4i :" HT 14 AUTISTIC KITCHENS. r ...... ... Beautiful Rooms Where the Meals of Miliouaires Are Cooked. AN IDEAL KITCHEN IN PRANCE. Exquisite Appointments and Utensils of the Tandaroilt Eitchen. COOEIXGBJ. STEAM, GAS AKD CHAECOAL tWEITTZX rOK THI BISMTCH. The most ideal kitchen I erer saw was at Fecamp, famous 'or its Benedictine and Benedictines ot blessed memory. . "We had stopped over to take another diligence. The waiting room, which was also dining room, was too reminiscent of dinners past and din gers to come to be tolerable. So, impelled by the natural instinct after a more agree able environment, I reached the kitchen. The change from the grim, weary waiting room to this airy, spacions kitchen, filled with gayety and color, had the en chantment of a transformation scene. The three large French windows were vine wreathed. The range was framed in with scripture tile, and a spit Strang with fowls cheerily spnn before an open fire. An an nex to the range also framed in with bine tiles was filled with holes, each requiring its own charcoal flame and to be ased as the service pressed. Against the walls and over doors and in panels hung copper pots and pans, arranged with as much skill as if they were trophies of arms, and burnished to the last degree of brilliancy. Long handled frying pans, like unstrung banjos, were graded down to baby pans fora single egg without a missing link, and copper measures, in like manner, seemed to go o0 toward a varnishing point. M.ny of these were beautifully wrought with incised ornament. I will not attempt to describe the personal attractions ot the kitchen, the rotund hostess who was cook, nor the wit and good fellowship which evi dently made the kitchen a rival of the wine room, for we are about more serious busi ness. TheKorman kitchens of the humbler sort with which I became familiar were all arranged with reference to form and color, due presumably to the fact that they were largely living rooms, and will always be remembered as among the most artistic rooms I have ever seen. LIGHT AND CLEANLINESS. "Perfect ventilation," said Mr. George Post, the architect, who is regarded as an authority on the subject of kitchens, "is the first consideration in a kitchen, then come light and the possibilities of perfect cleanliness." To get these in a crowded city block and half buried in the earth, is, in the nature of things, difficult. Mr. Cornelius Yander bilt's kitchen was the first of the evolution ary series which Mr. Post inaugurated. It is a large room, 33 xl6. There are three windows on Fifty-seventh street, and these are peculiarly constructed to receive the light and air, on which the architect insists. A bronze grating only is seen from the street; Within this are shelving panes of glass which may be opened so as to freely admit the air yet will prevent the passers , bv from looking in to see what the Vander ' bilts are going to have for dinner, for there are people who entertain that sort of curios ity. Another provision prevents them from smelling the dishes. This inheres in the more essential ventila tion, line range is situated in the remote Xevond Th corner of the room in order to be near th?Yhand is' that main Tentilatinc RhnXc nr thp hnnw. rn I . immense hood is suspended above, wfaich connects with the shatt and gathering all the steam and odors passes it through ana, without losing a single smeJl'"out of the honj This is an immense 'advantage as everyone livinjf; in tjba-city hbpsea around which linger the scent of perpetual dinners knows. The range is in fact two ranges separated by a partition. These are built out from the wall and behind are two horizontal boil ers. Attached at one end is the charcoal broiler, at the other is the roaster which consists of a low grate with a spit attached to a jack moved by clockwork, and a semi circular Dutch oven. Of course for ordi nary occasions but one spit is used. SOME CONVENIENCES. At this end of the room the cook moves, a cherry table at his right hand, his copper treasures in a pot closet at liis left, the dresser at his back. Tnis dresser has no back except the enamelled tiles of the wall. This, too, is a consideration in a city wh'ch lacking the necessary supply cf Cretan water, is overstocked with Cro'ton begs, in sects which show an unreasonable disposi tion to colonize in the seams of dressers, that they pry open for that purpose. At the other end of the room the kitchen maid moves. At one side is the table at which she prepares her vegetables, and op posite the porcelain lined sink and draining table where they are washed. This sink is provided with a grease 'trap, a clever ar rangement by which the grease is chilled and adheres until it can be removed and the stoppage of pipes thereby prevented. In front of the windows is a long table for the 4 preparation of entrees, and beneath this are closed compartments. Hear by is the chop- ?ing block, its architecture that of the utchers' block. The pastry shares a cooler room, which the scullery maids also occupy. I have been specific because this kitchen lias been thoughtfully considered.and while it has what is needed, has only what is needed. The floor is laid in red and gray encaustic tiles, the walls are lined with cream enameled tiles, and there is no reason here, as Mr. Post suggests, why a hose should not play without detriment to any thing but dirt. Mr. W. K. Vanderbilt's chef has had such renown that the temple in which he moves and the altar at which he officiates must be of interest. Both are worth his cost to import, and worthy his talents. Mr. Vanderbilt's kitchen is really very beauti ful to the eye. The purity of marble, the luster of tiles and the gleam of metal are what one sees. The floor is of marble, the' -shelves, the tables, the sinks, all the things that are rarely moved are of marble and cut with the precision of jewels. The walls are lined with cream enamelled tiles and all the angles are covered with brass mouldings. "Where these meet the doors and the win dows they are covered with these metal mouldings, dispensing even with wooden trim. The ceiling is made of white enamelled tiles set in cement. But one does not imperil the head of a 10,000 cook with a loosely set brick, so each tile is also secured with raised metal bolts. SPLENDID COOKING UTENSILS. Accenting all this gleam of white and metal is the large double range. It is similar to that already described. and set in one corner under a large semi-circular hood en riched with embossed copper ornaments,and swung from iron bars wrought in spirals and foliations. This hood, the purpose of which has already "been described, is so powerful an agent in carrying off the odor and greasy steam that it will waft from the hand a newspaper held under it The cooking utensils are in keeping with All this splendor. They are of copper, with wrought iron handles, many of them orna mented, and some of them have been copied from special pieces in the Cluny and other museums. Luxurious cooking utensils are Indeed the thing of the moment, and a wedding present not disdained is a set of copper silver lined such as aie now dis played among gems and gold at the jewelers. Leading from the kitchen to the butler's pantry are spiral stairs entirely enclosed in glass to shut out possible odor yet retain the light And this is so successfully done that although the kitchen it directly below the dining room and butler's pantry.nothing disagreeable makes its way aloft Before referring to another attachment of this kitchen, allusion should be made to the pilM Mdhsie outlet 'a tie Mt f tJjSXfje, marble floor, for it is by a hose which may play fearlessly in any part of the room that the kitchen is kept clean. Connected with the kitchen and built under the sidewalk is a series of vaults. These are for ice, meat, vegetables, milk and eggs, and are built in three sections ot hollow masonry that may be kept tree lrom damp, and perfect ventila tion. The heavier insure articles, such as ice and meat, are let in through the side walk with derrick and hoist, which relieves the kitchen of a good deal of unpleasantness, ' as every housekeeper may imagine. THE LATEST THING. The very latest thing in kitchens is that of the Oate Savarin, in the fine new build ing of the Equitable Insurance Company, inlower Broadway. Although it i intend ed to feed 3,000 people between noon and 3 o'clock, its methods, appliances and perfect organization present hints to people who dine in more moderate numbers. Through the courtesy of Mr- Dolver, the Superin tendent, I was allowed to inspect it just be fore the fray began. It is a large open apartment at the top of the house, reached by"elevators. The floor is laid with white encanstio tiles, and the walls are ceiled and lined with lustrous white enamelled tiles. Three ranges are built out in the floor, and the 42 cooks skir mish on all sides. This position of the range is approved in some private nouses, as it gives the cook greater command of her resources. Between these ranges were two long tables and in the center of each was a sunken square of tin or zinc perforated with holes. In these basins stood tin handleless pails and around them water surged and spluttered. These were the steam tables, and in them all the cooking that requires no browning or crust is done. The question of fuel is now a very open one. In this Kitchen everything that can be done by steam is done, and as steam is required for the other purposes of the build ing, tbe fuel is practically saved, not to speak of the lack of wear and. tear inmerely turning the wrist to let the steam off and on. At Billett's, which is small but the most fashionable of the downtown restaur ants, all the cooking is done by gas. And while talking with Mr. Post, he recalled an engagement that afternoon to see some cook ing done by electricity. Press a button and tbe pot boils. But steam will not broil, bake or roast; this handicaps it greatly for private use. In this kitchen there were separate charcoal fires for broiling. A large brick oven in the center of the room for the pastry with gas lighted peep holes for the pastry cook, and a tremendous upright grate with three tiers of. spits before which fowls were now spin ning and shedding juices gloriously. The spit and the upright grate make the one luxury that private kitchens, however un pretentious, should try to afford. One need not be so fastidious as tbe old Norman epi cures who required their fowls to be roasted before apple tree logs, but the kiss of the flames is certainly transforming and ideal izes even the pig as we have been delight fuUy told. SAvnro space. Every piece of furniture in the kitchen has a special definite purpose to fulfill. The brawny butchers occupy one corner with their battle axes. The pastry cooks prac tice the fiDe arts on their own area, the men cuning with their knives keep within their own barriers. Everything is calculated to save space and time. Above each ranee are horizontal bars, from which hantr tire long-nanaiea copper pans which the nimble cooks manipulate with the 'rajftdity and ease of tbe tumbler in the ciroas. To the waiter, alwaytin anguish be tween the wrath ot thyTiungry man and the boot toe of the coojehe kitchen at the top of the house iw-a saving grace. He never, by anyyfchance, can encounter the cook, and leaning against the dumb waiter while hiviands descend gets a few seconds to brt6 himself tin to Inept thl Uinndprino' baow of his client in the brilliant restaurant The disadvantage on the other any inaccuracy in filling the order cannot be ascertained'for some time, but this way insures accuracy. Something was said last week of the movement to rescue the top floor. This goes hand in hand with private elevators. There is also another movement toward elevating the kitchen dynamically. One of the most novel of the private is that of Dr. Morton, on Fifty-second street west All the house hold offices are on the top floor. The serv ants' bedroomsare in front. Midway is the laundry with tiled floor and wainscoting; connecting with it is the servants' sitting room, and opening into if the kitchen. THE COOK'S THBONE. This is a noble room, with windows that catch the first rays of the morning sun and the last rays of his benign majesty, and com mand the distant prospect right and left. Onemay well envy the cook her private do minion. Mrs. Morton, with more practical mind, tells me that the saving of gas bills is of consideration. There is also a consider able saving of time, as the ashman, the rag man, the pcddl&rs of all wares, soon discover that there is neither pleasure nor profit in the area. The humanitarian aspect of this elevated kitchen is worth notice when one considers the army of servants that spend their lives in basements inaccessible to air and light. Mrs. Morton savs that by organizing her household carefufly, less, not more, servants are required. A great lift is used at stated intervals by the man who manages the fur nace, everything else is brought up on dumb waiters, and a servants' stairway is screened off by a pretty arrangement of spindles. The clothes are dried on top of the house, and in a cold room above the kitchen meats are hung and perishable arti cles kept It is not a misapplication of an adjective to call some of the kitchens in the hand somer apartment houses beautiful. These are small but calculated to a nicety. In fact, except when there is a staffof servants, it is a mistake to have a large kitchen. It wastes the time and takes the strength of ithe cook to cover more space than is re quired. As these kitchens are placed in the least advantageous parts of the house, every care is taken vto give them ajl the light and air possible. The floors are tiled. The walls are lined with enamel tiles usually white, but some times made gayer with col ored tiles, blue or pink. The sinks are por celain lined and the faucets silver plated. The cupboards and dressers are in light natural woods and the glass unspotted. The cook feels as if she is in a jewel box or is a precious article enshrined in a cabinet and the probabilities are that she strives to keep her situ ation. Maby Gat Humphbets. Helping; the Help. Mrs. TJpton Platte (to Nora, who had been the belle of the Micky Duggan Coterie the previous evening) Come, breakfast is all ready. I don't believe your last mistress ever did that much for yon? Nora She did, mum, an' more. She brought me breakfast up to me. Puck, ,An Epidemic ot Scarlet Ferer. rSrXCLU. TEI.ZQE.Uf TO TBI DISFATCH.1 CADIZ, May 4. Scarlet fever in Its worst form is raging in this place, and all schools have been ordered to close until it has abated. There hare been six deaths and new cases are reported daily. All the new shades and colors in awn ings at Maaaux & Son's, 537 and 639 Peon THE THE TEXAS COWBOY. Au Elaborate Defense of a Much-Maligned Individual. U0T A PICTURESQUE BRAVO, "But a Highly Educated, Eefined and Chiv alrous Gentleman. ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND AMUSEMENTS There is probably no class about which so much pure fiction has been written, and be lieved, as about the Texas cowboy. I say Texas cowboy, because it was the Texas cowboy who first made the name. famous. The Eastern and remote periodicals have illustrated him as a person going about with a Winchester slune to his back, four huge revolvers in his belt, and a long bowie knife in each bootleg a regular walking arsenal. The artists have fitted him up in clothes which would make an ancient Comanche warrior ashamed of his lack of picturesque savagery in dress. This Eastern cowboy picture, or Eastern picture of a Texas cowboy, always has a hat with a brim as large as the dome of the Mormon Temple, a woolen overshirt, opened in front with fancy flowers embroidered on it, and twilled silk cord in lieu of buttons and with tassels at the ends. Now, the truth is, the Eastern man would not recognize a Texas cowboy were he to see one even out on a drive, not to mention if he were-to meet one in town. I was a trav eling correspondent for an Eastern paper down in Texas and Mexico for over IS years, says a writer in the Chicago Tribune, and never saw a single cowboy like those I had always read about and seen illustrated. A SCHOLAR AND A GENTLEMAN. To begin with, he is frequently a scholar. I remember in 1874 to have examined the diplomas of 63 young men out in "Wise, Clay and Hardeman counties, Texas, out of 102 cowboys. And those diplomas were from snch universities as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, the University of Virginia and the leading institutions of the land. These young men had gone out to try their for tunes, some with ample means to start tor themselves when they had learned the busi ness lor it must be thoroughly learned to attain success; some of them for their, health, and many to get a start And at the cattle men's conventions here I meet many of those same cowboys of 15 years ago who are now cattle kings and known as men of culture and wealth, and who are .sought after so cially. The Texas cowboy is almost always a gen tleman. I do not mean that he always has the polish of a Chesterfield or. the acquired suavity in modo of an Admirable Crichton. I mean that he Is eallant. auick to respond to every appeal for assistanceihe-avowed slave and defender pf a woman's name and honor. Aifdhe'is not so awkward in a drawiBg'room as one would suppose, as he ,g6es there more frequently than some of those who would caricature him. HIS 2IANNEB OF DRESS, v On the trail tbe cowboy is rough of dress. Going through brush and thorns and out in rain and storm as he has to do, the cowboy needs clothing which will not tear and will turn water and keep out cold or heat The hide of cows and horses and goats, dressed with the hair out, serves both purposes, and the Texas cowboy adopted this as a kind of overalls to put on over his trousers. He wears a broad-brimmed hat so as to pro tect him from the sun and rain. He doesn't wear tremendous spurs at all. Sometimes he doesn't wear any. If he does, they are a small pair with short rowels and seldom used. He pre ers his Mexican quirt, a small, plaited riding whip with fancy knots and twists made on the handle. His boots are the most unique thins about his appearance. And when he is off duty, and in town on what might be called dress parade, these boots mark out the Texas cow boy more than any 'other part of his attire, except, perhaps, his diamond rings, or pins, if they might be called attire. These boots Are made to order and are never cheap. The conspicuous part of them is their heels. They have high and small heels, which are slanted forward till they almost reach under the middle of the foot The Texas cowboy is not' a shooter of met. He carries a six-shooter when he is awav out on the trail where the professional cattle thieves and the Mexican and Indian robbers bold full sway. But he never carries it in his belt when he goes into a city or a town. The cowboy carries a Winchester rifle on the trail, but it is slung under his right stirrup in a leather "scab bard." True, once in a while a cowboy does go into a town, get drunk, and shoot around, maybe shooting throueh a window or doing some other damage. But he doesn't hurt anyone, and he is almost invariably arrested, his companions helping to turn him over to the authorities and paying his fine next morning, and then they give him a -"cussin' " for being snch a fool. This kind of a cowboy is an exception. HIS ACCOMPLISHMENTS. It is in his skill with the lasso and his horsemanship, as well as his acenracy of aim vith a pistol or rifle while going at full gallop, that the Texas cowboy is pre-eminent And it is his proficiency in these which has aided in giving him the terrible name he bears, no doubt Theromantio name of the Azteo as a horseman and a thrower of the lasso pales before the accom plishments of the Texas cowboy in those feats. He carries his lasso coiled ready for instant use, and fastened to the horn (pommel) of his saddle with a buckskin string so looped that a slight jerc loosens it and puts it in his hands in one movement This is more to be feared than his six-shooter, as his aim with it it abso lutely unerring. I have seen him catch a steer, going at full speed, by any foot he de sired. He can do this nine in ten times. And it is this, coupled with his horseman ship, which is part of the art of throwing the lariat (lasso), which makes the Texas cowboy so famous. He can ride anything in the way of a horse. He lassoes a wild horse, claps a sad dle on him, blinds him and mounts, strips 1 the blinds off and then calmly sits on tbe pony s hurricane deck while he pitches all over the prairie trying to unseat the rider. As soon as the pony is bridle-wise he is trained to help in the lasso throwing. This consists in teaching the horse to run after straying members of a herd until he sees the lasso shoot out in front of him, and feels a pull a slight pull on the bridle, when he must suddenly stop, throw himself on his haunches, and brace his fore feet in front with all his might This brings the steer to the ground, as the lasso is made fast to the horn of the saddle, and is as firm as if tied to a post when that little pony braces him self so. HOW HE AMUSES HIMSELF. The cowboy sometimes amuses himself in thiswise. He gets on his pony and has an other well trained one ready and induces some city man who thinks he is a rider from "way back," because he has attended an equestrian school, to mount. Then he gives the stranger a few lessons in lasso throwing and they start out after a "beef," that is driven from the herd. The ponies give chase, and the tenderfoot manages finally to throw his lasso oyer the head of the flying steer. As soon as the trained pony sees the lasso fix itself over the head of the recalcitrant steer he knows it is time for.him to do his part, and he does it, too. Quick as lightning he stops, throws hii forefeet ont in front, draws his hind feet under him and his career of 30 miles an hour is suddenly reduced to ahalt Not so with his astonished rider, who keeps Tight on and shoots over the head of the astonished pony, who is amazed to see his rider flying 20 feet ahead of him, plowing up a furrow in the hard, virgin prairie with his nose. The pony, too well trained to move-uniil the steer either gets up and makes off. again or I 3 A -..t.tl. Jt-J.J'f .Vi: .1 I i too&eueu, bi lucre mui etuo uuuwu jot- i Jittiu &uu uwu.ua, lumeuuou. kvsuvuuk sii PITTSBTJK& DISPATCH, SUKDAT, MAY 5, the unusual sight, the only one who does not enjoy the spectacle, except his late rider. After this experience, which the cowboys call "initiating a tenderfoot," the Eastern man ceases to brag about his horsemanship and soon learns to lie as expert as tire best of the natives. p HIS MARKSMANSHIP The marksmanship of the Texas' cowboy is a marvel. He can gallop at lull speed and hit a jack raboit running with his pistol or Winchester. Some of them become so ac curate in their aim while thus riding at full gallop that they can throw up a tincup and put two and three bullets in it before it reaches the ground. Ana even the style ot cowDoy i nave pictured, which is the genuine Texas cow boy, can no longer be found in Texas, except away out on the extreme border of the "ter ritory" and along the Bio Grande. He has been crowded out by the wire fence, which makes it no longer necessary to herd cattle. The cowboy can flourish only where he has to "stand guard and herd" day in and day out, in all kinds cf weather, sometimes be ing several days and nights in the saddle without sleeping,. except napping in his seat on his pony. This he does frequently. To see him in town is not to recognize him except by that peculiar walk noticeable to a close observer as belong to a man who spends most of his time on horseback. It is a walk that resembles a cross between a man trying to step over potato hills and one trying to lift himself over the fence by his suspenders. He can be found mostly fn Western and Northwestern Texas and in Wyoming Territory. la the cities he dresses in the best, is modest and quiet in manners, observes everything around him, puts up at the best hotels, and is lavish in spending his money. PULLING TEETH BI ELECTRICITY. A New Method of Removing Troublesome filolan Practiced In Boston. Boston people nowadays have their super fluous teeth drawn by electricity. The pro cess is very simple, scarce any apparatus being required beyond an ordinary two-cell battery with vibrator attachments. This at tachment is a thin strip of metal fastened at the ends, which is made to vibrate a thou sand or more times a second by the elec tric current At each vibration the circuit is cut off and renewed again, the effect being to give a perfectly steady flow of the mysterious fluid. In order to make sure that the flow is quite satisfactory, the oper ator tunes the machine assisted by a little reed tuning pipe until the strip of metal sings "A." Now, to the battery are attached three wires. Two of them handles at the ends, and(the third is hitched to a forceps. ' The patient in the chair is given a handle to hold in each hand, and the current is turned on gradually until it becomes pain ful. Then he is told to grasp the handle as strong as possible, the electricity having been switched off for a moment is turned on again suddenly, and the dental surgeon applies his forceps simultaneously to the tooth. The instant the molar is touched, it, as well as the other parts surrounding, be comes electrified and absolutely insensible to pain. When it is withdrawn front the socket the subject of the operation feels not the slightest disagreeable sensation. A jerk, and the tooth is out, the patient drops the electric handles and the painless affair is over. KENTUCKY DIALECT. Queer Expressions Anions tbeSIonntalneera of tbe Bine Gran Stale. Louisville Conrler-Jonnn). The Kentucky mountain vernacular also has peculiarities, which Charles Egbert Crad dock did not find or notice in his Tennes see mountaineers. Here a man who wants to say he fired two shots says he shot two shots. The Western expression ot get ting the drop is never used, the moun taineer saying instead that he "throwed his gun furst" The prefixes in and im are not known, un being used instead, as "unpossi ble," for instance. To "mislist" a' man is to deceive and ill treat him, and when a man says "his word is his jint" he wants to convey the impression that he is speaking as truthfully as'if under oath. The queer expressions are so numerous that it is hard to understand all that is said. A dialogue that was a gem in its way was indulged in by two young mountain gal lants, one asking: "Be it mohe fur you to see Nance this afternoon?" The answer was: "No; I don't have bound to, but I aim to." The man who has knocked on a door, when asked what he wants, says: "I want in," and in the same style he wonld ask a stranger: ''How might you call you?" They have no difficulty in understanding each other, however, for English is treated in the same manner by all, and even those who can read and write talk a great deal as do the less learned. SUBJECT TO A DRAWBACK". How Imported Iron Can be Made Into Ralls Without Faring- Dnty. Washington, May 4. Inquiry was re cently made at the Treasury Department as to whether railway iron cat be imported from England for re-manufacture into frogs and switches and re-exported to Mexico for use by the Mexican Central Eailway with out payment of duty. Assistant Secretary Tichenor has informed the inquirer that if the frogs and switches referred to shall be manufactured exclusively of imported ma terial a drawback can be allowed on the ex portation of the manufactured articles equal to the amount of duty paid on the imported material used in their manufacture, less the legal retention of 10 per cent, butthatif any domestic materials whatever are used in the manufacture of said articles no drawback can be obtained thereon. Assistant Secretary Tichenor also said that there is no provision of law under which imported rails'can be manufactured in bond into other articles and exported without payment of duty. QUIETED WITH A HOSE. The Peculiar Method Used to Quel! a Riot In Michigan. Manisteo, Mich., May 4. The Polish priest of this place was assaulted on the street this morning by one faction of his chnrch followers and a general riot resulted, in which both men and women participated. The militia was called out to quell the riot and the fire department was also called out and turned the hose upon the mob. After nearly drowning several of the rioters peace was restored. The Sheriff attempted to arrest the lead ers of the disturbance and was attacked by the women, several of whom were knocked down. Ten of the rioters have been jafled and a gnard is stationed at the priest's house to prevent further trouble. STILL SAIS IT IS TRUE. The Name of tbe Young Woman Restored to Life Not Yet Known. St. Louis, May 4. The remarkable case of catalepsy reported yesterday on informa tion given by a sister of the yonng married1 woman who was rescued from the coffin, as alleged, has attracted widespread attention to-day, but the mystery surrounding the case is as deep as ever. The young woman who related the story reiterated it to-day. The parties living at 721 South Fourth street, where the young woman resides, de cline to reveal her name. Tjie tenant of 721 is one Alois Zehrer. The local newspapers are working hard on the case in the hope of getting at the facts. Cloak Depaetment. All the latest styles of wraps, jackets, mantles, etc., in large assortment Huotrs & Hacee. Mwrsn PlXK,blue, cream, ladies' ribbed vests Uo, worth 25c, at Bosenbaum & Co's. Pbtmbosb awnings at Mamanx & Son' C-XT -J tOO T. ... 1 wi Mtu ww cuu ttYWiw. EVERYDAY SCIENCE. The Application-of Air to Increase Heat in Melting Furnaces. PAPER FOR BUILDING PURPOSES. A Eapld Method of Converting Grade Iron Into Steel. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL NOTES. rfSEPABID TOS TUX mSPi.TCH.1 Headers ot The Dispatch who desire information on subjects relating to indus trial development and progress in mechan ical, civil and electrical engineering and the sciences can have their queries answered through this column. Mr. Iorin Blodget, of Philadelphia, in a treatise on the possibility of obtaining heat from air without the use of much carbon aceous fuel, says that in all cases where a powerful blast is applied to the limited area of a melting furnace, and particularly in the Bessemer converter, the degree of heat is greatly in excess of the theoretical yield of the number of pounds of coal consumed. From this and other data, and especially from the fact that not less than 4,000 of neat can be attained with a mere initiative of carbonaceous combustion, and main tained indefinitely by merely preserving the encandescence of the surface, he argues that we are on the verge of new revelations in the matter of heat production, and that the line of reasonable progress lies in the direction of relief from dependence on the combustion of carbon, organio or inorganic, as the source of heat for economio purposes. Exterminating Rabbits In Australia. M. Pasteur's plan of exterminating the rabbits by inoculation with transmittable virus has not proved a success in Australia. A simple and easy method, however; has been proposed by Mr. Bodier, of Tambua, Cobar, New South Wales, which is said, after eight months' trial, to -have cleared the districts where it has been put into prac tice. The rabbits are captured in nets or otherwise, but, while all the females taken are destroyed, the males are turned out again. The conseequence of the predom inance of males which naturally follows is that the females, owing to excessive perse cution, are not only prevented from breed ing, but often "worried to death." EncalTPtn Verses Mosquito. It will be a source of comfort to many to know that where the eucalyptus tree is grown in large quantities entire immunity is obtained from mosquitos, although the air may be thick with the insects at a com paratively short distance. Paper for Bnlldlng. Paper for building purposes has many advantages. It can be made in rolls of almost any width or length, and wiU stop the passage of air because there are no joints. It has no grain like wood, and will not split It is not affected by change of temperature, and, therefore, has the advant age over sheet metal as roofing material. It may be rendered waterproof by saturation with asphalt or by other methods. It is non-resonant. It is a non-conductor of heat and can be made fire-resisting by chemical treatment By being solidified it can le place wood for many purposes, and after proper preparation, it is unaffected by heat, coia, or dampness. Quick Firing. The strides that are being taken in the improvement in heavy guns has recently been exemplified near Dartford. where, in- the course of a series of experiments, the Maxim automatic gun of 0.45 caliber fired 334 rounds in 27 seconds, , A Rival of tbe Bpns Tree. The discovery is reported'of a deadly gas spring in Yellowstone Park. It is stated that it rises through a small creek, to which it gives the appearance of boiling, although the water is quite cold, and its exhalations have killed squirrels and other small crea tures. Further up the gulch the odorf gas becomes more intense, and there in addition to the carcass of a silver-tip grizzly, on which there were.no signs of violence,' were found, it is said, the bones of four more bears, an elk, and other smaller animals. Lead Poisoning, Among the many singular instances of lead-poisoning placed on record recently, is that of a florist who had.been in the habit of biting off the ends of the tinfoil used as wrappers for hand boquets. Another pa tient at St Luke's Hospital, who was suffer ing from lead colic, was found to have been in the habit for several weeks of drinking beer from bottles which were cleaned by his employer with lead shot It is not many years since several cases of lead-poisoning were traced to the use of a popular brand of chewing tobacco which was wrapped in tin foil. Cnre of Inebriety. Dr. Elliot, in a recent lecture at Toronto, gives the four principal conditions that must be observed for the treatment of inebriates to be successful. The first is abstinence; this must be absolute, and on no plea what ever, of fashion, of physio or religion, ought the smallest quantity of an intoxicant to be put to the lips of an alcoholic slave. The second condition to ascertain the predis posing and exciting causes of inebriety, and to endeavor to remove those causes, which may lie in some remote or deep-seated phys ical ailment The third condition is to re store the physical and mental tone, and the fourth condition is employment; let the mind of the patient be kept occupied by at tention to regular work, and the task of reformation will be shorn of half its diffi culty. , Tannin Treatment of Phthisis. A Belgian physician, who has tried this treatment on all his phthisical patients for the last 20 months states that it gives excel lent results in all stages of the disease, es pecially in the condition where cavities ex ist He considers that the general results of this treatment are most encouraging. Telephones for Infections Wards. It is stated on the authority otthe Medical Press, that it is proposed to apply tele phones to the infectious wards of theFrench hospitals, so as to enable the sick people to have the comfort ot hearing their relatives' voices without any risk of conveying in fection bv an interview. This is indeed en listing sciencein the cause of humanity. A Photographing Phonograph. An invention which has already been foreshadowed is reported from Mexico. By speakfng in a photophone transmitter, which consists oNa highly polished dia- fihragm, reflecting a ray of light, this ray of igdt is set into vibration and a photograph, is made of it on a, traveling baud of paper. If tbe image of this photographic tracing is S rejected by means of an electric arc or oxy ydrogen light'upon a solenium receiver, the original speech is then heard. Electric Dice Table. A novel application of electricity has been made by a saloon keeper at Port Costa. His wonderful success with dice at length aroused the snspioion of the authorities, and on an examination being made a steel plate was found connected with an electrical battery beneath, so that a current could be applied whenever the Ingenins devotee. of science wanted to shake, hteh. bv nrsseinz L889. his knee against a knob. The dice were, of course, loaded, and would work very well without the battery, but when the current was applied the sixes invariably came out on top. The enterprising saloon keeper is said to have realized 51,800 by his clever rascality. Work Done by the Telephone. It is pointed out in a New York electrical paper that the statement that the Bell Tele phone Company of ' this country have in operation about 170,000 miles of wire, over which 1,055,000 messages are transmitted daily, conveys to the average mind no realization of what the figures actually mean. It therefore puts the matter differ ently. "When wo say, however, that if the telephone wires were stretched in a continu ous line thev would reach about seven times around tbe world, and that, if the messages' transmitted every day were sent tnrougn one set of instruments allowing two min utes for each message it would require something like ten rears to transmit them all, we get some sort of an, idea of what an important factor the telephone is in the great mechanism of modern civilization." Sngnr an an Antl-Incrastator. Some interesting experiments are saidHo have been recently made in the employment of sugar as an agent to prevent the incrusta tion of steam boilers. The results are re ported as highly satisfactory. Into a boiler of 20-horse power and containing 126 cubes, two kilometers of sugar were introduced every week, and after four months working under these conditions tbe incrustation on the boiler, which had formerly been badly incrusted every six weeks, was found to con sist only of a thin film, which was easily re moved by washing. Hnsklng Corn by Machinery. An Austin inventor has devised a steel corn busker, which, drawn by a team, picks and husks the corn at the rate of 8 to 12 acres a day, according to the capacity of the team. The team and machine move astride the row, one horse on each side, and every ear o! corn, large or small, is picked up. Corn busking can now be done just as threshing is, lasting but a few days. Peach Stones an Fa el. The fruit growers of California, finding that peach stones make an excellent fuel, are now selling them at the rate of $6 a ton. A sack of stones will weigh about 80 pounds, and is said to last as long as an equal number of pounds of coal and give an even greater heat This will form a very welcome supplement to the income of the fruit raisers. Oil on Stormy Seas. A most ingenious and valuable invention is the cartridge devised by Mr. Walker, of Hartford, Conn., for distributing oil over troubled waters. It holds about two ounces of oil, and can be fitted in an ordinary cartridge shell and discharged from an or dinary breech-loader. The cartridge, weight ed at the end with lead, sinks into the waves and the oil rises to the top and spreads like a film over the waves. By means of these cartridges, it is stated that a path an eighth of a mile in breadth can be made through the heaviest of seas. Converting Crude Iron Into Steel. M. Bobert, of Stenay, France, has patent ed a rapid mode, of converting iron into steel by providing means lor maintaining constant relations throughout the whole period of conversion, which is effected by varying the position and volume of the blast He applies a blast of air to a body of molten metal at a maximum pressure at the beginning of the operation, and after thus overcoming the inertia of the metal and im parting to it the proper speed of gyratory motion, he lowers the level of the blast, with out carrying it into the body ot the metal, and varies its pressure and volume in ac cordance with the requirements caused by the reduction in tbe combustible elements of the iron and the increased fluidity of the metal. , An Improved Boiler. Experiments have been made at the naval arsenal in Brest, France, by the officers of the Government with a boiler furnished with tubes having ribs or flanges on tbe inside, so as to prevent a larger surface for the absorp tion of the heat of the fire. The projection of the flanges is about one-quarter the diam eter of the tube, and eight ot them are placed at equal distances around the inner surface. The results gained would seem to indicate an economy of 18 to 24 per cent in the' con sumption of coal, when compared with the working of the ordinary smooth tubes. IN WATER UP TO HIS HEAD. A Colored Well Digger Hon a Feorfol Etrngglo to Escape Drowning. Baltimobe, May 4. John Simmons, a colored well-digger, had a terrible struggle for life yesterday. He was digging a well in the yard of 1427 West Lombard street, and had been in the well all morning. About 10:30 o'clock Simmons was heard to give a yell, and when assitance came he was" found to be planted in the bottom ot the well with the earth packed solidly around his body. When the earth fell it molded itself about him so quickly that he had not even opportunity to straighten his limbs, and had to remain in a painful attitude. A man was lowered into the well and managed to draw ont from about Simmons' body the large pieces of scantling that formed the framework which had fallen from above. He could not extricate Sim mons, however. By various slow methods a portion of the fallen clay was dug from about his body, a rope was placed under his arms and an effort was made to pull him out. but he screamed so much on account of pain that he was allowed to sink back into his former position. The work of digging was then renewed. Simmons all this time was pleading with the workmen to save his life. As the afternoon grew on. water flowed into the excavation, rising slowly about the poor man's shoulders until it rea'ched his month. A man was then lowered to bail out the pit- vv une toe water wan oeing uiKen oat oiui- mons had to throw his head back in order to get his breath. When the water had been taken out the digging continued, and at 5.30 o'clock Simmons was hauled out He had been in there five hours. Arrested on a Charge of Embezzlement fEFECIAL TELXGBAV TO THE DI8PATCTI.1 Scottdale, May 4. E. W. P. Bichard son, agent of the Scottdale and Everson Land Company, was arrested at this place to-day on a charge of embezzlement, pre ferred by Barclay Everson, President of the land company. Mr. Bichardson gave titil for his appearance at a hearing next Thurs day. You Need It Now To Impart strength and to give a feeling of health and vigor throughout tbe system, there Is nothing equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla, It seems peculiarly adapted to overcome that tired feeling caused by change of season, climate or life, and while It tones and sustains tbe system, It purifies andrenovat.es tbe blood. We earn estly urge the large army of clerics, book keepers, school teachers, housewives, oper atives and all others who have been closely confined dunng the winter nd who need a good spring medicine, to try Hood's Sarsapa rilla now. It will do you good. "Every spring for years I have made it a practice to take from three to five bottles of Hood's SarsaparUla, because I know it purifies the blood and thoroughly cleanses the system of all Impurities. That languid feeling, some times Called 'spring fever,' will never visit the system that has been properly cared for by this never-failing remedy." W. H. Lawbehce, Editor Agricultural Epitomise, Indianapolis. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. SI: six for 85. Prepared. oniy oj v. x. nuuu a u., ijoweii, juase. 100 Doses Ofie Dollar NEW ADTEKTESEXEXTS. HOPPER BROS. & CO., PIONEERS OF LOW PRICES, BTT Tact, Energy and Perseverance, have placed'fthem selves in position to demand the recognition of being "? ' TPOT.TrnvroRT1 l mw li III In their line in the city. Now, what we wish understand by beingf foremost where we do not manufacture the goods, we deal directly with the manufacturers, saving quite an item of expense, that thej buyer is compelled to pay when dealing with those who are compelled to buy in small quantities. The difference, or mid-"" dle'man's profit, is quite a big saving to the customer. -? Then, having the space or room, we certainly can show a greater variely of goods. Also being the only dealers in this line, being PRACTICAL MECHANICS, have a more thorough understanding of the business, and, being versed in the art, understanding thoroughly all the different trades in connection with the Furniture and its kindred branches, can . converse intelligently on any subject offered by us for sale BUY FROM THE MANUFACTURERS. We are offer-' ing an elegant line of BEDROOM SUITS At prices that, when you compare qualities with .other houses the common confession is "Don't let's look. any further." OUR PARLOR. 9UITS Have the reputation the city over for being the best for the money. Those goods when purchased from us are bought directly from, the hands of the manufacturer. No shop-worn goods are sold. We are making a special drive on REFRIGERATORS, ICE CHESTS AND BABY CARRIAGES. Remember that there is nothing, about the house but what we carry in stock. ' We are sole agents for the DAVIS NEW HIGH-ARM' SEWING-MACHINE, which has no equal. Selling direct from the store we save the customer at least $26 on each machine, CASH OR EASY PAYMENTS. HOPPER BROS. & CO., " 307 WOOD STREET. - 307f Open Saturday Evening Until 10 O'clock, r - v CONCEDED THAT WE "R if' .jeadin g : iriiinery : OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA, And H is a well-known fact that we carry the Largest Stock of Untrimmed Hats, the Largest Stock'of Ribbons and the Largest Stock of Flowers: That the prettiest Trimmed Bon nets and Hats in town are to be found in the handsomely appointed show rooms of DANZIGER& SHQENBERG. Styles the Latest, Workmanship the Best and Prices the Most Popular. Oloalkzs am.cL Wraps Ladies' Fancy Cloth Jackets, tailor made, feasant Garments, new shades, $T 49. Embroidered Cashmere Fichus at?l 49. Flannel Tennis Blouses, large assortment; at Jl 99, . Si 1 "k-s. Fancy Figured China Silks at 42a a yard. Black Gros Grain Dress Silk at 74c a yard. Black Faille Francalse Silk at 89o a yard. Colored Satin de Leon at 79o a yard. TDrr-ess G-qod-S. 24-inch Persian Challies, 5c a yard. . Elegant Dress Satines, 80 a yard. Best quality Dress Ginghams, 7o a yard. Black and Colored Henrietta Cloth, 25c a yard. ZPl-o.sIb.es. 1,000 Pieces Silk Plushes, all new shades, 44c a yard. -A.-p--co-n s. Ladies Muslin Aprons, best value in town, at 16c T-n-fa-n.ts3 O-ixteE Its. Infants' Embroidered Cashmere Short Coats at (1 24. Infants' Enibroidered Cashmere (Cream), Long Cloaks at $1 29. Lace,Embroidered and Corded Caps, in exquisite and pretty designs,at 24o,49o and Tiff" ZHIOXLSefTL3?lld.SiLXLgS. A large, varied and most extensive assortment of Tin, Wooden, Iron and Agate ware, colored and plain Glassware and Crockery, to which we direct special attention as being' ' exceptional bargains, and procurable only of as. All children accompanied by their parents and visiting this department get a pretty ,, Japanese Kite free. , -n DANZIGER. & srrocBHoaa to- Je5- a-afi. EgrAMS 1 tt efc TrrTr-Ax.TnT?i rtatarfMVI. the reademq. dealers is that in every case?? - ARE THE House $1 69. -A ' SHOEHBEEi J1 lain mi kuwrE H t 1 Sis f9jl f-lfiSK sn VHTC V - . - - . -. r .." "i " sr' i , -issA,