' V - THE COURIER fc J o ' i were of most infrequent occurrence. The rescuo society may have and doubtless has accomplished Borne good; but it can't begin to keep up with the demands; and it is fast becoming evident, oven to those peoplo who clamored for tho kind of a policy Mayor Weir has followed, that the result of the so-called reform is not only discourag ing, but in some respects, alarming. Town Topics says: "That great and good philanthropist, Mr. Geo. M. Pullman, is. I understand, the object of a good deal of commis eration in Chicago just now, owing to tho tendency of certain un thinking -and misguided people to heap obloquy upon him by rea sonof the Pullman company's alleged intention to evict such of his tenants, or former employees, as may be in arrears with their rent. How people of intelligence can regard tho matter in any light save one I can not for the life of ma parceivn. Mr. Pullman, as every one knows, owns the town of Pullman. The houses in it are his. The peoplo who livo in the houses are not doing so for love, but on tho understanding that they pay rent. They have not paid the rent, because they have not the money to pay it. If they wished for tho money to pay Mr. Pullman his rent they could obtain it by resuming their work in Mr. (Pullman's car shops for exactly the wages that Mr. Pullman chooses to pay them and no more. Nothing could be simpler. It is Mr. Pullman's un questionable right as a landlord, to turn all his non-rent-paying tenants, together with such invalid wives and sickly, half-fed children as they may have had tho stupidity to collect about them, into the street. The luxury of living under a roof is re served for peoplo who can pay rent. Mr. Pullman's non-rcnt-pay-irg tenants should remember this. Their lot after all is not a hard one. The air of the town of Pullman is soft and balmy. The sand of the surrounding desert is soft enough to sleep on com fortably. There is plenty of water in Calumet Lake to drink. The grass is good to eat. Nobody need complain. Lot there bo a truce to the silly carping." "I met a man the other day enjoying ideal contentment,'' said an occasional contributor to The Courier. "He had been a cow boy, and enjoyed the experience. He could bury a dead man with the same serenity with which ho would rope a Texas steer. To him life had been, and was, a constant comfort. His wants were few and simple, and supplied with only tho slightest exertion. He had never married, though ho never missed a ranch dance, and was popular with the girls who wero there. Ho had ranged over miles and miles of canons, in summer, and in winter, an 1 knew what hardship was. The morrow had no cares for him. He said distinctly that all he needed was Iward and clothes, and ho was not over choice about either. His team had been turned out to pasture with a kind of mental reservation that if feed continued to become scarcer and higher and horses of less and less value no attempt would bo made at recapture. If an opportunity offered to use the team, and his necessities really demanded that some workshould be done he might look them up. What did he care for money and tho luxuries of civilization? Assured of a weeks' Ioard, no trouble iiitted across his brain, and he could spend days and days idly listening to the tales of village or country. Frank and apparently honest he did not hesitate to tell any one all the scrapes he had had, and to take satis faction in the rude code of morals he had set up. One winterscason he and some companions lived in a lonely dug out and had a royal time. Tho ponies found their own living. They slaughtered and cured thei- own pork and beef, did their own culinary work, and fared sumptuously every day. They had money and bought many things they could have had without objection. If time hung a little heavy they looked up the claim of some non-resident, and either filed a contest themselves or procured some one to contest. Then at once they became important witnesses. It was immaterial on which side. If the party having tho claim was sharp enough to seo them ho could hold on without difficulty. If the other man saw them, good-bye claim. While doing the witness act they were boarded at a good hotel aud received S2 a day for their time. Nothing could have been more agreeaole. The weak were sure to have their friendship. Some horrid man attempted to con test the claim of a poor girl who was working to secure a homestead. She had no witnesses, and little money to defend. Our hero assumed the role of detective. He made the acquaintance of the horrid man and finally offered to give him 840 if he would dismiss the con test The bargain was made. Our detective made out a check for the amount and had an accomplice identify him andcortify that the check was good. Tho next morning ho went upon tho witness stand and exposed the wholo deal, which, under tho laws, forfeited all right of contest. Ho then explained that tho check was drawn on a bank which had failed months before. This transaction was entire ly meritorious from his standpoint. It was really quite refreshing in these troubled times to find a man so contented, and so constitut ed that tariff laws and currency questions could not rutllo his feel ings in the slightest degree." So Mrs. James Brown Potter and Kyrle Bellow aro coming to Lin coln again after an absence of several years. When this precious pair wero last in this city they wero objects of far greater curiosity than now. Then Mrs. Potter was in, what might be culled tho first blush of hor notoriety, and about Bellow there centered enough scandal to mako him an interesting figure. But both have ceased to attract the attention they once did. They havo beon away for a long time, and in this country not much has been heard of them beyond an occasional bit of salacious gossip that would somohow find its way from India whore they enjoyed, according to report, a profitable season. People have ceased to comment on tho relations of these two picturesquo persons who have made their own charac ter a marketable commodity. Things aro taken for granted. President Cleveland's first administration is responsible for Mre. Pottar's appearance on tho stage. Mrs. Potter had gone in for reci tations and amateur theatricals and all that sort of thing, and in Washington she was taken up by Mrs. Whitney, wife of Mr. Clove land's secretary for the navy. This lady, with immense wealth at her command, had immense facilities for showing off her protege, and she made tho most of her opportunities. For one winter undei Mrs. Whitney's patronage, Mrs. Potter was an important personago in Washington society. No swell entertainment was complete with out a recitation by Mrs. Potter, and these recitations were, by the way, sometimes risque enough to interest tho most blase devotee of society. Finally, as many will doubtless remember, Mrs. Potter made an immense sensation by reciting Sim's "Ostler Joo" at a re ception or entertainment given by Mrs. Whitney. This selection was considered extremely outre, and tho beauty, as she was then called, was severely criticised for offending tho delicate sensibilities of Washingtonians with s:ch a coarse and suggestive selection. There no was no end of talk, and Mrs. Potter became a central figure almost immediately, and it wasn't long after tho "Ostler Joo" episode that she went on the stage. She went to London to study and buy gowns, and she was shrewd enough to take advantage of tho wanning glory of Mrs. Langtry as a professional beauty. She found her way easily enough to the Prince of Wales and succeeded in awakening sufficient interest in that quarter to greatly perturb the Jersey Lily, who ina now historic in terview, quoted the Prince as having said that Mrs. Potter's arm was not pretty. Mr. Potter, meanwhile, was left in New York, and it was said that the domestic relations of the Potters, which were apparent ly felicitious up to this time, would be uudisturbed by Mrs. Potters appearance on the stage. It was going to be a model arrangement. She was going to act but she was going to remain faithful to James Brown and they were going to show the pu blic like Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew, to whom reference was made last week, that a stage career isn't incompatible with conjugal bliss. But it was'nt long before it, was evident that Mrs. James Brown was getting a little swift for James Brown. Bishop .Potter, of New York, James Brown's brother who has a great regard for the conventionalities, went to London to reason with the woman who would be an actress and, if possible, disuade her from her purpose. But the Bishop returned unsuccess ful. Mrs. Potter persisted in her determination, and she has been on the stage almost continuously for the past five or six years. f Notice to Taxpayers. All city taxes of any kind now due and delinquent should be paid by September 1, or the same must be reported to the county treas urer for advertisement and sale. E. B. STEPHENSON, City Treasurer. Fresh country milk at Central MHk Depot, 134, south 11.