-34 PBELLIOFS FRUITS. I 'Independence of the American Colo nies a Great Gain to irTHE COMMERCE OP THE WORLD. jA Sapid Increase in the Production of Sugar and Cotton. BOHE TEEI IXTEEESTING STATISTICS rwmxra roE this sisri.TCB.1 HEBE can be doubt that, at no the time, the great mats of the English people believed that the suc cess of the American Revolution would be a fatal blow to En gland. As a conse quence, when the war was over and it was seen that not only was England not ruined by the loss of the American colonies, but that on tLe contrary there was a great gain - to both countries, there came a universal feeling of surprise. The population of Great Britain (exclud ing by this Ireland) wa about 9,250,000 on the close of the war in 1783 so that out in dependence meant the loss of about one fourth of her English population, and it meant about one-ninth of her commerce. It , cannot be disputed that the sudden lopping off of one-fourth the population and one ninth oi the commerce of England was well calculated to produce alarm; hut it was not of that magnitude that would portend na tional disaster it did not mead the destruc tion of England's commercial position in the world. But undoubtedly it did mean lieavy loss to certain portions and classes of the English people. To understand this it ' is only necessary to look at the way the "Navigation System" was deranged. GOOD CUSTOMERS. All Europe at this time believed that colonies were to be fostered simply as cus tomers of the "mother" country, and in this England was the most vigorous of all probably because she was the most vigorous colonizer. It was a system suited for a nation of shopteepers. England had built up a trade in this way the colonies raising for her the material's of manufacture and taking her manufactured goods in ex change. Hitherto a triangular trade had existed between England, the "West Indies and the American colonies. The colonies had been importing from England more than they exported to her, which excess they paid by way or trade with the "West Indies, with whom England was in arrears from her large purchases of sugar, cotton and trop ical goods. This was mainly in fish, lum ber and provision supplies generally, and America bought sugar and molasses from the islands. But the American colonies were now free and independent and had dropped out of the circle of the navigation laws its provisions Were now law against their trade with the islands and other English colonies as much as against the other independent powers. The effect could not be1 other than disastrous. To the West Indians, Americans were now "foreigners." They might still import from America, but only in English ships; but as to their former large exports sent direct, thev must now send to England in English ships, and henceforth England would be the only source of supply to Americans. LIMITED FEEE TEADE. The laws were rigidly enforced against the American trade at once, the popular ex pectation being that Canada and Nova Scotia would eoon fill the place of the American colonies as a source of supply to the English AVest Indies. But as might have been expected this gap in the supply was not filled by the Canadian trade, because Canada was not in a position to fill it and England could not. The re sult was intense suffering in the British cugar colonies in the necessaries of life. In the period 1780-1787 there was excessive mortality among the slave population of the islands 15,000 died from the general in sufficiency of ordinary necessaries. En gland was compelled to relax the severity of her laws, and she then began the practice of allowing free trade at certain seasons of the year by royal edict. There was also a widespread notion that the loss of the American colonics was a dis tinct loss over and above the destruction of trade and the navigation system. It is hard to define just what this feeling was; but the. essence of it was that a great part of the empire had been struck off. England had obtained no revenue from the colonies, no military aid abroad or at home; but, on the contrary, she had had to keep up a large military and naval force. Even in the civil government there was expense. England's only profit was in the exchange of commodi ties, entire and distinct from the naviga tion laws such a gain as, is generally inci dent to all trade without reterence to its nationality. Tt teems clear the gain was not because they were colonies, but the pain was in useiul commodities independ ent of their origin. A PROFITABLE ACCEPXIOX. The only exception to this rule was in the sugar plantations of the West Indies, which were largely run by English capitalists, and the profits ot the production received at home. But this was not the case on the American continent there the people had their own capital, kept and retained the profits. But the public were alarmed at the dis memberment of the empire and at what Sublic men said of the navigation system! he result was that England entered upon a desperate struggle one which we cannot appreciate so well because we are so used to dealing with large figures in finances. At the beginning of the war England's debt was 127,000,000, a large and heavy debt in those days. It was the size of the debt which alarmed Hume in 1750, although it was then much smaller. And Adam Smith, at the beginning of the war, speaks of England's enormous debt. During the course of the war, England added 117,000, 000, or nearly doubled her debt. If one counts subsequent "pensions," etc., which are just as real a debt as any, she altogether doubled it. The taxes, oppressive at the beginning of the war, were largely in creased, and we find England's poor tax a largely growing expense. It was such an efiort as she had never before made, and it is doubtful if she has made such a one since. At this time Arthur Young estimated the amount of the annual English incomes atJ a.iiu.wu,vw per year, wmie in j.Be, JSir. Griffin, the eminent financier, estimated them at 1,000,000,000. Here,-then, we may compare the sacrifice. A DISFBOPOBTIONATE ESCEEASE. Incomes have certainly increased more than tenfold, whereas population has scarcely increased threelold. In other - words, "it would be fair to say that her new debt alone was equal as a burden to all England's pi esent great debt, by a fair com parison of the sources and abilities to meet it But greatly as was England burdened on the close of the war, within ten years she was able to resume wars which lasted 22 years, and in which the expense of the Revolutionary "War in figures was infantile bv comparison. The explanation of this ms always been a puzzle to students; but the only explanation lies in the enormous expansion of her industry, by which cheap clothes, iron and military enpnlies could be . furnished in abundance. The improve ments in effect were equivalent to the addi tion of thousands of men to her population, f an increase in productive power. Thus it v was she could spend and spend, and still have more to spare than during the Revo lutionary "War. Very quickly certain influences in the United States began to make themselves i felt in the growth of wealth and population L which would have acted but slightly or not at all had they remained colonies. In the first place, they gained from the,removal of trade shackles gained a market with the rest of the world. Under the old regime their trade had been confined almost wholly to England, the West Indies and the African coast. They had little or no trade with the rest of Europe the little they, had being almost entirely of an ille gal, smuggling kind. OBOWTH OF COMMEBCE. It is clear there never could have been any full development of trade or resources under such conditions not until the colo nies could buy and sell where they pleased. So long as productions were small and the wants ot the colonists few, they did not leel the restrictions so much. But so soon as they began to grow in population and in varietv of wants, the trouble began. All these burdens were lifted off them when once they had become free. Trade at once, with clastic bounds, sprung up with parts of the world from which they pad hitherto been excluded. Within two years after the close of the war (1785) thev had established a neutral trade with China and in the China seas. The voyages were very long ones "ventures" they were called not simply voyages back and forth between two settled and defined ports. Ihe ships traded at many ports on the way back, and brought home a great variety of goods. The eflect of this freedom of trade was shown at once in the great expansion both in imports and exports, and especially in the magnificent growth of our ship tonnage. The following table explains itself the imports and exports being in millions of dollars: tJSITED STATES. Years. 1790 1795 ISOO Exports. Imports. 20 23 4S 70 71 81 Tonnage. 274,000 tons 748,000 tons 972,000 tons nfCEEASED TOXNAGE. At a glance we see the great growth in trade in the period of 1790-1800,and could go back to 1786, the growth, bv comparison, would be still larger; for in 1790 the country had struck a great revival from a financial depression previous. This continuous and great increase follows along unabated until 1807, when. the Embargo'act began to pro duce contraction. In 1808 the exports had risen to 5108,000,000, and the imports to 5138,000,000, while the ship tonnage was 1,270,000 tons. The United States was also a great gainer in the possibilities of manufacture. Previously she had been confined to the production of raw products a policy which England continued toward her other colo nies alter the Revolution, even more strictly than ever. But the United States found she could manufacture what she pleased, and very early business men began to ex amine the possibilities and resources of the country in these diiections. Hamilton's Report on Manufactures in 1791 was very complete. There is a certain broadness, and a consciousness of power, running all through it a peculiarity of this age, show ing the whole people, in a vague way, ap preciated their future greatness? The gains, then, were a free commerce and the freedom of manufacture. It is con ceivable that these gains might have been made had we remained English colonies, but it is extremely improbable. It is not likely England would have seen her true interest so soon as the Revolution com pelled her to accept it. AS A XEUTBAI, FCHVEB. But it was in the period of the European wars that the United States made her great gains. By her freedom from England she was enabled to remain a neutral power dur ing a large part of the great Napoleonic wars. From 1790 to 1807 she floated almost the only neutral flag on the seas. A-war in the mother country always embroiled her colonies more or less, cutting up their trade and commerce. The United States was now in a position to look on these quarrels with indifference and make the most of a "thrifty" position. Shipping uuder the flags of the contend ing powers was very dangerous, and, as bv common consent and necessity, the West India ports of nearly all the powers were opened to us, their products were shipped under the American flag to the United States, whence they were re-shjpped to foreign ports. The extent of this we can trace in a comparison of the imports and exports. The exports were classified into "ioreign 'and "domestic, and as stated they speak for themselves. The foreign goods imported and re-exported were as tollows: Tears. Values. 1793 J 2,000,000 1801 47,000.000 1S07 60,000,000 EABLT IMMIGBATIOX." As regards immigration, the United States was a large gainer, though as there are no reliable figures, we have only esti mates. Before the Revolution this force had been felt and had caused some alarm in England, owing to its extent. But it, now largely increased and has gone on increas ing from decade to decade until now it may fairly be compared to the great tribal mi grations of the past. Our necessities called for a mixed race, unhampered by attach ments and customs and prejudices of a single clime and country. Here all races met on a footing of common equality had we remained colonies this bad not been to. Our English population would have been very large and other races would have come here with the natural reluctance to transferring allegiance to a foreign and rival power. The Germans, French and Irish would not have come in such num bers. The secret lav in the flag we carried it was a common flag to all men of freedom and equality. J.oere is another relation that is less clear more speculative. As soon as commerce began to grow it showed the effect ol the growth of cotton in the South. Had.we re mained colonies it is hard to say what would have happened with this new featnre in pro duction It is quite certain that England, ac cording toherpolicy, would have encouraged its growth; but it seems equally certain she would have endeavored to keep a monopoly in it. Previously the New England people bad imported some little cotton for use in their homespun goods. PIEST COTTOIT SHIPMENT. The first authenticated shipment of cotton from this country was in 1781, when eight bags were seized at Liverpool on the ground that they could not have been grown in America. The soil was known to be good for cotton, but at first labor was too dear to cleanse and pick it by hand, which pre vented the expansion in production. But in 1793 Eli Whitney produced his cotton gin. It was a very simple device for pull ing the cotton through a kind of comb, leaving the seed behind. This allowed it to be produced and collected for export at very small cost, and yet with great profit, for ingiana was an eager customer lor all we could produce. The production grew very fast, for this invention gave the United States control of the cotton market of the world. In Egypt and India, where the picking and cleaning were done by Hand, the production was much more expensive in spite of their labor, and the cotton fiber in ferior in quality to the American fiber. We had good river communications both along the .Mississippi and its tributaries add along the coasts and the distance to Eng land was short as compared to India, where all facilities for gathering the cotton for shipment were very poor. No matter what the gain in dollars and cents, though, this invention fastened sla very on the United States for at least two fenerations. Had we not have won our in ependeace, it is hard to say what would have resulted from growth in the cotton production in the Mississippi valley. John Dean Beown. Attention, Companies nnd Societies. We have a big lot of army muskets, car bines, swords, sabers, etc., which must be sold at anv price within 60 days. J. H. Johnston, 621 Smithfield st Lecture by Rev. Francis- McCarthy (native of Pittsburg) in basement of Cathe dral this evening at 7:30. Admission 25 cents. Invalids call at 1102 Carson st, and be cured free of charge. the A GOOD CONSCIENCE Is largely a Matter of Surroundings, Says Kev. George Hodges. THE CRUCIAL TEST OP A MAN'S LIFE Codes of Morality Peculiar Professions. to Different SOME OP THE PLEASURES OP A CEIHINAL fWRITTlty FOR THE DISPATCH". HE Hebrews had in their language no such word as "conscience." When we take the word conscience to pieces, as a botanist analyzes a flower, we find in it a preposition and a noun. "Con" means with, and "science" means knowl edge. And so conscience means that kind of knowledge which comes, from putting one thing with another. .Thar part of our mental and moral being which at once associates with every act the princi ple which determines the character of that act, we call conscience. When the act of theft is associated in a man's mind with the divine law against stealing, or the tempta tion to make an unkind comment on one's neighbor is confronted by the divine prohi bition of false witness, then ponscience speaks. The man of impulse or of indul gence knows very well that a certain act will give him pleasure. He puts all other knowl edge, so far as he can, out of his mind. The man of conscience knows the pleasure as keenly as the other, but he knows something else, too; side by side with that knowledge of pleasure he puts a knowledge of penalty. He knows that that pleasant thing is pro hibited; is a sin. The knowledge which comes from this wise putting of one thing with another is conscience. But scholars say that there is no word in Hebrew which denotes that kind of knowl edge. The word for "conscience" in the Old Testament is "heart" or "spirit" "A wounded spirit who can bear?" That ex presses the heaviness of the burden of an offended conscience. "Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life." The writer counsels the keeping of the conscience. ANTOTSTAINED CONSCIENCE. The most important thing about your life is not the possession of a handsome liouse, or the wearing of fine cloths; it is not the elegance of your table or the smoothness of your lawn; it is not the size of your bank acconnt, or the number of your friends; it is not strength, or beauty, or wisdom. These are all good; they are all worth trying after. But they lie only on the surface of life; they are matters of a day or of a year. They are not life just as your body is not you. The most important thing about your life is the possession of an unstained conscience. The Hebrews chose a wise word when they called conscience the "heart." It is the heart; the heart of a man, and the heart of a man's life. There is at least one test which calls out the trne ring of a man's life, and shows iust how much that life is worth. It is the test of death! How will my life look to me at the end of it? And when you try life by that test you will find, as I said, that the only thing which gives life abiding value is the testimony of a good conscience. Your wealth, your friends, yonr place in the world of commerce or society, will not make you glad when you look back one dayupon your life will not make you glad as the possession of an unstained conscience will. The best life which any man can live is a good life. Keep thy conscience with all diligence. Keep it, so the meaning goes, above all other keeping: better thayou keep your money, better than you keep the favor of your friends, better than you keep anything, for out of it are the issues of life. The problem, then, is how to keep the conscience; that is, how to keep it true. And this is no easy matter. It is a task which needs "all diligence." Eor there are many kinds of conscience some of them very curious and questionable kinds. There is the superstitious conscience. That was the kind which the Pharisees had. It was particularly strict in matters of mint, anise and cummin. It pronounced it sin to eat eggs which the hen had labored to lay npon a Sabbath. It set down regulations touching ceremonies to the number of 10,000. But it was lax when the weightier matters of the law mercy, judgment and truth were concerned. This SUPERSTITIOUS CONSCIENCE is remarkable for its contradictions. It is equally at home at einrer extreme. In En gland, in the days of the VHth Henry, it bowed the heads and hearts of men before the images of smiling Madonnas, and be fore weeping crucifixes, it sent men on pilgrimages to the shrines of saints, it lay at the bottom of the abuses which made tne reiormation necessary; and then, in CO years, it turned about and demolished the fair shrines, burned the images and whitewashed the pictures, broke down the stately abbeys, attacked the carved work with axes and hammers, and left as a legacy to England those ivy-covered ruins, where in the guidebook has supplanted the prayer book. Mr. Ruskin has no desire to visit this country, and would find life quite in supportable here, because we have no ruins. Thank Clod that we have no ruins to tell such a tale of shame and sacrilege. There they stand, the eloquent and warning memorials of the work of a superstitious conscience. "The superstition which had paid an undue reverence to the symbols of holy things was avenged by the superstition of as blind a hatred." To-day this super stitious conscience stands upon both sides of the question of ritual. There is a foolish and superstitious insistence upon forms and ceremonies, and an equally loolish and an equally superstitions objection to them. Then, there is the partisan conscience, which denies that the other side has any case at all. Everybody who opposes the possessor of this conscience is either igno rant or malicious, either a fool or a knave. This is the intolerant conscience, which for bade the Jews to have-any dealings with the Samaritans; which made Christians hate heretics; which amused Certullian to laugh ter, as he thought how the persecuting heathen would one day be roasting in the flames of hell. This conscience composed the initial sentences of the Athanasian creed; it sept a papal legate to lay a writ of excommunication upon the altar of the Cathedral Church of Constantinople: it asked questions at the tribunal of the In quisition, and tightened up the thumb screws, and worked the ingenious machin ery of the rack, and fetched faggots for the bonfires of martyrs; it has presided over ecclesiastical controversy; it persuaded the Rev. Augustus Toplady to remark in his discussion with the Rev. John Wesley, "If such an opponent can be deemed an honest man, where shall we find a knave?" And to add, with a fine show of Christian serenity, "Without the least beat or emotion, "I plainly say, Mr. Wesley lies;" it turned the Methodist societies out of the Church of England; it sets the tone to-day in which Protestants speak of Roman Catholics, and Roman Catholics of Protestants; it is said to be occasionally occupied, even still, in EDITING RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPERS. its voice is heard upon the floor of relig ious assemblies; it stirred up one good brother to remark when the question ot in strumental music was under discussion in these parts, "Brethren, I want to help the home missions by contributing to them, but I cannot do so so long as this corruption of worship goes on. I want to contribute to the extension of the Lord's kingdom on earth, bnt I cannot do it when my con science tells me that the Lord would disap prove of it. I have no ill-will toward the Assembly, but I dare not act when my God tells me not," that is, when his conscience told him not to, his good, honest, narrow minded, partisan conscience. This kind of 'PrrrsfeuKG - dispatch, consoience stands to-day as the one prevail ing hindrance to Christian fellowship and union. And there is the corporate conscience, whose guidance has made it a proverb that corporations have no souls a conscience which permits a dozen men united in a syndicate to do what not one ofthem wiuld dream of doing by himself. This conscience will bribe lawmakers; it will lie; it will steal bread out'of poor men's houses. It is doing its best to drive this country into an industrial revolution. It lends color to the bold saying that the "dangerous classes" of this day are not the tramps, but the capi talists. There is the commercial conscience, which has a code of morality peculiar to itself; which tolerates and encourages a "commer cial honesty," which is very far indeed from being the honesty of the eighth command ment. This is the conscience which the deac6n had in the fable, who called down to his clerk, "John, have you sanded, the sugar? and put the chicory in the coffee? Well, then, come up to prayers!" "Thou shalt not steal," declares this singular con science. "Thou shalt not steal" a little. You may steal a great deal, and give a long name to your questionable transference of funds, and be commercially honest. A re spectable traveling salesman told me that he was not ready yet tor confess himself a Christian man, on account of certain methods In his line of business which he was not in a position to give up. A gentle man, connected with a large business in this city, gives a similar excuse. Now these facts mean something, and the meaning is not remarkably creditable. And the worst of it is, not only that men such as these hold back, but that other men do not hold back. That is where this commercial conscience comes in. It bliuds a man who is only commercially honest, and makes him think that he is an honest man all the way through. , You see that there are a good many kinds of conscience. I read tne other day, in one of those curious stories which Mr. Julian Hawthorne is manufacturing out of the diaries of Mr. Inspector Byrnes, a discus sion about the happiness of professional criminals. One man thought that their life must be entirely miserable. They have no homes, they are hunted about by the police, they spend a large part of their time behind iron bars, and they have a heavy and constantly increasing burden of sin upon their consciences. But to this it was replied that such a judgment was entirely at iauic THE PROFESSIONAL CBIMINAIi lives a life of adventure, his chase by the detectives he turns into a great game of hide-and-seek, and as for his conscience his conscience approves. He has a criminal conscience. In his opinion, society is an oppressor, an enemy; he is at war with society a war in which all is fair. The more he can harm society, the more he can get out of the wealthier classes, so much the more is he getting his iust due. His conscience does not trouble him because he has a peculiar variety of conscience. Time would forbid "me to recount the falsehoods of conscience. Saul's conscience told him to persecute the Christians, and compel them to blaspheme the conscience of Simeon. Stylite's told him to perch himself for several years upon the top of a lolty and exceedingly uncomfortable pillar. Con science said in Egypt, worship the .sacred bull Apis; conscience said in Sparta, it is no sin to steal; conscience in Mexico allows bull fights for the benefit of the church; conscience in this country discountenances bull fights but allows lotteries and gambling for the advancement of the cause of true re ligion. Conscience forbade Bishop Hooper, inthe days of the Puritans, to wear the episcopal vestments, until over-persuaded by the logic of imprisonment in the tower of London. Conscience encouraged Archbishop Laud tp force the Book of Common Prayer upon me unwilling people oi ocotianu, ana conscience inspired Jenny Geddes to throw a kneeling-stool at the head of the first clergyman who ventured to read the service from it. Upon the 12th day of this month an eminent dig nitary of the Church of England will be brought to court to answer the charge of violation of the'English law of ritual; the ritualistic bishop and the evangelical prose cutors are alike inspired by conscience. It has been said that a single degree of latitude may change the whole code of ethics, and remove the whole matter of right and wrong. That is, conscience here says this, and there .says that. It is also true that a few generations may alter the verdict of conscience. Conscience allowed Abraham, the friend of God, to have several wives. It appears, then, that conscience is a most uncertain guide. There are those who go so far as to maintain that "there is not any thing so capricious, so fluctuating and ut terly absurd as conscience." And these illustrations of its differing decisions would seem to affirm this judgment. It is not enough to follow the leadings of conscience. This is the point which I desire to em phasize. And with this I must stop to-day. It is not enough to follow the leadings of conscience. You may be right, or yon may be wrong; you cannot infallibly tell. You must pake sure, so far as you can, that your conscience is leading you in the right di rection. You must be sure that you are not following a will-o'-the-wisp conscience, which is persuading you into the mire. You see that the wise man who wrote that sentence: Keep thy conscience with all diligence, knew very well what he was say ing. The conscience must be "kept." But how? Suppose we study that next Sunday. Geobge Hodges. G. W. SCHMIDT, WInei, Liquors and Clears. "With the increased facilities at my com mand for doing business, and my steadily increased sales, I am enabled to purchase in greater quantities and direct from both im porters and distillers, and by so doing I place the goods on the market at the lowest prices consistent with the quality. The prices I guarantee in every instance, and the stock I offer from which to select is one of the largest. In my wine department I am offering all the leading champagnes, Brandenburg freres, clarets, Lauterne & Sohn. Rheinish and Moselle; "B. Bruning haus' " Burgundy, Brandenburg freres, sauterne, Hungarian wines, also sherry, port and Madeira wines; beer, ale and malt extracts; natural mineral waters, olive oils; olives in one gallon kegs; liqueurs and cor dials, imported brandies, rum, ein and fhe finest old Monongahela pure rye whiskies in the market. I also offer the largest assortment of the finest imported Key West and domestic cigars in tne city. Call and get a price list of liquors and cigars. Goods delivered to all parts of Pittsburg and Allegheny.- G. "W. Schmidt, ttfsu 95 and 97 Fifth ave. ' I "VTILI, 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, Merchant Tailor, Cor. "Wood street and Sixth avenue, Pittsburg. There Is no comfort, night or day. When teeth are suffering from decay, And oh! the pain that we shall feel When bitter hours at last reveal That all our woe came grim and gaunt From our neglect of Sozodont wrsu The Pittsburg Beef Company Agents for Swift's Chicago dressed beef sold at whole sale during the week ending February 9, 1889, 133 carcasses beef, average weight 633 pounds per carcass; average price 6 60-100 cents per pound. Valentines Wholesale and Retail. The largest assortment in the city of the latest novelties in valentines, such as "Cupid's Telegram." "Messages of Love," booklets,cellutoid goods, etc. Alarge variety ofcomics,fringed and lace valentinesalso on hand atL. Breuninger & Co.'s, 535 Smith field street, Pittsburg, Pa. Wholesale and retail. 3,7,10,12 Cash paid for old gold and silver at Hauch's, No. 295 Fifth avenue. WP3U Sunday, eebruart SOLONS OF THE PAST. Serious and Amusing Questions That Came Before the Legislature WHEN PENNSYLVANIA WAS YOUNG An Assemblyman in Jail and a Gpjernor in a Tavern Kow. ' PE0HIBITI0N A TERT OLD ISSUE WRITTEN FOB THB DISPATC1I.1 VERYBODY who reads the newspapers is of course familiar with the questions over which the legis lators at Harrisburg are puzzling their brains. Matters of great pith and mo ment are before, them continually, but hap pily for the lawmak ers there are some sub jects, once deemed ot the utmost importance to the public, upon which the General Assembly is no longer required to legislate. If, in addition to the prohibition question, the Allegheny char ter, the traction roads and the thousand and' one separate interests for which laws are asked, the Solons at Harrisburg were called upen to devise ways and means for solving the perplexing problems which occupied the attention of their official predecessors of a century or two ago it is highly probable that there would be an early adjournment. Ten dollars a day would not be sufficient in ducement to keep enou&h legislators to form a quorum in Harrisburg. When the Legislature first met in Phila delphia they hired a room and paid the ex pense themselves. The country members secured lodgings outside the city and walked in, frequently bringing their dinners with them, to attend the sessions. In 1683 the Speaker ordered that members who absent ed themselves without good cause should pay a fine of 12 pence each. A few years later a legislator sent in a most excellent excuse for absence. His name was John White, and his excuse was that HE WAS IN JAIL. This fact being communicated to the Leg islature, White's release was at once or dered. The member was liberated and took his seat in the House; but the sheriff in whoso custody he had been, incensed at the usurpation of authority which belonged to him, broke open the door of White's room on the following night and carried him back to durance vile. July 9, 1695, the House of Assembly met at Sarah Whitpain's house, where they had secured a room. They each agreed to pay their proportionate share ot the rent and charge it to the counties which they repre sented. Curious complaints claimed the at tention of the Legislature in those days. For instance, in 1706, the slaughter houses, located in the very center of population of Philadelphia, were voted a nuisance, and t ordered removed. In the following year a communication was sent to the House stating that wolves had become so numerous in the vicinity of Philadelphia that great apprehension was felt that all the sheep would be destroyed. In 1701 it was deter mined to increase.the pay of jurors, making their compensation 8 pence a day. Wit nesses fared betted, being alio wed 2 shillings each. Philadelphia and the Indians seem to have' required more legislation than the rest of the inhabitants of the colony. The rec ords of the early years abound in references to both. City government was established in "Philadelphia in 1701. In 1705, a city constable named Cresson, going his rounds at 1 o'clock a in the morning, discovered a crowd of riotous persons in a tavern, and ordered them to disperse. John Evans, the Governor of the Province, happened to be in the tavern, and calling Cresson in he flopped him severely, and ordered him to he imprisoned for two days. In 1712, the Assem bly having been asked to declare freedom to all negroes, resolved that "it was neither just nor convenient to set them at liberty." A message was sent to the Assembly from the Goveruor in 1715, which was delivered as follows: A JOVTAIi GOVERNOR. "The Governor has requested me to state his regret that he has been unable to get the council together, and will feel happy if the Speaker and members will wait on h'im this evening at Sarah RadclifTs and take a glass of wine with him." The House soon after adjourned, so the chronicler avers, and met the Governor at Sarah RadclifTs in the evening. This was onet of the pleasant occasions ih which the legislators took part. At other times there were more exciting scenes. InJ.71G a man armed with pistols attacked th" Speaker of the House and tried to kill him, but was prevented by members. In 1717 Assembly men were paid four shillings and six pence for each day they attended. The prohibition question was discussed by the legislatnres of our ancestors iust as it is to-day. The doctrine of total abstinence does not seem to have been especially popu lar, however. In 1721 the project of pre venting the sale of spirituous liquors throughout the Province and encouraging the sale of beer as a substitute was consid ered. Proprietors of iron works asked for a bill prohibiting any person from retailing liquor except beer and cider near their es tablishments. March 17, 1760. there was" no meeting of the Assembly. The Speaker and a majority of themembers were unable to get from their lodgings to the State House. Snow had fallen steadily during the night, and in some places it was seven feet deep. These and many others were the embarras ing things which confronted members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, In the good old colony times When we lived under the king. Barney. A THIEF'S CLAIMS. He Says He's a Lincoln nnd a Nopuetv of the Famous Ex-President. ISrECIAI. TELEGRAM TO THB DISFATCn. Baltimore, January 9. Samuel W. Lincoln, who says he is a nephew of ex President Lincoln,was before United States Commissioner Rogers to-day, charged with abstracting money from a letter sent through the mails addressed to Ryan A. Gyles. Mr. Lincoln is from Lacy's Springs, Ya., and claims to be a temperance lecturer. His victim is a medical student. Both boarded at the same hoube, 681 West Lafayette street. A money order for $25 came to Gyles, but Lincoln captured it and had it cashed at' the post office'on Saturday last. Congressman C. F. O'Ferrall, from the Seventh district, Virginia, -a personal friend of the defendant, appeared in the lat ter's behalf and secured a postponement of the case until to-morrow, and it is probable a compromise will be effected. Lincoln is positively identified as the thief, and makes no denial of his guilt. Mr. Gyles is from South Carolina. Snvcd From a Boycott. Detroit Free Press. "So you are married!" exclaimed one as they met in front of the postoffice. "Yes." "And to Mr. Blank?" "Yes." "But I thought von broke vbnr enia?e- ment with him?" "I did almost, but he threatened to have me boycotted and X thought it best to marry him." , " 10, 1889. THE FIRESIDE SPHINX A Collection of EnismatiGal Nuts for Address communications for this department to E. R. ttLAVEOVRX.Lewtilon, Maine. 170 AT SAMOA. --S7.a4 jy, j The upper portion of the cut represents a question asked of the captain of a vessel; the lower part stands for the captain's reply. 471 TO BK PBESERVED -WITH CARE. I'm in the dark gray vault around. And in the earth and sea. In darkness I am ever found, The crave embraccth me. But lose me and day seems to die You sigh with all you say; And each gay friend becomes a guy Whose heart is hurt alway, Bnt on the road you'r fare Is free. Though there your wrongs begin. The dimes you spare will make a spree. Your gain is changed for gin, S. 472 ANAGRAM. "ME., I NEED CASH." said I To one who would on credit buy; I wish to pay the debts I owe. My "goods" aTe offered very low, And best of bargains can be made By those who come with me to trade. Nklsonian. 473 two pictuee3. On a wild and stormy night a boy sat in a. lighthouse alone. His father, the keeper of the lighthouse, had gone away in the afternoon, expecting to retnrn before night, but a storm had arisen, and the boy knew that it would be impossible for his father to return before the next day. "I must take my father's place," said he, "or vessels will bo wrecked." He stood nobly at his post all through that stormy night, and no vessels were lost. On the outskirts of a village in a small cot tage sat Abel S. and Mary J. one evening. Abel had been courting Mary for a long time, buf was too bashf nl to ask her to be his wife. But on this evening he summoned up some courage, and at last said, "Mary, do you think you could make up your mind to have met" Mary blushed, but did not answer, and Abel asked her again, and said, IMary, 1 want you to ten me.- aiary smiieu, looxeu up ana Why was she like the boy in the lighthouse? MoBNiNo glory. 474 ADDITION- EXTBAOBDHTAEY. Five hundred and five hundred, Now add them if you please. And only have "five hundred" Which you can do with ease. Undine. 275 the woeld's wat. "Here is my two"' said two; "now pay The full amount you owe; I cinnot wait another day. Nor further favor show." "1 must admit' the other said, "That what I owe is one. And though I know it must be paid, Yet it must longer ran: The very best that I can do, In my financial strait. Is to present you my one two, And ask you still to wait." Nelsoniah. 476 stae. L In "scratch." 2. A verb. 3. Came together. 4. Wood-nymphs. 5. Ordinary. 6. English novelist died 18S2. 7. Called. S. A barbarous word which had various significations among the ancients, and arid (two words). 9. Certain fossil, ganoid fishes of the seas. 10. Part of a sleigh. 11. Three-fifths of the S. W. part of Arabia. 12. The svmbol dt one of the chemical elements. 13. In "scratch." Q. Beds. 477 METAGEAM. I may with truth and brilliance glow, Though mute and bidden I may be; Or I may make a senseless show Of some poor tool's stupidity. Each man thinks his surpasses all The very wisest, strongest, best; But be is one of wisdom small Who cannot calmly each one test. Behead me and I'll quickly rise With joyous, airy song-bird's light, Although a captured culprit tries To burst me in securing flight. The half of what I am is seen In ceaseless numbers near you thronging; In polished, shining forms we gleam, lo hold secure some frail belonging. And what is left describes a god. Whose mother once this son disowned; His name bespeaks his.native sod. The land where he was once enthroned. Sea. 478 a mysteet. Of all the names the greatest be Five letters, told in only three; Although its presence always near, Whoever could it see or heart It lives and works in ev'rv nlace. Is not confined by time nor space. XTne nn tllut.nlHi. (inn n rmi na: No science can it comDrehend. Not in a sculptor's works of stone, In symbols only be it shown. J.B. ANSWEES. 462 Sunshine. 483 "The music of the spheres." 4&J On the yard-stick she measured off 23 inches by means of the small stick. She then laid off the difference (13 inches) on the small stick. This gave a length of 10 inches, which she deducted from the 13 inches on the yard stick. She now had a length of 3 inches, which she laid off twice on the short stick, thus ob taining the required length of i inches. 465Sad-iron. 466 Pop(u)lar. 467 S E I SESSILE I S E R I N IRATE L I T O R N E N E R Q I O N I O 468 Gay, fay. ray, bay. hay. May, gay. 469-M1X: IX-XiI; ix-f2k. CAfl?47X9 WolffsACMEeiacking BEATS the World. It Is the Best HARNESS DBESSIHG The BEST for Men's Boots " Ladies' a Children's" AJBSOZVTET.Y WATERPROOF. SOFTENS and PRESERVES the Leather One a weekor men's ioott and cnee a invn&for noaenU is ampl forperfttt result. It nukes the handsomest and most durable polish yon ever saw. You don't hava to groan and aveafi vnth a buck ing: brush- Bs wire and try tt. Becasse yonr grandfather worked hard la so reason yon should sot spars yourself this vorse than caeleos labor. Sold by Grocers, Druggists, and Shoe Sealers. WOLFF A RANDOLPH. PHILADELPHIA KWTSU 532&823tttU. T Y'ilB'r"agl"' WW U 3 1 V JC !- L-lsliy- fSSfp f NEW ADVERTISEMENTS DAH2IGEE'& -SUCCESSORS T0- MORRIS H. DANZIGER. Our entire business to be reorganized. t Many new departments to be added. Foremost among all will be our immense DRY GOODS and HQUSEFURNISHING DEPARTMENTS. Our builder will take charge in the next few daya He must hava room to aocomplish his task. We must move the goods out of his way, and this is how we mean to do it, create a Gigantic Forced Sale, -TO BEGIN- MONDAY MOMHG, FEBRUARY 11, i And name the lowest prices ever attempted in this or any other city in America. We have no time to waste, so here goes for FORCED SALE PRICES: Forced Sale Bargains in Ladies' Muslin Underwear. 65 dozen Ladies' Lace-trimmed Chemise, former price 39c, tate them now at 25c , 35 dozen Plain and Trimmed Corset Covers, with embroidery, former pries 39c, now 25c. 20 dozen Ladies' Embroidered and Lace-trimmed Chemise, former price 75c, now 19c. 27 dozen Ladies' Night Gowns, "Lace-trimmed." former price 75c, no w at 49c SI dozen Ladies' Skirts, Tucked and Cambric Flonnce. former nrice 75c, now 49c 15 dozen Ladies' Corset Covers, Tacked and Trimmed, with Embroidery, former price 75c, now 49c 44 dozen Ladies' Drawers, Clustered Tucks and Torchon Ruffle former price $1, now 74c 39 dozen Ladies' Chemise, elegantly trimmed in Embroidery and Torchon Lace, former price SI, now 74c 60 dozen Ladies' Night Gowns, Tucked and Insertion, with Cambric Bnffle, former price $1, now 74c 60 dozen Ladies' Night Gowns, Mother Hubbard style, former price SL now 74c 25 dozen Ladies' Nieht Gowns, Cluster Tucks and Cambric Ruffle, former price 89c now 69c 10 dozen Ladies' Skirts, Tucked and two Ruffles, former price 89c, now 69c 35 dozen Ladles' Night Gowns, elaborately trimmed, Mother Hubbard style, former price. Jl 25, now 99c 0 dozen Ladies' Skirts, with Tuck and Deep Embroidered Raffle, former price 81 50, now 99c Forced Sale Bargains in Men, Women and Children's Underwear,' The Quantity of All These is Not Large, so Come Quickly If You Want Them. 90c for Men's Scotch Wool Shirts or Drawera, former price $1 25. 60c for Men's Red All-Wool Shirts or Drawers, former price 99c - 29c for Ladies Gray Merino Vests or Pants, former price 49c 16c for Ladies' Swiss Vests, former price 25c 33c for Ladies' Fine Vests, former price 49c 59e for Men's Fancy Merino Shirts or Drawer, former price 75c 51 each for a Small lot of odd sizes in Men's Fore Wool Scarlet Shirts or Drawers, former price $150. Lots of natural strictly pure wool health underwear for men, women and the little folks. All go at forced prices in this sale. 19c for Gents' Fine Silk Scarfs, former price 39c and 24c. 15c for Silk Windsor Scarfs, former price 24c 48c for a Splendid Unlanndried Shirt. 79c for the very best Unlanndried Shirt, former price 99c 5 Lots of These Children's Elegant Embroidered Dresses, N SLIGHTLY SOILED. Lot 1110 White Dresses, former prices SI 24 and 99c, yonr pick now 49c Lot 2212 White Dresse3, former prices $1 49 and $1 69, your pick now at 74c. Lot 3171 White Embroidered Dresses, former prices SI 49, Jl 74, SI 99, $2 49, S2 74, $3 99, you pick now 99c Lot 4100 White Embroidered Dresses, former prices S2 74 to S4 49, Tour pick now at 11 50. Lot 5108 White Embroidered Dresses, former prices $4 49 to 6 24, yonr pick S2 50. FORCED SALE BARGAINS IN LADIES' JERSEYS. 330 Ladies' Jersey, former prices SI 62, S2 24, S2 74, now your choice at 9Sc 600 dozen Ladies' Fancy Bordered Handkerchiefs, former price 9of-now your pick at 4c 430 pairs Children's Cotton and Silk Hose, former prices 25c, 39c 49c, 69c yourpick at 25c a pair. 155 pairs Boys' and Misses' Hose, former prices 59c, 69c and 74c, your pick now at 39c a pair. 220 pairs Ladies' Pure Silk and Lisle Hose, former prices S224, SI 99, $174, SI 49, yourpick now at SI a nair. 110 pair Children's Pare Lisle Hose, former prices 74c and S9c, price now, your pick at 69c a pair. 1,000 pairs Men's Half Hose at 7c and 8c a pair. Forced Sale Bargains in White Goods, Table Linens, Napkins, Muslins, Towels, Blankets, Comforts, Table Scarfe, Turkish Towels. 100 dozen Turkish Bath Towels, f ormer price 12c, now at 9c 60 dozen Turkish Batn Towels, former price 16c, now at 12c 33 dozen Turkish Bath Towels, former price 18c, now 14c 36 Full Size Comforts, former price Sh now 73c 45 Large Size Comforts, former price $1 39, now 95c. 30 Fine Large Comforts, former price $2 99. now $1 99. . 60 Splendid Large Comforts, former price S2 24, now SI 69. eu uray uianKets, tormer price s, now i id. 75 Fine Gray Blankets, former price $2 49, now $1 89. 60 pairs Strictly Pure Wool White Blankets, now at $4 39 per pair. 300 Pure Linen Hack Towels, large size, now at 21c per pair. 200 dozen Unbleached Linen Crash Towels, now at 7c each. 1,000 Wash Rags, "large size," two for 5c 45 pieces Fancy Madras for Curtains, now at 10c yard. - 100 pieces Forfar Crash Toweling, now at 6c yard. 100 pieces Linen Crash Toweling at be yard. 100 pieces Flax Glass Toweling, fine quality at lie yard. CO pieces Linen Table Damask, 60-inch power loom, now at 9c yard. 25 dozen line quality Cream Damask Bordered Napkins, now at 99c per dozen, 25 dozen White'Fringed Napkins, all linen, 89c, Si 49, SI 99 per dozen. Thousands of White and Colored Bed Spreads, all marked at forced prices during this Sals. Thousands of liemnants in Fine Wliite, Fancy and Checked Lawns Marked Away JDown. 100 pairs Cream Fancy Curtain nets. 44 inches in width, 7c yard. Lots of White. Fancy and Checked Lawns at 9c, He, 123c yard. . i v Lots of Nainsooks and Cambric at 10c to 14c yard. Lots of Prussian Linen and Victoria Lawns all at Forced Sals prices. Lots or fancy Turkish Tidies. 12c, 14c 19c, 24c and 29c each. Lots of fancy Turkish Table Scarfs at 49c and 69c. Lots of White Piques at 12Kc to 19c yard now. 100 pieces Lonsdale Muslin at TJJc a yard. 100 pieces Chapman Muslin at 6e a yard. "Forced Sale Bargains in Embroideries and Torchon Laces." 10,000 yards Embroideries at 2c, 3c 4c. 5c, 6c, Sc, 9c, He 12c, 14c, 16c and upward now. Lots of Fine Embroideries and Matched Patterns; also lovely new designs in Baby Edgings; 20,000 yards Real Torchon Laces at 3c. 4c, 5c, 6c 7c, 8c, 9e, lie, 14c, 17c, 19c, 21c, 24c a yard now. Also new designs in Smyrna Laces, suitable for infants' and cnlldren's wear. ''Useful Remnants in Embroideries and Laces." 800 pairs 5-Hook Lacin? Kid Gloves, former price 74e, now 33c 600 pairs 4-button Kid Gloves, former price 89c, now 30c pair. 2C0 pair Gent's Kid Gloves, former price $1, now 69c pair. "See Our Apron Bargains During This Forced Sale." "Forced Sale Prices on Reliable Corsets." 110 dozen perfect-fitting Corsets, all sizes, now 44c pair. 96 dozen French Woven Corsets, all sizes, now 56c pair. 60 dozen of the R. and G. celebrated Corsets, now at 75e pair. 60 dozen of the P. N. Strengthening Corsets, now at 89c. 25 dozen of Dr. Shilling's Health Corsets, now at S9C pair 90 dozen fine French Woven Corsets, former price SI, to 75c Forced Sale Prices in Toilet 1000 boxes Tetlow's Swansdown Face Powder.each box containing K-oz. bottle fine perfume , now 13 cents box. 600 boxes Tetlow's Gossamer Face Powder, now 19 cents box. 60 boxes Potter Drug Company's Cuticura Soap, now IS cents cake. 21 cents for Colgate's Cashmere Bouquet Soap. 6 cents for Colgate's Glycerine Soap. 9 cents for Colgate's Pansy Soap. 6 cents for Colgate's Honey Soap. - . 6 cents for Colgate's Windsor Soap. 10 cents for Pears' Unscented Soap. 14 cents for Pears' Perfumed Glycerine Soap. . . v i - 69 cents for Dr. Holland's Imported German Cologne. , .....i&J&Sb- 22 and 39 cents for Oakley's best Florida Waters. ' ,T 14. 24 and S9 cents for Oakley's fine Imported Bay Rmn. " 10, 20, 25. 40, 50 cents for Chamois Skins. 24 and 69 cents for Colgate's Cashmere Bonqnet Extracts. 69 cents for De Mott's line French Extracts. 62 cents for the genuine Latin's Extract. 11 cents for Major Cements. 8 cents for Royal Glue. 6 cents for a big cake of fine soap. Full lite of Colgate's toilet waters. 6, 14. 25 cents for good bath sponges. FORCED SAXiE BARGAINS ON. GLASSWARE! 800 Individual Salt Sellers now at 2 cents each. 1,600 plain Glass Goblets now at 4 centi each. ' 2,000 Glass Tumblers, cut glass design, now 5 cents each. 1,000 Glass Tumblers handsomely engraved, now 11 cents each. 600 Glass Spoon Holders now at 9 and 12 cents each. 600 Glass Celery Holders now at 16 and 24 cents each. ' 150 Glass Boats now at 19 cents each. 1,000 Glass Molasses Jugs now at 24 cents each. 1.000 Glass Vinegar and Oil Crnetts now at 24 cents each, 600 Glass Cat3up Bottles now at 31 cents each. 1,000 CMass Castors, with nickel frame, now at 24 cents each. 1.000 Glass NaDDies now at 2 to 7 cents each. 1.000 Glass Fruit Dishes now at 14 cents each. - 600 Glass Fruit Dishes now at 34 cents each. s. 600 Glass Fruit Dishes now at 39 cents each. i, 150 Glass Orange Bowls now at 49 and 74 cents each. 1,600 Glass Fickle Dishes at 6 cents, 17 cents, 24 cents now. 600 Glass Breakfast Sets, consisting of Butter Dish, Sugar Bowl, Spoon Holder and Creamer, now at 24 cents and upward the set. 800 Glass Lemonade Sets now aft 74c. 99c SI 24, SI 49 full set. 1,000 Parisian Cream Pitchers, very pretty, now a; 10 cents each. FORCED SALE LADIES'. WRAP BARGAINS; 20 Ladles' cloth Newmarkets, former price SH, now $6 99. 31 Ladies' cloth Newmarkets, former price 817, now $8 49. 29 Ladies' cloth Raglans, former price S19 60, now $9 75. fe 25 Ladies' cloth Jackets, "tailor made," former price $6 50, now S3 34. 15 Ladies' cloth Jackets, "tailor made," former price S10, now S4 98. y jt 17 Ladies' cloth Jackets, "tailor made," former price $20, now S9 99. - ? 10 Ladies' cloth Modjeskas, former price S15. now $7 49. ' ' J . 19 Ladies' Stockinette Jackets now at $3 98. $4 24, Jo 491 " " Balance of all our Plush Coats and Modjeskas will be offered in this gigantic forcedjule at prices that will Induce you to buy for next winter. -vTl 108 Misses' and Children's Coats, former price S3 50 to $3 50. your pick now of the entire lot " 2 at SI 50 each. J -V DANZIGER 4M-46-M-S2 Silt! SL f8 SHOENBERG, Articles, Soaps and Perfumery. SHOENBERG 638-540-542 Fan Are, MttiMiW