,ytnn;;jpgBM WWWPPMllHill WBfW wmmmmN'imn ntnium t m n i ui.w.i..w.. wmmmauIUWE& rSS3$iJ JfoAm CAPITAL Cl'lY COURIER, SATURDAY JULY 4, 1891. I I ASTRAY BUT RECOVERED OR. TALMAQE PnEACHES ON THE NECESSITY OF A REDEEMED. eMitty, lthna ml Cum fort t'nmiil In tlir Flflythlnl Clinitrr uf linlnli llor anil Whjr Mm nml Alirrp On A.trnjr. I WlioMirtrr Will, 11 Him Conir. 1 JlKOOKLYN, Jiiiiu 28, Dr. TaltiMKo' wr mon today I of mi decidedly ovmiikoIIchI u diameter oa to prove conclusively Mint while mi many eminent preacher of tlio day nro drifting awny from tlio old fmli toned (Impel lio remain firm In tint pittlm el orthodoxy. HI miliject In "Antray, tint Recovered," nml liU text, Iimlnti llll, tl: "Allwoukonliw'iihiivoKiiiioiiiitrnyi ami tlio IaihI luitli lnld on him tlio Iniquity of tu nil." Within ninety yenrs nt tho ItuiKent nil who hear orreml tliln ftcrmon will Ihi In eternity. During thu next fifty yean you will nenrly nil I hi koiio. Tho uoxt ton wnta will out n wide nwiitli iiiiioiik thu coplo. Tlio year 18K1 will to mime lw tho llnnllty. Buch connlilorntloiiH tniiku tliloccimloii ufo orliliiK and nioiunntotm. Tliu first half of my text In nn Indictment, "All wu llku tieep hnvo itouo nxtnty." Some ouo Miyni "Cnn you not drop tlio II mt wonlr Tlmt U too Ki'iiurult tlmt Hwct'ii.H too Kront n circle." 6inv innii rlxci In tlui niiilluucti nml ho lookn over on t ho ootlto ndlo of tlio homo, and lio Hnym "Them It a liliinplieiner, nml I andomtnnd how ho lint none nitrny. And tliort) in another part of tho liouxe I u do frnudrr, nml ho hat untie nut ray. Ami tltoro In nn Impure pcrion,aud ho has none Mtrny." Bit down, my brother, nml look at homo. Uy text taken iim all In. It Mart behind tho pulpit, nw'eepi the circuit of tho room ml come back to thu point wheru It Urtcd, whon It nays i "All wo Itko ulieep lutvo koiio iwtrny." I can very cosily untler Und why Martin Luther throw up IiIh bands after ho had found tho Illblo nnd cried out, "Ohl my sins, my slim," nnd why the publican, according to tho custom to this day In the oast, whou thoy hnvo any great grief, beiiaii to hunt hlinxolf nnd cry aa hoimote Ukii his breast, "Ood bo morel ful to me a sinner." OXUSTHATION ritOM TIIK BlIKI'llKtlD'fl MFIC. I nn, like ninny of you, brouRht up In tho country, aud 1 know some of tho hnblu of beep and how thoy got astray, nnd what y text means when It say, "All wo like sheep have jjono astray." Sheep got astray la two ways, cither by trying to got Into other pasture, or from being Beared by tlio dogs. In tho former way some of us got astray. Wo thought tho religion of Jcmis Christ short commons. Wo thought there was better pasturage somewhere else. We thought if we could only lio down on the banks of distant streams or under great oaks on tho other side of somo hill wo might be better fed. Wo wanted other pasturage than tlmt which God through Jesus Christ gnvo our soul, and wo wandered on and wo wan tiered on, nnd wo wore lost. We wanted bread aud wo found garbage. Tho further we wandered, Instead of llndlng rich pas turage, wo found blasted heath nnd sharp er rocks and more stluglug nettles. No pasture. How was It In tho worldly groups when you lost your child f Old they como around and cousole you very much? Did not tho plain Christian uiiiu who came Into your house ami sat up with your darling child give you more comfort than all worldly associations? Did nil tho convivial songs you over heard comfort you In that day of bereavement so' much M the song thoy sang to you, purhapa the wry song that was sung by your little child tho last Sabbath afternoon of her lifef There Is a happy land, far, far away, Where saints immortal relt". brluht, brlfht as day. Did your business associates in that day of darkness aud trouble give you any espe cial condolence f Business exasperated you, business wore you out, business left you limp as a rug, business made you mad. You got dollars, but you got no peace. God have mercy on tho mail who has uoth Ing but business to comfort him. The world afforded you no luxuriant pastur age. A famous English actor stood on the stage impersonating, and thunders of ap plause enmo down from the galleries, and many thought It was the proudest moment of all his life; but there was a man asleep Just In front of him, and tho fact that that mnu was Indifferent aud somnolent spoiled all the occasion tor him, aud ho cried, "Wake upl wake up!" So one little annoyance In life has been more pervading to your mind than nil the brilllaut congratulations aud successes. Poor pasturage for your soul you found in this world. Tho world has cheated you, the world has belled you, the world has misinterpreted you, the world has perse cuted you. It never comforted you. Ohl thbi world it a good rack from which 'a hone may pick his hay; it is a good trough from which the swluo may cruuch their mess; but it gives but little food to a soul blood bought and Immortal. What is a soulr It Is a hope high as the throne of God. What is u man r You say, "It is only a man." It Is only a mnu gone overboard In buslucss life. What Is a manf The battleground of three worlds, with his hands taking hold of destinies of light or darkness. A manl No line can measure him. No limit can bound him. Tho arch angel before the throne cannot outlive him. The stars shall die, but he will watch their extinguishment The world will burn, but he will gate on the conflagra tion. Endless ages will march on; he will watch the proiosslon. A manl -The mas terpiece of God Almighty. Yet you say, "It is only a man." Can a nature llko that be fed on husks of the wilderness? Substantial comfort will not grow i On nature's barren soil; 1AJ1 wo can boast till Christ we know Is vanity and toil. TUOSK WHO 8TUAY IN TKOUULK. Some of you got astray by looking for better pasturage; others by being scared of the dogs. The hound gets over into the pasture field. The poor things fly In every direction. In a few moments they are torn of the hedges and they are plashed of the ditch, and the lost sheep never gets home unless the farmer goes after it. There is nothing so thoroughly lost as a lost sheep. It may have been lu 1857, during the finan cial panle, or during the financial stress in the fall of 1873, when you got astray. You almost became an atheist. You said, "Where is God, that honest men go down and thieve prosperf" You were dogged of creditors, you were dogged of the banks, you were dogged of worldly disaster, and some of you went into misanthropy, aud some of you took to strong drink, aud oth ers of you fled out of Christian association, and you got astray. O maul that was the last time when you ought to have forsaken God. Steading amid the foundering of your earthly fortunes, how could you get along without a God to comfort you, and a God to deliver you, and a God to help you, and a God to save your You tell me you have been through enough business trouble si- most to kill you, I know It. I cannot un demand how thu boat could live one hour In that chopped sea. Hut I do not know by what process you got astray; somu In ono way, and some lit another, ami If you could really sen tho portion somu of you occupy before God this morning, your soul would burnt Into nn agony of tears nml you would H'lt tho heavens with tho cry, "God hnvo innrcyl" Blunt' batteries havu been uullmheivd nlmve your soul, nml nt times you have heard It thunderi "Tho wages of sin Is death," "All have sinned aud como short of tho glory of Ood." "My ouo mnu sin entered Into thu world, nnd death by sin; nml so death passed upon nil men, for tlmt nil have sinned." "Thu soul tlmt slnneth It shall die." When Sebastopnl was Ixilng bombarded, two Ittisslnti frigates burned all night In tho harlror throwing a glare upon the trembling fortrvMt, ami mjiiio of you aro standing In tho night of your soul's t rou ble. The cuunomidu ami tho tontlagrn tioti, the multiplication of your sorrows nml trouble I think must make thu wings of God's hovering unguis shiver to thu tip. Hut thu Inst part of my text opens n door widu enough to let us all out ami to let nil heaven In. Bound It on thu organ with nil thu stops nut. Thrum It on thu harps with nil the strings ntuiiu. With nil thu melody ptmlhlu let thu heavens sound It to thu earth nnd let the earth tell It to thu heavens. "Thu Iord hath laid on trim thu lnl(iilty of us nil," I am glad that thu prophet did not stop to explain whom ho meant by "him." I lint of thu manger, him of thu bloody sweat, him of thu resur rection throne, him of thu cruclllxlon ngoiiy. "On him thu Iunl hath laid thu Iniquity of us nil." CIIIIIHT COMKHTOTIIK FAM.KK. "Oh," says somu man, "that Is nut gener ous, that Is not fair; let every man carry his own burden nml pay his own debts." That sounds reasonable If I havu nn ob ligation nnd I hnvo thu means to meet It, nnd I cnuiu to you nml ask you to settle tlmt obligation, you rlghllyMiy, "Pay your own debts." If you nnd I walking down tho street, both hale, hearty and well, I ask you to carry me, you say, and say rightly, "Walk on your own feetl" But supposo you nnd I were in a regiment nnd I was wounded In the bnttki nnd I fell uncon scious at. your feet with gunshot fractures aud dislocations, what would you dor You would call to your comrades saying, "Como and help, this man Is helpless; bring the ambulance; let us take him to tho hospital," aud I would bo a dead lift In your arms, nnd you would lift me from tho ground where I hod fallen mid put mo In the nmbiil lino and take mo to the hos pital mid have nil kindness shown mo. Would there bo anything mean lu your do ing that? Would there bo anything be moaning In my accepting that kindness? Oh, no. You would bo mean not to do It. That is what Christ docs. If wu could pay our debts then it would bo better to go up and pay them, saying, "Here, Iml, here is my obligation; hero aro tho means with which I menu to settle that obligation; now give mo a receipt; cross It nil out." The debt is paid. Hut tho fact is we hnvo fallen In the battle, wu hnvo gone down under thu hot fire of our transgressions, wo hnvo been wounded by the sabers of sin, wu aro helpless, we aro Undone. Chlst comes. The loud clang heard In tho sky on that Clu-istiuas night was only tho bell, tho resounding bell, of the ambulance. Clear the way for the Son of God. lie comes down to bind up tlio wounds, and to scatter the darkness, and to save the lost. Clear thu way for tho Son of God. ' Christ comes down to see us, aud wo are a dead lift. lie does not lift un with thu tips of his fingers. Ho does not lift us with ono arm. Ho conies down upon his knee, and then with n dead lift ho raises us to honor nnd glory und immortality. "The Lord hath laid on him tho iniquity of us all." Why, then, will no man carry his slusf You cannot carry successfully tlio smallest sin you ever committed. Yon might as well put tho Apennines ou ono shoulder nnd tho Alps on thu other. How much less can you carryall tho sins of your lltotimul Christ comes and looks down In your fnco and sn(vsi "I have como through all the lacerations of these dnya nnd through nil tho tempests of these night. 1 hnvo como to bear your burdens, mid to pardon your sins, mid to pay your debts. Put them ou my shoulder; put them ou my heart." "On him the Ixml hath laid tho Iniquity of us all." NO IIUST FOIl THE WICKED. Sin hits almost pestered the life out of some of you. At times It has made you cross and unreasonably, and It hits spoiled the brightness of your days nnd tho pence of your night. Thero aro mun who have been riddled of sin. . The world gives them no solace. Gossamer aud vAlntilu the world, while eternity, as Uiey look forwanl to It, is black as midnight. They writhe under tho stings of n conscience which proposes to give no rest hore and no rest hereafter; and yet they do not repent, they do not pray, they do not weep. They do not real ize that Just the position thoy cccupy Is the position occupied by scores, hundreds and thousands of mon who uover found any hope., ' If this meeting' should be thrown open and the people who am hero could glvo their testimony, what thrllllnguxporiouces we should hear on all sides! There is n man in the gallery who would say: "I had brilliant surroundings, I had the best edu cation that one of the best collegiate insti tutions of this country could glvo, nnd I observed nil the moralities of life, and I was self righteous, aud I thought I was all rigut ueioro uotl as I am all right before men; but the Holy Spirit came to me one day nnd said, 'You aro a sinner;1 the Holy Spirit persuaded me of the fact. While I had escaped the sins ngainst the Jaw of the land I had really committed tho worst sin a man ever commits the driving back of the Sou of God from my heart's affections. And I saw that my hands were red with the blood of tho Son of God, and I begau to Sray, and peace came to my heart, aud I now by experience that what you say this morning Is true, 'On him tho Lord hath laid the iniquity of us nil.' " Yonder Is a man who would say; "I was the worst drunkard In New York; I went from bad to worse; I destroyed myself, 1 destroyed my home; my children cowered when I entered the house; when they put up their lips to be kissed I struck them; when my wife protested against the mal treatment, I kicked her Into the street. I know all the bruises and all the terrors of a drunkard's woe. I went ou further and further from God uutll one day I got a let ter saying: "Mr Dsah Husband I have tried every way, dono everything, and uravnl unrtwxtlv and fervently for your reformation, but It seems or no avail. Slucoour little Henry died, With the exception of those few happy weeks whin you reuiuinod sober, my life has been one of sorrow. Many of the nlitbts I have sat by the window, with my faco bathed in tears, watculuB for your coming. I am broken hearted. 1 am sick. Mother end father have been here frequently and bowed mo to come home, but my love for you and my hope for brighter days have always mado mo refuse them. That hope seems now beyond realisa tion, and 1 have returned to them. It is uurtl. and I ba;tled long before dnluu It. May Uod ' bless and preserve )iiii,ainl tnko from you that aociimeu npiH-iiiunnu liasien tlioilny when we hull tie attain IIvIiik happily together. This will lo my dally prn)er, knowing that ho has alii, 'Coiiiii tiiiliiiiinnll ye that labor nnd are heavy laden, and t will glvo you rent.' From your loving wife, Mauv, "And so I wandered ou and wandered on," says that man, "uutll ono night I passed n Methodist meeting house, und I said to myself, 'I'll go In mid see what thoy nro doing,' aud I got to thu door, nml they wero singing! All may como, Whoever will, This mail roeolve Kxr sinners still. "And 1 dropped right thero where I was nnd I said, 'God have mercy,' mid ho had mercy on mo. Aiy homo Is restored, my wife sings all day long during work, my children como out it long way to greet me home, mid my household Is it little heaven, I will tell you what did all thin for mo. It was thu truth that this day you proclaim, 'On hint thu Iord had laid thu Iniquity f us till.'" TIIK UIIUNKAtll) ANII TIIK OUTCAST. Yonder Is a woman who would sayt "I wandered oir from my fathur's hoiisoj I heard thu storm that pelts ou a lost soul; my reel wuro blistered on tho hot rocks. I went on ami on, thinking that no ono cared for my soul, when ono night Jesus met tuu und ho wild! 'Poor thing, go liomul your father Is waiting for you, your mother Is waiting for you. Go home, poor thliigi' And, sir, I was too weak to pray, and 1 was too weak to repent, but I Just cried out; I soljbed out my sins ami my sorrows on the shoulders of him of whom It Is said, 'the Iml hath laid on him tho Iniquity of us nil.' " Thero Is n young man who would sayt "1 had a Christian bringing up; I camu from thu country to city llfu; I started well; I had a good position, a good com mercial M)sltlon, but one night nt tho the ater I met somo young men who did me no good. Thoy dragged mo till through the sowers of iniquity, aud I lost my morals nnd I lost my position, mid I was shabby aud wretched. I wits going down the street, thinking that no otiu cared or me, when a young man taped mo ou thu shoulder nml said, 'George, como with mo and I will do you good.' I looked at him to see whether ho was Joking or not. I saw ho was In earnest and I said, 'What do you menu, elrr' 'Well,' he replied, 'I mean If you will como to thu meeting tonight I will bo very glad to introduce you. I will meet you at tho door. Will you como?' Said I, 'I will.' "I went to tho place whero I was tarry ing. I llxed myself up its well as I could. I buttoned my coat over tt ragged vest ami went to the door of the church, nnd the young man met me and wo wont lu; ami as I went In I heard an old man praying, and he looked so much llko my father I sobbed right out; mid they were nil around so kind and sympathetic that I Just gave my heart to God, mid I know this morning that what you say Is true; I buliuvu tt in my own experience. 'On him the Lord ' hath laid thu Iniquity of us nil.' " I Oh, my brother, without stopping to look as to whether your hand trembles or not, wituout stopping to look whether your hand is bloated with sin or not, put it in my hand, let mo glvo you ono warm, brotherly, Christian grip, and Invito you right up to tho heart, to tho compassion, to tho sympathy, to tho pardon of him on whom thu Lord had laid thu iniquity of us all. Throw nwny your sins. Carry them nolouger. I proclaim emancipation this morning to all who aro bound, pardon for all sin, and eternnl life for all tho dead. Somo ono comes here this morning, and I stand osldo. He comes up these steps. He comes to this place. I must stand aside. Taking that place ho spreads abroad his hands, and thoy wero milled. You sea his feet, they wore bruised. Ho pulls aside tho rolw nml shows you his wounded heart. I say, "Art thou weary r" "Yes," ho says, "weary with tho world's woo." I say, "Whence contest thour" Ho says, "I como from Calvary." I suy, "Who comes with theef" Ho says, "No one; I have trodden thu winepress nlouol" I sny. "Whv earnest thou heror" "Oh," ho says, "I caino hero to carry nil the sins nnd sorrows of tho people." Aud ho kneels and ho says. "Put on mv shoulders all tho sorrows and nil the sins." And, conscious of my own sins first, I tnko them und put them on tho shoulders of tho Son of God. I sny. "Canst thou bear nnv more, O Chrlstr" Ho says, "Yea, more." And I gather up tho sins of nil those who servo at these oltnrs, the officers of tho utiurcii or Jesus Christ I gather up nil their sins nnd put them ou Christ's shout. dew, nnd I say, "Canst thou bear any moror" Ho says. "Yea. more." Then I gather up nil the sins of it hundred people iu mis iiuuso, nun i put mem ou tlio shoul ders of Christ, mid I say, "Cnnst thou boar morer" Ho says, "Yea, more." And I gather up till tho sins of this assembly, and I put them on thu shoulders of thu Sim nf God and I sny, "Canst thou benr theiu" "Yea," he says, "morul" UK HATH UOUSK OUIl Tlt.VNSUItESSIOKS. But he Is departing Clenr tho way for htm, the Son of God. l'011 tlie door mid let'hlm pass out:- He is carrying our sins and bearing them away. Wo shall never see them again. He throws them down into the abysm, nnd you hear the long ro verberating echo of their fall. "On him tho Lord hath laid the iniquity of us nil." Will you let him take nwny your sins to dayr Or do you say, "1 will take charge of them myself; I will fight my own bat tles; I will risk eternity on my own no countr" A clergyman said in his pulpit ono Sabbath, "Beforo next Saturday night one of this audience will have nnascd out of llfo." A gentleman said to another seated next to him: "I don't bellevo it. 1 mean to watch, and It It doesn't come true by next Saturday night I shall tell that clergyman his falsehood." Tho mnu seated next to him said, "Perhaps it will bo your self." "Oh, no," the other replied; "I shall live to bo an old mini." That night he breathed his lust. Today tho Saviour calls. All mny como. God never pushes a man off. God never destroys anybody. The mnn Jumps off. It Is suicide soul suicide it tho man per ishes, for tho invitation is, "Whosoever will, let him come." Whosoever, whoso ever, whosoever! In this day of merciful visitation, while many are coming into the kingdom of God, Join the procession heavenward. Seated among us during a service was a man who came In and said, "I don't kuow that there is any God." That was on Fri day night. I said, "We will kneel down and find out whether there Is any God." And lu the second seat trout the pulpit we kuelt. He sold: "1 have found N in. There Is a God, a pardoning God. I feel him here." He knelt In tho darkness of sin. Ho arose two minutes afterward in the lib erty of the Goel; while another sitting under the gallery ou Friday night said, "My opportunity IS gone; Inst week I might have been wived, not now; the door Is shut." And another from the very midst nf ,I.U MIAtllll. j1..l(.i l... .u.inl. B....1....1 !ut bii :i.iHtt, inn"K iliw nriin, i iiaiiuti out of the front door of the Tubermiclu, I laying, "I am a lost man." "Heholdl the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin of the world." "Now ! the accepted time. Now is the day of salvation." "It is tip- pointed unto nil men ouce to die, mnl after Unit the Judgiuentl" WHO WILL BE REMEMBERED? A CorrmMiiiletit Tnkrs Issim with Liiniincry Mitchell Depow. Hjoclid CorrespondcDce. New YoitK, Juno 25. When Dr, Cliauiicey Mitchell Dcimw sattl in his ntldruM nt tlio unveiling of tho Grant monument at Galena, that of all Ameri cans down to this titno only five would bo remembered by tlio pcoplo thousand yenrs henco namely, Washington, Hamilton, Webster, Lincoln ntitl Grant there wns a conslderiiblo cry of dis sent TltereuiKin tho doctor guvo nn ex planatory interview, in which lio mild: nut. I.I....1 . ts. . "wiiHiiiugiuii mm Hamilton wero tlio constructors, Webster took up tho work thoy lirtil begun, Lincoln and Grant finished tlio work. It is only tlio con structive men who aro remembered by tho mans of tlio iieoplo." This1 is hows, indued. Most general renders certainly thought tlmt Alttric tlio Goth, ntitl GtMiserio tlio Vandal, nnd Attiltt tho Hun wero remembered, mid that thoy wero not very "constructive." And Hannibal the Carthaginian most peoplu lutvo heard of him and Tamer Inno and Unjuzot and Genghis Khan, Wnllunstoiii nnd Tilly uro remembered by most Germans perhaps Dr. Depow would gy it was because thoy con structed desorta in Germany. Certainly nil tlio abovo named uro as well remem bered as liny constructive men of their time. On second thoughts somo of these mun niight lie said to bo of it "constructive" tendency Tamerlane, for instance He constructed a pyramid of 00,000 corpses iu Bagdad. This was tho way he cele brated July 0, 1101. On his way to Delhi, in India, finding lilinsolf encum bered with captives, ho hud an oven 100, 000 of them massacred to construct n gravoynrd, probably, as Dr. Deiww would say. Ho overran southern Russia, burned Azov, and finally, in 1403, mini hilatcd tho tinny of Bajnzet and cap tured that twtentuto, whom ho took around with him in un iron cage as long us tho enptivo lived. Tamerlane's great ancestor, Genghis Khun, might perhaps bo culled construct ive, us ho issued a codo of laws to tho effect that there was but ono God, and therefore should lie but one khan, and ho wits that khan. Ho conquered nnd captured ninety adjacent khans, throw ing his captives into kettles of boiling wntor. Invading China ho burned nino- ty-six cities nnu mnny Hundred villages, slaughtered some 10,000,000 iieoplo, and constructed it desert us big as Texas. In central and western Asia he did even better. Civilization wits utterly destroyed from China to India and Arnbia, and, al though tho people of those countries aro inclined to exaggeration, their statement that ho caused tbn loss nt 1 no nnn nnn lives is considered reasonable. Yet ho seems to bo remembered even by "the mass of the people" in Asia anyhow. Hannibal slaughtered tho mon of Italy llko sheen, killing 50000 nr (to OoO Inn battle, nnd novor constructed anything worth naming; yet tho American who nas not neurit or Hannibal must bo a nhonomenon of itrnoriinee. Tlin rhnnra are at least oven that Wilkes Booth will bo remembered us long ns Lincoln, and it's a safe bet that more Americans can quote tho refrain of tho last verses of Guitenu this mlnuto than thero aro who can quote any speech of Garfield's. And does not tho poet tell us that Tho aspiring youth who tired tho Kphcslnn dome Outlives lu memory tho pious fool who reared it. Most people, it is true, cannot name either olfhiiud, but why enlarge? Tlio plain truth is that Dr. Dopow's gonoral statement is not in accord with tho iop ular way of thinking. Perhaps people ought to romomber their benefactors and tho constructive men best, but they don't. If thero is any difforenco notico ablo it is the great destroyers who aro best rememliered. If you want to test this go and ask your acquaintances nt random: "Who was Dr. Priestly? Who invented chloroform? Who introduced vaccination? Who was Dr. Marion Siinins, nnd what did ho introduce? Who began tho groat modern reform in prison management?" And when three fourths have answered that thoy don't know, then ask them about tho Bender family and Nero and Lucretia Borgia. Dr. Depew's particular application in tho case of Alexander Hamilton is un fortunate. Impartial history says that the convention of 1787 took ouo good look at Hamilton's plan for u govern ment and rejected it unanimously. Ham ilton did a great work to be sure in get ting the convention together and induc ing the states to ratify its work; but ho mado no secret of the fact that ho had no faith in tho government "only ox pectod it to last till a better ono could be f ruined." Ho was a monarchist. Hera is his own statement: "The best form, not attainable by us, but to which we should approach as near us possible, is the British constitution. Ite houso of lords is a most noble institution. It seems to bo admitted that no good executive can bo established upon Republican principles." But let us ap ply an everyday test Ask the average schoolboy who Hamilton wits, and ho will answer that ho was tho follow Aaron Burr killed in a duel. Hamilton did indeed havo a "con structive intellect." So has Jay Gould. So had Napoleon Bonaparte. If the avorogo man were asked to name the great "constructive intellects" of this age, is thero any doubt that ho would uumo such great captains of industry us Gould, Vanderbilt, Carnegie, the Astors and ttossibly Dr. Depew himself? Aud yet who would think of handing over to that class tho job of constructing a gov ernment for a democratic-republican people? As to Thomas Jefferson well, he drafted the Declaration of Independ ence, the "Act for the Freedom of Reli gion" (1780) in Virginia and soveral mes sages and other stuto papers of marked ability. Ho bought the great Louisiuua territory and provided the plans for or ganizing governments in thu great north west. If half or more of us Americans credit him with the poiwesslou of a "great constructive intellect," it is be lieved that we can present pleas in miti gation. l H. Bkadi.k. A BARGAIN! -- THIS WEEK ONLY! 600 Glotb Top Lace Slioes FOR $4.00. Parker & 1009 THE OLD Ch "OFFERS" SPECIAL SALE THIS W66K ON ALL OltADES OK CARPET1NGS Our work speaks for itself, it needs no brag or bluster, simply your own opinion will testify to its merits. A. M. DAVIS & SON. Phone 219. 1112O Street. Opened Jan, 1, '91, All Improvements The Lincoln, TKKMH-I2.&0 TO t.C0. be latter price Includes Untlix. 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