TUB 6CRA27T02T TSIBTTKB 8ATUBDAT , XIOIZNmO. AUGUST 10, 1698. 0 t-v-V.W-M.-AIIrl ee9. ";.w:4.v;. ,. i.-.. 5ymposIum of Information, Partly Grave, r : Partly Gossipy and Partly Gay. ' "They -have the new woman In Aue V'truli, and a writer In the Woman's Voice' of Sydney, N. S. W.. suggests employment for her. Thta wrlter.be , Ueves that there ia a wide field for a labor bureau which shall undertake to supply on demand skilled women, to be engaged by the hour or the day at a fixed rate, but not to be provided with a home at the place of employment. duanyv householders whose work re- quires a servant, but whose house room Is not sulllclent to afford lodging for one, would be glad to engage a compe tent woman for a few hours a day or for one or two hours a week. If they were only sure of having the hour's . work done and the engagement kept regular. Girls who value their free dom and dread the ordinary relation of mistress and servant, the writer thinks, might; do well at this casual work. 'One of 'th greatest abjections to do mestic service made by the best and most methodical workers, namely, that a servant's work Is never done, would . then disappear. A housewife under this system could contract with a -competent person for three mornings or afternoons on which certain work should ue done, so much sweeping, so . much scrubbing or dusting, and the preparation of a dinner, and on those afternoons or mornings the housewife could do her needlework or her visiting, while on other days she could attend to her household work herself or with L'the aid of her daughters or of cheaper and less skilled hired help. The de . vlser of this scheme has In mind no such slaveys as women commonly have In for the day to do the work of a char woman, but Intelligent persons with ' whom housework Is a trade as carpen tering is with a man. The housewife . will define the work and expect only a da.y's -work for a day's pay, while the skilled houseworker by trade, will be ashamed to spend three or four hours in doing What could be done In one hour. The establishment of a labor bureau and the classification of work Into skilled and unskilled, thinks the writer In the Woman's Voice, will make it plain to employer and employed that even for housework there needs a defl- nlte period of apprenticeship and a sys tem of examinations and certificates. It has too long been taken for granted that women are all born housewives. They are not so any more than men are born carpenters and blacksmiths. . The woman's labor bureau should have a house where girls could be trained in , cooking, washing. Ironing, house ' gleaning, and like trades. Such a house, it Is Suggested, might be almost self-supporting, as girls out of work, but with some money saved, could go thither for lessons, and the casual workers,-already discussed, could make It their home. It would, In fact, be at once a college of household arts, an In telligence ofllce, and a boarding house. A housewife who wished to have Jam made, a dinner table adorned, or a sup per prepared could apply to the super intendent of such a house with the cer- -talnly-Ot otrtatntngcompetent help. , .. ' ll U II Mary A. Ford is a woman who takes an optimistic view of the future of her sex. In an address recently delivered by her before the Chicago Society for Ethical Culture, Mrs. Ford described the varying condition of woman In the C0T.1E ; LO01SE CHANDLER BOULTON. ' Gone A' 1.1 j i j J j Ju j j j J- J,r? - qa ' 1 '1 , ,, j , j--J j n r J J y -M . g J J sgTI sj J j'V d SF -1 -3 i back, dear days from oat the past, I tee your gen tie ghosts g, dx, 70a iJ - - . b f N f fi 1 r I - - -i . h i. j. y i--$- J sLS m , Egg t" , look at me with mournful eyes, and then the night grow IT'-.' -r .... T : x .,-,.V" .' ; 1 .f .. 'a 'r. i . " . J- A Why ages whan everything was estimated from the power to conquer by brut force and brawn to the days of knights and crusaders. She argued that with the disappearance of crude war Imple ments and the necessity of the use of brute force, there came the opportunity for woman and advance. Bringing the subject down to the present time she said: "Today we are out of the age oof blood and our struggles are those of wits. Woman has long walked meekly by the side of her husband, (father or brother, but with the disappearance of material weapons and the method of defense becoming a spiritual on she Is placed on the same footing with the man. In spite of themselves women have been foroed Into this position. Man does not oppose this progress of the new woman, because Its is sensible enough to look upon it as the develop ment of the great movement of the century. She does not stand Vone. She Is a part of the new olvlnr n which the world Is evolving. Science has taken from the women of this age the duties they had to perform In the past, such as the manufacture of the fabric and goods for all articles of wearing apparel. The only possibility for the women of this land today Is to become a doll, or else shape out a new career. Statistics show there are fewer mar riageable men than women. This means that many women must earn their own livelihood. It will result In marriages of refinement and love In the future, be cause the- educated women andi the working women of today are on equal footing with the new man. and are thinking twice before accepting offers of marriage. The children of these marriages Will be the greatest race ine ...i and It will surely be from the hands of this new race that the evolution of humanity will come about. There has never been ft new woman without a new man history tells us that It has 'been absolutely Im possible for man to advance very far In any one direction without woman keeping pace with him." II 11 II It was a southern editor, according to the New York Sun, paying his first visit to Gotham after an absence of ten years, who. when asked what of the things he saw new since the interval Impressed him most, replied: "The thing that has struck me most ts not your big buildings nor your wonderful elevated and cable cars; neither Is It Wall street. Central park, nor the big Sunday editions of the newspapers. It Is not your good butter nor your fine whiskey, but It's all this talk about the new woman. I hear It everywhere I go: and the newspapers are full of her. Indeed, I was prepared to stand In great awe of her, but, bless my soul, I hadn't cast my eye on a dozen of your women before I saw that they weren't new at all, but Just the same dear old girls that we have In the land of cotton. They are more progressive, but our woman ae-fco ping In sight anyhow, and I believe some day they'll catch up with the procession. Accord ing to the beliefs and traditions of peo ple living In prehistoric days, they were only three new women. Eve, Minerva and Venus. The first came mature In body and mind from the side of man; BACK, DEAR DAYS. ' did yon teat a way the second sprung fall grows and pan oplied for the battle of Ufa from the head of Jupiter; and the third came ra diant and lovely front the waves of the ocean. Mow the women down oar way are beginning to combine the char acteristics of these three, and the con sequence la that they possess What is best In the highest type of the new wo man here, and have decided that your women are doing the same thing with the same result. Suppose ws all drink to their success." The drinking, no doubt, was bad; but who dare question the sentiment ? It II tl " Warming up, perchance under the In spiration of the drink, this chivalrous editor continued: "When old occupa tions of women passed away, they sud denly found that they had either to sit Idle at home or seek work outside the kitchen, nursery, or sewing room. Mow they find that the field Is widening, and that many of them can do things that their mothers and grandmothers would not have dreamed of. And these new women as they are called, whose mlads are developed on all aides and whose bodies are clothed according; to the re quirements of health and comfort, are not to be set aside with cheap Jokes. Watch her; she Is going to ennoble the home life and make It more than a treadmill. Instead of being a drudge she will bring to bear on her duties all the influence and power of a mind stored with useful Information. She Is laying aside many of the simpering frivolities that characterise some of her sex and Is asserting the superiority of a mind dominated by pure love. She em bodies in her own being the devotion of her mother, Eve, the 'dignity and strength of Minerva, and the grace and warmth of Venus. That's the only kind of a new woman that we've got down our way and I say let them come." II II II In answer to a question asked by the Sun concerning bloomers, Mrs. Stanton recently said: "Whatever a woman is going to do, let her put on clothes fit for the occasion or exercise. It would be superfluous for her to swim In a tailor-made gown or to go to a gymna sium In a dinner dress. If she wishes to skate, let her put on a short skirt. I think the women who ride bicycles are the ones -to decide upon the appro priate dress to wheel in. and not Bishop Doane, and If bloomers are more com fortable than skirts, let them wear bloomers. In fact, I approve of bloom ers. It does me good to hear all of this talk about the new woman and to read all that Is being written about her.. The fact that every newspaper runs a wo man's page Is very significant, but I wish some of them would take the Initiative' In always giving, alongside their women In frills, furbelows., high heels, pointed toes, and skirts that hang In waves, one object lesson every week In the attire of a. well-developed young woman, plainly, comfortably, and sensibly dressed, with a waist measuring twenty-seven Inches and a short, light skirt, that shows her feet, shod In broad-soled, unheeled shoes. The bicycle will bring about a revolu tion In women's dress, and the dally Journals might Just as well tell' them now how to dress. There never will be a generation of philosophers, statesmen, and students until there Is a generation of well-developed women." II II II I . HEALTH HNTS: Tho hair requires considerable attention. Outings have a (Meant ro us effect upon tresses. Wash' the hair carefully in warm water, using netther soap nor ammonia. As a wash dissolve a spoonful of powdered borax in a pint of boiling water. When cold add gradually the well-beaten yolk of an egg. After rinsing -the hair In tepid water, dry with a warm towel. Do not be near, a Are, as the heat makes the hair GEORGE J. ZOLONT. dear ' dayif eMesseMfrfeewseessfieeeeeeeseefeMffvtseefveMSffssenseefTeesseseeeisssssseevt brittle and dries ua the aatar Have the ends scnestsiislly out sheet an eighth of an tack, and brash carefully far tea minutes er longer Marat and memlag. Blr Erasmus Wilson's recipe- tor a hair toatc Is very one. It Is composed of tinc ture of caatharklea, one ounce; eau de cologne, eight ounces; oil of lavender, salt a drachm, and oil of rosemary, half a uracam, ' An effectual. If somewhat dlsagreeble, tonie for use when the hair is dry and brittle la the following prescription: Par amo, ten drachms; vaseline, Bve drachms, and boraclc acid, three drachms. . Many hair stimulants contain glycerine, but In some cases this proves too drying. The above recipe should be used fer eight or tea days and the hatr then washed, when an ordinary tonic can be substituted. To those who caa use glycerine effec tually the following recipes are given: Whisky or rectified spirit, two ounces; tincture of cantbaitdes, , two drachms; spirit of rosemary, a quarter of an ounce, and glycerine, twenty drops. Shake well before using. The last Is as follows: Dis tilled water, four ounces ; glycerine, two drachms; Hnoture of cantharldes, half aa ounce; bus vomica, two drachma, and aro matic vinegar, one drachm. Here is a pretty conceit that la sure te have the desired effect of snaking the hair amen sweet: Make an old-fashioned cop of soft silk, line K with a thin sheet of betting In which you have heavily sprink led sachet powder of your favorite odor. Wear this when your hair Is Just drying and you will be astonished at what a love ly and lastlag scent will prevail. A simple yet very efficacious remedy for dandruff and hair falling, one that has been tried. - and alwaya with great suc cess ts this: Oct your chemist to make aa ointment consisting of the following: Eight grains red oxide of mercury to on ounce pure vaseline. Use It In the follow ing manner: Every night take a little mixture on the tips of the fingers, spread on the scalp (tiiSTthe hair), then thorough ly massage It well Unto the roots by means of placing your fingers under the hair, and rubbing the scalp freely until ab sorbed. Of course a certain amount of the greasy mixture will adhere to the sur face, but who would not stand that when so much benefit Is to be derived? Do not make a frequent practice of clipping the hair, as It has a strong tendency to coarsen and darken It. Ladles' Home Journal. II II- II ! ' SELECTED RECIPES: Baking Powder Biscuit. One quart of flour, three and one-half teaapoonful of baking powder, half a teaspoon! ul of salt, one tablespconful of butter and two cups of sweet milk. 81ft 'the baking powder and salt with the Hour, cut the butter in lightly with a knife, then, wet with the milk suit enough to roll, but not knead. Cut with biscuit cutter and bake fifteen minutes In hot oven. If water Is used In stead of milk double the quantity of but ter. Potatoes Bechamel. Boll and slice some potatoes and put them n a hot dish,- and pour over them a sauce made as follows: Cook one tableapoonf ul of flour In one heaping spoonful of butter till smooth, but not brown; add gradually a pint of milk, stir constantly until It thickens, season with salt and white pepper; tske from the fire and add the yolk of aa egg beaten In a cup, with a teaspoonful of water. Turn this sauce over the potatoes and serve at once. Stuffed Egg Plan. Parboil the egg plant ten minutes, spilt It open length wise and scrape out all the seeds. Mean time soak some of the soft part of bread In cold water and squeese out all the water. Chop half an onion fine and fry It In a tablespoontul of hot butter; add the squeesed bread, a little minced parsley, salt, pepper, a very little grated nutmeg and a little beef gravy. Stir all together over the fire a few minutes, then remove from the fire. Fill both halves of the egg plant with the mixture and put them Into a bake pan stuffing upward. Cover with bread crumbs and bits of butter and bake half an hour. Fried Tomatoes. Blice1 green tomatoes thin, dust With flour and fry brown In but Ton' were 10 wd bird sang ma -tins in your mm a m y when 70a went, The f: r , i' I J J J . To left bo pledg M A- )t s1 J J jWlJL rt j J gftjj iT - j v M win fa X all my spent, Now I m poor ti nd tad ell. ter, turning (hem mat both Baked Tom atooe. These are a pleasant variation, Shoe fresh tomatoes and spread m layers with salt, Denser, earrr sugar aad butter, and lastly a layer of bread erambs. Bake until tomatoes are Under. Five minutes before taking out our over them a cupful of whipped cream sweetened, tt will brown before It melts aad sashes piquant sauce (or the dkm. Tomatoes Fried la Cream.-Thls Is German dhm. Fry snail tessstsss la bet ter, arm one side, then the ether. When fried, salt aad pepper, and then sift flour over them. Add a cupful of sweet cream, tew together until the cream Is snick ened aad the tomatoes thoroughly cooked. Tomato Stew-Cook a quart of tomatoes thoroughly, boiling until most of the liquor has evaporated, Thea season with a large piece of butter, a large spoeaful of sugar, salt and pepper. A teaspeoaful of Worcestershire sauce la a pleases t ad dition. Seme prefer curry aa a flavor, while others like onion. Thicken the stew wtth fine bread crumbs for ten or fif teen minutes before serving. This Is nice eaten wMa baked potatoes and meat or Peach Sauce. Beat a quarter of a pound of butter to a cream aad add gradually a half cup or powdered sugar, beat untU very, very Mght. " Mash or press two largo mellow peaches through a eo leader, add a little at a time to the butter and sugar, beating ail the while. When very Ught turn Into a pretty dmh aad stand la the refrigerator to harden. Cup Cake-One cup of butter, two cups of fine granulated sugar, three scant cups of flour, a cup of milk, one teaspeoaful of vanilla or lemon, a pinch of mace, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar and half a teaspoonful of soda. Warm the bowl with hot water, then wipe dry; be careful not te have the bowl hot enough to melt the butter. Put la the butter aad rub with a wooden spoon tin light and creamy. Add the sugar gradually, than the yolks well, beaten, then the flavoring. Reserve a quarter of a cup of flour for fear the cake will be too thick If all Is used. Put the soda and cream of tartar into the flour and etft again. Add the milk and flour al ternately, a little at a time, aad lastly the whites, which have been beaten to a stiff froth. Bake In small tins about twenty minutes. Frost the tops of half with white frosting and lay on each the ua broken half of an English walnut; cover the remaining tops with chocolate frost ing, or add to your dough a cup of cur. rants or a cup of finely-chopped nuts. Cake made wtth soda and oream of tartar does not dry as quickly as that made with baking powder. . Buy the soda and cream of tartar of the druggist, la order to se cure its being pure. Cream of Corn Soup. Score one desen ears of corn and wtth the back of the knife nnu Ant th mtln On , h. .... cobs Into the kettle and pour over a pint m uwnng water; DOU gently for twenty mlnutAM. Put aha an,rf IIW a- - farina boiler, rub together two tablespoon- iuw or vuuer in tnree even tamespoonfuls Of arrowroot, add thiu I th. kniiina milk, stir until It thickens, then add the w iiwi uiv corn coos ana a wie- SDOOtlful Of Aldan IlllM? te Mt nufuMu smooth put through a line sieve, return it to the farina boiler, add the corn, cook tea minutes, add salt and pepper and serve. Eggwtches. Cut the top nearly oft of rollb that are a little stale, remove all the crumbs and soft part possible ahd fill with a stuffing of chicken (veal, tongue or any meat desired), finely chopped, with celery salt, a little parsley, pepper, plenty of but ter or chve oil, and to each roll allow the yolks to two hard-boiled eggs, which should be thoroughly mashed wtth the other Ingredients. Fill the rolls, shut the top and place m the oven to get hot. ' Summer Squash.-Cut the squash In quarters, remove the mads and skin, cover with salted boiling water and boil until done. When cooked mash the squash and add one ounce of butter for each small one. Moisten wtth gravy or broth and put In little pans or dishes; cover with bread crumbs, place tiny bits of butter en the otp and bake a delicate brown in a brisk oven. com when 70a Camel The moro4ng ikies vera all - lame, ths prate, AU else of -wm 1 v WW' yean since thin are bleak aad cold; No borst- log bodi the Jonee u fold while wn j. m or . er . am af lias Bssss.-Put same Bam bsaaa, pstataas Sad bests ea belled ten der) on Ice, and a short time before sere, lag eat the potatoes aad beets Into father the has an and dices with OanUsh with a tew Drop Cakes. Biat an cop of butter aad one aad one-half eape of sugar te a cream, add three woM-bmien sgga and a cup of sua. gift one heaping tm spoonful of baking powder with teres cups of flour. Beat all to a smooth bailer and flavor wtth aceeea to the taste, or lesson or vaaJUa. Drop with a spoon, three laches part, en e wail-buttered baking pan, sprinkle a few currants on top and bake la a hot ovea tea minutes. - Cracy. or Carrot Soup. Take five or six large red carrots, wash and scrape them wen, shave off In than siloes the outer part. Wavang the yellow center. Then pool aad sitae a large eaton and a small piece of turnip. Put them In a stowpaa with a heaping tablespoontul of butter, a few sprigs of parsley and two bay leaves. Fry tho whole a Ught yoUow color, then peppsr to taste, and when hot servo lm- meoJetely with croutons. IN BUT TO A VABt From Barron's London Letter. I know seme excellent people who are thoroughly coaviaced that alummlng la a sort of morbid dissipation, with which ths true spirit of moral reform has nothing to do. There Is, however, one socio moral evolution due directly to the one time rage tor slumming which Is. In my view of life, equal In Importance to the awakening of ninety-nine sinaera to consciousness of their inner deformity. The great and progressive movement te which I refer was the recovery by Eng lishmen or the ancient and noble privilege to ride, without fear and without re proach, through the streets of London on top the tilth tiring and tbttherlng busses, II II II When I was In this capital four years ago gentility was so enslaved to conven tion, was such a pitifully obsequious serv itor of good form that tt was accounted a shame and a humiliation to be seen outside a bus In the capacity of i seeker after pleasure or as aa econ omist of time and pence. Though I pro tested With friends that the top of i bus was a coign or vantage, the most ex cellent from which to view the shitting panorama, they methodically shook their neaos ana with melancholy iteration de- elated "rt would not do." It was proper enougn to no cribbed and confined is cab with the vision llmMed to the herlson of the hone's tall and earn; hut to mount atexi 10 a comnanojng pinnacle of ex- aluraMon and delight, whence to survey the surging multitude below, peer aloft late the wide stretch of blue or shadowed sky, send the gam to traverse vistas of curving streets and narrow lanes, scan faces that paaa on a level aa other buses roll along faces of every degree and con dition, eloquent of every emotion and pas sion of human experience this Intelligent laying hold upon straining aad striving and quivering London from a side at once picturesque and comprehensive, romantic and analytical, was Incompatible wl that law of social repression which de stroys individuality and makes the man subservient to the mass. II II II When, however, It became the smart thing to go righteously down Intothe slums as fishers of men and . women, It would have been incongruous to make the Incur sions by carriage. Indeed, getting on i bus after the fashion of the lowly way- rarer whose wealth did not rim above a two-penny fare was looked upon as a pre fatory and related step to the grand per formance of alummlng. Accordingly there were the elements of a Joyous spree In the mere fact of going outside, and a new ex citement was discovered. The sensa tion proved altogether too agreeable to be lightly surrendered with the abandonment of the employment that was Us original exouse. Having broken over prejudice for shimming sake, the Interested public de termined to cling to the benefit gained for Its own sake; and new It Is no uncommon thing to see busses wtth all the outside seats taken by smartly dressed men and women who present the appearance of gay content with whatever ts. life 70a pot to ahaae. C F II 1 H 1 T tajl Eg) Ifd m th bouse? Way. Jhe wise mother. Beaote, when taken iattrnlBy Kxbtb m a few minutes,' CramK, Spurn, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Minomaui. gleeplsssnat, Sick Headache, pfmtast, Dytsntery, Summer Comptaint, Csiic, htsJaacy ana ad fertrmJ paint. MStWrbif iteaspooafui In haU i tumbltr of water. Used externally, it will cure Rheumattsra, Neuralgia, Mosquito ates, Stints of bisects, teburas. Braises, Bums, Scalds, Coughs, Csmt and all throat troubles. Badwar'i Read Relic!, aided by Itaa Wara nib, will curt rever and Ague; Ma larious, BUIous and other Fevers. a MarCmtssBsras. aaUtynracfhtt, BAVWAY COM if aw Yeck.! RAD WAY'S Purely vegetable, mild aid reliable. Canst Kreet digestion, complete assimilation an4 Itaful regularity. Cure oonaiipaMan and lis long list of anplvaaaat symptoms and reju venate the system. SSeanteabox. All drug aisle. EVA M. HETZEL'S Superior Face Bleach, Poiltliilj Rimofes 111 Facial Blemishes, No more Freckles. Tan, Banburn, Black, heads. Liver Spots. Pimples and Sallow Complexions If ladles will use my Su perior Face Bleach. Not a cosmetic, but a medicine which acts directly on the skin, removing all discoloration, an one of the greatest purifying agents for the complex, ion In existence. A perfectly clear and spotless complexion can be obtained in every instance by Its use. Price, 100 per bottle. For sale at E. M. Hetzel's Hair dressing and Manicure Parlors. 330 Lack, awanna ave. Mall orders filled promptly.- The best wearing, most stylish, and the greatest value of any 13.00 Men's Shoes on the continent. Bert calfskin, dongola tops, solid leather soles, with all the popular toes, lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork filled Soles. Each pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for 1160, good for 00 days. Wear Lewis' Accident Insurance Shoes once and you will never change. The insurance goes fer "fall measure." Talk with your dealer who sells Lewis , Shoes. FOR SALE AT Globe Shoe Store 237UCU. AVE., SCRWT01, PI. ET1NS & POWELL, Prop'n OR. HHRA'S j vi:lmcrea!.i nSilii,' rVinit v twmm buu ro. i skfct to its orlgi- asl sjssunsa. preaoaiBg a emsr an healthy isslsn, ssmvlort fmMMons sad.perfectiy aulled lor SOcta bmd foe Ctoularj STcTrnWiitirexs .,TokKoa,Ok) ttTfteTgrn M,ttn,w 8m' and Mwssee Mtewu Aeemeime .wrwx CATARRH KWDACHE!S lMB4Mr wtfl esre yon. 4 awonarfal mob to mftVieii : mm veil lilniii reTkraei, KraBaklll.. ?.TSLo'sT4f; rlVXK. AJrrli iihhmkimi mint. AilSdul eacu '7' ' Tmedr.eonTtntenttoeuT Sjet,mfT W ( oa Srit Indication of mtt. aeeeT Vse Ja4ets PeraMoet Cars, aloe sasftaea arawMiar,,. rfM. ?waiaV.pitB"ir?i, LVerSTMiOi srepalit AdwM m thai. OM.fi ojMhiby Mstthsws Bros. and John "I Chlil Mlirt Easllm MaaimS Bnua. ' PEntWRdYAL PILLS "LiW. ma?a?'L,l.?flleh fjlhlTasl AbtV ttrc, Jwvi nUtkb. utn us JT ntm Mr CaulufMr', IN. Au mii Irmd In Ua u4 MM mKHncy W ua. MM WIU blM rtbWm. Tmk af m eWlM I eTLm. V asMenlhenx ntsAiM sLajiswrotiA oatistim 1 Asffsou and sMffaUiONS. AtntUtlaM.ssrsMelmm. I W : Jf t- JtriktUra, tMHtMlala aad SauaO' ,MilMni Siaaraj iixa , ra BLANK DOOKS Of all kipda, aanafactttred at thoit SVBDCtJ, OaTltM fSSmSMasassmw. j. - BaHw Aja - A US Oopytltht,ilie,y m Maw Tons assaraa aetke, at lie Tribue 02c&