electricity it Is now proposed to make the carpet, the Per sian rug, or the tiger's pelt as warm In winter as the latter was while worn by the tiger. In Germany the experi ment is now being tried of wiring the floor covering so as to heat the carpet or rug and do away with cold floors. A patent has been taken out for run ning wires through the carpet In pa rallel lineB In such a way that an or dinary lighting current can be run through the wires. The conductor be comes warm and heats the carpet. The heat in large carpets can be con trolled as desired and the carpet will remain warm for two or three hours after the current Is turned off. A small foot rug can be heated and tak en for comfort during a carriage ride. The wiring of carpets for this pur pose is new, but patents have been is sued before tor passing wires or wire gquze through compartments In table covers, carpets, and other coverings for lighting purposes. Not Evenly Distributed. One fool In a family ought to be enough, but It seldom happens that way. pressing hlmielf ovor laborious hand writing, und quickly plokod, up the trick of manipulating It. The main principles of Dr. Sldls' ed ucational theories aro based upon what ho calls tho law of reserve men tal on orgy the prlnclptd of itorod up, dornjant, potential, subconscious en orgy. The ordinary stimuli of 'life are quite unable to reach this store of unused energy, and even have a ten dency to choke it up and strangle It You may have had the experience yourself, after prolonged mental work, of feeling greatly fatigued; but If necessity required you to keep on working, after a time this feeling of fatigue seemed to' pass away. You are then drawing on your reserve mental energy, Thero Is nothing, he affirms, that will prevent the libera tion of this reserve energy so much as fixed adaptations, stable habits. Quaint Wind Mills. Silos are Just coming Into favor among dairymen, although the most of the corn-fodder Is still shocked in tho field until after husking time, and then built Into tall, conical stacks, giving the landscape a picturesqucness that is worth seeing. There are no large rivers and streams on the island of Aquldneck to furnish water power, and tho quaint windmills seem artistically situated on the hilltops, as though to embellish tho landscape. Prank P. Fogg In Na tional Magazine. the Blind cago department store became inter ested In the work. One of the man agers was sent to New York to In vestigate. He returned much Im pressed, his only criticism being that the clerk in charge was not interested enough In the work. This fault was remedied In the Chicago venture when a woman, who for twelve years had lived with Mrs. Kate Selby, treas urer for the Illinois department of the blind, and the mother of a blind son, was chosen to act as a clerk. It is largely duo to their efforts that the new department has met with such success. Last December a bllijd department was opened in this store and that month the sales amounted to $300. Every cent clear, mind, to the unfor tunate people of the United States who are deprived of their sight That is, every cent but a small sum that bad been paid out for expressage. And such a variety of articles as were sent in! Every nook and cranny of the United States seemed to be represented. Industrial homes, schools for the blind, individuals, all sent' their donations. The ages of the con tributors ranged frofh 6 to 89. Bead work, hand work, lace, rag carpets, baskets, brooms, books, poe try, music everything. In fact that one could imagine found its way to the blind department Every color and design conceivable seemed to be among the articles. T,he baby goods were resplendent and reasonable, for the blind workers mark the value of their own goods. Be it exorbitant or otherwise, the price stands Just as it is marked. Most common of all tho work Is the bead work, which is easy for the sightless to learn. Every blind per son learns bead work while In school. The fine hand work, hemstitching, hemming, and all the other stitches would prove a credit to one with sight, and looking at the perfection of the work It seems impossible to be lieve that one without the gift of vision could accomplish such exqui site work. The books, all well written, are numerous. The music Is catchy and sweet, although often a strain of pathos appears. But there Is little that Is not hopeful and Joyful, for the blind are said to be the most happy natures. Thus far the section has done fairly well and the contributors are continu ing to send in more "wares" as they receive at the end of each month a check covering the amount received from the sale of their contributions. LATE INVENTIONS. A storage battery suspended from the frame supplies the motive power for a' new motorcycle. To keep a motorist's hands warm there has been invented a gauntlet heated by the engine exhaust For use with small boats a Wiscon sin man has invented a folding an chor, the arms of which lock when It Is opened. German engineers have perfected a machine for weighing locomotives which provides separate scales for each wheel. A three-pronged gas burner with a long handle, to be connected with a .gas Jet by' tubing, has been invented for Igniting fuel In coal ranges. A balloon which, when deflated, can bo packed in its basket and carried on a man's back, has been Invented by a French aeronaut A fireman's helmet invented In Ger many may be connected with a line of hose In such a manner that be can be surrounded by a falling: curtain of water. In splto of tho efforts of the Audu bon society on this side of tho Atlan tic, and kindred organizations on the othor, there. is a very decided return to plumage decorations In the latest swell autumn millinery. And when fickle fashion calls, sense and senti ment have to give way, as is shown In this Instance. In tho picture above is seen one of NEW TRICK IN MILLINERY Long Strings of Black Velvet Are Soon on Little Bonnets This Season. "Straws show which way the wind tlows." So, alBO, 'db-the little bonnets of tulle, coquettlshly set upon the waved and puffed coiffure and engar landed with myosotls, and the large tagals lined with felt, that have quite taken the place of almost all other forms of headgear during the last few weeks. Every one of them have long strings of black velvet which are tied at the side and at the back and have thin long ends floating, or caught with a Jeweled pin high over the bust and on the left side. The "sleeve" string Is simply a very long loop of broad velvet ribbon, through which the arm is slipped. It hangs loosely on the left sldo under the arm. This new trick In millinery is caus ing not a little comment regarding its probable popularity, but withal seems to be finding favor in the eyes of the "ly great dictators of styles. A SPORT'S COAT This useful coat might well be made In tweed or rough serge. It 'has the upper part set to the basque under the waist-band, which Is of material cut the reverse way, as also are the cuffs and collar. The cap Is of tbe same material as coat Materials required: 2 yards 48 Inches wide. Angora Wool. Angora wool, ever so beautiful, soft and fleecy, Is made up In many at tractive forms. A dull green sweater coat Is $22, but it Is the loveliest thing of its kind. Unlike all the awkward things that are accustomed to being crowded under coats and make the wearer entirely miserable, this one Is soft and pliable, clinging to the figure In nice lines.,. It has pockets and belt and Is finished down the front with small smoked pearl buttons. There are scarves, too, ,of this fleecy Angora yarn, long and soft and loosely woven, though warm as toast. They come olther In pure white or with a purple Mriped border. these latest hats. The feathers are thoso of the ordinary rooster, shaped and trimmed to a height that 1b In direct contrast to the broad, low con fection of last year. There is appar ently no, limit to the lofty altitudes to which these hats may reach. The body of the hat Is of' bronze-brown velvet with an upturned brim that rises front and rear. TIMELY TIP ON LINGERIE Among Prettiest Corset Covers Are Those That Fit Into Peplum at Waist. The busy "bachelor maid," who has no. one to look 'after the little details of her wardrobe, but must attend to them In the bits and edges of time after business hours when she would be glad to stretch out and relax In place of fussing with tapes and rib bons, continues to buy or make her corset covers and "combinations" with headings or casings at waist and neck edges, in which ribbons must be run if they are to bo worn with any comfort. , Yet among the prettiest corset cov ers of the present day are those that fit Into a peplum at the waist line, a narrow Insertion or tiny band of fold ed lawn covering tho Join and render ing a "draw tape" 'Superfluous, and those that have' the fullness at the upper edge gathered daintily, to fit once and for all, under a similar fin ishing band to which tho lace or em broidery around tho neck is Joined. Reference is not made to the close fitting corset cover, which reminds one of a fitted lining. These peplum corset covers have a slight fullness at the waist line, gathered Into the band, and almost as much at the upper edges, before finishing, as If tho bead ing were to be used, with baby ribbon to draw It close. And they yield noth ing to the other style, either In prettl ness of appearance or perfection of finish. Moreover, they quite elimi nate all unnecessary "bunching" ojt the waiBt line, which advantage, con slderlng tho present styles, Is recom mending them more and more to "those who know." A Good Hint. In an emergency, where one has to evolve a "fancy" costume with little tlmo and apparently less material, something very loVely can be made of several of tho beautiful evening scarfs, either the spangled ones or plain ones. Nearly every wpman will possess a scarf of one kind or another and these can be borrowed, as no damage need be done to them. Over a white dress hang two or more of the silver span gled ones, so that they fall from tho shoulders down as far as possible on either side. Then wind others about the hips and around the bead, cross ing a piece over the forehead and an other over the chin and lower part of tho face. The eastern effect Is grace ful and usually very becoming. Whi.te Felt Hats. Although every one may not accept the fashion for whlto felt hats In hot weather, it Is probable that they will be tbe first choice as soon as the cool weather comes back. They will make admirable early fall hats, simply trim med, with a bow of black velvet or taffeta ribbon. One should not attempt tc put any thing ornate on them, although It is probable we shall see them trimmed in morning glories, in cherries. In plums, and In small red apples. The Resourceful Girl. She Is a perfect treasure, and far more necessary for the comfort of a home than a. patent carpet sweeper or even a telephone. Her suggestions in an emergency are always sensible and to the point; she does not wasto time in moaning and groaning ovor what can't be helped, and makes tbe best of whatever material cornea to hand. GOOD QUALITIES OF CAPONS Although Industry Is Growing Rapidly Supply Does Not Begin to Equal the Demand. (By It. It. BLOCUM.) A capon is a male chicken bearing tho same relation to a cockerel that a steer does to a bull, a barrow to a boar or a wether to a ram. As with other animals of this kind, tho dispo sition of tho capon differs materially Diagram Showing Where Incision Should Be Made Between Last Two Ribs. i from that of the cockerel. He no longer shows any disposition to fight, Is much more quiet and is easy to keep within bounds. The true capon never crows. Along with this change in disposition there is a change in appearance. The comb and wattles ceaso growing, which causes tho head to appear small. The hacker and sad dle feathers develop beautifully. In deed, these feathers and the undevel oped comb and wattles serve to Iden tify the capon and In consequence should never be removed when the bird Is dressed for the market As a result of tbe more peaceful disposition, the capon continues to grow and his body develops more uni formly and to a somewhat greater size than is the case with the cock erel of the same age. For a time the cockerel and tho capon make about equal development, but In a short time the capon outstrips the cockerel" In growth. As they do not fight nor worry one another, a large flock of capons may b'e kept together. Coupled with tho batter growth Is the fact that the capon, brings a better price per pound. Cockerels up to 5 months old usual ly bring from 12 to 18 cents a pound; if hetd longer than this they aro biassed-as old cocks and do not bring morefthan 6 to 12 cents a pound. Ttier'e are two reasons, then, why it Is better to caponize surplus cock erels than to raise them for market as such: (1) There Is an Increase in .weight, and (2) the prlco per pound Is materially Increased. Yet In many localities where espe cially fine poultry is raised, while capons usually 'Sell for a somewhat better price the difference Is not great In fact, for the Boston market many capons are picked clean and sold as "South Shore roosters." Henco it will be seen that the profit in capons must depend to a great extent upon local conditions. In selecting tho breed best suited for caponlzlng, several factors must bo taken into consideration. Largo capons bring the best prices. Conse quently the breed should bo large. It does not pay to caponize small fowls. Yellow legs and skin, as In other classes of poultry, are most popular. Tho Plymouth Rocks, Light Brah mas, Cochins, Indian Games, Lang shans and Wyandottes are all recom mended by different producers, as aro also various crosses of these. The Brahmas and Cochins possess good size. By some the Brahmas are claimed to be difficult to operate upon; by others this Is denied. The Plymouth Rocks and Wyandottes aro somewhat smaller, but sell readily and possess tbe advantage of yellow skin and legs. The Langshan Is large and is easily operated upon. The In dian Game Is probably the most use ful as a cross upon some one of tho Method of Securing Fowl; Also Spreader In Place. other breeds, thereby Improving the breast meat without materially re duclng the size of the fowl. In Mas sachusetts the Brahma was formerly the most popular breed for this pur pose, because of the demand for large birds for roasters. Later, crosses be tween the Light Brahma and the Barred or White Plymouth Rock be came quite popular, while at present the pure Barred and White Plymouth Rocks are also considered suitable and are widely used. Prevents Indigestion. Charcoal Is very effective in pro renting indigestion, which Is a com mon ailment among poultry of all kinds and of all ages, and as Is very well known by all who are in the busi ness, Indigestion Is one of the for miners of poultry diseases.