' it tr t jp; . j. . - r a i!i """ sZT": m KOBEE SPORTING MEN. Rich Young English Lords Who Have 'Fine Horses and Bet on Them. ffl A PRIKCE WHO LIKES TO BET. BlneBloodcd Women Who Haunt the Eace Courses Abroad. tconRESrovDcror TUX dispatch.! Loxdos, May 26. One of thefirst things xrhich strikes an outsider visiting the pri vate inclosure of a crack British race meet ing is the moody countenance and freezing reserve of th" aristocratic habitue. The bookmakers may be screaming out the odds and the common people roaring their de light during the progress of a race, but the noble sportsman rarely raises his voice above its ordinary conversational tone, and he must be watched closely and continuously before one can detect the muscular twitch ings, the involuntary flush, the gnawing of the nether lip, which prove that his calm ness is simply assumed because it is sup posed that only the vulgar people wear their hearts upon their sleeves. Occasionally human nature will cause even a noble lord to break through this artificial restraint when he has an unusually heavy stake upon a particular horse, and then be proves to be quite a common person, cursing his hard luck in ordinary oaths or offering to stand drinks with the irrational enthusi asm and generosity of the drygoods young man who has won his first bet. But these occasions are very rare and receive no en couragement from the well-bred icebergs who float around the paddock and follow in melannchol vprocession the Prince of "Wales whenever His Royal Highness deigns, and that is not unfrequently, to put in an ap pearance at Kewinarket, Epsom, Doncaster, Goodwood and Ascot. KOTAXTY AT THE RACES. Boyalty rarely misses any one of these meetings, and the Princess of "Wales will often accompany her free-aud-easv spouse ' especially to Epsom and Ascot. She does not devott'xnuch attention to the racing, but occupies herself chiefly in looking alter her daughters and guests. The joung prin cesses cannot be said to be handsome, for they take too much after their royal father, but they are young and full of spirit, and courtiers say that, like their beautiful and popular mother, tbev are very gracious to those around them. The Prince of "Wales likes the sport,, is fond of betting and still fonder of winning. He does not bet very often, but then he rarely misses a good thing. His ncing counselors are Sir Fred erick Johnstone, Bord Alington, Sir George Chetwynd and Mr. Mackenzie, the latter a rich Scotch laird who claims to be descended in the direct line from the ancient kings of Scotland. These Mour sportsmen know pretty well all that is wortn knowing about lorni, trials and jockeys and trainers' .gossip. , ' .Anyone in a position to obtain reliable news can find a ready market with all or anyone of them, and they will spend money freely, secretly or openly, it does not mat ter much to them, to obtain a good thing which will enable them to place their bets and give the Prince a tip. His Boyal High ness does not bet lor himself, his commis sions being executed by Johnstone, Aling ton or Chetwynd. He wins much oltener than he loses, because his advisers, know ing that the royal temper is apt to be upset J at tne enu o: a nan aay, taue care to give Jam what they believe to be the very etraightest of straight tips. FIXING A ItACE. The royal sportsman has made several efforts to become the owner of good flat racers, but his speculations hare been un forttmate. But he has had better luck with steeplechasers, in which department his right hand man is Lord Marquis Beresford, brother of the Marquis of Waterford, and chief sporting member of a famous Irish sporting family. Lord Marcus years ago tried to enjoy himself like a Marquis upon the slender portion of a younger son, got into difficulties and was set upon his legs strain by being appointed official starter to the Jockey Club, at a salary of 5,000 a -vear. Lord Marcus and John Jones, the JEpsom trainer, persuaded the Prince to pur-f cbase tne norse jviagic which lias turned out almost a first rate steeplechaser at three miles. The animal has tton several races in the royal colors purple and scarlet with gold braid and won them on his merits, but his first win. at Liverpool, was notor iously arranged by the owners of the other liorscs in order to please the Prince and in duce him to attend Liverpool races more regularly. - The Prince's favorite racing town is New market, and he loves it because the natives do not mob him whenever he stirs abroad. I met himSn High street there a week or so ago strolling along quite unattended and nnnoticcd. He was got up in correct sport ing fashion, and wore among other striking things a pair of long yellow riding boots, which well set off the handsome legs and ankles of which his Boyal Highness is inor dinately proud. I have frequently seen the Prince in London, and upon every occasion his face had the same mechanical, half foolish, half-amiable smile, which is part of the royal outfit when moving about town. At Hewinarket, however, the Prince was without the stereotyped smile, and walked along whistling and-whacking his big boots with a whip as though life was worth living there at any rate. TOTING COLLARS A2TD CUFFS. The Prince's eldest son, Albert Victor, better known by his popular name of "Col lars and Cuffs," is a fast young man, who is engaged just now in having his fling under the kindly and notunsmpathetic eye of his royal papa. Albert Victor is not a" beau tv, and would be considered an average speci men of an ordinary dnde were it not for his neck, which is as long as a comclopard' and attracts nnwclcome attention, wherever jhe goes. The youngster has recently regis tered his own colors, but only for regimental (racing. Lord Alington is altogether unlike the popular idea of a lord. He bears a most ludicrous resemblance to Xat Goodwin. His lordship has the same queer property smile, the Eame unctous expression and quick perky manner which are connected in the popular mind with Goodwin in some of his burlesque roles. Lord Alington bete with the persistency and courage begotten of knowledge, and rarely makes a serious .mis take. He isnot so reserved as the general crowd of aristocratic sportsmen, and after lunch he has been known to bandy unrefined jokes with bookmakers. Tears ago when he was plain 3Ir. Sturt, he was wild and reck less, and although he has long since settled down, he is fond of a revel still in congenial company. He usually bets with Bookmaker Steel, a long-limbed, long-taced Yorkshire man, who began business life at Sheffield as a fish hawker, and is now a great iron mas ter and millionaire as well as a bookmaker. His partner, one Peech, is as round, podgy and red as Steel is long, lank and white, and the pair are known as Codlin and Short, XS ECCENTRIC HOBSEMAN. One of the richest and oldest of owners is Mr. Bichard "Naylor of Hootton Hall, who in his time has owned Stockwell, Macaroni and other famous horses and has won most of the great races. 2aylor is about 80 vears old, hut Hale and hearty. He guard's his money with a parsimonious care heartbreak ing to Lord Bossmore, a comparatively poor voung nobleman who married Kaylor's daughter years ago and has been since dis consolately wondering how long the old man is going to last. But the old fellow is very tough and not improbably may outlive his lordsnip. Naylor alwaays wnllis np the hill at Newmarket to save the 25-cent cab fare which the lazy, broken backer thinks .nothing of paying. "His dress is as slovenly ,as though designed deliberately to increase jtbe chronic anguish of his aristocratic son-Jin-law. JSo one wears his clothes longer or his linen more frayed than does old Dick Savior, and no one can bettr aferd to dU- regard outward appearance than he. Lord Bossmore on the other hand( is always spic and span, perfumed and oiled as though fresh from the hand of his valet He will make a big splash when his millionaire father-in-law dies and leaves him the where withal to do U. Meanwhile his lordship judiciously lies somewhat low. Sir John Astley, who claims to be the originator of the "go-as-you-please" pedes trian contests, is perhaps the most widely Lknown and popular sporting man in Bn- KianiV ixe is a oig, uurir, uiccav, uiiucu- lunged old man, fond of strong language and strong drinks. Wherever he may be he cannot, help being prominent; hisFalstaffian figure, white hair .and beard, the enormous black cigar which is never out of his mouth, save when he is eating, drinking or sleep ing, his loud strident voice and his frequent boisterous langh, all help in that direction. It is one of Sir John's peculiarities to ride a very small horse, and as he is a very big and heavy man,the effect is curious to the human observer and distressing to the poor little beast. He has already managed to get through two fair-sized fortunes in the en deavor to make money out of the bookmak ers and would CirEEKFULLTJISK A THIBD if he could get it. But his means are now moderate and his betting is on the lightest possible scale. There is something attrac tive about this rollicking old baronet and he is entitled to some measure of respect were it only for the fact that heheartHy despises the languid set and declines to con form to their ways. Sir George Chetwynd is the youngest member in the Prince of "Wales set, being just 40 years of age. A year or more ago he was publicly charged by the Earl of Dur ham with swindling the public by instruct ing his jockeys to manipulate his horses. It was feared tfiat so crave a charge would have serious social consequences for him, but so far it has apparently made no differ ence. He is too useful to the Prince to be lightly dispensed with, and the general run of sportsmen do not trouble to look too closely at a man's character especially if he be a Baronet. Chetwynd's wife is the Donager Marchioness of Hastings, who is a very keen sportswoman. Chetwynd em phatically belongs to the frigid set, but one can tell when he has a lot of money on a horse by the way in which he strokes and gnaws his tawny mustache. Lord Durham, Chetwynd's accuser, is a supercilious aristocrat who loses or wins with equal indifference and never shows any emotion. He has a big rent-roll and it would not be easy to ruin him. Lord Lurgan, a close chum of Chetwynd, is a "West of Ireland man with little ot the fiery Celtic blood, to judge from his de meanor. He would have done well as a re porter, being endowed with a keen scent for news. In tbepursuitof information he will made friends with anyone, from a stableboy to a book-maker. He was so badly hit at Goodwood last year that he had to go into retirement for a considerable time. Eventu ally his '."riends raised the money necessary to set him going again, and 1ft is well to the fore this season. WOMEN W-IIO GAMBLE. In most countries it is considered scarcely consistent with feminine modesty for a woman to consort babituallv with book makers and stablemen and to frequent race courses. But it is all right in England. The Countess of Cardigan, for instance, is never happy unless there is racing goin on. She is over 70 years of age and a decidedly unwholesome old lady. She is tall and straight, and these advantages, added to a curled flaxen wig and a well-padded bust give her a youthful appearance at a dis tance. But when you get close the illusion disappears, the highly enameled complexion and the other accessories fail to conceal the ravages of age; and one cannot repress a shudder. The Dowager Duchess of Montrose is as old as tne Countess of Cardigan and not much more wholesome. A year ago she married a young fellow named Milner, voung enough to be her grandson, and she is, not in the least ashamed of tbe fact. In her hilarious moments, which are not un frequent, she will even joke about her youthful lord and master, and tbe merri ment is not as a rule of a delicate character. She is florid and fat and as big and strong as a prize ox. Add to these natural beauties the manners and conversation of a fish-wife, and you have the most unwomanly duchess on the face of the earth. She is reputed to be a good-hearted woman but she is subject to fits of temper; and at such times rages around tbe ring and sweeps through the Eaddock like a second-grade cyclone. She ets prodigiously but is never satisfied and as she is strongly suspected of manipulating her horses to suit her book she is generally in bad odor both with the bookmakers and the general public. The foolish young man named Benzon, and more commonly called the "Jubilee Plunger," or "Jubilee Juggins," is, of course, no longer a leading British sports man; but his memory will be cherished for a longtime to come by the bookmakers. During the jubilee year he spent about $200,000 among them, and within a year and a half squandered bis fortune of about $2, 000,000. He purchased an annuity, which brings bim an income of SIC a week, and he can now be seeu occasionally eating a dinner costing about SO cents m a cheap London restaurant. He has a good dinner or outing now and then at the expense of the bookmakers, whom he enriched and whose generosity he frequently praises. "While he was spending his fortune, Benzon never wore a shirt more than once. He has no other claim to fame. But what a claim it is, though ! Blakelt Hall. CHANGE OF JI0TI0N INTO HEAT. A Curious Illnstrntion of tbo Transforma tion An Explanation. The opinion is now commonly accepted by scientific men that all bodies, substan ces, gases and liquids are composed of mul titudes of particles or molecules of almost inconceivable smallness, and these are sup posed to be in motion among themselves this motion, moreover, being heaf; that is to say, heat is neither more nor less than a kind of motion, and this interval vibration can be transmuted into a perceptible mechanical movement, or, on the other hand, mechanical movement can be convert ed into the invisible motion called heat. How the change takes place no one knows, but the change is none the less a fact. As illustrating this point a writer in the Mechanical Engineer cites the fact that the difference between a solid and a gas is simply that the motion of the particles or molecules of the gas is much greater in ex tent than is the motion of the particles of the solid, some gases also having a greater range of motion than other gases, and if by any means the motion is taken out of gas, say by compressing it into a vessel, the sides and ends of which reduce the range of movement, then, as nothing is lost in nature, the invisible and insensible motion of the gas, which it has lost, reappears as heat in a visible form, and it is lonnd that the sides of the vessel become hot. Further, the oxygen, which has combined wih coal has a very considerable range of internal motion, but when the oxygen has combined with the coal, another gas, known as carbonic acid gas, is produced, and the particles of this gas having a much smaller ranee of motion than the particles of the oxygen have, the difference appears in the form oi heat. Tbo Metric System. As applied to- weights and measures the metric system has been adopted by Prance, 'Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, Greece, Mexico, Brazil, Pern, jChili and tbe South American republics. Switzerland, Denmark and Austria have partially adopted it. It is legalized or per missive, but is not compulsory, in the United States or Great Britain. ConI Susnr Condemned by Doctor. In Pari the saccharin, or sugar from coal, has been unanimously conden by the medical profession, because it ously troubles digestion. In conseqd ot tneir recommendation, a law nas enacted prohibiting tbe nse oi coal sua a arUele ef wed., THE FADS OPMCR MEN. now the Wealthy Pass Some of Their Leisure Moments at Home. THEIR ELEGANT BILLIARD ROOMS And the Costly and Artistic Furniture With. Which They are Filled. OTHER BICE AND ATHLETIC APPARATUS nmiimt ron the, dispatch.'. Billiard rooms used to be in the basement, bnt as other rooms they are tending upward. Houses will soon have to be all top. Men will go np stairs to play billiards when they won't go down stairs. In the basement they are too near the servants, whose ears are preternaturally acntc. TJp stairs there is greater freedom for conversation. Men who have sons find that if there is a well equipped billiard room near the roof with good air, unrestricted vision, adequate privacy and satisfactory means of "refresh ment, that sons after, business hours are much more apt to come home, bring their friends with them, and play nntil dinner than to go to their clubs. Wealth and discriminating -architects have produced' some marvelous billiard rooms in this town. An architect of large experience says that nothing in the country compares with the billiard room of Mr. "W. K. Vanderbilt. It is a Moorish room open ing out of the great Francis I. banqueting room. The walls are wainscotted in five feet wide old Moorish tiles brought from Spain, rich with irridescent dyes and pea cocks' eves luster, a secret that modern enamels have never recovered. Above the wainscotting the walls are of papier niache, modeled in designs secured from the Al hambra 20 years ago by Mr. B. M. Hunt, a favor not granted since by the Spanish Gov ernment There have been plenty of models since secured with geometrical precision by calipers and ennning instruments, but these show the blunted angles and softened lines of the original, and as they are colored with the same tints have that charm which the greater precision would not give. The doors and ceiling are of butternut, elaborately ornamented with Moorish inter laced work. The mantel and the fire-facings of the horseshoe arch are of Mexican onyx, and a series of onyx columns above the mantel breast makes niches where tbe cues and other necessary solids and liquids ot a billiard room are kept. Opposite the mantel is a fountain secured in a niche where the water breaks in spray over silver ribs with beautiful effect. The window of the room is in itself a notable feature. It is filled with perforated ornaments and behind this a large onvx, so thin as to be almost transparent. This is of butternut, inlaid in Moorish designs, and in keeping are clftirs and divan. Adjoining is a Moorish toilet room lined with Moorish iles with 'the figures in onyx. THE NECESSARY rrXTUEES. The essentials of a billiard room are few, but they are very essential. There must be plenty of clear space around the tables. The wall should be such that cues awkwardly handled shall not harm them. There should be no projections to stride out, and imperil the arms and shoulders of the enthusiastic players. There should be raised seats con veniently out of the way for onlookers. There should be recesses for cues and other things. The perfect billiard room contains no non-essentials. Mr. Cornelius Yanderbilt's billiard room is in tbe basement, tbe corner room. It i, in fact, a mahogany box within the room proper, and so complete that at any time it conld be removed like cabinet work. The niches for cues,-the closets for refreshments, cigars, etc, are all. inclosed " with this mahogany lining, and in order, as has been intimated, that there should be no projec tions to interfere with the elbow room, the divan for spectators is in the alcove which makes the bay of the parlor. ThS table is of mahogany, richly carved, a Collender table made according to the designs of the architect. A billiard table, like a piano, is in form a thing to be endured when it cannot be alle viated. Certain conditions are inevitable. It must have dimensions 4x9 feet. It must have strong supports. For years it was accordingly strong, but clumsy. Now it is strong, but less aggressive. Architects have wrestled with it and finally brought it into subjection. So important is any suc cessful result that Peabody and Stearns, who designed the tables in the Union League Club, patented tbe design, and the House Committee of tbe club, as a courtesy will sometimes permit members to have the design repeated for themselves. Mr. Louis Tiffany & Co. have designed billiard tables in white enamel and gilt, daintily enough in color for my lady's chamber. Usually, however, thev are ot stnrdier character and in dark woods. SOMe HAHDSOME TABLES. Mr. George Vanderbilt has a table of Jap anese design. The wood is lacquered in old red and dragons and other grotesque forms of brass arc hammered in. This is presumably placed in a Japanese room. Such rooms are lined with matting, which is an admirable protection for the walls against the cue,. The billiard room of Mr. Calvin S. Brice is pannelled with matting, although not a Japanese room, Mr. Brice's billiard table is considered one of the handsomest in town. It is of oak elaborately carrcd, and particu lar attention has been given to making its legs objects of beauty, as the legs are almost the only chance that the de signer has. For Mr. Brice's table thejcloth was specially dyed to match the antique blue green of the ceiling which gives the color tint of the room. It appears that the cloth used in billiard tables is a special weave made by a man named Simoni in Belgium and can be procured no where else. The green of the ordinary table is as well known as the grass from which it borrows its tint. Occasionally other tints are used, gray, for example, but in very rare cases. One of tbe most astonishing tables just ordered andwhich the makers call a ireaK, speaking iu mu lauguagc ul me siue show, has a bright yellow cloth cover, yel low satin pockets and brass covers to the pockets. It was ordered through a large decorative firm here and it would be inter esting to know for what gay-minded and strong-eyed player, Tbe handsomest billiard table ever made in this country was for Patti, who, as is known, is an enthusiastic lover of billiards, and it is graciously said plays a good game. The' table was of rose and amaranth woods, with hand-painted panels bordered by relays ot ivory. It cost 53,000 and is now at Craig-y-nos, her castle in "Wales. riSETXT ARCHITECTURE. The billiard room of a gentleman who forbids his name to be used, has some pretty architectural features. It is a long room in colonial styles, and wainscotted in oak within three feet of the ceiling above, which is a frieze painted by Mr. Francis Lathrop. At each end is a dais with divans, and these are architecturally placed in alcoves by letting down from the ceiling perforated screens, which seem to reproportion the room. The windows are filled with Crow inhield glass, and the receptacles for cues and the closets are appropriately recessed. One feature of this room does not seem so desirable. The table is placed on a plat form with room, of course, for the players, but in the excitement of a game it is always possible for a man to take an unlucky back step and lose his equanimity, if noth ing more. Not only one of the handsomest bnt a bil liard room the most appropriately mascu line in its fittings is that of Mr. Howell Os borne, at the Osborne villa at Mamaroneek, whichis, by tbe way, one of the most dis tinguished country seats, both in its archi tecture and in its decoration in the suburbs of New York. This room is in oak, with oak studded ceiling, and the walls are cov- wiLwitb. brews oalfekia fastened to plaee PITTSBURG DISPATCH, with brass nails. The calf, excepting in its sweet breads, seems never so truly valuable as in this form. The soft brown hue of the tanned hide is one of the most agreeable tints that nature and man nave combined to produce. It carries with it also such a pleasant suggestion of strength, endurance, indifference to hard knocks,asenseof virility, complimenting those things one likes to think of men, and therefore so appropriately used in men's rooms and belongings. A CHAPTER OK CUES. Not a great deal of attention is given to handsome billiard cues. Length, weight and balance are the important considera tions. The wood proper is ash finished wjth leather tips that are made by the French peasants, and not procurable elsewhere. Each cue is or should be constructed 60 that it will balance in the middle when placed acsoss tbe finger. For this reason the end in the hand is usually of lighter wood and here some ornamentation is given. A present fashion consists in bead-like moldings that assist the hand in its grip. But the most expensive cnes are ornamented something like peacock eyes, with successive curving bands of color, and these are formed of in lays of colored wood so perfectly joined that they look more like enamels or lustrous paints. Billiards are rather a polite accomplish ment than an exercise, and so owe nothing to the later prominent of athletics. On this subject men hold diverse opinions. One man will tell you how he has recently had all the rheumatism shaken out of his bones by placing him under the direction of a pro fessor of physical -development. The pro fessor's regimen usually includes a dietary schedule, which should not be admitted in taking ths results into consideration. Other men look with dismay on the increase of sudden derangements of the heart which bowl a man over before "he knows anything is the matter with him, and these are at tributed to the newly acquired taste for ex ercise. Mr. Cbauncey Depew, to me the other day, attributed his fine health, amid increasing cares, to the fact that he took no exercise, and quoted Mr. Evarts, whose health in a long and busy Hie has. been phenomenally good, in support of the same conclusion. Still the tide goes the other way. Most busy men make some provision in their schpme of life for exercise. Dumb bells and Indian clubs are found in most bathrooms. Mr. Andrew Carnegie has a pulling machine for getting his mnscles in trim. Numbers crowd the athletic clubs, the boys';schools and now the girls' schools are introducing gymnasiums with trapezes and turning bars. Some few private honses include gymnasi ums. Mr. "W. K. Vanderbilt has a private gymnasium above his banqueting room. This was suggested by tbe construction of the banqueting room, the ceilingof whichis hung from theroof. Tbespace above through which the trusses extend seemed valueless except for this purpose, for which the beams and supporters fitted exactly. Accordingly the usual equipments of a private gymnasi um are found here and it is a royal place for roller skating and velocipede exercise for the younger people. A FANCY SKATER. You do not often get a chance to see a sugar broker dance, as Mr. W. S. Gilbert has aptly remarked. "We do more often see a man skate whose income it is alleged is 16,000,000. Nor does Mr. John D. Bocke feller intend that be should be seen in his favorite pastime, for a high board fence now shuts in the refreshing green that used so agreeably to lie exposed for the benefit of tired town eyes on each side of his house, and also screens his private skating rink. This is not for roller skating, but is an ice rink, and is intended primarily for Mr. Bockefeller's own diversion. Here in the winter he skates every morning before going down town, and is joined usually by some of his business friends. There are skating classes for the misses and daughters who do not skate, and all the provisions for a merry time. It is doubtful if out of Russia another man gratifies his taste in this particular way, and there is something delightfully naive in a man so fatally rich prosecuting his boyhoods tastes and skill iu this ingen ious manner in the heart of a city. Another man who takes his exercise under exceptionally happy circumstances, and in a novel manner is Dr. F. N. Otis, the prominent and popular physician. Dr. Otis is addicted to the rowing ma chine, which furnishes an admirable exer cise, but is really a great stretch on one's dignity. The idea of sitting up in a dry room and pulling with any heartiness on oars that never touch water requires more imagination than most men are willing to expend in the mere pursuit of health. But Dr. Otis assists the delusion, that it is really necessary to give the first impetus to the blood-stirring current by having the end of the room toward which he looks as he pulls on his oars filled with a large painting. This is a Lake George landscape painted for this especial purpose by Mr. Homer Martin. Mr. Martin has imagination enough and charm of touch sufficient to expand the walls and glorify the ballroom which Dr. Otis has dedicated to his recreation. And Dr. Otis has imagination or he could never have de vised so happy an expedient And so as he sits and rows ho has daily the illusory de light of pulling out from the lovely shores of one of the loveliest of all lovely fakes. ' Maei? Gat Humpheets. EANDALL'S POPULAR DAUGHTER. A Girl Witliont Any Ifonaenso nod Who Saitntns Her Fntbcr. I saw the other day a strong-featured young lady, wearing glasses, driving rather a stylish turnout, one of those yellow "buck boards" with a small rail around, and a seat for a footman behind. The horse was raw boned and clumsy. l The young lady held the whip and reins in an independent, off hand way, as if she were on a genuine Penn sylvania "buckboard" going to the cheese factory, and the load behind were a can of milk instead of a big black man in livery. In her featnres I recognized Samuel J. Bandall, and knew her to be his daughter. Bandall is one of the most affectionate men in his family I ever knew, but somehow, if possible, I think he is more devoted to his unmarried daughter than to any of the rest. Sheis as much like him as a young girl can be like an old man in appearance, and her manners and disposition would make any one recognize her who knew him. She is absolutely devoid of affectation, and is as smart as a whip. During her father's ill ness she has been his stand-by. "When it was thought that hewas in danger of death, her force of , character sustained Mrs. Bandall and the rest of the family, and after he got back to his work she used to come to his committee room to see how he felt and to offer him assistance. No matter how much perplexed and taxed by his work, a smile of pleasure came on his face at sight of her. He would throw his arm across her shoulders as if Bhe were a boy. He says she sustains him, and he is as proud of her as can be. When she walks down the avenne she attracts considerable atten tion without knowing it. She always walks with a brisk, "swinging gat, and never wears a bustle. She is one of the most pop ular girls in "Washington. HAK1NG CHROME IKON. A New Process Dlseorered by a Norwegian Engineer. A Norwegian engineer has obtained a ten years' patent for a new process for the manufacture of chrome iron. A well mixed proportion of finely pulverized chrome ore, powered charcoal and tar are made red hot in a closed vessel, allowed to cool, and finally remelted Jn a crucible, to gether with a certain pioportion of pulver ized iron ore, powdered charcoal borax, ground glass and cyanide of potassium. The proportions of the mixture are secret. Cantlom. Tinlcee Blade. Miss Crimp People say I look like my sister. "What do yon think about it, Mr. Softy? Mr. Softy (her sister's beau)-;;! think yon iook. very iiiuuu H&.S year um, DUt .piease SUNDAY, JUNE 9, HOfTOBEABEAUTI Shirley Dare Tells Why Women Want to.be Good-Looking. REMOVING SPOT? ON THE PACE, What to Do for Bed Noses, Flushed Faces and Shiny Complexions. ANSWERS FOR ANXIOUS INQUIRERS. WBrrTEX FOB THE DISPATCH. 3 This letter must be given up to cosmetics, or editors will have to answer the 400 in quiring correspondents themselves. Next to money making, or making a living, people seemed to be concerned about their looks," and it is quite reasonable, for on personal attractiveness, in physique and manner, de pends most that makes life worth living. Somnch hinges on -personal favor, among men and women, that it must redeem the office of the cosmetic and hygienic adviser, from the mere pander to the vanity to that of the confidante who must minister to soul and body, to put people in right rela tions with themselves. There is a half divine pleasure in this" impersonal service to those whose names are often unknown, to feel that in removing a blemish, or improving a dull appearance, one is giving confidence to sensitive, shy people, and banishing the smart of unde served inferiority. Some of these letters touch one deeply, from the motherless girls who have nobody to advise them; the lads away from home, anxions as girls to have a good complexion, and justly so, the yonng wives who tell a whole story in the line, "I am afraid my husband does not love me as he did when I was better looking," and the women of 40 who still work to look well for their husbands and their big boys. "Will correspondents in all cases send an address at which replies can reach them, in no case for publication. A SALLO-VV SKIK. "Bother" writes that she suffered from sal low skin and sulphur-colored blotches on the face, for which she "doptored" with solittle success as to discourage fler till she tried the taraxacum treatment. The small spots have left her face, the complexion is daily becoming clearer, and she says "I am not ashamed to have anybody look at me. Still one spot on the forehead does not re move, and grows darker instead of lighter. I have no mother, ana am the only girl, so that I have nobody but a doctor to go to for advice. All the doctors say it is nothing, and tell me to never miud it. But I do." I wish "Bother" had sent her address, for one can't help having a kind corner in one's heart for the girl who has no mother, and only a doctor to go to for advice, who tells her a blemish of such flagrant sort is noth ing. A future of love and success has been lost for such a mere nothing "before this. In such a case baths, friction daily, especially over the right side, where the liver is, and careful diet, with coarse bread, cereals and much fruit juice shonld form a part of the treatment, and two or three doses of com pound licorice powder be taken successive nights. This is well known at most drug stores, and costs something like 10 cents an ounce. The spot may be rubbed at night with this paste: Elder-flower ointment, one ounce, mixed with sulphate of zinc, 20 grains. Take care not to let it touch the skin beyond the spot. At morning wash it with Castile soap and soft warm Water, and bathe five minntes with a lotion of citric acid and 30 grains in one-half pint fusion of roses. Thisshould dispel the spot in a fort night. FACE "WASHES. Formulas for Magnolia Balm and other face washes containing chalk and bismuth will not be given in these letters. "Hattie S." To make hair grow on a high forehead, try rubbing the skin with flannel till red, and applying another flannel wet with oil of lavender over night, bind ing it on by a tape round the head. A year's trial is not too much time for the experi ment. Or, apply high test kerosene, with out rubbing the skin, repeating the applica tion nightly and letting it evaporate at will. To all inquiries about the toilet mask, and iheir name is legion, it must be said that the use of any mask proves less advisable than other toilet preparation"", which im prove the complexion more "quickly and rleasantly. For this and other reasons, I advise the use of a lotion which dries into a protective layer on the face, that will not wash off. The lotion is perfectly safe, and refines the skin more rapidly than anything known. The price is 1 a bottle. It is not a paint or powder ii any shape, and does not disfigure the face in its effect. But it should be distinctly understood that no lotion or mask, medicated or not, will ever refine the skin, unless care is civen to diet and health. "Women seem to think a toilet mask will prove all that is necessary to in sure a good complexion, which is a great mistake. "Constant Header" finds her neck turn ing brownish yellow where the collar of her dresses ruh it, and ammonia will not remove the stain. For snch discolorations apply powdered borax wet with very little cam phor, letting the paste dry on the skin for IS minutes, then washing off. Repeated daily this will bleach the skin, provided a thin lawn is worn between the neck and the dress collar. The dvc of the material has possibly stained 'he skin. A DANGER SIOKAI. "Ninon." Bel noses seem to be the affliction of many persons who take great care of their health. A nose always reddish at the sides and swelling and 'growing frightfully red at the first touch of cold is truly a humiliation, and when it comes without use of malt or spiritous liquors, in spite of the closest personal care, it is the sign of deep-seated internal disorders. Unsuspected disease of 'the intestines, in flammation which gives little discomfort, signal their lurking danger by this persist ent redness of the nose. At once lay aside the use of white bread and pastry forever, making whole wheat meal bread, and wheaten grits and staples of diet, without discarding meat or other acceptable food. But the use of bolted fine flour is responsi ble for most of the brain exhaustion and the worst inflammatory disorders of modern civilized life. Tbe experience of the wisest physicians confirm this, and nothing can be said too strongly against this waste of vital ity and stinting the" most necessary food of the system. A woman with a red nose should wear a wet bandage about the hips, and take tepid sitz baths daily, to relieve internal inflam mation, a treatment which of itself is enough to cure many abdominal diseases without the degrading and painful practice common in snch cases. Laxatives like com pound licorice powder, figs and senna or castor oil should be used freely, beginning with a dose nightly for three nights, then one every third night, for a fortnight or a month, as suits the person. This removes accumulated wastes which inflame the tis sues, and if the habit of using coarse food has been established meantime, nature will Erevent further trouble. But few persons aveany idea of the STRICT REGIMEN NECESSARY to prevent harm when nature has once fallen into disrepair. Going without coarse bread a day or two because it does not suit domes ticconveqience toprovideit,witl throwaner vous person hack into sleeplessness, oppres sion of the brain and very likely neuralgia. Just so, one who is dieting for complexion, which includes purity of blood, will find very Blight irregularities of food-and habits undo the good of weeks of care. All athletes know that a glass of ice water-or a rich dish tasted at the wrong time will so destroy their fine physical balance as to lose the productof a month'scostly training. Health and supremely good condition are so pre cious, so invatnable to ns, that probably this extreme care is not too high a price to pay to impress us with its worth. ' A red nose or a flushed faee will exeuse jBy, ueraaEasiae w ei,-Mwew w resiewj 1889. its unsightliness. Farther, a good face powder cools tbe inflammation of the skin, and nothing is" better than precipitated car bonate of zinc with an equal part of French chalk, which is really a fine soapstone, white and adhesive. Bismuth powders are not to be recommended, delicate as their effect may be. A little rood nowder laid on and spread with the tips of the fingers, veils tne reaness ana renders the lace less ouy. Two lotions are recommended for red noses and faces, one a very weak wash of white vitriol dissolved in soft water, say the bulk of a pea in a pint of water. The strength of chemicals varies so with age and expos ure that it is only safe to judge snch washes by trying them on a morsel of skin. If they burn or smart unpleasantly, reduce with water, spoonful byspoonful till only a slight irritation is felt. The second lotion Lis 15 grains of tannic acid dissolved in five ounces of camphor water. These washes are to be applied with a sponge or cloth to the face and left to dry several times a day. say from six to twelve times. "When the redness of face is due to latent erysipelas no time should be lost in consulting a good doctor, and entering on a thorough course of treatment by baths and ont-door living to avert the horrors of settled disease. A CURE TOR -WRDKXES. One correspondent writes from Omaha: "Since I have been in this country.my skin is so dry and wrinkled I don't know what to do with it I have never used cosmetics of any sort, with the exception of almond meal recommended by Mrs. (a well known writer on cosmetics), Taut after three months' use wrinkles were more apparent than before. I am 29 years old, which may account for my wrinkled skin and gray hair, but if I continue at this rate, what will I look like at 40? I cannot explain to you what the lost of beauty means to me, bnt could I do so' I feel sure that you would sympathize with me and help me." B. L. "What the loss of beauty means to these "inquiring women" is too easy to guess. It means often tbe loss of a husband's interest, or the loss of a lover; which women do not seem to take in the light it is intended, a favor in advance. B, L. needs to counteract a dry, bilious habit of body, which lessens the natural moisture of the skin, by frequent baths; or stiU better, wet packs, as hydropaths call them, which are as cosmetic and purifying as vapor baths. For a pack, cover a bed with a rubber sheet and two blankets over it, wrap the person, undressed, in a wet cotton sheet, or wet gown wrung out of hot water, and let her lie down on the blankets and be snngly folded in them, the head wet and a warm brick at the feet. The arms may be left ont, and the shoulders wrapped in a separate small blanket, great care being taken not to let tbe patient get chilly an instant, or, on the other hand, to let tbe bead become flushed and full by OVERHEATING THE BLOOD. Presently the subject begins to perspire, as Ulna vapor bath, as if the flaids of the body were flowing through a strainer, and she usu ally falls into the sweetest sleep. Indeed the wet pack is a great cure for Insomnia. In half an hour, a warm bath should follow, with clean warm clothing, which last has more to do with clear skins than most people believe. In doors, one may secure a moist atmosphere,by keeping a plentiful evaporation of water in rooms, nut from the poor little stove vases, but from broad enameled pans, at least 15 inches across, which shonld vaparize two quarts a day in a room 15x15x10. This would not only pre vent wrinkles, but throat and lnng diseases. When about house-keeping duties or out of doors, a little vasaline should be rnbbed into the face, especially In the lines next the nose and the droop of the mouth, about the outer corners of the eyes and on the forehead. This should be done when the face is washed and dried, the first part of the toilet, left a few minntes and gently wiped off to prevent a shiny look, leaving a soft moistnre on the face. Warm water for washing face and hands, warm sift towels, and vasaline will keep any skin soft and free from wrinkles, if begun in young womanhood. For protection from the drying winds of the West, one must use vaseline or cold cream before going out and wear a very thin gauze veil, not black lace, whose snots and meshes injurs the eyes. Borne exquisite creams for tbe com plexion are sold, which really refine it, but the formulas are secret. Lastly, In a dry region, one should drink more than usual, to supply the fluids of the system. A large goblet of filtered water five times a day shouldbe sipped, much to the benefit of tbo health. Vapor baths are Indispensable In our dry climate. Ulycerine is not'klnd to all sorts of complexions, and almona meal is too often a mixture of flour, castile soap and the refuse from which almond oil has been pressed, with all the astringency of the skin of the kernels. Women Bhonld make their own almond paste, and always blanch tbe kernels before pounding in a mortar. A pure rose water, distilled from petals of fine roses, is greatly desirable as a toilet preparation, most of the rose water known being a compound, of cheap ottar and magnesia with distilled com mon water; and far from possessing the proper, ties of true rose water. These commercial Imi tations have very little value. 'some valuable hints. J.F. L. Use the loofa, By all means, for rheumatic ailments with poor digestion and sleepless nights. If it is too scratchy, try fric tion with flannel. But tbe use of coarse crack era and acid fruit, if well borne by the diges tion, should be more for you with friction than friction alone. Subbing tbe body with cocoa nut oil would help you gain strength and flesh, using half a cup ot oil for tbe entire form each night and letting the skin absorb it. Bnobing a cut lemon on the affected parts will often re lieve rheumatism and neuralgia. "Florida, Anita and others," who askabpnt toilet marks, may address me personally, Tri bune Building, New York. v "3. H." should use the finest magnesia pow der for a shiny nose. The invisible ' powder named will do no harm. Bhe may also bathe it in camphor spirits frequently to correct the greasy tendency, and be careful to use none but coarse bread. Bedness and coarseness of the nose is index to visceral inflammation and ob structions which must be removed. Drink grape juice at each meal, if you can get it un fermented, or use tbe jnice of stewed rhubarb till grapes come again. Bub lemon juice on the nose, and dust with powdered borax, while moist, at night. , . c "W. II. Phila." will find the process for cure of crooked shoulders described in "1 heory and Practice of the Movement Cure," by Charles F. Taylor, published many years since, but to be found in second-hand bookstores or public libraries. "Twelve Inquirers" wfll find the taraxacum treatment and other processes described at length in my "Ugly Girl Papers," printed a dozen years since by Harpers', to which I must refer them for of t-repeated directions. "Ad mirer" should order a pint of fluid extract taraxaenm. with one tablespoonf nl of man drake extract added, and should also leave off greasy, indigestible food. Shirley Dake. AMERICAN MINING IJiGINEERS. Adventures In Sooth America) Alaska and tbe (yordclleras of Slexlco. From the New York World.! Mining engineers have a hard time of it. They are looked upon as doctors who may be called at any hour of the day or night to go here, there or anywhere else, and it must be conceded that, generally, the engineers are as eager for employment as the medicos. "While tbe doctors are confined to their bail iwicks, the mining engineer's scope is bonndless as the sea. "We read to-day of a well-known American expert, Edward Bates Horsey, concluding his ' examination of certain gold mines in the new South Af rican gold fields, being abont to start for London to report. On lower Broadway vou meet M. C. Hillyer, another noted export whom a tew montns ago wnen heard irom was in the heart of the Andes, South America, examining silver mines, andonly a few months before he had comedown from icy Alaska, where he sampled tbe remark able gold mines of that new field. At the Brunswick you meet Angustns J. Bowie, Jr., of San Francisco, who can relate mar vellous adventures in the heart of the Cor dilleras of Mexico, or upon the deserts of Nevada or Arizona while earning a fat fee on a supposed mining property. They get big pay, but they take their lives in their hands. No wonder when they return after a hard trip they want a good long rest and dread to start ont again i Ie in Job Lou. 4maba World.! Uhicago wife What will yon charge for procuring me a divorce from my hus band? Chicago Lawyer Have we ever secured a divorce for you? C. W iio, 1 don't remember ever having gotten a divorce through your office. O, L We shall havo to charge yon $5 for the first divorce, bnt, as a matter of coarse, if yon will promise to give us all youif cases of this nature is the future we WHBsaKeyosaewraw.K h,, 't UAiJWBi ln I I N ll I I ' SUNDAY THOUGHTS I AND BY A CLEBGYMAN. . I WRITTEN FOR THE DISPATCH. 1 The frightinl disaster on the banks of the Conemaugb, illustrates again and di vinely what the Chicago conflagration and the Boston fire and the floods in the "Valley pf the Ohio, manifested in the recent past the greatest intimacy which now binds States and communities together. The former isolation and antagonisms are no longer possible. The railroad and telegraph have made tbe most distant regions next door neighbors. Suffering is no longer in divTdnai, or at best communal: it is na tional, international. Cities are connected like children of one fsmily. If one is as sailed, all the rust run to the rescue. The wires had scarcely begun to flash the news East and "West, North and South, be fore New York, Boston, Chicago, St. Lonis, Cincinnati, as well as this city and the great towns nearby rushed to the telegraph office and eagerly inquired, "Whatcan we do for you?" The waves of devastation that rolled down the fated valley had not begun to sub side, before another wave, a glorious flood of sympathy, an inundation of money, food, clothing followed it, and spread itself in blessing as the other had in destruction. Such an outflow renews one's respect for human natnre. It is the sweet fruitaze of Christian manhood and womanhood. Amer ica is seen to be &a cosmopolitan in virtues as in vices. "If anything were needed," writes one, "to give the lie to such as say that trade is merely selfish, that commerce is only mercenary, that the American thinks of nothing but dollars, it can be found in the sublime spectacle of spontaneous, con tinental generosity which seeks to bnry loss and death under tbe mighty tide of help and consolation." Such an exhibition is almost compensation. A Century' Chnnges. Men are hopeful or desponding according' to temperament; and for the rest, according to standpoint. Viewed from one side, things appear to be going from bad to worse by the lightning express. Viewed from the other side, all life is seen to be a development out of dark ness and Into sunshine. The recent Centennial has suggested many and significant comparisons of the past with the present, social, industrial, political. The relicloos progress of the centnry has not re ceived so much attention, and yet it is the most amazing of all. In 1789, when Washington took the oath, there was one church member to every 14.5 of the population; which would give a total of 200,000. In 1889 there is one chnrch member in every three of the population; that is 20,000,000. A hundred years ago there were not MethodlsU enough in the whole country to make up a camp meeting; now they number more com municants than there were then people on tbe continent. A hundred years ago, the Baptists were persecuted and banned in the North and in the South; to-day they are foremost in repu tation and adherents. A hundred years ago the Congregational churches of New England were a part of tbe State: their growth and in fluence are tbe result of their disestablishment. A hundred years ago, the Episcopal Church, which was discredited by its Tory learnings. and whose parsons were prohibited from drunk- I annMa liv sf ,tnt In thliTA,. nf rftna im aa '. becomes the church of Washington and Madi son, a leader in good words and works. A hun dred years ago, tbe Presbyterian Church was supported, measurably, by lotteries; these have long since disappeared as an orthodox source of revenue. Still better is the showing in Christian work. Within this wonderf nl century have been born the great missionary, and reformatory, and benevolent societies which have belted the earth with zones of beatitude. Moreover, this is the lavman's age. The minister no longer does it all. His voice Is snpplemented,bis bands are Increased, his nersonalltv Is multiplied bv those of co-operating and consecrated millions. J ins prayer mteuoK, mo cuouay scoooi, tne Christian Association, the Christian Endeavor Society these are the omnipresent and gigantic instruments or tne new me ox unristianity. Burely. its path is like that of the just, 'Shin ing more and more unto the perfect day." A Wonderful Woman. The death, in May, of Laura Brldgman re Calls her miraculous story as startling as any in the pages of history, secular or profane. She was bom possessed of all her faculties. In infancy she was subject to severe fits, which shattered her nervous system. Before she was 2 years old she was prostrated by scarlet fever, which completed the apparent destruction of her physique. She became blind, deaf, dumb, and lost the senses of taste and smelL It was death in life. She was burled in herself. "Here," writes the late Horace Mann, who was familiar with the case "was this glorious world nature, beauty, love, humanity, without: there, within, brooded and moaned an immortal soul. What passage shall be opened to that hidden spiritual continent? Who shall enter and gather tbe frnits of this new garden of the Hesperedes? What angel shall convey a spark to kindle the incense laid upon that seques tered altar? There was but one man on earth who had the patience and courage to open the sarcophagus, and bring to life the Imprisoned spirit that man was Or. Samuel O. Howe, of Boston, the most successful of all instructors of the blind." He took the child upon his-knee, and day after day, with divine patience, opened an ave nue to her soul, bringing out the captive into tbe light of day, and the more precious licht of knowledge into a perception of the truths that pertain to time and eternity. He found her a blank voiceless, thoughtless, inaccessi ble. He made her sensible, beautiful, learned, happy; far more intelligent and useful than the average of young ladies who have bad more than her advantages, with none of her de privations. During more than half a century she con tinued to teside in the institution where she re covered possession of herself, and here she died in ber 63th year. Though always frail, she was tbe most industrious and cheerful of women. She had a wonderful knowledge of character, which she literallv read at her fin ger ends. Sbo was singularly thoughtful of others and sweetly benevolent. At tbe time of the famine In Ireland, she bought with money earned by her own work a barrel of flour which was sent to the sufferers. In 1SG3 she was bap tized and admitted to membership In tbe Bap tist Church. Her life was beautifully consist ent with that act. If Laura Brldgman stands as an illustrious example in tbe chanter of philanthropy, she stands as an equally illustri ous example in the chapter of grace. Blessed Is ber memory: and blessed, also, the memory of her mental and moral father, Dr. Samuel U. Howe! Snndny-School Statistics. At the sixty-fifth anniversary of the Ameri can Sunday School Union (one of the largest and best of nnsectarlan agencies) recently held, the following summary of work for the year ending March 1, 18S9, was officially submitted: New Sunday schools organized, 1,736, contain ing 7,869 teachers and 63,375 scholars; schools aided. 1,816, with 13,015 teachers and 123,538 scholars; schools previously reported aided, 4,432, containing 21,778 teachers and 201,531 scholars; Bibles distributed. 8,625; Testaments, ll,68lrfamilies visited. 40,041; addresses deliv ered, 11.341; miles traveled, 409,308. At least 4,000 hopeful conversions have been reported, and over 100 churches of different denomina tions have grown from these schools in 12 months. Two View ot Tirtne. Dr. Blair concluded one of bis eloquent but indefinite discourses on "Virtue" thus: "O, virtue, it thou wert embodied, all men would love thee V Later in the day his colleazne thus replied from the same pulpit! "Virtue has been embodied but how was she treated ? Did all men love her ? No I Sbo was despised and rejected of men, who, after defaming. In sultinc and scourging her, led her to Calvary, where they crucified her between two thieves I" Clenrette Pictures. Old King James published a "Blast Against Tobacco." A more modern reformer publishes a blast against certain abuses connected with the cigarettes. The manufacturers of cigar ettes are cultivating an awf nl harvest ot sin by tbelr advertising schemes. They are issuing thousands upon thousands of obscene pictures, which are given away with packages of cigar ettes, 'and thus undermining all tba: is pure in the youth of our country. Have these men no conscience? no shame? Is there no law that can punish them and suppress their crime against the virtue of our rising generation? Is it not time for the religious press to brand them byname before the public as the enemies of our race? Debauehers of the body andde hauchers of the soul you are eating away the manliness of the c4sMe generation who are to gerera oar eearr,rwk are we to expeet x 10 . - the impurities of Pompon become a part ' f men uany exuiencei .-W ,' f- An Eloquent Friar. ij? An Italian friar named Agostlno da Monte-. feltro is creating a f urdr by his eloquence. He went, recently, from Florence to Rome, ,m where he is now preaching in the aristocratlo ,"' but ugly Church of ban Carlo on the Corso. , , The edifice is crowded at each service with j. motley congrcgation.cnmposed of cardinals and " other dignitaries, mixed in with lords and ladies and riff-raff from the streets. Father -. ' Acostino sways allatbiswillandm-eacbesthe -i homely and nnpopnlar moralities with the fear fulness of a Savanarola. He was, in the old days, a soldier nnder Garibaldi: was crossed in love; gave np the world and hid his griefs un der.the cowl. Doubtless. n small pirt of his nower as a "master of assemblies" comes from his knowledge of the world gained before his voluntary retirement. Converted men of af fairs make tbo best preachers. 'WISHES TO SEE HIS C0WHIDEB. A Railroad Doorman Advcrtlies for ths Worann Who Whipped Him. From the Mew Tork World." A LIBERAL REWARD will be paid for the address of tbe woman who struck a door man at Grand Central depot May SO. Doorman, care of Mendel's package office. This queer advertisement, which appeared yesterday, was the sequel to a most myste rious and extraordinary scene which, oc curred 3Iemorial Day in the waiting room of the New York and New Haven Railroad Company. Shortly before noon on that day a well dressed, middle-aged woman with a shawl thrown over one sbonlder and her hands nervously twitching beneath the end oi it, walked np to one of the employes and asked: "Is there a doorman employed here with light side-whiskers, a fair comnlexion a big, tall man, strongly built, who usually watches the middle door?" She was told that the description she gavg tallied exactly with that of GusBaszewnski, oue of the doormen. She inquired excitedly if he were about, and said she wanted tn seq him right away. The man was standing a one end of the waiting room and he was pointed out to her. "Without a word tba woman walked up to where he was stand ing, and pulling irom nnder her cloak a long cowhide struck a vigorons blow at hisr head. Although Baszewnski was not pre pared for the attack he warded off the blow and attempted to catch hold of the cowhide. The woman managed to elude him, how ever. "I will teach you," she screamed, "not to insult a defenseless woman again," and she showered jdown blows upon his head with the whip. The waiting room was packed with excur sionists and the cowhiding created much ex citement. Several of the employes ran ran in between the woman and Baszewnski and affteran effort managed to push her away. The doorman ran in the opposite -direction to get a policeman, he says. The unknown woman then wrapped her cowhide in her shawl and got on a Forty-second street car. No one attempted to stop ber. As soon as the officials heard ot the scene the doorman was suspended till he could give an explauatiou. He says he has no idea who the mysterious woman was or why she should have assaulted bim. He denies ever having insulted anyone. Baszewnski has been doorman for the New York and New Haven for two years. No previous charge has ever been made against him,' and he is said to be of good character. Ha put the above advertisement in the paper to try and find the woman and get an explan- ation from her. A PERFECl A. purely Vegetable Compound that expels all bad humors from tbe system. Removes blotch es and pimples, and makes pure, rich blood. ap25S 3IED1CAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PENS AVENUE. PITTSBDKU.P As old residents know and back files of Pitts UUig papula uiuic. la .ud uiuco. umuiuugu auuiu moat prominent physician In the city, devoting v special at ten uon tu an curomc uiseasca. x- rum piM0 NO FEE UNTIL CURED MCDAni IO and mental diseases, physical I H L tl V U U O decay, nervous debility, lack of energy, ambition and hope, impaired mem. ory, disordered sight, self-distrust, bashfulness, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, im poverished blood, falling powers, organic weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person for business, society and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKIN &?& blotches, falling bair, bone pains, glandular swellings, ulcerations of tongue, mouth, throat, ulcers, old sores, areicured for life, and blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from the system. JIDIMAPV kidney and bladder derange UnlliAn Ijments.weak back, gravel. ca tarrhal discharges, inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment; prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Whittier's life-long, extensive experience insures scientific and reliable treatment on common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patients at a distance as carefully treated as 1C hpre. Office hours 9 A. H. to 8 P. M. Sunday, 10 a. M. to 1 P.M. only. DR. WHITTIER, 8H Penn avenue. Pittsburg, Pa. ap9-31X-nsuwk gw w - a t t -t.fWff 'T1 "VI T.TJt'iJ A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatlsd oa the Errors ot Youth, Prematnre Decline, If eirotm and nyaicai ueouiijt impunueajj uic diuwj, PBaPflf 'tjlMamjnmMFWwtmwseuftrr f Resulting trom Folly, Vice, Ignorance. Excesses or Overtaxation, Enervating and unfitting the victim, for Work, Business, the Ifarr'ed or Social Relation. Avoid unskilful pretenders. Possess this gTeat work. It contains 300 pages, royal 8vo. Beautiful binding, embossed, full gilt. Price, only 81.C0 by mail, post paid, concealed in plain wrapper. Illus trative Prospectus Free, if you apply now. Tha distinguished author, Wm. H. Parker. M. D re ceivedthe COLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL from the National Medical Association, for the PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker and a corps of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, confi dentially, by mall or in person, at the ofuce of THE PEABODY MEDICAI. JDf STITCTE, No.4Bulflnch St.,Boston.UIass., Jowhomall orders for books or letters for advice should M directed as above. al3- Tuvsuwk CHICHESTER'S hWGLIbh MMTKIlVl c ZZ3 CS:S3 SIAKOT Z21SJ. OrtdamLbMt.nlmsnlwol rdibl pill for ile. KmrFsiL. Anlc tor CUdutta't EnglaiC (Diamond Brand. In red - l uaiM twxiM. Mmled wlta blue rib l boo. At Dragg-Urn. Accept ba nthr. IU BUlA in DIIU, botnl boxes, pink wrappers an a dsnger. ods counterfeit. Srad 4c. (jump.) b f'vtlcaurs sad jeuerrr Ladles," w etter. bv retnrn nuU. 10.000 tescU nonl2U&roaLADl!SwbobTsueatbem- XuoaF&ptr. Ihlchestrr Clirmlcal CoBldlJOnSq.,PMlo-,P. de2S-21-'W.SUWlC GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE CURES NERVOUS DEBILITY, LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF MEMORY. full particulars In pamphlet sent free. The jrenutne Gray's gpecitlc sold by drusrjrlsts only in yellow wrapper. Price, ft per package, or six for So, or bv mall on rvcelnt or nrlee. hv ndtlru sir mi. uitAi .utLiiujr. wx.. uunalo. . X " hold in PitUbnrg by 8. S. HOLLA-ND. corner Emltbflpld and Liberty ss. ap!3-SS . ..... .-.... v.... .1.: -. L i : - A SUFPEEER a mS2a& -weakness, lost vigor, etc., was restored to health a: " in men a remaruDie manner aneriu else; had failed that he will send the mode of care TREE ta an reiiow sufferers. Address i.. o. MiTCltELlv mist jaamsam, vesa. mjw-ss-mnw-s. sw MjevI khqw thyself; JOV h3K?L"ja J AJS L?14JLJ-M?Mrfi F T"flTSMV a m 'mi .; . i . i &i JM ! P w r. -fenJkfS-. .&-&L-