BIG HOUSEKEEPING. TAKING CARE OF UNCLE PROPERTY IN WASHINGTON. How the White House, Capitol and Departments Are Maintained A Small Army of Watchman, M wavs ex-officio master Mansion reception recep : Formerly the rahal « Columbia sas al ceremonies : troducing the gu tending to I Frederick Dougl Ww office its i HT the fun Public Gre gine r corps ol Ha ~ Lieutenant assigned to assis ever the gentlemen accompanies h'm, to look ter his comfort family includes, tary, who signs hings nn Pruden, who kecps if the District of tive social matters othe 18 Chosen MINA ttache mee WLS Wher thes af rrison’s administration a naval a J N Parker, President goes one of and safety, 3 sy hig e ph Desde nis private SOCre his business letters assistant the bills and and two oversees generally, secretary, records « ointments and to Cong carries al ress, Sexecutive (ne of shursing the as ai agent, paving lr alford and all the WI nt. pte On other Government House, ex or about Mr. Harrison 66 from States, 1 an an ded keep the surroun looking pretty and laborers do ch dors steps, «a coppersamit 3 copper rool jeak. All of this bh affairs of the resentatives Senate a1 They keep ho selves in their respective Capitol. Each wing of the Capito engineer, three five firemen, to look complicated system of chinery required for heating, ventilation, pumping of the building, ete. Sixteen great revolv- ing fans, the biggest of them 16 feet in diameter and resembling paddlie-wheel of a steamboat, great structure with fresh a suck through subterranean pas stone towers 600 feet away that are open to the sky and drink in the pure atmos phere from far aloft. Standing in of these tunnels chief and a assistant engineers after the ait vast and ma Hahting, through engines wi er somewh it supply the which they sages from one through which an arti ficinl breeze rushes continually at the rate of 26 miles an hour, one feels unpleas antly chilled during the hottest hours of a summer day. When the are crowded, every member and spectator in the House is provided with 60 ubic fect of fresh air every minute, The next most important building owned by Uuncle Sam is the one occu pied by the Departments of War, State and Navy. According to a law passed fn 1883 it is managed by a commission composed of the secretaries in charge of these three branches of the Government service. They choose an executive offi ger from the engineer corps of the Army or Navy, who is appointed by the Presi dent on their recommendation, That po- sition is held at present by Chief Engi peer Thomas Williamson, Congress ap- propriates about $160,000 a year for the management and maintenance of the i 3 galleries huge apartment house, The scale on which the housekeeping is done may be conceived from the fact that eighty char- women are employed to do nothing but scrub the floors of the corridors, They work from four to six p. m., each week- day, and get twenty dollars per month. There are eight assistant engineers, twenty-four firemen, ten elevator con. ductors, and twenty laborers who wash 4 mer 8, ete, The three departments are split. up into bureaus and divisions, ead h of which | 1 who takes care while the « xeoutive officer that rhted, re For ht and 1 1 hit INeKsSenger, of the ? keeps ! and sees the | heated, gunrded, fifty-el vatch part of must be patrolled ( ry and nirht, and of clean propel ly wed and he empl Hy . i the corridors i is wmilding is Pp Lire d, this last tL purgy i i ventil or captain ol Every 3 i watehinen, a tho two lieutenants, Vi tructure nours the S11 min is requ butto (ay trie which recor " ice on the lid i h when they ing thev go into every the way, 7 o'clock ead window shades they will the connecting doors room and draw al tly half from the street, ime closing all acainst the down ex 20 that JK nice at srecaution spread of pos i ire the building furniture l in renews its own fund provided for the pur the latter ie nut s11 ni luding all carpets, but Spring, sent to the Au He has the every and put down in inn by Willi f i cent + Interior riments are run in About 55,000 iy Honeyv-Bearing Trees, he traveler of th all walks in the native of India can eas the x gin ! as they were probably practiced in Europe i The shops t are usually open Kmen who quarters cities study there industries in MNS, enn be seen inside industries, pottery, shoemaking, ir. armoring. jow all £ 5 like Chitpore Strect, ike pains to examin methods workis an If attentive iy the shall be struck by the enormous function by the lower limb. Whatever industries, the Indian, squatting or ground, works with his as well with his hands: and it might be said that all four of his limbs are in exercise, The joiner, for example, has no assistant to hold his plank, but makes his great that purpose, The shoemaker does not employ a fixed clamp for the shoe on which he but holds it in his feet, which change position to suit his convenience, while his nimble hands do the sewing. The metal-worker holds we t of sitting on the fret fis constant tow serve I% SOW De, | cutting copper, {| In the making of wooden combs I have seen the comb held straight up by { the feet, while the workmen marked the teeth with one hand and with the other | directed the instrument that cut them. | The wood turner directs the hand rest with his great toes; so, generally, do | Egyptian and Arabian turners, In | smoothing twine or sewing s bridle the | Indiune hold the article between the | first and second toes. When the butcher cuts his meat into small pieces, he holds his knife between the first and second toes, takes the meat in both hands, and pulls it up across the knife. 1 have seen a child Rnb a tree and hold a branch between his toes. These are enough de- concerning the constant, universal of the . {Popular Science Mo ithly, fool, AROUND THE HOUSE. For pianos at the seashore, wh the is apt to affect the instrument, wndded key iin on the boawl when or shut It the keyv-board, dampness it isa good idea to have a i ird cover to rem thi piano 1 either open i made the ea I may be ¢l {ARE OF wiaier 18 4 Powe riul 120r, Potash, golved i best articles t It is wise also Mo lern Artificial Limbs, Sterilized Milk. from almost His microbe y those ¢ infants Nature seems to have provided that no : Yield 1 all Kas van which acts externaily shail Have effect internally, and vice versa ike be swallowed with impunity, of the stomach presumably decomposing it and rendering it harmless, Many ex periments have been made to prove this, he most deadly st YOuom « the juice one pers wm swallowed the whole of the poison that could be obtained from four Italian vipers without suffering any bad In the same way the poison found in the envenomed arrows of South American Indians can be swal- [New York Journal, Facts About China. The empire of China, according to the Ostasintischer Lloyd, covering an area of 4,000,000 square Kilometers, now has a about Ho Nan, it declares, is the most thickly ypulated province of the country, hav- pos about 210 persons to the square kil ometre, Shan-Tung follows Ho-Nan, with 142 to the square kilometre, The boundary territory of Thibet numbers the least people of any district of the empire, there beieg only three persons to the square kilometre, FOR THE LADIES, Mrs. H Lasyk 3 4} & But she 1 than a Hes or tages; whi an owner extend for ses lex throughout the of hor and vehi ries the United States mail, 1 modntaing, and she OWNS SCO ira 11 oa A% Well as Her husband died a fow years ago anid took hold and managed and ex tended business aforesaid. Mrs, she 5 the rom the Government, at Washington, D. ., which vity she often has oceasion to visit in connection her mail contract, Recently she had some correspondence with Post. his method of awarding contracts, in which she expressed herself in a manner to attract the attention of the entire Mrs. Langdon is reported to be ax good a judge of stock as any man in the stage She knows also the oportune with the stage business, so as to make it successful, Her stage lines extend over some of the ruggodest routes in the Sierras and again serens plaing, like those about Susanville, Plumas county has several of Mrs, Langdon’s lines, Ske delivers mails and passengers promptly, and by of and her ability in executing them has be- noted for her pluci and enterprise, | reason her skill i i holds 1 { nothing incom Se 0 upon nothing to pres with carriage of materials pale ye How Late wraps ar the $60 " shoulder caw The full and falling circular and in length gathe red far i enough price. collar or yoke below the waist {or ¢ style for general use, Yokes, and trimmings to imitate yokes, | are the favorites for cloth and silk cos. Tames adopted shows the top part of the waist, and deep ruffle bordering the lace yoke. | It is very becoming, There is a reaction in favor of white laces, and the pretty Venise, Malines, Irish guipure, point de gene, and rose point designs are largely employed for rats, jnserted bands, yokes, frills, sretelles, berthas and sleeve caps of greater or less depths, Rosettes of plaited ribbon in two colors, loops o silk or velvet ribbon in drooping rows, one above the other, WY of silks formed of lined silk folds braided in and out like strands of hair, and puffs of silk between bends of velvet, are all used to finish the bottoms of skirts, PONNSYLVANIA TT% tomeof New into Many and harm on arriving vigor assert far surpassing § Yi KiaAVs which th rid prevall was nat there were herbs which, if tt eX posure § ail. Ww petit the clea: jgrants from the iropean weeds ha pled themsel to cleared land, and were in € Wee clad call, few 1¢ 3 cd { : the change } 1 prepared to fi ich forest tha exposed to the sun and other new i the Monthly. or —I I. ns Foolish Sheep. A Colorado stockman SO conditions i 1LICes, Popa says. thas reason that no animal that walks on four legs is as big a fool as a sheep. Most animals can be relied on to aid » deliberately to work to kill themselves, If caught on the plains they will drift before the wind, and die of cold and exposure rather than go a hundred yards to windward to obtain shelter in their corral To drive sheep against the wind is absolutely impossible. 1 once lost over one thousand head because 1 could not, drive them to a corral not a hundred feet away. In the corral they are still more foolish. If a storm comes up they all move “down wind” until stopped by the fence. Then they will climb over each other's backs until they are heaped up ten feet high. Of course all those at the bottom are wmothered. Not one has sense enough to seek shelter under the lee of the fence, as a horse or dog would do. set