Show EVICTEDBY SERVANTS t r 1 Millionaires Obliged to Dhle Out On Sunday Evenfng THE COOK S NIGHT OF REST I I 4 NEiW 7 YpIu SEASONS ARE EXP EX-P ry FOBW01 N i + Ed ur ThouSand DolI81 s Is the Least a EasMonable Woman Cam Expect toSendOa a Seasons Wardrobe Cl irvpytiit Takes Society By StormFanfare Orchestra + J a I Though not an extravagant woman 1 confess no girl can expeqt to gb through a successful season on less than 400Q qu tha damsel with wrinkles wrin-kles of worry op her pretty forehead EYerr4 ear she continu the cost t a society campaign in New York city grows more and more oppressive Here is an itemized statement of what a girl can just get through four months of hard worlt in society on Jtm No 1 Eight ball gowns will last from the 1st of November till the last of March and they range in price never below 125 to 250 apiece Two tailormade street suits at 90 to 100 each one reception toilet and thIs must bq velvet and fur costs at the minimum 180 cannot be got for IeEe or dispensed with Of costumes to wear at home five are necessary not less than 75 can be paid for anyone of these and at least one elaborate brilliant bril-liant tea gown is requisite As high as 500 Is paid for some of these but our average girl can brThg the price down to 150 HQts to the number of five is a moderate estimate and the simplest sim-plest walking toque costs 18 while the velvet reception affair with plumes comes to a round 40 It is almost impossible to particularize particu-larize over the item of silk petticoats stays stockings and handkerchiefs but 200 draws a conservative limit Three dozen pairs of gloveS at the present price of 24 a dozen puts one through with clean hands nothing more There The-re lly rIch women wear six dozen pairs Qne riding habit and you must own one comes to 110 A derby and a top hat go with this costing respectively 5 < and 8 A skating dress and a golf I r i tir t j I I frr p < I 1 J r I I L I pI r An Orchestra From the Far East dress add another 160 and now if you put all these figures together you will have spent about 2900 but the end is not yet Out of her fund the girl must disgorge dis-gorge her cab hire and she can hold her purse strings tight and yet not spend less than 60 a month thats 240 alone Again shq must be ready to meet her subscription dues to the dancing classes her theatre and sewing and musical societies her skating and riding club dues and if she can get through on 200 she can count herself ahead of the game This then leaves her a trifle over 600 out of which to buy shoes underwear and her wraps send flowers to sick or happy friends make her purchase of Christmas gifts and wedding preSents anti yet at the end of the season she presents herself to the paterfamilias as emptYhanded as hollow of purse and as ragged of apparel as when she set gayly forth on her social conquests the 1st of November The question I can r frL L J 1f 0 I riIy t 6Jt JoFj j G m inw IJI fi1 fJ 0 L r tf t t 0 JIV R h b s c J 4 I J j M 13 g t J r I f l nlti i Ii iW IplJd J jec e Sunday JinncTs Out asure you that is now agitating the minds of anxipu5 parents and the hearts of onscieptious daughters is Does New York society pay EVIOTIO OF 1oULL10NAIRES ills Stuyvesanl Fih1rb Mtkey Mrs Sloan and Mrs Seward Webb and heir friends pay as high as 75 to 100 t 1 < A 3 a month to their butlers very nearly 1 as much to their coOks and yet once a veer whether ther like ft or not these wealthy women are lIterally turned put of their houses to forage for themselves On Sunday evenings the ranges in the big kItchensar cold the diningroems are eIienf an the master and mIstress are obliged to resort to restaurants for their dinner or gOt without It is an ill wl1Td of course that doesnt make somebody happy and in the vast gilt and crystal dining hall of a new Fifth ay jmud r sta rant of a Sunday evening verone who is anyone any-one in society is present and for the first time American history the Women Wo-men are dining In public iri jewels and lownecked gowns Over by the corner for instance is a table sacred on Sundayi to Mrs Astor 1 and herpartyby the window William > c I I j 4 I 1 I flr 1 1 4W r V S tk t W z r I Ji I r ill f I AJ I Ip A DRESSY TOILETTE FO IdIDS1TlIMER 1 Vanderbilt and his friends find food and shelter from their cruel domestics and the price of the dInner reaches a dizzy height because every table has its exclusive dishes and floral decorations decora-tions and color of candies One night lfrs Astors table is a bower of mauve and white violets and across the way Mrs Clarence Jlackay is dining in the shade of Lawson pinks while Mrs Pierpont Morgans board is heaped with roses that bear her own name From 830 untIl 11 the process of dining din-ing continues accompanied by music and in Lent the Sunday feasts have been hailed with unalloyed pleasure FOr persons who love good eating the food at the various tables is beyond compare Every dinner opens with an oyster cocktail and concludes with coffee into which no lumps of sugar are put because special nCw perfumed Parisian confection is served with the coffee and nibbled between sips THE FANFARE ORCHESTRA I The musical programmes are to be I the important feature of an the spring weddings not at the church alone but at the reception after the ceremony Those people who will be sO fortunate as to find their way to Irs William Sloans house the day of her daughter Emilys marriage will hear the chanting chant-ing of the newly gotten together wedding wed-ding chorus These are glee singers men and boy who are secreted somewhere some-where in the house on the nuptial days and sing lovely marriage choruses at intervals till the bride departs They sing not only the vellworn LOhengrin chorus but lovely old English Scotch Irish German and Swedish bridal songs without the accompaniment of any Instrument and the effect is beautiful beau-tiful as wen as unique The faithful Hungarian bands here have suffered a setback They have to acknowledge a bitter rival in the popular popu-lar FanFare orchestra that was intro duced by Mrs Abraham Hewitt at the great receptiongisen in honor of Lord I J I IL 141 I r Charles Beresford The FanFare 01 phestra Is confined to wood and wi7d Jll3trumemlts alone and it in turn has a rIval in Mrs Frederick Vanderbilts protege the Russian Cossack band Ten mighty warriors Qf eastern Russia bearded like Tards in taIl sheeDskin I caps high booth and rough caftans sing and play the mournful sweet melodies mel-odies of the lonely steppes and wild I CaucaSUs The Russians were much sciught after to lend diversity of inter I est tit the private Lenten charity readIng read-Ing s lectures etc Another quaint feature at the Lenten Len-ten enterprises wasa gtoup of Arabs I > f Y di who as well a s Jean deszke nnd Mme Senibxichrhavel arnd that there is a way to New Yorkeis ppccts through he New Yorkers ears There were only three of these darksdnnecl whit robed sons of the rohet atvl they were really traveling lri tllesuiC of an Englishman on his way round thdtor1d from he SoudaIi to LondOn Hs Egyptians had aeiuhl1y fought the kalifha and they played on little drums and tooted on little pipes sitting flat on the floor and they ertatned guests not only for Mrs Belmont and Mrs Fish but fOr half a sor of other celebrifles and went away with the mysterious Dockets in their robes and turbans very much heavier than when they set out to explore the country Of the unbelievers FASHIONABLE CLAIRVOYANT The Derson of late who has made fame and money ilr catering to the haILadknowledged superstitious beliefs of our bluest New York blood is a simple clairvoyant The woman regards I re-gards the past and foretells the future fu-ture by dropping into a waking dream and her name is Mme Dora Hahn Now Mme Hahn might have = ut out heI business card till it grew weather beaten and read the future till her powers were worn out and society would never have gone near her h I not somebody unfolded the fact that Jay Gould not only cOnsulted her as to his vast eculatlon5 but followed her advice most suc e3sfuIlY The naton age of the great financier has made lIme Hahns fortune and her ulain little rooms are now croWded every day with about the best peale in town She charges moderately and her instinct In-stinct for stocks and Wall street are jects is quite marvelous it is said EMILY HOLT threads of saffron are dIssolved in the milk I EASTER CAKES these arc delicious and it 1 1llh cheaper to make them than to buy j them Take tJix oUnces or butter aUlI six ounces of sugar and neat them tot a cream tlen add four eggs each one beaten in separately To this mixture add tnreequarters of a pound of 5111 tans raisins and a quarter of a pound of andied peel cut very fine sIft in half a pound of fine flour and mix welt A together adding one teaspoonful af baking powder and half a spoonful of essence of almonds In another basin mix half a pound of II ground almonds half a pound ot castor 4i sugar two wellbeaten eggs and a few l drops of almond essence Grease around a-round deep cake tin and line it with wellbuttered paper Place half the mixture in then put on this the al mend paste and cover it with the remaining re-maining cake mixture Bake for two and a half hours in a moderate oven If preferred the almond paste may be placed on the top of the cake which may also be further ornamented with balls of almond icIng tmd sweet meats GOOD FRIDAY CAKES Thee are made by first boiiing six ounces of loaf sugar and four teaspoonfuls tea-spoonfuls of water to a syrup beat up bo egg and pour the yrup hot upon thEm stirring all the time add two ounces of butter cut small and beat the whole tor fifteen minutes them stJr in eight ounces of flour four ounces of currants one ounce of candied can-died lemon peel cut snaIl one tea > poonful of carbonate of ammonia dissolved dis-solved lit a tablespoonful of milk and one teaspoonful Of ground mace Mix all together pour into a mould and baKe in a quick oven MARION DEPEW |