- gfsBsagg? v sx?$?mv jq&' fH v-s-VTfTjvfrrf THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JTJLT 17. 1892. 13 WOMEN AT THE Fl How Tliose of Limited Means Can Best Attend the Co lumbian Exposition. GOOD LODGINGS CHEAP. An Arrangement of Stock Sales With Desirable Privileges. EMPLOYMENTS THAT MAT BE HAD TroTision for Care of Fahiw While the Mothers fee the Show. A GREAT SCHOOL FOR THE CHILDREN IBl'lliri TOR THE DISPATCH. 1 How to see the "World's Fair on a limited purse is already the question of the day, and one that cannot be too early considered, for that it is going to take money and plen ty of it no one having lived through con vention week at Chicago can gainsay. TJn donbtedlv there is the disposition,, even in friendly Chicago, to make those who dance pay the fiddler, the argument being that we, the dancers, will own the floor, or, to drop the figure, the entire town. Chicago will be homeless for the time, or to para phase, the old town will not be what it used to be, for they will be full of strangers, or, worse yet, distant and long forgotten rela tives. Stores will be crowded until all na tives not having purchased beforehand the requisite number of fig leaves to see them through the summer will find wearing those out of date, preferable to trying to buy "the latest" Worth Tour Life to Go Driving. There can be no driving; indeed, it is already agreed by residents of the World's Fair city that such a thing as driving for pleasure is not to be attempted. The streets are to be left tree as possible for traffic and travel and the fashionable drives given over to recreating sightseers. That some such restful recreation will be a necessity those having visited the Centennial Exposition will remember, and if necessary at that time, it will be ten times so at the coming Exposition, for as the infant to the man tully grown so is the Centennial to the World's Fair, judging by promises. But to get back to our mutton, for all these rights and privileges we are, in flash language, to "shell out," and that liberally. We are to own the .town utter we have paid lor it. That we are getting our toes tramped while tramping those on the proverbially large Jcet of Chicago is not to reduce the price of such sport, therefore, we may as well brace ourselves for the in evitable, make our property safe and begin a system of penny saving. A Home for Women Tlslsors. Realizing that the extortions of con scienceless landlords and greedy landladies will tall heaviest upon women dependent upon the purse of a possibly grudging other "half," and so also upon the great army of self-supporting women, the Board of Lady Managers, who really have thought of everything for the betterment of their sex in connection with the movement, have considered what could be done toward pro viding a home for women during the Fair, and the result of their deliberations has been the maturing of plans for a safe, clean, thoroughly comfortable home at rates which all industrial women, wage earners or work ing girls can afford to pay. The Woman's Dormitory Association of the Columbian Exposition will erect .four odfldings that-will comfortably house 1,250 each. These are to be supplied with good beds and "all toilet conveniences, and the rate for such accommodations, it is prom ised, shall not exceed 40 cents per day, and may fall a trifle under that nominal sum. The association has issued stock at 510 per share, no person bping allowed more than 5100 worth. Tnis stock has been sent to lady managers in each State to be disposed oi, and there certainly should be no trouble in selling it when the plan is understood. Stock is non-assessable, and the presenta tion of a certificate of stock at any dormi tory of the association will entitle the own er, or anyone to whom Bhe may have trans ferred her stock, to lodging at the apart ments, and the certificate will be applied toward the payment of such lodging at its lace value. And the holder ot a certificate will be entitled to share in any profits that may accrue from the enterprise. Earning a Vrrp at the Fair. Refined, matronly women are wanted to preside over these homes to insure the safety and tender care to the temporary residents. This, you observe, opens up oue wa" for a lew womeu to see the Fair and earn the wav to see it. Other ways there are which I want to tell you of as we go along. For the position ot matron or for waitress, in cae the light restaurant now ibeing talked oi in connection with the dormitories is constructed, address Mrs. Matilda B. Carse, Chicago, 111. Those owning stock must state in advance the number of weeks they wish to exercise their privileges; then their names will be booked and the barber shop method of first come first served will be strictly adhered to. If your certifi cate entitles you to a stay of two weeks and vouonly wish to remain one, and then to turn it over to a triend, engage your room lor two weeks. These dormitories, while open to all women ol good repute, were originally in tended for that class commonly known as "working girls." For professional apd business women there is still another pro vision, thanks to the "Physicians' Publish ing Company," which is an association of women physicians who have an incorporated company with capital stock of 530.000 for the purpose of erecting a hotel. This building will be commenced August 1, until which time the company offers room certifi cates at 510 each exchangeable for the ue of one room lor one week during the six months or the Fair, the time to be. specified in the certificate. These certifi cates also are transierablc. VI' asant and Convenient Quartern. The situation of the hotel is both pleasant and convenient. It is within one block of the Exposition grounds and a five minutes' walk from the main entrance at Midway Plaisance. The building will be on a cor ner lot allowing sunlight and outside air to all rooms. These rooms will be furnished with conveniences for only oue person, but the holder of a certificate upon payment ot 54 00 additional at the time ot oc cupying her loom will be entitled to admit another woman to share it during her week of possession and suita ble accommodations lor two will be pro vided. This, you see, will enable women to secure comfortable rooms near the Expo sition grounds at the low rate of 51 per day. In connection with this hotel there is to be a. restaurant, a bureau, of information, tele graph, telephone and messenger service, all at the usual rates. This hotel owned by women, instituted solely for women, is to be run by women only. Here again employment offers, the only requirements being a recommendation vouching lor the good character and fitness for the work, ol the applicant this to be signed by three reputable persons giving their full addresses in order that the officers can ndilress them. Application for either certificates or lor employment should be addressed to Isadore L. Green, M. D., sec retary, 315 Lincoln avenue, Chicago, I1L Providing for the 1,1 tile Ones. A still better and greater oDnortnnitr for women and girls to pay their way through tee season win ue tnose opened up by the I proposed Children's Home. A desirable location has been granted for this imnie . diately adjoining the Woman's Building, ) bat upon coudition the necessary funds be raiacu wiiuin ov uays. aub nine is Biiur and it is earnestly desired that this be made a work for little people as well as big. It is to be their home, their school and their play house: so let them have a. share in its erection. Were each schoolroom to have its money-bank and each child to deposit one-dime, the building fund would be corn iortably swelled. What to do with the children who were old enough to see, enjoy and be profited by the great school that this fair is to be for them as well as for us children grown tall wa at first quite a problem. But the Board of Lady Managers were equal to this as they have been for all else entrusted to them. The building as planned will cost abont $20,000, and from $10,000 to 515,000 more could undoubtedly be used in equipping and maintaining it. The idea is to embody everything within this horn e that will con tribute to the comfort and happiness of vonug people, and also furnish such aa ex hibit as will tend to disseminate the newest and most vital thoughts concerning the well being of children both in the home and the school. Their proper diet and clothing will be considered from a scientific and hyginic standpoint; their literature, games and amusements and all that will in any way conduce to the natural and happy development of the physical, moral and mental natures of these embryo men and women of the future. A Noted Educator at the Helm. Working heart and hand with the ladies in this movement is Colonel Parker, whom we all know so well and favorably in con nection with school work. I recently heard Colonel Parker address a body of women on this snbject, and' was impressed with his teachings. He made it emphatic that amnsement must go hand in hand with instruction; that a child would not receive instruction unless inter ested; the wav to get it interested was to amuse it; hence the establishment of the kindergarten and kitchen garden and ob ject lessons. So manv hours are to be de voted to instructions in this great kinder garten school where all the) latest tried and approved methods w ill be practiced under eyes of interested people who are to have the privilege of a gallery that will surround the schoolroom, where they can look down and on the school below without disturbing the little students. Children of suitable, ages will be enter tained by stories of the different nations peopling the earth, their geographical posi tion, language, uress, peculiar customs and important facts in their history. Then they wiil be taken to see the exhibits, native village's, etc., from these countries of which they have heard, which we all know will be the best object lesson that could possibly be given and which will impress the young ster in a never-to-be-forgotten way. For this work only regularly graduated kindergartners are to be employed. Appli cations by the score are already going in, and those thinking of enlisting in this -work cannot get their names too early on the list, since the number is limited. Providing for the Babies. However, the creche or nursery in this home for children will furnish employment for children who have been graduated only from the great school of human kindness. What to do with the babies who could not be left at. home, or who would keep home tied mothers away, was another problem not solved in a aav, but whioh has been finally and satisfactorily settled by ihe mother-women of the World's Fair. For the first time on record mothers need not be kept at home by their babies, but can for a small sum deposit their precious burdens in safe hands that will be in charge of the creche, which is to be provided abundantly with cradles, hammocks, cots everything, in fact, for the care of babies. The only re quirement is that mothers remain away not longer than three hours. What mother would? There will be a plavroom for all children of an age to enjoy toys and games, aod at tendants employed to play with them. The assembly room will ofler entertainments of a widely varyingcharacter, given at specific hours aud to suit the tastes and understand ing of the little visitors. .These will in clude charadesmusfcales, ;stereopticon Iec tures;efc. ""It is- .hope'd bjC.tha.lady mana gersthat young-gifls in everyState will as sume a share of the responsibility ot raising .funds to carry out these plans. This they can easilv do bv festivals, necktie or apron .parties or any of th several ways tried suc cessfully betore this. There" will be no needof previous appli cation to get children into the 'school or babies in the nursery, but those wishing employment in either department should apply as early as possible, not forgetting their credentials. Address Mrs. Helen M. Barker, Columbian headquarters, Chicago, Acting a Guides and Interpreters. Another avenue through which women may see the Exposition offers in the posi tion of guide and interpreter, those speaking foreign languages being especially in demand. Women are to be as freely em ployed as men, and if they are not to re ceive the same remuneration for their ser vices then no one .knows it as yet For such position I believe Mrs. Amy Stark weather, at Columbian headquarters, is the one to whom you might write for fur ther information. All letters sent in to that division are promptly and courteously re plied to. Manv other ways and means there are for deserving women to pav expenses through their stay at the Fair, more than I can write of in one letter. There must be nurses lor the hospitals, cooks for the model kitchens, women maids, watches through the woman's building, and, indeed, all buildings under the control of women, and, I should think, in some of the others as well. All these things are worth the attention of women who are in doubt about being able to afford the great Exposition. I hare seen enough of it already to know that no one can afford to miss it and am impressed that the old aphorism, "Where there's a will there's a way," applies to the way of getting to and tfirough the World's Fair. Mabt Temple Bataed. THE L0EGKETTE GIEL. She Contributes Her Share to Fnrnith Flirtations for Tonne Men. Once a Week. What shall be done with this quintes sence of graceful impertinence? She is usu ally not one bit near-sighted. Tne dainty tortoise-shell toy she so deftly and effectively wields is either an instrument of coquetry, defense or cruelty. Viewed as the former weapen, it is with out equal in the entire arsenal of flirtation's weapons. A skilled coquette can do more damage with it than with the fan. As a means of delense against the impertinence of other women it is invaluable. A cold stare, a contemptuous scrutiny through it, will put to rout an army of impudent wo men. But as an instrument of cruelty, an in quisitorial weapon, it does greatest execu tion. The lorgnette girl can display the most finished insolence with her fragile plaything. She is quite capable of calling the attention of tne public to the worn gown or mended gloves ot her victim. A favorite and systematic course of cruelty is to take her station at the door of a summer resort hotel at the hour when the omnibus is arriving from the btation with its load of weary, travel-stained passengers and closely scrutinize the dress of each woman as sue alights. The lorgnette girl can be fascinating, she can be clever, but she has possibilities of brutality which would make a strong man quail. Fishing In Slam. In Siam the natives utilize a curious wicker contrivance for fishing in narrow stream. The device in question is in the shape of an inverted vase, without a bottom. While one man devotes bis attention to driving the fish down the water-way, an other stands ready to clap the basket over their heads when they come thickest. Having thus penned in a number ot them, hethiusts his arm into the trap and pulls them out. ' iMOUNCING GUESTS. The Extreme Formality Adopted by an Eastern Nourelle fiiche. FAD FOR COSTLY LITTLE THIHGS. Effect of the Women's Club Movement Upon Domestic Relations. MARGARET E WELCH'S TIMELY GOSSIP rwramir ro thb sispatch.1 Some New York women will not adopt the custom, now almost universal, of having guests announced. All first-class caterers send ont "callers" along with the door openers and maids for the cloak room, but not all hostesses accept their services. It is English to have them, and often women with large visiting lists are very grateful for the proper name to fit the proper per son. At very large receptions a hostess send a number of courtesy cards often to people she scarcely knows and it is ot bene fit to both when the flunkey reminds madam that it is Mrs. Robinson who is entering her drawing room. Other hostesses pride them selves on their ability to pay their guests the compliment of remembering them with out any assistance and such decline the "callers." It has remained for a young matron whose parentage was very humble, but whose marriage with a wealthy manufac turer has given her money to be consider ably in the swim, to carry things to ex tremes. At her superb home, not a thousand miles from the Berkshire hills, servants are in evidence from the time one drives through the lodge gates. When she gives one of her grand receptions three footmen in gorgeous liveries waft the guest from the dressing room to her presence. The firsts at the landing half way down the stairs, calls out "Mrs. Smith comes;" the second, at the foot of the stairs takes up the refrain with, "Mrs. Smith approaches," and the third, at the door of the drawing room, pro claims with a low bow that "Mrs. Smith is here." A noticeable feature of the time is the tendency to reproduce the common small articles of the wardrobe in expensive form. Gold glove bnttoners, handkerchief and flower holders, and later the gold spike pin to attach the corsage bouquet, were consid ered a few years ago rather unnecessary luxuries to be occasionally indulged in. Silver and gold button hooks and shoe horns crept in, supplemented by common hair pins of the same materials. Sow, stocking supporter clasps, suspender buckles, buttons, any of the small belong ings that come in steel and nickle come as well in silver and gold. Gold safety pins, large and small, and dainty little frosted safety pins of gold to catch up the always too long dress sleeves of young infants, are considered "must naves tot all well-regulated modern babies. A young woman ordered half a paper of gold pins made exactly like the common pin of everybody's cushion and she used a number of them to pin a black tulle sur plice waist and wide sash in place in lieu of buttons or hooks. The little polished steel manienre scissors with enrved points are made with sterling silver and gold handles from 6 to 10 inches long. In silver 510 buys a pair; the gold ones much more expensive. w "Nowhere," savs a New York woman, "do I eat such chicken salad as at Mrs. 'a. In the snmmer at her lovely suburban home it is a permanent feature of her Sunday evening suppers and the fame of it has gone abroad among all her friends. It is com pounded after a recipe given to her bf a notable German housewife a dozen years ago'in Berlin. As the dressing is most Im portant and is a delicious mayonnaise for anything where such is used, I give that first: One cup ot wine vinegar, one full teaspoon mixed Colman's mustard, two tablespoonfuls sugar, one salt spoonful cay enne pepper, three teaspoonfnls salt, yolks A JVetrf Dressing Boom Table. of six raw eggs; whip, and heat thoroughly but do not boiL The knack in malting the dressing is to heat sufficiently yet stop shortt of the boiling point. When cold set in a Ean of ice water and add, a little at a time, alt a pint of salad oil, whipping constantly with egg-beater. Lastly add juice of half a lemon. This is sufficient for three chickens. To prepare the chicken after it is boiled and cut into dice pour over it half a cup of wine vinegar with one teaspoonful of Old Maderia and one teaspoonful salt. Add be fore serving six small heads of celery that is cold and crisp to each chicken. Pour over the dressing,-toss the salad lightly to- getner and send to tne tame. The illustration is modelled after the fashionable little Marie Antoinette tables for the dressing room. It is very pretty made of plain pine wood and covered with cretonne or some of the inexpensive chintz pattern satins. The material is glued to the wood; a double box-plaited ruffle may be Used instead of the fringe. The com partments may be interlined with per fumed wadding' and used for gloves, ties and handkerchiefs. A couple of sisters, whose brother came home permanently last month after a col lege'eourse absence, spent the six weeks be fore his return in transforming the rather J grim den he had left, a lad of 18, into an apartment a young belle might envy. "Ned loves dainty things as much as a girl," they said coaxingly to their mother, and, "if it does not cost too much," was her re ply. 'JLhe paper, a dull yellow, was stripped lrom the walls, and in its place a delicate cream paper with gold bow knots all over it, was put on by t&e girls themselves. A fresh matting was laid on the floor, and each contributed a rug from her own room, with the expense ot a white goat skin to stretch before the bed. This was an. iron oue painted white, with brass knobs, and they were able to sell the old black walnut one for its price. Dotted muslin curtains with a fluted ruffle, tfed back with pink ribbons, shaded the windows, and a wide flounce of the same was tucked to the white bed spread in imitation of a valance. A" straight piece of the muslin ruffle. trimmed went over the two pillows, giving the bed a wonderfully dainty effect. Then the young vandals attacked the ma hogany and hair-cloth furniture, which might be "rich and antique," they said, but was not "pretty." They painted the ma-- nogany in white enamel picked out in gilt, and replaced the haircloth on sola and chairs with some charming cretonne that had bunches of pink roses tied with bow knots on a creamy background. A tall pine chest of drawers made by the Tillage carpenter became under their deft hands a white and gold chifionier, and a dressing table of white and gold was draped with the nose gay cretonne. To finish, some of his boy belongings were prettily arranged in a white and gold cabinet with rose silk curtains that had begun life plain pine shelves. When the young collegian sauntered up to bed the night of his arrival, his yell of amazed delight fully repaid the listening women at the foot of the stairs for all their efforts. The Indian puggarees are duplicated in New York for fishing hats for both women and men. They make ideal water headgear, being light and cool, yet excellent pro tectors. The imported ones are quite ex pensive, costing $2 and $2 60, and only ob tainable at tms high-class shops. The ac companying cnt is of a home-made one fashioned irom one of the 10-cent mat baskets from a Japanese store. The stand ard for the head was made with iour three inch lengths ot pasteboard with a thin sheet of leather glued over as covering. These are sewed with one or two stitches of stout white thread to the bowl of the basket at regular intervals, and a circle of paste board fitted to the head is covered with oiled silk and fastened to these. "I chanced to spend the night recently," says a woman, "at a small town in Western Hew York where was being held ft the The Top of the Hat. time a Woman's Temperance Convention. Two delegates occupied the room adjoining mine, and in the silent watches of the night indulged in various confidences. .As a door and loose transom constituted a part of the partition it was impossible not to hear their conversation. One complained in strong terms of her husband who, she said, did not help much with the children, of whom there were six nnder 10 years, of age, and 'the dear knows,' she said, 'I have no time to look after them with my appointments on these conventions.' "The other's tale of woe was equally dis tressingj her husband was so neglectful of his duties; sometimes she came home to dinner and the cook announced nothing for the meal, 'that lazy man having forgotten to do the marketiug, expects me to look after everything, with all my district visit ing and temperance work. Why, sn. finished with serious emphasis, 'I might just as well not have a husband.' It struck me she might much bettter not have had, and also that those two women might find some temperance work right in their own homes betore they knew it" It is this objection that is being brought against woman's clubs and other organiza tions of the sex which hare multiplied on every side. Certainly no woman should let her devotion to certain "causes" or "cult ures" deprive her family of the attention and care it deserves and sacredly claims from her, but on the other hand it is pos sible to be a better wife and mother, sister or friend from a judicious and moderate in termingling of "cause" and home work. Like most other things in lite there is a golden mean in the woman's club movement which is not slow in outlining itself to the sensible woman. Maisgarkt H. Welch. B00MIHG THE WOBLD'S FAIB. Dr. de Guerrilla Bad an Andlenoe With the Baler of the Celestials. Chicago Times. Dr.. de Guerville, who is traveling In the east with an illustrated lecture-on the, AY orld's Fair, is now in China. His trip in Japan, during which he gave his lecture at all principal cities and towns, was very successful. The Emperor accorded him a special audience, and his illustrated des cription of the World's Fair was given on one occasion as a special entertainment for the Emperor, Empress and the high digni taries ot the Japanese court. Dr. de Guerville has recently commenced his tour of China, but at last advioes was suffering from the effects of malarial fever, from which, however, there was a prospect of his entire recovery. Betore he fell ill Dr. de Guerville had an interview with the viceroy of China, Li Honshong, admiral of the navy and com mander of the army, in which "the whole subject matter of Chinese exhibits at the fair was pretty fully discussed. Li-Hons-hong in the course of the audience stated that he could not feel that the attitude of the United States toward the Chinese Gov ernment had been friendly, but he listened with great attention to the propositions of Dr. de Guerville, who, as the honorary com missioner for the exposition, set forth the advantages that would undoubtedly accrue to China if imnortant and interesting ex hibits were made from that country. The 'interview lasted for two hours, dur ing which Commissioner de Guerville re hearsed at considerable length and in detail the features, extent and administration of the Columbian Exposition. CHANGED SH1EI8 WITH EACH 0THEB. A Cnrions Example of th Enforcement of Discipline In the British Army. Youth's Companion. The true soldier obeys orders faithfully, no matter at what sacrifice. A company of a British regiment was once sent on some duty, in time of peace, to a remote village in Ireland, and left there for several weeks, quite separated lrom its usual base of supplies. .During this period some general orders, applicable more especially to men in bar racks, were sent to the commander of the company. Oue clause of those orders were as follows: "AU'men in the command shall change their shirts at least twice a week." The captain gave orders to the orderly sergeant to see the command put into exe cution. "But, captain," said the sergeant, "there's only a shirt apiece to every" man in the company. How can they "bilencel" exclaimedthe captain; "orders are orders, sergeant. Let the men change shirts with one another." So the sergeant saw to it that, as long as the company remained in the place, .on every Sunday and Wednesday morning the soldiers swapped shirts one with another. Some Ancient Mirrors. The mirrors of the ancient Greeks and Romans were, thin discs ot bronze highly polished, aud usually fasMoned with handles, though sometimes they were set upright on stands. Later on, silver was used, and the first mirror of solid silver is said to have been made by Praxiteles about the time of Julius Ctesar. HEABX-STOBJUS. Chambers1 Journal. The shadow of night is falling, But the shore is sunlit yet: Oh tranquil tide, what a flood you bear Or bitter and wild regret! When the storm your waves uplifted, When the wind was wet witu spray. My heart was eased of Its long dull aohe. And I looked from my grlel away. 'lis when all Is calm and peaceful. When at rest the whole world lies. That the heart la stirred with a storm un seen, And utters its lonely cries. P. TT. Boot. Xv gSjs, s&ztr A SHOW IN IITCHENS; Those of Ireland and New England Prepared for the World's Fair. WHERE COOKING WAS SIMPLEST. Dow the Women of the Emerald Isle Found lime to Embroider. THE CABINS IN WniCH GENIUS GREW iwnrrraiT roa the disfatcr.1 Aa an exhibition ot the work of women, kitchens are to have full play at the great Fair in Chicago next year. In addition to the German kitchen, heretofore spoken of, the interior or an Irish cottage is to be fnlly shown in all its simplicity, with possibly the pig under the bed, of which so much has been told by tourists. All the cooking that some Irish women have to do, it Is said, is to boil a pot of "pittaties"' and this they do up to the Queen's taste, as, everybody knows. This limitation of kitchen work gives the house wives time to embroider, make laoe and to engage in other industries for profit. A full exhibition of these, including the thatched cottages in which they are manu factured, has been designed by those inter ested in the promotion of Irish industries, and the betterment of the poor people of Ireland who have a dire struggle for their living. The Irish cottage is picturesque, but not any prettier than the log cabins, or cliff shanties in this country. Dear to the Irish Heart. It answers the purpose of shelter, usually inefficiently, and forms a home that, with all its drawbacks, is dear to the dwellers therein more from sentiment and association than tor comfort or good living. Their homes in the bogs are as dear to the Irish peasants as the castles of their richer brethren,and when driven out of them for non-payment of rent their lamentations ascend not only to high heaven, but are published to the ends of the earth to give testimony to the villainy of landlords and the mercenary grasp of those who after all only ask for their own. The exposition of one of these Irish cottages, as proposed, and true to life, will be one of the great features of the Fair. It will show to the thousands of well-to-do Irish in Chicago a real picture of the homes of their ancestors, just .as will a reproduction of the cabins in which thev were ''raised" dis play from what humble antecedents so many of the Presidents ol the Bepublic rose into power and fame. An amusing story is told of an Irishman and Irishwoman who came to this country in the steerage on their wedding trip vears and years ago. When they landed in Pitts burg they had as tells the story not a "fippeny bit between them." But they had strong hands, stout hearts and good looks. They worked, economized and saved, until money flowed in upon them without stint, and "a castle in stone" be came their home. Society of the four hun dred order made them welcome at every door. At this stage apedigree became desira- Die, ana tne madam was wont to discourse at favorable moments upon the castle of her ancestors in Ireland. Her husband, having more pride in the financial success he had achieved than in the imaginary glories of dead and gone ancestors, who lived and died among the bogs, spoiled one of her finest stories and put a damper upon all her pretensions bv savincr that the castle of her ancestors was a cabin where "you could put your hand down the cbimbly and take the pittaties out of the pot." The Food of the Irish Heroes. Just such a cabin, we are told, is to be a part of the Irish exhibit at the great Fair. and the simplicity of living and cookery will demonstrate upon what food and under what circumstances are great men grown and heroes bred. The famous log cabin of Thomas Lincoln, the father of Abraham Lincoln, the martyr President, if shown at Chicago, will be one of the most notable ex hibits of the great exposition. It will show one room and a loft, which was reached, not bv stairs, bnt by pegs in the wall of logs. TJp these pegs went "Old Abe" to bed hen a boy, and beneath the rifted roof of that "loft" he dreamed bright dreams and thought great thoughts. Hog and hominy were doubtless his diet, as it was that of most of the early settlers of the Western country. Simplicity of living and economy of labor as to cooking will thus be shown as nnt . n j...... tSt.1.. .....1. !....!. . .t. J!. UUb 411l.UUJJrtllUiB Willi UlillliS iUIU illtj U1S- tribution of honors in this country. Boyal blood is made an essential to the thrones of Europe, but in America the log cabin Presi dents give token that energy, enterprise, intellect, genius and that mysterious con dition called "good luck" have power to set the humblest-born into the highest seats of power and greatness. Harrison, Arthur, Lincoln and Garfield were born in bumble log cabins and grew up on homel v fare. Their early homes as reproduced at the Fair in all their barrenness of beauty, their lack of modern conveniences, their dearth of books and papers, their pathetic picture of the stress and straits of poverty would show the scope ot American ambition and the possibilities of the future for even the most lowly country boy. Bomrs of thn Future's Great Men. In shooting along the railways in remote and sequestered regions are seen little log cabins, or cheap little weather-beaten houses. Out of these may come presidents and great statesmen in the future, as in the past. Grant's early home, as pictured, is a common little house with two' rooms and a lean-to kitchen. Lincoln's home was bed room, dining room, kitchen all in one. Simplicity in living, absence of society, lack ot style, give room lor thought, afford time for s'tudy, and give good.strong founda tion to inborn genius and native talent. If the country boys who have acquired name and tame and wealth had been worried as to their clothes,had been full ot the desire to make a display upon small means, had been fired with a passion for spending hard earned dollars upon baseball and other amusements, rather than upon education and books, it is likely they would have been left to dim obscurity a prey as millions are to-day. Country life, country fare and the prompt ings of narrow means seem to enter into the J mating ol many ot the best of men. Town life with its many distracting temptations, town schools with their monotonous uni formity, town amusements in their endless variety keep the mind full of everything save earnest thought, cool reason and calm consideration. Out ot the plainest, the scantiest, the barest homes have come the noblest and the greatest ot men. Out of the kitchens most poorly furnished, and lack ing all. save the sheerest necessities, have stepped great women and noble men. In the early New England days the kitchen and living room were all in one. Among the pots and pans were discussed the great matters ot government and religion. Discussing Revolution and Cabbage. In Bevolutionarv days in Mercv Warren's kitchen were talked over the plans of the colonists, and their schemes against the British. Mrs. Warren, while cooking cab-' bage, was full ot thought for the country, and counseled independence before even the Congress met, that made the famous declaration. In a New England kitchen was written much of that famous book Uncle Tom's Cabin while the bread was baking add the boiled dinners were look ing. At the Chicago Fair, a New England kitchen is to be displaved in its original simplicity. What would make this more interesting wonld be a historic connection between it, and some famous representative of Yankee ways and manners. A fao simile of the Hawthorne kitchen, for in stance, would bring to mind the great writer as a family man. When they had no "girl" the author ot the "Scarlet Letter" used to eet breakfast and lJ01f UVUl. BUVUI IUC UUUSC X"Cll kitohen reproduced as they lived and U-l.. IIQ....1.1-! 1 a il. I mi..!- worsea in it, wouia to Americans, approaca that of Shakespeare in interest. Then the Emerson kitchen would be very attractive. Ralph Waldo, the profound philosopher, can hardly be Imagined in a kitchen, and yet there is little reason to doubt that he, many a time', ground the coffee and brought down his great mind to breakfast and din ner subjects. The kitchen at "Apple Slump" would be full of interest to every reader of Louisa Alcott In that kitchen while at work she thought ont her stories, and brought her brains to bear npon the problems of housework and the characters in her books. Many who love "Little Women" would reverence even the tea kettle, and the skillet, and the saucepan in which Louisa got up the, family dinner in a real New England kitchen. Then who would not be pleased to see the Beecher kitchen, as it existed on the narrow means of a minister? The Typical New England Kltchxn. A New England kitchen at the Fair will, however, be most likely "away off" from historic association. It will present, we are tola, tne .run tan ljitcnen. it will show the old dresser, rich in Dutch blue dishes, the old clock with all its strikes and cones on. The festoons of dried apples, held to be a native feature, the rafters strung with hams and sides of pork, the spinning wheel, which clad all men of old in homespun, the crane which has been immortalized In song and story. The home-made rag carpet, the home-made bedspreads, the ancestral chairs; the time-worn relics of that elder day will all be shown. How the foremothera worked, and toiled,and slaved, will be made as plain as how the fathers wore out theirlivesbefore the day of steam plows, patent reapers and machine mowers. The New England kitchen to be exhibited is, of course, one of the Miles Standish pat tern, one of the Governor Bradford like ness one of the "Mayflower" limitations. There will be the ancient clocks from the old home beyond the sea, the corner cup board rich in pewter and blue delft, the claw-footed furniture in brass and oak, the English teakettle and the Dutch oven so common and yet so useful. But it will not be the kitchen in which Longtellows grew up and Emersons found footing. Bessie Bbamblz. A TRICK OF THE CROOKS. They Have Devised a Mew Scheme to Im pose Upon the Unwary Public. New York Commercial Advertiser. The crooks in New York have a new trick by which they hope to gain possession ofar ticles of value belonging to the unsuspect ing public It requires two men to work the scheme, but if the victims are selected with discrimination it should prove success ful. The trick is a simple one. Crook No. 1 boards an elevated train and sits down on one of the cross seats on the side nearest to the station. If the window is shnt he opens it and then begins to scan a newspaper. His pal joins him afterward and takes a seat fac ing him. No sign of recognition passes between them, and they continue to ride thus until the seat beside' one of them is occupied by a passenger carrying a satchel or a bundle which has the appearance of carrying arti cles of value. Then when the next station is reached one of the men rises leisurely and walks out of the car. He waits until the car is in mo tion and then rushes breathlessly to his pal and excitedly asks tor the valise which he left behind. His pal picks np the valise and passes it out of the window to his confederate before the rightful owner has a chance to protest Explanations follow, bnt, the crook pre tending to learn his mistake, humbly apol ogizes and leaves the train at the next sta tion. 10 SEE TOTJHBELF TALE. The Details of the Phonoscope, the Latest Fhotographlo Novelty. Philadelphia Kecord. An announcement was made some weeks ago that a Frenchman had succeeded in tak ing instantaneous photographs of the lips of a speaker and in recombining them in a kind of zoetrope, so as to produce the orig inal movement and enable a deaf mate to understand what was said. It is now stated th'at the inventor has im proved on the process and brought out a new apparatus for combining the images, the device being termed the phonoscope. The changes of the lips it speaking are so rapid that 15 photographs a second are re quired to give a good result The whole head and bust of the speaker are repro duced in the photograph so as to get the benefit of the expression. In the phonoscopes the positives are ar ranged around the periphery of a disk which is rapidly turned by a handle. A second disk having a single window in it opposite the plates is also rotated by the same handle, but at a much higher rate of speed than the Other. A beam ot sunlight illuminates the plates from behind and the observer looking into the apparatus sees them pass his eye one after the other in such rapid succession as to produce the ef fect ot a single image endowed wltn anima tion. To produce this result it is necessary that at least 10 or 12 must pass the retina in a second. SAVED BY HI8 C00LHESB. The Iron Dnke's Strange Interview Tfilh a Murderous Maniac San Francisco Chronicle. Some years ago the Duke of Wellington was sitting at his library table, when the r door opened, and without any announce ment in stalked a figure of singularly ill omen. "Who are you?" asked the Duke in his short and dry manner, looking up without the slightest change of countenance upon the intruder. "I am Apollyon. I am sent here to kill you." "Kill me? Very odd." "I am Apollyon, and I must put yon to death." " 'Bliged to do it to-day?" "1 am not told the day or the hour; bnt 1 must do mv mission." "Very inconvenient; very busy; great many letters to write. Call again, or write me word. I'll be ready for you." The Duke then went on with his corre spondence. The maniac, appalled, prob ably, by the stern, immovable .old gentle man, backed out ot the room, and in naif an hour was in an asylum. SOMETHING ABOUT HATCHES. Of All the Different European Kinds the Swedish Are the Best Philadelphia Times. The oldest and it is said the largest match manufactory in the world is in Sweden. Matches were made there long before the old, roughly trimmed splinter of wood, tipped with sulphur, was discarded with the tinder boxes, for which they were used. In 25 years the export trade of Sweden in modern matches increased 1,000,000,000 boxes a year. Some of the machines for making matches which we use in these days make 200 revo lutions a minute each and turn out about 2,5()0,000 of matches daily. Bather more than five matches per head tor the whole population are used daily in. the United States. Strange to say the quality of these Swedish matches, in many cases, is so bad that the State intends to resume the manu facture and computes that the profits will produce a revenue of 51,000,000. Altogether there are in Europe about 150,000 factories, and thev vearly produce matches valued at $50,000,000. A Strange Coincidence. During the Fourth of July celebration at the Washington monument, in Washington, just as the speaking began a beautiful rain bow formed apparently just above the apex of the monument It soon disappeared and i ct!Jj;carcu JU.b aa fcllC VCICUJUIUCS cuueu. The phenomena was the more marked as the, .............. J !--l ... .U. ..-..-I . 1 1 weatner was aengnuuiiy ciear. FRUIT 11 THE GOWN. Foulards Strewn With Cherries One of the Novelties of Snmmer. BEAUTY AT THE GARDEN PARTIES. Elbow Sleeves Worn With Long Gloves One of the Fages Just Now. THK 'TBEFOIIi THE POPULAR BROOCH teonaisroirnawcx or thi dispatch. New Yobk, July 16. Strange as It may seem, there are some, even in that select circle known as the Fonr Hundred, who re main in town off and on through the sum mer, paying alternate visits to different re sorts, without remaining long at any one place. While in town they manage to live very comfortably by dining at Delmonico's, driving in the parks or out to Tuxedo, and meeting at the Casino or Madison Square Garden for some light entertainment of the flavor of the Parisian Cafe d'Ambassadeurs order. Undoubtedly these stay-at-homes get more variety out of the summer festivi ties than if they were domiciled perma nently. Most of them through relations and friends have standing invitations to Newport, Narragansett Pier or the Long Island fashionable resorts, which they choose in turn according to the induce ments of each. A favorite pastime for a day is for a party to take the steamboat Laura M. Starin at Thirty-second street for Oyster Bay, where Mrs. S. V. R. Cruger entertains often at her country residence, 'Idlesse, one of the most fascinating spots on the island. Luncheon is served on the verandas with mnsic, and here may be seen the very latest inventions of Paris modistes. A Gown That Made n Sensation. Mrs. Cruger herself is noted for her beau fnl gowns, that of canary colored uncut vel vet, trimmed with gold and white silk, ac companied by a sunshade of canary and WUi Cherrie Bed and Jtpe. white chiffon, which she wore a-coaching this season, having been the talk of the day. She received her guests on a recent bright day in a striking costnme of Pompa dour silk with a lavender ground, trimmed with absinthe green ribbons and white lace. Her garden hat was a big Watteau, with brim of green faced with black chip, the crown filled in with pink roses and their foliage, apparently tied with a bow of black satin ribbon. Butterfly bows oi the same caught up the sides of brim in a very coquettish fashion. A very charming piazza gown was worn by Miss Kitty Cameron, being nothing less dainty and costly than black silk mull with a wide daisy flouncing, the daisies looking as natural as those she wore in her corsage. It was made exquisitely with a fall of blaok lace flouncing. A wide girdle of black silk was relieved by hip sides of frosted gold. Falling from the back of the yoke was a Watteau bow of blacK Insertion ribbon. Her hat was a large Leghorn, with soft moving brim, trimmed with a great pan ache of black and green ostrich feathers, three of the feathers falling forward, two toward the back and three along the left of the crown, the right side being left bare. Some of the Striking Costumes. There was a gown of blaek foulard, figured with an iris pattern in pink and deep violet: there was a straw-colored Bedford combined with pale blue velvet and rich old lace, and an ecm silk with a satin stripe worn with a Louis XIV. coat of hunting green velvet, trimmed with a deep border of ecru guipure. Those just returned from Europe wore cream foulards figured with fruit, which by the way will be the material of the hand somest midsummer toilettes. The most striking of these, indeed the dress of the occasion, was a satin finished foulard, with a cream ground, shot with pinkish pretty color and strewn with ripe red cherries and their green leaves. It was made up with a generous showing of green velvet and cream lace, the lace being lined with surab, shading lrom red to pretty color. A puff of green velvet between the frills of lace formed the loot trimming. A green velvet corselet and elbow sleeves of lace, knetted with green velvet were features of the waist A big drooping Leghorn in cream was one mass of lace and red cherries. Short Sleeves Art the Kage. Whether thl scene is a Newport rose party, or a Hudson river garden dance, or a Lenox tea, there is a big display ot bare arms, that is to say arms which are covered to the elbow with the thinnest pretense of silk gloves. It helps give the flavor of old pictures to modern scenes and goes very ac ceptably, in spite of the prudes, with low V necks crossed with Marie Antoinette fichus aud big Watteau hats laden with roses, violets and orchids. It does very well for the critics to dilate upon the pit falls of copying characters out ol books and paintings, but who shall say that the same tendency does not add to the brilliant effects in dress? Short sleeves are to be worn even in day, gowns at all the watering places. This is joy supreme for the girl with an arm like Hebe or Psyche, but pain un mentionable for the swarthy, bony class. A pretty arm and a pretty neck with a low, sweet voice that sounds in one's ears as it its owner had drunk in the nectar of the sunshine, and what man cares if the nose is slightly pug or the leatures a bit irregular? Did I say elbow sleeves? Yes, and what's more these short sleeves are for the most part simply knotted on the shoulders and above the elbow like the corners of a hand kerchief, with a bow of ribbon, so that the full, rounded line from wrist to shoulder is only oroten by a loop and end. And if the material be some silken gauze and the silken gauze be black, lrom fair in contrast, how irresistible is that gleam of lair, white SE1U. The Gloves Are an Item. The new sleeves are not lifted, aa of late, at the shoulders but are made with such fullnen ai to droop in many folds toward the elbow, often terminating in a deep frill. Again the fullness is gathered in to the deep cuff over which it falls gracetullv or it is carried away to wrist, where it Is held with a band. The long-wristed, silken gloves are an expensive luxury, as are the evening cloves of white kid, reaching to the shoulders and paneled with white lace. White gauntlets with colored stitching in trreeK paiiernsmaKe dainty outing gloves. Girls who imitate the picturesque garden gowns of Maud Howe Hall and Carrica I Fayre wear some dainty enoughforabride maid, of white surah or China, cut short waisted and trimmed with Valenciennes lace, the sleeve draperies of diapbanoni fabric caught on the shoulders with jeweled ornaments. Hats to correspond are mads of; drawn silk and trimmed with rosettes of Valenciennes, or when a bonnet is desirable, as an out-of-door theatrical performance.tha same is the cutest imaginable, composed of rose petals and adorned with rose buds and white lilacs, tied with white satin atringi fastened with a tiny diamond arrow. Amid the folds of lace at the neck gleams a dia mond trefoil, most likely, set in a circle of brilliants, that being by all odds the most desirable brooch of the season. Worn at a Wedding Bilk If gowns are only artistio they mar b worn at country house weddings, balls or garden parties with little discrimination. The Proper Thing Just JTour. big hats and chifion parasols accompanying the one, bouquets, fans and jewels' the other. A girl who joined in the dance in the lawn, a unique feature after the pretty wedding ot Mis Pauline Jerome to Doug lass Worth Olcott, at Gluckheim, Will iamstown, Mass., (the residence of the bride's father) wore a cream delaine, fig ured with honeysuckle in pink and green, with big, shoulder rosettes of green velvet ending in long streamers. Not an expen sive gown at an, out answering tne lasmon able requirements of the dav by its quaint coloring and simple cut This girl is one of the pretty debutantes of the season, be longing to the Van Rensselaer set of New York, but with an income far out of pro portion to her position. Economy is with her a necessity, but she chooses so wisely that to see her one would think she had un bounded means. When this dress must do duty at a garden partv she wears it' with becoming hat ot crinoline straw with bows of pink and green, and carries a cream par asol with a bow ot the same on the handle. Even a simple white muslin is in keeping with the occasion if worn with a wide baby sash and a soft brimmed hat Thanks to Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt and a few other social leaders, who for several seasons have essayed to set the ex ample of less extravagance in dress, fashion and economy may be, thus made to coincide, when cheery hearted' women have the good sense to choose what they can afford rather than to try to copy the costly gowns of their acquaintances. Dot DojtmcK. Stealing; In Persia. In Persia the first time a man is caught la the act of stealing he is "bastinadoed" (beaten on the soles of the feat withan lroa rod) and made vr s.'gn. a paperssflaring that that will be his last offense. If he forgets this when the soles of his feet quit burning, and tries it again, the seoond offense calls for the amputation of his right hand. If he is still obdurate, and goes at it left handed, the third, and, of course, last resort, is decapitation. Manufacture of Sheeting. Bamboo-sheeting is a new Chinese manu facture which is extending in the Province of Wenchow. The cane is split up so as to form a sheet, which, after being softened in boiling water, is pressed out flat The sheets are used for veneering, making trays, fans, screens and carved fretwork. The Truthflil Test It requires no learned experts .or scientific experiments to establish the fact that DR. PRICE'S DELICIOUS FLAVORING EX TRACTS die not only the strong est, but positively the sweet est and most delicate fruit flavors. If housewives will flavor a cake, pudding, cus tard or cream with Dr. Price'i Extract of Vanilla, Lemon ot Orange, and a smaller quan tity gives a more natural and grateful taste than can be im parted by any other Extracts, is it not an incontestable? proof of their greater excel lence? In every case whero Dr. Price's Flavors are used they give perfect satisfaction. THOSE UNSIGHTLY . FIRE PLACES Can be beautified for al most nothing. We sell very handsome Hie pa pers by the yard, to be ased in covering hearths daring the snmmer months. The paperis dar able and beantifnl. Cost lOe to 50c a yard. WM.TKINKI.E fc CO 541 Wood St., Cor. Sixth At. Fine Wall Papers and MealeUassi fill m Iw? &, J 1 ' - i ' . ' J jt-