CAPITAL CITY COURIER, SATURDAY APRIL 18, :S9i. &- W TIlEDANaKKOUSCfiASSKS DR. TALMAQE THE HIGH FINDS THEM AMONG AND THE POOR. The Man of UViitlli mill I.eUurn U'lm "KIIUTIme" In Dnlnii Nullilng ,l tlm Otlirr lltlrnim Are tlm (Jrlinliml I'mir, thu llmperrttft mill lrimh hitf. Nkw YoiiK, April IS. -Dr. Tnluwtgo, In coiittiiimnre of the course of sermons nu "The Ten Plagues of tlm Cities," today preached to largo audiences In the llrook lyn Academy or Muslo In the foreiinon, mid at The Christian Herald nervlco at tlm Now Yoik Academy of Music In tlm even. ItiKiOH "The Plagtioof 'rlnu." lie took for hU text KxuiIun vll, S, "All tlm waters that wen In tlm river were tnrneil to blowl." Anions nil tlm Kgyptlan plagues nonu could hnvo been worMithnn thN. TlmNlhi in the wealth or Kgypt, IN IIhIi the food, It waters the Irrigation or garden and field. Its eontlltlon decides t he prosperity or the (loom or tlm empire,. What happens to tin) Nil u happens to all Kypt. Ami now In tlm text that groat river Is Incarna dined. ' It Mured gash across an empire. In poetla license wo Hcnk or wars which turn the river Into blood. Hut my text Is not a poetic license. It was a fact, a great otltusoiv appalling condition described. The Nile rolling deep of blond. Can you Imagine n more awful plagueF The miMleru plague which nearest corre ponds with that Is tho plague of crlmo In Ml our cities. It halts not ror bloodshed, It shrinks from no enrungo. It bruises And cuts and strikes down nnd destroys, Itrovols In tlm blood or I tody and soul, this plague or crime rampant ror ages, and never bolder or moro rampant than now, Thu annual police reports or theso cities aa I examine them are to mo morn sug gcstlvo than Dante's Inferno, and all Christian jiooplo as well an reformers need to awaken to a present ami tremendous duty. If you want this "Plague or Crime" tostop there uro several kinds of persons you need to consider. First, tho pulillo criminals. You ought not to bo surprised that these penplo make up a large portion In many communities. Thu vast majority of tho criminals who tako ship from Mil ropocoiuu Into our own port. InlWKi, of tho forty-nlno thousand people who worn Incarcerated In tho prisons of the country thirty-two thousand were or foreign birth. Many of them wero thu very despera does of society, oozl n Into tlm slums of our city, waiting ror an opportunity to riot and steal and debauch, Joining tlm largo gang or American thugs and cut throats. Thoronrulu this cluster (if cities New York, Jersey City and llrooklyu four thousand woplo whoso entire business in life Is to commit suicide. That Id its much tholr business as Jurisprudence or medicine or merchandise is your business. To It. they bring nil their energies of body, mind and oul, and they look upon tlm Intervals which thoy spend In prison ns so much un fortunate loss of time, Just as you look upon an attack or liilluonr.il and rheuma tism which fastens you in thuhouso forn row days. It Is their lifetime business to filck pockets and blow up safes and shop 1ft ami ply tho panel game, and they hnvo ai much pride or skill In their business aa you hnvo In yours when you upset tho Argument of an opposing counsel, or euro a gunshot fracture which other surgeons have given up, or foresee a turn In tho market iu you buy goods just before they go up 90 per cent. It la tholr business to commit crime, and I do not suppose that onco In a year the thought of tho Immor ality strikes them. Added to theso professional criminals, American and foreign, there are a largo doss of men who aro moro or less Indus, trlous In crinio. In ouo year the police In this cluster of cities arrested teu thousand people ror theft, and ten thousand for no aault and battery, and fifty thousand for Intoxication, Drunkenness Is responsible for much of tho theft, since It confuses a man's ideas of property, and ho gets his bands on things that do not belong to htm. Hum Is re.sMiuslblo for much of the assault and tmttery, Inspiring men to sudden brav ery, which they must demonstrate though It be on tho face of tho next gentleman. BOCtKTT TttltKATKNKI) ON AM. 8IIIK.9. Ten million dollars' worth of property stolen in this cluster of cities In one year! You cannot, as good cltlaena, bo Indepen dent of that fact. It will touch your pocket, slnco I have to give you the fact that these three cities pay about eight million dollars' worth of taxes a year to arraign, try and support the criminal pop. nlatlon. You help to pay the board of every criminal, from the sneak thief that snatches a spool of cotton up to somo man who swamps a bank. More than that, it touches your heart In tho moral depression of tho community. You mluht ns well think to stand In a closely confined room where there aro fifty people and yet not breathe tho vitiated air, as to stand In a community where there is such a great multitude of tho depraved without some what being contaminated., What Is tho fire that burns your store down compared with the conflagration which consumes your morals? What is tho theft of the gold and silver from your money safe com pared with the theft of your children's vir tue f We aro all ready to arraign criminals. We shout at the top of our voice, "Stop thlefl" and when the police get on tho track we como out, hatless and In our slip pers, and assist In tho arrest. Wo como around the bawling ruffian and hustle him off to justice, and when ho gets iu prison what do wo do for hlmr With great gusto we put on the handcuffs and tho hopples; but what preparation aro wo making for the day when the handcuffs and tho hop ples como ollr Society seems to say to theso criminals, "Villain, go in there and rot," when It ought to say, "You aro an offender against tho law, but wo mean to give you an opportunity to reent; wo mean to help you. Hero aro lllbles aud tracts and Christian Influences. Christ died for you. Ijok, and live." Vast Improvements have been made by Introducing Industries into tho prison; but we want something more than hammers and shoo lasts to reclaim theso people. Aye, we want moro than sermons on tho Sab bath day. Society must imprest these men with, the fact that It does not enjoy their suffering, and that it is attempting to re form and elevate them. Tho majority of criminals suppose that society has agrudgo ugalust them, aud they in turn have it grudge ogaliibt society. They uro harder iu heart and more infurl itte when they como out of jail than when they went iu. Many of tho people who go to priaou go again aud again ami again. Some years ago, of fifteen hundred pris oners' who during the year had been In Sing Sing, four buudred had been there before. In n house of correction in the coaiitry,.wbire durlug acortutti roach of tine there bad bean live thousaud people, h iuiw iiuiumuii uiii ucuu mere So, in oo ca the prUou, aud la tlm other Hie homo of correction, loitthm jutt Hi hail n they weiii Iteforo. . Tim mi'ietiirviir one or tlm benevolent ' societies of Now York sajs a lad fifteen years of ago had spent three years of his Ilfn III prison, and he said to Dm lad, "Wliiil. have they done ror you to make you better" "Well," replied tlm lad, "thu first Unit) I was brought up before tlm Judge he said, 'You ought to bo ashamed or yourself.' And then I committed a crlmo again, and I was brought up Iieforu tlmsaum judge, and ho said, 'You raseall' And after a while I committed somo other crime, and I was brought before thu sainii Judge, ami ho said, 'You ought to In) hanged.'" That was all they bad done for hlin In the way of reformation and sal vation. "Oh," you say, "these peoplo am Incorrigible." I suoso there am hun dreds of persons this day lying In thu prison hunks who would leap up at tho prospect of reformation if society would only allow them a way Into decency and respectability. TDK UNCIIAIItrAlll.r. JtnxiKH. "Oh," you say, "1 have no patience with these rogues," I ask you In reply, how much Inner would you have been under tho H.i mo clrcuuistaucesf Suppose your mother had been n blasphemer aud your father a sot, and you had started life with a body HtulTed with evil proclivities, aud you had spent much of yourtlnm Iu n collar amid obscenities and cursing, ami If at ton yea rsof ago you had been compelled tngoout ami steal, battered and banged at night If you came In without any spoils, ami suppose your early manhood and womanhood had I icon covered with rags ami tilth, ami ilo- lent society had turned Its back upon you. ml left you to consort, wit': vagaimutis anil wharf rats bow much Iwttcr would you have been? I have no sympathy with that oxecullvo clemency which would let crlmo run loose, or which would sit Iu tlm gallery of a court room weeping hecnuso somo hard hearted wretch is brought to justice; but I do say that tlm surety aud life of thu community demand moro potential Influ ences In lmhalt ol pulillo oiremiera, Iu some or tlm city prisons tho air Is like that or tho Illack Hole or Calcutta. I havu visited prisons where, as tlm air swept through tlm wicket, It almost knocked me down. No sunlight. Young men who had committed their first crime crowded iu among old olTcmlers. I saw In one prison a woman, with a child almost blind, who had been arrested for tlm crime of poverty, wlio was waiting until the slow law could tako her to tho almshouse, where she rightfully belonged; but slm was thrust In there with her child amid tlm most aban doned wretches of tho town, .Many of tho olTendors In that prison slept on tho floor, with nothing hut a vermin covered blanket over them. Those peoplo crowded ami wall ami wasted and half sulTocated and Infuriated. I said to tlm men, "How do you stand It herur" "God knows," mild ouo man, "wo havu to stand It." Oh, thoy will pay you when they get out. Where they burned down ouo house they will burn three. They will strike deeper tho assassin's knife. They aro this minute plotting worse burglaries. Sumo of tho city jails aru tho best places I kuow of to tunuiifucturo footpads, vaga bonds ami cutthroats. Yalu college Is not so well calculated to make scholars, nor Harvard so well calculated to make scien tists, nor Princeton ho well calculated to make theologians, as many of our Jails aro calculated to make criminals. All that those men do not know of crlmo after they have been In that dungeon for some time, Sa tanic machination cannot teach them. Iu tho lusutTerablo stench and sickening sur roundings of such places there Is nothing but disease for the body, Idiocy for tho mind, and death for tho soul. Stilled air and darkness aud vermin never turned ii thief Into au holiest man. Wo want men like, John Howard and Sir William Hlackstono and women like Eliz abeth Fry to do for tho prisons of tho United States what those peoplo did in other days for tho prisons of Kngjaml. I thank God for what Isaac T. Hopor aud Dr. Wines and Mr. Harris aud scores of others have done In tlm way of prison re form, but wo want something more radical before will como tho blessing of him who said, "I was in prison, and yo canio unto mo." TIIK CIIIMK or MISaoVKUNMKNT. Again, in your effort to arrest this plague of crlmo you need to consider untrust worthy ofllclnls. "Woo unto thee, O land, when thy king ia a child, and thy princes drink in the morning." It Is a great calamity to a city when bad men get into public authority. Why was it that in New York there was such unimralleled crime be tween 1800 and 187U It was becauso the judges of police in that city at that time for the most part wero as corrupt aa tho vagabonds that came before them for trial. . Those were the daya of high carnival for election frauds, assassination and forgory. We had all kinds of rings. There was ouo man during thoso years that got one hun dred aud twenty-eight thousand dollars in one year for serving tho public. In a few years it was estimated that there wero fifty millions of publlo treasure squandered. In those times tho criminal had only to wink to tho judge, or his law yer would wink for him, and the question was decided for tho defendant. Of tho eight thousaud peoplo arrested In that city In ono year only three thousand were punish ed. These little matters wero "fixed up," while tho Interests of society wero "fixed down." You know as well as I do that one villain who escapes only opens tho door for other criminalities. When tho two pick pockets snatched tho diamond pin from tho Brooklyn gentleman In a Broadway stage, and the villains were arrested and the trial was Bet down for tho general sessions, and then tho trial never came, and never any thing moro was heard of tho case, tho pub llo officials wero only bidding higher for moro crlmo. It Is no compliment to publlo authority when we have In all tho cities of tho coun try, walking abroad, men aud women no torlous for criminality unwhlpped of Jus tice. They aro pointed out to you in tho street day by day. There you find what aro cnlleil tho "fences," tho men who stand between tho thief and tho honest man, sheltering the thief, mid at n great price handing over tho goods to the owner to whom they belong. There you will find thoso who aro called tho "skinners," the men who hover around Wall strict, with great sleight of hand in bonds ami stocks. There you find tho funeral thieves, tho peoplo who go ami sit down and mourn with families and pick their pockets. And there you find tho "confidence men," who borrow money of you becauso they have a dead child iu tho house ami want to bury It, when they never had a house or a fami ly; or they want to go to Kuglaml aud get a largo property there, and they want you to pay their way and they will send the money back by tho very next mall. There aro the "harbor thieves," the "shoplifters, " the "pickpockets," famous all over the cities, Hundreds of them with the(r faces In tho Rogues' gallery, yet do ing nothing for the lout Ave or teu years but defraud' society aud' escape justice. Whc these people go unarrested und un puuibed It la putting a high premium inu vtr mill tctyniK " "ho yotuiu crlmi- '""I f this country, "What, u nafti thing It In to he a gloat criminal!" a'1 tliu law swoop upon them. I .el It lie Known In this country that crime will have no quar ter; that the detecthes lironflerlt; that tlm police club Is being brandished; (bat thu iron door of the prison is lielng opened; that the Judgo Is ready to call on thu case, Too great leniency to criminals Is tjo great severity to society. llll.KNI.si ISVITIM 1IIH IlKVIL Again, III your effort to arrest this plague or crime you need to consider tlm Idle pop ulation. Of course I do not lefer to people who aro getting old, or to tlm sick or to those who cannot got work, but 1 tell you to look out for those athletic men mid iMiuieu who will not work When the Krench nobleman was asked why bo kept busy when ho bad so large u propel ty he odd, "I keep on engraving so I may not hung myself," I do not euro who tlm man h, yuu cannot nlToid to be Idle. It, Is from he idle classes that tlm criminal classes ire made up. Character, like water, get.s putrid If It stands still too long. Who can wonder tl it In this world, where t hero Is m much to do, ami all the hosts or earth mil heaven aud bell are plunging into the 'iinlllct and angels are Hying and God Is at work and tlm universe Is a-quaku with the marching and counter marching, that (!od lets Ids Indignation rail upon a man who mouses Idleness!1 I have watched these do-nothings who ipenil their time stroking their beard ami retouching their toilet and criticising In lustrlous people, aud pass their days and nights lu barrooms ami club houses, loung ing and smoking and chewing aud card playing. They aro not. only useless, but limy aro dangerous, How hard It Is for them to whllu away tlm hours! Alas, for tbeiul H they do not kuow how to while 'way an hour, what will they do when they have all eternity on their hands? Theso men for a whilo smoke tlm best ci gars ami wear thu hc:t clothes and move iu the highest spheres, but I havu notlcisl that very soon they como down to the prison, tho almshouse, or stop at tlm gal lows. The polleu stations or this cluster or "It leu furnish annually between two and 'hrce hundred thousand lodgings. Fort In most part these two null three hundred thousaud lodgings ate furulshisl to able 'milled men ami women people as able to .vork as you and ! are. When they aro ie ;elved no longer at onu polleu station he can so they uro "repeaters" they go to 40UIO other station, and so they keep mov ing around. They get their food at house doors, stealing what they can lay their hands on In thu front basement while the servant Is spreading tlm bread iu tlm back basement. They will nut work. Time und again, In tho country districts, they havu wauled hundreds and thousands of labor ers. Thesu men will not go. They do not want to work. I havu tried them. I have set then) to sawing wood lu my cellar to seo whether they wanted to work. I of fered to pay them well for It. I have heard tho saw going fo.' about tlireu min utes, and then I went down, ami lot thu wood, but no saw I Thoy aro the pest or society, and they stand lu thu way of tlm lird's poor who ought to bo bellied, aud must bo helped, ami will lie helped. While there aruthoucaudsof industrious men who cannot get any work, theso men who do not want any work come lu ami make that plea. 1 aiu In favor or tho res toration of tho old fashioned whipping post for just this ono class of men who will not work sleeping at night at publlo expense lu tho station house; during tho day get ting their food at your doorstep.. Imp. Is onment does not scare them. They would like it. lllackwell's Island or Sing Slug would bo a comfortable homo for them. Thoy would havu no objection to tho alms house, for they llko thin soup, If they can not feet mock turtle. I propose this for them: On ono side of them put somo healthy work; on tho other side put a rawhide, and let them tako their choice. I llko for that class of peoplo tho scant bill of faro that Paul wrote out for tboThessaloniau loafers, "If any work not, neither should ho eat." Hy what law of Uod or man Is It right that you and I should toll day lu and day out, until our hands aru blistered and our arms ache and our brain gets numb, and then bo called upon to support what In tho United States aro about two million loafers. They aru a very dangerous class. Let tho publlo au thorities keep their eyes on them. TIIK ILL TliKATKD 1IKCOMK DKSI'KIIATK. Again, among thu uprooting classes 1 place tho oppressed oor. Poverty to n certain extent is chastening, but after that, when it drives a man to tho wall, and ho hears his children cry in vain for bread, It sometimes makes him desperate I think that there aro thousands of honest men lacerated Into vagalwndlsm. There are men crushed under burdens for which they aro not half paid. While thoro is no ex cuse for criminality, even In oppression, I state it as a simple fact that much uf tho scoundrellsm of tho community Is conse quent upon 111 treatment. There aro many men, and women battered and bruised and stung until tho hour of despair has come, and they stand with tho ferocity of a wild Ix-ast which, pursued until it can run no lunger, turns round, foaming and bleeding, to tight tho hounds. There is a vast underground Now York ami Brooklyn life that Is appalling and shameful. It wallows and steams with putrefaction. You go down tho stairs, which uro wet and decayed with filth, and at tho liottom you find tho poor victims ou tho floor, cold, sick, three-fourths dead, slinking Into a still darker corner under the gleam of tho lantern of tho police. There has not been a breath of fresh air In that room for flyo years, literally. Tho broken sewer empties Its contents upon them, and they Ho at night In the swim ming tilth. There they are, men', women, children;' blacks, whites; Mary Magdalen without her repentance, and lizarus without his God. These aro "thu dives" Into which tho pickpockets aud tho thieves go, as well as a great many who would like a illlTcreut life but cannot get It. Theso places aro thu sores of tho city, which bleed perpetual corruption. Thev aro thu underlying volcano that threatens us with a Cameras earthquake. It rolls ami roars ami surges and heaves and rocks and blasphemes and dies, ami there are only two outlets for It thu police court and the Potter's Held. u other words, they must either go to prison or to hell, Oh, you never saw It, you my. You never will s) It until on tho day when those staggering wretches shall como up lu the light ef tho Judgment throne, ami whlluall hearto aro being revealed, God will auk you what you did to help them. There Is another layer or poverty and destitution not so squalid, but almost us helpless. You hear tho lucesMiut walling lor bread ami clothes aud fire. Their eyes are Miukcu. Their check hones stand out. Their bands aro damp with slow consump tion. Their flesh Is pulled up with drop sles. 'j'helr breath Is llko that or the char uel house. They hear the rour of tho wheels of fashion overhead aud tho gay laughter of meu and maidens, aud woudcr why Qod gave to others so much and to them so little. Somo of them thtust Into nn Infidelity llko that of tlm poor German girl who, when told lu tlm midst of her wretchedness tluit God wiu) good, said: "No; no good God. Just look at mo. No good God." Ot'lt ilOO.OOO MlflKIIAW.Y I'OOIt. Iu this cluster or cities whoso cry or want I Interpret them are said to be, as far as I can figure It up from tho reports, nlxiut tlireu hundred thousand honest poor who are dependent upon Individ ual, city aud statu charities. If all their voices could come up at onco it would bo a groan that would shako tho founda tions of tlm city ami bring all earth and heaven to tlm rescue, lint for thu most part It sutlers unexpressed. It sits lu silence gnashing its teeth and suck ing thu blood of Its own arteries waiting ror thu Judgment day. Oh, I should not wonder iron that day It would ho round out that somo or us had somo things that belonged to them, somo extra garment which might have miidu them comfortable lu cold days; somu bread thrust into tlm ash barrel that mlht havu appeased their hunger for n little whllu; somo wasted ixiu dloorgas Jet that might havu kindled up their darkness; somo fresco ou the celling that would havu given them a roof; somo juwel which, biought to that orphan girl In time, might havu kept her from being crowded oil' tlm precipices) of an unclean life; somo Now Testament that would have told tlieui of him who "catim to seek ami save that which was lost." Oh, this wavu or vagrancy ami hunger and nakedness that dashes against our front door slept If thu roofs of all tlm houses of destitution could bo lifted so wo could look down Into them Just as God looks, whoso nerves would bo strong enough to stand Itf And yet thoro they nro. Tho llfty thousand sowing women lu theso three cities, somu of them iu hunger ami cold, working night after night, until sometimes tho blood spurts from nostril und lips. How well their grief was voiced by that despairing womat. who stood by her Invalid aiudmuil and invalid child, and said to tlm city missionary: "I am down hearted. Everything's against us; ami then thero aro other tilings." "What other things?" said thu city missionary. "Oh," situ replied, "my hln." "What do you mean by tlmtr" "Well," slm said, "I never hear or sen any. thing good. It's work from Monday morn ing till Saturday night, ami then when Sunday comes I can't go out, ami I walk thu lloor.uud It makes mutreiublu to think that I huvo got to meet God. Oh, sir, It's so hard for us. Wo havu to work mi, and then wo havu so much trouble, ami then wo aro getting along so poorly; and seo tills weo little thing growing weaker ami weaker; ami then tothlnk we aro not getting nearer to God, but tloatiug away from him. Oh, sir, I do wish I was ready to dlo." 1 should not wonder if thoy had a good deal bet tor limo than wo In tho future, to make up for tlm fact that thoy had such a bad time here. It would lo Just llko .lesiiti to say: "Como up ami taku tho highest seats. You suffered with mo ou earth; now bo glorified with mo In heaven." O thou weeping Ono of Ilethauyl O thou dy ing Ono of tho cross! Have "mercy on the starving, freezing, homeless poor of theso great cltle.il TIIK UPIIOOTIXU CI.ASSK3. I have preached tills sermon for four or (lvo practical reasons: Because I want you to know who aro tho uprooting classes of society. Becauso I want you to bo moro discriminating In your charities. Becauso I want your hearts open with generosity, and your hands open with charity. Be causo I want you to bo made tho sworn friends of all city evangelization, and all newsboys' lodging houses, and all chil dren's aid societies, aud Dorcas societies, under tho skillful manipulation of wives and mothers aud sisters ami daughters; let tho spare garments of your wnrdrobes bo fitted to tho limbs of tho wan ami shiv ering. I should not wonder If that hat that you give should como back a jeweled coronet, or if that garment that you hand out from your wardrolsj should mysteri ously do wuuoneii, ami somehow wrought into tho Saviour's own robe, so in tho last day ho would run his hand over It and say, "1 was naked and yo clothed mo." That would bo putting your garments to glori ous uses. But moro than that, I have preached tho sermon becauso I thought lu tho contrast you would seo how very kindly God had dealt with you, and I thought that thou sands of you would go to your comfortable homes and sit at your well filled tables and at tho warm registers, und look at tho round faces of your children, aud that then you would burst Into tears at tho review of God's goodness to you, nnd that you would go to your room and lock thu door and kneel down and say: "O Iionl, I have been an Ingrate; mako mo thy child. O Lord, thero aro so many hungry and unclad and unsheltered today, I thank thee that all my life thou hast taken such good jgiro of mo. O Iortl, thero aro so many sick am! crippled children to day, I thank thee mine aro welt somo of them ou earth, somo of them in heaven. Thy goodness, O Ixml, breaks mo down. Take mo onco ami forever. Sprinkled as 1 was many years ago at tho altar, whilo my mother held me, now I consecrate my soul to thee lu a holier baptism of repenting tears. "For sinners, Lord, thou cam'st to bleed, And I'm a sinner vllo Indeed; Iml, I believe thy grace Is free, O magnify that grace to me." A Cur llrlvnr's Story. "Yes; I'd rather bo a car driver than a private coachman In a swell family," said a stout, rosy faced young man on a Broad way car. "It's just this way: I know my hours now, ami I can say Just when I'll lie home with my wife nnd babies, and when I won't. When I was driving for the G.'s, up on Madison avenue, I never knew a minute's peace. When I had nothing to do I must lie always lu tho stable, subject to orders. I had iR-aiitlful clothes and all I could eat, but thu work came that hard on mo sometimes that I nearly died. "When thero wero visitors I was going all thu time; every night I was out till 'J or 3 in thu morning at balls and parties, nun un "in imn iiisl iiuwii aiming mc shops ami then out through thu park. At last my woman said she'd run away from mo U I didn't keep lietter hours. I spoke to tho mistress about it, and sbu said If I didn't llko my place I could leave. That night thero was a big ball at Delmnnlco's and I didn't get homo until 4 lu tho morn ing, after waiting nearly two hours iu tho coldest wind that ever blow. "I gottlowuto my house Justus tho wom an was getting up to light thu lire for breakfast. I deserved u different kind or a warm reception from .ho ouo I got. There was no usb of explaining about tho ball, l had to tnko my scolding, and it was that bad I muds up my mind to leave my place that very day. I did so, and gotajobon thu railroid bare. Now I'm all right. I ain't tony and I can't look down on poor Iicoplo the way I could from my high Ikj.y, iut 1 can get homo at night aud not get luy bead howled oil me. Met ween you und me, a car company is pretty tough ou its servants, but it isn't a marker to a swell old society woman." New York Letter, ffZZZZZZZ um 60 ALSO DO thousands op Other People. ' 3 5UPP05E THI$ YIASYOUR AUVCkiDtluCNl r A M MVTC A n. m. lAiiu w Spring, 1591. V This is the Season of the yejir when COAL is KING when Competition is Close and Everybody has the best. Then is the time to go direct to Headquarters BETTS, WEAVER & CO. and see their line and get prices. There you can get the pure article direct from America's greatest mines noted for their purity and excellent quality. Call up Phone 440. SIDEWALK AND BUILDING g BRICK Ibbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb J.A. H. W. BROWN DRUGGSITWBOOKSELLER The Choicest line of Perfumes. D. M. Ferry V Finest Flower ant1 Gfirden Seeds. 127 Soi-ith Eleventh street. 100 Engrayed Calling Cards And Copper Plate, for $2.50. If you have a Plate, we will furnish 100 Cards from. same, at $.150. WESSEL PRINTING COMPANY. PEAD THIS? RAW AA uvn. y& 4. New NOW IN. j 0V Styles PHONE 219. 1112 0 STREET. Office, 118 south nth st. VITRIFIED PAYERS bugkstaff m i f ' A .W . w