New York's Woman of Domestic Science 0""NB OF the most Interesting youag women In the working world of the American metropolis Is Miss C ".Ui Florence Corbett, dietician, whom Homer Folk, the commissioner of publlo charities, has recently appointed to rule over the department kitchens. Her position does not conflict, as might bo sup posed, with that of the housekeepers or stewards In the city Institutions. Though, she has a general supervision of these de partments the greater part of her time is devoted to the question of cooking and serving the food. Miss Corbett is a remarkably pretty young woman in the twenties. Her voice Us soft and low, yet decisive and Indicates that in flplte of her glrllehness and pronounced femininity, she Is well qualified to con duct her branch of the department. Seen at headquarters, where she has her desk, In the office of the deputy commissioner, she looks attractive and businesslike, gowned In a walking skirt of brown cloth and a smart white pique shirtwaist. A native of Manhattan, Kan., and a graduate of the State Agricultural .college there. Miss Corbett came to her present position through the natural turning of the wheel of evolution. It was early her In tention to be a dietician, and to this end she made domestic science her special course during her college days. At tho Kansas college domestic science became an Important branch through Mrs. Kedzle now Mrs. Kedzle-Jones who was the first teacher in that science in the west, and Is well known throughout the country. Botany for a time threatened to swerve Miss Corbett from her chosen lino. She became proficient In making botanical drawings. So valued were these thought to be that her botany Instructor urged her to make that line of Bcience her profes sion and even went so far as to apply to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington for a position for her. But domestic sci ence won the day. Through the influence of Mrs. Hudson Campbell, well known In the work, Miss Corbett was transplanted to the Pratt Institute In Brooklyn, where she took the two years' course In six months. While at the Pratt Institute a week be fore commencement tho charge of the die tary department of the Elizabeth, N. J., General hospital was offered Miss Corbett, and sh6 was permitted to leave to accept It. This position she later resigned for one with the Kings County hospital and almshouse, which are part of New York's institutions. Dr. Duryea, then superintendent of the Kings County hospital, thought there was a need of her line of work In all the city institutions and used his influence with the Civil Service commissioners to have her appointed under the title of charity die tician. They sanctioned the appointment, but not the title, evidently supposing the new officer to be nothing but a combination 3Iayor's Campaign (Continued from Fourth Page.) for the needy, Moores has relieved their need from his own purse. Where other men Ijavo' theorized on democracy, Moores has exemplified it by meeting on equal footing the grimiest toller who ever saluted him. And all this time he was "campaigning." By all these acts he was making friends and votes. Ills enemies will seize upon this declara tion as an admission that he is politic. They will charge, perhaps, that there was always "method In his madness," and that whatever he did, he did for personal gain. It was always so. No man in public life ever gave a dollar that he was not charged with selfish endo. But let the reader ask the men whom Moores has helped what they think about it. Det the reader ad dress his inquiries to the widow who had no vote to give and none to Influence; to the aided partisan, already too strong in his faith ever to bolt a party nominee; to the sickened stranger who Would be leagues away from Omaha before an election; to orphaned children who would have no voice in public affairs for years to come; to democrats known to vote with their own people ever and always; to the lame, the halt and the blind, of whom nothing could be expected and of whom nothing was asked. These can tell, better than any others, whether Frank E. Moores was playing poli tics and giving only that be might receive. These can tell how it Is that a man may "campaign" merely by cultivating such charity and benevolence that other men will recognize it in him without ever seeing It demonstrated and he drawn to him by that confidence born of intuition. And in this Intuitive confidence he In spires lu others lies the great secret of Frank E. Moorea' success as a campaigner. "Personality," the wise ones term it. It has "made" nearly every public roan who ever has succeeded and It will be the secret of all those who are to follow. It Is within a man's breast, never out upon his shirt front, and is felt in his hand clasp rather than expressed by bis sentences. Moores could write a speech as long as a supreme court decision and never make half the friends by it as he can In five minute i . - ' vj I 1 ;r: .is.- a5 t . . s . fJ? r" 'J I -. f - ,, 1 ; '1 . ' " u ' - - ' '? , 3 i,'- im ) . 11 .: raw ..-. V , y-' - "-V" i , , t - 1 jj MISS FLORENCE CORBETT, of housekeeper and cook. At the end otr Bix months Miss Corbett proved her prac-t tieal value on linrs so thoroughly sclen-, tlfio that her right to a distinctive office was recognized and tho title of dietician was created for her. Commissionor Folk, who looks after the welfare of Father Knickerbocker's charity patients, Is determined, he says, to estab lish a dietary in the institutions under his control that will meet the physiological re quirements as now understood by the best modern teaching on that subject a dietary that will give sufficient variety of food and the proper amount of each kind of .'oods. In speaking of his object in bringing Miss Corbett into the department, he said: ' "One of my principal reasons for ap mixing In a crowd. That 'Hole in the Bot tom of tho Sea" has defeated the philosophy of a number of eminent gentlemen who have sought, from time to time, to supplant its singer in public favor and public sup port. Men like to feel that one whom they are asked to employ as their official servant will not assume to be their school master and their dictator after the ballots are counted. The people want a man of the people and for the people. They feel safer with him because they know they can get near enough him to make their needs and wants known and understood. Still, let this not be understood as im plying that Frank E. Moores Is wholly a philanthropist or a humanl ar'.an. and noth ing of a politician. He Is a politician, and honest enough to concede that ha is. Thie are other gentlemen, too, who wl.l con cede that be is, if they be quite hjnes', for he has beaten them at the game, with odds and the best cards on their side. When votes are needed he goes after them, and goes after them with the one lnten'icn of getting them. In an ante-election pe riod such as the present his office is like the headquarters of an army efflcer. Cne day's visit there is quite enough to c n Vince anyone that Moores Is a general, an organizer of much more than ordinary ability. He has his staff of officers com missioned to carry on the fight in every quarter of the field, and those officers fol low Instructions explicitly because they have confidence in the man who issued them. At all hours of any week day they are dropping In to get advice, and going out again with a suggestion that will overcome the difficulty that confronted each. If tbey don't find the mayor in, they may wait he has a secretary and a page who are exper s at making people feel at home in the big upholstered divan or chairs or they may meet him on the front steps, or on the street and get what they want there. Moores doesn't have to bo behind closed doors to do his thinking, nor does be have to talk a long while to make himself un derstood. In one minute be can tell his point, and In another minute he can Inspire his auditor with a belief that he is right about it. This latter faculty Is one of his greatest blessings and sources of strength. He Is one of the tnoU convincing and ever CHARITIES DIETICIAN. pointing a dietician was that I was con fident we could get a good deal hotter diet for the money we were spending by pur chasing materials which, on account of (Conditions at a given time, might be 1 cheaper than ethers and of equal food value. Miss Corbett has undertaken a gen eral oversight over the question cf pre paring food at the different Institutions, and seeing that it is served hot whenever possible. "She began by going through each In stitution and carefully studying the wholo question of food from the time It is or dered to the time it ia consumed. As a re sult of her investigations and suggestions, we have taken the Initial steps In the way of reform by establishing new dietaries at lastingly optimistic leaders a party ever had. Wherever he goes he inspires hope among .his friends and uneasiness among those who are against him. Another contingent that frequents this civil general's tent as long as It dares each day are the news getters. It is a congenial place for them because It Is both pleasant and prolific of readable matter. Moores Is as easy to "get at" as a press agent, and If he has a "story" he will give It up without that perpetual pumping that lesser men sometimes require and seem to relish. A request for an Interview hi either grants lnstanter or turns down with equal prompt ness ali depending on whether or not tho topic is one on which he is entitled to speak and free to speak. He doesn't talk Just to bo quoted, how ever. And he doesn't tell anybody all he knows about political plans, either. In fact he does a great deal of his campaign ing "without the rid or cens nt of any other nation on earth." Sometimes this is very disconcerting to those associated with him In a fight. For example: The night be fore the election that first made him mayor he disappeared from headquarters without a word, and didn't come back. Tho leaders became distressingly fretted. They even called him a fool and an ass for betray ing such Indifference at so critical a time. They sat up most of the night waiting for him and when they went to bed they were disheartened and disgusted. Next morning a delegation of counsellors was at the door of the office of the clerk of the district court (which office was then Moores') be fore that door opened, and they declared that it was no time for him to be loafing. Put Moores bad not been loafing. He had been down in the First and Second wards as long as any voter stayed up, and he had had heai t-to-heart talks, with t,o many of them that when the ballots were cast and counted nerf day the territory he had covered was founS to have gone to him with a rush and to have given htm quite a prcportlon of the majority he bad that year. He didn't tell any one where he was going when he started and he didn't offer any apologies when be returned. He let the votes do the talking. Often, he slips on his hat and coat and leaves his offlcs as the City hospital and the Tntwrcalosta la. Irmary on IUackwrll's Island. "Eventually these improvements will rover all the institutions in our department and a dietary will be arranged for tbo em ployes as well as the patients. There has never been any dietary tor employes and one Is greatly needed, but necessarily tha patients must he our first care. "Miss Corbett has thoroughly studied the wholo question and I shall leave her quite free to work out the pi blems of her department In her own way." To tho tuberculosis Infirmary MIfb Cor bett has given deep study. As everyone knows, consumption Is a wasting away of the tissues and to give tho patients proteid or nuiBolo building foods Is of the utmost importance in arresting tho disease. Tha diet list as now arranged is as good as at a private institution. It Includes a regular, special light and liquid ' diet. The regular diet Is a menu covering the three meals for the seven days of the week. There are no two meals on tho list alike. To get sway from tho everlasting daily stew, Miss Cor bett has made variety by roast beef, pot roast, cornbeef and boiled mutton. Steak Is included in the special diet for bed pa tients who also have more than tho regu lar allowance of eggs and milk. By this treatment it Is hoped. If not to cure, at least to arrest the disease In a great many cases. At the City hospital the new dietary ar ranged by Miss Corbett differs from ths old In materially Increasing the amount and kinda of cereal foods. It also Increases somew hat the amount of milk and decreases the gross amount of bcof. Variety In tha menu is a feature. A decided innovation Is the glass of milk served at 8 o'clock p. m. to every patient As they eat their supper between 4 and 6, bedtime refreshment Is acceptable. This Is probably the only one of the diotetlo BieaaureB of which they are aware. Miss Corbett's Ideal is that there shall lie established eventually at every institu tion a building devoted exclusively to die tary -purposes. This would be erected near the main building and consist of dining rooms, kitchens, pantries and storehouses. Under the present arrangement In many public Institutions there Is one large dining room for the Inmates, while in others there Is a dining room for each ward. Invariably there Is only one kitchen, which seems to have been constructed with a view to get ting It as far away from the dining rooms as possible. In consequence much time and strength Is wasted in merely getting tha food to the dining rooms. The present mode of transporting food from the kitchens to the bed patients Is open to Improvement. Miss Corbett thinks that instead of sending it In cans and tubs, each of which requires one and sometimes two prrbons to carry It, a special food car can be constructed which would be heated and so arranged that one man could oper ate it. suddenly as though Just telegraphed for, and It may bo two months before he ever chances to mention where he went. In deed, ho may never mention It. . " . But notwithstanding this, he no longer gives the attention to little things that ha used to, nor does so much of the hustling. He sees in his city attorney, W. J. Connell, one who Is a much more careful master of small but essential details than Is he. And as for hustling, ho now has such perfect organization of his forces that It Isn't ar necessary as it once was. Moores always had splendid organization and those who have followed his career say it Is better this time than ever before. The speeches ho delivers during each ante-electlon period are not of particular merit as orations. They are embellished with wit rather than humor and almost en tirely devoid of pretty figures. He is more a mlxtr than talker and on a stage he feels too far away from the people he wants to reach. For all that, he succeeds because convincing and plain-spoken. The little talk be made in accepting the nomination of the convention at Washington hall, April 11, fairly carried the crowd off Its feet and made every man a fighting man, ready to do his best in the approaching battle for party supremacy. Had he faltered or weak ened, -his supporters might have lost their enthusiasm for the cause and made no such valiant fight as they are making. Ha told them that he would make the fight of his life, that ho expected them to do tha same and that when the ballots era counted the party will be found to hava vanquished Its natural antagonist and to have shamed those who deserted Its ranks because their preferences had not pre vailed. He wos not abusive, nor even sar castic, but merely determined and plain spoken. And they rallied with a cheer that echoed his own enthusiasm. What has tranFplred since then does not appear to have disconcerted him In tha least. It would not, were the opposition twice as strong. For Moores Is a man who never cries quit; who likes his vic tories to come through honest fighting and who contemplates success and defeat with, equal composure and equal respect for tha will of the majority.