16 THE PITTSBTJUG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1890. UNCLE SI'S HOTEL It is the White House and Ben Harrison Keeps It. A NEW OXE BADLY NEEDED. Hrs. Harrison Has Four Bedrooms and a Hall for a Parlor. abreast elbows. through it without touching their PEEPS INTO ALL THE APARTMENTS icokbspomk;ck or the dispatch.) Washington, March 29. The "White House to-day is like a big hotel and President Harrison is the land lord. Every man and woman who comes to "Washington thinks he has a right to enter hii house without knocking. They tramp over hiB carpets with their muddy boots, suk all sorts of impudent questions of his errants, and the chances are that tbey carry way a bit ot the furniture. Every now and then a piece as big as your hand is clipped out of one of the lace curtains by a relic hunter, and during President Lincoln's time r mmsn was caueht in the verv act of it cutting the cosily curtains of the Est room. She cried when she was found out und she was taken up weeping to the Presi dent's room. Mr. Lincoln looked at her aorrowfnlly and told her the best thing she could do was to leave the city. It is the tame with the cushions ot the furniture, and by no means safe to let sightseers move about gave nnder the eye ot a guide. These guides are the President's servants, and they have all they can do to keep the crowds out of the most private parts of the house. Xot infrequently visitors want to see the kitchen and all the home life that Mrs. Harrison gets must come from a little space on the second floor. The President's grounds cover many acres, and the White House covers a third of an acre It is a long rectangular almost iqnatty two-story structure with a wide porte cochere having a floor as big as that of the average two-story house. The porte cochere is upheld by ionic columns as big around as the largest oaks of the lorest, and its roof supported by these is of the Grecian order. Around the roof of the White House there is A MARBLE FENCE about as high as a table, and made of round marble pillars the size of a baseball club. The building has a basement under it and two rows of big rectangular windows look lis n i I M 'a 5fijV.p The While Bmut Laundry. out of the stories above this. The basement windows are square and the most of them look as though they needed washing. "Wide walks lead np in the shape of a half-moon from Pennsylvania avenue to the White House, and you walk half the length of the House before you get to the front door. As you do so you can look right down into the basement, aud if your eyes are sharp, about very other day yon" will see a num ber of colored girls here with irons in their hands polishing the President's shirts and putting the finishing touches on babyMc Eee's unmentionables. If, on leaving the mansion, you walk over toward the State, War and Saw Depart ments, your nostrils may be saluted with the hog and hominy which is being cooked in the Presideut's kitchen, and you may see the President's colored lady chef producing those exquisite dishes which are making the state dinners so famous. It is not halt big enough for an establishment of our Presi de -t, and it has none of the modern con veniences for keeping dinners warm which the best restaurants of the conntrv contain. There is a big lange at one side of the room, and there is another little range in the scullery beyond. The cooking utensils are of copper, and the walls are plastered and not tiled. The entire front of the basement of the White House is taken up with kitchens and laundry. The back has a storeroom, a furnace, and whisper it low in the ear of our Methodist brother a billiard room. MLLIAEDS IS THE -WHITE HOUSE. Billiards have been played in the White House ever since the day of John Quincy Adams, and President Arthur could handle a billiard cue equal to Slosson. John Quincy Adams bought the first billiard table that was ever used in the White House, and his extravagance in this respect was made a campaign issue, and he eventu ally paid for the table outot his own pocket. I don't know that President Harrison plays, but tbetable is there in the basement, and he can if he will. Let us look at the first floor of the White House. Guards stand at the doors aud a giant Apollo in the shape ot Colonel Dins more inspects every man who comes in. The doors are of mahogany and the knobs are as big, almost, as the head of a babv. You turn them and on brass hinges the great doors turn inward and you are in the tiled vesti bule, at the back of which there is a wall of mosaic of beautiful stones and colored irlass which reminds one ot the jeweled palace of xreaencc me ureat, at .fottsdam. This BELONG TO THE PEOPLE. Just next to this, at the left, is a hall with stairs leading to the President's office, and on the other side of this hall is the mighty East Room. You never see Mrs. Harrison or any of the family upon these stairs. They are the property of the pnblic, and the ceaseless tread of the countless crowd which besieges the President goes its muffled way np and down them. The East Boom belongs to the people. It is always open to visitors, and the only use that Pres ident Harrison gets from it is in crowding his C3llers into it at a big Presidental recep tion. It is one of the most beautiful rooms in the world. Its walls are painted in silver and gold, and its ceiling is three times as high as that of an ordinary room. It takes 442 yards of brussels carpet to cover it, and the velvet into which your feet kink is of the color of Etruscan gold. The most wonderful thing to me in this room is the chandeliers. Each one of these is made of 6,000 pieces of Bohemian glass and they cost ?5,000 a piece. There are eight massive mirrors, each as big as two billiard tables, set into the walls about the room and when these chandeliers are lighted these pendants are reflected like diamonds in these mirrors and the scene is indescrib ably brilliant Still you might as well lurnish a barn or a bowling alley and call it a parlor as to think of using this big room ior me living room tor me Home life of a private family, and if President Harrison wanted it he couldn't get it, for the people have monopolized it by the precedent of generations. HOT PAETS OF THE HOME. It is the same with the Green Boom, the Blue Boom and the Bed Boom. They are full of beauties in furniture and hangings, but they are as much shut out from the every day life of the President as the parlor of a .hew England farmer s wife, which is dusted every day but never used except for com pany. It is in the Blue Boom that President Harrison, with his wife standing beside him, shakes the hands of the multitnde at a big reception. The room is oval in shape, fin ished in blue satin fresco, ana its diameter is about that of a oountry church. Still it is hardly large enough io"r this purpose, and when the crowd is out of it it is too big for common use. There are many dining rooms in Wash ington larger than the State dining room, and I can count on my fingers a dozen which are more beautifully furnished. There are no ie of the conveniences for serving a great dinner, and these 51,000 feasts which the President gives have to be largely gotten up outside of the house and hired waiters have to be brought in to pass the victuals. The dining room used by the family, or the pri vate diningroom, is at the right of the ves tibule. This have to be tnrned inside out at every big reception for the table must be removed and shelves be put around the room to hold the hats and coats of the guests. At such receptions the state dining room becomes a ladies' dressing room, and more fuss is made in the Executive Mansion every time the President receives than you make in your own home when your daugh ters are married. A SECOND-CLASS BOARDING HOUSE. 2sot long ago there was a mantel bed in the reception room opposite Elijah Hai ford's office on the second floor. I passed through this room yesterday and noticed that it was still there but whether it is used or not I do not know. Think of the Presi dent of the United States being compelled to nave a wardrobe bed in one of his par lors. It is true no one knows what it is. but it makes one think of the occupant of a second-class boarding house who is trying to keep up appearances and pretending to have a suit of rooms when he gets along with only one. The liTing rooms of the President are at the west end of the second floor, and Mrs. Harrison has only four good-sized bed rooms. It takes about a hundred yards of carpet to cover each one of them, and she has turned the lower end of the hall into a sitting room, and the children are using the little private office at the northwest corner of the building where President Arthur used to receive his most intimate friends. There is an elevator leading to this floor, and there are two or three bathrooms hud dled together right over the big entrance hall. -r Tc, The business offices of the White House take up the whole of the eastern portion of the second floor. Entering the big front This room is a big oval, requiring 141 yards of velvet brussels to cover its floor. It has windows looking out upon the Potomac -and it is 69 feet wide and 28 feet long. The President's callers are seated on chairs about the room and he usually stands with head bent over as he talks with them. He ' receives nearly every pne who has business with him and he is besieged by a host of Congressmen nearly every day. It is this room which forms his home and his busi ness is always with him. His bedroom is next to it and the ghost of work undone must hover over him as he sleeps. NO BUSINESS MAN "WOULD STAND IT. The President of the United States never gets through with his work and there ought to be some arrangement by which he could get away for a certain time during the day from the care of his office. He ought not to have to eat and to sleep bathed in the per spiration of office-seeking applications and there is no other business man in the United States who would endure the environments of our President. The attic of the White House might be supposed to furnish some room. It does not. The roof is so low in most places that you cannot stand upright under it. All the light comes from the skylights, and the place is fit for nothing but a lumber room. In it are stored President Harrison's trunks, baby Mclvce's cast-off clothes and the old furniture of the Executive Mansion. Bats and spiders are about the only inhabitants, and the top of the White House is more like a country garret than the attic of a two-story Douse covering a quarter of an acre and situ ated iu one of the great cities of the United States. FOR ONE OB THE OTHER. The trnth about the matter is that the Ex ecutive Mansion would do very well for the private residence of the President or for his offices. It will not do for both, and the statesmen appreciate it. In 1882 Senator Morrill had a bill which passed tbe Senate appropriating $300,000 to build an extension to the White House, and Mrs. Harrison has said that there ought to be two wings added to it. She would remodel the conservatory, add a hall of painting and statuary, and wonld leave the present building as it is, sandwiched between tbe ends of these two wings. In this war the historical associa tions of the building would be preserved, and Mrs. Harrison's ideas are much better tjhau that of Senator Iugalis, who was in fa vor of adding a story to me building. The White House has cost already about $2,000,000. It took $JOO,000 to build it nearly 100 years ago, and more than 51,700, 000 have since been spent upon it. It is full of beauties in the way of furniture and pictures, but it costs us more than $125,000 a year to pay the President's salary and keep up his establishment Feank G. Caepenteb. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS JOU -3TH EATERS Under the Direction of R. M. GULICK & CO. WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY. MARCH 31, MATINEES WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY. The Romantic Military Melo-Drama, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. THE DRUMMER BOY; OR, THE BATTLEFIELD OF SfflLOH. Benefit of Charity Fund General Alex. Hays Post 3, G. A. R. BEAUTIFUL TABLEAUX. STARTLING BATTLE SCENES, ENTIRELY NEW SCENERY. 100--Peop!e on the Stage 100 BLE2P: 75, 50 and 25c. Tbe Aceof Clnbs. announcement in advertisement on April 7 Leavitt's Spectacular Attraction, "Spider and Fly.' mhSO-27-su coming again: THURSDAYEVENING, APRIL 3. , OTTO HEGNER, AT OLD CITY HALL. Ticket? at H. Kleber & Bro.. Wood St. Reserved seats SI eacb. Admission 75 cents. mh30-83 G HAND OPERA HODSE See Page 15 of this issue. Benefit FIRST REGIMENT SELECT KNIGHTS, A. O. U. V WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 2, 189tt Tickets for sale at Hamilton's, 93 Fifth ave., and Central Hotel, c.ty, and Young fc Smith, Federal street, Allegheny. mh30-23 MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 31. Matinees, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Tn&zmkia! if & T'sSsifBi itVTjOT ' CranU Get in Sometime. wall was made hy Tiffany. It cost many thousands of dollars, but one old lad v who looked at it last week told the guard she was "glad to see President Harmon had become economical, and that he had saved the country money by making a glass wall ot old broken bottles, and it's real purtv, too," the old woman said, "and you wouldn't think it home made." It is here that the Marine Band plays at tae President's receptions, but there is nothing home-like about the vestibule. It Is so big tbat you could build an eight-room house inside of it, and 30 men could march 7W 'Sryy Around the Globe in the Cabinet. door, you turn to tbe left and march up a pair ot steps about five feet wide. Ton note that though the carpet is new the tread of the office seeker has worn off its nap, and at any hour of the morning vou pas; the most noted men of the country on the stairs. They stamp along as though they owned the building and most of them think they do. WHEBE THE BUSINESS IS DONE. "When you reach the second floor vou find that your surroundings are those ot a busi ness establishment rather than those of a private residence. Two colored rontlpm stand at guard at the door,and a gray-haired German, short and squatty, sits before a lit tle desk as you enter the hall. He is in the corner made by the partition which has been run across the hall to give the Presi dent's wife a sitting room, and as he looks at you his back is turned toward the door of the room in which the Cabinet meets. This man is Sergeant Locfller. He is the Presi dent's messenger, and he has been here for almost a score of years. He is in a measure the watchdog of the President, and he car ries all the cards of noted visitors into Mr. Harrison. Ho has sometimes to deal with crants in case these pass by the giant form and bine eyes of Colonel Dinsmore below. Sergeant Loefller makes about the sixth guard you have passed since entering the White House. You are motioned bv him iu me icn, aim lurmng your eyes you see a couple more of colored guards, one of whom is the watch dog of the private secretary. You co by there into a big reception room which is over the end of the East room, and which is filled with very ordinary furniture. It is here that office seekers cool their heels until the President is ready to receive them and it is here that Colonel Crook, the css"h ierofthe President, sits. In a little room beyond this there is a telegraDh office, and here the President has telephone connec tions with all of the great departments. WHERE THK CABINET MEETS. The Cabinet room lies between the private secretary's room and the library where President Harrison sits. This room is almost entirely filled with a long dining table, which runs from one end of it to the otner. Around this table are nine high-backed chairs, and there are writing materials placed at different stations upon it. There is a big globe in one corner of the room, and it is aronnd this that the President, Secretary Blaine and the other Ministers stand while they discuss inter national questions. The Cabinet meets here about every other day, and they usual ly spend several hours at a session. The room is of such a nature that it cannot be used for anything else -than the meetings of the Cabinet, aud it is a business office pure and simple. In it have been held all the Cabinet meetings for several administra tions, though President Lincoln ssed to hold his Cabinet meetings in the room now used by Colonel Halford. The President's office is in the library. 'Paris Expositions, 1889. JL CcLTS obtained the only gold medal awarded solely for toilet SOAP in competi tion with all the world. Highest possible distinction? ELLIOTT'S JOLLY VOYAGERS AND EUROPEAN SPECIALTY COMPANY. And Elliott's Now Comedy, called OUT OF SIGHT. Monday, April 7 THE IRWIN BROS.' BIG SPECIALTY SHOW. mhSO-29 TheElliottFamily(5). Miss Belle Emerson. W. E. Cnlhane. Johnson & Mack. Miss Dot Pullman. Walton & Slavin. Golden & Qulgg. Baby Ernia (Julhane. O'Brien & Alexander. James A. Baisley. Honrie fc Lunadi. Miss Victoria Elliott. Sam J. Burton. BASEBALL. RECREATION" PARK. ALLEGHENY VERSUS EAST END ATHLETICS. Wednesday and Thursday. April 2 and 3. ALLEGHENY VERSUS McKEESPORT. Friday and Saturday, April 4 and 6. mhS(W3 "ITJENTHER'S ORCH; gTRA Furnishes Music for Concerts, Weddings, Receptions, etc., etc Lessons on Flute and Piano given by PROF. GOENTHER. 410 Wood St sel5-41-sa GRAND OPERA HOUSE. MR. E. D. WILT, Lessee anaManager. One "Week, Commencing MONDAY, MARCH 31. Matinees Wednesday and Saturday. "THE GREATEST FTJNMAKKRS IN THE WORLD." JOLLY Nellie McHenry AND HER FAMOUS Farce-Comedy Company, Under tbe Direction of Webster and Maeder, In the Cyclone of Mirth and Music, entitled GREEN ROOM IFTTISri Written by BKONSON HOWARD, Esq. One Huge Laugh From Start to Finish. REGIME PRICES: 25c, 50c, 75c, $1. Next Week, London Gaiety Company, In FAUST UP TO DATE. mhSO-80 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS EXTRA. BIJOU THEATER HOLIDAY ATTRACTION, BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 7, The Novelty of the Season, SPIDER anfl FLY. 3 TROUPES IE ONE 3 1. PANTOMIME. 2. BURLESQUE. 3. TAUDEYILLE. DAZZLING COSTUMES! GORGEOUS SCENERY! Sale of Seats Commences Nest Thursday Morning at 9 O'Olock. BIJOU PRICES: RESERVED SEATS, 75c, 50c, 25c. mnSO-7 NEW JtDTERTISKanntTB. HARRIS' JHEATER. Veti Cone AHHay, laid 31. Every Afternoon and Evening. HARRY LA MARR In the Funniest Flay Ever Written, WIDOW BED0TT! As Flayed lor 850 Nights in New Sort City. "Week April 7-TRUE IRISH HEARTS. mh30-2i htyoVii. U& Cofliijild jl short time loner. f., If. & co. . REMOVAL SALE Continued A Short Time Longer. F K. & CO. -e- BEMOVJLL SALE Continued A Snort Time Longer F., K. CO. CojitijiUed I short time longer. Mfcp, ktpbhick & CO., 516 Smitlifleld Street, mb30-C9-Sa Opposite City HalL pajgyuiupt MflEg B H H ELASTER Q SALE OODVCMIErOES TO-MOEEOW. LIGHT : SPRING : OVERCOATS. And it is surprising to us that other dealers in the city sell any clothing to speak of when we offer such advantages to the public in our present gigantic stock. Certainly, no one has bought of us that fails to come again, for we've always stood at the head of the clothing trade of Pittsburg, there being an indefinable finish to clothing you get from us which is lacking in what you get elsewhere. Not only do we control special designs of our own, but the uniform reliability and incomparable style of our goods has become a proverbial and established fact. STYLISH : SPRING : SUITS. To pin your faith to every tempting assertion made through the press is simply to grasp at a shadow. So many have the happy faculty of palming off the most inferior goods on account of their cheapness. But if you would lay hold of the substance, and test the virtue of truthful assertions, inspect our present magnificent line of SPRING OVERCOATS, and your appreciation will be complete. We have all textures, all sizes and all colors, with unlimited choice, ranging from $4 to 30, with elegant goods from $10, $12 to $15. There is no weight, color or shade we cannot supply you with, and the whole are made with studious care as to style, make-up and finish. Better values were never before offered to the public. Confirmation Suits IN ENDLESS VARIETY. As most parents are at this season becoming anxious for the genteel appearance of their sons in attending the important and im posing ceremony of confirmation, we would particularly impress upon you that you will find in our exclusively NEW AND MAM MOTH STOCK OF EASTER CLOTHING everything that fancy can covet or heart desire to attire the rising generation in the most stylish and effective manner. Nor is clothing alone our forte, for we are also showing CONFIRMATION HATS, CONFIRMATION SHOES AND CONFIRMATION FURNISHINGS, In precisely the same fashionable styles as found the present season in all the metropolitan centers, while in point of a variety to select from,no retail clothing house in America is displaying a more diversified and larger stock. And, what is still better, we guarantee on every purchase you make from us you will have the satis faction of a SAVING OF AT LEAST 25 PER CENT. ' ' ' ' .1.. - .-1 1 . ., .... 1 1 ii in You will find our grand and unapproachable bargains in the latest and most stylish Dress and Business Suits stand unequaled in the market. Tailor fitting qualities in our styles, extra care in cut and gentility and fashionable shapes and material are the prevailing points to which we have given attention. Indeed,of our immense and incomparable stock of GENTS' DRESS and BUSINESS SUITS, it is safe to say that we can sell a suit as metropolitan and modern in style as Paris, London or New York clothiers, for our stock is pur chased from the same manufacturers. A man who buys his clothing in our establishment may rest assured of being well dressed, for we carry no garment that is not of approved style and thoroughly fashionable in color and texture. Only call and see them and a moment will convince you. Dili' Miii m nit Never was so abundantly stocked. Let your wants may be what they may, we can rreet them yes, and meet them satisfactorily. Whether you want a shoe at the lowest price or of the very highest grade, for Lady, Gentleman or Child, we have anything and every thing you can call for. You will find all the Newest Spring Styles known to Society. We are confident that you'll appreciate our efforts to please you if you only give us a call. We want it to be under stood that with every pair of shoes we sell goes the guarantee that the price charged is lower than you can get the same quality of goods for elsewhere, that they will be perfect fitting, and every pair is warranted to give satisfactory wear. BRING ALONG THE CHILDREN. We have the most durable and natty footwear for them that ever adorned their understandings, and, what is more, such perfect fit that they will never limp around nor have deformed feet. TER FUillTSHIArGJ-S. We wish it to be distinctly understood that in this department no hand-me-down, old style and shop worn article is to be found, but everything New, Bright and Charming, pre-eminent for its originality and cuteness. Whether in plain or fancy Shirts, Night Shirts, Flannel Shirts or Under wear, we can supply your every need at prices no other house in the city can duplicate. In Neckwear we have the prettiest combination of tints, shades, colors and patterns ever submitted to the fastidious tastes of youth. Gloves and Hosiery in unlimited quantities and at unprecedented prices. As regards Handkerchiefs, we have them by the thousand dozens in every material and price, while our stock of Umbrellas for Ladies or Gentle men, no house in Western Pennsylvania can duplicate. SOWING to the large increase in business, during the past Season, in our Mail Order Department, we have been compelled to largely extend our facilities for its conduct, hence our patrons can send in their orders by mail just so fast as they please, in the full assurance of experiencing not the least delay or disappointment ' GUSKY 5 The Most Popular and Only Exclusive One-Price Clothiers in the City. 300 TO 400 HVLAJEIKIET STREET. J-Bcsure you send for the Easter Number of our ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY. Mailed free to any address sent GUSKT'S, 300 TO 400 10.1130-29 r. jLtU&.&foj.-. -- ynHHHHHHBWM p.wi-jiw ffytr .i-. 'L1L . J..1.'. TJ (svpmm&m