' The lady whqï¬vu at the tinny hotel Jâ€" ._ 1... Al..- 3‘10.ou u..- _-,,, on the New: side was dressing {or din- ner. She wee not. expecting company just at that moment and was somewhat aurtling to the eye. BM. no eye was these save hen. Suddenly she was roused from a cohtemplotion of her chums in_the min-9r by I. knock. n ,l A _--s uu-quu nu v..- .__-, ,, “Some due is npplhg'igain." the mute tax-ed. “Everybody in this hots! seems to him I. hunger may." um , __,“ _‘_‘ "when in? clear. bird-like voice the called: “Who is it?" “It’s Johnnie." said svolco. Johnnie was the cad-faced boy with the painstaking head who brought up ice water and things: _ -- . . .- 1-34 fair. JI- have a card," replied the page. “Put it under the door," said the charming guest. “I can't," said Johnnie; “it’s on a. Aand the elevator fell to the baseman with a great crash. In the forward max-elf of science, na- ture‘u methods are being closely imii ated in the laboratories of the synthetical chemist who has already been able to make am artiï¬cial quinine which con- tains most of the therapeutical proper- ï¬el of the real article. Two German chemists working in Berlin have juxt produced an artiï¬cially prepared cai- ieine. the alkeloid‘to which both tea and coflee owe their refreshing stimu- lat/mg and analgesic properties. "Want. in it. Jthxiie'r' asked thelady conmntrated; milk, w need to 5" put into a water to be at: Pch‘mn the real article. A usehhns been found for old shoes, a derelict product'thnt has heretoforedeo fled the eflorts of that, class of claimants who view with despair the absolute loss of anything. says the New York Jour- nal. The leather is cut into little disks of variomi shapes. These are set on edge and held together with long wim staples. and the result is an odd looking but flexible and urviceable door mat, which seems to do the work excellent; ly of the wire and steel mats that m in such general use in outer hallo. The leather temp mat is very cheap, and will last a lone time. ' IT WAS ON THE TRAY. IN OUR POCKETS. FOR DOOR MATS. voice the THE HIGHLAND PARK NEWS The hum of the-pinning wheel 131ml a familiar sound in Block Inland. ‘ quaint and interesting rem in sum- mer and a miniature world in winter. in which tube habits and customs are those of 1.10 3' ago. The island is 15 “‘11.... n" \‘nn 'lhn-la Inland shore and $134; on m}: 'Rhonfe Inland shore m1 alums! directly nouuh of stormy Point Judith. says the Ngvy York Herald. I -,__n.l-- u...~â€"l . w- , '1‘ he heads of 30 Block Island familial set sail in ï¬dhing bouts the other day and pushed up the Thames rim toOak- dale, where they left. heap of WWI m be carded inlo rolls for hand spinning. The rolls will be spun and knimd int!» stockings and mitwm for the protec- tion of the lmrdy islanders against the bleak winter winds of the Atlantic. 'l‘lwre are times during the winter when the wind sweeps new like tree‘ less land all a. velocity of 84 miles an hour. and women take their lives in their hands when they venture out. of doors. The isolation of the island is almost complete. thn Schoï¬eid established the ï¬rst woollen mill in. Connecticut near Oak- dnle, where mhe carding was done by power cad-dis. In 1798 the Block Inland- ersbeg-antoaendwoolmthemillbobe ,, ,A -_-4:|M n06.“- rlu â€". .â€" ~_w, carded into rolls. and genermtion alter generation have kept. up the practice. Farmer-1y many bags of grain accom- ‘ A â€"J â€"“I|n-u 1:- J " J 1: v pmied the wool. and g'r'nt and woollen mills were kept. running day and night, while, the ï¬shermen and Wm en- joyed themselves in the quiet‘Connecti- cut. vmnge until the work was done. “On my flnt. circuit I had a‘ lesson in human nature that I have never for- gotten." said u; Methodist minister to a Washington Sm _reporter. l l l I l . vkum."_ _. Hi, “The circuix was in the mountains of West Virginia, and amoag the members of my church was a. widow. who. in ad- 5 dition to the loss of her husband, had i auflered ï¬nal earthly parting with four of her children. leaving but two, a girl and a boy nearly grown. 1 “One night I was asked to hasten to her cabin, which I did, reaching there just in time to be with her son when he died from the eflects of an accident. “The mother, although deeply grieved, acted more calmly than I peoted. and early in the morningl went. home, returning in the afternoom I found the widow in the paroxysm of tears. I tried to comfort her with the usual Christian consolation. Finally she quieted down enough 108a,": “ "Tain't- only thet he died. I know he’s a heap better off.‘ “ ‘What is in then?’ “ ‘We kain‘t, hev no funeral.’ “ 'No funeral?‘ “ ‘No. Sal’s jean got back from th' sto', an' not. a. ya'd 0‘ black hev they got. I never did ’tend no funeral 'thout black, an‘ I ain’t. goin‘ ier 'ten’i now. He kin git 'long ier be buried ‘thoni a funeral better’n I kin bemean myse’f hav'n one when I ain‘t. got nothin‘ ï¬tten to w'ar.‘ “And Jim was buried with no one preaem except. his mother. his sister and me." ' ‘ ‘ A FUNERAL COSTUME. 5Pâ€! BY HAND. The old story that. Saul when out o! temper used to summon David to play the harp, and found the music to be a sedative, may prove to be more thus simple historic incident. for both Char- cot and 'l‘nrchanow have declared that musical sounds are a remedial agency in disease which no physician can af- ford to ignore. says the New York Herald. Mr. Werthin, of Michigan. who has given s great deal of thought to this sub- ject, asserts that, different. kinds of sounds are more effective than drugs in the cure of disease. For instance. he boldly assures us that the music of Valkyrie will inérease perspiration. and. therefore, cure certain forms of ailment caused by checking its flow. The operative energy is not the music as such, but the peculiar vibrations made 'by it. Tannhauser, on the other hand, is a. vibratory suporiï¬c and inâ€" duces a serene state of mind and body. M. Coriveaud. of Paris. asserts that violin playing is at. leutna temporary remedy for sciatica. He adduces the in- stance of a. patient who found almost instant relief in that way and who suc- ‘ cessfully resorted to it whenever threat- ened with an attack. Perhaps this is an appeal to the in- agination, but what matters it if the patient is cured? Perhaps, again, there is a law hidden somewhere in the pile of apparent impossibilit-iesâ€"one which 'will some time be discovered for our beneï¬t. We never smile with increduli- ty at anything in these wonder-«working days. All children who present themselves at the vest for study are received. It is not ever required that their'puenta bring them or send them, says Popular Science Monthly. The newcomer chooses his professor, and, if accepted, begins at once to study under his direc- tion, installs himself in his cell or in the school hall, and becomes his servant. If the protessor has already too many pupils, he refuses the new pu- pil and advises him to choose another teacher; sometimes he guides his choice, directing him to a. master who has few or no pupils, or takes him to the su- perior who will select a. teacher for him. The choice of a professor is always a grave affair, because it is held in Cam- bodia, as in all Buddhist and Brahmatic countries, that professor and pupil are vvuu ~~~~~ , _-_._, r’ bound by strong ties of spiritual af- finity, and that the pupil ought to re- spect his master as he does his father and mother. The law inflicts the some penalty upon an offense of the pupil against his master as an offense by a son against his father and mother and it mwribes tlmt in certain cases the pupil any be heir of his professor when he 'has cared for him or supported him or served him when studying under his direction; not only a family bond but a religious bond, too. is established be- tween them. for the professor makes it his business to (each his pupil the course by which he may earn more advanta- geoul reincarnation and reach the Nir- mm:~ and becomes his spiritual guide. EFFECT OF MUSIC. who has