14 WHEBEOILISFOMD. The Economic Yalne and Civilizinc; Influence of Petroleum. THE QUALITT OF COLORADO OIL. An Immense Productive District Within the Arctic Circle. THE EAELIEST SEARCHERS FOE GOLD rwETTTEX FOE THE DISPATCH. MOXG the various earth resources which have been brought into gen. eral use within the lifetime of the pres ent generation, per. troleum holds the first place in eco nomic value and in its influence on civilization. It is not too much to say that it has brought lipht to almost every household. To the United States it has been of great economic value, lorthe reason that it has given an increaeof our commer cial products amounting in value to between 520,000,000 to 530,000,000 per annum, in this respect ranking with anthracite coal. It has also been a large clement in our foreign trade. For awhile it seemed that, as regards this substancej the United States would encounter no considerable com petition in the world's markets. It now ap pears evident, however, that the marvelous wells at Baku, on the shores of the Caspian, will contend with us lor the trade beyond our own frontiers. In 1887, 312,000,000 gallons were shipped from the Russian field, amounting to about one-third ot the pro duction in the United States. The produc tion from the Caspian territory is increasing by leaps and bounds. The flow from the wells is so enormous that no storage can be provided for it, and indeed, from one well it is said that more than 1,000,000 barrels were lost from the impossibility of constructing reservoirs with sufficient rapidity to contain it. COLOEADO OIL. The competition from this unexpected source makes it a matter of importance to ascertain how far our sources of American supply are to continue. A few years ago it was' supposed that all the profitable oil fields ol this country were Known. As these fields already began to show symptoms of exhaustion, the question was as to the en durance ot the source of profit. A recent paper by Prof. J. S. dewberry, read before the 2Cew York Academy ot "Sciences, was printed in the Engineering and Mining Journal. It describes the general conditions of the oil field in the northwestern corner of Colorado. The discovery was first made 20 years ago, but it is only within lour years that the oil was found in paying quantities. There are now about 40 wells; uone of them yield oil in the large quantitv which is afforded by certain Pennsylvania wells, but they pourout from 20 to 100 barrels a day irora each opening, and the yield now am unts to about 1,000 barrels a da. There are a number ot interesting facts connected with this Colorado oil which de serve the attention ot the reader. In the first place the discovery is of much import ance because the oil comes from the rocks of the cretaceous age, a horizon which has not previously yielded any considerable quan titv ot jetroIeum. Within the valley of the Mississippi all theoil has been derived from rocks below the coal measures, and the pre sumption has been that deposits as modern as the cretaceous would not be likely to yield any profitable quantities of this sub stance. The quality of the oil is also peculiar in the tact that it has an agreeable odor. The process of refining is vpry easy, and the residuum left alter the preparation of the material for market is extremely rich in parafine. After setting forth the facts concerning the Colorado oil fields, Prof. Uewberry dis cusses the formation of pteroleum. He is inclined to believe that it is in all cases due to the decomposition ot vegetable matter contained in the rocks where it is produced. Concerning this view there is no general concensus of opinion. The facts seem to me to lead to the conclusion that any organic matter, whether vegetable or animal, may produce by its decomposition both oil and natural gas. COXTIXUOTJS PRODUCTION. Prof. Xewberry inclines to the opinion that there is a continuous process of pro duction of this material in the rocks, the ancient organic stores not having yet com pletely undergone the processes ot decom position which produce such oils. He uotes the interesting tact that the oil wells at Mecca, O., which at first yielded consider able quantities of petroleum, were soon, as it appeared, exhausted. Further observa tions has shown that these wells can be pumped for a few days each year, the quan tity so obtained showing no marks of diminu tion. He concludes from this evidence that there is a process ot continuous production going on within the rocks. Another new field for the production of coal oil seems likely to be developed in the far north of this continent. A committee of the Senate of Canada has recently made a reort on the resources ot the area of Brit ish America lying in the valley of the Mac kenzie river. From this report it is ascer tained that a large part of that valley, near ly half of its aiea, indeed, gives promise of producing petroleum in Urge quantities. The general character of the geological structure in that region is in favor ot the conclusions attained by this commission. Thus, although the matter has not been sub mitted to the economic tests, it seems not unlikely that in this vast area, far exceed ing in extent the previously known petro leum districts of Xorth America, we may find a bource of supply of this valuable material. It is true that a large part ot the country is close to the Arctic ocean and in a climate which precludes all hope of gain ing access to'it within the present century; but an area of 100,000 square miles or more is south of the parallel ot C0, and an area of 0,000 or more square miles lies within GOO miles of the Cauadian Pacific Bail way. That portion of it is likely to be made ac cessible by railway communicatfons within a lew years. It seems not improbable that the contin ued supremacy oi this continent, as a source of petroleum supply, may be insured by this great field. The limited area ot the Baku district, if wc would apply to that re gion the conclusions drawn lrom our Amer ican ground, makes it probable that the sup ply from the Caspian district will not prove enduring. 2Co other important stores be yond the limits of Xorth America have been discovered. Within our own field it seems likely that we have a store calculated to last lor a century or more to come. A-CUEIOUS THEORY. In connection with these considerations concerning petroleum, we may call attention to a curious theory concerning its origin which has recently been put forth by the distinguished Russian chemist Meudeljeff. His notion is that petroleum is produced by water penetrating downward through the earth's crust to the heated regions and there uniting with the various combinations of carbon and the several metals, especially iron. In this reaction he conceives water gives up its oxygen to the iron, the hydro gen of the water combining with carbon Jorming hydrocarbons, the gases ascending toward the surface, where they condense in the form of-petroleum. He deems his views supported by the fact that he has succeeded in producing an artificial petroleum by the combination of decomposed water with car bides of iron. Although this is an interesting laboratory experiment, it seems quite certain it throws so lighten the production of ordinary pe troleum, and this for the reason that we never find this substance in rocks which IIPW have been much heated. It occurs normal ly iu positions far removed from volcanic activity and under circumstances which clearly indicate that it is due to the decom position of organic matter The report on British America which we have noted above with referenced the con clusions concerning the extension of petro leum has also much popular interest from the facts which it affords concerning various other resources beside petrolium which may be of value to men who resort to these high regions when the world becomes overcrowd ed. It is interesting to note that there is another source of light and heat in that hy perborean region where both of these agents are to be in such demand. The commission asserts the existence of very extensive lignite deposits extending throughout more than half of the Mackenzie basin. Although these lignites being but half baked coals are poor substitutes for our high grade fuels, there presence in this country, in which no better subterranean fuels are known, is like ly to prove of the utmost importance as re gards the fitness of the area lor man's use. They will afford both heat and light, and with proper treatment, gas as well. EXTENSION OF CCLTIVATION-. It is perhaps with reference to the agri cultural resources of this territory that the report of the Canadian commission is of most immediate importance. It is asserted in the report and indicated on the maps that the wheat belt extends to the parallel of about 62 north, including the ter ritory south of the Great Slave lake and west to near the one hundred and thirtieth meridian. They assert that barley will ripen about as tar north as the Great Bear lake, and that potatoes will develop nearly up to the mouth of the Mackenzie river. Although these statements are probably as favorable as the observations will admit, and may assert a greater adaptability of this region to the use ot agriculture than experience will bear out, there can be no question of their importance as indicating the extension of the tillable area of the con tinent qver a field of several hundred thous and square miles which has hitherto been deemed unsuited to the use of civilized man. The tacts appear to show that an area of not less than 400,000 square miles, or, cay ten times that ot Kentucky, has by this report been added to onr reckoning as to the habitable area of North America. In a recent communication to the London Economist, Ottamar Hauptgivesa computa tion as to the total quantity of gold held by the United States Treasury and the national banks of the various European States. He shows pretty conclusively that there has been a notable increase in the quantitv of this precious metal in these Government stores during the past vear. The amount in October, 1887, w-isestimated at5,961,000,000f, and in October, 1888, 6,525,000,000f, or, say, at present, lor the total store of gold in trie Government treasuries about 1,000,000,000, OOOf. Despite this great horde and the strong positions given to the national cur rencies thereby, the gold market seems in a singular sensitive state. Whenever the gold shipments set in from any country the general markets at once exhibit indications of fear on the part of the financiers. This apprehension, though probably due to various causes, doubtless in part represents the apprehension lest the to'tal amount of gold in any country be insufficient to main tain the stability ot the currency. It is satisfactory to note that at present the United States Treasury; has more gold at its command than is held in any other national depository, the total in 1SS8 amounting to l,726,000,000f. LITTLE GOLD IX CANADA. It would doubtless be in an immediate sense very fortunate if new discoveries of gold fields would serve to increase the sup ply of the precious metal in somethiug like the way in which the California finds ot 40 years ago enhanced the world's supply. It is theiefore with some regret we note that the Cauadian commission does not seem very hopeiul as to the profitable nature of the wide area of sands containing gold ly ing on the western side of the Mackenzie river. Many geologists were disposed to look upon this field as a possible source of extensive supply trom gravels, though the washnigtfcould, of course, be carried on dur ing only a part of the year. It appears now that, until Central Africa comes to be bet ter known, there is little chance of a new El dorado comparable to that of California or Australia. It is evident that the search for gold among the early peoples of Asia, and prob bly among all primitive folk after they had come to esteem the precious metal was ex tremJy ardent- Thus, Mr G. Atwood, in a recent paper published in the quarterlv Journal of the Geological society, observes that in the province of Mysore ot Southern India natives in lornier centuries have shown a curious skill in searching out every possible deposit of gold over a very exten sive area. Although he tested for gold at several hundred points he never found it in a single place where the old miners had not left the marks of their work. They appear to have won all that substance froin the al luvial deposits, and to have searched all the outcrops of quartz in their inquiry for the metal. The fact seems to be that Europe, Asia and much of Africa have been thoroughly scoured for this precious metal. With all the modern search for new supplies, no new profitable fields have been dcveloDed in these areas. All the important modern supr ply of gold has come from the Americas, trom Australia, and in a measure from Africa. A HAZT THEOET. In the correspondence column of Science there has of late been much discussion as to the nature of the curious haze which is oiten seen in Alpine and other parts of the old world. This haze, most distinct at morning and evening, does not seem to be cloud-like in its nature for it is evidently not composed of watery vapor. It has been suggested that it is smoke, but there are no forest fires in that region such as yield the abundant smoks olten found in this coun try. M. Anloine d'Abbadie suggests in the last number of Mature that such peculiar haze abounds in many countries, and that it has special names in Portuguese, in Spanish, in the Basque language, in Ethio pia, German and elsewhere. He notes the interesting fact that the Ethiopians compare it with smoke but regard it as distinct from it. M. d'Abbadie agrees with" Prof. Tyndall that this curious haze commonly appears in horizontal layers, oiten of a singular iorm. He notes the fact that the Ethiopian schol ars, in commenting on the tenth chapter of Exodus, state that the darkness referred to in the twenty-second verse was an intense form of this haze, to which they give the name dobar. They furthermore explain that the "light enjoyed bv the children of Israel" is lully borne out by the fact that the dobar may sometimes be present iu one place and absent in another. The learned writer suggests that this Alpine haze is only dry air, which, as is well known to astrono mers, is less transparent than very moist air. He apparently regards these hazy layers as bands of air exceptionally free lrom witery vapor. Last ol" all, he notes the interesting fact that the natives of countries in which the dobar abounds are remarkably swarthy, and he asks the question whether or not "it operates to darken men's skin. This sug gestion is probably of no account except from its amusing nature. That u haze which is always high above the earth could serve in any way to darken men's skins when we know that such darkening is suf ficiently effected by the sun's rays alone is the very extremity of speculation. It is worth while for onr observers in this country to make some study of this peculiar haze. It probably occurs in the mountain ous parts of America as well as elsewhere; or if it is wanting in our country, that fact of itself will be an important observation. Prof. 2T. S. Shaler, Strangely Contorted Are the joints by rheumatism. Extirpate this atrocions dlscase,aR well as cunt and neuralgia, at the outset with Hostetter'n (Stomach Bitters, and avoid possible life-long agony. It is a tempting of Providence to delay when rheu matism a-sails Ton, as it Is not only obstinate, but dangerous. Chills and fever, kidney com plaints, nervousness, debility, constipation and dyspepsia arc also routed by the Bitters. Use regularly. Hats, special styles, Jackson's pocket hat, from 74 cents up. 951 and 956 Liberty street, Star corner. risa PLATING WITH FIRE. The Law for the Rich and the Law for the Poor Nowadays. THOSE NATURAL GAS DECISIONS Of the Supreme Court Calculated to Make People Ponder. TWO LEGAL PICTURES PRESENTED WEITTEt rOB THE DISPATCH.l ECISIONS of the Supreme Court of the State during the week touching the illegality of taxing natural gas company pipes, and practically legalizing the claims of the natural gas companies to charge what they please, are of more far-reaching importance than at first appears, and in dicate that we are slowly, but none the less surely, drifting to that point outlined by the poet where he says of Lo! the poor Indian: We, the rightful lords of yore. Are the rightful lords no more. And what is true of Lo! the red man will soon be equally true of Xiol his "pale-faced brother." I have np sympathy whatever lor what is commonly preached as communism, and our Anglo-Saxon thrones of "law and order" compel us to gracefully accept legal de cisions which we feel are strained or errone ous. Yet it is impossible not to feel that such decisions as those handed down during the week will in the luture not only breed what Carlyle calls "law defiers," hut that they are giving legal effect and force to principles which the vast mass of orderly and intelligent citizens feel to be a mon strous wrong. The average citizen cares nothing for the tax collector's "pugs" involved in this de cision. Very little more for the mere "tare and net" as such, so far as it effects the city's exchequer, but it is surely a curious spectacle to find the Court of last resort in Pennsylvania closing the English lan guage into a corner to get adjectives vigor ous enough to uphold corporate against popular right. REMEDIES FOR LTTIGAJTTS. Chief Justice Church used to say in New Tork tlint a litigant when beaten in the lower court had two remedies one to ap peal, the other to swear at the court. Here we have no Court of Appeals such as they have in New York, and peradventure our onlv popular remedy in sight is to "swear at the courts" and certestbe public are swear ing hard at these later decisions of the Big Wigs. And why not? Take a very simple proposition, which everyone can understand without petti fogging: A stranger visits the city has no inter ests there, is a mere bird of passage. He orders a cab. He is charged an excessive rate, and he finds a remedy a tariff ot rates ordained by the municipality for the pro tection of "all and sundry" persons within ourgates. He pays neither tithes nor taxes gives no equivalent for the police, magis terial and legal protection afforded. He gets: all these without any sort of return or equivalent. I am talking now to common people, such as left their bloody footprints at Valley Forge, and supposed they were es tablishing a government of "we, the Deo ple," but knew .nothing of the quadlibets and quidiebits of 'modern law. Now look at the reverse of this picture and tell me if the drift is not toward a "de cline and fall." Here is a corporation drawing its powers from the peonle. and given valuable franchises without any highways, tear up and obstruct streets, make mud holes out of leading thorough fares, cause citizens loss and annoyance without any redress asserting rights not claimed by any citizen, and assuming to charge the public, which has been granted all these lavors, any rate it pleases for its product, and when the public attempts to resist these extortionate claims, it is told by the highest court in the State that it can have no redress, and the creature is above the creator. Pray where do "we, the peo ple," come in under snch a doctrine? HISTORY MAT REPEAT ITSELF. If such decisions must stand, the Huns and Vandals which Lord Macaulay pre dicted would overthrow the "Great Re public" in the twentieth century will likely be recruited very Iargeiy from the sons of the "law abiding" citizens of the nine teenth century. Take the other case, and Tell me, 1 implore. Quoth the raven evermore. Is this sort of "inequality" in a land of "equal laws" to continue? A poor man erects a homestead of brick and mortar, and the assessor comes along and assesses the homestead at what is face tiously teimed its actual cash valuation. There is no escape for him. Taxation follows assessment, and lien and costs follow delin quency as inevitably as the day follows the night. No courts or retinue of lawyers in tervene in his behalf. Whether it be robbery under the form of law, or the other kind, he must stand it, nolens, volens. But lol here is a corporation, which uses not private ground paid for bv individual effort, but public ground paid for by the common weal, it digs up the highways, obstructs travel and traffic, and lays pipes which are as much the product of human labor, and, therefore, as property taxable as bri;k or mortar, and the company resists taxation on this franchise, and this property the big wigs and silk gowns in the highest judgment" seat in the State affirms the corporate claim as against the individual. Injustice cannot permanently thrive under onr Anglo-Saxon civilizatio'n, and 'ere the child of to-day is a voter such decisions and their authors will be as forgotten or as exe crable as Jeffries. It was su:h outrages as these against "popular right" that com pelled the Barons to combine against King John and have made Magna Charta and Bunnymede immortal. As Charles O'Connor said in the Tweed appeal suits, "When law ceases to be an embodiment of justice, it becomes a thing of contempt. James W. Breen. Boss townshit, January 19. Electrical Dinitnoftls of the Brain. Several of the Eastern papers are noticing the electropathie diagnosis and treatment ot the brain discovered by the able electrical physician, Dr. S. L. Johnson, of this city, and speak favorably of the remarkable re sults gained in diseases of the brain bv his method. Indeed, the results obtained by the doctor in serious brain troubles on many of our citizens, as well as others from differ ent parts of the country, who came to him for brain diagnosis and treatment, are sur prising. While the photographs made by Dabbs have always been considered fine, many people know there is an individuality and refinement about his pictures that distin guish them from all others. Chrll-' Dancing Academy, No. 1012 Penn ave. Prof. Christy is forming new classes for beginners on Monday evening, January 21. This is a new term. Tailoring One thousand and one styles of goods on hand at nil times for making to order at Jackson's, 954 and 956 Liberty st. TTSU Buy a good, reliable watch. Your old watch taken in exchange at Hauch's, No. 295 Fifth ave. Established 1853. WFSn The best housekeepers use the best flour. The best flour is "Bosalia," manufactured by Whitmyre & Co. THE PITTSBURG- t DISPATCH, ' SUNDAY, JAmTAHY 20, 1889. r . SCRAPS FROM TOE STUDIES. Art Items of Intertst What the Home Artists Are Doing. Mr. Geoege Hetzel Is at present very much interested in the appearance of land-scape-on a frosty morning, and Is engaged upon a number of small pictures showing the effect upon nature of these first touches of winter s cold. One of the works winch he has already completed may be seen at Mayer's, where it wilt perhaps attract attention as being the nearest approach to a cold morning which we seem likelv to encounter this winter. The supply of the real article of cold being appar ently exhausted, Mr. Hetzel's imitations are, perhaps, the best substitute we can find. A number of paintings from the collection of Mr. Charles M. Kurtz, of New York, are to be seen atBojd's, an inipeciion which will re pay anyone for the trouble of a visit. They are mainly landscape subjects, and are mostly of small size, some of tiieru being remarkably diminutive for w.rks in oil, but they are all distinctive in character and possessed of con siderable merit. Same of the smaller pictures are very clever little works both as to color and execution; in fact this collection appears to have been gathered together by a man who had a good eye for color, and who knew a fine painting when he saw one. Bricks arc not generally regarded as pos sessing many very valiable decorative quali ties but they are nevertheless being largely used for that pnrposejand they prove highly satisfactory whenever' circumstance will ad mit of their use. Fon this purpose, however, thev are made in various colors and are also glazed, which gives them their nmst valuable feature frbra an utilitarian standpoint, as it increases the brilliancy of their color and renders them verv easilj cleaned. Since, when they are once built Intp the wall, they require no further care or expense, and are perhaps more permanent than tie balance of the struc ture of which they torn a part, they are par ticularly suitable for tse in halls and public buildings. Since the exhibition pf the great Monkacsy paintings in this city and the much talked of Verestchagin collection in New York, some little speculation has bsen aroused as to the kind of rooms which serve as studios for artists who produce such extensive works. Mr. Verestchagin's studio, 'which is situated at Maison Lantte, one of Hie suburbs of Paris, is 150 feet long and 50 feethigh, and is the larcest room ever occupied for such a purpose. Tnis one fact is almost sufficient to convey an idea of the light in which works or art are viewed abroad, when such extensive preparations are made for their production, but a description of the studios of the most successful painters of Rngland and France would also be a tale of luxury beyond anything which our home artists ever dream of. The question as to wtcther or no it would prove beneficial to have inch places as art gal leries open on Snndaj s is being freely discussed In New York, and is perhaps deserving of con sideration in this city, agalnbt the time when we shall have a gallery worthy of the name. The arguments which are used in favor of Sunday opening are by no means new, out tuey are as good now as ever they were, and are mainly to the effect that art exhibitions and public li braries, being edncatlonil institutions, should be accessible at such times as the peo ple for whose benefit they are intended could most conveniently visit them. Since the majority of people are almost con stantlv employed durmgthe week the qnestion does not seem to admit of any great difference of opinion. If it is desirable that the great mass of persons should remain Ignorant rather than acquire knowledge on a Sunday let the doors .if such institutions remain closed, other wise open them wide and give the elevating influence of art and culture a chance to operate in the direction in which they will do the most good, and that is upon the minds of tuose whose need is the greatest and whose oppor tunities are the smallest. For the next few days Gillespie's art gallery will be one of the most interesting places in the vicinity to tbosj for whom fine paintings possess an attraction. Ttere is now on exhibi tion there about 30 pictures by foreign and American artists, which, for variety of subject and general excellence. B one of the best col lections of its size which has ever been seen in this city. Nearly all of these pictures are by well known, not to say famous artists, and though not all equally striking they are jet above the commonplace. Among the most famous names isthatof J. L. Gerome, Paris, represented by a snail painting entitled, "In the Mosque." 'The Departure," a pictuie well known here through numerous reproduc tions, is by F. H. Kacromerer, a pupil of Ge rome's and is a beautiful piece of work in a bright decorative stj le of execution. A picture bv Charles Sprague Peirce, called "In the Field," is a strong work, the interest of which centers in the figure of a joung girl, excellently drawn, particularly the vork on the head and face. "The Triumph of Judith," by another Parisian artist, E. Kichter, also shows good dravmg In the figure and snlendid nalntinz of texture in the drapery. Some little fault might be found in an other wise fine marine entitled, "North Atlantic," by wise nne marine entitled, "jNortn Atlantic, oy H. P. Smith, of New York. No comment is needed on a work by J. G. Brown, his 'style iKiug su well known here. The picture bearing his name, "xne uia ruiaer," is one oi nis characteristic studies. A landscape with cattle, by J. M. Hart, of Hew York, Is one of the best works of its class ever seen in this city. The color is good, the drwing excellent, and the composition beautiful; three things which when combined make a fine picture. The above are a few of the mst notable works in this collection, but there are others of equal merit, and a vr-it to the gallery during their stav will be amplv repafj. The pictures re m..n until next Thursday. One of the most notable paintings ever exe cutcd by a Pittsburg artst 13 that by Mr. John W. Beatty, which has teen on exhibition for the past two days in one of tho rooms of the Pittsburg Art School. 'Plowing the Orchard" is the title of this work! and it very well ex presses the character of the subject. The chief interest centers ibout a pair of magnifi cent horses standing ready to move forward again as soon as the p'ow to which tbeyare harnessed shall have teen disengaged from a rock u hich it has encountered. The plowman is seen in the act of drawing the plow out from behind the -stone; he is a typical farmer boy, and his attitude is thoroughly in keeping with the action. To tie left the background is formed by some fine old fruittreesthatstand boldly out against the sky. On the right the sky itself serves as a backgrnnnd,and a sufficient expanse of it is seen to lend light and brilliancy to the work. Beneath the trees, and between them and the horses, is a strip of briglit-hned green sward, and in the immediate foreground is the freshly turned eaith just broken by the plow. The color scheme of this work is about all that cnnld be asked. Of the two animals, the one which shows most prominently has iust sufficient red in his coloring to form the ey-note of the picture, and to pleasantly con trast with the greens of the grass and trees. The sky is a clear blue, which accords well with the colors in the other portions of the picture. In fact, alter the splendid drawii g of the horses has been considered, the leading feature of this work is the excellent relation which all its parts bear to each other, the artist having tuny securea mat expression oi ntness uy which nature unites all her various features, blending them into one beautiful and harmo nious whole. Mr. Beatty alsodeserves honor as being the first Pittsburg artist to prodnce an etching. The advance prooT of the plate which he made after bis picture. "Return to Labor." is worthy of notice for itself, as well'as being the first work of its kind by ono of our home artists. The extent to which art has invaded the home life of a nation forms a fair criterion by which to judge of Its progress in culture and civilization. And, in this respect, art does not simply consist of hanging pictures upen the walls nor vet in having the inmates of tho household dabble in colors, decorate china, hammer brass ,or inako crayon portraits of their relatives and friends, but it is indicated by the degree ot judgment and artistic taste with which the house is lurnisbed. A sense of tho harmonious ' re lations of colors. combined with an eye for beauty of form, in the articles of utility or ornament with which we surround ourselves is as positive evidence ol the posses sion of the true artittic instinct as the accumu lation of pictures and art works, and if in addi tion to this ws becoue possessed of a fair share of pictures, and these good ones, selected with judgment and taste, we have realized about all that it is possible for the average individua to attain to in this particular, judged from Its enectsupon home me, pernaps the most im portant branch of art is that applied to tho designing and construction ot house hold furniture. As this applies to objects of daily use, and with which we are more or less constantly surrounded, it is a matter which In terests everyone, and the presence or absence of a display of ait Is tic taste and judgment in this particular is an influence for good or evil from which none can escape. Fortunately, there is of late years evidence of an increas ing appreciation of the. value of art as practi cally applied to evsry-day life; people have be gun to reject the old-time ugliness, and to call tor (forms of grace and beauty; and in color harmony begins to take the place of crudity. Whatever may be' demanded by the public in this direction will be forthcoming, but demand must necessarily come before supply. Flaxman was able to greatly advance the art of pottery-making in England, but an advance in art should not be permitted to depend upon the energies of any individual or it nay be delayed centnries be yond its time. Let there be a great public de mand, however, and a hundred snch as Flax man will come forward as if by magic. There is at present good evidence of this popular de mand for tho beautiful in the preparations which are made to meet it, and there is every Indication that It will continue to Increase. When once the people 1 nlly realize the amount of aesthetic pleasure to be derived from the thoroughly tastef nl adornment of their homes tbey will not readily accept ugliness In its place, more especially as It is often just as easy to make an object graceful as the reverse. A LAND. OF FLOTOS, Sunshine and Balmy Breezes, Where Winter Storms Are Unknown. THE PEER OP ALL WINTER RESORTS Memories of the War Cherished fcy the People of Aiken, S. C. DEVOTED, HEROIC S0DTHEEN WOMEN CORBESrOITDEXCE or THE DISPATCH. Aiken, S. C, January 15. HEN people are well and full of the vigor and coura g e that health gives, they think nothing of the snows and sleets, the rains and winds, the sudden changes from warm to cold, or wet to dry, beyond their !? disagreeableness and their Interference with plans for pleasure. But for invalids and those especially who have disease of the chest, the cold and cruel winter, with the bitter blasts now howling now whisper ing hypocritically of springtime balm, is especially trying. More than that it is fraught with dread, distress and danger. "What is needed for such invalids, and for all who desire to escape the rigors of the season when flowers are dead and hills are bleak and bear and the storm king rules and rages with the savage pride of power that dominates all out doors at least, is a warm, an equable we may say the ideal climate. But where to find it is the question that most deeply concerns those in whom the forces of life are low, who need vigor, need stimulus and require the tonic of open, fresh air and warm, refreshing sunshine. Some pronounce for clear, bracing moun tain air, others more highly esteem the warmth of the tropics, while still others seek for regions where can he found a cool sum mer and a moderate winter a happy me dium that is known in only a very few fa vored spots upon the globe. FAMOUS WINTER RESORTS. Europe has its famous winter resorts along the Mediterranean, iu the South of France, on the sunnv slopes of Spain, while in this country Florida, Texas and Southern Calilornia ' about complete the list. Those who stand by the Al pine theory that dry, clear, frosty air is most conducive to the healing of the lungs, and the cure of physical debility, stand up for Colorado and the mountainous plateaus of the Alps, while others, who tavor the warm and dry regions with an equable temperature and the genial breezes from warm ocean currents, are wont to extol and recommend lower California. Southern Europe is the more fashionable, especially for rich Americans, who follow the nobility of Europe, and who are fully possessed with the idea that anything that costs the most money must, of course, be the best thing. San Bcmo, Mentone, Nice, Biarritz and other noted resorts swarm with dukes and duchesses, counts and countesses, and Ger man barons and English earls and Italian princes,conscquently the American million aires must be there also, even if the most favored spots on the globe, as regards cli mate and health, are in their own couutry. It is the happy belief of the inhabitants of Aiken that no place yet discovered in America or Europe so per ectly comes up to the conditions of health as their own favored town. Those who know anything of the scientific features of the case take the utmost delight in the figures which show that the mean relative humidity of Aiken is only 58 percent, while in Florida it is 71 per cent, in Thomasville, Ga., 03, in Nice, Italy, 71, and in Mentone 70. If figures do not lie this should of course settle thejease for all doubting Thomases. If pueumonia and other lung diseases are to be relieved and cured by tonic- air and a dry climate, then Aiken has good reason to glorify itself, for certainly such conditions are here to be found. We have said some thing about this before, but the longer we stay here the more we learn, and the more enlightenment we propose to gfve on tho subject, for the benefit of the many who are longing and eager to know. BLISS TO BREATHE. If it has been settled by the doctors who ought to know that moderate elevation, dry air, warm climate and the balsamic odor of pine woods are the favorable conditions for the cure of throat and lung diseases and ner vous prostration then we may say they are here, and that many are greatly benefited is certain. The average outdoors winter tem perature is (50. To-day it was 64 in the shade, with snch sunshine and balm as made it a luxury to live and bliss to breathe. The streets were full of invalids riding, driving, walking. Sick wives with stalwart devoted husbands frail and feeble men supported by vigorous, healthy help meetspretty young girls who are here to secure lost roses delicate young men on the tearch of brawn and bronze and muscle all were enjoying such a glow of sparkling sun shine, such heavenly blue of sky, end such airs as were blown in Eden before original sin and total depravity were invented. Aiken is laid out on the most gorgeous scale. The streets are ISO feet wide, with double rows ot trees and parks in the middle, with seats scattered along Jhe side walk, so that pedestrians can sit down and enjoy the beauties of nature, drink in the virtues of the air and take in the passing throng. "I don't think my husband looks half as bad as most of the men here," said a tall, anxious-looking lady at the book stall, who was evidently a newcomer. "He is very ill of course, but he does not look so awtully bad, does he?" she said, appealingly look ing round, as if for confirmation and reas surance to buoy her hopes and belie her fears. "Oh, no;" said the lady addressed, "he looks quite sick, of course, but he will not be here a month till he will be like a new man." HER INVALID. The hopeful smile that brightened the worn and anxious face of the devoted wife was beautiful to see. That she had had weary days and broken nights was visible in every line of her countenance and in the tired-out look in her eyes. For strain on nerves and energies the poor woman needed rest, and balm, and change, herself as much as her husband, but her sole thought was for him his health, his restoration, his en joyment were what filled her mind to the exclusion of selt. The few words of encour agement and sympathy, aided by the air and sunshine, gave hope, and she fondly hugged the delusion that her husband, her patient, her treasure, did not look so badly as other men she met, when the fact really was that to the bystanders, he looked like an animated ghost. If the climate ot Aiken could put the vigor of health into such a man a miracle would be accomplished. However, let us hope it will so refresh and invigorate the loving wife that she may bet ter bear the cares and burdens that will so soon tall upon her shoulders the task of supporting' and educating five fatherless children. School children at the North who are na tive Americans often taunt their schoolfel lows from across the sea on their nationality as a "sassy Irish thing," or as a "nix foor steh Dutchman," hut here the reproach and belittling gibes come on another score, as we heard on the street to-day. "Oh you," said a white child, with strong contempt, to a middling dark one," you are nothing but a black-and-tan." "Well," replied the little darky, her eyes sparkling with rage, "yon ttiank your Heavenly Father you're not a black-and-tan; but, anyhow," she continued, with ris ing wrath, "I'd nuff sight rutherbe a black-and-tan than poo-ah wljjte trash like yon." But for all that we have seen and heard there Is as ranch amity and good feeling be sSSi r il irJEs wnillJiJ'nS tween whites and blacks as between native Americans and Irish and Germans in -the North. $ NO RACE FEELING. There are no indications of "bitter race antagonisms," "deadly feuds" or "im passable gulfs ot bate," and the dominance of force by tear, as some of the rip-tearing, fire-eating, bloody-shirt orators are wont so blatantly to portray. The black and white races have grown up together in the South for generations, and while the emancioation proclamation changed their conditions, it aid not provoke the antagonism expected did not to large extent destroy the loyalty of servants to their old-time masters; did not result in hate and bitterness, save where perhaps it was fomented by carpet-baggers and freedman's aid missionaries. It is ouj of the pleasant memories of the war cherished by the Aiken people that during the whole unpleasantness between the North and Sonth and when Kil patrick's troopers from Sher man's army invaded the town, only one negro braved the contempt of his neighbors by joining the Yankees and becoming dis loyal to the Confederates. All were heart and hand with their white friends. It is amazing to think that this peaceful little village was shelled for three days during Sherman's March to the sea. But so it was. And that its inhabitants were reduced to unknown undreamed of privations is shown by the story of a lady that they care fully gathered up'the corn that fell from the bags of the troopers and ground it up for a little food. Another bit of testimony to the climate of Aiken is furnished. in the fact thaj after the surrender of Lee, officers and men and horses were here for months to recover from the effects of the war. With ideas of the fire-eating Southrons formed from "The Fool's Errand,".by Judge Tourgee, we were not a little surprised to meet a Yankee from New England who Iihs lived here for nearly a quarter of a century in peace and quietness, and has won the re spect of his friends and neighbors. In a little conversation he said that how he came Sonth first was with a sister who had con sumption. They went to Florida, but it failed to benefit her, and she died shortly alter reaching home. With a like fate in view lor himself in a New England climate, he determined to settle in the South, and fixed upon Aiken a3 the spot. He bought a handsome estate, upon which was a spacious residence house of the olden style. Here he has lived in good health ever since. He has fertilized his fields, and raised good crops and managed his affairs with Yankee energy and thrift. "We asked him if he had ever had any trouble, or suf fered from ostracism as a Northern man and a "Yank" at that but he said no, never. He was never molested or mis treated in the slightest degree. But then, said he in an explanatory way,I never wanted an office. If I had gone actively into politics it might have been different. The politicians are the fire-eatera not the people. North, as well as Sontb, the poli ticians are great on gao, ana are given to lying and all manner of deviltry. The old man's eyes twinkled, and anybody could see that he wa3 smart and cute enough to get along anywhere. tVOMEN OF THE SOUTH. "We of the North have been to.d that the women of the South were the most devoted and heroic upholders oi the Confederacy that they sacrificed everything for its suc cess that they by a courage and bravery worthy of a better cause encouraged its defenders in the face of dire defeat to per severe, to try, try again, to perish in the last ditch rather than surrender, and when at last the game was lost, the women dis played the most bitterness, cherished the warmest resentment, and were full of un dying hatred to the North; but certainly, as yet, we have seen no manifestation of such feeling. It may exist, but if it does it is closely concealed. It is hard ly in consonance with human nature not to hate what people deem to be the cause of inexpressible sufiering and privation. But in the bitter school of experience, and under the iron "hand of misfortune, they have learned to love their enemies for revenue only, as a cynic observes, or to forgive them from a business point of vfew, but we pre fer to believe them sincere, and to have seriously and heroically been led to live np to the creed they orofess by loving their neighbors as themselves, and by praying for all such as have despitefully used them by defeating th'eir champions in the open field. And talking oi living up to religious pro fessions and tee thachingand creed of Christ, we know of no small town on the continent better provided with the means of grace, or in which the spiritual interests of the peo ple are more carefully attended to than this town of Aiken. For a population of per haps 1,200 white people.it has an Episcopal, a Presbyterian, a Methodist, a Baptist and a Boman Catholic church. These are apart from the churches of the colored people. Bessie Braxble. About Overcoats. A very popular price is fifteen dollars, and that's the figure we now offer our $35, $30 and $28 kersey and chinchilla overcoats at. A dozen different styles, all silk and satin lined. Tbey were "bargains" at $30. Imagine what value they are at $15. We also have a number of overcoats at $10 re duced from $22. We've simply knocked the bottom out of prices in men's business suits. A ten dollar bill buys an elegant all wool suit that would have cost you $22 a week ago, and when you recollect that wev only deal in the better qualities ot men s clothing, you'll understand the full strength of these bargain 'prices. Just look in and see us to-morrow; we will be glad to meet you whether you purchase or not. P. C. C. C, Cor. Grant and Diamond sts., opp. the new Court House. New Departnre In Accident Insurance. The National Benefit Association, of In dianapolis, Ind., have recently added to their business an industrial branch for ac cident insurance, in which the premiums will be collected weekly at the homes or the workshops of the insured. Mr. John Jordan, who has had some 20 years' experience in industrial insurance, the last five years as superintendent for the Prudential Insurance Company of Ameri ca, has accepted the position of supervisor for the industrial branch. I "will remove my place of business to the corner of Smithfield street and Seventh avenue, Bissell block, on or about March 1. Previous to removal I will close out my present stock at reduced prices. Walter Anderson, Cor. Wood street and Sixth avenue, Su Pittsburg. Catarrh Cured. A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome dlsea.se, catarrh, vainly trying every known remedy, at fast fonnd a recipe which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending self-addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren St., New York City, will receive the recipe free of charge. The Pitsburg Beef Company, agents for Switt's Chicago dressed beef, sold at whole sale during the week ending January 19, 135 carcasses of beef. Average weight per carcass, 590 pounds; average price 5 cents per pouna. Clothing, of our own make, none better in the country, at the lowest possible prices. Jackson's, 954 and 956 Liberty st. ttsu .i w biwuvii; u ujiiac Kwuu w sts- wu ".Rosalia,'' the best patent flour in the mar- No trouble to make good bread from ket. Manufactured i by Whitmyre as uo. Workingmen using overalls with apron or without try our 50 cent star overalls, thev are our own make and warranted not to rip. Jackson's, ttsu 954 and 956 Liberty St. Special Kill Glove Bnrgnln. 150 doz. fine 4 b. embroidered kid gloves, choice colors, 50c, worth 75c, at Rosenbaum &Co'. Gold-headed canes and umbrellas; lowest prices, at Hauch's, No. 295Fifth ave.' No charge for engraving. 'WFSa Dabbs' photographs are finer than ever. ( SUNDAY THOUGHTS ON pnu$ 0 mPi BY A CLERGYMAN". IwitirruM tOb toe cisrxrcn.l HE first duty of a preacher is to keep the congregation awake. In struct the sexton to let in plenty of fresh air. Without air, without life. Break out a few of those stained glass win dows and admit the sun shine? Darkness always nrovokes a yawn. Mil ton sang: "I love the high embow'ed roof With antique" pillars massy proof, And storied windows richly dlght. Casting a dim. religions light." Bnt Milton was a poet. He looked at the matter from the Esthetic point of view. The minister is set to instruct and arouse. He must insist upon right physical con ditions for this work. The whole atmos phere of many churches is somnolent. Xhe decorum the routine of worship the ab normal hush the whispered chants all tend to drowsiness; and the droning voice of the clerical reader completes the sleepy spell. Hence, the congregation settles into the "sleepy hollow" of the pew and plays Hip Van Winkle as naturally as Joe Jef ferson. And no' wonder for now it is not acting. Here, there, and yonder heads nod assent to the sermon in the wrong places. "Oh," said one who was troubled with in somnia, "would that a man could carry his pew to bed with him!" Preacher, take a lesson from the politi cians. During the late national canvass, with a theme not half as vital as yours, they broke through decorum and convulsed the continent. How? By talking from the heart to the heart amid congenial surround ings. Our Methodist brethren keep things lively by exploding aniens. Well, they have an apostolic warrant. Fornclently In a religions assembly, as in a modern political meeting, the speaker might be assailed by a rattling fusillade of Interruptions, assent, dissent, questions all were orthodox. In such circumstances he could not glne his eyes to a manuscript. He had to be a "minute man," like our revolution ary sires. Such was the scene when St. Feter preached on the dav of Pentecost, and the peo ple broke (nap on him with the cry, "what shall we do?" Let the preachers themselves wake up, if they would awaken others. An English bishop once said to the great actor. Garrick: "Why is it that yon art to f nil seats, while I preach to tmpty pews?" "Welt," replied (jarricc. "I preach fiction as though it were truth. You preach truth as though it were fiction." It is stated that the most splendid tomb in England is that of the Duke of Hamilton, in the grounds of Hamilton Palace. 'Tisa model of the castle of San Angelo in Borne. The gates are copied from the Ghiberti gates at Florence. The coffin of the Duke is enclosed in an Egyptian sarchophagus of black marble, brought from Alexandria. Tbns Europe and Africa are taxed to decorate death. The immense sum of 900,000 is lavished upon this monument of pride. This matter of mortuary decoration Is every where overdone. The cemeteries are populous with ostentatious monuments. An effort is made (vain and absurb) to carry the dis tinctions of time into eternity. Meanwhile the worms are bnsy under ground refuting the vanity above. Death is a Jacobin it levels all with an undistingnisbing hand. Let those stay eqnal who have been thus equalized. Ostenta tion at the grave is grotesquely out of , lace like advertising disease, or boasting of de crepitude. Only vulgar beggars uncover and parade their sores. No one criticizes when private grief sets up the modest commemorative headstone, or molds and unveils the beloved form in "Stone that breathes and struggles, Or brass that seems to speak." But the expenditure of $300,000 upon a mauso leum does not honor the dead it commemor ates vulgarity. Coleridge was an admirerof John Wesley, the founder of Methodism. Southey's "Life of Wesley" was cqnstantly in his hands. He gave bis copy of it to Sontbey on account of its marginal annotations. One of them con tained the grateful apostrophe: "Ob, dear and honored Southey, this book is the favorite of mv library among many favorites, the book which 1 can read lor the twentieth time with delight, when I can read nothing else." Coleridge's fascination lay not so much In the charm of the story teller, as In the charm of the story itself. And Wesley's was a wonderful lifel If you would learn how great things may be modestly done, what Joy may be found in grief, wbat peace may be bad amid tempests, study the career of this hero of faith. "Carrie," said the kind maiden aunt, "how was it that your brother Johnnie got so much of the cake, when I gave to you?" "liecause, repuea uarrie, rubbing her eyes he snatched itf ' God gave mankind the good things of the earth gold for money, coal for fuel, wheat for bread, cotton and flax and wool lor clothing, iron for building; the raw material for supplying every need. How did the John nie whose name is Monopoly get so mnch cake? 'Because he snatched it!" Uncle Sara sbonld step in anb'interview Johnnie and make him disgorge that cake. This is the view of Judge Barrett, of the Supreme Court of New York, who, in arecent judgment, has soundly spanked Johnnie Monopoly and commanded him to re turn the cake. Johnnie is aghast. Bnt snch is the law God's law even more than man's. It is both genuine democracy and New Testament Christianity. Here is a clipping which carries its own moral: "My son, I observe that yon are reading that sage headline in this morning's paper, Don t Be a Clam. Now take your father's advice rather than that of the news paper, and remember that you might do worse than be a clam. The clams that I have met in this world have minded their own business; have kept their mouths shut; have avoided Indorsing their friends' notes: have never embezzled trust funds: have never come reeling home atmidnight nnder the influ ence of cocktails; have never told lies about their neighbors or indulged in ribald jest or wounding repartee. Remember these things, myson. Emulate the clam, and If misfortune overtake yon, as it often does the bivalve of whose virtues I have just spoken, yon will at least have the consolation that be has: your troubles will not be due to your own foolish ness." This is a telegraphic age. We speak by lightning. We travel by steam. We light our houses by electricity. We live longer in a year than our ancestors did in half a century judged by what we accomplish. Mere length is out of date like last year's almanac. Peonle now-a-days skip long edi torials, and don't read long books, and avoid long talkers, and stay away from long meetings or get up and go our, "Time Is fleeting." There is much to do. The application is to ministers : Don't preach long sermons, and thus oblige yonr Dansbion ers, in self-defence, to pnll out their watches and shut them with an admonitory click. Cut it short. Makenp in quality for any lack in qnantity. A poor sermon is tolerable if it be short; a good one is tolerable if it be long. The application is to Christians: "Wbatevpi thv band flndeth to do, do it with thy mlghf-J-ie night cometh. Therefore improve the passvig occasion. Speak your word, perform yonr work, and then, like poor Joe, in Dicken's ftory, move on. Don't wait to be run over. The auplieatlon is to the household : Draw to- f -ether tolay to-morrow never comes. Why ive a tip-toe ? Settle down on your heels, and enjoy the present. Love one another, help one another, forgive one another, sympathize with one another, now. A fool never has enough, though he has everything. Lucilius. He who has grown weary of remaining at home often goes forth and suddenly returns, inasmuch as he discovers he Is nothing better for being abroad. Lucretius. By examining the tongue of a patient physi cians find out the disease of the body, and philosophers the disease of the mind. Justin. I never knew a bad man who was not nn happy. Juvintus. Mutn 1 faith" abolished, all human safety is destroyed. Livy. The only path that surely leads to a life of peace lies through goodness. Juvenal. The seeds of our own punishment are self sown the same moment that we commit sin. Hesioc The man is not nnor who hath the use of things necessary. Horace. Perverse mankind, whose wills created free. Charge all their woes on absolute decree. Bomrr (Odyuey). "Virtue (sings a wise old poet) though in rags will keep me warm." Not in this climate ! Woman has bien denned a "As essay on goodness and grace In one volume, elegantly bound. Although it may be dear, every maa should have a copy." It's poor work allavs settin' the dead above the livin.' We shall all on ns be dead sometime I reckon; it 'nd be better If folks 'ud make much, on ns beforehand, instid o' beginnin when we've gone. It's bnt little pood yon '11 do a-watenn thelast year's cron. Mr). Faystr, in Adam Bede. A bad characteristic of our time is insub ordination. An Irishman writing home to a friend in Ireland, said, "Pat, come to America. Here one man is as good aa another and better, too." We have no rule and no ruler. Especially is this true of young America. This young gentleman explodes the old fogr notion of obedience and deference with his fire crackers on the Fourth of Jnly. Go where you will enter the home of poverty, or abide beneath the ceiled roof of wealth, and yon shall surely find self willed and unruly children. Paris Communism is exemplified la countless nurseries. Think ot the discomfort of snch homes; homes which else would be delightful, but spoiled by these little tyrants In pinafores. In such circumstances, the most humane person most secretly symcatbize with Charles Lamb's toast, offered at a dinner party which had been mined by a gang of insubordinate younzsters: "Here's to the memory of that mnch maligned king, Herod I" Think of the future of these children, thus permitted to grow np pampered, self-indulgent, uncontrolled. What kind of, fathers and mothers will they make ? Nur tured in habitual disobedience to law and or der, wbat shall prevent their becoming chionle disturbers of law and order T These dear ones shall tbey mature into tenants of jails and food for the gallows ? Here a question of gravest interest to every thoughtful patriot is touched. Based as i our Government is upon the ballot box. and there fore dependent?at last, upon the sobriety and virtne ana self-control of the individual voter, what hope of the permanence of republican in stitutions, if the future voters, the government of to-morrow, are drunken, or lack virtue, or are without self-control ? A deadly peril to domestic happiness and national stability masquerades in this insubor dination of Young America. But the precise time to form habits of obedience, and of re spect for justly constituted authority, is in the plastic hour of youth. As Pope says: "Just as.the twig is bent the tree's Inclined." And a wiser than Pope affirms: "Train up a child in the way he shonld go; and when be is old. he will not depart from it." The place, therefore, in which to meet andstiflo tbs latent peril is the nursery. Stamp out this spark of childish disobedience, and the general con flagrationthe Chicago or Boston Are of adnls conflict with legitimate authority Is prevented. Parents, and above all Christian parents, this is yonr work. The command of God, the ex ample of Christ, the comfort of home, the good government of the country, unitedly dictate the duty of implanting early habits of obedi ence. Faithfulness here quiets the present and secures the future. Since the dawn of authentic history, Af rica has been acommon prey. In the interior wars have been perpetually fomented in order to secure captives for the slave mar ket. The rakish slave ship, Built in the eclipse, and rigged with curses dark, has ever hannted the coast. The seraglios of the Eastaud the hearthstones of the West have been stocked with servants, the plun der of Africa. The Western world Is now closed to slavery. The barbaric East still holds the door open. Christendom is at last united in the purpose to close that door. At last, the great powefc, under the inspira tion of a benevolent Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, have formed an alliance whose object is the final i-uppression of the slave trade. England. Germany, France, Austria, Italy, Greece and Portugal (this last for centu ries the European agent of the slave traders) have agreed to maintain a naval blockade of the east coast, the exit of the inhuman traffic. Presently tne patrol is to be reinforced by pushing repressive expeditions into the inte rior. Tne young German Emperor, iu his lat est address to the Reichstag, makes bimsel the Peter the Hermit of this crusade. Another generation will probably open Africa to civil ization, and Christianity will go in and possess the land. Poor, Foolish Men; TAKE A WOMAN'S ADVICE.. This Is onlythe second time in eight weeks that Ihavo had to polish my boots, and ret I had hard work getting my husband to grro up his old blatktoa biush, and the annoyance of having tho pasto black ing rub off on his pants, and adopt Wolff'sAGIEBIacking A magnificent Deep Block Polish, which lasts an Men's boots a'weeft, and onWomen'samontlu WOLFF & RANDOLPH, PHILDL?hia. LADIES WRAPS, DRY GOODS, FURNITURE, .:. 'CARPETS, Anything and Everything to fur nish your home. Well sell you on time with the cash discounts all off for the next 30 days, and give you four months to pay for the goods. 635 Smithfield Street. Terms Cash, or Easy Payments. ja20-sa HOLIDAY PRESENTS TO THE OLD country. Drafts, moner orders, steam ship tickets, etc at lowest New York, rates. Parcels forwarded to any part of Europe, mat SCHAMBERG CO., Foreign Bankers, 63 Smlthfleldst, Flttjburc wsu Mitiis 1 ' JA in aii . M rr Dpfmls I iilsitferri,