THE. PITTSBJJllG'-DISPATOH, STTNDfOpTOBER201889 u ky,, WE APPEECIATE ART. Piltsburg in the Front Bank of Cities of -Artistic Culture. THE DEMAKD FOE FIKE ART WARES Famishes Evidence of Oar Increasing Wealth and Kefinement. THE'IaTE CAPTAIN JO.VES AS A CEITIC TnUTTIK TOE THE DISPATCH.! OF all the cities in the United States of equal size and importance, Pittsbnrg stands first on the list as a market for the sale of art pottery, bronzes and bric-a-brac This fact is well known to those who are best able to judge of such matters, bat is not so clearly appreciated by the general public. Still, anyone wh0 -will take a walk through the busi ness portions of other cities, after seeing the magnifi- The Greek Slaie. cent displays made In the windows of Pittsbnrg dealers, cannot fail to observe the marked contrast between the splendid collections of art objects which are exhibited here and the comparatively meager assortments that are shown in most other places. It is al worthv of note that thedemand for this class of goods has grown rapidly doting the last lew years and still continues steadily increasing. Ibis indi cates two things, which must prove of great Soft Patte Sevres Vate. interest to onrcitizens, and altogether denotes a Tery agreeable state of affairs. In the first rtlace. it shows that there is here a large and constantly increasing class of persons able to anora these ratner expensive luxuries, and secondly, it furnishes the most incontrovertible evidence or a growth in refinement and culture which bids fair to surpass that of any other locality. Even snch a city as Chicago, which, from its size and importance might reasonably be ex pected to be somewhat in advance of Pitts burg, is in reality far behind us in the de mand for fine art wares. Of course, the ap preciation of the beautiful as displayed in this direction is of comparatively recent giowth in this city, but it is of that steady growth denoting an ever increasing love of the artistic and elegant, which gives it a character far above that of a mere craze for what is fashionable, and places it upon the secure foundation of an intelligent regard for the elevating and ennobling tendencies of art. EDtTCATIJTG THE PEOPLE. It was during the Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia that this popular demand for fine art ware had its inception, not alone as regards Pittsburg, but with the great masses of the people all over the country. This as the first lair opportunity afforded to large numbers of the American people to gain an insight into some of the rare manu factures of the Old "World, and its influence was soon to be observed in the changed character of the decorations of their homes. In Pittsburg the most healthy leature of this active demand for art products is that it is not by any means confined to any one class of people, nor even to those who have the means to readily satisfy such reasonable desires. The wealthy people buy freely of the most rare and expensive pieces; those ot more moderate means purchase with just as much taste but more couservatively, being governed in some measure by the question of cost; the poorer people, those who must exercise economy, in order to live well, and at the same time within the limit" of a small income, display a rare judgment in the selection of lower priced wares possessing some of the desirable characteristics of the higher grades. It is Doulton Jar in Louit XV. Style. this well-grounded appreciation of what is elegant and tasteful, that is placing this heretofore prosaic manufacturing city in the front rank of art loving communities, and making the culture and refinement ot the greater number of the people one of our most notable characteristics. In this connection it is worthy of remarK that the late Captain Jones, whose recent and sudden death is mourned by so many thousands of persons, was regarded as one of our best critics in this branch of art. Being a man of keen preemptions and quck decision, and having been afforded uuusual opportunities of ac quiring knowledge through his extensive travels and wide acquaintance, the Captain's judgment was considered as reliable upon most subjects on which he ventured to ex press an opinion. Of the different sources from which the applies of these art products are brought, ift 31 trJ toflf Vwtrx lYvV , fit rfiKsm England stands pre-eminent in the manu facture of pottery; France in that of works in bronze, both in the real article and in the imitation, or what is known as French bronze, while Italv is noted for her sculp tures in marble. There are a number of celebrated makes of English art pottery, among the most famous and most important being the Royal Worcester ware, Doulton's, Crown Derby and "Wedgewood wares. The popularity of these fonr wares is in the order in which they are named. THE KOTAIi WOECESTEB comes first, but it is being closely followed by Doulton's products. Indeed, this latter ware bids fair to take the lead in popular favor, in the smaller pieces particularly, for the reason that the Worcester ware has ben so extensively manufactured in the smaller and lower priced pieces, that it is not now so much sought after as formerly; in the larger and more elaborate works, however, it still maintains its ascendancy. Doulton's lactones which are located in Burslem, in Staffordshire, produce some of the largest and most important wors that are manu factured anywhere in the world; they are beautiful in form, rich in color, and cohered over with decorations, contrasting strongly in this particular with tbe refined and delicate con ventionalized designs of the Koyal Worcester wares, which in other respects they re semble. The richness and beauty of the Doulton ware is dne mainly to the genius and skill of its originator. Sir Henry Doul ton, he having been knighted by Queen Victoria lor the elegance and superiority of his products. The energy and enterprise which have been instrumental in bnilding nr this world renowned industry is in stanced in the sending of Mr. Lionel Bilton as far away as Australia, in order that he might secure new and heretofore unused varieties of flowers to serve as motives in de signing, with a view, of producing results different from anything previously seen. It is, perhaps, not putting it too strongly to assert that Doulton ware is soon to take the front rank of all tbe art potteries. There is another variety of ware made at this factory quite diflerent from the one above referred to, but which is also very popular. It is also a remarkable fact that tne Doulton fac tories produce everything in the line of earthenware, from sewer pipe to the finest works, and are especially noted lor productions in the line of sanitary pumbing. Although tbe French are more celebrated for their works in bronze, they still produce some fine re sults in pottery, of which the famous Sevres china is the most important. This ware is commonly ornamented with bronze, as is also the beautiful Louchet ware. PITTSBTXBG AIT AET CENTEE. If a doubt exists in the mind of anyone as to Pittsburg's rank in the matter of ap preciation of fine art products, a visit to some of the first-class dealers in such com modities will set it at rest forever. Through the courtesy of Mr. Hardy, of the firm of Hardv & Hays, the writer was afforded a considerable insight into the growth and importance of this business in Pittsburg, and also an opportunity of closely examin ing some of the more rare and valuable works. Among these are a coupie ot pieces in real bronze, fresh from the Paris Ex position. One of them. -'The Greek Slave," is a noble work ana 01 exquisite grace. The other is entitled "The Fairy Tale," and consists of the figures of two children deeplv interested in a book. Upon a superb bronze pedestal rests a fine bust of the blind oet, Milton, and near by stands a large and striking figure in French bronze called "The Sower." "Spring" and "The Fisher Boy" are two handsome works iu Italian marble. A specially fine vase inKuyal Worcester ware is decorated with a view of Stratford-on-Avon, the birthplaceorShakes peare. A set of three vases in fine Louchet ware, ornamented with gold-colored bronze, form a beauti'ul group. Pierced Royal Worcester ware is a beautiful product, in patterns not uulike filagree work in metals. Wedgewood ware also finds considerable lavor, and some very beautiful specimens of this goods may be teen. At the art rooms on the second floor of Mr. W. W. Wattles' establishment some very fine works were seen, particularly in Doulton ware. Several fine pieces ot this OL f Teplitz Ware. goods were seen in designs of the Louis XV. style, and Mr. Harvey Wattles, who pos sesses a valuable fund of information on this subject, is authority for the statement that this is the class of designs which are now in the greatest demand, and which, from all indications, will continue to be for some time to come. He has also shown a splendid tall vase in soft paste Sevres ware with gold bronze ornaments, which, he says, is a class of goods that is rapidly becoming scarce, and is now made only in IiABGE AND VALUABLE PIECES1 of elaborate design, some of them costing as high as from $2,000 to $3,000. This vase is also in tbe Louis XV. style, as are a num ber of others of similar character, including the Doulton jars referred to above, which present the anomaly or strictly French de signs in products of English manufacture. It is hardly necessary to call attention to the character of these designs as the style is so generally known. The cuts ot the two vases of which special mention has been made, are from pencil sketches drawn by Mr. Harvey Wattles. A piece of new Doulton ware has a design in relief, carved in while the material is yet soft. In the colored decorations of this ware a change has been recently made, inasmuch as the gold lines and ifetwork, lormerly so freely used, nas been abandoned, and the style of work is less conventional. At tbe store ot Wattles & Sheafer some further information was gleaned regarding Royal Worcester ware, to the eflect that no two pieces of it bear the same decoration, and that every piece of it bears a stamp by which it may be known, and some markings under the glaze which aid as safeguards against counterfeits. At this place may also be seen some fine works in bronze, of which "The Rustic Sculptor," by E. Aizein, and "The Difficult Duet," by A. Gavadez, are two of the most important. The latter work is from the Paris salon. Perhaps some handsomely carved ana highly orna mental clocks, spven or eight feet high, may be taken as indicating the regard which Pittsburg people have for time and time pieces. E. P. Roberts & Sons have some fine works in Italian marble, of which the finest, perhaps. Is the one called "Venica," a mandolin girt. They have works of all the diflerent kinds mentioned above as being seen elsewhere, and also a large number of pieces of what Is known as Teplitz ware, another English production, which is man ufactured in all manner of fantaitio shapes and designs, and which is possessed of a beauty of form and color peculiar to itself. In the designs for this ware use is made ot a combination of the delicately beautiful and the quaint grotesque, and serpents, lizards, alligators and all kinds offabulons monsters, such as griffins, dragons, etc., are pressed into service as motives. A MAGNIFICENT SPECIMEN. At the store of Mr. J. C. Grozan may be seen what is doubtless the finest piece of Louchet ware ever brought to this city. It is a very large and handsome vase, of rich design and exquisite workmanship. This ware is manufactured at one of the smaller factories in Paris, bat it is unsurpassed for beauty of design and fineness of finish by the products of any of the larger works. At the same place may be seen a very hand some table of rich brass, highly ornamented and with a top formed of one large piece of Mexican onyx, and also a fine cabinet of the same materials. There may also be noted, among other fine works, a splendidly executed figure of an American Indian and an excellent bust of Beethoven, both in real bronze. Everywhere one may go throughout the citv, the same indications of rare taste and judgment are displayed. Beautiful designs in all kinds of artfstic manulactures may be sen: Art pottery, fine bronzes, pedestals in Mexican onyx, brass, bronze and other materials, inlaid tables, desks, etc., all Large Vate in Louchet Ware. of which are the most elegant and beautiful. All these fine goods are of foreign manufac ture, but this is a condition of affairs, which, in the nature of things, cannot long con tinue. Our desire for the beautiful has been thoroughly awakened, and its satisfaction has come to be regarded as a necessity not a luxury, and it will not be long before American enterprise will enter into the pro duction of art manulactures to compete with all tbe world. To this end it is necessary that we should produce men with tbe busi ness energy of Wedgewood, and the artistic skill of Flaxuian the men who first estab lished the industry iu England. The first we already possess, and the second will surely arise as soon as it appears that the time has arrived and the work may be accom plished, and that will be in the not far distant luture. We will then secure what we now most sorely need, and that is really fine work at a moderate cost. This would be a natural result of the aDundance with which it would be produced, lor Americans could never rest content with producing goods, however fine, in such small quanti ties, as the Sevres manulactures, of which but few are taken away from, France, they being mostly absorbed by the aristocracy of that country. When that time comes we will, perhaps, be ahle to teach other na tions something about art, as well as con cerning matters of a more material and prosaic nature. Gerald E. Flanagan. NATIONAL GUARD NOTES. Lieutenant a. L. Pearson. Jk., returned home yesterday from St. Louis. A SBMBEK ot the officers from the local or ganizations will attend the funeral of General Hartranft. Ca ptain W. H. Davis made a flying visit to lit. Pleasant on last Thursday to attend the wedaing of Mr. C. C. Law. Captain Coon visited tne range at High Bridge on Thursday. In practice he made 17 bull's eyes out of 20 shots, with a total of 87 out ol a possible 100. Captain Emory Thompson, Company I, Fourteenth Regiment, was unanimously re elected captain of tba company for the ensu ing fire years on last Wednesday evening. The plans for tbe new armory for the Eight eenth Regiment and Battery B were submitted to the officers at the Board of Control meeting last evening after a few suggestions were adopted. Captain O. C. Coon, Company J, McKees port, has purchased a handsome gold medal to be shot for by tbe members of his company on next Saturday. Such members that have made a shapshooter's score will not be permitted to enter. The election for captain in Company G, Fourteenth Regiment, was not held on last Thursday, as there was not a sufficient number of men present. Lieutenant Colonel James B. R Streator, of the Tenth Regiment, was a spectator at the Fourteenth Begiment inspec tion. fTHE following list of members of the .Eigh teenth Regiment have entered for the Brown & Hirth medal: Captain O. C. Coon. Lientenant Chris Lauer, Sergeant Pearce Garvey, Corporal Kingon, all of Company I, and Corporal A E. Boss, of Company G, and Lieutenant A L. Pearson, Jr. Major General John F. Hartranft died at his late residence in N orris town on Thursday. By his death the Guard loses one of its best friends. Under his management the reorganization was made after the riots of 1877,'and through bis advice and ability as com mander it has reached its present bish stand ing. He will be buried on Mondav afternoon witb military Honors, General bnowden. Com mander of tbe First Brigade, bavins been de tailed for that purpose. The following is the record of General Hartranft's military career covering a period of 32 years. Private, W orris City Rifles, 1S57, elected (Second Lieutenant, First Lieutenant and Captain tbe same year. Lieutenant Colonel First Regiment, Second Di vision, Lieutenant Colonel and .Division In spector, Colonel First Regiment, Major General beptember 2. 1870, Commander-in-Chief from January, 1873, to January 21, 1879, Major Gen eral and Division Commander Jauuary 23, 1879, resigned October 28, 1853, reappointed same date, commission expired October, 1888, reap- Sointed in General Order No.,21, October 25, 88. by Governor Heaver. His record during the late onpleasantnesshas been published. Adjutant General D. H. Hastings, as sisted by Colonel Thomas Hudson, Lieutenant Colonels Elliott, Potter and Robinson, and Major Barton D. Evans and Lieutenant Bean, Second United Scales Cavalry, conducted the inspection of the Fonrteentb Regiment on last Tuesday. Promptly at 11 o'clock Colonel P. D. Percbment presented his battalion for inspec tion and muster, after which details from tbe vanons companies reported to the Adjutant tor guard mount. Captains Nosblt andTnomp son were tbe old and new officers of the day; Lieutenant Over officer of tbe guard. Tlieu came the inspection drill, and for an hour the regiment was put through the different ma neuvers on the list in a very creditable manner. Tbe regiment uastben marched to tbe East Liberty station, and tbe company commanders took charge and returned home. The visiting officers were invited to Colonel Percuinent's residence, where tbey were entertained in tbe usual bappy manner of tbe host. Among those present were Generals Hastings and Wilie, Coronet Smith and Colonel Hudson, Lienten ant Colonel James R R. Streator, of tbe Tenth Regiment; Lieutenant Colonels Elliott, Gray, Potter and Robinson and .Major Evans, of the Governor's staffi Captains Hamilton and Mur doch, of General wllla's staff, and Adjntant Cbarles Reese, of the Eighteenth Regiment; also the field and stall of the Fourteenth Regi ment. Corset, Gloves and Hosiery Be sure and get onr closing-out prices be fore buying elsewhere. We can save you money. F. 8choenthal, 612 Penn avenue. nfxssll iff Jf jPm Til JfiL l?Tjj?iiiiiiiirl A PAIR OF -SLIPPERS Worn by an Egyptian Lady Ages Ago Form the Theme For ANEWPOEMBI SIR EDWIN ARNOLD He Defends the Foets and Poetesses of Passion. A PROTEST AGAINST P0B1TANI6M SPECIAL TXLXORAX TO TBK DISrATCS.1 San FBANCisco,October 19. Sir Edwin Arnold and daughter sailed for Japan this week on the Pacifio mail steamship Belgic A large delegation from the Century Club or this city, and many personal friends bade farewell at the steamship wharf to the giited poet and his charming daughter. As a parting word, Sir Edwin said that he left America with much reluctance. This, bis first visit to the TJnited States, will form the subject of a series of graphic essays in the London Telegraph, of which newspaper the author of "The Light of Asia" is chief editor. To The Dispatch correspondent. Sir Ed win a few hours be "ore his departure ex pressed himself as charmed with America and the American people. He pronounced New York as grand iu its great men; Bos ton, a welcome home for the traveler and student; Washington, the most bciutilul city on the continent; Philadelphia, as charmingly picturesque; Chicago, as phe nomenal; Denver, as an oaK ot steaay, sub stantial growth; Omaha, a modern mart, and San Francisco, most attractive to the tourist. THE NETf SCHOOL. TJdoq tbe morning of his departure. Sir Edwin smoked an after breaktast cigar in his rooms at the Palace Hotel, and chatted pleasantly with a DISPATCH correspondent upon timely literary topics. As a moralist, as a poet oi sweet purity, as a man of fine sensibilities, there is scarcely an English man to-day better qualified to speak, in terms ill or good, of recent Americtn litera ture, and more especially of erratic fiction and poems of passion, than is the well known student of ancient Asiatic literature. "I have read Ella Wheeler Wilcox and Amelia Rives." said Sir Edwin, knocking the ashes from his cigar. "The others I have not read." You speak of Mrs. Atner ton, Edgar Saltus, Abby Jackman and other writers of whom I know no.hing, and of whom I have never heard. The Quick or the Dead I read with a vast deal of interest. I do not regard this recent American litera ture as a new school, and most certainly such a school shonld not be established. I do not think there exists to-day a separate, distinct school ol this kind. There are cer tain writers headed by our own Swinburne, and the giited men of" France, men whom I know. I do not admit that these men con stitute a school in literature characterized as fleshliness. A BETOLT AGAINST PURITANISM. "Their work is the old eternal classic re volt against Puritanism and tbe narrower forms of Christianity. The first of them all was the Emperor Julian, one of the finest fellows that ever lived. In his heart there was a revolt against Christ and His teach ings, for in his breast was the old grace of Greece, and the glory of Rome. This new religion, draped in gray, seemed odious. Look round and see the clergy consign the babes to everlasting torment, and say 'tis wicked for a man to look at women's ankles. Do not misunderstand me. I should never excuse immorality or forgive offenders against public decorum. Let us remember Swinburne's verses, andbelieve that thepoets of the present make but a natural and even uselul protest against the extravagances of Puritanism. I agree with him who writes: 'Dost thou believe that because thou art virtuous, there should be no more cakes and ale!' "I was sitting with Walt Whitman the other day, and T repeated to him some of bis own virses, and explained their philosophy and their beauty. He said to me: 'Yon are the first man to explain my own lines.' At this I said to him, 'I am no more ashamed ot body than of soul. I look largely, broad ly at men, at literature, at the affairs of life.' Walt Whitman is right. I swear I am no more ashamed of bod v than of soul. Read those lines of Robert Browning in which be says: 'Nor soul helps body more than body once helped soul.' THE ENEMY OP BEAUTY. "Ah, me, it is a sad spectacle, a disgust ing thing for tbe world to be ashamed of beauty. This does not apply to bad books. There is no excuse for their birth or their existence. There is no enemy to the beauty of the world, the Greek of life, like the ob scene man. He is tbe guerilla that de faces, mars the shape and form of nature. If such books are written to sell, to pander, the man who writes them is a villain, and should be cast headlong into the broad Pacific, aud the woman vea, she is worse than tbe man. There is Rider Haggard! I know him well, and meet him frequently on the 'underground.' His work is clever, his 'She' even better I think than 'Cleopatra.' There are beautiful things in his books, yet people will not read. But then you cannot judge Cleopatra by the young women of Boston. You Americans are very moral. There is more propriety here than across the sea." THE MAIDEN OP THE NH.E. One day last winter Edwin Arnold was walking along Piccadilly. Soon it was raining hard. He took reluge in a museum of Egyntian antiquities. There he saw the slippers of an Egyptian mummy. He took mem up, ana nis quicK. perception saw tne Maiden of the Nile, who wore them, stand ing before bim as a living reality. He drew an envelope from his pocket, took hurried notes, and some time since completed a poem of great beauty. The Dispatch correspondent has secured these verses lor exclusive publicatiou in America, and they are printed to-day for the first time iu this country: TO A PAIR OF SLIPPERS IN THE EQYPTIAH EXHIBITIOir, PICCADttiT. X. Tiny slippers of gold and green. Tied with a mouldering gulden cord ! What prettr feet they must hive been. When Caesar Augustus was Egypt's lord t Somebody graceful and fair you were; Not many girls could dance In these! When did the shoemaker make you, dear, Such a nice pair of Egyptian threes? n. Where were you measured? In Sals, or On, Memphis, or Thebes, or Pclusiumr Fitting them featlv yonr brown toes upon. Lacing them deftly witb finger and thumb I seem to see yonl So long ago! Twenty centuries less or morel And here are the sandals; yet none ot us know What name, or fortune, or face you borel in. Your lips would have laughed, with a rosy scorn. If the merchant or slave had mockingly said: The feet will pass, but tbe sboes they have worn Two thousand years onward Time's road shall thread. And still be footgear, as good as new! To think that calfskin, gilded and stitched. Should Rome and her Cassars ontlive; and you Bo gone like a dream irom the world you be witched. rv. Not that we mourn you; 'twere too absurd; You have been such a very long while way! Yonr dry spiced dust would not value a word Ot tbe soft regrets that a verse could say. Sorrow and Jov and Love and Hate, If yon ever felt them, are vaporized hence To this odor subtle and delicate Of cassia and myrrh and frankincense. Y. Of course they embalmed you? But not so sweet Wero aloes and nard as yonr youthful glow Which Amentl took, when the small dark feet Wearied of treading our earth below. Look! It was floodtlme In Valley of Nile, Or a very wet day In the Delta, dear! When your glided shoes tripped their latest mile: The mud on the soles renders that fact clear. VL You knew Cleopatra no doubtt You saw Antony's galleys from Action, comet But, there! If questions could answers draw From lips so many a long-age dumb I would not tease you (or history. Nor vex your heart with tho men which were; The one point to know which will fascinate me. Is, where and what are yon to-day, my dear! vn. You died believing In Horus and Pasht, Isis. Osiris and priestly lore; And found of course, such theories smashed By actual fact, on the heavenly shorel Whatnext did yon do? Bid you transmigrate? Have we seen you since all modern and fresh? Your charming soul as I calculate Mislaid its mummy and sought new flesh. vrn. Were you she whom I met at dinner last week, With eyes and hair of the Ptolemy black. Who still of this ''find" in the Payown wonld speak. And to scarabs and Pharaohs would carry us. back? A scent ot lotns around her hung. She had such a far-away wistful air As ot somebody born when tbe earth was young, And wore of gilt slippers a lovely pair! EC Perchance you were 'married? These might bave been Part of your trousseau the wedding shoes; And you laid them aside with thos loto-leaves green, And painted clay gods which a bride did use: And, maybe, to-day bv Nile's bright waters nimsels of Ecvnt. in cowns of blue- Great great great very great grand daughters-Owe their shapely insteps to youl X. But vainly I knock at the bars of the past. Little green slippers with golden strings! For all you can tell is that leather will last When loves and delights and beautiful things Have vanished, forgotten; nay, not quite that! I catch some light of the grace you wore When you finished with Lite's daily pit-a-pat, (And left your shoes at Time's bedroom door. 3CI. Yon were born In the Old World which did not doubt; You were never sad with our new-fashioned sorrow: You were sure, when your gladsome days ran out, Of dt) times to come, as we of to-morrow! Ob. dear little Maid of tbe Delta! I lay Your shoes on yonr muininy-cbest back again. And wish that one game we might merrily play At 'Hunt-the-Slipper" to see it all plain! , Edwin abnols. Schooner Yacht Hadassab. Saved It "In about seven minutes, pard, we oughter be worth 15 or 520, if them folks on the train is got any gratitudel" "It's all right the engineer is stoppin 'err "I didn't expect no reward, gents; bnt this will enable me to git back to my happy childhood's home, and visit my poor ole parents ag'inl" "I tell you, pard, it takes genius to make a success of the travelin' biz!" Pucife. HOUSE CLEANING TO ORDER. An IndnstrjTbnt Does Away With Mqeh Disagreeable Gosilp- There is a company here that takes the contract for cleaning a house ready for oc cupancy, says a New York letter to the Washington Pott, It scrubs the floors, washes the windows and paint, cleans the cellar and the furnace, and gets all the trash out of the dark corners and out-of-the-way places that a well-trained servant never sees. If there is any painting to be done it does it, or any whitewashing, or decorating, or papering. The chimneys are cleaned, and the steps and the back yard and the shed, if yon have one, and, altogether, this com pany does work that is balm to the tired son. Of course, it robs a woman of the pleas ure she generally finds in telling John, when he gets home from the office in the evening, "I never did see snch a dirty house as this when we came in. The woman who lived here before had a perfect hog-pen. Why, if I couldn't keep house better than that I'd " Tho Everett Clnb Piano This Week. Certificate No. 87, held by Mrs. Sadie Early, Tustin and Moultrie streets, Pitts burg, receives the Everett upright grand piano this week, 'on pavments of $1 per week. Mrs. Early saves $75 in the price of her piano by beiuc a member of our club. She gets a piano for $350 that can not be sold on" any other plan lor less than $425. You are losing time and money by not coming into our club. We are delivering pianos every day. Send for circular or call at the-store. Alex Ross, Manager, 137 Federal street, Allegheny. Corsets! Corsetn! Corsets! 112 styles. Best fitting goods. Every well-known make. Examine the light Eeatherboue, 89c, and Common Sense at $1; our SI Equaline health corset; our 50c, 75c, $1 corsets; our line of French satin corsets 51 50 to $3 25; the R. & G. corsets, 75c up. Our prices always the lowest. Eosenbaum & Co. Irlib Point Imce Curtnlna nt Half Price! Silk chenille curtainsathalf pricel Turco man curtains at half pricel Slightly soiled by dust at the Exposition go nt half price, beginning Wednesday morning, October 23, at Edward Groetzinger's, 627 and 629 Penn avenue. Unshed, Bat Still Complete. Although we have done an enormous business the past two weeks, our stock is yet complete. Come at once, while ire have sizes, colors, etc. E. Schoenthal, 612 Penn avenue. Fob Cold Mornings. The most de lightful thing imaginable for the cold morn ings is "a plate of light, flakey hot cakes made from Marvin's sell-rising pancake flour. Get a package from yonr grocer and try it. ttssu Cabinet photos, $1 per doz. Lies' Pop ular Gallery, 10 and 12 Sixth st, xisn Wain w eight's beer gives gennlne sat isfaction always. All dealers keep it. xnsn F. Ss V.'s Iron Oity beer is unrivaled. Connoisseurs pronounce it so- tf u, - J' THE BARBER OF PARIS Figaro's Glory and Importance Has Faded in These Modern Days. SOME FAMOUS ARTISTS IN HAIR. Dressing the Locks of Actresses on Monthly Contracts. FALSE TEESSES GOING ODT OP FASHION tCOBBISPOJTOIWCE OT THE DISPATCH.! Pabis, October 5. This winter very little false hair will be worn, curling irons are also to be abolished and it will be con sidered very bad taste to change the natural color or one's tresses. Nor will "Coiffeur de "Ville," as hairdressers are called who go to private houses, be called in as often as tbey used to be. Bich people are attending more and more to their own requirements, valets are dressing their master's hair, and the maids will look after my lady's tresses. Of course, Figaro will be asked to come and powder the servants in livery, bnt there will he no more such nonsense as fonr hours de voted to the toilette as was the case with Talleyrand. The women are doing up their hair very simply, and in fact dressing it solidly in a way to allow of riding, driving auu uauuiug, mfcuuui, uavmg ib m me eyes or banging down the neck in loose frizzes. Paris barbers are not what they used to be, nor are the hairdressers either. We no longer linger in a barber's shop to hear the news, the gossip of tbe day, or the latest can-cans of the boulevard. Everybody is in too much of a hurry to exchange words witb a fellow who shaves you under the skin without chloroform, and insists on selling a few bottles of the stuff which adorns their toilet tables. a peetentious baebeb. Still Paris coifieurs are a pretentions lot of males who mainly come from the southern districts of France. One of them, over in the Rue du Bae, is pretentions, "par excel lence," and will do no business with any person except he is of the nobility. This imbecile imagines himself a born sculptor, and the last time I saw him he showed me, on a plate, a pig's snont in wax, which he tald was a boar's head. He had modeled it with sqnint eyes, and a month slit toward nose; the foolish man actually tried to get it in the French Arts Department of the Exposition. Long ago barbers and hairdressers were compelled to hang a white metal basin at their doors to distinguish them from sur geons, who sheltered themselves behind a copper basin. These are still used for sign purposes; they are of oval shape and a small piece ischipped out at one end, to show tbat the basin would fit nnder the chin, if neces sary. But there are no snch basins inside Paris barbers' shops. A gentleman who goes into one of them to be shaved must wash tbe latber off his own face when Figaro has finished hacking him. Then, it he wants his hair dressed, he sits down again in the very uncomfortable chair and the iellow recommences. There are some hair dressers who are not barbers, but all barbers are hairdressers, and many of them are also wigmakers. There is one man np by the College ol France who has an oil painting outside his premises which represents Ab salom hanging by his hair to a large tree while his horse is galloping away'in the distance; and below, the following words are written: "If he had worn one of our wigs, this misfortune wonld not have hap pened him. A barber of my neighborhood has the sign which reads: "Shaving done here to-day for money, and to-morrow tor nothing." A shaveb's studio. We all knew Galabert, of the Rne Basse de Rempart. He would cnt hair witb an uncommonly small pair of scissors, and looked on curling tongs as an abominable heresy. He called 'bis barbers "clerks," and used to tell us tbat we must net sup pose ourselves when in his shop in a place similar to tbat of any of his fellow-tradesmen. "You are in a studio," he would sav, as he fingered about our craniums. He grew rich, retired, and is now growing vines in the Medoc country. Old man Baudn, a hairdresser, who had been in the business for more than 0 years, was, four or five days ago, crossing the stage of the Cluny Theater, where he had gone to give some instructions about the wigs that bis men are making for the next niece, when he fell through an open trap, br hi bis back not at all difficult, for he was over 80 and when picked up, exclaimed: "It is finished. Go and tell my son to come here, and take these things back to the atelier." His first master was the famous Giovanni, and he commenced his apprenticeship in 1815. Recognizing the young fellow's ca pacity, Giovaanl sent him to dress the hair of tbe celebrated actors and actresses of that epoch, and thus he came to know Talma, Potier, Frederic Lemaitre and Mile. Mars, and he was always full of anecdotes about the illustrious heads which he had put in curl papers. He possessed the finest col lection of wigs in all Paris, and he leaves no fortune whatever. CONTBACTS -WITH THEATEBS. One coiffeur that is to say, one house will do the business of several theaters. The larger theaters, such as the Grand Opera and the Comedie Francaise, pay 200 frat.es a month, and for this two men must be supplied every evening. The small places of amusement pay only 150 or 125 francs, and there are some which even pay as little as 100. Many actresses nearly ruin themselves by their expensive and fan tastic methods of dressing their heads. Sometimes a wig costs as much as 1.000 francs when an eccentric fabrication is gotten up, such as the "Tour Eiffel" or the "Cap tive Balloon. The Comedie Francaise has always given great care to the wigs of its artistes. Talma had bis bead-dresses designed by David, or other painters of renowo, and he spent long hours with the coiffenr trying different styles which he thought appropriate to his personages.. Although he had a good nat ural head oMiair, he often bad recourse to wigs to obtain a desired effect. Miles. Con tat and Lange attached such importance to their head-dress that during their incarcera tion at the Madelonnettes and at Sainte Pelagie, they deplored above all the en forced neglect that their hair suffered. Mile. Mara placed full confidence in the coiffeur of the Comedie Francaise, and kept to him, but Feveral brilliant actresses went over to the coiffeur of the Empress Jose phine, Desmarets performed wonders to make up the little hair lelt on Mars' head at her 60th year. She would consent only with regret to the addition ot false hair, de claring that it hardened the physiognomy, and to avoid vexing her, Desmarets found means to make a band with a few scanty locks which be slipped in a false chignon without her perceiving it. A TALENTED HAXBDBESSEB. At the present time the coiffenr of the Comedie Francaise is Auguste Petit, a man of taste and talent, wbo studies tbe old s.vles, and is perfectly familiarwith those that prevailed in the reigns of Louis XIV and Louii XVL His men may be seen in the Rue Richelien, but on a first night, or at a revival. Auguste himself is there ready to criticise and suggest any altera tions or improvements. These sort of hairdressers made their ap pearance during the first years of the 18th centurv. Before then, gentlemen used to have their hair dressed and beard shaved by a valet de chambre, while the headgear of the ladies was arranged by female atten dants. Only those who were of noble rank or Princes were condemned to pass through the hands of wigmakers and professional hair dressers. The first in tbe profession who made himself a worthy name was Legros, who published a treatise in. quarto on -the art or hairdresslng. He, too, died by an accident. Not below tbe stage, but in a fireworks display in tbe Place de la Concorde, at tbe time of the marriage of the Dauphin. The handsome Leonard Whom i Marie .Antoinette, discovered acquired an immense celebrity as"a "poser de chifions," as was called tbe art of alternating the locks of tbe hair with folds of colored silk gauze, and on bne occasion he wove no less than 18 yards of this stuff into the hair ot tne jrrincess ne .Liamoaiie. juicnaion made his appearance during the Consnlate, and it is to him that the bairdressiug bouses owe wax basts. He declared himself the friend ot artists, showed himself assiduous to Feydeau, had a gig with armorial bear ings on it, a negro driver, and charged 20 francs for each sitting.' Henbt Hatnie. . .1- TV JT- -V f .. f f f PICTURES AND PAINTERS. Mb. John Johnston, the scene painter, sometimes paints iu a diflerent medium from tbat employed in worlffor; the stage. He has two landscapes in oil ori ylew at Mayer's. The exhibition of pictures belonging to Mr. D. A. Mathews, which has been held at Boyd's, was closed last evening, and the paintings will be taken to New York during the fore part of this week. about 20 pictures have been sold at the Ex position galleries, which, hi the opinion ot Mr. Wilson, who has charge Of the galleries so far as relates to the sale of Dorics, Is a larger num- wr tuaa uas oeca aisixnea ot at a similar ex hibition heldln any Western city. Thejr are all American works, and a few ot them are by local artists. Tbe pupils of the School of De sign have been fortunate in this particular, as several of their studies .have fonna purchasers. A VISIT to the studios is always interesting, and on Saturday afternoons tbe artists are usually very welt pleased to receive calls from their friends, and from others wbo understand ana appreciate tbe merits of their work. It la safe to say tbat callers will be well received at almost any time; but since it is anything but pleasant to be interrupted in the prosecution of a serious work, it is only common courtesy M so time one's visits that they will not par take ol the nature of an intrusion. Mb. A. F. Kino's latest picture will be seen at Gillespie's during thewei-k. The subject Is a still-life, consisting of a loaf of bread, a bot tle of beer, a box of sardines, mustard, a glass, a piece of crumpled brown paper and several other small articles. Tbe various objects de picted are painted with trntbfulness to nature, are correctly drawn, and tbe textures of the different surfaces clearly indicated. As tho composition ol this picture is also good, it will readily be seen that it bas a fair share or tbe qualities which form the chief attraction of such works. Setebai. important additions have been made to the' collection of foreign paintings which Mr. Blelman bas on exhibition at the Gillespie gallery. Among these is a large work: by Corot, which shows to advantage the pe culiar lumlnons quality which that artist suc ceeded In giving to the sky In his paintings. "A Good Story," by Leo Herman, is a clean and" caret nlly finished work, of tbe kind that may be lodged upon its own merits without regard to tne reputation oi tne author, ueorge Haquette's "Steering Lesson" is a strong pic ture, showing a marked contrast between the faces of an old seaman and a child, who is amusing both herself and the old man by her efforts at steering the boat. There is also some good drawing in a work by Berne-Bellecoar. and a rich bit of coloring by Diaz. This lot of paintings will remain in the city during all of the present week. A PICTUEE which Mr. George Hetzel bas on exhibition at Boyd's this week, is one that should certainly please all admirers of tbat artist's work. While in some respects a de parture from his usual stile, it is at the same time possessed ot all the features which have made his works so deservedly popular, tbe change in character being in the subject rather than in tbe manner in which it has been handled. The work- Is a landscape, the scene being located near Harmony; Fa. It consists of a stretch of level country, somewhat marshy in the immediate foreground, where may be seen a luxuriant growth of pond lilies and swamp grass. In tbe distance, the scene is bounded by some picturesqne trees rising from the banks of tbe Connoquenessing creek, beyond-which may be seen tbe tops of some verdqre clad hills. In executing this work, Mr. Hetzel has given evidence of bis ability to Ealnt a subject of a character which he has not ltherto attempted, and to do It well. Xwo new paintings of the striking character and pleasing style with which Pittsburg people are becoming familiar as the work of Mr. 'E. A. Poole are now on exhibition at Boyd's. One of them is a scene on, Chartiers creek, near Washington. Pa. It is a beautiful composi tion, with a fine effect ot sunlight breaking through the clouds and falling npon tba trees and grass in tbe middl& distance. A number or sheep are seen emerging from among the toll herbage, on tbe left bank of tbe creek. This picture is called "October," tbe color and atmospherlc effect leuig,such-as may frequent-J A POINTED DO ", "s-" ANY STORE OFFERS BARGAINS EQUAL TO OURS? tUNMI&l. We point with pride We point with scorn to the feeble eerir of 0Hr rivals to eess pete with us. ' We point to our patronage as proof of our popularity. , y. PRICK COMPETITORS BUT PLEASE CUSTOSERSS! T .uy it you are on -ne point oi purcnasmg. see oar goo aaa ge- V. .A mm rtntMe KssfrtF VmiWnt TTtftn-tT WAV 1StVVd BWWW JWW J w COLD : ENOUGH : FOR : CLOAKS Iff I ' We are ready with an Immense stock; such as we never V-. had tbe pleasure of showing before. PLUSH SACQTJES, 18 styles, from $15 to $89, worth "SO per eeat more. PIjTJSH JACKETS, 15 styles, fS to ?S6. worth 60 per cent mere. NEWJI AEKETS, 8triped, from 54 to $15. Beaver. $7 50 to $99. -CONNEMAKAS. Broadcloth Peasant Wraps. $9 75 up. " ". m - BEAVER JACKlTS, liiii , 1 STOCKINETTE JACKETS, from 75 to SS 7fl; extra geeet values. MISSES', CLO-AJKSi 120 styles of Misses and Children's Cloaks, Kinas or material, lrom 5z to 910. .every one a 30 styles of Infants' Cloaks, from $2 to $15. sucn variety to be louna. eisewnere. .'. HOSIERY : We will surprise you this week". We will sell, commesseiag Wednesday, 150 dozen Ladies' All wool Hose, 22c; worth 35e. 120 dozen Ladies All-wool Heavy Hose, 25c; worth 35c 100 dozen L idles' Imported Cashmere Hnse, 30c; worth 50e. 80 dozen Eadles''Imported Caihmere heavier Ho'e, 47c; worth 8Se. . . an rlriTAn T.nduMi' fliiarahteed F.ist Black Cotton Hose. 19c: worth 25s. "Foil line of Children's Wool Hose, at In MTJFFS of all descriptions and FTJB tirely new line, at exceptionally low prices. ' OUR CORSET AND GLUVt DEPARTMENTS attract crowds of eager purchasers. The assortments are Immense, while priees are tie ; lowest, uome this Tree c, ye bargain seesers. oseno&virKfci 510, 512,514 MARKET ST, lr be seen daring tee present mostbr'Ia ij asect or color IBO wore w a very pleasant ose.'l there being just saSelest warmth of color i tne grass ana tallage so lorn an agreeable coa-" trast with the portions which still retain the brightness of their summer green. Tbe second (-Picture Is entitled "Autumn on tbe Cheat ' I HIT.. " Til. .ff... .MAA.4 1m ....a- . River." The effect rendered is of tbesams sesoon oi ine year as that oi tne one mentioned above, bnt the subject is of an en tirely diflerent character. Although the river gives a name to this work, and. of course, materially affects the tons and manner of growth ot the trees along Its banks,' very little of It Is seen In tbe picture, and the effect Is al most that of the interior of a woods. On the right of tbe picture are tome fine old trees, with gnarled and twisted roots and foli age glowing witb the rich colors of autumn. Through the open spaces between the trees glimpse of tbe opposite bant of tho stream may be obtained, with; its verdure-covered banks partly veiled and ob scured by a delicate blue mist. In this work also, tbe effect of snnligbt tallin" upon tbe brilliantly colored foliage has been very cleverly shown. Both of these paintings pos sess tbe many pleasing qualities to which Is dns , much of the popularity ot Mr. Poole's work, and they are pictures in which he bas main tained his established standard ot excellence throughout every detail. It is strange, bnt nevertheless true, that works of a certain class.sncb as those produced by Corot, and by other painters who worked la a somewhat similar style, are hardly ever sold on their own merits, but almost invariably ca the reputation of the authors, and in case the picture should prove to be a counterfeit and not really tbe work of the man whose name it bears, tbe purchase Is found to be worth osly a very small percentage of tbe price paid for it. It is true. also,tbat it is works of this class that are most frequently imitated, and. farther more, that t hero are comparatively few per sons, even among those educated la such mat ters, wbo can positively pronounce as to tbe falsity or genuineness of such pictures. Sobw of the most enthusiastic admirers of Corot, those who talc most glibly about his "wonderful truth of tone," hla "nice relation of values." et. wonld hesitate a long while before giving the pnee for one of his plctnres unless it bad his name signed to it. This is true ot the great majority of tbe "Corots" now on the market, but it does' not apply to all his works, for it is unquestion ably the case tbat be bas prodncnl soma pictures the value of which Is well understood, and of a quality which bis imitators cannot ap proach; but is this any reason why people should pay snch enormous prices for works which donot possess this quality, whether they were or were not painted by Corot? Why must we enthuse over an inferior work because the same band has produced a superior oner What is the pecular characteristic of work by Corot tbat gives to bis pictures snch enormous values, and yet is so easily imitated that even experts' are deceived? We do not so often hear tell of counterfeits of work by Bongerean, Alma-Tadema or Melssonier. Such works as these men produce wouU sell without a signa ture at all. or would make famous any name attached to them, because their merit meats for itself. It is really difficult to understand wby a man will pay such high prices for works the excellence of which he cannot appreciate; and which, for alt he knows, may set be what tbey are sold for, since not even aa expert could positively pronounce them geawseu .j. DIsguMlns Druirs. Blue mass for torpid liver, castor oft for con stipation, other disgusting drugs for piles, dys pepsia and sick headache, are being surely ban ished from use Dy tbe Sweet, fruit-like Ham burg figs. 25 cents. Dose, one fig. JlactDraz; Co, N. Y. TTStt Axmlnster Carpets at Half .Prtee! .''1 Wilton carpets at half price! Moqaetta carpets at bait price. All the goods we had on display at tbe Exposition will be offered at half price, beginning on Wednesday morning, October 23, at 627 and S3S Penn avenue. Edward Gboetzdjoeb. Quick Now for Bargain In all kinds of ladies' furnishing goodt Everything must be closed out quickly with, out reserve. F. Schoenthai., 612 Penn avenue. Just What You Want. Do you want tbe finest oyster crackers that are made? Then get hand-made or shell brand and be happy. All grocers keep them. ttssu Special bargains this week in gold and silver watches, at Hauch's, No- 295 Fifth, aye. "WTSB. The pleasantest and most drink is F. & V.'s Pilsner beer. wSvc9vb9 If Ton Want Is Bar Blaraaada r I Go to Hauch's jewelry store. No. 386 Fifft t, J$ lave. Large assortment, Iowestprie?,5No-'i- 295 Filth ave. Established 1868. TrT3t" - ., -sMsf It h m QUESTION YOU N 't-x-Jk Eli KNOW V ' THAT V-fiNr to our record as reliable bBiness.meB. ' vb i-,ri? THESE POINTS -1- "IMW AUWUVJ Tailor-made. $5 to $10. Wraps, Newmarkets and Jackets," ia all oargain. The most exquisite, novel styles. BARGAINS bargain prices. iMiL TBIMMJNGS of all kinds we offjriHrea . Jl $ v - t,,' amryoa wm not De atsappeiBted. AND 27 FIFTH AVENUE! MK fc' upNesHRT SH3V- ' IU 6 iS-e i Sl HSSBlBSBlBlBlBBli IWlliSEBBSSMWSSSfSyMSSlSSlllBailllilllllllSSilBlPfjJJlSsyil