nigh Grades That Will Cost the Fair Consumer's Admirer Fifty Cents Per llonthfnl. GROWTH OF A NOVEL BUSINESS. One Man Started With a Block Worth Twentj Dollars and Xow Leads the Metropolitan Trade. iFPETITE FOR SWEETS IXCEEASOG. ,Hit for Mothers TYLo Prefer to Mute the Delicacies the. Little Ones Loie. ;COR&r.SPOXDEKCX Or THr DISPATCH. New York, Dec. 5. - T is indeed sweets to the sweet! Let nobody but women read this. Dear me! What a lot of pretty things are made and et aside for women kind! All of these lovely Broadway stores that are and are to corner nearly. The whole world is ransacked to amuse and beautify the sometimes gentler sex. Here is this great retail candy establishment the opening of uliich on Monday last Eet young feminine New York wild. Thee enterprising cater ers to the sweet tooth actually took a whole reason abroad in the study of the prettiest and mo-t artistic designs for th; fitting up of their tew store and the result is that 10.000 joung misses have ironounced it "just too sweet for anything." This "open ice" was the greatest novelty of all. The firm ent out engraved invitations only to the mi'ves of New York. Poes a woman lose her taste for 6weets after marriage? Anyhow, that crowd was an actual curiosity of loveliness and millinery. jradam Sarah Bernhardt declared it excelled in these any thing the had seen in her dear Paris. And s.s for the six-story establishment, it is a beauteous confection in itself. A Delightful Fairyland. Curious to see what pleases the women of New York I stepped inside for a moment My tastes do not run to confectionery. I never eat candy seldom cake. But I found when I left that I had been there three hours. The place was a dream a veritable J'hirylacd of color and carving and candy, and the half a hundred pretty eirls in uni form dresses aud dainty French caps who i-crve the fashion of New York only need the traditional ballet iriil's wings to make the scene compile. "Who ever thinks, of genius in connection w ith the candy business-. And jet there is something like genius in this artistic whole. Yes; and something like money, also. Fifteen thousand a jear rent and forty thousand for fixtures. How many sticks of andy at 1 cent each must be sold to pay that and the running expenses? You tee 1 always think of cuidv as in A Profanonal Pull. rticks. But, bless uu, there is no tienny stick candy about this business. folly cents a pound is the cheapest and S5 a pound is the highest. Think of SIO for a box of candy you cirls who get 5o a week. And vet the vouiiir chief proprietor of this establishment tells me if the manufacture of still liner qualities of caudv were possi ble it could be -old as high as 510 .-. pound ISHoSu cent- a mouthlul according to the melting capacity ot jour mouth. AH Grown Trom Twenty Dollars. No wonder ibis vonng man who six years ag had a lit!!-- cjndy shop in Brooklyn Mucked for S'0 i., now a rich man with a wholesale and manufacturing house that rut. U.H) hinds and this finest retail estab tcem in the Burls. 'fn my sit iejrs experience," said he, ! hr.vc touched ctery trraie of the candy Jrasinrsi, 'Within the last three years sev eral large cs:?Hishnicnts have started up aind seem to be doing well, while my trade has iiicrca-ed -early so rapidly that -e can't keep up with the demand. There is & m:irh candj sold by one house now as was sold in all New York a dozen vears ago. J don't know w hy it is or where it is going to stop. Perhaps it is because the better rra make things the more people want them. The one branch of chocolate has lec carried to a high state of perfection. We do not put out cheap candies of anv kind, thouzh there is a very large anil profitable business in that You will notice that in this finer candy trade 'good form' goes lr considerable. Tasty packets of tulf'sell more readily than the same candv i-cooited out ot a case." "We expose compara tivelj linle of n:r stock. "What the ladies liko eic bon-!.o:s, amj I will sav for the general gnwth of public taste for the bautilui that the more artistically ladies are sened the better for us. "We have spared no expense, as you can see, in the decorative art to give our gentle cup tomers Jlas3r.t surroundings. Nothing is too good or New York women. Nothing can be made good enough for them. The price is nothing, if they wantanything." The Cnn'Ij Man's mel Idea. There is more sound philosophy in this enterprising candy man's talk than l.c would give himself credit for. Ho is af flicted with ideas. One of these he has crystallized in the form of a novel store front. There are no shoiv windows. The whole front is a lobby open to and on a level with the walk, "in thecenterof this lo'ibv is a l.irg" oal glass case with bronze cupola. L'p .uto this case from the base ment rises an elevator. On the elevator is apagoda-hke arrangement of shelves to display wudies. You go down Broadway and look in the case in a few minutes you happen o return there is an entirely new 2nd elaborate arrangement within. The mysterious disappearing elevator has done the business. It changes every half hour. This scheme knocks the ordinary show window that can be changed but once a day tiil. Another novel idea. On the second floor is what is termed the "cocoa loom," where dight lunch is terved. Immediately over the Broad war front is an open space corre sponding to the entrance lobby an Italian Joggia exquisitely decorated with Venetian glass mosiic where ladies may sit on rum mer afteriio.n and sip their tea or cocoa as liicyluok down on busy Broadway. The whole front of this floor can be thrown open to the street. There are curious little cres-' cent-haped cccoa tables with one end fit ting agjmst the wall where fixtures re eeie an i-rn for tea, or cofiee or cocoa. A pretty girl stands in the hollow of the cres cent, her back to the wall, and can serve fST JSP four or five customers at once without exer tion. Gracefnl Silver Eiffel Tower. Another novelty downstairs on the main store floor is the substitution of light, grace ful silver .Eiflel towers about three feet hieh lor tiie conventional graveyard soda water. marbles. A man w ho had the courage to do that ought to pet a Government medal. There are six or eight ot these slender silver towers ornamenting the rear hard wood counter. Not a bit of marble, not a glass or sickening syrup bottle in sight. The coolers are below, the glass washers are below, the nasty looking syrups are out of sight. Nothingbul the slender silver tower and the visible tube ri-ing half way up its middle. The decorative artist who carried out the ideas of his employer in the various ap pointments of this place got eflects worthy of the engraver. The rear stairway from the ground floor, lighted by a broad concave sweep of opaque leaded glass, is an artistic creation that appeals to the refined eye at once upon entennc the house. The second thought is the Italian sideboard, tastefully carved and paneled, that rises to the ceiling on your right, reflecting in its great mirror the lovely fireplace and it mosaic filled mantel of carved ouk opposite. A Dream at Mantel. This mantel is a superb piece of work. Its main projection is eight feet from the floor and the space beneath usually tiled up is laid with old blue Venetian mosaic, in the center of which and a little above the fireplace proper is a quaint clock. The effect is massive and princely. The eye can scarcely measure it at first sisht it is a picture' that grows. It is not only a work of art, but its beauty is creatly enhanced by the fact that the walls of the room are disfigured by neither counter nor shelf nor picture. Tne double counters run down the middle like two long banqueting tables and the customer moves to and fro next to the walK The lovely oak wainscoting in the Italian renaissance and the frescoed walls can stand criticism w ithout further accesso ries of art. The rarest quality of the whole is that it is not overdone a fault that applies to much artistic work of N ew York. There is a subdued tone, a quiet, solid effect in creased by the few elaborate detail". Simi lar, but more delicate, results are obtained in tin cocoa room and in the ladies' parlor above it. The latter is finished in Japanese style, the wood in ivory white and the walls a delicate cream. It is as dainty as a canarv's nest. Really, !t seemed quite sac riligious for a great big. fat, beefy-looking man in a chinchilla overcoat and slonched hat to be walking through this fancy sales room. OiAKLrs Theodore Mueeax. CANDIES FOR THE HOME. X More Domestic and a More Pleasing FIctnre of Sweet-Maklne IIow the tit tle Onci Enjoy tho Process Old-TImo Customs Receipts by Margery Daw. rWItlTTMf FOR THE DISrATCH.t Tt would not seem Christmas to the little people without candy, any more than it would without dolls, and even older ones would share the same feeling if something sweet were missing. There are many pretty ways of serving bonbons with the Christmas dinner. Pretty dishes filled with them can be placed upon the table. Dainty bags of various colored silks, with sprays of flowers painted upon them and filled with bonbons," eiiher with dinner card attached or name painted upon them, are pleasing souenirs. The variety of candies that can be made at home is infinite as to color, hape and flavor. The purity and cheapness of these manufactures are worthy of. consideration, also. Besides, all the delight of the children in watching mamma make the delicious bits is ;l pleasure too great to be denied the little consumers. In the olden time a paper bag filled with candies was suspended in the doorway. In turn, the young people were blindfolded, a long stick placed in their hands, and, after being turned around, they struck at the bag. Some oi.e was sure to succeed in breaking the paper bag before long, and then what a scramble there was for candy. A Christmas pie is a welcome surprise when it appears upon the table. To make this pie, take a large wooden bowl or tin pan, cover it in an artistic manner with white or colored paper: fill it with bran, in which are hidden small packages of candy, marked with the name of the person for whom it is intended. Or each one may draw the first that comes to his hand. I will give a few recipes for Christmas candies easily made at home. French Vanilla Cream. Break Into a bowl the white of one or more eggs, as is lequiied by the quantity j on wish to mike, ii'iil add to it an equal quantity ot cold water; then stir in the finest powdered or coi::ecioner suar un til it is stilt enough to mold into shape with tho tlngcis. Flavor with vanilla to taste. After it is formed into balls, cubes or lozenges place upon plates to dry. Candies made without eookinzaie not as pood the first Unv. This cream is the foundation of all the Fiench creams. Xut Creams. Chop almonds, hickory nuts, butternuts or English walnuts, quite tine, il.jko the Fiench cream, and before adding all the sugar while the cream is still quite 'oft, stir into it the nuts, and the form into balls.bais or squaies. Three or four kinds ot nuts may be mixed together. Maple &ngar Creams. Grate maplo i-i-trar. mix it In quantities to suit the taste, with French cream, adding enough confectioners' susar to mold into any shape desired. Walnut creams aie sometimes mado with maple sugar, and are delicious. Oranjje Drops. Grate the rind of one orange and squeeze the juice, taking caie to reject the seeds. Add to this a pinch of tartaric acid; stir in confectioners' suirar until It is stilf enousli to form into small balls the size of a small marble. These aie delicious. Stirred Cream "Walnnts. Take two cnpfuls of sugar, two-thirds of a cupful of boiling walev, and one-h.ilf salt teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Boil until it threads, cool slisrhtly and beat until it be gins to thicken. Stir in chopped walnuts and drop on tins. Peanut Nonjrat. Shell the pesnuts, removo the skin, and bieak into small pieces, or not, as preterred. Take two cups of conlectioners" sugar and one cup of the peanuts. I'nt the siuar in a saucepan, and as soon as dissolved tluow into it tho nats, stirring rapidly. Pour quickly into a buttered pan and press inton flat cake with : buttered knite, as it cools i ery quickly. Spiced Chocolate. T.tke two cupfuls of brow n sugar, one-half cupful tif grated chocolate, one-half cupful of water, and a small piece of butter. Add spice to taste. r.oil these ingredients, and when nearly done test by dropping a little into cold water. Pour into buttered pans when done and mark in squares. Marary's 3Iolasscs Candy. Take two cnpfuls of molasses, one cupful of Mmar. a piece oi butter the size of a. small ORir. and one tablcspoonfiil of gljcciine. Put these Ingredients into a kettle and boil hard 20 or EO minutes: when boiled thick, drop :i lew drops in water, nod If thedrop3 retain their s-hape and rue brittle, it is done; ilo not boil too much. Have pans or platters well butteied.nnu jnst before the candy is poured into them stir in one-half teaspoon tul of cream of tartar or soda. If flavorins Is desired, dr-p tho flavoring on the top as it begins to cool, and when it is pulled the whole will he ttuvoied. Pall it until as white as desired, and tew into sticks aud cut with shears. This recipe is unsurpassed. M.M'.Giir.v Daw. For the Children. Our rcadera will notice the advertisements in these columns of Chamberlain & Co., Des Jloincs, Iowa. From personal exper ience we can say that Chamberlain's Cough llemedy has broken up bad colds for our children and we are acquainted with manv mothers in Centerville who would not be without it in the house for a good many times its cost and are recommending it every day. Cent erville (S. B.) Chronicle and Index. 50 cent and ?1 bottles for'fcale by druggists. vsu Portralti tor tho Holidays Order now. A handsome SxlO frame with every doz. cabinet photos. Also cravons at special low prices. Lies' Studio, MWb'J 10 and 12 Sixth st LITTLE GIRLS' GOWNS. The Toke and Guimpe and Konnd Waists Still Popular A Novelty In Kibbon Dresses for Dancing and for rnrtles A Taris Coat of Figured Camel'i Hair. fWISITTEt FOB THE DISPATCH. ITTIiE girls gowns arc still dominated by the yoke, guimpe full straight sleeve confined at the waist, round waists and gathered skirts. The waists are not quite c dinrt. as thev were. 'rl'' and the skirts reach the top of the shoes,and are simply hemmed. Much use is made of black velvet ribbon, notably for neck bands aud belts; consider able variety is got by shirrings. and Irish point lace is liked to lay over light yokes, and of cuffs'. A pretty gown for a child of 4 years is of A Rilibon Waist. pale gray cashmere, shirred onto a black velvet poke. The shirring is continued down to form the waist, and through it are run lines of black velvet rib bon. The back has a "Watteau fold, which extends to the neck. Black satin ribbon is plaited into a ruche about the throat and ties behind in long loops. A collar of Irish point is gathered under the ruche and falls over the yoke. The sleeves are full, and are shirred at the wrist. The ribbon waist is a novelty. Five inch ribbon may be used for it. One width goes straight round, and forms a bodice, to which the skirt is gathered. The rest of the design may be as the fancy dictates. One idea is to cover the ribbon in front, fold it on the shoulders and let it pass, folded, down the back, to meet at the bot tom of the waist to be tied there into aknot with ends. These waists are worn with wool skirts, over white sguimpes. Another model has a skirt of pale blue crepon, with a straight bodice made of moire ribbon of the same color, to which narrow ribbons are attached and tie over the shoulder. For girls a little older, yokes and cuffs are made of light colored silk, and over laid with white lace. Thus a gown of dark green cimei's-hair has the yoke and cuffs of ecru silk overlaid with lace. Velvet ribbon passes in three rows round A Piciureviue Handkerchief. the waist and is tied in loops behind. An other ot mushroom-colored ladies-cloth has yoke and cuffs of pink moire. The lace is gathered round the neck and covers the yoke as a ruffle. Lace is gathered also over the armhole, to form caps. The neck band and belt are of black velvet, and there are velvet bows.on the shoulders. It should be observed that dresses of this form are in better taste when the yoke is of heaviertorat least darker material than the bodice and skirt Velvet yokes will be far more elegant, and it should be remem bered that taste requires the bodice to be supported over the shoulders, if it is only by a simulation of ribbon ties. A variation from yokes gives a wide handkerchief or cape, made of colored linen and edged with embroidery. As these can be removed and laundered, the model is a good one for school gowns. The sleeves may he of linen also, and may be detachable. An agreeable combination is a skirt and waist qt camel's hair plaid in broken green and browns, with cape and sleeves of pink and white striped linen, or iie:ivv cotton. Shirt-waists of colored silk are provided for girls of from 10 to 13 years old, to be worn under sleeveless jackets. They are gathered into a belt which has a side plait ing set on its loner edge, and is worn on the outside, A side plait ing is round the neck .and down the front. They are buttoned behind. The A I'oice Coat. sleeves are full and gathered into a cuff. The jacket is cut low around the neck and falls apart in front; is fitted behind and ex. tends some inches below the waist, and is slashed. A pretty combination would be a skirt of dark plaid, a plain jacket, of the Erevailing color in the plaid, and a scarlet louse. For dancing dresses white is most in favor. dskitif ,'.mW WMn Hand embroidered muslins are hemmed on the bottom, have a short puff sleeve and low, round neck, finished with a fall of em broidery. The inch-w ide belt may be of in sertion and have a colored ribbon set under, which is tied in long loops at the back. Lutestring ribbon may be run through the binding of the neck and sleeves also, and be tied in loops where it emerges. These dresses are w orn over long sleeved guimpes of solid embroidery. Other paitv dresses are of tnlle in white, with colored dots, worn over colored slips. Cream-white, and colored, china silks are used also, and colored crepons over white guimpes. Cloaks for small girls are commonly made with a short, plain waist, a skirt gathered or plaited on, and cape. The materials are camel's hair, cheviot and elothj and the trimming is mostly fur. A beautiful model is of old rose camel's hair, double-breasted and fastened with pearl buttons. Over this is a deep cape of white lamb's wooL The hat to go with this should be a cap of old rose velvet, with pale green satin ribbon and white tips. A novelty is a coat, of Paris origin, in fieured camel's hair, of two shades of brown, with black astrakhan trimming. It is box-plaited from the neck down. A wide V belt of brown velvet confines the plaits in the back; a flaring collar of astra khan narrows in front to a mere roll and passes down the arm seams of the front; the lull sleeves are confined at the elbow by a lfPS' fill A Paris Coat and Hat. Y of the velvet, and are gathered into astra khan bands. The Russian coat is new. It is loose, double-breasted, and confined by a belt Girls larger than 8 years wear double breasted cape coats. They are popularly edged with gold cord and furnished with brass buttons. The newest headwear for girls yonnger than 9, is a bonnet, though the large, soft felts are still in use. One of the latest bon net designs has a shirred rim. bordered with fur, and a soft cap crown shirred to a discin the back. It should be of velvet, trimmed with satin ribbon. All hats for children have strings. Older girls wear large soft felts, trimmed with velvets and wings, for dress occasions, and saiiors for school. Ada BACitE-CoNE. CAN POWDER IK PUBLIC And No One Will Be the Wiser if Ton TJse the Bight Appliance. IWRITTEIJ tOB TIIE DISPATCH.! "WOMAN" t o - d a 7 makes no more secret of the fact that she dusts her face off with powder'than she docs of the fact that she washes her face. So far from dissembling it?, the matter, she often carries her j wder-puff about with her and wields it frankly and freely in the face of unpowdered man. A certain young woman has an ingenions pocket-piece which makes this performance the deftest, simplest thing in all the world. It can be carried on right under the eyes of mankind without his being a bit the wiser, unless he is shrewder than he has any busi ness to be. It is a pocket-bag made of a bit of thin chamois, eight inches long and three and The Powder Bag Done. a half broad. The first thing she did after she cut it out was to fold it to the length into four equal parts. Then she took a tiny bodkin and pierced the lowest fourth part full of little holes. On the second fourth part she laid a thin bit of cotton wool, and dusted face powder thickly all over it; then another laver of wool just a3 thin as she could handle it, and more powder dusted over that. Then she folded up the pierced fourth over the wool and riowder, making a small pocket, and sewed it tightly every where. Then she bound the whole piece about with narrow blue ribbon, and folded the upper half quite around the lower, and sewed blue ribbon ties to hold it together. P0LI8HIBG A STAINED FLOOR. Only a little Trouble to Do It and the Itesult Is Highly Satisfactory. IWBITTEN FOR THE DISPATCH. A highly polished floor is effective. Be yond its artistic value it is economical. The secret is not hard to find. A tin of wax and a little system are the essentials. Do not be induced to use oil, as less trouble. In reality it is more. The oil will cling and every atom of dust with it, No amount of polishing will carry off this evil eflect of oil. First have the floor washed with soda and hot water, then apply the soft wax lightly and evenly, rubbing with the grain. If you cannot aflord a regular polisher, have a flat iron covered with an old pieee,of carpet, a mop handle tied on (to chviate stooping) and that weight thoroughly rubbed on your floor will make it shine like a mirror. Once every day or two, instead of sweep ing, have any dust taken up by a soft cloth wound round the broom, then the weight applied, and this will last months. Should there be any scratches from the moving of furniture, or stain of any sort, there will be ample wax in the boxto nib lightly over the injured place. It will rub in so smooth and dry that the whitest garment will not be soiled in passing over it, and its decora tive effect in the room is hy no means its least recommendation. The Public Invited to call and examine the safe deposit department, German National Bank, wood street and Sixth avenue. Information con cerning the renting of boxes and deposit of valuables cheerfully given. su A 4&"'s t vtiv J s, 5V ''JSS "n s! -r?r FROM A SELF-MADE COOK. Octave Thanet Tells How She Xearned Through Bitter Experience Some Little Things She Discovered How to Cure a Sick Mayonnaise Dresslnc Art or Egg-Bo-ting. WP.ITTEl. FOR TOE DISPATCH. HE writer of the fol lowing recipes and bits of advice to cooks is a Eelf-made cook who has been-thrown on her own resources in a country where trained cooks are not, although possibly they were, and whohas been obliged to learn the theory of cookery by its practice. In many cases she has discov ered how to do it, only by discovering, first, every way how not to do itl And although she has had advantages, has met famous cooks and been treated with distinguished kindness by the chefs and the cooks of genius employed in the families of her friends, and has thus picked up much for which she is grateful, the most enduring and useful help that she has received has come out of tribu lation and personal experiment. The recipes that she will give, have all been tested by herself, the advice that sho offers has proved its value first to her. She can tell how bread will surely be spoiled by actual relation of facts, and will give only those means of escape from destruction that the has used to escape herself. It is not as an artist or teacher, but as a comrade.that she would speak. And she will always be glad to supplement these public talks by any private information that she can give. Letters addressed to her in care of the editor of The Dispatch will receive prompt attention. To Renew Curdled Mnyonn.iUo Dressing. Usually, all directions for the making of mayonnaise, are explicit in requiring the oil to be added, "drop by drop," and the white of the eeg to be most carefully separated; but none of them say anything about what should be done if mayonnaise goes wrong; it is treated like a sin past re pentance. Mayonnaise goes wrong, because the oil is put in too fast for the egg, or else becati60 there is too much oil for the egg. In the first case its conduct is familiar to most cooks; it shows an oily mass above an un wholesome looking deposit of egg: it grows stringier aud slimier the more it is beaten; instead of a beautiful cream-colored dough, which can be reduced to any consistency, one has a nauseous, bright yellow fluid, a sight to make tear! In the second case the conduct of the dressing is different and of a painful deceit. It will, generally, harden and grow light in a satisfactory manner, and the cook puts it away to cool, well content; but when she conies to mix the salad lo, a curdled custard that is hopeless! Not au Incurable Disease. At least nine out of ten cooks call It hopeless and throw it away. Iteally, in neither case is there any need of despair only for egg! Since egg is needed, since lack of egg or too mneh liaste with egg has made the trouble, nothing is easier than to simply supply egi. "Where the egg has not had time to blend with the oil, often one miy mend matters by pouring off the oil above, and then, after beating the deposit left in the bowl with an egg-beater, adding the oil, drop by drop, as at first. In about seven out of ten caes this will make your dressing all you could ask: but if the dress ing should not thicken, that shows that you need more egg. Add an extra yolk only one. Do not'ndd it to the sorrowful dress ing; add the dressing, just as it is, drop by drop, at first, then a spoonful at a time to the egg. This never fails. One. should not have too much egg for the oil. Delmonico uses one yolk to a pint of oil; and I have found the proportion to hold. It is best to put in the vinegar and oil alternately, and a drop of ice water, now and then, "is an improvement. Mayonnaise should begin to thicken at once, and bleach as the vinegar and water are added. Both make it lighter colored, and both should be put in with miserly care. Accomplishment ot the Egg-Heater. I am perfectly aware that one out of five ot my readers "has discovered the accom plishment ot egg beating, and value3 it as it deserves; but there are the other four. I make the estimate from actual inquiry. Do you know that in nine times out of ten, if your custard or your soup curdles, if vour sauce or vour thick soup or your gravy lumps, if your gelatine-stiffened cream thickens unevenly, all you need to do is to give the egg-beater a chance to work? In a few minutes the soup, the gravy, the custard, the ereani will be of a ravishing texture. Try it. Don't scold the cook, or the stove, of the eggs, or the milk; whip the thing well. A few whirls of the wires will surprise you. To fulfill its mission as the champion of economy in the kitchen, an escalop should have a perfectly concocted sauce and the finest quality of bread crumbs. It should also this is important! be made by a per son of taste. Any odd bits can be made into a delicious escalop. Any farmer's wife, out of the carcasses of fowls which she often throws nway or else turns into the soup pot to make a weak and insipid broth misnamed chicken soup can have a dish for au epicure. Utilizing Bits of Chicken. She can make a white soup, flavor it with onion and parsley, stir up the bits of chicken that come off the bones, pour it into an earthen dish, sprinkle bread crumbs on top, scatter melted butter over the bread crumbs, then bake in the oven until the crumbs are brown. The bones of the fowls will make the stock for the white sauce. In town a third part of mushrooms is avail able, and makes the dish more toothsome. Wine may be added or not, according to taste. I have 6een a very delightful escalop made out of a cold bit of fish that did not look useful for the entertainment of man or beast. A white sauce, a little onion, a little cream, a whifl of lemon, a glass of wine, the mixture poured into any kind of shells or dish, aud behold an entree lit for any occa sion! Cold salt mackerel makes an excellent escalop. Bits of beef from the bone that is left of a roast, if cut into neat dice and put into a tomato sauce and covered with bread crumbs, make a very palatable side dish. It is not necessary to" give proportions; take what meat you'have (a cupful of meat to a pint of sauce is a fair proportion), make your sauce out of anything that j-ou have, dark sauce with dark meat, white sauce with white meat. A Favorite Delmonico Dish. There are innumerable vegetable as well as meat escalops. Sauce, solids in small pieces, and bread crumbs are the only neces sary ingredients. Onions, sliced orwole (when very small), with a white sauce, make a good escalop. Potatoes cut into small pieces, with shalots or minced onion, parsley and a white sauce, have for years been a favorite Delmonico dish. Cheese is grated over the bread crumbs on top of this escalop, but many people prefer to oiuit it. Tomatoes, thickened with bread crumbs, stewed and flavored with curry powder, make one kind of tomato escalop; raw tomatoes, jcut in slices dusted with salt, pepper, curry or parsley, and bits of butter, sugared and covered with bread crumbs, then baked in a moderate oven, and, five minutes before they are tender (it will take froji half to one" hour, according to the depth of the layers in the dish), cover with an inch of whipped cream, then in five minutes taken out, make a ,more fanciful and very palatable escalop. But of making escalops there is no end. And if the reader will but once set her wits to work." not to make some particular escalop set down in her recipe book, but to use whatever bits she finds in her pantry, she will be amazed at her own success, and her family will rise up to call her blessed. Her cook, also, will praise her. Octave Thakzt, BOME FACTS FOB THE COOKS. Kllice Serena Throws Out Some Helps to Tonnir Housekeepers. tWTJTTEX FOlt THE DISPATCH. Pure olive oil is the best of all frying media; but if this is not available the light colored dripping of roast beef and the top pot or fat taken off broth may be used with good results. Beef suet is also ued for frying purposes. It should be chopped fine and melted down on a slow fire without scorching. "When the bottom of the pan can be seen through the snet, it is suffi ciently melted. The temperature of the frying bath may be tested by the ordinary cook's method that of throwing into it a piece of bread about the size of a nut. If it frizzles and produces large bubbles of steam the full temperature ot frying in the hottest of fat is reached. For flow frying it should frizle slightly and give out small steam bubbles. Mushrooms and truffles are highly prized bv the best cooks for the fine flavor they give to the dishes in which they are used. Truffles predominate in many sauces and' ragouts, and for stuffing tnrkevs and pheasi ants they are unsurpassed. "When truffles are to be served as a separate dish, their delicacy depends upon the manner in which they aire cooked. They are at their best when simply steamed for an hour. "At a feast," says Theodore Child ou table service, "the guest and his comfort should be first considered, and the guest should never he made the slave of the orna-. ments and accessories of the table." For lighting a dinner table, to his mind, there remains but one illumination, namely, can dles"placed on the table itself in handsome flambeau v and on the walls in sconces. He further adds that at the Kothschild houses in Paris the dinners are served by candle light, and that if the viands anil wines were as fine a3 their candlesticks, their dinners would he perfect. licserve the water in which the green peas have been boiled. Add to it some well reduced stock, or some of Liebig's extract, atfd at onte a delicious soup is produced. The French never throw away the wateHn which vegetables have been cooked. "With proper seasoning they convert it into a palatable, wholesome and economical pat age or food. Sauer-kraut, regarded as a staple food among millions of highly intelligent people, is a dish not to be despised when served piping hot, bristling with sausages, and crowned with a piece of good, sweet'bacon. Oatmeal porridge made some days before eating, and then warmed up when required, is said to be more digestible than newly made porridge. It should be kept in a closed jar. Hints for the Kitchen. EcDDHfos should be baked slowly or boned rapidly. Cake Is good and wholesome when tt la plain and simple. Practice is the only master of whom to learn salad making. Asoex cake served with custard sauce makes a delicate pudding. Fob all frying pnrposes the pan must be thoroughly hot before using. ' In making tea, all the water necessary should be poured on at the first drawing. Iy huying canned fruits it ahould'be ob served that the ends of the cans are con cave. Vfazy about to scald milk wet the sauce pan with cold water to prevent the milk from scorching. I'eesh meat after beginning to sour, will sweeten if placed out of doors In the cool over night. To preserve tomato catsup and Improve Its flavor add a tablespoonlnl of brandy to each bottle. Commox salt will generally attract water, and tbuj become damp. It should be kept in a warm, dry place, well covered. The frying bath has reached the required temperature when a peenliar hissing sound. Is produced by allowing a drop of water to fall into it. Is mixing omelets two general rules should never be forgotten. One is never to use more than eight eggs for any one omelet; another rnle.not to beat the eggs too much. L'LLICE SEEEJfA. VISTUE OF 'A "WAEM BATH. The Water Should Be at Hinety-FIve and Gradually Reduced to SeTenty. WKtTThN FOB THE DISPATCn.t A warm bath will accomplish for many a nervous, irritable woman what a whole church service sometimes won't put her back into her natural sweet and composed state ofbeing. There's the best of physi ological reasons for it, too; it isn't her soul that's wicked, it's only that poor tired body of her3, and the nerves that quiver and jump with every sound. "When the body is soothed, the evil spirit is exercised. And for almost any woman in fairly good health the warm bath is the best exorcist in the world. The bath should be at 95 Fahrenheit, and may be enjoyed for 13 min utes if the following directions are ob served: Before entering the bath, bathe the back of the neck and the pit of the stomach with a few handfuls of the water. This will pre vent the tendency tonausea, to which many nervous women are liable on plunging sud denly into water, whether hot or cold. After remaining in the water for eight or ten minutes, turn on the ,cold water and let the water cool gradually to a temperature considerably below the normal temperature of the body. Many women are invigorated by letting "the water get down to Go, and in auy case no harm is done by dropping the temperature to 70. If then a brisk rub bing follows, and, as a last touch of luxury, fresh underwear and a pretty gown, any woman is certain to approximate near to the state of soul which our colored friends call "glory." Tne warm bath is just 33 good for the baby as it is lor the baby's mother. Sup5 pose the small pink mors'el some day gets pinker than he should be under the influ ence of a fever whose origin is not clear, and thrashes about in a most discomforting way. Don't have recourse to medicines or to a physician at once, but try the H-arm bath. Have the baby's tub filled with water at 03 degrees; bathe the head, face and chest with a little water, ant. then gently slip the little body into the Harm water and bathe it with the hand, using gen tle friction. After ten minutes of this slowly reduce the temperature ofthe water to 80. Then take the baby ont, wrap it quickly in a flannel blanket, inside of which a piece of sott old linen has been placed. Dry the body rapidly, and then put the little one back in its crib. If this bath doesn't restore the child, it is best to call a ph) siciau. A Neat Little Trick. Youth's Companion. This seems a very easy trick, but if done fairly it is really difficult. Open the hand naturally and place the cent on the palm, then ask someone to brush it out with a whisk broom. After repeated efforts it will probably be suspected that the cent is fast ened in your hand in some way. In order to prove that it is no;, let the sweeper place it on hie own palm and he will find it re mains as immovable there as when he tried to sweep it from the hand of the other per son. Poor English 1 Chicago Tribune. Teacher (of class in syntax) "Correct the sentence: 'He uses awful bad English.' " Pupil (after a severe struggle with it) "He uses English awlul bad." How the Knives, Forks and Spoons Are Placed and When Used. rWIUTTEN FOB THE DtSPATCH.l Sometimes it happens that he modest and somewhat timid person who is only occa sionally bidden to a stately feast finds him self or herself in secret anguish of soul on being seated at the board and confronted with an imposing array of knive3 and forks, the propel selection of which he is rather uncertain about. Xo matter how imposing and many-coursed the dinner may be, it is hardly likely that there will be laid at each cover more than four forks, three knives, a soup spoon and a teaspcon. A longer array would be vulgar. "Where the number of courses requires more, it is better to renew the supply. A properly laid table has the forks and knives in tho order shown in the illustration. Hoip the First Cota-se LooLs. For the roast the largest size of fork and a steel knife is oftenest used; these should lie next the plate. For the salad, the fork is usually offered by the waiter. If it has been placed at the plate it will lie between the fork for the entree and dinner fork. The fish fork and the salad fork are often used interchangeably, as there is little dif ference between them. A small knife for bread and butter may lie back of the plate and is only used for spreading the bread. A teaspoon and the tiny after-dinner coffee spoon may lie outside the soup spoon. But the teaspoon is little used, a fork being pre ferred, even for ices. The ice fork isbroad-. tined, like the salad fork, which maybe used for ices, if necessary. A resume to carry in the mind of the timid person who goes out to dine is this: Select your forks and knives from the out side in the order in which they are placed, being careful to reserve the largest of both for the roast or piece de resistance. The largest spoon is ior soup, the smallest for coffee. The teaspoon, if there is one, is not for vegetables, but for ices. A HOME-MADE TOILET TABLE. Dainty Bit d Elnory 1'It for the Dresslns Boom of a Queen. rWHITTEN FOB THE DISPATCH. 1 An old kitchen table, a round mirror, some pale blue satine and two pairs of cast off net curtains, made Florence's toilet table for her. The top of the table was wadded and curved smoothly first with' the satine, then with the lace. A full skirt of the satiue was tacked around the edges of the table and over it, one of the curtains was draped at the corners with bows, "like a ball gown," Florence Florence's Dressing Table. said. Over the table the mirror was hnng, after its frame had received three coats of white enamel paint. And when two of the curtains were draped either side of it, as the picture shows, the fluffy cushion and the silver brushes were laid upon it, it was just the daintiest, prettiest blue and white bit of finery you ever saw, fit for the.dress ing room of the dearest, daintiest rosebud in all the world. "Wasn't it ? PB0PEE "WAY TO BEETS' TEA. When Prepared as the Celestials Prepare It Xothingr More Is Needed. rr rrciAi. TEtconAM to the dispatcw.i Tea should be the perfect way, because it is the way the Chinese themselves brew their celestial beverage. Take a level tea spoonful of tea for each cup. Have a tea kettle filled with the same nnmber of enps of boiling water. Pour all the water into the teapot in which the tea is to brewed.and which has been previously warmed gently so that the temperature of the boiling W3ter shall not be lowered when it is poured into the tea-pot. Ifow, stir down into the boiling water all the tea. "When it is thor oughly mixed with the water, let the in fusion stand for four minutes, then pour it. This process reverses the one customary with us, which is to pour the water on the tea. No person who iseducated in tea drinking enough to want his tea made in this way, is going to put any kind of seasoning in his cup not even lemon. "Won't you try a little lemon in your tea, just for once?" pleaded the young hostess, to the traveler who taught her to brew her tea in the perfect way. ".Madam," he answered, with as much indignation in his tone as his gentle courtesy would permit, "my tea-drinking is a rite, not an experiment" x PERSONAL comfort of ladies consulted in the arrangement of the safe deposit depart ment, German National Bank, Wood street. su Mm Mm Patronized by the Ladies. The delicate, pure and truly excellent qualities of Dr. Price's Delicious Flavoring Extracts have se cured for them the patronage of the most intelli gent housewives of this country. A few cents additional cost does not deter ladies who are mindful of the health of their family, from procur ing that which is known to be pure and whole some. Those who have not should try Dr. Price's Delicious Flavorings, Vanilla, Lemon, Orange, Nec tarine, etc. They are the finest made. THINGS THAT ALWAYS PLEASE. Well to Be Extravagant in Buying- for Eco nomical Little Wife. WOES OF THE 1KDEXT T0OG I07ES rwarrTrx Ton tiie dispatch.! S CHP.IST3IAS comes on the faces of the masculine half of me unman race are shadowed with per- plexity. They are such a helpless lot I Here are the holidays cloe np to them; there are a dozen wo-m-n, young and old, more or less dear, and the shops are full of bewilderingly beauti ful things that these poor fellows have got to go and buy for thoe dear women. And they don't know the shops, and the clerks in the shops pity their ignorance: and, hano; it! how's a man going to know, anyway, what a woman wants? ' AVell, he isn't. No man really knows, though he sometimes thinks he does until after Christmas, or perhaps after he has tied np the box and sent it off, and then ha is sure, all at once, to remember that she said onee she didn t care for silver toilet things, but preferred Dresden instead; or that she is makins a collection of teapots, and that it would have been just the thing" to have given her one of these. And be cause men, quite of themselves don't know w fiat women like for Christmas presents, and aren't likely to find out unless soma woman helps them out, these things are set down as reminders. Some Things That Always Please. Of some things a woman never has enough: to wit, of fine handkerchiefs, of curious bits of jewelry, of silk stockings and of kid gloves. Neither does her soul grow weary of dainty bitsof bric-a-brac, of quaint silver teaspoons; nor of curious brass candle sticks and lamps, no matter how thick tliey may stand about. "Women always like etchings, too, or a good print, no matter how small they may be. So, also, with a bit of a statuette in bronze or marble, or in piaster. Even if a woman doesn't know abont these things, she is flattered that you think she does. If she's your mother, or your sister, or your wife, you won't have to keep up any of these flattering little fictions, but can just give her a right-down sensible, useful gift. Give your mother a new lizard or seal pocketbook, and be sure there's not much silver about it, except hidden in the pockets, and even there gold is better. Or give her an eider-down cover for her own bed, or a pair of fur-lined dressing shoes for the dear feet that don't keep warm as they used to. Then there's a bit of real lace for the little gentle-woman, who will lay it away in rose sachets and think up a dozen ways to wear it and be happy in it. A Triple Dressing Mirror. Perhaps your sister's leather card case is a little worn at the edges; or she's lost her visiting list book. If she has set np her afternoon tea table give her a copDer kettle or a wrought iron crane. If she hasn't set up the tea-table, give her one in bamboo, with the cunning little tea stool that goes with it. If she hasn't a triple dressing mirror give her that, by all means; there' nothing in all the world that comforts and sustains a woman's soul like being able to see her back hair and her eyes and her pro file all at once. Or there's a party tan an ostrich feather one if yon can, a gauze one if you can't or a big black Spanish, lace scarf to '.tear about her head of an evening. If you're a man who hasn't a poeket full of dollars and your wife spends your moneV anxiously and thriftily, just go and buy her's..,,, what she will call "a foolish gift," that is "too fine for her." It isn't; she's been de nying herself ever since she married yon, the beautiful little things she has wanted because they were so expensive. It isn't too fine for her; she'll love it all the better because its fine, and you, too, because you thought to give it to her. One man brought tears of joy to the eyes of his little wife bv giving her the prettiest, most expensive patr of house-shoes he could find in New York. She hadn't had such a pair since she bought her wedding shoes, because they were so ex pensive. And she wore two and a halt'AA, tool What Not to Get for Her. Perhaps the young man who is buying tor. The One "Woman has the hardest of alL He's so hysterically anxious to have the gift in good taste and he won't ask his sister to help him out because she doesn't really appreciate Her anyway and never did. And it's just as well, perhaps, for him not to say anything to anybody, because he wouldn't quite be satisfied with anything that anybody could suggest. But perhaps, one may suggest some thing -, that he would better "avoid buying: Per fumes, because any girl knows what sht wants best herself; things to wear, becauss her father has the right to provide these for her; stationery, because she has her own distinctive style, and vou would better not interfere with it; jewelry, above all, because no man should give a woman jewelry unless they are betrothed or married. Make the gift useful, but not too useful f that would assume too great intimacy; pretty, but not expensive that would em. tarrass her; impersonal, yet delicately per sonal. Then rest your soul in peace. Forifsha cares for you, she'll care for the gift, no matter how simple it is. And if she card for neither then why should yon vex your soul? Helen- Watxebsojt. The Old and the New. "Of course it hurts, but you must fcria and bear it," is the old time consolation given to persons troubled with rheumatism. "If you will take the trouble to dampen a piece of flannel with Chamberlain's Pain Balm and bind it on over the seat of pain, your rheumatism will disappear," is the modern and much more satisfactory advice. SO cent bottles tor sale by druggists, 'wsa Mf&i-rt SitifafrT t " 'rtoi-irf' ' ttffl h &-