r ' THE DAILY EVENING TELEGKAm. PIlILADELrHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER! 22, : 18G0. G ALL SMOKE BBf.neral proposition, which persons who J'upulou. to the letter In their atalernco a ,lht choose to modify into -Nearly all people moke." There U a email minority who retrain iTora emoklBR; but those who do not smoke are considered, by those who do, as ycry poor creatures indeed. ' Bomctinies, on contemplating the hourly in dolence In this universal habit, thiBconmopoli tao luxury, I ask mjeclf how the world-that Is to fay, the Old World-got on before A. D. 150, or thereabouts.. We were alt poor creatures then; our mouths were underrated with cigars, enr pockets ungaruished with Inciters, vestas, and neat little volumes of cigarette paper. No joung ladies, then, embioiderod tobacco pouches, or sold them at fancy fairs tor fancy prices The timler-box and its substitutes were confined to the kitchen, or to the bapgage of rious enterprising travellers who might have to roast their dinner over dry sticks, after shoot Inn it and preparing it themselves in the forest. The meerschaum, the yard of clay. and. the frute-gueute, or short, black, muzzle burner, wore equally unknown Bnd uninvested. There is no awoke without tire, and there s no tobacco moke without tobneco; and yet the world did get on, somehow, before A. D. 15o0. "All 8moke" Is so slight an exaggeration, that it might be allowed to pass uncavilled at. All men smoke as ail ducks and geese swlm-wlta exceptions, which, it they do not confirm, cer tainly do not Invalidate the rule. It may be rramed, too, that the habit of smoking varies in Intensity at different spots of the civilized globe. In France, smoking wears the teeth out ol the workman's mouth at an early age. He canmot work without his pip); while his hands arc busy, his lips must pulf. He cannot walk to bis meals without it; he cannot digest thorn afterwards without it. On a holiday, espe cially, he cannot tuke his pleasure without it; he cannot ro to sleep without it. Paley said that teeth were made, not to ache, but to eat with. A French artisan's or laborer's teeth were given to him to hold a pipe. That is the iisal cause of French dentition ever since the creation of the human race. For t lie last five thousand years H has been perfecting itself for that main purpose. Iron would not stand the . wear and tear tuat many of these teeth have ptood. But considering that teeth are so valua ble lor other purposes besides pipe-holding, I -wonder that that ingenious nation has not Invented some patent indestructible mouth pipe bolder. Then again. In Germany, do they smoke, or don't they? It cannot be dcaied tnat they do, a little. Not, to insist on what the vulgar do, I will merely instance in this respect the ways of a Herman professor, as- sketched by an able contemporary. Your German professor never gels on in thewoild, and he smokes all the day and most of the night. It ruu.it be allowed that no human being, not even a Turk, nor an English ensigu, nor a French peasant of the Departement du Nord, can smoke any thing like a (Jeriwin professor. A really practised and burdened German professor will not only moke during every other moment of his waking hours, but he will smoke all through his dinner, talcing alternately a jnouthlulot food and a mouthful of smoke. His pending years in proving that being and not being are the same, or that they are not the same, audit not, why not," and how otherwise, might seem to be irrelevant to the nil-smoke question; but some people might reasonably opine that it is only a natural consequence of the smoke. ' In Northern Italy at least, smoking on the wing has becomo eo general a practice, that . almost as much attention seems paid to your whiff by the way as to your reaching your final destination. At the Turin station, you step out on the platform, to take your place in a depart ing train. "Fumare 1 Fumare 1" shouts the guard, point ing to a second-clnss carriage. 'Non Fumare; Genoa 1" says a traveller who is making his first appearance on this stage. ''I dou't want to go to Fumare, but to Genoa. I don't even remember to have seen Fumare either on the time-table or on the map. 'Xou Fpmare, non Fumare, se vi piace,' If you please.1' "Non Fumare ! JJon Fumare !" again shouts the guard, pointing to a contiguous carriage. Quoth I to my puzzled fellow-traveller, "The train Is going to Genoa, sir; but 'fumare' indi cates the carriages where you may smoke, 'non lumare.' where you may not." "Ah I thank you. To be sure 1" he said. "My Italian has grown rutty, for waut ot use. I tooi Fnmare lor a station I" Hot mav we in justice neglect American ex ploits in the smoking line. A letter from Wis consin mentioned the existence there of an in dividual named Joseph (it should have been Methuselah) Crlle, who was supposed at that date (April, 1805) to be the oldest man on earth. He is, or was, a Frenchman, born in ihe neigh- vuruuou vi iv iioi, in wormancty. tils baptts- mm register assigned nim, tueu, tne re- Bpectawe age ot one hundred and thirty cleave wood, and to walk distances of several Miles. His habits were regular; his consump tion of drink was moderate; but he could not live without smokiuff trom morninar till mcht. If tobacco be a poison, we must either admit that it is a very slow one, or else suppose that memuBeian urue naa attainea what is tecum cally called "a tolerance" of its influence. trom the aged turn we to the juveniles. The journal or Education, or Ohio (date unknown V ' informs us that la one of thvschoolsof thatBtar , oonsibting ot nve-and-thlrty boys and girls, inere are nine Utile boys who quid, and five little girls who smoke tobacco. The Journal seems annoyed by that statistical fact. "We say nothing about the quidding," It wails aloud; "but when we think of the smokeresses we almost fancy ourselves in the Sandwich Islands." The Journal is wrong to express surprise. In a go-ahead nation like the United State, the young idea, taught or untaught, will sometimes make extraordinary shoots. All that remains is for American mUtresses of deport ment to teach young ladies graceful ways of holding a cigarette, aHd of making the smoke, ftJtyescapes, Invariably curl in the Hue of .U!bi no'elty yitb which America presented Uf Ji..i7o ree hundrel years ago, had been . attractive to any ot the senses, we might be : tS?S7?Mat tDe,uW U has taken of all the Old World populations. But Its power is . quite paradoxical. Although the p ant oTitoelf la ol portly mien, prepared tobacco has nothing which pleases or invites the eve- whii m ih taste, the amell, the stomach, il , at the outset absolutely offensive. Wbo is there who doea remember the painful expeiimeut oi learuiuir to smoke ? Amongst others, Napoleon I never could or never would learn. In Egypt, he pretended t0 gmoke as he held out his pofslble-con version to Islamism to please the Egyptians by adopt ing their customs. But he never could light his ipe himself. It was his Mameluke Koustnu's uty to set it going. If his master let it go out again, charcoal and matches were not ruinously expensive. ' , Afterwards, when the Persian ambassador presented him with a very hautleonie pipe, ho ordered his valet de chambre, Constant, to till and light it. The fire being applied to the mouth of the bowl, all that remained was to ' make the tobacco catch; but in the why in , which his Majesty set about It, no smoke would have appeared trom tnat time till doomsday. He simply closed ana opened bis Jips, without drawing tne least in tne worm. . . "What the deuce!" he exclaimed at last "There la no setting light to it." , Constant diffidently ventured to observe that the Emperor did not proceed exactly in the usual way, and showed him the right mode of going to work; but the inapt scholar still re turned to nia bad imitation oi tne act or yawn in or. 'Tired at last of bis useless efforts. "Con slant, he blurted out, "do you light the pipe; I cannot.". ' i Bo said, ao done.; It was returned to him with the ateajji well up, going at a high-preasure rate, with a double Persian power of amok. Scarcely had be drawn a whiff, when the smoke, which he did not knaw how to pet rid of, went down his throat, coining out strain through his noe and eyes. As soon as he had recovered hts breath, "Take 1t away I" he gasped, "take It away 1 Whnl an infection 1 What a set of pigs they must be 1 It lias turned my stomach!" He was ill for more than on hour 'afterward; and he renounced forever "a pleasure whose enjoyment," he said, "was only good to Oil up the -time of Idle people with nothing better to do." Nature certainly has done her best to deter via from the. use pr Ihe dreamy weed; and, as hap pened long ago, men cannot resist 4he tempta tion of lorbidden fruit. And when I say men. I include with them women. Ladies' might possibly be influenced bythe same spirit of contra diction when they first tbrut powdered tobacco up their pretty noses. According to the dogarel song put into the mouth ot a eniitf-taking lady, somebody said they should not; consequently, they would: "A pinch of tnvttt That bryrnd stuff t Take It r No, indeed, I can' I. Such, Sally, dear, Wan m irioa. Until my husband raid 'You $fian't." "Yon shan't I' to me! Fiddle-dee-dec I Of course 1 take it on the sly. You know, dear ban, For 'shan't' or 'shall,' What husbands say is all my eye !" This spirited nersonapn deserved, in return, to be addressed in the blichtlown lannuatre in which Balzac tnot the modern novelist) re quested a piach ot a lady wbo flourished in the days of Louis XIV. "Madame," he said, "per mit my digital extremities to insinuate tliem- selves into your tooaccnic concavity, 10 ootain from it the subtle powder which dissipates and confounds the aquatic humors of uiy inundated and swampy biain." WhOj aenin, would ever have supposed before hand that the tnxes on so detestable an article would ever produce an iumortant item in the State's revenue? Yet such we know to be the case in more than one European country. , rancv. some three hundred ver.rs aro. when Jean Nicot, kitg'a advocate and ambassador extraordinary, first sent tobacco to France from rorrugai, as a jiresent to tnat amiable queen, Catherine de Medicis onlv fnncv a bold finan cier requesting an audience of the Cardinal de Lorraine, and addressing him to toe following purport: Muonseigneur, knowinsr the treamrv to be in a aomewhat pitiable condition. I htn come to propose a tax which will bring you ia a oouple or nunarea minions or irancs. cneerru iv raid- voluntary contributions to the State revenue. There will botaxnavers ineverv familv trouerh- out the land, and you will never have to seize or squeeze to collect it.' ' btate vour nroiect." thr Cardinal tYilfThr. coldly reply. aionseigneur, it Is MmDlv this. The Gov ernment has only to reserve to itself the exclu sive privilege or selling a certain herb, which is to be reduced to a powder sufficiently tine for people to stuff it up their noses. The plant mav also be left in the leaf, to be chewed, or to be burnt tor the purpose of inhaliug its smoke." lour Diane, men. atioras a de lcnttui ner. fume, sweeter than amber, musk, or roses?" tvv no means." tne rneculntor would renlv. "Its smell is unpleasant rather than not." l understand, it is a nanacea. a Bnet lllc. en dowed with marvellous healing virtues per haps snatching men out of the jaws of death." -ioi a aii. quue rue comrarv. xue numt ot sniffing in the powdered herb weakens the memory and destroys the smell. It cautes giddi ness, 'mere are instances ot its brine insr on blindness and even apoplexy. Chewed, it renders the breath offensive and puts the stomach out ot order. Inhaline the smoke ia a different affair. First attentats brina on nains in the chest, nausea, swimming in the head, colic, and cold perspiration; but in the course of time and Dy persevering, jou gradually get accustomed to it." "How many people do vou believe you will find to be fools and idiou enoueh to punish themselves for your tax-gathering "purposes by smoking this plant or stuffing their nostrils witli it " There will one dav be. Mon-eierneur. more than twenty millions in France alone. I don't mention tne minions in Knuland. Germany, and elsewhere, because they, Monaelgneur, pay vs no taxes." If the Cardinal had ordered the sctotner out of doors in a huff, or got him put Into a lunatic asylum, his contemporaries would have given him small blame ior it. And yet, as events have proved, he would have made a great mistake in reiecting mat counsel. Tb a last bit of badmaore is the wntmsicat view which Alphone Karr takes of the tobacco tax quest on; but he exaggerates, perhaps, the dangers oi tne weea wneu empioyea wun orai nary precaution. Another of his countrymen, Eugene Pclletan, rivals our King James I in the violence of nla counterblast against tobacco, asci thing to it a considerable share in causing what he considers the deca dence ot France, be it noted mat ho holds up for wine, landing it as th genuine national beverage, and utterly proscribing the use of alcohol. Drumfdrtnkii) is his terror and aver sion, while beer find little favor in his eyes. Wine, for him, is b9 health and sanity; eau de vie and absinthe, madness and ruin. The flame of brandv bi)is up the blood, and the race of Frenchnif" is dwindling away in consequence. The stiwdiird height for soldiers Is obliged to be reduced. Thanks to absinthe, thanks to the dis tillers of beetroot and the consumption of alco nol augments every year in another century, peihaps in less, the world will really behold Frenchmen consumptive, onnv. ricketv. unnhlp. to handle either spade or gun, like the French men ol old Eueiish caricatures. Now alcohol calls In the aid of tobacco, by the verv nature of thinsrs, out of simple svmmetrv. One over- excites the brain, the other benumbs and stu pefies it. According to I'eiietan. tne verv introduction of tobacco could not happen in an ordinary way. The circumstances accompanying it were reces.-arily startling and fantastic, like the com pounding a cu arm or tne completing an incan- lauou. in tne sixteenth century the monsoon waited to Manilla a vessel manned bv anes of a singular species. Dresed up like men, they imitated buinun shape so well as to cause an illusion lor the first lew moments. But tbev ale tire-sticks-, and rejected the smoke tbrougu a nasal protuberance ot portentous length. mete curious animals were suaumvds. who had jut learnt in America the art of smoking, and brought it piping hot to the coast ot Asia. The inhabitants of the Indian Archipelago, accustomed to the small noses ol the Malayan lace, could not behold without secret horror the cornuconiouB aquiline of the Castilian tvne. The long noses got i tie upper hand of the short botes, maims to tne m-ip ot tne nrqucbuse. The conquerors tamed the conquered race, reducing .ucua iu tiuvery. no you Know nowr uy stupe fying au.i boBotiiug them with ciaars. . uucted a long resistance to the inva oriSiiSLi? H.cco" " The rt'Seut distributed it Sat.w.7.,i.oeol!L taste forlt and create ou ..v..,,. WHUT. Thp t,il .. ., that S ".u lew .hundred thousand franc. 1 V W VA A V IUUV at the very outside. It uo produces two hull- dred mill oiif. But, at least, in the enrWinu ceutnrv tn bacco was taken in powder by the 0',.y' i there was somethina s inpathctlc in that 'laLhtnn of taking ir. The sriutl box passed from liuud to hand; lingers were thrust into it, in turu. The box tilseli 'leDi'i't-euted a work of an. a iimi of pnee. a breviary of the heart, a portrult of gome uciovcd oujeci. It was a mod well suited to the affected society of eileminate seigneurs, smart little abbes, giddy-brained duchesses, crumpled 'up beauties', and heart-shaped mouths constant baited with a smile. The action h' oi' ihe thumb in administer ing the piath, nymakinar the nose turu up more and nioie, pave it a detlant air; and the snuff itself, by peppering the ninroua , membrane, spuned the intellect, and the wltticUin, ex ploded. Heaven' knows what sort of witticism But tbe elghtveuth century thought of little else than love-mukine, with an epigram now and then to break the monotony. nufT, incessantly inlccted into the naal i sinus ended by destroying the sene of smeil. 1 If therinhtcenth century indulged In the love ot tloweis, it, did so uncoifclous of their por fume. Its nose was slopped np. Now, whoever loses the impressionability ot a sense, at the anio time loses a porticn of native mode-ty. Wituesi the blind and deaf and dumb. The eighteenth century, through its nasal dcatness, becamo mad alter game kept till it was high ani tainted alter putielaction on a silver dish. For the fame reason it courted coarse amours, the gal lantry ot the lamp-post and the gutter. The l)u Barry reieucd everywhere, from the highest to the lowest, in aristocratic circles. Society so fool could only be cleansed by plunging it in the wash-tub ot revolution. And now that man has recovered hi" nose, that he can Inhale the pertume of beauty and floweia, he extinguishes another senso, that is, another perception of modesty. H0 takes in tobacco by the mouth, ho breathes It In smoke. He converts the sanctuary of taste Into a chimney. He lines and Impregnates every corner of his palate with a sooty coal ol nicotine. And yet that is the place where the immortal soul gives audience, thedwelling-placool speech speech, the glorious communication of man with man, ol man with woman. And when ho whispers a Confidence of the heart, it floats from his lip infected by the pipe, like the hot puff of fulsome vapor which recks up from tho window 01 an underground kitchen. What poetry can words of love retain when they present them selves In such bad company? A woaian must sadly want to pardon the man when she goe3 so far as to excuse the cigar. it is In vain that Nature (who appoints senti nels to guard us from ourselves) protests against this internal fumigation of our persons. In vain does she charitably warn us of the danger by the very difficulty we have in acclimatizing our selves to tobacco smoke. Tho contagion of ex ample draws us on: the demon of the pipe has got possession of ns. . No doubt the novitiate is long.- We suffer soa-sickness ten times a day: we shudder with chilly ague fits; but by dint of undergoing the penance, we acquire the right ot smolling offensively. r ''Tobacco has killed kissing," says Michelet. It does more; it closes the drawing-room. For merly people conversed after dinner. Men and women, assembled round the same lamp, went through a course of mutual instruction. The men initialed the women into intellectual life: the women taught the men the graceful arts of pleasing. Both parties were gainers by the bargain. It was free exchange In all its splendor, i , . But the male portion of the French popula tion are anxious to compete -with Yarmouth red herring and Hamburg smoked beef. Whenever thevara asked to .dinner, as soon as they get back to the drawing-room they cast melancholy gmucca in mi uin-ciions. w nat does it matter to them that their hostess is handsome or witty aim ciever r nas a young man or the present day any need to toss back the ball, and answer one amusing speech by another f After dinner he is lamt and languid; his thoughts are absent; his heait is wandering after a Havana cigar. But,.as a well-bred woman cannot convert her drawing-room into a pothouse, every creature who wears or might wear a moustache takes his departure at the earliest occasion, and goes into female society where he can smoke at ease, Idling back with bis legs on the chimney-piece. Every evening La Jeunesse Doree takes prac tical lessons in cynicism. Now and then an elegante moving In good society, In despair at the cigar's severing humanity in two and con demning her to a life of conversational cclibscy, endeavors to retain the deserters by opening a smoking-room in her mansion, and herself set ting the example with a cigarette. But tobacco has a fuller flavor in an equivo cal than in a respeotable house.- There, at least, it can be moistened with beer and brand y. And thus a stinking West Indian plant, burning in the human pullet, banishes the wine-glass more and more.- Neither the perfumed produce of jjieocc nor tne electric vintages oi Burgundy retain their holy on the smoker's palate. The unhflppy wretch olunees his lip in a bitter de coction of hops, or swallows a class ot kirsch at a gulp, which Is one way as good as another of firing a pistol into one's mouth. Smoking, like dram-drinking, is the conse quence of having nothing to do, of disenchant ment ot the heart and mind. ' A prisoner of siaio ancgca, -'tseiorc entering my ceil, i was innocent of tobacco; but I learned to smoke under bolts and bars, to beguile the weariness ot solitude." The increasing consumption of tobacco is frightful. Children ten years of age already smoke. But it is time to think of a remedy. Tobacco is a poison a slow one, if you wiB bnt certainly a poison; ior it Denumos tne Dram, extinguishes the memory, brings on giddiness, on1 (mllif a . it ..d , 1 1 . "i r tinavtlilA lioanL'nj cancer in the mouth and softening of the spinal marrow. When it does not kill totally, it kills paittaiiy. it concert with its comrade alcohol, it ravages tne organism and dwaris tno species, Tobacco injures the human race not only phy sically, but morally. It strikes thought with atrophy, and paralyses ' action. ' With every whiff of tobacco-smoke a man exhales an enerorv or a virtue. Germany smokes and dreams; 8paia Buiuacs guu bicciw. xuiney,. wno nas been smoking these last three, hundred years, has no miiBcr oireugiu wj niaui on ner legs, lte clining on a divan, she dreams all day Ions. nut louseenei eomewncre says, "A ver tical nation win always conquer a hori zontal nation." ... Take care ot , vourselve. O Gallic youth ! Unless you throw your cigar Bwiiv. ubuic wajr io?sioiy vauun in srooKc, Bucb is the conclusion of M. Pcllptnn's in Another French author, M. Jolly, member ot the. Imperial Academy of Medicine, is indignant that smoking should be openly permitted in a uoveruuieni scnooi. -as ir," ne says, "learning me pipe-aua-cigar exercise were a necessary preparation for serious studies; as il such a novitiate were the best Introduction to a career oi science, arms, ana letters." Worse still; physician, whose name he suppresses out of respect lor the rest.ot his colleagues, had the singular idea of proposing the use of tobacco snioKe as a saiutaiy regulation lor French Lyceums! Tobacco did uot find Its way into the different countries of Europe either through the same channel, or exactly at the same date. Its im- ploynieut as an excitant and a stupetier is pro bably as old as the aboriclnal populations of the X' lr 1-1 1 If .. .A if . . .wcw norm liseu. uui its m ex introduction to the Old World cannot have occurred earlier than the sixteenth century. We ow e it to a Spanish missionary named Fray Komnno Pane, who had oeen taiten to America by Christopher Colum bus, to o m vert the natives to Cbristiauitv The worthy friar Imving remarked, tn the priests of the god Kiwassn, the fanatic excitement pro duced by the vanor of tobacco leaves in fer mentation or combustion, took it Into his head to send seeds of the plant to Charles V, In all piuuuuiiit; nine Huspecnng mat ne was trans muting to nis sovereign the germs ol a revolu tion destined one day to overrun the world. r-uch at least, appears to be the origin of the culture of tobacco by Europeans. Spain hud it first. This occurred in 1618, an epoch equally fruitful in superstitious frivolities and libdoiical events. Cuba was tbe first snot aelRctmi. on account ol the superiority of its produce. Por tugal soon followed Spain's example, byerovving tobacco in several districts ol llruzil. PortifHl, also, observing how Its sale Increased, was tbe tlrt to draw a revenue from a tax on tobacco. About that time, Cnrdinal Delia Santa (iroee, ben the Pope's nuncio in Portugal, imported tobacco into Italy, Atuie instigation ot Admiral Drake, tne Au:!io-Ameni;u" uuu autraiv oroken un iui iiuiibdi wiiuiM uwoo in , uuiuiu uuu juarviauu ior tne special culture or topacco. All thla im Plies a ertaiu demand, which, though partial "u limited at urst, must nave oeen tteadily on "he Increase. , tobacco, therefore, was not olv . ""yrded a revenue to a portion of Enrnii had cuhft1 Klf ' "cn E"vy Lisbon, who mpntna u ? garden, and had experl- cure for linu.i. v 11 wtlu ooo powuer as a Catherine de x'.?,!!red in 15G0-to Vueen uu iiiurw(1i ,WU iAkannA powder as a II toerto tobacco had n..i., i. ' V " 1 fumlgator by tbe SS hav undercone Hnmir r .,T. 'I'armus, wnicu reaching the TeAn whfahW. sent, but thji time It was no longer a Csilon o" Inhaling the smoke of the plantfiu pTer haj to be snuffed In bythe nose. Ann Uwasthni that, alter journeying by sea and by laud, and traversing a rortiou of Kiirone. tobacco made Its entry into France by the narrow passage of ner nosiriie. ; The moment could not be better choson nor more opportune. The Queen, who, as well as her sen Francis li. suflcied froui obstinate headaebes, received the remedy with the hearty welcome always given to new and far-letcued specifics. Ol its success nothing is recorded. All we know is Hint, from that dale, headaches have often been the pretext tor anufl-taklng. . ine custom soon fotead. with incredible rapidity, throughout all classes of society. There was a mania, a rage tor snuff. Rich and poor, men and women, healthy and sick, every one, furnished with their little roll of tobacco, the mater wherewith to reduce It to powder. strove who should oil' r it ami take it the most eagerly. Far Irom lading into neglect as time wore on, as olten Happens wun tbe best or things, the ut-e ol snuff was constantly on the increase; to such an extent that, during the reigna ot Louis III and Louis XIV, it was almost tho etiquette to present tini'i eolf -at court, grater In hand, tbe shirt frill bespattered wun huun, tne note more or less stutted with the precious powder, the checks slightly tinged with its hue, and the clothing thorongnlv scented with its smell. Some few of . our aged contemporaries may have seen tho last relics of that memorable epoch. ' i cut tne tooacco craters taithoutrti articles or finery which rivalled the most expensive fans) could not long survive the improvements 1ri the ars ot reducing tobacco by maenmery. ltiey were succeeded by snuff-boxes, displaying In turn the mirk ot extravagant luxury. Both graters and tnuff-boxes are alike responsible lor the Immense consumption of tobacco In Franoe. No nation ever snutled to snch an excess: and that in spite of criticism and railory, In spite of tl.e advice of physicians, in spite ol the autho rity of kirgs and popes. i i The sultan and the Muscovite . sovereign threatened death, the king ot Persia amputation of the noi-e, Urban VllI excommunication, Christian IV of Denmark the m ilder punishments of lines and whipping?, to persons guilty of to pacco tatting, liut we know what little muuence both laws and reason, either singly or in combl tion, have in checking the spread of a foolish lasnion. we need not searcu nistorv tor exam ples we need not no back to Rome, nor even to Venice having contemporary instances belore ourejes. "The mode" will ever manifest Us despotism by forcing society to adopt some new- langiea iouy oi tne uav. : Aotnintr. indeed, proves better than tne nts-; tory of tobacco the Btrange turns taken by hu man at! airs by the wajs and doings of men and women. An acrid, letid. and reBul-tve plant. unused by and unknown to all except the. eavages ot America, is brought over to Europe. , One would say, belore the experiment was tried, that It was sure to be despised and rejected, or at least let nione. and consigned to a corner in a druggist's shop with other "nauseous and medi cinal articles. But instead ot tnat, presto; it suddenly finds favor as if bv enchantment. The naonsot nations are changpd-in consequence; a new luuuiKeucu ' creaieu; a new want, oi primary necessity, makes itselt felt by the world at large, xooacco a triumphant march in ad vance shows the power or imitation not only on the human mini, but over the destinies of a people. 1 isevertneiesH.tne t rencn did not vet smoke, al though smoicing was already common in Spain, Holland, Switzerland, and Prussia. And al though France tolerated foreign smokers in the spirit oi ner naDituai courtesy, sne still kent exclusively to her pinch -of anntf, seemingly in protest, agaiusi wnai appeared ir.com patible wun national manners. : As to the time consumed In smokinc. bv wav oi pareninesis, 1 sav notnimr. because in manv cases the amusement is adopted avowedly as a means oi Killing time, snuming, it has been calculated, U even a greater waste of time than smoKing. People can smoke and go on with what they are about; while snuffing, thev do that and nothing else. Now every habitual snuffer is estimated to take a pinch six time? at leat per hour. Every pinch requires tbe employment or ine nanoKercnier, tne taxing out ot and re turning it to the pocket, the opening and shot ting of tne do.v, and other indispensable manoeuvres, taking uo in all not less tban a minute and a half, or nine minutes per hour, or two hours twenty-four minutes per day (of BlAll'CU II U II 1 9 UU1V, AJUb I, WCULJ '1UU11, Ul bUlfty- six days and a halt (of twenty-lour hours) per annum, or exactly tour whole years during a li e ot forty years just the tithe, in short, of a person's existence. (Somebody asked Abernethy whether the moderate use ot Bnuff would injure hts brain. "No, sir," replied the Irrltabie doctor; "for nobody with an ounce of brains in his head would ever think of taking snuff." Louis XIV did not smoke, but at least he tole rated smokers. Jean Bart was one of the first personages who Introduced the pipe to court, whiiher he had been sent for by the king. As it was not yet daylight when he preeuted him self, he bud to wait m the antechamber before admission to the presence. -Knowing nobody at Versailles, he found tbe time long; so he took out hi pipe, struck a light with flint and steel, and set to smoking in right good earnest. Such conduct was naturally considered ex tremely improper the height of Impudence. Nobody had ever before smoked in the king's apartment. The courtiers ' were shocked ; tue guards wanted to turn him eut. .He coolly replied, puffing away, MI have con tracted this habit iu tbe king my master's ser vice, and it has become a necessity. I believe him to be too just a monarch to be angry at my satisfying it." As he had never appeared at court, there was only tbe Comte de Forbia who knew him; and he, fearing the consequences of the freak, dared not acknowledge him as his friend. , Bo some- r body went and told the king that a stiange fel low naa presumed to smoae, ana renuea to quit the antechamber. - - "Let him do as he likes," said the king, with a laugh; "I bet anything that It Is Jean Bart." Adding toon afterwards, "Let him come in." On entering?, his Majesty received him cor dially, remarking: "Vou, Jean Bart, are tho only person allowed to suicke here." , Tue name of Jean Bart and the king's gra cious reception made a Strang alteratioa in the courtiers' manners. When he lclt the king they tbroneed about him, asking how he managed to get opt cf IHinkerquo with his Utile squad ron, in spite ol the floet blockading the port. Rantiug them close together in a line belore him he pushed his way through, elbowing right and left, and pommelling them with his fists. Then, turning round, he said: "That is the way 1 managed it." , Sailors elsewhere had already indulged them selves both with tbe pipe and the quid, and so distinguished themselves from the rest ot the service. But examples like these spread quickly, if not lor the gratification of curiosity as hap pened even to the daughters of tb Grand Monarque. One day, when they were indulg ing in the novelty, without asking their gov erness' perraitsion. they were surprised by the entrance of their royal father, who was struck all of a heap at the Bight. Copying the nuvv, tno army soon smoked, be ginnuig with the officers and not ending with the common soldiers; lor now all r ranee smokes like one man, with a single mo'-itu, keeping millions upon millions of pipes alight. The pastime is not confined to the bivouac, but Is practised everywhere, at all times, in all weathers, in all ranks of society, from the im perial throne to the meanest hovel. Princes and ministers, masters and jalcts, rich and poor, great and little, everybody ampkes, all smoke. Smoking Is perpetrated on loot, on horseback, In private carriases. in railway ditto, at work, during repose, always and every where. Almost Ihe only interruption are the Ea devoted to rest and aleep? and that inter Son will shortly cease tvheu France shall be as advanced aa Germany. Tender youth is not held I Si'nt reason for abstaining from the SSe ol tobacco. The adolescent smokes; the child? the schoolboy would also aiuoke were he Sot prevented rather by paternal surveillance and echolastlo discipline than by the giddiness naivea, and intoxication which are consequent on hi precocious attempts. Declamation la powerless In Ihe face of stub bora facts, and when people have resolved to do a thitig, 11 la of no tise advising- tlieifl notto do it. Still, wc cannot conceal trom ourselves that England, as (ar as tobneoo Is concerned. Is bo-. finning to llval the eocial state above defcrincd. rvai the Continent doubiless we have Imported aniOKing to excess, iiist as. we nave imported moustaches, beards, white table-clottts at dessert, acd dinners a In Huhsc. The one may be as irresif title ns. ine oiners; out, nntorlnu- itrlv. it is neither so inexpensive nor so harm less, for it involves the whole questlou of na tional hvtipne. ol the popular health, ol the dwarfing of our race and the spread ol dWcase. Hardened smokers win go on in tneir own way, in spite ot all they may read or hear; but beginners would do well to peruse attentively Dr. lilchardson'a able treatise "For and Against Tobacco." Although it la more Against than For, it is sulbciently impartial to command respect. iondon hcoutyfer October. WATCHES, JEWELflY ETC, J USE GOLD WATCHES. to sojourners in our city. Wi i itelal attention of tbe tolonnien la tn oiir to tie FINE WATCH AND dlLVKtlWAllB ESTABLISHMENT OF i. W. W. CASSIDY, V No. lit South SECOND Street, Who has on band on of tbe Uncut ajwortmetiti ot Jew- eliy, etc., of any in tbe city. A tplendld assortment o BlLVZtt WAJUE ALWAYS ON HAND. Reroacabor W. W. CASSlDY, No. 13 Boutb BECOKD Street ILENRY HARPER; IXo. 50 AROII Street, . Manurtctorer auu Dealer m Watches . : . . Fine Jewelry, ' ( , Silver-Plated Ware, "J Solid Silver-Ware. KIOH J EWE LEY. JOHN BRENNAN, . i DEALER IN DIAMONDS, FINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, ; Etc Etc Etc ,'9 2(i , 18 8. EIGHTH ST., PJIILADA. DIAJIOSD DEALER & JEWELER WATCHES, JEWELBT A SILTEa WARE, .WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED.. 802 Chestnut 8t.,PMlr. Owing to tbe decline, ot Hold, baa made a grent re- Auction In price of bla large and weU.aiaorted atock Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Silverware, Etc Th public are reapcctrully invited to call and examln our stock before purchasing eliewnere. . sj A full aeeortment ot above arooda oonataoNr oa hand at model ate prices the it usJcolBoxei placing from 2 to 10 beautiful Airs. FAKE & BROTHER, Importer., No. 824C11EENUT BTREET, llllamth$rp ' Below Fourth. " G. RUSSELL & CO., No. 22 North SIXTH IlavlDg Increased tbelrracillttei (or FINE WATCH HEPAIKISG, Invite tbe attention ef tbe public . All work warranted for one year. C2 BOWMAN & LEONAKD, MAKCFlCTDKEKa OF WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Silver No. una 704 Silvcr-Platcd Goods, ARCH STREET, FBIj-ADXLFHlA. Tboce In want of SILVER or SILVIB-PLATED yVAhi, will Jlud It much to tbelr adTautags tort.lt ourblOMS beioie making ilieir purchase. Our long fcxpeneuce in tua n.uuiaotura ot Uia above k.luda of goods enacua u to ouiy competition. - We keep no good but tboae wLlco are of tbe FIRST CABB.all of our oWn make, and will boaoldat reduced prices. lm g ILTER-PLATED WARE. SAMUEL K. SMYTH, Practical Partner of tbe late firm of MEAD A 8-MX'iH, would inform tbe trade tnat lie baa removed to No. 39 South THIRD Street, Wbeie be will continue the manufacture of SOPE. KIOK MLXk K PLATiLD WAfiL ol oouble and triple plate, under (be nam (of tbe Him of bllYiU AXlAili. i'l lm INSTRUCTION. JIJ- AMILION INSTITUTE b' Oil YOU NO Jj A E I 13 S. PHILIP A. CHI OAR, ! Being about to relinquish bis poaltlon In tbe publ!o ecboola. wlib ivhlcb be baa been connected fur the last t tut) -three yearn, W ILL Vl'tli A DAT AIp BOAfiDINO SCHOOL roa yOUKO LADIES, ' AI Ko. 8810 CntttKUT STuEKT, ON MODAY, 8KPTEM11ER 10. Ybla Institution is designed to rlral the best aeml naiiea In the oouulry. C1RI ULAB8 Containing nartlculars and olliei Information In relation to mis Jusiltutlou, can b uad unlit tua 1st of Mo- ttuiuer. at No. MON. TWELFlUStiee. 827 MONBIEUtt ALEXANDKK W0L0W9KI would luiorui tali mends and the public gunerally that be is now ready to give lumruetloa iu Binuiug and on the l lano. According to bis owu Avsteia which hereto fore bas proved no successlul In reuderlug the voice Eowenul and melodious, and at iIm awe time linpart ig Ibat fi cillty to enable tbe aocu ate reading ot tbe most difiicult passes. llls.meiu ior tbe Plauo ena bles bis pupl a to execute eperatio and. classical uiualo wl h eaue, leelmg, aud briiHaucy. lbote winning to avail thennelvea of bla long expe rience can do to by calling at bis residence. 8 24lairp lo. 7U 8. WABUOION Fquare. II E OAIt AY' INSTITUTE. Eh G 1.18 H AND FRENCH. Boarding and day pupils, Aos. 161 and 1KW SPRUCE Street, will reopen ou 1UCHKDAY, heptainhof 20. French la tbe language of Uie faiuOy, aud la constantly tpoken In the Institute. " ' i Primary 1 epartment. per annum., . . v , liay bobolkr, bi annum, fiw i ' ' . Day BoMdmg s upU. t DAJ D ii ftnwim Prtuclpal, W4T0HES, JEWELRY, &o. ! MUSICAL BOXES. St., SHIRTS, FURNISHING GOODS, At J. c.or TA & c;or SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AHO TEALKXS IM MEN S FUJ.INISI1INQ OOOD8i No. 814 CHESNUT Street, FOUR DOORS Bf.LOW THR ''COSTISB NTAL, x7!iip PHILADELPHIA. PATENT . SHOULDER-SEAM BIJIRT .MANUEACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S i URKISHINO STORE.' PERFECT FITTIKO BHIBTS iND DRAWERS marte Irom rr.panurcnirnt at very short notice. AM ether si tides ol Oi.MLi.HUN DHJS88 GOODS In lull variety. WINCHESTER & CO., IM! No. 706 CHESNUT Btreet' THE QEZST FITTING SHIRT -i tva ao ins il I tn RUHinui uicu ttj . , . F. AYRE, No. 68 N. SIXTH f,tCt TbUadeVbla. 7" can una a large aMn.imenrnr ; i OeTB FURMUmalO tbOOBwr).a Clip this out and give us a call. r .n 917- . , No. 68N. BlXlU Street. rhiladelphla. SADDLES AND HARNESS, i. TT A II N ,E S S . ' , x lakgkJlot or sew tjki ted states WAOON HABNESS, 2, 1 and 0 hone. ; Also, parts Of HAESESS, 841)1L,ES, COLLARS, . UAL. TFE8, etc, bongbt at tho rcceiit Government aaloa to be acid at a treat aacriflco Wholesale or Uoiaiu, Together with onr usual assortment of ' " ' ' ,' SADDLERY AND SADDLERY HARDWARE. WILLIAM S, IIANSELL-& SOKS. ( l : k . 5 ' . 1 i ' I "r '" (I M 7 21, No. 11 MARK Htreot. - 1 i i .... : STOVES, 'RANGE:s7if C Q U L T E ll'S NEW P A T K N T aoT.A'iAF U U ii A. b b: RANGES Of A 1,1V 81ZKB. ALSl, TBI EGA '3 ,t KVt LOW PRESSORS STlAil ULA1JNU Ali'ARAfOa,, -job balk ar CHi-ULES WILLIAMS, .610$ . Bio. itbi y.iilUil bTRJUCX. 27 OAS S T 0 V E SI, 27 THE EAGLE GAS-1IEATIWP STOVJE9 .win, BFATr.::i:i'. .:r.':r 'J Your Offices, Parlors, ' Dining', ' Sleepiaa;, and ." Bath-Rooms, .. . : ' ; , ; . at . )J) ji LESS - EXPENSE, LES TltOUBLK. NO J)IRTa BMOKe;, OB A8UH.8. . j 1 hey are all warranted te do tl-a work. Call and go them, at G. W. . LOO.lIS ii , 10 0 lm Ko. ar P. SIXTH Street.' Fbiludolpbla, Pa. TiinAtPsnM'Q T nvrvnv ttttpiti'vww i OR teROFEAN RANOK, ter famlilm; hotels, or l u blio iiiBtiluilous. in 1 WfcNTV DU'f'KKfcNC MZtS, Also, I'M aile.pbla RaiiRea. Hoi-Air iih oavra, uriauie nvaieni, ijunuutta uimw, - iwnaarfli Atoves, Bam Boilers, bitwiiole fiatea, Urollera. Oook lug Htovta, etc., wboloea-e ami i. mil, by the munmac turera. ellARVE A TBOMBOH, alatnth6m ' Ko. 209 ii. BECO.NI atreot I SHIPPING. firft FOR SALE. TWO PROPELLEtS J U JyT, STEAMSIl l P8 S 0 tont eaeb i two years old t luiifciu, 1M, leet breailtli el Ik am, 26 leet 8 hictiest (leptli oi lower boid.V net li ineuesi tM-t-neen decks, 1 feet tt inchest conclengtnft euii Ine cyllnoera, 3tt lucr.es tn bora and m In stroke. , i'reittbt capncltv. 4lrf0 barre a. Copper fastened, ana built Iu I hiladeluula by aleesis. Wllllium Cramp A Houa. In p endld ordtr. .. . . , For particulars apply to ' - W. B GALLAGHER. - . Ko. 208 N.'W UARVKt. or to ' W1LLTAM F. P0TT8, 9 241mrp . 'o 1228 MAUK.L1 Btreet, Pliila. si'ri.'.iM th 1.1 V KMPnnT currva u.at Oueenatown Ihe Iniuan Lln. aailluK atuii-wte&iy, carrrniK me l uiieu ntaieamai.s ' t ItY Of WABHlNOlUJS" Baturdaf. Ootobe Tt "tin r Lia r mi n. . Wednesday. October 31 1 tiTi OF LOSPUN" , C1TI OF MA.MJllK8'llih',..Veenemiay. November 1 .eaturaay. Aovemuer s and eacb succetding faturday and weduestlay, at noon, irom Fler Ko. 45 Korib nvrr. Oi' PaBSAUE By the mall steamer sailing every Saturday. Fuat Cabin, Gold 19U btetrago l'arreocy...,.35 To London..., 981 ToLondon 4(1 To Vans lut To Paris M Passage by tbe 'Hedneeday steamers in-First cabin, 1(1(1; steerage, 38. Payable in United States cur rency. .. ' - . Passengers also forwarded to Havre, Hamburg, Bra men, etc , at inodorate rates. titeerage pasig trom Liverpool ot- QuetnurtowH, $49. cutrency. 'i icktts can be boutint here by, pextoaa aeadi lu? for tbelr trlenfla. For mriber inioimatlon apply at the Companyl Ofllcea. JOHN G. DALE Acent, 81 Ko. Ill WALAVT Btreet. I'biJad. r-xKZZt Foa NKW ItOEK. -PfllLADEL atflaaai i i I i delphla Bteam Propeller, t'omaany Da. kKau.u Bwinsure Liucs.vU lielawara and Karilaa OanaL. Iealngdalyat l2 11. and 8 p. A4M oouuecUiiaT With aA Avniitra auu r.aiieru uuc , For freight, wliluh win be taken upon accommodating terms, apply to WILLIAM M. UAlKIi A 4,'C, , lia Ko liii B. DELA WARM aVveaOaf . TO SH IP CAPTMNS AN D O WM ERS.1 i ii nugnnuKDeu naviug leased tno H-lus b.oluN SCUKW DOlk., beHS to inform bis 1'iiomU and tbe patrons oi the iiock that he la prepared wltU Increated rac littles taaccouimodute thoso naviug vessel to be taised or rcpBlre'', and being a pi ac.tlcal ship-car penter and caulker, will give personal attention to the)' vatsela eutrosteU to bun lor repairs - Captalus or Agenls. Bbtp-C'arpeutora. and Machlnlsta" having vetsels to repair, a.B solioiu-d to pail. Having tbe agency for the sale ot "WetUrstedt'a Putent Meta lo c ouiposltlon" lor Copper pamt, lor tha preservation of venels' bottoms, for this cl y, I am pre pared to lurulsh the same on lavorablo terms. John u hamkitt, Kt nsington Kcrew Dock, V I IS DFLAW ARE Avenue above Laurel street. WALL PAPERS. pAPEIl HANGINGS .. and WINDOW S H A D E S AT WHOLE 8AL. i . fc 4 0 IN. PLAINS, FISE DECORATIONS, L ' ' , BOBBER MOPLliINGS. .., ' .. . . - STAJkP GILTS, - EAGLISO 8ATINS, - blanks, Eia; IN GREAT VARltTY.- : :i:.j v.n t. hazzard;h If 6 mw3m Ko, 819 ABCH Btreet, - GARBLED SLATE MANTLES. 8LATE WOUK of every description on band.ordous to order. rr I LAIN 6 LATE AND TILES alwajs pn band. J. B. UIME8 Si CO., W Vo 2120 and I'ig CHKSNUr Btreet: G- e o k g e p,l o wii t:; OARl'liSNTIS'It AKD tJUJKDEKi aKI a. 3 a aa aa v. . And Nn in rwvir o...,. Machine Work and lilUwrigbtuif pioapiiy atijtuJo