. THE FTTTSBUKG- DISPATCH, STjDAY, PEBRUAET 2, 1890. 1 r- , h r P yw 6" U A I I GAY GALLERY GODS. They Applauded and Hissed In Days of Old as They Do To-Day. THE DELIGHT OF 'FAB.S1TI BOYS. Scenes in the Top Loft or the Crowded Pittsburg Theaters. THE BHKILL WHISTLE OP APPROVAL tlWJU'WXX rOE TBS DISPATCH.1 AXT and im mortal are the 'gods 1" Hot the dead gods of old Olym pus, cor the bygone war dogs -of the Vikings' Va halla: bat the living, breath ing Joves and Odins who sit enthroned to day amid the dizzy heights of the topmost gallery. In every land that can boast a theater the "gods" of the gallery are found. Betore the dawning of the drama the "cods" rejoiced in the sun light of their morning. They showered wreaths upon the g listening hero who urged lis steeds along the Isthmian track; they cheered their lavorite gladiator in tbe slip pery arena, where blood gushed forth like rain. Their pitiless hiss was heard above the tumult when luckless Cimon's halting Terees lost him the laurel crown, and with aTage glee they pressed their thumbs downward upon the benches when the wounded Spaniard lifted his wistful eyes in a last prayer lor mercy beneath the heel of the yellow-haired child of Gaul. In later times their power of applause or condemnation was undiminished. One can imagine the delighted horror of the "gods," when in the market place "Mystery Plav," his Satanic Majesty, horned, hoofed and nailed, quite en regie, leaped out of the The ' Varsity Boy? Tribute. mouth of hell, as typified by a murky cavern with a furnace blazing in its depths, and commanded his myrmidons to seize upon the villain of the piece, and bear that sinner to his awful doom. What a raptur ous sight for the small boys in white surplices to whom my Lord Abbot had granted 10 minutes leave! What a treat tor honest Robin-a-Ditton, who had trotted in to town with Goody, his wife, perched on a pillion before him; and the cheese and apples hanging over Grav Dobbin's mighty haunches behind! And by-and-bve the "gods" were privileged beings indeed, for it fell to them to hear Marlowe's first majestic lines, and to welcome Will Shakespeare's maiden efforts. How the poor frequenters of the Globe and Surrey galleries must have suffered when black browed Koll Cromwell drove the players adrift. 'VABSITT BOYS IN THE GALLEBY. But the gods never die! They hurrahed Tor Garrick, howled for Macklin, they woke the echoes for Edmund Kean. When the little, black-haired Irishman drew his keen knife, and glared hate at Christian Antonio, how the "prentices in tne gallery applauded and how their souls were racked to be Sbylocks, tool Dublin, once the rival of London as a great theatrical center, was and is the para dise of the gods. In the old Sinock Alley Theater, and, later, in the Theater Boyal, the 'varsity boys were for the most part'the gods. In their shirt sleeves, with mortar boards on head and gowns on arm, they were accorded theront seats as a matter or right. Beautiful Miss O'Neill was long their dar ling; Jennv Laird and Tietjens became their idols in later days. One night a young student, who afterward became Peer of the Bealm and Privy Councilor, was let down from the gallery by means of a rope passed under his armpits. Tietjens was singing the "Last Bose of Summer" as a tribute to the audience. She had just reached the last notes when Lord A was seen dangling in mid-air with an enormous bouquet in his arms. The house was astounded, two ladies fainted, scores shrieked wildly. But Tietjens knew.Trinity boys, and nnish'ed her song un disturbed. Then Lord A threw the bouquet to her feet, and was hauled back into the gallery in the midst of a storm of cheers. The writer remembers his pride, when as a freshman of T. C. D., he applauded Mary Anderson from the front bench of the Gaiety Theater gallery. We drew Mary's carriage to her hotel afterward, and she asked a dozen of us to supper. 'Varsity boys do not frequent galleries in the United States over much, but the galleries are just as lively for all that. The spirit of the "gods" is just as strong in this Iron City of ours, as ever it was across the water. THE GALLERIES AT HOME. Many readers of these notes have, no doubt, paid a visit to the galleries of local theaters. If not, the loss is theirs. They have missed a curious and interesting experience. The sight of Bobemianism, in shirt sleeves, munching its peanuts and passing its com ments upon the play, is worth seeing any dav. The writer has often, through the cour tesy of Messrs. Gulick and Williams, been permitted to lonnge in the galleries at the Bijou and the Academy. A fellow-feeling with Bobemianism, has made these loung ings fairly frequent; and there is always some sew type of character, some new phase of life's seamy side to be observed upon the upper benches. A few night's since, an expedition was made to the olvm pus of the Bijou. "The White Slave," a great ''gallery play," was "on the boards," and it was quite evident that Mr. Gulick anticipated a large attendance of "gods," for he had doubled the number of ticket takers at the doors. As the writer strolled up the steps, a young colored lady of six or seven summers, appeared. "Is they any gals upstairs, Mistah ?" she asked of the ticket-taker, with a caution and propriety higblv commendable. "JSot many," replied the questioned one, eyeing the lady from head to foot, somewhat superciliously. "Den 'twouldn't be nice for me to go up," said Miss musingly. "Still I guess I'll take a look around myself." THERE IS KO RESISTING. Accordingly she walked abreast with the writer to the gallery door, where, seeing no "gals" at all, she halted for a few seconds. "When a woman hesitates she is lost" Miss looked cunningly up at the writer and said: "Dey's no ladies heah. Guess i;il go in an' see de gen'l'men." The gallerv was crowded it was a full Olvmpus. With a happy disregard of "les convenances" the "gods" sat, sprawled, stood upright or occupied any other position which suited their ideas for the nonce. In a far corner three tables groaned beneath the wares of the refreshment vendor. Mys terious bottles containing somber liquids the nectar, no doubt, of these Olympians; luscious oranges piled high In rich hued pyramids; myriads upon myriads of highly attractive doughnuts, sandwiches, apples, candy and other edibles ambrosial food for Jupiter Tonans all these found place on the refreshment tables. There were three Ganymedes instead of the conventional one Ganymedes who glided about in their shirtsleeves and watched over their goods with wakeful care All the "gods" ap peared to be eating. There was a steady "munch-munch" kept up throughout the entire performance, with an interval now and then for purposes of applause. A young colored man, perched upon the back of one of the benches, was particularly noticeable from the huge bag of peanuts he carried. He leaned slightly forward, his headgear pushed back from the swarthy forehead, glistening with perspiration, and clutched the big conical bag. He was not a The Gallerv God's Whistle. tall man, and the peanut receptacle reached almost to the level of his eyes. Over this improvised eye-rest he watched the play; and eat steadily at his peanuts. He had a very nice calculation, that colored man. He allowed for seven acts in the "White Slave," so he purchased peanuts enough to last for seven acts, at so many nuts per act. But he wa! foiled. The filth act did not last for five minutes, and at the end of the play the calculator must have been annoyed to find a useless surplus of peanuts. Macaulav could always study best when eating bread and butter. The "gods" enjoy themselves most when munching peanuts. HOW THE GODS CATCH ON. Somehow or other, the finer sentiment of the piece seemed to escape the gallery. They laughed at an oft-repeated guv, like Mrs. Lee's oft-repeated "Mist er Stitch;" and they pounded the benches, shouted, and emitted shrill whistles, suggestive of loco motive yards, when the "hero mouthed a grandiose sentiment, or the villain was de fied by the heroine in an unusually tragic manner. They seemed to like a good situa tion, and they reveled in a discharge of fire arms. Six or seven newsies (they must have been newsies from their voices) perched on the back rail, like so many spar rows, and whistled whenever a pistol went off. When the "Belle Creole" blew up, they whistled so loudly that a seedy and trampish-looking gentleman on the fifth row leaped to his feet and looked round in dismay. Poor fellow, he had been dozing, and awoke to hear, as he thought, the night express come hurtling along the ties be hind his weary bones. Oh that gallery whistle! It is the grand secret of the gods, transmitted through long generations of gallery frequenters. It rises high above the loudest acclamations it is heard in the fiercest tempest of cheers. These little Gavroches on the rail were not shy about expressing their sentiments on the play. It was "Jimmy, dat's a corker, dat gall" and "Git on to his gun. bovs."aud "Hope dat ar Lacy'll get hung, bymeby," from the rising of the curtain, even unto the falling thereof. One of the little gamins had owned to a lurking feeling in Lacy's favor. This made him the target for bis friends' scorn and derision "Now whar's yer Lacy? Guess he's beat this time." "Knockin a woman down! Ob, he's a daisy, he is." "Put a bullet in him, the big cow ard." These were the taunts levelled at Lacy's defender, who still held his own stubbornly, and exclaimed when the villain was arrested, "Wal, they was four to one agin him, anyhow." BREAKS FOR THE DOOR. At the end of every act there was a rush for the door. The privilege of going out when you want to go out, and getting a check "just like a dude goin' for a drink," is an enticing one to gallery Arabs. The writer was borne with the stream down the staircase to where the check-bestowers stood. "Mister, gimme check;" "Gimme check, mister;" "Gimme ttvo checks, mister, for me an' Whitey," shouted the youths on the crest of the wave. How they all got checks was astonishine to a degree. Behind came the older folks, among them some gentrv whose rubicund nasal organs hinted that, like Mr. Squeers, they were "going to stretch their legs a bit between whiles." These took their checks more soberly, but as the play progressed, and the leg stretchings grew more frequent, there is little doubt but that the sobriety would be largely diminished. Leaving the Bijou gallery the writer hastened toward that of the Academy of Music. In the cozy little theater over which Mr. Harry Williams presides, the gallery is much the same as in the Bijon. Of coarse the "tough" element was present, as it was aho in the Bijou. One cannot keep the tough gods ont, that is apparent. But the gallery attendants moved about, ready to pounce down upon any disturber of the public peace. Perhaps it was imagina tion, but apples and oranges seemed to the writer more in favor at the Academy than peanuts. Two or three young fellows sit ting near the front rail, devouring the latter juicy fruit, seemed bent upon making the mouths of the fair singers water, and thus impeding their vocalization. THEY WHO CHEERED LOUDEST. With the love for beauty which is rooted deep in the Celtic nature, the Irish element, or a very large slice thereof, had put in an appearance in the Academy gallery. It was they who did the loudest pounding and clapping, it was they who whistled shrillest at the encore of a popular cantratice, or danseuse. It was they who, in accents re dolent of breezy Connemara, punctuated the performance with approving remarks. The newsies did not flock quite so thickly to Mr. Williams show. The overpowering attraction of "The White Slave" quite out did the Academy in the minds ot these yonng worshipers of melodrama. But of "children of a larger growth" there were plenty, and so far as crowds went there was little to choose between the two galleries. A little while was spent among the Academy "gods" alas that it should have been but a little while! The end of the per formance came all too soon, and the writer felt regretful, as he passed out of the gallery, still echoing with the last burst of applause, and descended with his friends, the gods, in motley concourse, to the street. In the street the Olympians melted away, to alley, or to mill, or to eating house whithersoever duty or whim chanced to call them. But their destinations mattered little, in the streets their divinity had left them; out of the gal lery they were "gods" no longer. Been an. Look Here, Friend, Are Ton SIckT Do you suSer from dyspepsia, indigestion, sour stomach, liver complaint, nervousness, lost appetite, biliousness, exhaustion or tired feeling, pains in chest or lungs, dry coughs, nightsweats, or any form of con sumption? If so, send to Prof. Hart, 88 Warren street, New York, who will send yon free, by mail, a bottle of Ploraplexion, which u a sure cure. Send to-day. eos THE FLOWER GIRLS. Nearly Four Hundred Perfume the Bight Air in New York City. CLUB MEN THEIR BEST PATRONS. A Weil-Known Woman Who Has Sold Nose gays a Quarter of a Century. COKKLIKG'S ST0EI OP NELL GWINSE rCORKISPOnDENCE OF Till DISPATCH. 1 New Tore", February 1. There are nearly 400 flower girls in the city of New York. Those are the figures given by the big florists who supply them with nosegays. Sadly enough nearly all of them perfume only the night air with their wares. Those who peddle nature's brightest smiles during the daytime are mostly big, hulking fellows whose bawls can be heard above the din of the bustling shopping thoroughfares where women most do congregate, for women form the vast majority of daytime purchasers of small floral bunches. Among her big sis ters the little flower girl, not timid, but small of voice and powerless to resist the swerving current of the street, would be a worthless straw. So the big fellows win. But the latter in turn are powerless at night when their gilded brethcrn become the nosegay purchasers Should they then venture forth with their wares they would be met only with sneer and jibe while the fragile little things in calico gowns find a silver shower mingled always with kind words and gentle smiles and rarely with even an approach to raillery. These little hand-maidens of Flora appear to be the wards of the public Prom nightfall until even midnight they flit from hotel to hotel, from table d'hote to table d'hote, trom theater to theater, and Anally front chop house to chop house aud he would be indeed a daring ruffian who caused one of them to shrink back in alarm. They are not the ragged flower girl of the drama, Bitting on a step beneath a storm of paper snow and sing ing a drearisome song. Their locks are neatly brushed, their faces washed to rosi ness, their clothing tidy, their shoes whole and almost without exception tneir oiossom laden trays presses against snowy white aprons. Their mothers who send them forth and some of whom accompany them to the door of each place which they enter, are re sponsible for the neat pictures which the busy damsels present for they know that the brightest looking, sweetest looking, tidiest looking lass opens the most purses. THEIR RICHEST FIELD. Their greatest field of profit is provided by the hundreds and hundreds of table d'hote establishments which in their varied French, Italian, German, Hungarian and Hebraic forms constitute, especially in recent years, one of the most strikingly European feat ures of New York life, and which, as they vary in the price of a course dinner from 25 Lizzie, the Flower Girl. cents to $1 0, are patronized by the humble and the high. The table d'hotes are pre sided over by chefs, "late of the Delmon ico," who are a legion in themselves, and there are scores of maitres de cuisine "for merly of the Union Club." Places such as these are largely patronized by clubmen, not bv reason of economy, but in order to vary J the monotony of the eating part of existence. In these the flower girls who are debarred from most of the fashionable restaurants, find their richest ground. Their feminine art fulness displays itself when they approach a man whose attention to a fair companion be trays his devotion. The boutoniere which the bachelor at the adjoining table has gruffly declined is quickly dropped in the tray, and, with a deft movement, a turn of the little head to one side and a bright smile, a bunch of roses is held beneath Mademoiselle's shapely nose. "How sweet," ejaculates the woman looking at the child, not at the flowers, and the man, un less he is a hardened brute, dives into a pocket, and the sale is made. What becomes of them as they grow older? The answer to that is a varied tale and, like all human narratives, sometimes sad, sometimes charmingly romantic It is safe to say, however, that in these prosaic days there is no approach ever made to the ro mance of the one famous flower girl of English history. BOSCOE CONKLTNG AND NELL GWYNNE. Botcoe Conkling once, in private conver sation, in a natural burst of eloquence which so frequently illumined his verbal structures made an epitome of Nell Gwynne's life which cannot be rivaled. The story was told me by its only listener. The incident occurred during the memorable Garfield-Hancock Presidental campaign. The New York Senator was sulking in his tent. General Grant's indifference to the result of the election was well known. The Bepublican cause seemed hopeless. The famous Mentor conference was held, and Conkling and Grant, side by side, rallied the Bepublican hosts from their hiding places. They began the battle at Warren, O., and continued it in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Bichmond, Ind., Indianapolis, Terra Haute and again in Indianapolis. It was after his great speech in Terre Haute and when re turning to Indianapolis that Senator Conk ling said to a newspaper correspondent who eat beside him: "What was the nameof that man who gave us the lunch in the railroad station?" "Beauclerk," was the reply. "He is the editor of the Bepublican alternoon news paper of Terre Haute." "I wish I had thought of that," said Conkling. musingly. "I might have made a happy allusion to it. Beauclerk reminds me of Nell Gwynne." "How is that?" asked the newspaperman. ONE OF THE GREATEST TRIO. "Beauclerk, Duke of St. Albans," replied the Senator, "was the most prominent of the 12 sons of Nell Gwvnne. who. with Marv. Queen of Scots, and Joan of Arc, made up a trio of the greatest women who ever lived. A man who even at this day would not shoul der a musket in defense of such heroic char acters would not be worthy of the name" Then, with eyes glistening, and the tragic gesture of the rostrnm, Mr. Conkling con tinued: "Nell Gwynne was born in a coal yard; raised like a bladeof grass between two cobblestones; a flower girl in a theater; the slave of an actor, and afterward of a king; the mother of a royal race, and the founder of the holiest charity (Greenwich Hospital) which ever blessed mankind." Never flower girl nor queen had her life more concisely told. When inquiring what becomes of flower girls when they grow older the assumption that unlike their sisters of the ballet, they cease io be flower girls appears in one in stance at least, to be unwarranted. There is not a "man about town" in New York who doe3 not know "Lizzie" or "Mary" as some of the incorrectly informed persist in nam ing her. The picture shows her not as she is seen at midnight in the Broadway vesti bule to Delmonico's, nor as she appears at 2 o'clock in the morning in the entrance to the well-known lair of the Welsh rarebit on Twenty-sixth street, but Lizzie as she sits at home on Sundays with her bevy of full grown children about ber, and just as she proudly insisted she should be handed down to history by the photographer's art But yet she is a "flower girl" and flower girl she will be to the end of the chapter, although her form is portly and her height greater than that of the average man. BEGAN IN WAR TIMES. Lizzie she has another name, of course. but nobody ever bothers with it else they might be guilty of calling her "Mrs." be gan selling flowers far back in war times. She was a tall slip of a girl, but even then with an arm which a blacksmith's helper might envy. Even in those brawling days she rarely met with else than courtesy. Later on she had an exceptional experience with the well-known Jimmy Oliver, which her old-time acquaintances among men-about-town frequently narrate with glee and which she sometimes when pressed will speak of with unaffected indignation. She was walking along Broadway at night with her nosegays when the so-called "Prince of Paradise Park" attempted what psrhaps he considered an act of gallantry toward her. The meek little flower girl quietly placed her tray upon a step and then seizing the surprised "Prince" she wiped with him the pavement of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, in front of which the occurrence took place, in such a thorough manner that it did not re quire brooming next morning. Little Lizzie was not annoyed much after that. She was quickly installed as afavorite among men who seek refreshments in popu lar public places after theater closing, and she has never forgotten those who aided her to make an honest livelihood in her young days. I am familiar with two striking in stances of this. Among her earliest friends were A. Wright Sanford and Captain Will iam M. Connor. They never saw her, whether they bought flowers or not. without giving her money, and many 10 notes have these generons hands cheered her with on stormy, saleless nights. Scarcely more than a year ago Sanford, who was the" most popu lar club man in New York, died. When his body lay in The Little Church Around the Corner that edifice was filled with a throng of notable, fashionable people, all sincere mourners, The air was heavy with the fra grance of costly floral emblems of grief. A SIMPLE BUT TOUCHING SCENE. As the casket was being borne away there was noticed midway in the center aisle the figure of a broad-shouldered and unusually tall woman, whose downcast head was cov ered with a woolen hood, and who was wrapped in a large aud heavy plaid shawl. As the body reached her, Lizzie "the flower girl" lifted a face down which the tears were pouring, and drawing from be neath her shawl a large wreath composed of nothing bnt violets, dropped it on the coffin land sobbed forth, in unconscious repetition ot the olt-repeated words ot Joe, the cross ing sweeper, in "Bleak House," "He was good to me, he was." I saw men of the world weep at that simple act Last summer, when Captain Connor was absent in Europe, Lizzie made peculiarly persistent inquiries at the St James Hotel as to when the proprietor would return. He had not been in his room two hours after landing when, after knocking, a neatly dressed lad entered, and, handing him a large horseshoe made of violets and roses, disappeared without a word. A card on the floral offering bore the inscription: "Good Luck from Lizzie, the Flower Girl." Lizzie is no rival of her far younger sis ters. She begins her travels far later than they, and it is not unusual to find her in the entryway of the Twenty-ninth street chop house as late as 3 o'clock in the morning. And while she toils cheerfully and smilingly far into the night, her little one? are sleep ing in their beds, for she will not permit one of them to engage in the life which she has pursued so long and so well. Louis N. Meoargee. PRIVILEGED COMMUNICATIONS. Fall Text ot a BUI Jnat Introduced In the Iovrn Legislature. Des Moines, Ia., February 1. Senator Schmidt, of Davenport, will introduce a bill in the Senate which is unique. No such bill has ever passed any Legislature in the United States. It is as follows: A hill for an act to render privileged, confiden tial communications to editors, publishers and reporters of newspapers. Be it enacted, eta. That no editor, publisher or reporter of any newspaper shall be compelled to disclose anv connaentiai communication made to him in his professional capacity, or to disclose the name of the author of any editorial or article tarnished such paper for publication, or to disclose the name of any person furnish ing Information for publication; provided, how ever, that in any proceeding, civil or criminal, against any person on account of the publica tion of such editorial, article or information, sneb editor, publisher or reporter may be com pelled to testify whether or not the defendant was the author of such editorial or article or turnished the information complained of. The effect of this bill will be to place edi tors and reporters, when acting in a profes sional capacity, on the same footing as law yers and clergymen. MARSHALL. FIELD fc CO. GohIp In Drygoodi Circles Over the Retire ment of ibe New York Partner What Mr. Marshall Field Sara. Chicago, February 1, 1890. (Special.) The following item was published in the New York Herald of Sunday morning: Reports that conld not be verified late last night were circulated that Lorenzo G. "Woodhouse, the New York partner of Mar shall Field & Co., of Chicago, bad retired from business relations with that firm. Twenty-five years ago Mr. Woodhouse left the employ of George Bliss & Co., of this city, to take a partnership in the firm of Field, Palmer & Leiter, which at once took the lead in the drygoods trade. Two years later Mr. Potter Palmer withdrew from the firm to manage his hotel and real estate bus iness in Chicago. In 1881 Mr. L. Z. Leiter retired with a bank account of several mil lions. The firm name since then has been Marshall Field & Co. Ill health is the cause assigned for the re tirement of Mr. 'Woodhouse, who is credited with a fortune of about 4,000,000; but mem bers of the trade in this city say that Mr. "Woodhouse has been very much dissatisfied with Mr. Field's policy of cutting and slashing prices during the past two years. Mr. Field's idea has been that he could thns stop Western trade from coming to New York. This policy the New YorK partner is said to have opposed vigorously. Mr. Woodhouse is a prominent member of the Union League and other clubs. A reporter lor the Inter Ocean, of this city, called upon Marshall Field & Co. yesterday afternoon, with the above clipping, and met Mr. Field, who had already seen the para graph, having seen the New York Sunday Herald. He said: "Mr. Woodhouse has retired, but entirely voluntarily on his part, aud much to our regret. Of course we are all well aware, as are others, that we have sold our mer chandise for the last 20 years lower than any house in the country, and shall continue the same policy. We have always bought our goods in Europe and this country for prompt cash, and sold for cash or shorter time than other houses, which enables ns to make lower prices than our competitors. who seem to thint they are selling time in stead of drygoods. Our policy secures the sharp, prompt-paying, best merchants of the country. The same policy will be continued as in the past, and with which Mr. Wood house was always in entire accord." Call find See Oar Mew. Carpets. New wiltons, English and American. New Scotch axminsters. New moquettes and gobelins. New velvet carpets. New body and tapestry brnssels. The new agra carpet, first ever shown here. New ingrain carpets. The largest stock ever opened in this city, at Edward Groebinger's, 627 and 629 Penn avenue. Cam Bain or Shine. Bring the children and have their photos taken at Aufrecht's Elite Gallery, 516 Mar ket st. Pittsburg. Cabinets, ?1 per dozen. Use elevator. CARET THE GOSPEL The Lesson in Philip's Appeal is to Come and See. CHRISTIANITY IS AGGRESSIVE. The Church Isn't a Spiritual Life Insur ance Institution. OUR STERN DUTY TO ODE BROTHERS 1WB1TTMT rOB TUB DISPATCH. 1 Christianity is an aggressive religion. It is never contented. It is never satisfied. It stands alone among the religions of the race in its zeal for making converts. It will never stop till it has discovered every Nathaniel and brought him in. It will never stop till the whole world is Christian. And it will not rest even then till every Christian is a good Christian. That will be a good while. The millennium will be here by that time. This aggressive spirit marks the temper ot every Christian who has learned the mind of the Master, and has caught the actual meaning of His religion. The Chris tian does not imagine that his work is done when he has worked out his own salvation. He does not imagine that the chief part of his work consists in working out his own salvation. He finds a higher task in help ing, uplifting, trying to save somebody else. William Wilberforce was a good kind of Christian. He was puzzled how to answer the question of a good brother who asked after the condition of his soul. He said that he had been so busy trying to save the souls ana ooaies or some half a dozen mil lions of enslaved negroes that he had almost forgotten that he had any soul himself. Some people seem to have an idea that the Christian religion is a kind of spiritual life insurance company, and that the chief end of man is to get to heaven. But the Christian the genuine Christian has no such selfish spirit. He remembers that he who will save his life shall lose it, and that he only who is content to lose his life for Christ's sake, and his brother's sake, shall find it. We are good Christians just in proportion as we follow the apostle who, having himself found Christ, lost no time till he should bring his brother also. THE SPIRIT OP EABNEST SIEK. This aggressive spirit, this longing to reach out and bring some brother in, this feeling in a man's heart that he must make someone else acquainted with hi? truth, and a sharer in his blessing this marks not only the Christian but the earnest man, the world over. It fired the heart of one earn est man, a camel driver in an Arabian desert, and made him a, prophet for a sixth part of the human race. "Tho' the sun stand upon my right hand and the moon upon my left." said Mohammed, "and both command me hold my peace, yet must I speak!" It stirred the sonl of another earnest man, a simple German schoolmaster, and made of him a mighty lever for overturn ing nearly all the established institutions of his dav, and building them over again bet ter. He stood firm, that honest Luther. Nothing could shake him. "God help me," he said, "I can do no other, speak I must." All the priests and popes, all the curses, civil and ecclesiastical, all the flames and faggots in the world notwithstanding, he must utter forth the truth that was in him. Were he confronted by as many devils as there were tiles on all the roofs of all the cities of all Europe, yet must he break throngh, and tell his message. This aggressive spirit makes all earnest men akin. The earnest man can never be contented to be right all alone. He will have no monopoly of truth. He will not have his brain a prison, but a treasure house. What he sees he wants the whole world to see. His desire is that of the apostle who stood before Agrippa: "I would to God that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost and altogether such as I am." And that all men may be snch as he is, possessors of the same truth, travelers in the same path, sharers in the same blessing to bring that about he mast speak. Necessity is laid upon him. "Woe is me." he cried, "if I preach not the gospel." PHILIP FINDETH NATHANIEL. It is interesting and instructive to notice how this aggressive spirit, which is the quality of greatness, marks in Holy Scrip ture even the humblest Christians. "The day following Jesns would go forth into Galilee and findeth Philip, and saith to him: Follow me" and so Philip became a Christian. And what next? "Philip find eth Nathaniel." He cannot rest till he has fonnd his friend and brought him. It is the same in Samaria. "The woman saith 'unto Him, I know that Messiah com eth, which is called Christ Jesus saith unto her: I that speak unto thee am He." What a revelation was therel That was the very plainest word yet. To no one anywhere had" he told that great truth so fully and dis tinctly. "I am the Christ." What does the woman do with this word from heaven? "The woman then left her water-pot, and went her way into the city, and saith unto the men, come, see a man which told me all things that ever I did. Is not this the Christ?" Always this word "come." "Come," cries Andrew to his brother Simon; "come," says Philip to Nathaniel; "come," entreats this woman of Samariastopping every one she meets in the street. These people must speak. They must get somebody else. They must tell what great things Christ has done for their souls. The Master heals a demoniac in Gadara. "And he went his way and published throughout the whole city how great things Jesus had done unto him." Matthew leaves his custom house and fol lows Christ. He gives up a good business; he abandons a chance to make a fortune. He brings his money, no doubt, but that is not enough he must bring his friends, too. He makes a great supper, and gets all the publicans together to meet Him whom henceforth he proposes to follow. SILENCE IS IMPOSSIBLE. The authorities seize hold of Peter and John and say you must speak no more in this name. If you do, we will put you in prison, ana worse alterward. And the Apostles answered: "Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto yon more than unto God, you are as good judges as we are. - or we cannot out speac the things which we have seen and heard." Tney simply conld not help it The great truth of the Christian faith had flashed in upon the souls of these men, and to keep silence about it was impossible. Better be put in a thousand prisons better die first, rather than be still. St Stephen did die. They might stone him, if they would, but while breath was in him, speak he must This aggressive spirit, this impulse of the Christian Philip to find Nathaniel, this duty, this desire, this necessity, ot open tes timony and personal appeal, ought to char acterize every Christian. Every Christian in this world ought to be making somebody else Christian. I know that it is not easy to sneak to peo ple in private conversation about the sub ject of religion. One reason is that we dis like to make ourselves disagreeable. We are afraid that the subject may not be a pleasant one. It is, indeed, true that Philip can make himself intensely dis agreeable. He can speak in an unnatural tone of voice, and with a constrained manner, and in cant phrases. He can dis gust Nathaniel, and do more harm than good to him. There are few more uncom lortably disagreeable people than the man or woman who is piously disagreeable. They make the very saints themselves feel wicked. NEED NOT BE DI8AQBEEABLE. But surely one essential element in all trne religion is genuine manliness and womanliness. There is nothing in the themes themselves that need be disagreeable to anvbody. They touch the highest, the most "interesting, the most important, the most helpful trnths-in the world. If they are disagreeable, it is either because the one to whom you speak has something the mat ter with his conscience, or because yon have not spoken genuinely and sensibly. Choose fitting occasions and fitting people. Choose natural words, and be a3 much your natu ral self as you can. Yon will not be disa greeable. In every friendship that is worth any thing, whether between parent and child, or between friend and friend, the moment does come, and not onco or twice only, when it is just the time for yon to speak. Be on the watch for that moment, and then speak. Have the aggressive spirit in your heart, be possessed with a sense of responsibility for your Christian influence, seek every oppor tunity to make somebody else as good a Christian as you are yourself, and you will find Nathaniel and bring him in, too. Who can measure the value and helpful ness of earnest, open, manly. Christian speech? Sometimes a word has changed the whole current of a life. And vour words, just because they are spoken by you, will be more impressive than a hundred sermons. Philip was not deterred from speaking to Nathaniel from any fear of making himself disagreeable; nor was he so much impressed, as some are, by the sacredness of religion, that he felt he conld do no better thing with his blessing than to keep it to himself. He had made the discovery of discoveries. He had found Christ Hi's first thought was for his friend. He mnst bring his friend into Christ's prison. He wanted to make a Christian disciple out of Nathaniel, and he let nothing stand in the way.. Philip was not kept back even bv the smullness of hlsown Knowledge of Chnst, or by his inability to argue much about Him. He had known Christ only one day, and when Nathaniel, having listened to what he had to urge about Him, interposed an objection, "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" seeming to doubt the whole truth which Philip brought him, Philip had only one answer: "Come and see." Only come, he said, look into His face, hear Him speak, put yourself within reach of His in fluence and make up your own mind. That was no argument But it was belter than a whole encyclopedia of arguments. Nathan iel did come and see, and that made a Chris tian ont of Nathaniel. Geoeqe Hodqes. ART MATTERS IN THE CITY. A painting by L. Sturm, the artist who ex ecuted the large work after Raphael for Mr. Andrew Carnegie, is shown this weekat Boyd's. The picture, which appears to be an old one, represents Mary Magdalen reclining upon the floor of a cavern intently regarding the pages of a book spread open before her, while near by is seen a symbol of mortality in the form of a human skull. The work Is well handled and of good color, bat upon a close examination of the volume, it strikes one as presenting rather a modern appearance. Ms. J. Euikr Salisbury, the yonng South side artist, who is still pursuing his studies in Paris, has sent boms three new pictures which arrived in the city a few days ago, and are now at bis residence on Tenth street The notable work of the three is a morning effect In a picturesque glen down which the sparkling waters oi a mountain stream una tnetr way. This is a very large painting, and one In which considerable skill in coloring and composition is shown. The other pictures are both por traits of children. All three pictures have been badly damaged in transit Mb. A. C. Wooster Is becoming favorably known as a clever painter of still-life subjects, bat be has not yet managed to relieve his works of the somber appearance which bis in tensely dark backgrounds cast over them. It wonld be extremely difficult to paint an old wicker basket and a few russetapples any more truthfully than has been done in the work which he is showing this week at Morrison's, and if they were seen against a background ot anything brighter and more suggestive than a flat wall of dark brown paint, the picture would be a thoroughly artistic production. Mrs. W. H. Milleb, of Allegheny, has a very creditable painting on exhibition In the GillespiA gallery. The subject is a still-life consisting of a group of richly colored objects very tastefully arranged. The leading feature of the work is a vase of roses standing upon a small table covered with silk drapery and seen in relief against a screen of dark plush. The work is well and freely handled, and is lacking; only in that solidity and substantial appear ance characteristic of more scientific painting. The objects are tastefully arranged, cleverly drawn and reasonably well colored. A notice able fault however, is that the roses are too nearly of the same shade as the covering of the table, bat In the face of so much excellent work it is scarcely fair to pick ont the faults of a work which in its general effect would do credit to some of our professional artists. Mb. Geokqz Hetzel's latest landscape may be seen daring the present week at Boyd's. The scene is at the junction of the Uonemaugh and the Loyalhanna, and it is painted with a view to representing the spot as nearly as pos sible in the way it appeared 100 years ago, for which purpose the artist has idealized the work in several respects, particularly by obliterating some ot the more modern features of tbe scene. Several wigwams are introdnced upon the farther bank of the stream, and a canoe containing a conple of Indian braves is represented floating upon its glassy surface. The effect rendered Is that of a bright sunny day in mid-summer with a silvery lumi nous sky and a clear flood of light over the landscape. In regard to drawing and coloring tbe work Is very true to nature, and m respect of handling is up to Mr. Hetzel's usual high standard, all that need be said, as this veteran artist's pictures are so widely known that com ment upon his manner of execution is unnces sary. Br far the best picture that Mr. Wils Porter has yet shown is at present on exhibition at Boyd's. Like most of this artist's works, the subject is a scene of military life, and the title, "Bringing TJp the Guns," conveys a very clear Idea of its character. The scene represented is, that of a battery advancing in readiness for action, and as regards conception and composi tion the work must certainly be regarded as a very excellent one. There is some very faulty drawing in the figure of one of the horses, unfortunately the nearest and most prominent one ot them all, bnt in other parts tbe painting has been vpry cleverly done, both In drawing and coloring. Tbe figures are well arranged on tbe canvas and the action is strong and life-like. Tbe landscape feature of the picture is kept properly sub ordinate in Interest: it is in harmony with the spirit of the scene and is fairly well handled. Altogether, Mr. Porter deserves credit for having produced a painting that will at once attract attention as being ont of the beaten track so closely followed by the majority of our local artists. New Bntlnesi of the Equitable far January. The new business of the Equitable Life Assurance Society for January, 1890, was twenty-one millions of dollars, a gain of five millions over January, 1889. Their business for the year 1889 was nearly fifty millions larger than that of any other company. E. A. Woods, Manager, 516 Market st, Pittsburg. SFKING CARPETS Are All Open and Ready for Inspection at Groetzlnirer's. There are many beautiful and entirely new patterns in all grades of carpets to be found in our spring importation. , Many of the patterns shown here are con fined to us. Ladies are requested to call in when out shopping whether desiring to purchase or not. The goods will prove as entertaining as an Easter bonnet opening to you. xou never saw an agra carpet, and you can't see them anywhere else in Pittsburg outside oi our bouse. EDWAED GEOETZIirOEE, 627 and 629 Penn avenue. Mr. Hendricks, of Hendricks & Co., ponular photographers, No. ,68 Federal St., Allegheny, makes a specialty of children's photographs. Every mother is invited to bring the little folks next week. Good cabi nets for $1 a dozen. Entire satisfaction can come only when the best is used. In making beer the Iron City Brewing Compsny employ the choicest ingredients and their patrons are always pleased. All dealers keep their celebrated Iron City, Pittsburg and Pilsner brands. Z. Wainwrioht & Co.'s ale and beer aTe ever in demand by those who appreciate the results of skillful brewing of the finest materials. Give them a trial. Families supplied direct 'Phone 6526. watt Come see our new spring goods Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Kir able & SacsTEB, 35 Fifth are. GOOD ROADS OR BAD. One Solution of a Problem of Great Interest to the Public. WHERE THE BEST HIGHWAYS ABE. So Setter Pablic Roods Anywhere Than Are Fonnd in the South. CONTICT LABOE EMPL0IED THERE 1WBITTEH FOB THZ DISPATCH. In Pennsylvania one of the earliest laws passed after tbe Bevolutionarr War was in the direction of reforming the penal code. An act of 1786 provided that certain crimes, which, until then, had been capitally pun ished, should thereafter be puished by labor, "publicly and disgracefully imposed." Under this law the convicts were em ployed in cleaning streets, repairing roads, etc., their heads were shaved, and they were clothed in a coarse uniform. The concurrent testimony of all, however, is to the effect that tbe result of this movement was to in crease crime and to degrade the criminal, whose shame at the public exposure soon hardened into sullen reseniment and impo tent rage. The Legislature, upon witness ing the disastrous effects of this system npon the criminal and npon society, attempted its reform with great vigor. The acts of the years 1789-90-14-5 prove the anxiety to cor rect mistakes and establish a system of pun ishments which should combine severity and certainty with humanity, and, "by re moving public disgrace and the temptation to excess, leave room for the possible en trance ot reformation." still ur force. A portion of the law of April 6, 1790, abont jail prisoners is still in force in the State. The system of solitary confinement and in-doors labor, formulated in that era is still the basis of the present arrangement, thongh modified by modern legislation. The commission for tbe improvement of country roads in Pennsylvania, appointed recently by Governor Beaver, is now con sidering, in connection with the character of improvements, the question of labor. That ot convict labor is advocated by several of the members, thus coming back to the exact state of things that ruled in Pennsylvania more than a century ago. Of course con ditions have changed since then, and what may then have seemed a good reason for abolishing convict labor on the roads at that time is no reason at all now. There are vastly more criminals. The very system of indoor labor then originated has resulted in evils which the lawmakers of pioneer days were not shrewd enough to foresee. Chief among these is the competi tion offered free labor in the trades of manu facturing. Our criminal laws are even more stringent and "the sullen resentment and impotent rage" of convicts because publicly exhibited, would avail nothing nowadays. Public opinion demands any practicable method ' of dealing with prisoners so as to check crime; and public opinion in this State is anxious for any available system by which better highways may be built for indespensable overland traffic Thus, two good purposes are com bined in one, notwithstanding failure of such an experiment 100 years ago in our own State. CONVICT LABOR OK THE EOADS. While in Washington City a few days ago I talked with Congressmen from various States about their systems of road making. In Missouri. New Jersey, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas, convicts work on public ways by State direction directly. In Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana and Missis sippi the convict labor is leased out to dif ferent townships or counties lor road and street improvements. In the State of Vir ginia the contract system prevails in letting out prisoners for work on public ways. In Alabama the latest laws give the courts dis cretion to sentence prisoners to labor on county roads and empower the County Com missioners to let them to private contractors for that work also. A particular act ex empts females from the prisons from labor of this class. When the male prisoners are so assigned they are shackled while at work, and if night finds them some distance from the prison they "must be confined in a sub stantial building or a stockade and carefully guarded." METHODS OP THE 'WORK. In Georgia when any county, city, town or village determines to organize a chain gang of misdemeanored convicts to work on the roads they must file with the clerk of any court throughout the State their de mand. When any person shall be convicted of misdemeanor and sentenced to work on the public roads, such convict shall be turned over to the county or town having the oldest unfilled demand on the books. Convict labor on public works in North Carolina is developed to a high degree. In addition to repairing and making roads, prisoners are made to do whatever offers. The beantiful mansion for the Governor of the State which stands in Burke Square, Raleigh, was entirely created by convicts, the materials all being manufactured in the penitentiaries and the construction carried on by the men, eyen to the hod carrying. The result of this system is that the country roads generally in the South at least in the agricultural regions are kept in the very best order. The convicts work Blowly and under careful supervision. The work is therefore of the firmest character. GOOD ROADS A 2TECESSIXT. Macadamized roads are popular, and In the tide-water sections of Virginia, North Carolina and Louisiana shell roads make driving a rare enjoyment Then, the scarci ty of railroads, or rather the backwardness of the interior South in developing railroad interests, made good overland roads an ab solute necessity, just as there was a necessi ty for the old national turnpike before the days of railroads in the North and West The spectacle of a chain gang, or even a prisoner with a ball and chain attached, on the public thoroughfares, will always be more or less repugnant to tne people of ' Pennsylvania, much as they do want the labor of the prisoners. It is barely possible that neither chains nor shackles will be necessary. That is for the opinions of prison keepers to decide. In Kansas there is a sort of compromise system. Their laws out there provide for the work on high ways without the revolting features. County Commissioners are empowered to establish a county stone-yard where prisoners may be worked at breaking up stones for the roads about to be macadamized. This lessens the chances of escape. When a prisoner shall so desire he may give sufficient surety and be allowed to enter upon an engagement for outside work on the highways. This will betaken as the paymentof his fine and costs. $1 per day, exclusive of board, being allowed him on account The surety from responsi ble parties guards against his escape, and thus only the most trustworthy prisoners get out upon tbe roads. A BLOW AT THE NOETH. But, after all, what more inhuman specta cle is there than a person condemned to soli tary confinement? It would strike the average Pennsylvanian with shame to see in the laws of Louisiana a State where one would expect to find tbe more brutal type of penal laws this clause: "Convicts in the penitentiary whose sentences have been commuted from death to imprisonment for life, or for a term of years, shall no longer be permitted to labor in company with the other convicts, but shall be 'con fined alone, on the plan in force in the Eastern Penitentiary of Pennsylvania." L. E. Stofiel. Loyees repelled, husbands disgusted, friends lost, who might have been retained by the wise use of a little of Atkinson's re fined perfumery. so GBA2TD display spring goods. KKABLE & Shvsxxz, 36 Fifth. aT. SEW XDYHnTISEXUtNTS. Save Tour Hair BY a timely use ot Ayert Hair Vigor. This preparation has no equal as a dressing. It keeps the scalp clean, cool, and healthy, and preserves the color, lullness, and beauty of the hair. "I was rapidly becoming bald and gray; bnt after using two or threo bottles of Ayer's Hair Vigor my hair grew thick and glossy and the original color was restored." Melvin Al&Hch, Canaan Centre, N. H. "Some time ago I lost all my hair in consequence of measles. After due waiting, no new growth appeared. I then used Ayer's Hair Vigor and my hair grew Thick and Strong. It has apparently come to stay. The Vigor Is evidently a great aid to nature." J. B. Williams, Floresville, Texas. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for the past four or five years and find it a most satisfactory dressing for the hair. It is all I could desixe,.being harmless, causing the hair to retain its natural color, and requiring but a small quantity to tender the hair easy to arrange." Mre. M. A. Bailey, 9 Charles street, Haverhill, Ma33. " I have been using Ayer's Hair Vigor for several years, and believe that it has caused my hair to retain its natural color." Mrs. H. J. King, Dealer ia Dry Goods, &c, BishopvUIe, Md. Ayer's Hair Vigor, razpAsxDBT Dr. J. C. Ayer It Co., Lowell, Mast. flold by Druggists and Ferfsmerm. MRS. ELIZA SMITH Cured by the physicians ot the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, 323 Penn avenue. "Hundreds of people in Pittsburg have told how wocderf ally they have been cored by the physicians or the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Insti tute at 323 Penn ave., and I feel it my duty to state my case. My catarrh, which had troubled me so long, had begun to affect my lungs, and they painsd me very much, especially when I coughed or raised up the offensive discharge which Seemed to so nil up my windpipe and bronchial tubes, that I found it often difficult to breathe. I coughed more or less both day and night It would often hart me to breathe, my breath became short, and 1 felt a tight op pressive feeling in my lungs. I often felt a pain in my left side. My food wonld soar on my stomach, giving me a fall, uncomfortable feeling after eating, with belching of gas. My hands and feet were cold and clammy. I coald sot wait any distance, or op a hill without getting oat of breath. I bad many other aches and pains and also suffered from those dfseases peculiar to women. In fact, I grew weaker and weaker until I felt as if I did not care whether I lived or died, as I wonld be an In valid the remainder of my life. I tried several doctors, bat I found no relief. Beading of so ijany cures made by the physicians of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia institute, and which seemed similar to mine, I took three months' treatment from these specialists. Tbe result ia I now feel like a new woman. I have gained 25 pounds In flesh; my work does not seem a burden to me as it used to. and I feel well and strong. I shall be glad to tell anyone farther wbat these physicians have dons for me. I liva on Lemington aye., near Lincoln aveEaaC Liberty, this city." MRS. tte a SMITH. Consultation free to alL Patients treated suc cessfully at home by correspondence. Send two 2-cent stamps for question blank, and ad dress all letters to the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute. 323 Penn ave. OSce honrx, 10 A. Jfc. to P. Jt, and 6 to 8 p.jc Sundays. 12 to 4 P. x. fe2-MWT3tt DOES CURE CONSUMPTION In its First Stages. Be turt you get the gtnuine. OCf-28-XWU FINE GOODS AT PRICES THAT WILL PLEASE YOU. BEAUTIFUL PIANO LAMPS. Th5 Handsomest CHAMBER SETS in the city. CHINA, DINNER , -Aim- TEA SETS at prices that will induce you to buy once. We , invite all to visit our Salts rooms, 211 WOOD STREET, Opposite St Charles, and 102 and 104 THIRD AVE, and tee our Stock. -- R.P. WALLACE & CO.-: t-5" s '$ Atjt wSBlSSlgpslBysaBaSSlBSS'WMSS.WSBaSfeSS ftT'