Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 December 1888 — LIFE IN THE WHITE HOUSE. [ARTICLE]

LIFE IN THE WHITE HOUSE.

Unde Sam DoeANot Provide for AU of the President'* Expenses. Milwaukre Sentinel’* Washington Letter. Perhaps the lady readers of the Sentinel might like to know something of the experiences which Mrs. Harrison will have when she reaches Washington as the wife of the President. Will she pack simply her trunks with wearing apparel and move into a house completely furnished and filled with beds and bedding, silver and tableware, servants and cooking utensils, or will all or any of these have to be brought along or provided after she gets here? That is a question very often asked, and with a good many others, as to horses and carriages, coachmen and waiting maids, cost of and payment for the necessaries of the kitchen and dining-room, &c. It is a curious fact that ail the Cabinet officers are furnished with horses and carriages at Government expense, but that the President is not. The Cabinet officers are furnished horses, carriages and coachmen, and the horses are kept at Government expense. If the President wants any of these things he must supply them himself. There is a stable near the White House, built during Grant’s time, with plenty of room for horses, but every President who comes finds it empty. And of course it costs him a lot of money to fill it. Whoever sells a h irse or a carriage to the President of the United States expects to get about 25 per cent, more for it than he would if he sold it elsewhere. Of course the President must have three or four carriages and several horses. Whether Gen. Harrison will bring any with him or buy them is not known, probably he will buy new carriages, and of course a President’s horses must be thoroughbreds. And he need not expect much of them after he gets through his term jn the White House either, ter Washington pavements are hard on? horses, as President Cleveland’s big seal-browns show. The President is also obliged to furnish his own driver. Albert Hawkins, a big colored man brought here by Grant before he became President, is still driving at the White House, as he has done ever since Grant’s? term, and will probably be re-enaged by Mr. Harrison; but if he does it will be at his own expense, for the Government does not pay Albert’s salary. Inside the White House Mrs. HgQfison will find employes waiting to be re-en-gaged and paid for their services. The steward, who has charge of the bitchen and dining room, the various subordinates who sweep and dust and cook and attend to the table and table ware—they are all private employes. Down in the basement, if you pass at the proper time, you see the laundry work of the White House going on. All these employes are, however paid privately. Of •course there is a yearly appropriation for the contingent expenses of the White House, but this is intended more to keep up the furniture and furnishings generally than to pay the cost of the hire of servants. On thing that Mrs. Harrison will find is a completely furnished house —solid silver, the finest of china, linen ter the table and bed chambers, elegant furnishings in the parlors and fairly good in the priva’e parts of the house. The private dining-room is on the first floor, just across the hall from the state diningroom.Thin ia~ the only room on the first floor used by the family of the President. The parlors are used for the callers, and the entire family or “living” rooms are on the second floor, There are, perhaps, half a dozen of these, scarcely more; a sitting rounrortwo near to the circular “library room,” where the President sits during his business and working hours, and several handsomely, .furnished bedrooms and dressing rooms. An elevator carries the family downstairs at meal-time and when thev go down for other purposes if they desire it, but as a rule they walk up and down the broad, easy and luxuriously carpeted stairs and through the handsome and always attractive corridors which lead the way to the dining-rooms and parlors on the first floor. There they find everything ready, ter the experienced steward is able to relieve the mistress of the White House ■of all the cares of housekeeping—if he is well paid for it. V 4#: .