BIG CRIMINALS GONE. SPECTOR BYRNES TELLS WHY THEY LEFT NEW YORK. plim l"llol Tlu-m Too t;iM-ly. I trnMlltiiii lrti-rti VfH Ailvrrt ix-I Ity I ' Krplt Well Known f'rnokn Itotla j I iljiouiitry ul in Kur-. 1 llnsix-tir Iiyrns in to )h lK-lievel, J jih class professional criminals arc a vpassinfr fj'ii'ration. The inspector doe not mean by this that hijh class criiii have ceased, nor tljat tli-y are any less numerous than heretofore, hut that the professional who had tin; skill to plan (Treat crimes and the daring to execute them is no lomji-i ;i !i .t in'.u.-ii.vl f eature of city life. "Twelve years ago," sai'l the inspector, "there were hold, defiant and skillful bands of criminals in this city. They followed crime as a profession. Tl"y lived liy Kteiliii. l tr.-fe su.iisof money in the lower part of New York. They wero to lo seen daily on Uroadway, parading their ill rol leu gains in diamonds, in fino clothes, and in lavish expenditures of money. They scarcely took the trouble to conceal their method of gaining a Jivin.tr. In fact, there w;us little neces sity for concealment. In many cases they fo carefully covered their traeks that the law was not ahle to fasten crime tijioii miy one of them. In oilier cases, mil these were the more numerous, they avoided the consequences of their acts by compromise. "Theiersot who was rohlied preferred :to get hack some part of his money :rather than to take Iiitl i moral ground land punish the thief. ,S they made New York their headquarters ami their chief field of tjxration. These men were, -many of them, well educ ated, and all of them clever. Their plans and their ob ject were on the most extensive scale. In this way millions upon millions of dollars were stolen. They worked in gangs of from four to six. Each fjang formed a close corporation, and there was no fear of lwtrayal. I'.RK.VKIXU l f TIIK PUOFKSSION. "AlMjut twelve ye ars ago this began to . change, and has continued to change ever since. The jtolice officials began to pursue new methods with the criminals, and the new methods were successful. These professionals were brought in and photographed, and their photographs were spread abroad, so that their faces became pretty well known. They were sent up to the penitentiary whenever there was a chance for conviction, and an impression became xrevalent among them that the old time 'honor among thieves' existed no longer. They began to suspect that there were traitors. Whenever four men came together to do a job each looked askance at the three others and each feared that one of the others might be leaking to the police. When their confidence was gone the stampede began. They soon were con vinced that New York was not the place for them to operate. They still .made New York their headquarters, however. "With this city as a base of operations they worked the inland towns and Balti more and Boston and such cities along the coast. My business then became the work of following them up there. When ever a crime was reported from another city, and the criminals were thought to be New York thieves, our force helped to hunt them down. In this way many of the high class criminals were arrested here and sent to other cities, where. they were convicted and sentenced to good long terms. "Another field which they could work with New York as a base was Europe. When they no longer found it profitable to work in New York some of the best of them crossed over and forged and robbed in England and Germany and France. I have known these men to make two trips a year, and to return each time with the spoils they had gained somewhere or other. THE THIEVES OF TODAY. "We did not lose sight of them, how ever, but opened communication with the authorities over there. Sometimes we got information that a raid was to be made, and forewarned the officials over there, so that the thieves were cap . tared, or the attempt thwarted at least. "So it has come to pass that the great professionals, so notorious fifteen years .ago, are no longer heard of. They are in other parts of this country or in Eu rope. Many of them are in reniten tiaries. Nor have they left any suc cessors behind them. The men of the present generation who are criminals at heart do not pursue professional methods. There hare been few graduates of late years into the high class stealing busi ness, and there will be fewer still. No one shouH infer from this that there ara no more professional criminals. There are thousands of them hundreds in New York and they are breeding all the time. But the new criminals are all young. They are not nearly so dangerous as the old generation, because they have neither the intelligence nor the adroitness. "The professional thieves of New York are today an insignificant set, stealers of small things, clothing, a few bits of jewelry, the contents of a sidewa'k showcase. When they commit highway jobbery it is upon a poor man walking through the darker parts of the city. But it must be said for them that in tba little thefts and crimes they are more daring than were the big thieves in their great crimes. For the big thieves were wary as weli as bold, and knew the .consequences and feared to take desper ate risks. But these young small thieves know nothing of the consequences of crime and so do not care." New York JSelh. What H"ar Haa Cost France. War, without counting the Tunis and Tonkin expeditions, has absorbed 13,641, 612,008 francs, and the naval movements 3,473,761,852 more. Independent of these puma we mnst add the expenses on ac count of liquidation namely, 1,575,633. 933 francs for the replacing of materials and frtock annihilated during the war of 1870-71, and 98,026,148 francs allotted to the navy for the same purpose, which shows that war has cost France f3,040t 10,000 since 1670.--Chicago Herald. A Drauclitaman'f Dilemms. In the office of a prominent architect Ln Chicago one of the draughtsmen is a yonng man who came here from Troy, N. Y. Hi: lives at a ix-nsion on Wabash avenue. One evening during a cold snap ho had occasion to escort a young lady to her home on Thirty-fifth street, and as affairs with them had raw-hed the stage where it is pleasant to le alone together, they walked. The girl was well bundled up, but the young man was not dressed for extremely cold weather, and when they reached their destination he found that his left ear was frozen stiff. The next day he apnvared at the office with his ear ioulticed arid bandaged. His employer noticed his condition and remarked upon the extraordinary devo tion to dutv he displayed. The vounir man was greatly pleased, and for live minutes quite forgot the pain. After he had been at work for an hour or so lie found that his head was irresistibly pulled sideways by the weight of the bandage, and that it was impossible to keep it squarely on his shoulaers. But he went on with his work. Next morning his employer was any thing but gracious and informed him that all of the previous day's labor would have to be done over again, for all tho lines were out of drawing and the houses leaned perceptibly to tho north north west. The young man at tempted to draw the front elevation of a house, but found that he could not draw a perpendicular line, and that the horizontal linos would not lie flat. He couldn't account for this phenomenon until one of his fellows suggested that the bandage on his left ear, which pulled his head over toward his left shoulder, was the cause of it. The young man thought the explana tion plausible. What did he do? Hid he lie off until his ear got well? No. That evening he called upon the young lady, induced her to go out for a walk. and left his right ear exposed to thf chilling blast. When he reached honu he found that he had accomplished his purpose, ;nd that the other ear was frozen as hard as a rock. After that he hail no difficulty with his houses. Chi cago Post. Points for Yonnjj Mariners. A grizzled individual in the attire of a farm hand prowled along the docks all day. With all his rusticity of attire there was a tinge of tar and bilge water alnmt him that added to his swagger and stamped him unmistakably as a son of the sea. His movements attracted considerable attention as he boarded vessel after vessel and inspected the pumps and then whistled for the ship's dog. His cruise extended from the sea wall to Harrison street, and it was at this point that he was accosted by one of Franklin s runners. "Want to ship, old man?" he asked, as the stranger climbed down from the top- sides of the Lady Cairns. "Yes, I'm going to sea again," was the reply, accompanied by the observation mat rancmng was not wnat it was cracked up to be. f "IH get you a good ship,"u: the runner. "Well, you needn't bother. I've been to sea for forty years, and mebbe I knows enough to pick out a ship for myself." "What are you looking for?" "A fat dog and a rusty pump bolt, you bloody lubber. What do you 'spose I'm looking for?" "Come and have a drink," suggested the runner, who was anxious to learn tne connection Dei ween a iat uog ana a rusty pump bolt and a desirable ship. "Well, lads, I'll tell you," said the in timate friend of Neptune, "and you want to remember this, because 't'll be useful some day. It took me many years to larn it, but it's yours for the sake of your kindness. Mark what old George Palmer tells you when you want to ship look for a fat dog; that means the old man is liberal with his duff and youH be well fed. Look for a rusty pump bolt, 'cause that means that the craft is right and tight and the crew don't have to break their hearts and backs keeping her dry. If the pump bolt is worn and shiny look out, lada, for she's a 6ieve, and your watch below will be spent in keeping her hold dry." San Francisco Examiner. lggested The March to the Sea. Among the chief figures of the epoch of the war probably Lincoln and Sher man were the most individual and origi nal. The most romantic and picturesque of the many renowned events of that time was the march to the sea. It has already a distinctive character, like that of the Greeks in Xenophon's story of the "Ten Thousand." When the news of its successful issue reached this part of the country it served to show the simple and honest patriotism of one of the most un fortunate of the Union generals. Burnside, after the explosion of the mine at Petersburg, had been relieved, and was staying with a company of friends at a country house on Narragan sett bay. The company were all sittiug one morning upon the spacious piazza, when a messenger rode up and announced Sherman's success. Burnside's delight was enthusiastic. All thought of him self vanished. The good cause only was in his mind and heart, and running to his wife he joyfully kissed her, saying, "I know that the company feels as I do, and will forgive me." It was the feeling of a soldier as sim ple and true hearted and patriotic, but not so fortunate, as Sherman; and it was the same candor and manly sweetness of nature that softened Sherman's voice whenever he spoke of the soldiers of the war to whom fate had seemed to be un kind. He is gone, the last of the old fa miliar figures, some of his old foes bear ing him tenderly to the grave. And are not Lincoln, Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, Porter, Seward, Chase, Stanton, Sum ner ana tneir leiiows nistonc agures worthy to rank with the elder Revolu tionary group dear to all Americans? George William Curtis in Harper's. Some Chance. "What does Miss Brown mean by say ing she was born just after the war?" She means the Mexican war 1 re member her telling the same story in j '61." Munsey's Weekly. RAW AS BEEFSTEAK Baby's F arful Suffering from Skin Disease Covering Entiro Body Cured by Cutlcura M y h-.liy taken very M"k wjien lie was three months nlil and in : few ilavs lienan lireiikihK w' -lti'lv'l both of the Inm e (toctois and they could do oollunt: tor hl'n. Then we sent for the ties' lorb r i" Ka " Capitis. Mich., and lie u t r-d li in for two I II lie u I vn veie a I tie time; anil i iii-ii i in u ii in JrS lit .laeksoii. le :i d - i or w" a1 ' nde Is .j.j.i . 1 1 1 I V. I II ,SVlHe:ie. iiflll I hell He io- wnr 1 1'aii ver. - in- I li.'il mv luis Ii.im.I we ha Letter t - i In- t i i li r it a i" v M I ll i s an way ; liii iiol haveai'N i ea y li e .1 i any u I, inn in i -si n. ,ii w.i nenUis IP III -li- 1 1 Ml we ln-jran civin' I hem o liiin lie wa- eli I irely well, linn li it a si 1 mi 1 1 1 1 il . Ill- h ill' Infill prowii.j; rijjl't ll, at il w ih unlit ne w nld always h-hald h 'ail d. I li r. w.i- ii1 a spiil on hi- w hoi- Imry. I:iee. ai il head n'V lili- iio-.e and rVt'H lull what w i- a raw as lieel-st-ak o in. hi 'i-ie wa-"i.n! an lhlin; I nt 1 1. lies, and s w eak he enuld i a'se ..eii tier hand nor head . .Ml-. I iank r.aiiet;. Wii In Id. Mteli. CIITiriJKA Hi: - OLY I NT 'I h- new liloml : nil Skin l ur lier K eat M of "uiiior Ki iii-dii-s. en-aii-t-s t h- h no'l of all iiii (iitt it ns ami poisonous eh luent-. aid t nil ! mov s I he CM1 -e. w li ile I I I li I I A . i he -at .-kin euro, ai .li l il I a S Al- :ne ii ile skill ' ai.t li. r. e i ai lie i ami -alp. ate' iest... Iliehair '' I II- lie l"l I - I' i. If lot Ki I h s cere eveiy M eei i- efileli ii.u'. Inn in;:. !ea' . i mp "lid Id li l y i-kin. ealp and h.o- f" lisi-;.sei Ironi pimp es hi sen.fiil.i II.. in infaney aj-'e, w hen 1 1 e h si I'liy i iaii- tail Sold ever.N w heie. l'l iee. U i tu'I HA f 0 : Soat. L'.'.c ; It kmii v t XT, SI . I' i i at ed l'V i lie I I 1THI I 'Id : AMI inMic.M.' i- 1" l: ATI "li. i '.'M ini lor "lluw Iii i 11 re l'l.i d Diseases." Iti.SlOll. kin and J-ial. piiritlio an di 4. KT he milled liv 1 I n 1 IcA -o.i !i.IJY lis.ilulely pine. Rh?umaiic UIIU Iii one m. mile I In- i lit euia A nl i-llnin Piaster n nev s i li-i.inai ie i-iark hip. kid e, ehes. al'i mli-Clil pains and w eal- lie s s I'l ice. -Jae I f you want and iloll.s J. 1'. Youngs is the place as lie will close out Jii stock of dolls regard 1 vss of cost and unit 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ir that line of ooods. 1 his is voiir chance "Jac dolls lor I Dc. Ha by is Sick. The woefull expn sion of a Des Moines teamsters countenance showed his deep anx iety was not entirely without cause when he iiiuuired of a clrur-ist o the same city what was the best to irive to a babv for a cold? It was not necessary for him to say more, bis countenance showed that the pet of the family, if not the idol of his life was in distress. "Weerive our baby Chamberlaitis's Coufifb Remedy." was the druu ti'ists answer. "1 don't like to irive tbe baby such strong medicine," said the teamster. "You know Tohn Olesori, of the Watters-Talbot Printing Co., don't you? Inquired the drufist. His baby, when eighteen months old, irot hold of a bottle of Chamberlain Cough Remedy and drank the whole of it. Of course it the baby vomit very freely but did not hurt it the least.and what is more it cured tha baby's cold. The teamster already knew the value of the Remedy, hav ing- used it himself, and was now gat istied that there was no danger in irivinir it even to a baby. For Sale by F. G. Fricke & Co Druggists. Monkeys That Fight with Stones. The Gelada baboons sometimes have battles with the Hamadryads, especial!' when the two species have a mind to rob the same field, and if fighting in the hills, will roll stones on to their enemies. Not long ago a colon' of Gelada baboons, which had been fired at by some black 8oldiers attending a duke of Coburg Gotha on a hunting expedition on the borders of Abyssinia, blocked a pass for some days by rolling rocks on all comers. This seems to give some support to a cu rious objection raised by a Chinese local governor in a report to his superior on the difficulties in the way of opening to steamers the waters of the upper Yang-tse. The report, after noting that the inhabitants on the upper waters were ignorent men who might quarrel with strangers, went on to allege that mon keys, which inhabited the banks, would roll down stones on the steamers. '"The two last facts," the report added, "would lead to complaint from the En glish and embroil the Celestials with them, especially if the men or the mon keys kill any English." Spectator. lie Ih Against Cremation. "Don't you favor this idea of crema tion? asked the old gentleman in the horse car of the ruau who sat next to him. "No, sir, I don't," said the other man emphatically. "Cremation and crime are synonymous terms with me. 1 have been in the gravestone business long enough to know that the old f.uihioned method of burial is in every way the best." Somerville Journal. Gymnastic Exhibition The following is the programme to be riven by the Turnverein at the opera house Wednesday, May 13, 18J1: PART FIRST. Overture orcneiMxa Address I'hilip Andres of Omaha si(ii(r Double quartet e of tne luruvereiu Tableau, repres nunga gymnasium. 1'uoils auu meiiiuers in uie luntracm ralisthenics oy' class 7;umr.inUi Kv..i;iii.n Polka. Mnuurka-W Boeck Mr. and Mrs. Julius re-t-iner oi uiuuii Vvun.Ui'ii mi horizontal liars. aieniDers oi me luruveicm PART SECOND. Selection urcneu ra Wand exercises Members of the Turnverein Sodk uouoie quarieun ui mc iiunirric.il Club HwingiDf; Otto Wurl Exercises on parallel bars, . ... ..uemoers oi me luiutncm T..,nmhil,lui'l.'.intiiiii. I.nmhve Zither eolo v,- .':rllon, ii;irinlle...L"iiibanl Mr. Julius Fetner. ,. I a.IIercules,and the Spartan Warrior Sstatutory c Veiitil o Thesius. Admission 23 and 35 cents. Re served seats can be bad at J. i . Young's. Brown & Barrett have the largest and finest stock of wall paper ana borders in I'lattsmouth. wtf Will you suffer with Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint? bhiloh s lt alizer is guaranteed to cure you. 2 For lame back, side or chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. J'rice - merits. For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co. and O. H. Snyder. 3 Most birds are stoics compared to owls. and those who cultivate their acquaint ance know that they have no time wherein to make their poetical com plaints to the moon. Poets should not meddle with owLs. Shakespeare and Wordsworth alone have understood them by most others they have been scandalously libeled. The most ancient description we have of a water pump is by Hero of Alexan dre, There is no authentic account of tbe general use of the pump in Germany previous to the beginniug of the Six teenth century. At about that time the endless chain and bucket works for rais ing water from mines began to be re placed by pumps. Croun. wlioomncr cough and bronchitis immediately relieved by Shiloh's Cure. The fragrant Heliotrope in bloom wonderfully cheap at .Moore s Oreen House. more being tf "The Fair" has onlj- a few velocipede's left, which are closed out at cost. Hair chains, rings, crosses and hair work of all kinds to order. :lKS. A. KXEE. tf 17'JG Locust St. Marriage license issued to Mr, Harris (. Todd, and miss Alice Brown both of Murray. Dr. E. L. Siggens has returned and may be found hereafter at his office over Gering's drugstore. tf The ladies of the South Park cir cle will give a box social at the Bap tist parsonage, i'lonuay evening. May 11. Ladies are expected to briiur a box containing lunch for two, with the ladie's name enclosed The gentlemen will have the oppor tunity oi paying tweniy-nve cents for a box regardless ot tne shape or size of the same. Kight reserved to withhold names until boxes are purchased. The South Park band will furnish good music for the oc casion. Come one and all. d2t New Millinery Store. Mrs. C. M. Graves, dressmaking and millinery. .New goods, new prices, latest st"les. Store No. 110 South 3rd st. Plattsmouth, Neb. lni Panssies! ies: in bloom, of the most gorgeous colors. They will con tinue to bloom all summer, too, and can be selected at Moore's Green iiouseior irom to ou cents rer dtf dozen. j. . resiure, siricKeii, ana give you a luxuriant growth of hair, to keep its color natural as in youth, and to remove dandruff, use only Hall's All watches, clocks and iewelrv left for repairs atC. II. laiiiipiieu -evine oiock, rixtn street, will re ceive prompt attention. All work guaranteed and done in a workman like manner. tf S03 AM Our Clubbing List. The Ionian isles produce a loose lace, nnifpie ratber than handsome. It was used at first mainly in the churches and tombs. As antiquity more than doubles the price the shrewd natives blacken and mildew their work before offering it to the tourists, who take dirt as a voucher for ajie. J udge E. It. Hoar, the senator's broth er, is the leader of the Boston bar. He is past seventy, but still earriea himself with erectness, and his step is elastic. He' is the father of young Congressman Hoar. Globe-Democrat and Herald $2.25 Harper's Magazine " " 4. CO Harper's Bazar " " 4.80 Demorest's Magazine " 3.10 Omaha Bee " " 2 40 'oledo Blade " " 2.45 Lincoln Call " " 2.15 National Tribune " " 2.45 The Forum ' " 5.55 Inter Ocean " 2.25 Lincoln Journal " " 2 30 The Home Magazine " " 1 85 Cough ayrup. Koch's Lymph is good in its place but no remedy has been put on the market and had such marvelous rsales in so short a time as Haller'a Sure Cure Cough Syrup. We guar antee it io cure any cough, cold, bronchitis or sore throat. For sale bv all druggists. :9 1'( The Waehingtton Areuue GROCERS a No- Provision Merchants. Headquarters for FLOUR AND FEED, We pay no rent and sell for CASH. You don't'pay any bills for dead beat when jou buy of this firm. The Hand. best SOFT COAL always ot DON'T IFOIFtG-ET AT THE 5 OOIRlsriEIRS Opposite Ilichey Brog Lumber office Time Table GOING WK8T GOING EAST No 1, 3 :30 a. m No 2 5 :05 p. m. "3 5:45 p. m "4 10:30 a. m 5, 9 :25 a. m. " 8 7 ;44 p. m. 7 i ris a. m. "io 9 :45 a. m. "9 6 :25 p.m. "12 10 :14 a. m. 11 5 :25 p. m. "20 8 :30 a. m. " 19 11 :05 a. m. 1Q L THE LEADINQ GROCERS HAVE THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY. EVERYTHING - FRESH - AND - IN - SEASON ATTENTION FARMERS We want your Poultrv T'o-o-o r.. icr cinci VOl r fnrti T-.. !.. . . . . . j" uutc oi ail kinds, we will pay you the highest cash price as we are buying for a fim in Lincoln. 3 a B. PETERSEN, THE LEADING GROCERS Plattsmouth - . Vo, , The Citizens BANK PLATTSMOUTH -Jayltal stock paid jn NEBRASKA Authorized Capital, fVooVooo. esooe A. CON No K OFFICER c ha iv UAKKUTI1. J()S P.i,i . w. u. dram,,. cr;" OlllCCTnRi Trank Carruta J. A. Coonor. K R r,K '""m. wn. Wetencamp. W H. dishing. " TRANSACTS!! GEKEfiAL banking ddsines MUe9 CPltlflCa.tPl of df rtn.lr. , s I