'5V OT H PITTSBTJKG- 'DISPATCH. STOTO AY, - NOVEMBER- 24, 188f "" - & f ME NOTED KIGKERS. Three College Football Teams Train- in? for the Championship. fA POPULAR SPORT IN AMERICA. IJHow the Game Has Been Modified in the Last Few Tears. J 4the ceack plaiees op tab coontbi r rwnrrrrx roit ins dispatch.! OOTBALL is fast becominc one of the most popular of A in e r i c a o snorts. I say "American" because, al tho ugh the game is of En glish origin, it has been so im proved and changed since it was taken op by our col leges that to-day it bears but little likeness to the original rough-and-tumble sport of onr cousins across the water. As played at present by the Intercollegiate league of this country, it is primarily a game of science. A man to'be a jjood football player must nowadays be gifted with brains as well as muscle and endurance. Mere brute strength has had to give way to skill. A combina tion of both, together with a cool head and much activity, makes the ideal player. All of these Qualifications are so rarely fouud in one individnal that the list of the really great football men is necessarily a very short one. They might almost be counted on the fingers of one hand. But if there are so few really perfect players, there are mauv who are very" nearly periect, and their ranks are being recruited year by year, S ' Gill, of Tale. as young America is awakening to a fuller knowledge of this most glorious of all field sports. As the great public becomes better ac quainted with the game and its rules it naturally increases in popularity. Indeed, there are some enthusiastic football lovers who contend that the day is not far distant when the game will have an equal place in the people's affections with the national pastime of baseball itself. Perhaps this is going a little too far, bnt certain it is that a good game of football .will Attract every bit SS fc;g-2L.ctDwd-i ven now as a baseball match. So far the patrons ot the football matches are mostly confined to college men and their friends. One sees a better class of persons at the football games than at baseball' matches. Bnt once let the great public learn that a good game of football is the most exciting of all sports to the spectator as well as to the player, and the patronage will gladden the hearts of the recipients of the gate money. A. COLLEGE GAME. "With the exception of one eleven all the great lootball teams are to be found in the colleges. It is distinctively a college tfaine so far. Even the teams outside of the col leges are almost if not entirely made up of the alumni of the'great institutions of learn ing. They learned to play the game at college, and they have been at it ever since. The big athletic clubs all have football elevens, but they cannot compare with the college men. This is continually being demonstrated in the matches between the athletic club men and the others. The scores nearly always show that the athletes have failed to make a single point in the game. u This is nearly wholly due to the superior opportunities for team practice enjoyed by the collegians. For months they practice together, day after day, until they learn all sorts of tricks and schemes which require concerted action and which are tremendous ly effective on the field. The same men play vear after year, and until a week or so ago the best players of the alumni were pressed into service to strengthen the col lege teams. This practice savored too much of professionalism to suit the better class of college men. and, on November 4 of this year, the Intercollegiate Association, which A Lively Scrimmage. represents all of the principal football play ing colleges, passed a resolution tbat there after no one should be eligible to play in any championship games of the association who is not a bona-fide student of the college in whose team he plays. Another rule, adopted by the Intercol legiate Association at the meeting on No vember 4, is that no professional athlete shall tate part in any contest of the asso ciation, nor shall any player of any uniyer sity or college accept money for his play :.i r . rl 11 -!..:.: -., euner ixvw tuc iuuiuoii assuciuuun, atn letic committee or college faculty. The immediate effect of this was to rule out one of the foremost football players of the country "Wagenhurst, the great "Prince ton rusher! It also frustrated the plan of the Yale eleven to press into service for the championship season three of the finest player who ever fought for a goal Beecher, Bull and Terry, now of the Cres cent Club, of Brooklyn, which holds the amateur championship outside of the col leges. As for Harvard, her athletes have always discouraged the employment of out side men in college sports, and the rule had no effect upon the formation of her eleven to contest for the intercollegiate champion ship of 1869. TUB BUGBY GAME. The Eugby game was introduced in American colleges in 1876. Harvard was the first of the colleges to take It up. At tbat time 15 men composed a team, and brute strength and endurance were the sole requisites of the good player. Slugging was not only allowed, bnt encouraged, and the man who could do the most disabling of the opposing team was looked upon as a fine player. In the early rears Tale and Princeton led Vol the other colleges at the game. They had hard slugging elevens and they rushed the balls tbrouch the lines of their weaker or more gentle opponents without mercy. Harvard had never played so roughly, and in consequence were lelt far behind by the other two great football universities. It was because of Harvard's attempt to forge to the front again that the exceeding rough ness of the sport was forever done away with. The Cambridge University trained a team of giants to meet Yale and Princeton at their own game. They were all sluggers, and when in 1883 they went to New Haven to play the Yale eleven they were under in structions to vanquish their opponents if they had to disable every man who came against them. They were to "slug" without mercy. Then it was that the Harvard faculty woke to the impropriety of permitting their students to deliberately go into a free fight. They demanded that a player should be dis qualified upon his first offense without any warning. There was much grumbling over this action of the faculty, and the game that vear was played without warnings. The immediate result was to almost entirely do away with the objectionable "slugging." This was such a marked improvement tftat 7 ...--'":'-.;v A Break or Goal. in 1884 it was formally adopted as a part of the laws of football. Since then everv trace of slugging has been gradually eliminated from the big college games. More colleges are it king np the game every year. Columbia College has this sea son put an eleven in the field to contest for the intercollegiate championship. The team being a new one and rather light in the rush line, of course can stand no chance against uch trained players as Harvard, Yale and Princeton have in the field; but the Colom bia eleven is playing at every opportunity and mnst constantly improve with practice, so that by next year they may be able to make a stubborn fight for the much-longed-for championship. CHAMPIONSHIP PBOBABILITIES. It is hard to make any predictions as to where victory will perch this year. All of the three great football colleges have heavy, well-trained and skillful elevens. Ther all have an immense deal of the nerve, pluck and coolness under exciting circumstances which is best expressed by the peculiar word "sand." It will not be until afterthe great matches Detween Yale and Princeton and Harvard have been played that the relative merits of the elevens will be decided. Experts agree that the Princeton eleven has the greatest number of fine individual players, and is not lacking in all, that goes to make good team work. There would seem to be, there fore, no very good reason whv the Prince ton men should not win the championship this year. That they will outplay Harvard no unbiased judge 'doubts for an instant, but when one talks of Yale being' worsted by the Princetons these same good judges shakes their heads in a dubious way, and say that "the precedents are against it." Pour football experts out of five believe that Yale is bound to win because she has not lost a championship game for several years I Tbis being the feeling, it is not strange that the outcome of the champion ship series should be watched with such ab sorbing interest. One novel innovation in the training of a football team has been practiced at Prince ton this year. On rainy days, when the eleven cannot go out for practice, it has been the custom of the captain to gather his men together, and, arranging a number of checkers on a board in the manner of op posing teams, iorm ail sorts oi combinations and quiz the different players as to what action they would take 'Undersuch condi tions. Their answers are open to discus sion, and in this way many curious problems of the football field" are worked out, only to be tried in actual practice at the first good opportunity. A. CODE OF SIGNALS. ' New and improved systems of signaling are also devised and practiced. So periect, WMll Get the Ball t in fact, has the signal system become that whenever the captain of a team savs any thing on the field, such as: "Now, Charlie, play np!" or "Look out there, Harry!" tou may take it for granted that he is giving some pre-arranged signal for an important move to one of his players, whom he appar ently is not at the moment thinking of at all. It is by the use of such tricks as these, and by the well-planned maneuvers of the team as a whole, that the great matches are won. Muscle and weight and activity and "sand" are still highly important factors, but science is becoming more and more necessary for work every day. The practice of "inter fering," or, in other words, defending the man who holds the ball by keeping those of the other side away from him, is fast devel oping into a science in itself. "Whereas formerly if a man made a great run with the ball he was entitled to nearly if not quite tbe whole credit, nowadays such brilliant plays are only possible because every man in the eleven is working together to protect the runner and to disconcert the enemy. The ignorant spectators applaud the runner still and look upon him as a very wonderful fellow indeed, but the finer judges have their eyes on the others who are smoothing his way lor him and keeping off tbe opponents tacKiers. xnat is where the science and the trained team work always tell. . - It is hard to say who is the greatest foot ball player in this country, as there are so mauy who have-iecome famous in tbe vari ous positions for which their physical or mental qualifications 'best adapt them, but it will not be making invidious distinctions to mention particularly Oil, of Yale; Cowan, of Princeton, and Harding, of Har vard. YALE'S CAPTAIN. Gill, who is captain of the Yale eleven, is perhaps the most perfect all-round player. He is a power in the rush line, is a superb and wonderfully sure tackier, and his in terfering is dreaded by all who come in con tact with him. He comes nearer to being an ideal player than any man in the coun try. He is a fine general and a strict dis ciplinarian a very necessary thing Jor the leader of a football eleven. The captain of n tpflm mnt h thi? snlft mnsfprnf ho fil1 and his commands mnst never be questioned for an instant. He mnst be a man of ready resources, and a strategist of no mean order. Above all, he must be a man of even temper and always "keep his head" under the most exciting circumstances. Such a man is Gill, the Yale eleven's captain, and if the blue waves in victory this year it will be in great part owing to him and his systematic training of his men. Cowan, of Princeton, is also a wonderful player, and his place could not be easily filled. He plays in the rush line, is 'a magnificent tackier, and is second to no one in hie interfering tactics. When he is taking part in the defense of the man with the ball it is pretty sure to be advanced con siderably toward the enemy's goal. He is cool, has a big supply of "sand" and knows how to use his strength and activity to the best advantage. Channing, of the Prince- I ct tons, is also a splendid player, and his work as a half-back has been much admired. He is known among college men as the coming halt-back of the country. Avery interest ing member of the Princeton eleven this year is Edgar Allen Poe, the nephew of the author ot "The Baven." He plays quarter back for the team and is also captain. He is the youngest captain of an eleven in the Intercollegiate Association, but fills his place admirably. Harding, the end rush of the Harvard eleven, is a giant in size, and, it is said, one of the roughest players of the year. He is greatly to be dreaded by any man who comes into violent contact with htm. In the old Eugby slugging games Harding would have been in his element. As long as he keeps his temper he is a formidable opponent; but his adversaries are always glad to see him on the Harvard eleven, because they think he may sooner or later be rnled off "and so cripple his team. As for the others of Har vard's eleven, they are, as a rule, "dark horses" to most people. Nobody will know what they are good tor until the big matches are played. n. A. Jennings. ART NEWS AND NOTES. A cbayon portrait of James Morrison, Sher iff of Allegheny county, 100 years ago may bo seen at Gillespie's. AN etching by H. M. Rosenberg, after Miss Jennie Brownscombe's painting entitled "Pre paring the Bridal Veil,' Is Bhown in the Gilles pie gallery. A small painting, in oil color, the work of Miss Jessie Moore, Is shown at Young's. The style of the work is rather suggestive of its being a copy, as it is much better iu conception than execution. AT Boyd's a fine picture of a well-known resident of this city is exhibited, executed by Mr. E. Farieon, a young and very talented artist from. Ke w York and nephew of the au thor, B. L. Farjeon, at present on a visit to this city. The picture known as 'Morning," by Carot, was sold recently in New York for $700. At the same time a work by -Diaz went for $725, and one by Rico for J120. When works by theso artists have been shown in Pittsbnrg thev have been valued all the way from J1,0U0 to $10,0001 Can it be that the locality has something to do with the price, or are New York buyers satis fied with poorer works than those in this city demand? The description of art pottery known as Irish billeck ware has become extremely popular re cently, and is being extensively manufactured in the United States. Tho American product is fully equal to tbe foreign in quality, and the designs and decorations are of a very similar character. A distinguishing featuro of this ware has been that the motives for decoration havo so largely consisted of forms of life, both animate and inanimate, from tbe bottom of the sea. The plain ware is of a delicate, almost creamy, white, slightly translucent, and In some respects resembles the finer grades of china. A perfect little gem of a painting, the work of a Fittsbarg artist, may be seen at Mayer's. It was executed T)y Mr. D. B. Walkley, and will compare favorably with any of the foreign works of the same class which have recently been exhibited intbis city. This painting is at once one of tho most vigorously handled and most highly finished works that Mr. Walk ley has yet produced. This picture is named "The Mower," a title which clearly indicates the character1 of the work. In the immediate foreground is seen tbe figure of a man busily engaged in sharpening a scythe. This figure is unconven tional as regards posture, and still more so in the matter of costume, which fact is proba bly attributable to the work having been exe cuted directly from nature. In placs of the customarv irarb of varying shades of brown. this figure is depicted as wearing clothing of a cool blue-gray tone of color, stained and weather-beaten, a color that it is extremely difficult to make harmonize with the various tones of a landscape ; but tbis is a task which Mr. Walkley has very successfully accom plished. The landscape portion or the work has been very effectively handled. It shows a stretch of level meadow of a clear green color, leading the eye into the distance, where its tone is pleasantly contrasted with the darker color ot a belt of trees. The sky in this picture is a feature that deserves special notice on ac count of its peculiar luminous quality and very pleasing color. Near tbe horizon there appears a bank of dark-toned clouds, uith a bright streak showing beneath it, and the sky above flooded with light. -Altogether it may be said of this painting that it is not only one of -the best of Mr. Wjlkley's works, but it is also one of the best paintings which has been shown here this season. EVEitY production made by tbe hand of man bears evidence of the mastery of mind over matter, but in the graphic arts tbis fact may observed moro readily than elsewhere. The great disparity between tbe end attained and the means employed, tbe immense gap filled by tbe human mind, which brings form and color out of chaos, and produces a thing of beauty with the aid of the meanest materials, is here more clearly apparent than in other work the resnlt of human thought and endeavor. One cannot contemplate the materials of art with out becoming impressed with their comparative worthlessness and insignificance. It wonld be difficult to imagine anything less suggestive of poetry or artistic expression than a sheet of white paper and a stick of charcoal, and yet in the hands of clever artist very wonderful effects are produced with these simple mater ials. Tbe very natural feeling common to un cultivated minds tbat anything so expensive as pictures mnst be made ot very rare materials was stnnk.nzly illustrated by the ques tion asKcu oy me countrymau wno. upon being "told "that :a certain picture worth $2U0 was made Vith charcoal, inquired what they made cheap pictures with. It is the same throughout all tho graphic arts; but few of the materials have any great value in themselves, a noted exception is tbecolor known as agenuine ultramarine which, being made rom tbe lapis laznli is a somewhat expensive pigment, and consequently one that is very seldom used. It is worthy of note also tbat the artistic value of the material bears but little relation to its commercial worth, and some artists wonld more readily dispense with this high-toned prodnct than some of the colors made from the most common earth", such as ochres and umbers. But whatever may be the natnre of the materials used in painting, they are re duced to the same conditions, viz: tbat of a fine powder, and applied in mixture with some suitable medium such as oil and varnish for oil color painting, and water, honey and several varieties of gum for water-colors. However, tho wonder is not that art works can bo pro duced with commonplace materials, but that it is possible to create such effects by any means and with any material whatsoever, for in view of the end sought to be at tained, .all means alike seem feeble. Just think lor a moment what a task it is that the painter sets himself to "perform, to represent upon the single fiat surface of bis paper or can vas tbe combined effect of all the myriad dif ferent surfaces and textures of nature as each presents itself to his eye at a given moment of time. Imagine for an instant the difficulty of representing upon canvas the appearance of so many different objects, not as we know them to exist, but under many and varied conditions, governed always by atmospheric effect and by the laws under which we exercise our powers of vision. In the power to which gives to one portion of a single flat surface the appearance of a tree or a flower close at hand, and causes another portion of it to resemble a moun tain many miles awav. there is something as nearly akin to a new creation as it is possible for man to produce. We are so accustomed to seeing the wonderful effects which may be pro duced with colors that we scarcely realize how truly remarkable some of tnemare, and yet it is certainly true that if some of us had never sees these works, we could never believe that such results were possible. Take the single in stance of a representation of a pool of clear Water, which affords a vie w of the ground be neath it. Here the eye secures the impression of two distinct surfaces that of the water itself, and of the ground which it covers and this impression is received by the eye resting upon a third surface of a character totally different from either of them. All things con sidered, progress in art has been very great, and the only cause for wonder lies in the fact that such great results have been accomplished. Bloat Men and Women Suffer needlessly. A disordered stomach, constipation, gout, rheumatism and kidney disease, can positively be avoided by the careful use ot the genuine Carlsbad Sprndel Salt. Beware of imitations. A Promise Kept. When we opened our store in February last, you could not help exclaiming as you looked at our elegant display, "What a pity you were not open for the holiday trade." Then we could only promise. Call and judge for yourself as to its fulfillment. Feench, Kendeick & Co., Opposite City Hall. Ton Can't Enjoy TbankacWIna Turkey Without Canary oysters. Cash paid for old gold and silver at Hauch'f, Ko, 295 Filth avenue. wrsa Fob undoubted excellence Walnwrighfs beer leads all competitors. Telephone 6525. wsu 1 AAA .! Afiilifilii. 1.a1M. MAJ. .4 1 JX Federal, Allegheny, THE CITY-OF HOMES. Philadelphia Residences Compared With Those of Pittsburg. HOUSES BUILT BY THE HUNDRED. Neat and Cosj Dwellings Working Men. Erected for A BUSTLING AND WIDE-AWAKE C1TI CwnrrntK foe the dispatch. I In the matter of building dwelling houses Philadelphia excels anything in this coun try, excepting perhaps Kansas City. Houses are built by the hundreds and sold as rapid ly almost as they are finished, many long be fore they are finished. The lot is generally from 16 to 20 feet wide by 60 to 100 feet deep. They are mostly built in long rows; some times whole blocks. One man, William Singerly, proprietor of the Record, started to bnild 850 houses in one section of the city several years ago, and he has probably ex ceeded that nnmber. He bought a large section, several squares of open ground northwest of Broad and Norris streets. He graded and paved all of the street and side walks; had water and gas pipes laid, and trees planted; had Diamond street opened through Odd Fellows' Cemetery after a long and hard fight; put up a planing and join ing mill and made his own brick. These houses were sold for from 53,000 to J7.000, according to size and location. The houses built in Philadelphia are very different from those- in Pittsburg in many respects. The parlor is longer, having two bedrooms over it. The laundry is bacKof the kitchen, with a hydrant at the door of the laundry. The whole house is generally heated from the cellar furnace through a register in each room. In the cheaper houses no room except the parlor has a man tel, the rest having a shelf over the register. Over the dining room and kitchen extends the sitting room, which is the family room, always light and airy. The front rooms have a large, double walnut wardrobe built into the wall haying often mirrors in the doors, and a marble washstand in the center, where a Pittsburg fireplace would be. It sets the room off wonderfully. Some have a mirror over this washstand, and none in the wardrobe doors. These conditions will be found in almost every house in the many new operations. Some divide the parlor by portieres or sliding doors. The better class have a large clothes press and linen closet on tbe third floor. A great many have only one large window in the parlor with a box of vines or flowers under it. In West Phila delphia many ot the houses have porches, which makes them tar more popular, both for renting and selling as it does away with the very disagreeable habit of sitting on the front door step in the hot summer months As there is not much back Ipt there is not the usual amount of weeds and dead grass, old vines and poles seen in most city lots. Close fences of flooring boards usually sur round each lot and the fences are always painted when tbe house is. There is an al ley between the rows of back lots of from three to five feet, which has an outlet at each end, and is always paved with brick. NOT NEEDED IN PITTSBUBO. Most houses have a coal bin in the cellar at the front window. The cotl wagons are all supplied with shut iron "shoot'," through which the coal is run from the wagon across tbe pavement into the bin in the cellar without any dirt, excepting a trifle of dust, which bIo"ws away. There is no trouble in Philadelphia with great piles of coal on the sidewalks unless it has to be carried upstairs, which is done in baskets. That is quite a trade in itself, and many a poor fellow puts in a good winter with his basket, shovel and broom by carrying coal up several flights of stairs. The city lets contracts by the year to take away the ashes and garbage. Once 8 week all of the dwelling part of the city (each section has a particular day) turns out of its cellars onto the sidewalks all sorts of de luvian and anti-deluvian vessels filled with the week's accumulation of ashes, old bot tles and cellar "truck generally. While twice a week tbe slop and garbage man comes to the back gates and removes the offal. Thus a large amount of cleanliness is maintained. Pavements must be scrubbed before 8 o'clock in the 'morning and after 7 in the evening. The sweeping of the pave ments every morning includes the gutters, ana sometimes to tbe middle of the streets of course, tbis refers to the greater part of the city. There are in every community those who are natural born slovens, who are a disgrace to themselves and an eye-sore to their neighbors. They cannot be intimi dated, shamed or suppressed. Another custom is that as almost every street has a horse car line on it, running in one direction, all of the vehicles follow the car, going their way, and woe to the "hayseed" who drives against the stream. Billingsgate is a mild language compared with the one he learns that day, compiled from the slang of every nation under the sun. When he pulls out to one side, as the tide goes past him, he becomes dazed at the constant run of sarcasm he gets from each driver. When a coal wagon backs np to a curb and gets the shoots adjusted the driver won't move even for a horse car until his load is off, bat he can always hold his own in the chaffing he gets. The hucksters commence their discordant cries quite early in the morning as they run from door to door, crying their vegetables, and ringing the door bells. They, too, are proof against the salutes they get from the girl who has just washed ofi her steps, when she sees that her work has to be done oyer again, as they have ruined the white steps with their dirty feet. These huekstpra-anri their cousins, the clothes-ringer men, the old clothes, old hats and boots men, book peddlers, male and female, coal and kindling peddlers, insurance men, both life and fire, sewing machine and lightning rod men, make life in a Philadelphia house a weary burden, by the constant ringing of the door bell, and the persistent endeavors to excite sympathy on the outside, and corresponding efforts to suppress emotions of a different kindmn the inside of the front door. The welkin rings all day long with the many cries of the perambulating tradesmen. In these long rows of houses, built alike, many strive to outdo their neighbors in the matter of vines, flowers and singing birds, especially in the back premises, which really makes the backs of the houses, looking out over the neighboring lots, by far the pleasantest part The sitting room, being always over the dining room, kitchen, and sometimes wash house, is rendered very pleasant, es pecially in tne summer, Dy these arbored outlooks. EAST TEANSPOETATION. The many street car lines, running north on one street and south on the next, make locomotion not very difficult, and the fare of S cents on the main line, with 2 or 3 cents extra for a transfer into a bisecting line, makes transportation cheap and enables the great mass of work people to live away from tbe bnsy part of thecity at a small daily cost. The Pennsylvania, the Beading (two de pots), the Korth Pennsylvania, the Schuyl kill Valley, the Baltimore and Ohio and the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore railroads, together with the Jersey railroads connected with the city by a dozen ferries, afford a vast outlet from the city, which is being more availed of every year, for it has only been of recent years that Philadel pbians could be induced to live far from the city, as her streets are always moderately clean and the surroundings of city life very pleasant. ' ' The general appearance of cleanliness in Philadelphia is often tbe subject of ridicule by many who live in very dirty cities them selves, and who affect to know what thev are talking about. The long rows of red Dries: houses with white window shutters and white marble steps, with green trees, clean red brick pavements and swept cobblestones in front of them, are an unpleasant sight to many who live in unpainted houses at home. With all her cleanliness, the residents are constantly complaining about the dirty streets if two or three weeks shonld happen to go around withont their streets being swept. Why, there is one avenue in Pitts burg Fourth avenue her Wall street, which the brokers say has not been cleaned for four years. On it is her Oil Exchange, new postoffice, many banks, insurance and brokers' offices, ai well as most of her real estate offices, which draw a multitude of people every day; and yet there is probably no dirtier street in the Union. Pittsburg apparently has no contract let to keep the streets clean or to hanl away either ashes or garbage. Each citizen pays for that himself, in addition to his multi tude of other taxes. The tax rate in Phila delphia is less, if anything, than that of Pittsburg, and yet she keeps her streets clean, keeps her sanitation in good condi tion, her ashes and slops removed, and has money left to build a large Court House and keep the park going beside. The peo ple of Philadelphia growl continually at everything that is done or not don in the matter of administration of the city's busi ness. Once in a while thev assert their pre rogative and elect the opposition ticket; but one term generally satisfies them that the ways of parties are various, but they all lead to the same place the pockets of the people. AN TOWABBANTED SNEEE. It has been the habit of many persons, many newspaper people especially, to sneer at Philadelphia's sleepiness her old logy ism and general deadness and inactivity. Did such critics ever go over the district be tween the rivers.from Callowhill to Market, or between Fifth street and the Delaware from Spruce to Frankiord? A vast district which is a perfect hive of industry miles in extent, where almost every trade is fonnd, a district which is great in mechanics in nov elties, in leather, dye stuffs, saws, files, etc. Great in woolen underclothes, stockings, yarns and especially of carpets (she im ported 21,000,000 pounds of woolen goods and wool last year),oiIcloths and machinery of all kinds. Great in her shipyards which are now building several new men-of-war for our depleted navy. Great in her Bead ing coal docks of wonderful extent, where coal is shipped all over the world. Great in her miles of dockage where ships from every land under the sun are daily unload-ingqueer-looking stuffs of great value and taking back cargoes in return to their far away homes. Away down in the lower city are the best sugar refineries which imported last year over 5,000,000 gallons of molasses and 550,000,000 pounds of raw sugar alone from the West Indies. There Claus Spreckels, of Honolulu and San Francisco fame, is bnilding a vast sugar refinery, with which he promises to wine out the great Sugar Trust, which has imposed a high price for sugar upon every person in this land during the last year. Along tbe Schuylkill is another great center of manufacturing industry, while at Broad and Callowhill is the great Baldwin locomotive Works, which now turns out daily five finished large-sized locomotives, which are shipped to every corner of the globe where locomotives are used. Adjoin ing it and near it are very large bolt and otner forging works of great capacity. Philadelphia is also great in her chemical works, whose products have a world-wide fame, while her medicines are household words. To escape taxation, many of her heaviest manufactories are located, as they are doing in Pittsburg, up or down the rivers or in the suburb", and .maintain offices only in the city. Tbe importations passing through the Custom House in 1883 reached the large sum of over $45,000,000. And yet people who are given to comparisons, but indiffer ent as to facts, call this a sleepy city,with grass growing in the streets. BrriiBALO. ANOTHER BEAUTIFUL EVEKETT PIANO. Club Certificate No. 138, Held in Plttibnrff, Is the Fortunate Nnmber Tula Week. The piano selected is one of those ele gantly carved rosewood cases. The front panels over tbe keyboard designed and artistically carved in groups of wild roses, by "Meyran," of Boston. The trusses sup porting the keyboard are fluted columns with Corinthian crowns, and the ends of piano handsomely paneled in pearl mold ing, altogether making one of the loveliest pianos ever brought to Pittsburg. The tone has a wonderful depth and richness, com bined with that sustained singing quality so much admired by cultivated musicians. These pianos are certainly as near perfec tion as any we have ever seen, and the Everett Club plan gives an opportunity to every lover of music to possess a fine piano. The Manager, Alex. Boss, 137 Federal st., Allegheny, says they hav,e room for a few more good members. BEST MNOLEUMS AT 75 CENTS. This la 23 Centa Cheaper Than the Sams Grade Is Sold Anywhere. Some dealers may offer you linoleum at the same price, but there are three grades of it, and the above is the best English make. 3,000 yards linoleum and corticine of first quality English and American make to go at 75c a yard. Positively the best covering for office and kitchen floors ever produced. f They are all this tail's styles, but of pat terns which will not be duplicated for spring. Edward Gboetzinqeb, 627 and 629 Penn ave. EVERYBODY BUYS. Only a Few Left. Sec. hand Soct. organ $ 20 Sec. hand 5 oct. organ 25 New 5 oct organ 44 New 6 oct. organ 55 New "1 oct, upright piano 175 Sec. hand 7 oct. square piano 100 Sec. hand 7Joct, square piano 125 We defy dealers in either city ,to under sell us. Examine instruments and be con vinced. Store open every night till 9 o'clock. Echols, McMiteeat & Co. (Telephone Building), 123 Sandusky st, Allegheny. THINGS FOR THANKSGIVING. What Shall It be for Dlnnerf Turkey and cranberries, celery, mince pie and plum pudding are indispensable. For these there mnst be brandy, also claret, port and sherry, then a pony with the cigars for the gentlemen. This is what Mrs. Harrison has ordered from the Half Cen tury House, and Pittsburgers have just as much right to have good things as Mrs. H., if shells the President's wife. The place to get these is at the popnla corner, 623 Liberty street, foot of Filth aye nue. ' JAPANESE WARE BAZAAR. Grand Holiday Display. This department will close January 1, 1890, making it an exclusive holiday dis play. Call and see onr wonderful selection. Wm. Haslaoe & Son, 18 Diamond (Market square). Peabson does not advertise like some others,. that he will give a large crayon for nothing, or give a lot of photographs free of charge, but he will make for 58 a life-size crayon portrait framed, and 12 cabinet pho tos that cannot be equaled in the two cities for three times the money. 96 Fifth avenue and 43 Federal street, Allegheny. See the Fine Watch Display At Hauch's jewelry store. No. 295 Fifth avenue. If you want anything in this line it will-pay you to call and see goods. Small payment accepted and goods laid away until holidays. vtfbu. Fob undoubted excellence Wainwright's beer leads all competitors. Telephone 6525. Yob Can't Enjoy Thanksgiving Turkey Without Canary oysters. F. Ss Vs. Pilsner beer is the pleasantest stimulant in the world. Fob rosettes and badges, call onf F. G. Beineman, 61 Sixth street, city. If Ton want lovelvAolidav roods, bnv at 145 Federal st, cor. N.feiasaond, Iiowest Lprice. AMAETTR'SMEMOEIAL Preparing for the Dedication of the Monument in Memory of PRESIDENT JAMES A. GARFIELD. Tho. Magnificent Tomb in Which Guiteau'a Victim Sleeps. ERECTED BI A, GRATEFUL COUNTRY rSFXCIAZi TZX.XQSA1T TO THX DISPATCB.I LEVELAND, O., No vember 23. One of the great national eventsof i'jnext .year will be the dedication of the mag nificent monument erect- ed in Lake View Ceme- 'tery. in this city, in memory of President James A. Garfield. The programme of ceremo nies is now being ar ranged, and enough is already known to warrant the conclnsion that every detail will be carefully planned and that the services as a whole will be im posing and elaborate. . Memorial Day, 1890, has been selected from the catalogue of American holidays for the dedication ceremonies. The monu ment was to have been dedicated On Sep tember 19th of tbis year, that being the eighth anniversary of President Garfield's death. A postponement was mads neces sary by an event that happened in Italy six months ago. Tbe marble statue of Garfield, which is to stand directly in the center of The Martyr-President. the great pile of marble and sandstone, had been almost completed, when the sculptors discovered a black streak that no chisel conld efface. Although realizing that the labor of months was being sacrificed, the almost finished statue was cast, aside and a new block of marble selected. Tbis proved to be faultless, and the statue has reached New York, where it is receiving the finish ing artistic touches. The statue represents Garfield just risen from his chair in Con gress and about to address the House of Representatives. It is of Italian marble, and is pronounced a marvelloasly correct representation of. the second martyred Pres ident. It stands on a marble paved dias and, with us base, is abont 12 feet in height. The memorial temple or shrine surround ing the statue occupies the entire space in closed by tbe great walls of the tower. Arranged in circular form about the statue are eight great qouble columns of deep col ored granite. These support a dome 22 feet in diameter that forms a beautiful canopy 60 ieet above the statue. A second ambu latory outside pf these columns allows the visitors to survey the interior from every point of observation. A. SOLEMN CEREMONT. The masonic bodies of Cleveland will pro bably have charge ot the dedication .servi ces proper and Knights Templars from every State and Territory in the Union will come. In a larger sense, however, the event will be one in no manner confined to organ ization or creed. The nation's military will come in force and the veterans of the war will march in numbers almost as great 27te Garfield Memorial. as at the' funeral eight years ago. Civio or ganizations of every kind will participate. Ex-Presidents Cleveland .and Hayes, the Governor of every State and all tbe Sena tors and members of Congress will be in vited. The dedicatory address will be delivered by ex-Governor J. D. Cox, and it is not im probable that tbe names of President Har rison, Secretary ot State James G. Blaine and Hon. Cbanncey 51. Depew may be in cluded upon the programme of speakers. A brief poem will be read by some writer of national repntaiion. One of the features will nrobablv be an annronriate hvmn writ ten for the event and sung by 30,000 school children. Memorial Day is s day of flowers and they will be scattered abont in boundless pro fusion on this occasion. The roadways leading from tbe cemetery gates to the mon ument will be lined and almost paved with them; while the mound upon which the monument rests will be a great mountain of roses. Every child in Northern Ohio will be asked to bring flowers and they will be fashioned into monuments of themselves. The manner in which the interest in the dead President and in the monnment soon to be dedicated to his memory is maintained is indicated in the remarkably large num ber of people -visiting the cemetery from day to day. Something like 700,000 people have visited Lake View during the past year. Many of them have looked the mon ument through and through. Not a small number have driven to Orange and looked upon the birthplace of the 20th American President. Others have visited Mentor and looked about the farm on which the Presi dent spent so many hours of contentment. Since Garfield's remains were first placed In the vault at Lake View it is estimated that 5,000,000 people have visited the cemetery. The design for the monument was selected from over fifty contributions from the best artists of Ameri6a and Europe. Mr. Henry Van Brunt, of Boston, and Mr. Calvin Vanr, of New Tork, were selected' as ex perts to decide between the many creditable designs. Although the entire fifty were ex amined in detail of each artist by himself, their report was the same. The contract was let in October, 1885, and the monnment is now completed with the exception of the statue soon to be placed in position. THE MONTTMENT ts DBTATX. It was first planned that the tower of the A Monument should be 2 tot U MgktJ jffilfolti 'mevmrn w mmm When, however, it was feuiid that this would require so great an outlay that little money wonld be remaining for the elaborate interior decorations contemplated, the plans were modified and the tower was made 165 feet high instead. The saving thus effected permitted the mosaic decoration, the superb marble work and the illuminated windows. A description of the memorial is as fol lows.' The monument Is fashioned like a circular tower. It is 50 feet in diameter and Is elevated on broad, high terracesireached by a- hundred pr more wide steps, somewhat resembling those in the bise of the statue of Liberty in New York harbor. AtthAhau nf thn tnwAr nro- ' Ht a ereat square porch, handsomely decor- Into five panels containing bas-reliefs repre- Bcuung uie career oi uarneiu. upon tnese Sanels are 112 life sized figures, each possess ig a distinct individuality. The first panel on the north side of the portico shows an ordinary country school In early days. The figure of the young teacher Is a good portrait of Garfield as a youth of 20 years. The second panel represents General Garfield when as Chief of Staff of General Kosecrans, at the battle of Chlckamauga, he rode through an avalanche of bullets to General Thomas with dispatches. The third panel shows Garfield as an orator. He is addressing the people at an outdoor mass meeting, rousing them, by his eloquence. On the fourth panel he is represented as taking the oath of office. Around him are gronped ex-President Hayes, Vice President Arthur, James G. Blaine, General W. T. Sher man, General John A. Logan, Chief Justice Walte, Carl Schurz. William M. Evartt and others. The fifth panel is a good representation oi the bier of tbe assassinated President. The ten great windows and the fonr panels, near the door, aro embelished with female figures,each bearing distinctive emblems repre senting the 13 original States. Tbe vestibule within the porch Is vaulted In stone with a pavement of marble mosaic. Above the space reserved for the statue. Is a frelze of tbe same beautiful material. Columbia and her daughter States are repre sented as weeping over the bier of the dead President. On other panels are figures repre senting law. Justice, Concord. War, Litera ture ana Labor. The dome is also inlaid with venetial mosaic, over 240,000 pieces of marble being required to prodnce tbe effect desired. At the base is shown a band ot wreaths con joined, corresponding In number with the States and Territories. The background is formed by the red and white stripes of the American flag, the stars f drming a band higher up. Over one of tbe entrance doors are seated massive figures representing War and Peace. Underneath is the inscription: Erected ty a grateful country In fmemory of Jame Abrm Garfield, twentieth President of the United States of America. Scholar, soldier, stales man, patriot. Born 19th November, 1S31. Died September 19, 1881. HOW THE M02TEY WAS BAISED. The cost of these great monuments and the manner in which the mosey was raised are always subjects of interest. Probably 200,000 people in the United States can feel that they have had something to do in making the monument a success. The 150,000 which the monument cost was made up in a large measure of pennies, nickels, dimes and inarters. A few rich men gave sums like 500 and $1,000, but the bulk of tbe fnnd came from family or personal sub scriptions; collections among children and in neighborhoods, and donations by secret societies and charitable organizations. The total amount thus far subscribed came from the following sources: Alabama t 37 03 Maine 1,610 00 Arkansas ...... 123 20 Maryland. 11193 California 820 30 Colorado 758 70 Connecticut ... I09S 23 Delaware 85 00 Florida SO OS Georgia ........ 139 00 Illinois 8.330 53 Indiana 1,396 91 Iowa 2,K!S 33 Massachusetts. Michigan Minnesota ..... Mississippi ... 480 83 624 72 273 23 123 00 1,431 00 369 91 22 CO W2 00 Mlssoor Nebraska N. Hampshire. New Jerser.... 833 87 Aansas 1,473 61 New York 14,109 24 North Carolina 4 00 Ohio tO,C94 03 Montana. .. ... 1,922 00 New Mexico... 213 00 Utah 23 00 Washlmton... 42S 03 Kentucky, 190 79 riouisiana...... Oregon Pennsylvania Khode Island.. Sonth Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia ....... West Virginia. Wisconsin .... Arizona........ Dakota Idaho Indian 49 40 959 371 1.789 S2 34 33 UO 13 93 579 20 Wyoming 27l 43 D. of Columbia 9 W England 3 00 France. 1,149 IS Australia ...... 12 00 Canada... ...... 3 00 Belgium 40 CO 68 TO 40 00 ,2 67 1,915 77 39 86 S3 00 12 00 13 00 Total 4134,733 73.1 The contributions were loaned out subject to call at 4 per cent to banks in Cleveland, and the amount thereby increased from all sources to abodt $150,000. When the dedication services take place the great metal casket containing tbe re mains of the late President will be carried from the monument, where it now reposes just inside the door of the monument A mammoth marble slab will be lifted and the casket will be lowered to the crypt under neath. The casket containing the remains of the President's mother will be placed within the monument at the same. time. It was her often expressed wish tbat in death she should be placed near the son she loved with so much fervor and tenderness. Different Ideaa of Manly Beaoty. 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