Essm vssiam r iiiwsjvziis&r,f'iMnmjzfiwri.A $vy AzmwisCiWiwis w jt vvko. .vss vw sc mk 'wmmtmmmmm fmmiMy:mjM pj iwrr iiys f j&Sr IN THE SHOPS OF PARIS. Book French Is a Bad Thing to Take Along on a Shopping Tour Patience of the Great Artists "Who Cater to Ameri can Trade Surprising Trices. C0P.BI.SF05DI2.CE Or THE DISPATCH. PjLBISs, Sept. 14. There really seems nothing more to happen now, everything hat been seen and all is over, for we have reached Paris, otherwise Paradise. My traveling companion and I have each agreed that if we can be spared to get the wear out of our new French gowns then we, are willing to die and be buried n them. "We "fought, bled and died" for this finery fought with onr modiste, who could not understand either good English or bad French, burst a blood vessel in frantio gesticulations, and finally died.ln despair of ever getting what we wanted. Just here a word of warning against bringing your gilt-edged book-Frenoh into Paris expecting to have it understood. Ton may exactly as well come with Choo taw on your tongue. It will not so much as buy you a dinner when yon ars hungry. "We know whereof we speak. However, we can do without dinner in Paris better than without pretty clothes. The change from the dowdlness of En glish styles to the tastefulness of Parisian styles is greater than you can imagine. There is a daintiness, a womanliness about the toilets of most women that is inde scribably attractive. Many colors, and very high colors, they wear, from oldest to youngest, and yet the young women do not look loud, nor the elder women as if they were trying not to be left in the race by those younger than themselves. Esch of us for a long while bacfc has avoided high colors at home as we would a petilence, actually find ourselves dipping into red, tihite and blue toggery along with the giddiest. But, as I intimated before, to get it was to earn it. Buying Clothes by Pantomime. "We met some young ladies from Philadel phia and Rochester, X. 1"., who had gotten some charming clothes, and at prices we could afford to pay, which was contrary to all expectations, since this is Paris, and we had always heard fabulous prices put upon gowns coming from here. "We secured the address of this surprise in the way of a reasonable French dressmaker,, and with expectations at fever beat presented ourselves for measurement. But alast Onr friends had forgotten to tell us madame had no English-speaking sales lady in her establishment and our school French would not work when applied to the fearful and wonderful terms now em ployed to designate "the latest" In cut, finish and material in the world of clothes. Eo after much pantomiming and unintelli gible jabbering in two languages we man aged to beat a retreat amid many "so sorrys" on both sides. So now instead of telling you what Madame Bray did for us I must tell what she did lor those who could make her under stand what they wanted, and I am sure the prices will be a revelation to you. Jfirst, a gown of Eussiau velvet, which is an imitation only and comes in all colors. It is one ol the newest materials out and quite the prettiest we have had lor some seasons. The material is all wool, plain surface with a little cord in white or a contrasting color thrown up in stripes every fifth of an inch. The velvety appearance is purely a trick of the loom, and a most successful one. One such gown was gray with a blue cord; this made with a plain skirt demi-train. The waist was very short basque in front and little coat-tailed back. High and full sleeves of blue faille silk; high neck-band of the same. A pretty arrangement of the blue on the front of the bodice which showed no buttons. Large bows of the blue faille sat upon the shoulders and another rested upon the left hip. These were pretty touches of art that cave aFrenchquaintness to the costume. Of course the entire gar ment was lined with silk, blue silk In this case, and just under the hem were two nar row pinked out ruffles of the silk, and all for 120 francs, or 24 American dollars. Think of it! A aiarvel of Beauty for 870. Another young woman has a gown from the same cloth, only in one of those soft wood-brown colors with a pink cord. This was made with silk lining of pink, a full niching of the material around the bottom, -nhich had quite the effect of fur. The waist was made round, with full sleeves of the dress material that had elbow cuffs striped closely with baby velvet the color or the cord shown on the fabric, A vest was simulated by means of tms narrow velvet striped in chevrons like a soldier's coat sleeve. The effect was very pretty and the color combi nation exquisite. This gown, bv reason of the velvet trimming, came 52 higher than the other. Then there was a lonp dress of uncut silk velvet in one of those indescribable shades that may b green or blue or gray, but you can t be certain which. This was princess cut and without other trimming than a chiffon, shirred and ruffled small vest This chiffon trough had in its meshes all the glory of a summer sunset showing in changeable colors, green, pink, gold and violet something right new in this always pretty and generally becoming material. This robe that could not be gotten at home for J100 had cost but fTO here, and its per fection of fit was worth one-half the price of the gown. Everything in French cutting runs into long lines. Paris should be a Mecca for dumpy women. The majority of French women a'ter middle age are too Btout, too short-waited and too full in the back be tween the shoulders, yet so perfect is their system of cutting that they are still shapely. I find it is a great ambition among the swell establishments here to create a style that will distinguish their productions from any other. To-day we were down to Monsieur Doucet s, one of "Worth's rivals and one -very well known among Americans, it would seem, judging from the number there, being fitted and bargaining for almost priceless things. Doncet Pats Oat Plain Skirts. Doncet effects perfectly plain skirts, not one for anv occasion that was the least trimmed did he have shown to us. These skirts are bell-shaped, out on the bias, of course, but as unlike the bell-shapes, of last season as if known by another name. Take down one ol your oldest Todey's Lady Books or some other journal dating baok to the days of "tilter" hoop-skirts and notice the width of the skirts in those days and you can get a good idea of the skirt M. Doncet is trying to in duce hU customers to buy, and successfully, tnn. Sereral tnat I know of are coine to New York and that means this style will make its way to Pittsburg, but if there Is an alternative oflered by Mr. Worth or Felix, then I prophesy ft will not find favor. The waists to this style of skirt are varied, no two exactly alike. Creative genius seemed to be exhaustless here. Frequently their would be several colors in troduced upon one waist, even where the dress material was black, and these colors were always those it would never occur to an American to combine. Everything in black whether coat or gown had colors with it. Sleeves commonly are of a different material from the waist This is to be another fur season, so I have been told everywhere, and yet M. Doucet was not making a point of it, rather more of jet'and heavy embroidery. M. Doucet is him self always to the fore in his establishment and pays particular attention to his Ameri can customers. He is a dapper little Frenchman, wearing at this season a light gray suit, and always a buttonhole bouquet He keeps his place lull of English-speaking French girls of fine figures and pretty faces. Displayed on Living Models. The business of these girls is to don the charming things exhibited and to parade up and down the large salle for onr inspec tion. In this way you see a gown on all sides, especially the "hang" of the skirt and the efiect of the trimming. This exhi bition goes on every hour in the day at all the competing establishments and in the ut most good humor. The pretty girls enjoy the admiration they receive and seem never to grow tired of exhibiting themselves; and the heads of the plac never allow you to feel that they expecc you to buy. Of course, everything is done in a very polite way to induce you to buy, but you are not urged. "Does not madam think she would like this?" or, "Well, I see this does not exact ly please madam. "We will show her an other," etc. So it goes on until you might reasonably expect to be thrown out of the v.indow, but instead, when you are trying to make a graceful exit quite ashamed since you knew you had no intention of buying from the first, you hear it good humoredly said that, It madam will kindly come in to-morrow J think we can show her some thing that will please her." Madam can go to-morrow and the next day and still not purchase and be treated in the same courteous and painstaking way. I am sure I know of no place at home where such patience would be shown to you. "We have cards from Morin Blossier invit ing us to see a wardrobe gotten up for Sarah Bernhardt's next European tour and also from Bedfern to see soiue gowns made for Mrs. Brown-Potter's appearance in America the coming season, to be worn in "La Dame aux Camelias." I suppose the hotel lists are consulted for American visit ors to Paris and then these cards sent out "We are expecting a great treat in seeing these pattern gowns. Mary Temple Batabo. A CHILD'S LUNCH BASKET. Perplexing Problem That Came to the Mothers "With the Opening of the Schools Novel Things In Fancy "Work New Ideas in Dress and Decoration rwKrms tor Tnx dispatch. i The reassembling of schools throughout the country brings up anew the perplexing question of the children's luncheon. The writer once read a treatise on the "child's lunch basket," with recipes for preparing food for it The food was most elaborate confections, which would take time,strength and money to evolve, quite beyond the average house mother, and the article was laid down with a sigh that its promising' title offered so little practical help. Lunch boskets are not so common these days as they used to be, and it is the luncheon served fat home which now creates the dilemma. As a rule children reach the house after the morning's session at school in a slate of starvation; anytbing that Is ready is greedily eaten, it should be, therefore, an easy matter to serve whole some food, since the sauce of a good appetite is so sure to be present although a small daughter of 8 did say the other day: "I wish wholesome things were as good as good things." It is the care given to many simple dishes which makes them good as well as wholesome. Boiled rice, for example, is either very good and much liked by chil dren or it is an uneatable, sticky, flavorless mass that nobody welcomes. A tea cup full of rice, carefully looked over and put on in cold water and allowed to boil till every kernel is separate but tender, is an excellent luncheon dish for children, served hot with consomme. Salt the rice cs the water comes to the boiL The con somme is easily prepared with beef extract and hot water, and adds a reliable flavor. What is left of the rice can be put away while warm in small cups and served the next day on a small platter with stewed prunes poured around the little pyramids, or a teaspoonful of jam on each cone and eaten with rich milk. Tomato toast, which is tomatoes stewed down and poured over small squares of toast, is liked bv most children. Spaghetti or mao caronl boiled 20 minutes in salted water and eaten with gravy, some warmed over clear soup, or the beet extract again, is another V- yt dish that never goes begging. Another way is to boil xnaocaroni till tender in water, pour that off and add milk, which heat and serve. Fried bread is a palatable varia tion of plain bread and butter. Dip slices of slightly stale bread in salted milk, in which the yolk of an egg has been beaten, and fry in a hot skillet with as little lard and butter mixed as possible. Poaohed eggs on toast,reallyniea creamed codfish,chipped beef with cream dressing and baked pota toes. These are old dishes which are some times forgotten, but which are useful to vary the luncheon bill of fare with the usual done-overs from the dinner of the day before. The fleur-de-lis fancy has attacked vases. A beautiful gardeniere standing two feet high was a massive fleur-de-lis in the plain yellow glaze that is so much used for pots and flower holders. Some beautiful effects are being produced in the new applique work as applied to tray cloths, doilies, and the like. A set of sheer linen finger bowl doilies seen with appliqued designs was a most happy com bination of the effect of the lace-like drawn work and the richness of filled in em broidery. Tiny leaves, squares, shells, crescents, eta, of lace are bought and appliqued in white silk upon the linen, which is afterwards carefully cut away from beneath. The result is a beautiful one ob tained at a minimum of time, effort and still, as compared with drawing the threads or filling in embroidery. 'it Is odd that in our appropriation of "five o clock tea from onr English cousins an absolute copy of its belongings as it is served on its native heath has not also re sulted. But as we took the tea-gown idea and then prooeeded to elaborate it out of all semblance to the original, so with that most simple of ceremonies, tea and wafers, at five o'clock tea in England. In English houses this pretty service is merely a short halt between the social pleasures of the day, finisned, and those of the evening, just be ginning; a slight informal refreshment mid way between the luncheon at 2 and the late elaborate dinner at 8. A cup of tea and a plate of thin, delicate wafers, or biscuit, as they are called, is all that is offered or de sired, and their serving is as unpretentious as themselves. The tea service is arranged in one of the lesser apartments, that is, not in the state drawing room, and when the hostess comes in from her drive the spirit lamp beneath the kettle is lighted and she brews the tea, which the few or several get for themselves, sans servant and sans cere mony. The tea cloth Is usually a simple fine square of linen hemstitched and with per haps a sentence embroidered across one cor ner the riot of elegance and elaboration which American women put on theirs be ing conspicuously absent the simplest china is used, though always dainty and delicate, and the whole function lacking in any sort of show. Englishwomen wonder on coming to Fifth avenue drawing rooms to have sandwiches, caviare, chicken or sardines, lobster or chicken salad, oysters pickled or fried, and tea and chocolate served with more or less pomp of attend ance and accessories at 5 o'clock tea. The sketch is of a genuine English tea table which a New York woman rejoices in, with the inevitable mitre-shaped cosy, that is as much a part of the English tea service as the tea itself. The "barefoot cure" is evidently the coming craze in panaceas. "We have had the rest cure, the athletic cure, the Delsarte cure, the faith cure, et al, and now the bare foot cure. Returning travelers from Ger many and Austria are bringing the idea over with them, and as it is vastly less harmful than the cholera bacilli, which which they might have brought, it is as well to be lenient with the lesser folly. The bare foot treatment is a phase of more than one process of cure; under one authority it is carried on on a sunny beach and the patients race through the hot sands bareheaded, bare armed and with legs and feet bare to the knees. This is to permit the sun and heat, with their health giving properties, free access to the skin, under another curist, to coin a word, it is a part of the hardening course, and though you begin walking bare footed over smooth turf, you advance by running through wet meadows, and later, meadows heavy with hoar frost, to the climax of being able to endure tramping in cold water. As most of the cures effected at present have outlived their novelty, at least we may expect to find this brand new barefoot cure eagerly seized upon. Among florists the newest decorative scheme is the use of foilage exclusively. Many tables at recent handsome dinners and supper parties have shown not a single bloom but leaves, tendrils and feathery fronds, in the various tones of color pos sible, green, brown, yellow, olive and red. The scheme has been carried out in hanging balls of verdure, similar to the floral balls which have been employed for some time. These green globes, however, are much more lasting as they are arranged in a wire basket, ball-shaped, packed with earth and moss In which ferns are growing, the green sheets conseuting to be trained up, down, and out on every side to preserve the sphere. Entertainers, however, need not fancy that this flowerless season means smaller bills, for the demand for foliage ef fects has at once develonod a scarcity of such material whlon is putting a lancy price on every fern and trail and smllax. The cultivated asparagus vine being much desired and really very rare as yet, takes the lead in cost A pretty hall btnch recently seen was one of the short wooden benches, the duplicate of the old-fashioned wash bench of our grandmothers, straight, stiff and uncom promising. The one seen was of mahogany and a plush tufted cushion of a soft old rose shade wastied on by broad ribbons of the same hue passed around the ends, out side the supports, to be tied in a large flat bow on the top. The model can be copied in any of the numerous stains of enameled paints and varied indefinitely, as the plain benches can be got at any housefurnishlng establishment Children and persons with dyspeptio tendencies often need warm drinks, in the winter especially, and a difficulty is found to provide them when neither tea, coffee nor the various preparations of cocoa and chocolate are liked. In this dilemma 'rice coffee is very palatable and nutritious. It should be browned as coffee is and ground. Tt two tablespoonsful of rice add a pint of fraKmOTXTRa dispStoh, boiling; water, cover and keep In a hot plaee with sugar and cream or boiled milk as coffee or tea. In this connection it Is well A- . 1 - Al.. 4U- - 11- J V.:.. tmm fed to many children possesses no nutrition miaicYer us uduiuiv preparea. J- UUK nearly iuu m iiu icr is wnuencu mi.u milk and sweetened; if enough milk is used w reaiiy nounsu it cuius ine water hi u unpalatable degfee, and as all nurses and many mothers are careless in its prepara tion, this fault or its opposite is usually present If you give the child "cambrio tea" see that oream is added to heated, not scalded, milk and a very little boiling water. Education in a New York private school of high clan is expensive and elastic. It costs about $1,000 from October to early June, and for this sum a young woman is housed In an elegant home in fashionable locality, is fed on choice fare, served by well trained maids, and looked after moral ly, socially and physically by refined and well-bred women. This in addition to a more or less elaborate course of study, of which the sine qua non is the modern languages. In addition there are plenty of extras, such as singing, painting, dancing etc., making It easy to spend two or three more hundred. Collegiate education is considerably cheaper as at Vassar, "Welleslev, Smith and other women's col leges 600 to $800 will Include a full course and as many extras as a girl is capable or. The old word "finishing" school has been tabooed at these orlvate Institutions, pupils entering the kindergarten attached to many of them and graduating later from the upper class. It is still true, however, that many pupils come from outside cities to get the "finish" supposably obtained no where else as well as from a year at a New York private school. Frenchwomen have resuscitated the old fashioned "stock" on the Louis Philippe cravate1 which they wear with their natty vest and shirt front costumes. A bias fold of satin or silk is brought around the neck from the front, crossed behind and tied in front in a small flat stifTbow. Dinner knives with handles of blue Ivory are new. In selecting a chatelaine bag, which by the way it is every woman's duty to insist shall remain in fashion, at least so long as the sex is pockctless, those with one flat side to hang against tho dress are prefer able. The rounded sides, as soon as any thing is put in them bulge out untidily. The long silk or cloth bag of black is still in evidence and is especially dear to the heart of the suburban shopper. Among the beautiful new things in a high-class shop, where decorative articles are sold, was a square table cover of a pea cock blue art serge, upon which was em broidered at each corner in gold thread the accompanying design, which is a model of one of the pods of the Hindus. Its claim to beauty lies. in its grotesqueness alone, but it has a value of suggestion to any em broiderers who choose to adapt it to scarfs or hangings, particularly as it is announced that the fancy for Chinese and Japanese' effects is waning before the rising favor of Indian, Turkish and Moorish belongings. A simple gown of gray ladles' cloth lately seen was a plain princesse, which just cleared the pavement The slight fullness, which was arranged from the neck similar to a wrapper, was held in at the waist by a soft sash of gray silk, which was passed around from the front, crossed over and bronght back to be tied in a snug knot with very short fringed ends directly ia front Gray gloves and a velvet turban of gray straw and velvet completed this shopping gown, which was really charming in its simplicity. Margabex H. "Welch. DEVOTED 10 HES SI8IBES, The "Woman "Who Stands at the EC-ad or the Intornatlonal Union. The woman's movement is making great strides in modern France, notwithstanding that a great deal of ridicule is cast upon it Mme. CheligaLoevy,although not a French woman by birth, started the present move ment, and she works unceasingly to amelio rate the lot of her poorer sisters under the existing laws and regulations. She is the President of the International Union of "Women, which has its headquarters in Paris. She lives with her husband, who is an artist, in a flat in the older quarter of Paris. The only daughter of a wealthy Polish no bleman, shejearncd when a child to speak and write French fluently. At the age of 16 she wrote and published her first novel About ten years ago she settled in Paris, and while there met and married her hus band, who shares all her Ideas, moral, politi cal and social. It was not until after the Congress in 1889 that Mme. Cheliga-Loevy made up her mind to found the Union TJm verselle des Femmes, which won' the ap proval of Simon and Kenan. In connection with this association she started the Bulletin da Fcmmcs, a tiny magazine devoted to all that concerns women's work. She acts as correspondent of a number of foreign peri odicals, and has at times lectured. She claims absolute equality with men, neither more nor less, and is by conviction a Social ist . THE SPEEAD CEH1DEIES OLD. Guest "Who Ate and Drank Stuff That "Was Made by tho Ancients. "I have eaten apples that ripened more than 1,800 years ago, bread made from wheat grown before the children of Israel passed through the Eed Sea, spread it with butter that was made when Elizabeth was Queen of Enlgand, and washed downed the repast with wine that was old when Columbus was playing barefoot with the boys of Genoa," was the remarkable statement made by Amazlah Dukes, a New York broker, to a reporter of the St Louis Globe-Danocrat. "The remarkable 'spread' was given by an antiquarian named Goebel in the city of Brussels in 187L The apples were from an earthen, jar taken from the ruins of Pom peii, that buried city to whoso people we owe our knowledge of canning fruit The wheat was taken from a ohamber in one of the smaller pyamids, the bntter from a stone shelf in an old well in Scotland, whe're for centuries it had lain in an earthen crock in icy water, and the wine was recovered from an old vault in the city of Corinth. There were six guests at the table, and each had a mouthful of the bread and a teasnoonful of the wine, but was permitted to help himself liberally to the butter, there being several pounds of it The apple jar held about two-thirds of a gallon, and the fruit was as sweet and the flavor u fine as -though pat up yesterday," i es j iff i r Mine. ChellgaLomy. BjrasSSrprasMBB25;1,l?58W FOOD IN SMALL BULK. Almost Anything the Cook Needs Is flow Put Up in Condensed Form. E66S Df THE SHAPE OP SAWDUST. Coffee-nd Jelly In Block! and Cider Boiled Into Email Space. A 0ITFS DHL! MILK IK ONE BUCKET vwiuTTXjr roa thx dispatch.I "When Uncle Sam next goes to war the soldiers who fight under the starry flag will be supplied with coffee in a shape so highly condensed that one 4-ounce package will serve as a month's ration for each man. The ooncentrated preparation will be given out perhaps as a dry powder, but more probably in the form of small lozenges, resembling cough drops In size and shape. These loz enges will be enclosed in tin boxes of 100, each of them weighing a gramme and repre senting one cup of coffee. For preparing the beverage no coffee-pot will be required, it being necessary merely to put a coffee tablet Into the cup and pour boiling water upon it, when the coffee is instantly made. In France such ooffee lozenges of compara tively large size have been recently intro duced, being made bulky by the addition of sugar for aweeteningj but everybody does not care for sugar, and therefore those which have lately begun to be manufac tured in this country have been made plain. The processes by whioh coffee is thus con centrated are very interesting. To begin with, the beans are roasted In an enormous oven and ground In a huge will. Then they are put into a great iron vessel, whioh is nothing more nor less than a gigantio coffee pot, holding 210 pounds at a time. Hundreds of gallons of filtered water are pumped into the coffee pot, which aots on the "drip" principle, and the infusion is drawn off to an evaporating tank. Coffee as Thick as Molasses. A steam pump keeps the air exhausted from this tank, so that the coffee is in vacuo, being heated meanwhile to a high temperature by steampipes. The water it contains rapidly passes off, and the coffee is of about the consistency of molasses when it is taken out It is poured into trays of enameled ware, and these trays are placed on shelves in another evaporator. "When the travs are removed a short time later, the cofl'eeis a dry solid, which Is scraped of! the trays, ground to powder and molded into lozenges. There is no reason why the Government should not prepare coffee in this way on a large scale, in the event of war, at a very great saving. By the processes described one pound of the beans can be made to pro duce more than 100 cups. By inquiry It has been ascertained that hotels and restaurants only get from 15 to 36 cups from the same quantity, the minimum being reported by the most expensive establishments and the maximum by the cheapest eating houses. The reason fo'r this is that the usual plan is to make the infusion and throw away the "grounds," which still contain two-thirds or more of the original strength of the coffee. Of course, for commercial purposes the lozenges can be made of Bio, Mocha or any other variety ol tne bean to suit tne taste. Experiments have recently been made with success in the treatment of tea by sim ilar methods, and before long a dry soluble essence, produced from the leaves, will be offered in the market, a tiny drachm bottle holding 20 tablets, each representing one cup. Eggs That Iiook TAJce Sawdust Eggs are now sold on the market in a shape resembling sawdust The chief center for the manufacture of this product is St Louis, where great quantities of eggs are bought up in summer, when the price of them goes down to almost nothing. They are broken into pans, the whites and yelks sep arated and evaporated to perfect dryness. Finally they are scraped from the pans and granulated by grinding, when they are ready for shipment in bulk. Bakers, con fectioners and hotels use eggs in this form, which is an important saving at seasons when they are dear in the shell. It is without doubt a fact that most of the eggs sold in cities during the winter have been kept over from the previous summer by pickling them in brine or limewater, so that people should be thankful for a dessl cated substitute. A manufactured product of a similar description, called "etrg albumen," Is 1m- fiorted from abroad. It looks very much ike a fine quality of glue, broken into small bits, golden yellow, transparent and decidedly pretty. The eegs of wild fowls of various species are largely employed in making it the whites, that is to say, the yelks being utilized in Europe for tanning leather. This "egg albumen" is used by bakers for glazing prints. It costs 55 cents a pound retail Jellies Made Into Bricks. Condensed jellies are becoming an impor tant commercial article. They are made in the shape of little bricks, each weighing eight ounces and with an inside wrapper of oiled paper. According to the directions the brick is to be put into one pint of boil ing water and stirred until it is dissolved. The mixture is then poured into a mould or other vessel, and put in a cool place. In a few hours the jelly is "set" and ready to use, a pint and a half of it It never fails to ''jtl," which is the cause of so much anxiety to amateur jelly-makers. The bricks are flavored with various fruits, cur rant, raspberry, grape, etc., and some are of pure calves-foot jelly, to which wine may be added for wine-Jelly, preferably Sicily madeira. Fifteen cents a brick is the retail price. Concentrated ice cream is put up in- tin cans of eight ounces each. Tne contents of the can are to be put in three pints of boil ing milk, stirred well, permitted to cool, and then frozen, producing two quarts of Ice cream. Condensed desserts are prepared and sold in cans similarly, such as blanc mange. When condensed milk was first intro duced, 30 years ago, the idea was laughed at The inventor carried the entire daily supply for Hew York City in a ten-quart pall, delivering it personally to patrons. He died worth $7,000,000, made out of the business, which has proven tb be a gigantlo industry. Qow Condensed Milk Is Made. The processes employed are very simple, the fresh milk being put into a great cop per tank with a steam-jacket "While it is beings heated sugar is added and the mix ture is then drawn off into a vacuum tank, where evaporation is produced by heat The vacuum tank will hold perhaps 9,000 quarts. It hat a glass window at the top, through which the operator in charge looks from time to time. He can tell by the ap pearance of the milk when the time has arrived to shut of! the steam, and this must be done at just the right moment else the batch will be spoiled. Next the condensed milk is drawn into 40-auart cans, which are set in very cold spring water, where they are made to revolve ranidly by a mechan ical contrivance in order that their contents may cool evenly. "When the- water does not happen to be cold enough, ice is put in to bring it down to the proper temperature. Finally the tin cans of market size are filled with the milk by a machine, which pours into each one exactly 16 ounces automatically, one girl shoving the cans beneath the spout, while another removes them as last as they are filled. PeoDle in eitiei nowidavi inn con densed milk largely in preference to thai unconuenseo, regarding It as more desira ble because of the careful supervision main tained by the companies over the dairies from which they get their supplies. For their consumption the product is delivered nmva.t.n.ilt 1...1 a t t.t. .......I!..... it UUfc DTGU lit klliB CUUU111UU Jli I two or three times as long as ordinary milk by reason of toe boiling to 1 which it has been subjected. Milk fresh from the cow contains 88 per cent of water, condensed milk 28 per cent The latter is fed to a great many babies, partly on ac count of the difficulty found in obtaining pure milk from the average milkman. Mixed Milk Said to Be the Better. It may be as well to mention here that the one-cow's milk business is a 'swindle and a delusion. To supply milk to cus tomers regularly from the cow is not possi ble in practice, though perhapsitmight pay to serve a single family in this way at the rate of 50 cents a quart Experts assert that mixed milk is more wholesome for the consumer than milk from one cow, inasmuch as the yield of a single beast varies from day to day. Many artificial baby foods are manufact ured and sold in concentrated form. For example, products advertised as "substi tutes for mother's milk" are made from cow's milk, to which is added, a sufficient quantity of sugar to correspond with the constituents oi mother's milk. The water is removed from the mixture in vacuo, leav ing a fine white powder, which is put up in packages. Finely powdered wheat flour and other nutritious vegetable elements are added in moro elaborate preparations. Another commercial article is condensed cider, which is made by evapoiatlng the juice of apples. One gallon of it, costing 80 cents, will furnish 15 or 20 gallons of cider that is sufficiently strong for bottling, by the addition of 15 pounds of sugar and the requisite quantity of water. Peaoh, grape, cherry and apricot ciders, similarly concen trated, are sold for $1 a gallon. Boot beer is put up in the same manner, half a pint of it making enough to fill 16 half-pint bottles. Condensing Joice of the Lime. During the last year 9,282 gallons of oon-.. densed lime juice were imported to the United States from Jamaica. For manu facturing this product, the limes are put through a squeezing machine, and the juice is strained and filtered, so that all'seeds aud pulp shall be removed. Then it is boiled down to the utmost possible point of concentration in copper vessels, great care being taken that it shall not be in the slightest degree scorched or burned, which would .spoil it by causing the acid to un dergo a ohemical change. Finally it is put up in bottles. Jamaica dnring 1891 shipped 44,492 gallons of this limejuice to Great Britain. During the same period it ex ported to this country its entire commer cial output of sour orange juice, 1,102 gal lons, similarly concentrated. This state ment is taken from a report of the United States Consul at Jamaica, Jnst received by the Department of State at Washington. Concentrated cocoanut is now sold in cans. It is a preparation made by chopping the Kernels fine, drying them and extract ing the flavoring elements. Ttiese latter are made into a syrup with sugar. Vanilla flavoring for ice cream and other pur poses is precipitated from the vanilla beans in the shape or a solid. Extracts of meats have grown enormously in popular favor during the last few years, and vast quanti ties of them are put up at present in Chi cago. They contain little more than the flavoring portion of the substances they represent, being merely stimulating and only nutritrious in a very small degree, so that, It is said, a dog will starve on an un limited supply ol them. The tendency nowadays seems to bs to condense every kind of food, both animal and vegetable. Compressed salt is even provided for horses and other beasts, a brick of it being put in a frame above the water trough, where the four-footed creature can lick it It would be interesting to know what results would be obtained by rearing a hu man being from infancy to adult age on condensed forms of aliment exclusively. If the normal digestive powers could not as similate all that was offered, they might be given artificial assistance in the shape of that substance obtained from the stomachs of pigs which is called "pepsin," adminis tered, as is usual, in compressed lozenges. S.ESE Bache. HIS HCTTJBE3 TOO LAEOS. The Main Reason "Why Terestchagln Found Xo Market for His "Works. Chicago Tlmes.l Yasili Yerestchagln has lost his dollars but recovered his mind. He lost both in New York, and he holds that city in no liking. He intends hereafter to live in Moscow, where he will paint a series of monster canvases illustrating the princi pal events of the Napoleonic invasion of 1812. The size of Yerestchagin's pictures made them unsalable. When auctioned off not long ago they went lor prioes which, in pro portion to their size, were less than n ot overgood fire-boards and tea-trays would bring. Bystanders were amazed to see some of these immense paintings going at $200 or $300 each, but no one dared bid on them to "hold for a rise," fo where could the buy er put thera? The private collector cannot afford to throw two stories of his house into one to make room for a picture 15 feet high and broad in proportion, and the man with a gallery doesn't want to crowd out a score of paintings of ordinary size in order to make room for one. Even the big bar rooms, which advertise themselves by buy ing big pictures, are too small to" make room for canvases bo large that the holder needs to stand out of doors to view them properly. COOK QOOSC i FREE "For tne Mes." . VZBES2X3ZX53 SOMETHING NEW JUST OUT. t "Delicious Dessert." C OOK BOOK Mailed Free. Sand name and address to PRICE FLAVORING EXTRACT CO. 74 WABEEN STREET New York City, New Tort Gall at Dor Store I We are at tho corner of WOOD ST. AND SIXTH AVE. The Duquesne, Central, Trans verse arid Pleasant Valley cars stop at our door. Have on hand everything known to the Wall Paper trade. 541 Wood St., Pittsburg, Pa. Wn,L FURNISH ESTIMATES. (IMS TaUpaone UM.. HKle&Co., THE LKT UNO LEADING flUfiER'f HOUSE IN 1ST. PEHM. Sg Elegance and excellence, coTn bined with our won derful Low Prices, crowding these big, brilliant stores W Mill! GoiMoi! Cd And, now the leaves are commencing to fall, the autumn foliage is radiant in its magnificent gorgeousness, the lovely tints and heaven-born colors dance and shimmer in the sunlight, all nature proclaims that the rosy time of the year is past and gone, gone, as it were, into the ancient history business. A few months more and autumn' 11 join , summer as an active business partner. So wags the world along. No let up, no stand still. Ever going forward,new, progressive ideas occupying and emanating from the intellectual brains of advanced thinkers, Well, as usual, we take no back seat. We're still in the front rank of the progress pro cession, ministering to the wants and necessities of thousands. In everything that is new, beautiful, stylish, fashionable, useful, whether for household furnishment or embellishment, personal comfort wear or adornment, we Jiave 'em all, in bigger abund ance and much lower prices than anywhere else. OUR GRAND jSlir 7i& , WILL TAKE PLACE Mrtay, inn; Tfiursttay, 291 nl Friflay, 31 M; All the nobbiest, toniest, most stylish, most fashionable Headwear for Ladies, Misses and Children culled from the most renowned millinery cen ters of the world, together with our own reproductions, forming such an im mense aggregation of artistic beauty as fairly entitles us to the well-earned reputation of Leaders in Fashionable Millinery, and all at a good deal less money than elsewhere. Ioimi Millinery Very Sjuci? a Spciallj 11 1. In Conjunction With This Gorgeous KHIinery nptpyffii Rf Our Magnificent Exposition of FALL For Ladies, hisses and Children. Now for extent of variety, in material, weave or style, combined with our well-known low prices, this mammoth Wrap consolidation hasn't a peer in these two cities. No Fairy tale this, but genuine, unadulterated, incon trovertible facts. The garments are here, mountains of them, ready for your inspection. Nothing in the Wrap line worthy of your consideration that we haven't got, and, as always, all at prices unattemptable anywhere else. Profitable, RIansy-Saving Revelations for You. 10,000 pairs super English Cashmere Hose, either ribbed or plain, to be given away For 49 c a Pair. A most elegant and full line of Infants' fine super, extra super and triple ex tra super Cashmere Hose, either in black or colors, just about half reg ular prices, From !7c on up to 59c a Pair. A most superior lot of Ladies' Ail-Wool Hose, in black or natural wool regular 38c stockings they be Now for 24c a Pair. An excellent lot of Ladies' Ribbed and Seamless All-Wool half-dollar Stock ings Now 3 pairs for L Another unapproachable lot Ladies' Wool Hose, ribbed tops, full regular made; they'd be dirt cheap at 65c, but just to open the ball Off they go now for 39c a Pair. Our Mr. Danziger while in Europe purchased large clearing lots of Ladies' Handsome and Rich Silk Hose. They come in all the pretty even ing shades. They're now here, and we'll lay them out for your inspection at less than half usual prices for same class of goods. 01 ffM-Aff AIB DSE8S THUG MUMSi Brimful of Latest Novelties. Never before in our commercial history or experience have we beea able to show such a magnificent, rich, first-class line of Dress Trimmings. Every hue, color and shade imaginable, in fact, some of them are beyond imagination. Not a shade of Dress Goods ryade that we cannot match with all the new, nobby, stylish, trimmings, besides we'll save you good money on every dollar's worth you buy. Following are a few of the new Dress Trimmings: White Angora Fur Trimming, Tan Tipped Angora, Nutria Edges, BESIDES MANY OTHERS. Velvet Ribbon Fringes', Siik Ribbon Fringes, colored or black, New Russian Bands, All new shades and shapes of Buckles and Buttons. FUR LOOPS, SILK LOOPS, Etc., Etc., Eta- ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST. SETT ADVEKHS3nTi "PTK." " &, every day in tho week with thrifty, e co n o m ical, money-saving, en thusiastic buyers. W LTIES FO! Pink Tipped Angora, Seal Edges, Mink Edges, SIXTH ST. AND PENN AVE? until I Ed m i rA 1 IE 11 n U I 1 SUP -B Urn u BSa O 9 m J n 9ft H an S3 UI LlilgiUi- WRAPS 1L 1 i . m