Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 13, 1883, Page 1

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e, THE OwMAHA DALy BEE w B L umbur THIRTFLNTH YEAR. OMAHA, NEB. TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13, 1853, NU. = William$S Are you looking tor Bargains in Silks? No Matter what other say. we confidently assert that you can find no8uch Bargains in [ BLACK AND COLORED SILKS! As we now offer. ONE SPECIAL LOT OF BROCADES, {n Seal, Bronze and Navy, at 50c per y vard, formerly sold at $1.2 The above is the Greatest Reduction Ever made on any ar- ticle of Merchandise. 20 Inch G. 6. Fine Dress Silk, at 80c¢ per yard. reduced from, and worth $1.15. | Lot Golored & Black Silk Rhadames at $1.00, worth $1.25 1 any market. 21 BLACK SATIN RHADAMES g S7 ‘e, former price $1. 2| In. Extra Heavy all Sllk Rhadames, at $1.25, 1educed from $1.75. 21 Inch Satin Rhadames, $1.25 , reduced from $1.75. We have made corresponding reductions on all our silks. “We Will Not be Undersold.” L. B. WILLIAMS & SON, Cor. 15th and Dodge Streets. The Latest ftyles of Cloaks and Wraps Arriving Daily. OMAHA, NEB._ NINE LEADERS ! IMPORTANT TO BUYERS OF Plaos & Droans Out of the many hundred manufac. turers of this line of goods, we lay claim | to representing the leading makers, and can show a more complete and larger line of Pianos and Organs than can be found | in ane ONE House in the west. Our | NINE LEADERS are the following well known and celebrated instruments, [ OLDEST WHOLESALE & RETAIL JEWELRY HOUSE IN OMAHA. Visitors can here find all the mnovelties| in SILVERWARE, CLOCKS, RICH AND STYLISH JEWELRY, Latest, Most Artistic, and Choicest | STEINWAY PIANOS, Selections in CHICKERING PIANOS, KNABE PIANOS, Precious sStomnos VOSE PIANOS PEASE PI NOS 2 AND ALL DESCRIPTIONS of FINE WATCHES. AT AS LOW PRICES SCHON CLOUGH & WARREN ORGANS, STERLING IMPERIAL ORGAN We want everyboay desiring a Vlano or Organ to call or write to us for infor- mation and GET POSTED. We can sell | yo& the best instrument made for the | least money, if you will give us a trial | and want to buy, All we ask 18 to show you, as we know we can satisfy everybody fromour Nine Leaders, which are racog nized by those posted, as the best made. nd or cataloyue and price list THE OLDEST WHOLESALE & RETAIL MAX MEYER & BRO., WAREROOMS Cor, 11th & Farnam ! ¢s., Omaha. STOVES, STOVES! = As is compatible with honorable dealers, Call and see our eleg 1% new s ore, Tower Building, CORNER 11TH AND FARNAM STS *MAX MEYER & BRO., MANUFACTURERS OF} SHOW CASES! A large stock alwavs on hand. —~ The largest assortment, the best stock, the lowest prices, on Base Burner and Heater Cooking Stoves, LANGES, BOTH CAST IRON AND WLOUGHT. At prices that that defy competition, JOHN H. ERCK, G615 and 617 North V6th Street PETER C. MILLER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Wall-Pager and Window Shadesand Painting in all its Branches, FRESCOING IN MODERN STYLE, No.1l8 South Fearl St. Council Bluffe. | ARION PIANOS - NGER CYMBELLA ORGANS, in | A-GREAT-PROBLEM FROM suzznnns T0 BLAZES |vrious #1000 seven por cont. coniv TAKE ALL THE In short, tal the best qual best] te Louis, Mo. A groc all 3the best¥qu ios of all the \ CAL INSTITUTE, Propriet disorders of the 1 few avor to a el toall sum beware of conr MEDICIN PURIFIERS, RHEUMATIC Kidney & Liver 'Blood ‘REMEDIES, Dyspepsia And Indigestion Cures. Ague, Fever, And Bilious Specities | Braln & Nerve FORCE REVIVERS, | | wise damaged. Great 'Health RESTORERS drops. the bust remedy that can be Wil cure when 10 chron sia and live plaint and in chronic constipation an other obstina pirt a del of champagne,and | “'ry it, but A<k Your for the gennine er drinks. erfeits, tiea ot all these, and st medicines in the World and you will find that HOP BITTERS have the trative qualitios and powers of all concentra n them, and that they of these, singly or combined, fail will give positive proof this v or al A thorough trial | Bittors allcompari ake wdard o 4 b BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS, Anexcellent appetizing tonic of x r the psin 0 all it J J W. WUPP[HIMNH Snle Agont. | hotel, a 1 Sucemnr b J. W. Haxcor, | mmosTema wrrTese g rondway. N. Y. 'MANHOOD RESTORED. Avictim of carly impraden ity, promaturo do known pemey aura, which Auum-..l . RE IR, HENDERSON, [.nch 80Ban:{ 603\ KANSAS CITY, M = 9 Chron i to | tion free and conid important tod —and circulars of o Authorized by the atate to trea I minal Wo jor wo 3 oont stamps. R atients at a di ential—call or wi med odw . causing norsous de! aving tried in vain o - lity (los nfsex noney refunded egular_graduate fo | stroyed, Ovor Kixtoen foo—twelve o o diseanos, s, Piles, o} e Worm, Urinary and Skin Dis ht losses) i DR. WHITTIER 617 St Charles St., St, Lams, Mo. | ployed in Wilbur's fuctory, most of whom | invited treatment, overywhe cines can be s Curable cases existy it iy frankly stated. ervous Prostration, De CASES roceive spec from Tmprudence, Excesses, Indul | MARRIAGE MANU WHOLESALE & RETAIL, Midard F et CMAHA, il s tiention. s and cure, 3 of two me £ in the treatment AND BLOOD Diseas: " onsultation t to visit the city for by mail or expros od; where or write, ¥, Mental and Physica Weakness, Morcurial and other affections of Throat, | 100 tmpurities and_Blood Poison | 9, Ol Soros and Ulcors, Imped! Special at- | 200 page JFACTURER, Bl olleg ree and not. or 260 t 26-dawly e dis. | Hostotter' rant is confessedly un equelied Blmm RS : CREAT:ENCLISH REMEDY. ERVOUS Db Ok, Spermatorr. | ox | sans, fons | r) &1 | fire oubt \ M thewhole story welltold. Many | receipts; who may | marry,whom |A Blowhard of Tmmsndnus Power | Sweeps the Lakes and Bastern Slatcs ‘va‘nl Havoc Mouuts the Bosom | of the Gale and Pulls the Lines for 48 Hours. | A Firo in Shenandoah, Pa., Proves } a Costly Plaything for the (B Hurricane. While Two Factorles 1wke at Charleston, 8, ¢, Ascend in | BLIZZA DS, Toronto, November 12, Dispatches from various parts Ontario indicate very last night. | At Hastings the spire of the church was of | the storm was sovere | blown down, and the chureh was other Sawmills were unroofed land fences blown down. At Belleville, Robertson’s block was unroofed and houses damaged. Chimneys, fences and trees were blown down in all partsof the city. The accompa lightning, thunder and a fearful Wi pour of hail When the gale struck the Metropolitan hall, in which the Salva. tion Army meeting was being held, the rattling of the scenery, caused by the wind, created a panic. Three | fainted. A rush was made for the stairs, P [ down which a bled. rely hurt Curenco, November 192, i+ from the west and southwest | i. | Lake Michigan all day yesterday and last night. It is less violent to-day, but the lake was still rough, and vessels ex perienced much difticulty in making port. | Thus far no serious qale was i by at many people scrame No one s | here, but there are grave apprehensions for the safety cf a uumlw,r of vessels, 4| The barges Transfer, C. 0. D. and Wol- verine, arrived at this |mn this after- noon from Grand Haven in a badly demoralized condition, having ‘mu tion of their equipment and y | The schooners Leo and Wannet kept company with them till Sunday night, not been heard from since. The new city dock, Bell's dock, Rose's | dock and Bay View dock were swept out |into the bay and destroyed. The loss individually ‘and to public property is * | very lar Noxtrean, November 12, A terrific | wind and rain storm raged all day) doing immense damage. A frame hclse at Rougemont was blown down and'an old | woman and a girl severely injured, the former it is thought fatally. Al traflic | on the river is suspended. w York, November 12.—The cit; c\pmenqhd a fierce g ?lv to-day, ~Much damage was done. the afternoon the wall of a foundry in course of erec- tion, at Kast Ninety-first street, was blown down down. A laborer was caught under the falling wall and severe- ly injured. To-night large tree on Sev | enth” avenue and Twelfth street was | blown down and fell upon a passing street | ing through the roof and break- ing windows, No passengers were hurt, BLAZES. SueNaNnoan, Pa,, November A fire started at noon in the United States ge th on the corner of Mair 'm.‘- wind was blowing a hurricane at the ime, and continued during the after- noons. The building was s un-*uv«-ln[vmll in flames, which communicated to the ad- | joining Iunhlnw north of Center street. The flames then communicated to the | block on the opposite side of the street, At G o'clock 16 street fronts were de including the United States ho. and Center streets, | tel, Odd Fellows” hall, Herald office row, opera house, The Mining Herald and The vening News offices, , | Assistance was telegraphed for, which was responded to from Pottsville, Ash ton, Tamaqua and other places, Over 200 families are he having lost | everything. Loss estima 50,000 | to %1,000,000, It is to give | the amount of insur | CuaLeston, 8. ( wember 12,—A | broke out this morsing on Hayne | et in the Wilbur clothing man | tory, spreading to Robertson, Taylor & | Co's. wholesale grocery. Both buildings were gutted, Loss estimated at $60,000. | Eight boy were em women and one jumped from the third story window, sustaining serious injuries, | — Breaking a Priest’s Will, MiLwavuker, November, 12, — Wm, Ed. August, Albert Walter, Mattie Sch nbach with | Staps, Tillie J. Rice and Henry | Loeew h brought suit in Grant county, | | Wis.., aguinst Mary Caroline Fries, su- | erior of the school of sisters of !\ulrn‘ this city, for a share in the es- ncis Schrouden- ‘ | bach, priest of Baltimore, who left a | | fortune of 5,000 the greater part of which was willed to the Milwaukee in- stitution, The complaints alleges fraud i | on the purt of the housekeeper who kept | all relatives from the priest, and they | charge undue influence in that she umi | 59,000 in cash and household furniture. | I | | Capture of Noted Counterteiters, | | New York, No [nspector Syrnes learned, two ago, that mber, 12, months Wm. E. Brockway, N. B, Foster and Lewis Martin, the most noted counter feiters in the country, we oparing to counterfeit securities of sor ind. The men were watched and it was found that they met daily at the St. Jaues hoteland remained together for hours, Brockway also visited the oftices of - bankers, litho aphers and printers. Last week the Al Was seen carrying pi into a louse in Lexington avenue stained entrance to the Lex nue house, arrested Martin The same hour other detectives raided Martin's roowm in the St. Jawes hotel and Brockway's room on 110th street. In eachplace counterfeiting implements were found. Brockway was also arrested, In Lexington avenue were found die stamps, plates type a batteries I'he count ters had al struck off other | women | ge 18 reported -story frame structure | | |seandson ot Commodore Wilkes, of the THE IRON HIGHWAY. {The Responsibility of the Pnliman Company to Sleeping Passengers Settled 1o Ilinois. bends, due in I"lll of the aser division of the Delaware & Western Railway Cotnpa and 81,000 six per cent gold bearing series of the Central Pacific Rail way Company. Even United States In tornal Rovenus stamps and bonds were | also counterfeited. Tt is believed some | | spurious bonds have already been plac n the market, Brockway is one of the | | best known forgers in the United State now under sentence of thirty years m nited States bond forgery,which \,.»“.n’ have to serve. The others are also well known. Foster is a native of Bradford, | 111 He has been a counterfeiter since youth, and belongs to a family of coun- [ SHICAgainst the Northorn Pactiic terfeiters, | THE NATlflNAL CAPITAL. | The Corn Crop Rcuurmd Forty Nillion i1 Bushels Less than Last Scason, The Yield, However, Suflicient to il a Medinm Sized Crib, ion morta Morris & | Lackawana ny, { bond: { A Crazy Mob of Strikers in Pa- nama Wreck a Passenger Train, A Change ot OMicials, 1 JAD MATT o A SUIT AGAINST PULLMAN COMPANY 12, -In Supreme Court this morning the judy. Pirrsnc e, November ment of the lower court was afirmed in | the suit of Gardner vs. the Pullman Pal- ace Car company, The ease attracted widespread attention, a verdict f Gardner secured . | 500, having been robbed of CAPITAL NOTES. THE CORN ROV, WasHieror, | valuables while sleeping in Pullman cars the Supreme Court's opinion held Ilml November 12 The | the company while not liable in action as | November report of the department of |41 inn-keeper or common carrior, ot o | reasonable and proper degreo of care is of agriculture gives the local yiold por acro in the October final imposed on them The main object in report, the condi par to provide reasonable eare and cau and 1-10 | yield per acre appears to bo bushels, 1} bushels per acre lower than | tion against the valuables of passengers | the yield of 1882 3 This glventhe. resl on from his bed or from the tically identical with that of October. The exact figures would be 1.577,000,- 000 bushels. Tn a revision of the sea- |5t son's returns, this result will | clothes of the person. of robbery | ree and violence, but by salthy larceny. not be ma RATLROAD STRIKE IN PANAMA, Brrury, November 12.—(Crown Prince [ into swamp starts for Madrid the 16th. He will go | to Genoa by way of Munich and will em- bark thence on a German man-of-war, | shakin Saturday, fo Spain. ; train WHOLESALE EMIGEATION [ one killed Dusiiy, November The Tvish | Times says a syndizate in London is dis- | cussing the project for a ship canal ac Ireland. The Freeman’s Journal publishes the full text of the circular proposing whole- sale emigration from Ireland, which it is alleged the government uunul, though the authorities disavow any connection with the paper. The Freeman's Jou declares the schemo is but a continuaf of the policy under which the Irish were kidnapped and_ transported to the West Indies in the days of Oromwell. PROTECTIONGATHOME, _ - Lo oo Novambien 42 s-At Yhe na. tional fair trade conference at, Leaming- ton, Robert P. Porter, ex-Secretary of the United States Tariff Commission, spoke at great length in favor of protec- tion, Burt, agent ot the rvoad, and Conductor Crutehley, in the bagga, A aped, the with a severe up. Many were seriously injured; no SUIT AGAINST THE N. I, e | Niw \'um\‘ November 12.-—A member ™% | of the Northern Pacific syndicato says a new suit against the company was brought by Daponta, who had ten shares | | of common stock of Northern Pacific transferred in his own name Saturday. No importance is attached to the suit, which will be tried in the United States 3 courts, CHANGE OF OFFICIALS, 1. Louts, November 12,1t is stated here that W, A. Woodard, late superin- tendent of the Hannibal and St, Joe, OF by Geo. St. Louis Leannager). latoly vacal W. Rustin, on the Texas an narrow guage, | & —— Bank Cles ~roN, November nees, Reports from 12, [ the leading clearing houses in the A CRUSADER SNUBBED, Lord Mayor Fowler, in refusing to al- | low Dr. Stocker, chaplain of the court of | Germany, to lecture in the Mansion house, stated that he could not disregard the feeli: of the Jewish community by giving prominence te Dr. Stocker as_excited hostility against the Jews. | rl Bland writes the newspapers that | every man with a spark of humanity ught to protest against Stocker'scrusade against the Jews. the week ended No- e tle total clearances at United States for vember 10 gi 501,576, per cent a decrease of ed with the corr bein, as com st year, and a de of 12.7 against last week. The exhibit is decidedly unfavorable. The same causes | which operated unfavorably on the ings last week produced a similar e this week. The weneral merchandise | movement, both enst and west, is far he sponding week se —— sller's 1 WiasiINoTON, November/ 112/~ Sooro: | o1 118 ordinaty pronortions; \luy Teller has under consideration the The Medill Memorial { plan endorsed by Commissioner Dudley | Ciievio, November 11.—The Chicago to prevent such scandals as have recently | been brought to light in - the practice of Press club held a memorial meeting this | afternoon, and unveiled the portrait of | certain pension attorneys. The sugges- | the late Samuel J. Medill, managing edi tion is that only members of the bar reg- | tor of The Chicago Tribune, and presi ularly admitted to practice and in - good | dent of the Chic Press club. standing be allowed to appear before the | was a large gathering of the older | department. nalists of the city to y the mtative Carlisle respect to the memory mired for his journalistic ability and | sterling personal qualitics, An eloquent memorial address was delivered by Con- gressman Finerty, and several feeling tributes were uttered by older members of the city press. — Steamship on Fire, New Youk,November 12, —The steam- ship Tulluhasco, n Steamship Company, of Sava ., suiled from that port Friday with 5200bales of cotton and a quantity of turpentine. She crew ot forty seven men and thicteen pas sONYeTs When off Highlands, at G:45 o'clock lust evening, she was discovered on fire in the forward hold, Every stfort was made to extinguish the fire,but with- out success. The hoat was then headed for Pier where she was docked and the fire put out. The less will be heavy. jour tribute of itep arrived, | A Story Denicd. November 12, —An Ogden, Utaly, dispateh, published a few days ago, death of the CHIcAGO, announced the near there The to the eflect that a young man who had been employed on . sheep ranche had lost his way among the mountaing and died from exposure, Commodore Wilkes makes a denial of the story and sa is 1o such person as the one described in the dispatches. — stutement was | United States navy. A Barge Ashore, Crevenasn, Outo, November 12, The Steam Barge John J, Johnston with nine hundred tons of are, from Escanaba to Cleveland, here in bad condi 1 ashore No lives lost, tion. The crew wus taken ofl by the | — life saving crew, T © Blows, = | —— Creaverann, O, Nov., 12, During a Supposed Tr inowis | furious gale last night when Joseph | Lamb, might watchman at the woolen mills on Wilson avenue, was making rounds, examining upper doorsand wind- ows, he blown oft the out side stair- | way across the narrow street and hurled to the ground, thirty feet. His back was | broken and he subsequently died, | Toroxto, Nov. 12.—A violent gale last night leveled telegraph wires, trees, ces ete. Conside snow fell this morning, The weather is cold, — val Sherman at Ho Mo. November, | W. T, Sherman arvive New York. Ther Nov., 12, Akron, Ohio, spocial says ner's family have been all taken violently i Times Star, Cixeissar, O, 5 R, F. Pal with wrichinosis from | it is supposed them will i¢ head cheese, probably die. Two of ow York Th Snowih Niw Youk, Nov, 12 of the season began this morning but was first snow little more than a tlurry. hard at Albany. storm at Utica, blesomme It iy snowing Then is a driving suow and telegraphing is trou S, Louis Gen, this morning from was 1o reception at TELEC ol ks it D that| the depot. He drove direct to his resi- bay itk sl e \ dence at the garrison where he passed . Baturduy ulghi the cagr od paue: U5 | the morning receiving visitors, He will T i e e b A be tendered a reception to-night by Frank AT E Blair Post G. A Iz, and will then attend e VA Py the McCullough performance at the wed p night, nea ank . v i ot aroling, was accidentally ¥ a1l tio, daines, | o NEW YOUuk e ey’ | derson, wn behalf of J. ). Bradford, has T in an sifort 1y | obtained — an injunction | Wednesday from Judge Donahue restrain- vud child were rescu save her husband | the | tion of corn, which avernged 78, was in- | (WRINE passage i sueh s to pernit pas. | torpreted to mean a product elose to|%¢N3ers to sleep, and while in that help 1,600,000,000 bushels, Tho o | Tess condition the duty rests o tho com- This is not a case | terially chang The product will| PANAMA, vix Gatvestos, November PR, 10,000,000 bushels | 12.—The strike among the Iaborors and | short of the vious crop, netwith. | ireight handlers of the Panama railway standing the increase in a The po- | Culminated in - the wreck of a train tato crop is large, amount- | Some miscreants vemoved a few fish ing to 175,000,000 bushels, plates and_replaced the rails, The en e gine passed over all vight, but _the tender | GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS, | displaced the loose rails. The baggage e [and o passengor curs wore turned over A : and precipitated down an embankment I'he strikers fired on the | has lieen appointed to fill the position of There | of a man alike ad- | his ' returnable | lmg the issue of £20,000,000 second mort= | gage bonds by the Northern Pacific rail- ’rn;u[luvmpnl\\ — SHERMAN AT HOME. [ (A Warm and Enthusiastic Welcome to | e Ol Commander in 1. Louis, ‘ : | The Grand Army Turn Out to Greet Him at His Home, 1‘ A Brief But Elc uent Address on the Glovtes of the t and the | P'rosperity of the Present, St Lovis, November 12, —Neveral | posts of the Grand Army of the Republic waited on General Sherman at his resi- dence to-night and serenaded him, the | United States arsenal band furnishing the music for the 500 votorans were in procession, and aboutas aceasion, Some | many more outsiders were present. On |appearing in vesponse to a call the | general was cordially sted. Ex- | Governor Thos. € speech, tendering amosthearty welcometo } their old commander. eral said Fleteher made a brief In reply the gen- he was glad to see so many [ his old comrades present and thanked them for their hearty He had | returned to St. Louis with the intention [of making it his home and he expected to spend the remainder of his days here greeting. | In former visits to St Louis, nota [bly in 1861, when the growlings of war made every man suspicious of his neighbor, he was called on by the President to fulfill his oath of oftice to l(h'l'\-ml his country from foreign and do. mestic enemies, and he appealed to the | assembled comrades to attest to the fact |that the oaths had been fulfilled. He ’m\l-l Pennsylvania was the Keystone State | when the Union was a single arch resting, Jone end on Massachusetts, the other | on Gieorgl With prosperity the coun- try had grown into & grand arch dipping into the Pacific and Atlantic oceans with Missouri the keystone of the vast arch. | He was too old to share with his listen ors the pleasures of life but he should watch them from the retirement of his home. He would welcome friends from Louisiana as well as Massachusetts, and from a common Union that would endure forever. St. Louis had many cherished memories, and he hoped all would join hands together and go on un- til they receive the last call. He thanked | the veterans present, and w(t--mh-(l the [freedom of his house to them. “This medicine I can iy recommend, B dock Blood Bitters are the best blood puri- fier we have ever used. Chas. A, Burt, 13 Court St., Buffalo, Y —— Destroyed By Fire., Lacrosse, Wis. Nov., 12.—A fireat Tremplau Sunday da-t:oyad the Buttler house and_several fram d store house on the l._mu The wind blowing a hurricane, The loss is 810,000‘ partially insured DYSPEPSIA Does not get well of itself; it requires caref, slstent attention and remedy that will ass 1o throw off the causes and tone up the organs till they perform their duties willingly. | Bosworth, of Amherst, N. 1L, after trying many “sure cures without benerit, found that Hood’s Sarsaparilla NIt the 1 Lon the head and res tored her to healt | distre ity of the stomach, heart-by | no | Hood's Sarsaparill I Ill i ON A NEW BASIS. Bankers, Capitalists, Merchants, and Professional men of m.mm, investigate the ANIKER'S | ...IFE ASSOCIATION, OF DES MOINES, IOWA, The plans and purposes of this Association will be thown you by JAS. A. SPERRY, General Agent for Neb. DR.EMILY PAGELSEN, RESIDENCE AND OFFICE 161 Dodge Street, Bet, 16th and 17th, Oflice hours from 10 to 12 a, 1w, m. 1d from 2 to 4 . Matter of Appheation of Becker Bierbach (or Liguor ot e 9th duy of Nov A, ion to theHoard of County Commissioners of Douzlas uska, forlic D, 1888, fle his applica ase to sell M i, ' D [ s will be granted BECKER BIEK BACK, JOHN BAUMER Cos 718 2n-lew F.SCHEUERMANN M D,, REGULAR GERMAN Homeopa‘cl&:p{ i ‘Phystoxan. WOMEN, CHIL] I‘!:fl:‘ l L:h(:n:“ DISEASES. unty Clerk, Hours Rosidence, No. 1443 8. 10th Street, till [ 10 0. i, and atter s p. . Hours At , No. 108 aud 103 B, 16t S, oot 7 from 10 b, t., t0 9 p. . N.B.—Tho Tape Worm will bo removed, without danger, in time of from 2 to 8 hours. McCARTHY & BURKE, | UNDERTAKERS! 218 14TH STREET, BET, FARNAM [ AND DOUGLAS.

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