if" asrry-!-:gr'ltrM w E52?3S3 gppyrtgaT" 7-ql ' 20 THE PITTSBUKG- DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JUNE B. 189a THEYALLWANT1NIT. Those Who Complain About the Wliite House Are Sing-. ing Low Just Now. IT'S JUST FINE ENOUGH To Hate the Statesmen Tear Their Hair to Be Its Occupant. THE PEESIDEKCI IS A SOFT SNAP. resides the Salary There Is $1CO,000 for Banning Expenses. CAEPIXTER'5 SNAP-SHOTS FROM INSIDE IC0RBE6POJfDIJfCE Or THI DISPATCH.1 "Washikgtok, June 4. A great Presidental battle is at hand, and the "White House is the medal to be awarded to the winner. Public men say the house is entirely too small, but I notice those who get in seldom want to get out, and all who are out are mighty anxious to get in. David Hill, bachelor as he is, thinks that Harrison's bed, which is six feet wide, would just suit him, and his frugal bach elor meal could be as well cooked on the great ranges of the White House kitchens as upon those of the Arlington Hotel, where he is stopping. Mrs. Harrison says the house ought to have double the number of rooms it has The Slate Dining Room. Bow, but she has not yet persuaded the President to give it up at the close of his term, and as tor Cullom, McKinley, Tom Seed and John Sherman, they are boiling their brains day and night to see if they cannot get the lease of the mansion for the next four years. It is the same with the leading Democratic candidates in all parts of the country. Boies, of Iowa, is ready to throw up his farm; Palmer, of Illinois, would resign from the Senate, and Gray, of Indiana, thinks the "White House would just fit him. It is the Bame with Grover Cleveland, and he knows all about it, for he spent his honeymoon there, and his wife knows the establishment from the kitchen to the attic. What ths Presidency Amounts To. The Presidency of the United States is worth more than most people suppose. They look upon the fat salary of 530,009 a year which our Chief Executive gets as his sole revenue apd every now and then some newspaper states that it costs ail of this and more to keep up the establishment. I don't believe a word about it Nearly every President saves money while he is in the "White Houe and the extras which the President gets are nearly equal to his salary every j ear. He pays no rent in the first place and he has a furnished house free. He has nothing to lay out on light or heat, for Uncle Sam pays his gas bills and he can have a wood fire in every room in the house from morning till midnight and it will not cost him a cent. He has a grand conserva tory for nottiiag and the choicest of flowers are cut and placed in his room and his tables decorated with roses in the midille of winter. The country keeps up his library and he has as m.my servants as he can use. He never nee Is to write a letter himself and his high-priced prhate secretary keeps the crowd awav from him and he has sten ographers and clerks at his beck and call. He never needs to open his own door and if he wishes to shave it will be strange it one of the colored bovs about the Executive Mansion cannot skilfullv handle the razor. The stables which Uncle Sam has built tor him arc as fine as many a house and his kitchens are supplied with copper cooking utensils and his laundry has stationary tubs and patent washing machines. Running Exppnsns 8100,000 a Tear. The cost of keeping up the White House, including the President's salarv, is more than f 100,000 a jcar, and notwithstanding the official troubles of his position its oceu- The Mutate Veslibu'e. pant ought to be happy. I have seen many of the fine houses ot the United State, but the White Houe has some advantages over all, and it ought to make a very comfortable home. Its rooms are all large and the ceil ings of the first floor must be nearly 20 feet high. The windows are big and the house is peifectly ventilated, and though there are said to be rats in the basement there is no damp or musty smell about it. The grounds surrounding it are filled with old forest trees in which the birds are now singing their spring songs, and the back yard, which contains many acres, is rolling and it has all the natural' beauties of hill and hollow, and in the center ot a vide stretch of vehety lawn there is a beautiful fountain which casts up a spray of silver and diamonds into the face of the "Washing ton tun, and the view lrom the rear of the mansion is one of the finest of the United States. Looking over a beantifnl park yoo see the silvery Potomac winding in and'oot of Its islands of green, and beyond it rise mmwm ii IB the hills of Virginia already covered with verdure. The White lipase as It Is. But let me give you a description of the "White House in plain common sense words. The people Rally know but little about it, and the pictures published of it give only its outlines. It stands, you know, in front ot a beautiful park, which, when Washing ton City was a village, was nscd as a race track but which is now full of fine old for est trees. There is a big iron fence fully ten feet high between the front yard and the street and the driven ays which lead up to the front door are of the shape of a half moon, and pavements of Sag as wide as the ordinary city sidewalk run along these to the porte cochere. This pavement is well In the ConsTvatory. kept but the asphalt is cracked in places and in summer it almost blisters your feet under the sun. The White House itself covers about one third of an acre. It is a long, low two story building with a basement, which at the front is almost flush with the sidewalk and which at the back is level with the lawn and forms almost a third story to the mansion. You all know that the White House is of a dazzling, ghastly white, but it has not that rich, mellow tint of white marble, and its color is produced by white lead. The building is made of sandstone, and it has been painted a;ain and again, until in some places, it is said, the white lead upon it is actually a quarter of an inch thick. The building was modeled after a castle in Dublin, and with repairs the total cost of it to-day is something like 52,000,000. now to Get Into the Ilonsr. The entrance to the mansion is worth a description. The porte cochere has a roof upheld by great stone columns, each as big around as a flour barrel and it covers a stone platform or porch so large that it would furnish the foundation ot the ordi nary seaside cottage. In the middle of this porch, between two great windows are the front doors of the White House. These are double doors of highly polished walnut and into each door is set an oval piece of plate glass with panels of Mosaic glass about it, and through these the doorkeepers can see who wish to enter, and if they are danger ous cranks, can refuse to open the doors. In one of these door plates a card hangs. This card is made of tin and upon it in black let ters is painted. Open 10 a. x. Closed 2 p. it. The White House is always closed to vis itors after 2 P. 1L, and after this time if you have important matters and must see the President, you must use the doorbelf. The doorbell is of bronze and like the door knobs it was especially designed for the White House. These door-knobs are each as big around as a baseball and they have a screaming American eagle cut into each of their brass faces. A Few Contrasts la Materials. Passing these doors you come into the vestibule, and this is a vestibule with a capital V. It is so big that you could turn a wagon load of hay around in it without touching the walls, and the ceiling is so high that the man who drove the "wagon could stand up and bis head would not graze it. At the back of it is a wall of the finest of glass Mosaic It is made of precious stones and colored glass and crrstal, and at night it shines like the jewels of the palace of Monte Cristo. The floor is of Mosaic and these beauties come out in striking con trast to some of their surroundings. There is for instance at the further doorof the ves tibule, through which you pass to go to the President's office; a ?2 walnut um brella stand, and the wood work of the room you see is grained to represent black walnut and is bv no means genuine. Against the wall there are a couple of 53 wick er chairs in which the messengers sit, for this room is for half the day public prop ertv. The parlors of the White House are on the ground floor, though there are enough rooms on the second floor to give a place for a sitting room, and the bed-rooms are so big and so airy and have such beautiful views that any ordinary mortal could sit in them without getting tired. Blg;est Parlor In tun Country. Of the parlors below stairs only the East Boom is shown to visitors, and it is here the President holds his noo t receptions. This is perhaps the biggest parlor in the United States, and it is a wonder of magnifi cence. Its walls are of silver and gilt, and in them are set eight massive mirrors, each of which is as big as the tops ot two billiard tables placed side by sidr, and your font sinks almost up to the ankle in the rich vel vet carpet which covers the floor. This room is 80 feet lone and 40 leet wide and it takes more than 400 yards to carpet it. The furniture is cushioned not with ex celsior but with genuine hair, and it is cohered with the finest of satin. This room is now lighted by electricity and there are in the neighborhood of a thousand incandes cent lights in the mansion. The chandeliers in the East Boom cost 55,000 apiece, and each contains 6,000 pieces of the finest Bohemian glass. Historic paintings hang upon the walls, and the portraits which look down at you have cost Uncle Sam in the neighborhood of 525 an inch. Room Pap-red Wlih sat'n. Most of these parlors of the White House have been creatly improved since the Presi dent was elected. The Blue Parlor has been redecorated bvTiffanv, and the entire wall is now draped in a blue-gray silk fine enough to make a ball dress tor a million aire's daughter, and this silk was made at Paterson, N. J. bilk curtains hang at the windows, and there is a dado about the lower part of tho wall which is 'band-painted, aud the moldings are tinged with gold. The ceiling has been entirely worked over by Tiffany, and the chairs and solas are of cold upholstered in satin. The room has the same blue tint that it had before, but under the electrio lights it looks far finer than it did when Dolly Madison used to re ceive within it and when Harriet Lane here held her receptions. In addition to this is the Bed Parlor, which is furnished throughout in red and has fine furniture and many curious pieces of rare bric-a-brac. The Green Boom has been rsdecorated and the pink of the peachblow and a touch ot gilt has been added to it. The furniture is of gold and satin, and the long promenade corridor with its portraits of the Presidents of the past has been made more beautiful than ever. The Blue, Bed and Green Booms open into this corridor and also the East Boom, Conserva tory and State Dining Boom. Pat Ton Thouixnd In Ona Room. I don't know how much it cost to furnish it, but you may get some idea of the money spent on the fixing up of the White House by the fact that the decorations and the refitting of the East Boom during this ad ministration are paid to have cost more than 510,000. It would indeed be an extrava gant woman who would object to' such fur nishings, and the wives of the various can didates will not need to brin; any pieces lrom their homes in order to help out the White House. This is equally so as to the dinner table arrangements. Mrs. Harrison has improved the looks of the State Dining Boom, and the private dining room is good enough for any family. The State Dining Boptri is an immense apartment and on the nights of State dinners it now blazes with electrip rays. It has perhaps the most beautiful marble mantels in America, which were carved in Italv, and which have great mirrors above tbeni. Its big table will seat 50, and Uncle Sam has supplied the Presl. dent with enough china to dine hundreds and have a cnange of plates at as many courses as you will find at the swell dinners of the Chinese. It is nice to drink out of cut glass and eat even your buckwheat cakts and sausage on Dresden plates and drink your coffee out of the finest of Hav iland cups. American China on the Table. It was Hayes who bought the Haviland set of china for the White House aud Mrs. Harrison has added to the china closet new set of American china which will com pare with the finest products of Europe or the Far East. The designs for this china were made by an American artist Among the articles in it are an especial oyster plate service, a dozen soup plates, 12 fis'h plates, a dinner service of a dozen pieces with a plat ter, and 12 plates escb for the game course and the dessert. There are after-dinner coffee cups and saucers, teacups and saucers and other pieces all elaborately and appro priately deconted. The next President will wipe his mouth with the finest of damask linen and JTncle Sam furnishes the napkins and table cloths for the ruler of his nephews. The napkins used at the White House at State dinners are almost as big as table cloths and they shine like silk and they are very heavy and thick. The glass used in the White House is cut glass, aud whether one wants to drink out of the water goblet or the champagne glass, or wishes to end his dinner with a pony of brandy, he can have his esthetio soul d'lighted by a vessel as white as the purest diamopd and as thin as an egg shell, and as he looks into it he will see the Amer ican eagle engraved upon its side. Shopping at Uncle Sam's Expense. Nearly every President buys new linen for the White House, and one ot the pleasures of the next first lady of the land will be the shopping which she can do at Government expense in replenishing the linen and china closets of ber establishment. She will not have the pleasure of doing her own marketing. That is outof fashion now, thonsrh President Harrison's grandfather used to start out every morning and walk to Georgetown, and pick out the choicest cuts for his own table. The President now has a steward, and I don't suppose that either Mr. or Mrs. Harrison have any idea of what they are going to eat before they sit down to the table. The cooking is all done in the basement, and Mrs. Harrison has had the whole lower part ot the establishment renovated. The kitchen is now tiled both as to floor and as to the dado of the side walls. When she came in she found that there were three rotten wooden floors placed one on top of the other, and she had these taken out and these tiled floors put in their place on a basis of concrete. The laundry of the White House is a very fine one, and all of its arrangements are of the best. A M ord About the Conservatory, It mnst take nearly half an acre of glass to cover the flowers of the White House conservatory. It keeps two men busy all the time to take care of It, and the finest of all kinds of flowers from oichlds to roses are continually in bloom here. There are broad India rubber plants which are worth from 550 to 5100 apiece, and there are some flowers which are absolutely worth tneir weight in gold. On the night of a White Houe dinner or reception the whole man sion is decorated with flowers, and at one state dinner not long along there was a floral piece on the table which used 8,000 flowers in its making. At a dinner to the Supreme Court 2,000 flowers were used to make a temple of justioe, and at the last diplomatic reception the mantels of the parlors were banked up with flowers, and at another time they were covered with im mense double tulips rising out banks of green. There are many odd things about the White House. There is a very nice billiard room down in one corner of the basement, which if the next President can handle the cue, will give him a fair chance to play with bis Cabinet when the good people think they are discussing the affairs of state, and there are no end of good wine closets which can be properly stocked for a consid eration. The Yl.hlte Honse'wine Closets. These closets have seen good liquors in the past. It was in them Andrew Johnson kept his favorite Bourbon and the sherry of The While House liiUiard Room. which he was so fond. Here John Tyler stored away his Jamaica rum aud the Ma deira which he imported himself, trading ship loads of corn from his Virginia planta tion for it, and it was here that Thomas Jeflerson had bottled up the 511,000 worth of champagne and other liquors wtiich he served up while he was in the White House. Jefferson spent more on liquors than any other President on record, but Arthur was noted for his fine wines, and Andrew Jack son spent a pretty penny on pnnch during his administration. In the President's business office you will find a hall dozen clerks, and you oan reach out vour finger and touch any part of the world. There is a telegraph operator whose key is connected with the cable and tele graph wires of the United States, and there is a clerk who does but little else than at tend to the newspapers, and the President gets his newspapers from everywhere, and all the leading journals are to found here. In one large room there are a number of clerks and among these is Colonel Crook, the cashier of the White House, and there are numerous typewriters and other em ployes. There is an elevator in the White House, and, all in all, the old mansion is packed full of interesting things. Fkank G. Cabpeuteb. THE CZAR'S QUEER SUIT, It Is Nothing Morn Thin a Homespnn, and he Colors Lichen and Indigo. Buffalo Epqntrer. The Czar of all the Bussias has had made for him a rather queer suit, nothing less than a suit of homespun tweed. The cloth is of the usual Highland kind a homely looking tartan, in which the prevailing colors are lichen and indigo. The Czar gave the order for the suit because his father, the late Czar, bad for nurse a Boss or Mull girl named Catherine McKinnon, who by some stroke of luck found her way into the im. fierial family ot Bussia, and so commended lerself to her roVal employers that recollec tions ol her services remain in the family to this day. So it happened that the Czar ordered the Mull-spun tweed suit woven within a few miles ot the cot where Cather ine McKinnon spent ber childhood. Had Catherine lived in an earlier age she might have been Czarina and the mother, not th nurse of emperors, for the great Catherine was of as lowly an origin as this cotter girl from Mull. Why be pestered with roaches, bedbugs, etc., when Bugine will banish them eter nally! 2$ cents at all dealers. Ojjtx Awjfiaos Entirely new and fast In color and exquisite In designs, at Marxian x a, eon-a, wa i-enn avenue, xei.- uns. wsu CARPETS IN AMERICA. Statistics Showing the Remarkable Growth of the Industry, A SUBSTITUTE FOE CAOUTCHOUC, Curing Mercurial Poisoning by Iodide of Potassium and Milk. APPARATUS FOE PREVENTING BMOKB rWTUTTIK TOB TOT DISPATCH.! A remarkable growth has taken place in the carpet industry in this country during the last 30 years. In 1860 the hand loom was in its prime throughout Kensington, where the power loom was looked upon more as an experimental curiosity than a practical aid to labor. Usually the employe worked side by side with his weaver, who earned good wages and was as much re spected among his neighbors as a high-class merchant now is. -Skilled Englishmen, Scotchmen and Irishmen all found ready employment and a prompt return for their labor. The total number of factories in the United States was 213, but the product amounted to onlv about 13,000,- 000 yards, valued at nearly 88,000,000, an in crease of 2,500,000 over the output in 1850. In 1870 the number of factories was only increased by three, but the amount of the product swelled to 32,000,000 yards, valued at about $22,000,000, with an invested capi tal of $12,500,000, Wages on hand looms be gan to' decrease owing to the competition of the power looms. In 1882 the capital in vested in the industry was upward of $25,000,000, involving 340 establish ments (including many small concerns not factories, strictly speaking), in which there were over 5,000 hand looms, 4,200 power looms and 22,000 operatives. The total out put was 62,000,000 yards, valued at $50,500, 000. Ot this over 27,000.000 yards were ingrain (one-half of which was the cheap cotton grade), 14,000,000 tapestry and 8,500,000 body brusselsand wilton. The estimated increase in the number of factor ies from 1850 to to 1880 was over 80 per cent; in capital 20 per cent, and in the num ber of employes 8 per cent, the latter mainly an increase in the number of fe males employed, rendered possible by the introduction of the power loom. Wages had increased 20 per cent. In 1890 a considerable change was found. Hand looms had practically disappeared, and the factories, though numbering only about 150, had been greatly enlarged, and ran, in the aggregate, something over 8,000 power looms. The total output in that year was about 85,000,000 yards (excluding mo quettes), valued at over $54,000,000, which, with the $3,000,000 worth of moquette, made only in New York and Massachusetts, bronght the grand total to $57,000,000. Of the 85,000,000 yards 47 were inzrain, 20)4 tapestry (brussels and velvet), and 17 body brussels and wilton. Philadelphia produces over halt of this, 46,000,000 yards, valued at $29,000,000; New Yorfc, 19,000,000, valuedat $13,500,000, and Massachusetts, 13,500,000 yards, valued at $10,000,000. The cheapen ing of the product and the consequent in crease in the per capita consumption, which is tenfold greater than in I860, is the direct result ot improvements in machinery. Pine tapestries and brussels can now be obtained at the former cost of the rudest ingrain. The enormous product, 85,000,000 yards, is consumed entirely at home, making a per capita consumption of nearly a yard ana a half, tar more than in any foreign countrv. The standard of carpet designs has vastly improved of late years. Designers' wages range from $10 to $20 per week, and a good design will sell all the way lrom $20 to $50. A Steam Tree Feller. According to a London technical journal, a tree feller and oross-cut saw of exceptional merit is now on the market The new tool can be fixed to any tree and ready for action in less than two minutes. As the smaller size, which will fell trees up to four feet in diameter at the butt, weighs less than four hundred weight, it can readily be carried about by four men. It works with incredi ble rapidity, sawing down an oak or elm tree three feet in diameter in less than five minutes, and witha gang of four men one machine will easily fell eight trees, aver aging 30 inches in .diameter, in an hour, in cluding the time occupied in movjng and fixing. As the machine will work in any position it can be used to fell trees growing on slopes, and by simply shitting the work ing parts into another frame it becomes an excellent cross-cut saw for cutting logs to any length as they lie on the ground. All the working parts are Bimple, and any intel ligent man can apply the instructions sup plied. The machine eonslsts of a steam cylinder of small diameter, having a long stroke at tached to a light wrought iron frame upon which it is arranged to pivot on its center, the pivoting motion being worked by a hand wheel turning on a worm, which gears into a quadrant cast on the back of the cyl inder. The saw is fixed direct to the end of the piston rod, which is made to travel in a true line by guides, and the teeth of the sau are of such a form as to cut only during the inward stroke. By this simple device saws as long as nine feet or ten leet can be worked without any straining apparatus or guide, as its own cut is sufficient to guide the saw in a straight line through the tree, and as the teeth offer no resistance to the outward stroke all possibility of the saw buckling is avoided. The machine is sup plied with steam at a high pressure from a small portable boiler, through a strong flex ible steam pipe; and as this may be of con siderable length, the boiler may remain in one place until the machine has cut down all the trees with a radius that is deter mined by the length ot the pipe. The ground oleared by the tree feller can be left absolutely level, for by simply removing a sod 4U inches thick the saw' works on the ground line, and consequently tut stumps do not obstruct the passage of carts, etc. The smaller sizd machines will cut down almost any ordinary tree, but a larger size is made equal to the felling ot trees of six feet to eight feet diameter at the butt Antidote for Mercurial Poisoning;, Employes in certain departments of in candescent lamp factories, and in other in dustries in which mercury is extensively employed, will rejoice in the discovery of an effective antidote tor mercury poisoning. Mercury and its compounds are universally known to have a most injurious influence on the human system, and the shake, the shortness of breath, the sickening pallor, the listlessness .and semi-stuplflcation of operators who are daily subjected to its fumes are sadly familiar to those connected with the pump rooms of lamp factories. Much has been done to improve the health ot the workmen by means of ventilation and improved machinery and pumps, but still the evil exists to a serious extent Slight cases are usually and quickly cured by change of air or ot work, but if not taken in time the trouble may end fatally. It is not always, however, that a work man can afford either to take change ot air or turn his hand to a, pew employment, and here the new remedv comes in. Some four years ago one of the partners of a large Parisian incandescent lamp manufacturing firm became salivated while experimenting with mercury pumps, aad he cured himself completely by means ot small doses of iodide of potassium dissolved in milk. He next administered similar doses ta some workmen in his lamp factory, who were suffering from mercury poisoning, and they quickly and completely recovered. In his present factory, into which he moved a year age, there has not been a single case of salivation, and this exemption is attributed to the tact that doses of iodide have been continuously administered to the workmen. Men from other factories have been taken in who on entering exhibited the character istic signs of mercury poisoning, and who reeorered forthwith. The dully dose snp plied by the firm to each man is 25 grammes of the crystallized salt, dissolved in about 400 cubic centimeters of milk. It has been sdggested that an improvement in practice would be to increase the dose in summer, when cases of salivation ae much more fre quent, and to diminish it during the cooler months of the year, but tbepresent method appears to meet all requirements, and the distressing malady is now robbed of its terrors. New Xnnd Cleaning; Machine. A novel way of promoting the fertiliza tion of land by .the utilization of Its weed growth is adopted in a new land oleaning machine. The principle of the machine is to root np all the weeds, scrub, eta, and pass them at once through a doable blast fire by means of a traveling engine. The frame is mounted on four traveling wheels and carries a small steam engine, on the right of which is a blower. On its left is a brick hearth, fitted in an iron frame, which forms a fire retainer. The weeds are con ducted to the fire by a gradual incline, and after they have passed through a fire re tainer, which is kept at an intense heat by the blast of the blower, they are deposited on the soil. The engine, with which, it is claimed, from four to eight acres a day can be cleaned, ean be had from six to eight horse-power, and, with the machine, re quires two men when In operation. Barning Glasses in Stare Windows. A chemical journal warns pharmacists and all others who have occasion to display anything in the nature of a lens in their windows that, as the season changes, the sun's rays may fall directly into windows which they did not reach during the winter, and therefore it would be well to bear in mind the possibility of fire being kindled through this agency, and take precautions accordingly. That the show globes in a "burning glasses" is proved by one case in which the woodwork of a window was effectually charred by the sunlight concen trated on it through a globular show bottle, Snbstltnte for Caoutchouc. A recent investigation of the solid prod ucts which result lrom the oxidation of dry ing oils shows that the absorption of oxygen produced new fatty acids and an jnsoluable oxy-eompound termed "linoxin." This ma terial swells up on boiling with acetone or acetic ether, forming an elastic mass, and in other respects resembles caoutchouc. On the strength ot this discovery it is believed that from oxidized oil a material that would make a good substitute for caoutchouo could be obtained. The Prevention of Smoke. The latest system of smoke prevention in volves the nse of the combined apparatus of two inventors. One invention consists of fireclay arches through which the combined air and gasses are passed, and which, becom ing .incandescent, cause the smoke to be consumed. The other principle is the in duction of a low pressure current of air by means of steam jets, and the two devices combined give a very good result, more especially when applied to steam boilers. Foreign Bodies in the Throat. An English navy surgeon cites an old method ot removing foreign bodies from the throat, such as pieces of meat or other solid food, as one of the best-known means ol effecting the desired result This simple mode of relief is to blow forcibly into the ear. Powerful reflex action is thus excited, during which the foreign body is expelled from the trachea. Paste for Ttaior Strops. The manufacturers of razor strops have al ways taken gregt care to keep secret the nature of the composition used in the manu facture of their special commodity. This material is now declared to be composed of coke, ground to an impalpable powder, made Into a paste with tat and perfumed with an ethereal oik THE HETBIC SYSTEM. Efforts of the Decimal Association to Intro dace It In England. The new Decimal Association, whose headquarters are at Botolph House, East cheap, London, has memorialized the Lords of the Committee of Council on Education on the advisability of taking an important step in connection with the introduction of the metric system in this country. The May examinations of the Science and Art Department are known through the length and breadth of the land, and much has been done by means of these examinations to popularize nnd extend technical study. The memorial which has been presented recommends that in certain of the science examinations, alternative questions be given in future, based on the metric system of measurement, whic) may be taken at the option of the candidate in lieu of questions based on feet and inches. In this way, the large and intelligent class ot candidates for certificates of the Department will be induoed to learn the metrio system. Tho Committee of Council on Education has already ordered that the principles of this system should be taught in the higher standards of all elementary schools; and one of the steps taken by the School Board of London and other towns in consequence of this order has been to fur nish the pupil teachers and advanced scholars with boxwood rules, having a deci malized inch scale aud a metric scale in juxtaposition. In addition to this, colored wall charts of the metric weights and measures are used, and in this way the ris ing generation will to n great extent be prepared for the introduction ot these weights and measures which is expected in the near future. THE SECBET OF FASCINATING. Fill Toar Heart "With Good Will and Prac tice the IJpst Manners. Et. Joseph. Mo., Gazette. Doubtless thousands of yonng people, and pot a small number of old ones, wish every day of their lives that they could learn the secret of fascinating others by means of their graceful, exquisite manners. The secret is an open one. It is so easy to learn that it lies all neglected by the wayside, while they who would give their dearest treasure to find it pass by unknowing. It is only this: Pill you heart with good will to everybody and then practice at all times the best manners yon know, particu larly at home. If you begin at home this charming manner will, so to speak, get set tled on you ana never leave you. Be just as polite to yonr sister as you would to your best girl. Strive to gain the good will of mother, father and brothers and sisters and children exactly as you strive to gain good will abroad. There is no place for practicing manners like the home circle; no place, permit one to say, where it will be so Appreciated. It will be a cultivation of beart, mind and body, this endeavor to ieel nothing but af fection lor the home people and treat them as though they were worthy ot as much con sideration at your bands as. if they were the President and his family. So they are worthy. Then from the home wl)l float out around you thosesweet, magnetic influences which will draw the hearts of all mankind toward you. It Is GoodI The more Chamberlain's Cough Bemedy is used the better it is liked. We know gf no other remedy that always gives satisfac tion. It is good when you first catch cold. It is good when your cold is seated and yonr lungs are sore. It is good in any kind of a cough. We haye sold 25 dozen of it and every bottle has given satisfaction. Btcdman & Friedman, druggists, Minne sota Lake, Minn. wan MEN DRESS IN TASTE. As a Rule Their Costumes Are Ahead of Women's in This fiespeci. WHAT CONSTITUTES A NOVELTY. The Utility of the Necktie Is the Secret of Its Appearance. SUITS THAT AEB PS0PEE JUST NOW rWRTTTElT FOB THE DISFJLTCB.1 Borne special study of men's costnmes forces the unexpected conclusion that in certain points the average man is dressed in better taste than the average woman. This inference sounds surprising in view ot swallow tails, trousers and bell hats, but it is not meant to apply to .general forms, but to V refinements ot line, T7 proportion and color J? inside the prescribed ihapes. A TioJtuii Be Use-id. The reason for it is plain enough. A man's garments are limited to a few pieces, whose general form and colors are practically fixed, so that there is nothing for the artistic tailor to do bat to labor at improving these forms and in making certain low-toned colors har monize more and more agreeably. The man's costumer does not have his energies dissipated in devising a novelty for each new pattern, but his force is directed season after season to perfecting, by his best lights, Sex of the Turn-Dovm Collar. the patterns already in hand. Thus it is that the best dress of men reaches an ele gance that the dress of few women attain. If many of the forms of a man's costnme are wrong from the (esthetic standard, some of them are right, and all have had infinite, though sometimes misdirected, pains be stowed on them. Thn Definition of a Novelty. It speaks worlds for the situation to note what a slight change in men's wear is called a novelty. The tailors are at present saying that the latest English fad for morning coats is undressed worsted. This is only a variety in the finish of cloth. It' takes something as startling as an electrio shock to be accounted a noveltv in a woman's wardrobe. The fashionable materials for lounge suits are rough laced Scotch and English tweeds, in pronounced checks and fine stripes; tropical worsted suitings and the undressed worsted just mentioned, cheviots also, that are in a wide wale popu lar clays, serges in blue and b'ack, and homespuns in the lightest tints of all colors. Trouserings to go with these are in nar row stripes and fine checks. Extremely light or extremely dark shades are chosen in preference to medium ones. For top coats there are two distinct styles. The covert coat, in Venetians and in covert coatings, in all the shades of tan, made very short, with strap seams, and collar of the sme without facing. It is lined through out with silk. The alternative coat reaches below the knee, and is made of fine whip cord, light weight kersey, cheviot or angola, in gray, light tan, blue or black. It is lined with silk faced to the edge; the seams are plain and the collar i of the same ma terial. The Styles in Mornln Coats. For morning coats diagonals and cork screws have been almost cast aside. In their place are used angolas, fine twills and cheviots, all in extremely soft finish. They are made longer than usual in both waist and skirt, and button medium low. The seams are plain and the edges are finished Bl use Bui' and Cow or Tuxedo Coat. with either narrow single stitching or a fine Bilk cord. The preferred vest is single breasted with a notch collar. For evening dress at watering places will be seen often, in place ot the swallow tail, the Cowes or Tuxedo coal, known to the trade as the sacque coat with shawl roll. We give a picture of this coat. Tha collar is faced with heavy corded silk. This is tne cost for wearing which, on a full dress oc casion. Berry Wall was some time ago ejected from a hotel drawing room. The coat has made headway since, out is consid ered only an elegant drmi-dress. Outing suits are of lisht weight cheviots with a line stripe of color, or of plaid home spnn. The sack coat is somewhat loose fit ting and without lining. The shirt is of fancy-colored cheviot or Oxford cloth. Such shirts have the collar and cuffs laun dered stiff, and the besom soft Sanhes will hardly be worn this Eeason. They became too popular last y- ar to suit fastidious men. Belts will take their place. A blouse outing suit, as illustrated, is a regular plaited white sash with belt passing under the plaits. The breeches reach just over the knees. Flannel shirt, ribbsd wool stockings, canvas shoes and sott felt hat complete this dress. lhf hole Suit MlknKoir. It has long been the fashion to make the trousers contrast in color and material with the coat and vest, but far more elegance Is attained when the whole suit is alike; for, however utility may be served by the division, the refined eye is displeased by seeing the body cut in two pieces. The full-crowned derby with flat brim and narrow end is the newest morning hat, though a tew New York bankers and brokers wear the silk hat to business. Gloves are plain-backed this season, which is an im-: provement, and canes must be of natural wood, though they may at option have a trace of silver trimming. Long and horn handles are used also, aud the ultra sticc is called the "Prince ot Wales CroSk." About neckwrar volumes might be writ ten. It is a detail, but yet it is the objective point of the dress. A great deal of it that is popular is ugly, and for reasons which tpfi ean he easily demonstrated. The best yon can do, gentlemen, with the limited ma terial you allow yourselves, is to wear the straight collar with rolled over, or broken, points fashion makes it high this season and either the straight tie or the flowing Ascot scarf. There are other collars and other ties, but let us have a look at them. A Ton-Down Collar on St Woman. There is the Byron collar, which turns down all round. The handsomest man alive cannot afford to wear it Why? Because The Ou.'aumy and Platd Cheviot Saek. it is a hard inclined plane, that does not fall in with the lines of the body, but swears at them all, and cuts straight toward the neck' with a threat of decapitation. Now a woman, when she wears a turn-over collar, has it fashioned in such a way that its lines flow with the adjacent lines of the throat and shoulder. At least she does except when in an occasional fit of abberration she tries to imitate man. Here her taste proves the superior. Don't scoff at this stricture, dar gentlemen, and say that you bate the pretty. If you do, in such dislike I bear you company. But this is not a question of the pretty, but solely of harmonious rela tions, a thing that you hold to be vastly im portant in other matters. As to ties. The four-in-hand is the most popular, but let it alone, friends. There are several things the matter with it In the first place a sailor knot, which.it virtu ally is, pre-supposes something to be strong ly fastened, and no one will pretend that the linen collar.has any look ot being held togetherby this tie. It is too hopelessly moulded, and the tie is too evidently use less. It is lined and interlined, so that it locks swollen, or like a finger done up in a bandage, and has not even the grace of pre tended use. The appearance of use is the test of a tie, and this quality is manifested by the puck ers of the cloth as they pass into the knot and emerge again. But what demented brain originated the idea of a stuffed tie? Evidently It is intended for pure show. But whatashowl It has no beauty; it makes a straight line down the front ot the shirt and causes the head to look as if held upon a stick, like a harlequin's wand. The Utility or a Fin. Now, into this tie if yon fasten an orna mental pin, von complete an effect that is abominable beyond redemption. The pin is useless and you cannot place it anywhere on the tie to make it look anything but superfluous. If this tie says anything at all, it proclaims itself securely fastened,and the pin if there is there for show and show alone; and therefore, though worn by the most fastidious man, it cannot be anything but vulgar. Take time to think about this, gentlemen. It is significant to note that at present every roan ot fashion ties his own cravat, and takes care that the tie shows the wearer's manipulation of it This seems to be a movement -toward getting rid ot the stiffness that makes the ordinary four-in-hand so ugly, and is an indication of grow ing taste. The white four-in-hand, somewhat nar row, is seen often on young men of the Stock Exchange, but men of taste do not in feneral wear white ties in the morning, he flowing ascot is the fashionable scarf. It is tied into the smallest knot possible and below (he knot is spread out over much space. One might think this knot necessi tates a narrow tie, but on the contrary the tie is of extraordinary width, but of very soft silk, and this is the secret of the fash ionable ascot One needs to pay about $1 50 for a tie to get the best effect. Dark and rich colors are fashionable. The straight tie is much worn by fashionable men of re finement." From the standpoint of taste it is one of the best ties made. It does not carry the eye np and down the axis of the body as the four-in-hand does, and asks at tention alone to the knot, as a tie should. With black clothes may be agreeably worn ties having black grounds and lines and figures of color, and colors so broken may have considerable brightness. With tan clothes a black tie looks well; red with tan makes too warm a combination; but if one must have color with tan choose a very much mixed, low tone green, one that verges on citron. Asa Bache-Cose. KO.I E1NG, CKACKL1NG AUD BUZZING. Catarrh of thn Middle Ear. Catarrh of the middle ear, even after serious deafness has been produced, is cura ble by a taithful use of Pe-ru-na. Mr. Frederick Bierman, of McComb City, Miss., had chronic catarrh very badly for many years. The disease finally passed up the eustachian tube into the middle ear,and had almost destroyed his hearing. He has been taking Pe-ru-na but a short time, nnd his catarrh is very much better, and he hears again as well '& anyone. Mr. W. D. Stokes, Baton Rouge. La., writes: ''I had chronic catarrh very badly, noise in the ears, and nearly deaf. I used your Pe-rn-na according to directions and am now well; can hear the tick of a watch ten feet Your Pe-ru-na is a wonderful medicine." Mr. J. W. McRobert, of Mason, Mich., box 15G, writes February 25, 1891: "My wife had been afflicted with catarrh of the head for fifteen years, and was cured by taking three bottlee of Pe-ru-na." The eustachian tubes are small tubes, about two inches long, leading from the upper and back part ot the throat to the middle ear. It anything happened to ob struct the eustachian tubes hearing is very much impaired, if not entirely destroyed. Catarrh of the tnroat most commonly fol lows cp these little ducts to the middle ear, thickening their mucous linings so as to completely or partially close them up, pro ducing partial deafness. The roaring and crackling sounds which catarrh subjects so frequently complain of is due to the spread of catarrh of these tubes. Pe-ru-na is the best, if not the only, remedy that will cure these cases. Taken regularly according to the directions on the bottle the symptoms gradually disappear until a compfete cure is the result In some cases it takes months to effect a cure, while in others only weeks are required. Coldi, coughs, bronchitis, sore throat and pleurisy, ere all catarrhal affections, and consequently are quickly curable by Pe-ru-na. Each bottle of Pe-ru-na is ac companied by lull directions for use, andis kept.by most druggists. Get your druggist to order it tor you if he does not alreadr keep it A pamphlet on the cause and cure of all catarrhal diseases and consumption sent free to any address by the Pe-ru-na Drug ManufacturingCa, Columbus, O. Mb. Moses Price, of this place, has been troubled with rheumatism for a long time. He savs Chamberlain's Pain Balm has eured him and that the Balm has no equal. Hnnecker Bros.) Loraine, O. One application will relieve the pain, 50-cent bottles for sale by druggists. "WSn Doa'T allow your house to become overrun with roaenes, Dedburs. etc. Clean them out with Bujlne; It never falls, acts. HAS OYER 1,000 SUITS. Emperor William Is the World's Most Elaborately Dressed Man. EVERYTHING MUST BE SKIN-TIGHT. Tailors and Shoemakers Fear the Zccentrie Monarch's Temper. CAN MAKE HIS TOILET IK EIGHTMIKUTES rcoBRisroxnEvcx or thb DisM.TCB'.t Beelet, May 21 The wardrobe of no modern sovereign has attracted more atten tion than that of the German Emperor. On all his recent travels, wherever he went, he became conspicuous by his continual change of dress, Of course, the Emperor has oftener the occasion to change his costume than an ordinary mortal. He might arrive, for instance, in Kiel, the chief German port of war, in traveling costume, review tha marine in the uniform of a German admiral, thenvisit the various schools in civiliaa dress, dine on a foreign man-of-war in the uniform of an admiral of its nationality and in the evening give a reception in some gala dress. The Emperor is known to have mads as many as 10 or 13 changes in 18 hours. Those who have become acquainted with the fact do not know whether to excuse it as a whim or attribute it to extreme nervous ness. That his wardrobe under these cir cumstances has reached gigantic dimensions is easy enough to understand. It contains at present over 1,000 dresses. They are divided into six classes: The Emporor's Dlffarent Costnm.s. 1. Military costumes, inclndf ng all tha dif ferent uniforms of the highest rantcsoftha German army, with a collection of modern Bwords which has hardly Us equal in Germany. 2. Court dresses, nnder which category all the dresses for creat ceremonies are classi fied excepting the coronation robes with scepter and crown, which are taken care of specially. It includes also the uniforms of all tha different orders, like tho order of the Black Eagle, of the Garter, etc., as also the costnme for the Torchlight- Polonaise at great festivals, which is entirely of silk with kneepants and gartered hose. 8. Civilian dresses araoni which the dress snits and high colored walking costnmes of English cut play a leading part: it contains, besides every piece of dress that is worn by tashionable men at present, with thn excep tion of a dressing crown which the Emperor never wears. lie rarely uses fine smoking Jackets. To this category also belong the lncosnlto dresses and the free Mason's costnme. 1. Sport dresses, which Include bathing, riding, driving, sleighin? and skating cos tumes and then the lare numberof hunt ing costumes from the Tyroleso to the Bus elan fnr gear forbear bunting. B. Dresses of courtesy contain all the uni forms of foielgn regiments whose honorary ohtef he is, besides all the costnmes he Is obliged to don in visiting foreign court. It being a onstom on such occasions for the visitor to appear in the host's favorite cos tnme and vice versa at the first meeting. Even Chinese and Japanese court dresses are not forgotten. The only national court costnme he has not worn 1 the French. Of all these costnmes a duplicate exists in case of an accident 6. Underwear and minor articles. Minor Essentials of His Toilet. There are 12 dozen of every piece of underwear, and of socks and handkerchiefs no less than CO dozen. As he does not cars for silk, his underwear is of merino, with the exception ot the socks, which are of silk. His handkerchiefs are of batiste, and as a rule he uses them but once. A number ot embroiderers are employed all the year round to make the initials, etc. As he is not fond of jewelry his wardrobe only contains a limited selection of cuS buttons and studs, all in gold and diamonds. The nnmber of gloves, on the contrary, is very large; there are chamois gloves for driving, beaver for riding, dogskin, whits lambskin and the innumerable white kid gloves for uniforms that are worn but once. In eivilian dress he uses gloves of a dis tinctly different color to the suit He has a number of canes that are but seldom used, and, strange to cay, the um brellas are but three in number, which have been kept elosed so long that they would surely appear streaked if opened accidentally. The Emperor never uses one as he has really no opportunity, either riding or driving oat, and then generally in uniform. And who has the care of this gigantia wardrobe? A special system of manage ment has been introduced, which has been so well regulated to its smallest details that it works like a clock. The marshal of his domestic affairs superintends the wardrobe. It it his duty to make himself acquainted with the latest fashions and suggest them to the Emperor, nho is in no way an inventive mind in fashions, and rather follows other authorities, choosing'what he deems best Like Tlghl-Flttln? Clothes. The Emperor, however, has decided likes and dislikes. Everything must be tightly fitting; the trousers scarcely touch tha boots: he has also a great aversion for the short overcoats and narrow, pointed shoes. When he was Invited by the Emperor of Austria to hunt in the Tyrolese mountains, he gave the order for several suits worn by the Tvrolese mountaineers. The marshal remarked to the Emperor that, although His Majesty could boast of a well-built figure, he would not look to advantage in the tight-fitting knee-breeches, mountain shoes and gaiters, leaving the knee bare, of the Tyrolese. To which the Emperor brusquely replied: "Don't trouble yourself about my taste. If I order a thing, it means that it has to be done." All the leading tailors of the larger cities offer their services with (he greatest induce ments, and are triumphant if they get at least one order, as it entitles theii, after filling it satisfactorily, to the right of ad vertising themselves: "Tailor to His Maj esty," etc. Four times a year the Marshal himself takes the Emperor's measare, not only tor costumes but also for shoes, gloves and hats, providing for any changes that might have taken place in his majesty's figure. For boots and shoes (slippers ho never wears) the annnal expenses amount to 20,000 marks. They are made by the best shoemakers and bear on the soles, like every other piece of his dress, except the incognito costumes; the Hohenzollern coat of arms. They Fear 'WIIhHm'f Tnrapnr, As the Emperor very easily loses his temper in matters concerning his toilet, the shoemakers are in continual fear that one or the other might not fit perfectly well tha first time, which would undoubtedly result in their iosing their high customer. He never stays more than a week in a place, so his costumes are stowed away in rosewood and ebony chests, in the care of twp valets, the body servants ot the Em peror, one of whom is an old man and has been in the service of the Emperor since the latter was a little boy, so is perfectly acquainted with his idiosyncrasies. The valets have a number ot servants nnder them, who dnst the clothes, clean the shoes and polish the swords and buttons, which in the uniforms arc all pure gold. Special c;re is devoted to the galoons and epaulettes, which are alyays covered with ttssue paper. Excepting hair dressing and shaving, ths Emperor has no immediate use of assist ance in dressing. A toilet table, covered with an array of tools, a collection ot bot tles and glasses ot old Bohemia, little in struments, files, nail polishers, curved, straight and pointed scissors, most of them in ivory aud silver, accompanies him on all his travels. Besides keeping these in order the valet has to lay out every article of dress ready and arranged in a certain order in which the Emperor is used to don them. He dresses with great rapiditv, never taking more than 20 minutes to his toilet in ths morning, and is known to have made sa entire change in eight minutes. C Satjakiciii Haetmauk. W$ pack, hanl, store, ship, repair, reflnlsh and reuDholster furniture, -wan Haeqh & Kxsx.nr, 33 Water street l I i ,M -JfrmJ!im& ".