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V - 0 . 1 [} P MORSE & C0 Monday, Nov, 15. ress Goods 421to 48 inches wide, 290c Wewilloffer the greatest bargains at our dress goods counter tomorrow that has been seen since owr sale of 33 cent Homespuns, This lot will consist of the entive lot importation of a French manufacturer. The styles ave thelatest; every picee is all wool, and the actuwal value is 9, §, $125. A yard, Some of these are slightly imperfect in the weave, but you can see in selecting exactly what the im- perfection is; in some cases is adrop ped stiteh, in some a slight spot or discolorvation, but in no casewill it interfeve with the economical cut- ting or after-wear of « dress at o0c Per Yard They are Not Half Price. Note the width, 42 to 48 inches | 20 different styles to choose frem. These dress goods are all pure wool. They are all made this season and are not the old spring styles shown hy other houses A WICKED WOMAN'S HISTORY Mrs, Lawler Arrested in Lincoln and Taken Back to Kansas, SHE KILLED HER HUSBAND. A Damage Suit for $50,000—Argu- ments in Progress in the Mc- intce Murder Trial —The Week in Society Circles, [¥FROM THE BEE'S LINCOLN BURBAU.] The sheriff of Johnson county, Kan., took southward with him yesterday from Her Lincoln a woman with a history. history covers a goodly number of and she was arrested for complic the murder of her husband. Mrs ler, the woman in question, came to Lin- coln some time since and suceeeded in getting her three children in the Home for the Friendle and she then rente! rooms ov second-hand store in the business part of the city, telling ner land- lovd that herself and husband would oe- cupy them for awhile. A man did stop with ) awhile and a_woman has been liv th her lately. The woman’s rly as it could be gleanc rom the officers, is that years ago she sdived in Johnson county; that her hus- band died there and she moved to Illi- nois, wirere she married again. From that state herself and husband moved to Kansas, and after awhile she appearced in Johnson county again, and from that place came to Lincoln. The crime with which she is charged is that when living in Kansas she conspived with two 1aen to muke y with her hus- band, and the alleged mode of proceed ure was that they were to take him with them to the Indian nation, m awiy with Ijm there and on thewr return she was to pay them $400 for th job. It Lain that the man never been seen sinet and the officer stated that they ¢ \ pected to establish that the money agr upon was paid over and consequently the authorities are after the woman, whom it would seem, in the line of plot and counter plot, is almost n professio Suspicion pomts to the bolief that the man who lived with the woman tempo, rarily in Lincoln is one of the two me who with her, made up the trio to wmake away with her husband, but where he 15 now is ap atly not known, The nied the sherilt without and stated that she would go and stand a trinl without the procurit requisition the plewents in it st sensational brot ners in the ol company, ¢ thair eity'to a Stowart” & Chute, present court for W hen th coln t! a foy James Chnt hat the | Dapers ot them for 30,000 as ol nm*’-\ to himself for their xets i § imprisonment, | us o | alleges, fulsely snd without the pale of hin tiw petition that sets forth the | (56 15 a lengthy one 1 \ ’, busiuess standing i mental ane Lsh that appe: us ot Like nature, J. A, Bi THE O NEXT WEEK e — Dress Goods 75¢ 200 picces of the latest aned choic- est sitle and wool and novelly diess goods perfect in cvery way, all 42, A4 and 45 inches wide, imported to sell for 1, $1.25 andeven $1.50 a yard. These fabries are not shown byany one bt ws in Omaha and ave very cheap al 75ca yavd, Mail Orders Filled. BIM0ASS Toboggan Caps This Style,$2 Each. The finest Toboggan hLood shown; hand Enitted of the finest German- town; covered with mesh work of split zephyr; all colors, trimmed with best satinribbon bow. is included wnh the Chics the s has been The ense will be watched aty, bt papers on the pa carried out. with interest. k THIRD DAY of the MeIntee murder trial terday and late in the attorneys were yot ¢ evidence on the p'ut of lhv(h( voluminous, it comprising a large per- centag of the neighborhood where Me- Intee livea, all of whom bore testimony of his good character, und as far as they were acquainted with the fu thought he had always treated b well.” They all evinced the e istics of very willing witnesse: were five or six doctors ealled o of the defense, all of whom te in the same vein—that they bel trouble from which the child die have arisen from natural causes and need not be necessarily attributed to injury by violence, The prisoner occupied —the \the part d much stand also in his own behalf and hi. amination was quite lengthy. The guments to the jury presumably ex Baustive and very probabl for the trial now has p pxhuust- {its third DEATITIN A LEWD HOUSE iday night as the play was in pro- s at the People's berts was calle in the The de man was Tom Dailey, & dissipated eb: wcter, who has been” practically living this house of ill-fame for some time past, so fallen as to be a common consort of the habitues of the place. It was stated that his death oceurred from hemorrhage, ch, if the truth is told, and it might as well be, was eaused by long and’ con- tinuous drinking, ABOUY oA fell tie | where he w for treatment. The plumbers of Korsmeyer's estab- lishnient are out on o ] one of the former str active in ol o: Whoh thomon ined coneessions, h 1 dismissed d, as the plumbers believe, to pu him'for his work in the former strike settlement not yet been reported, Jumes Dawso, a party who has bee od Wit being pic on the B. wus taken into s plead guilty to judge senten s and six wonths i the court yes erund larc i to te penitentiary even of the indicted trial in conrt Pound y ind arraig dietments r ties awaiting » wore taken beforo Judge noon recess 2 their aceord 1 ol after t After b they with and their Lerduy one trial wil Jobu B, and Blak of General Vietor Vafquuin, Barranquilla, dc ste hey will take shipand join ieral at lis South American post ‘I'ie_potice court only found two pris oners rday mo rning und t & chance to vy of fine consul y for »n YaRcoln yus 5 D Webster, of Stration, out Republican Valley country, wis in rehenrsing campaign alone yesterday uflcrnuun boy being cured for at In*u-!qu.xrllu Driscoll, Omaha;. C."0. Swan, uey; T. J. Ayers, Oukdale; B. D was looking tor the father of & who he K MAHA DAILY BEE: SMoRss ¥ Great Hosiery BARGAINS! For Next Week’s Sale! —— . LADIES’ Engl'sy Merino | C HOSE, s for $1. These Hose were im- p(!lh to sell for 45 cents a pair. They are soam] 1 come ingrey mixed and tan shauaes, CenLs next week. LADIES’ : 40C Cashmere Ladies' Fine Colored HOSE, Black Cashmere Hose, ver, 100 dozen fully 60c. « pair, Ladies’ and astic; worth Reduced for next week to 40¢ Pire S lk . $2.00 on sale Monday Silk Black Hose lieels and toes, a ve supe! worth at usual prices The next week La,d:es i Fure Silt | Hose | Colors and Black. These are the finest Silk Hose made. Have never sold before less than $6. The colors are exquisitely 25 dozen blended. All the new shades represented in boot styl ardinal top, black foot: orange and cardinal it blue and gar- net, &e. At $4 we pronounce them worthy your attention, . G. Stanley, Fremont; Nebraskans at Lincoln yesterday. JCIAL R W OF THE WE I'he La Veta club ve an n-]vz:\n( dancing y at Temple hall Friday evening that was generously attended by the youth and beauty of the city, and the ball was practically the inaugurs f the club for the winter months. music furnished of n high order, ana the programme contained many of the latest and most popular dances. he Pleasunt Hour club gave their sccond_hop of the season at Temple hall Thursday evening to a select crowd made up lugely of i own membershin and invited friends from other points who were tem- siting in~ Lincoln. The pari was all't ble in its line, xhibited again the youthfulness st u\diu" of the oldest social club in the IIHI) 400 members and guests of the Yity lodge of Mode) Woodme ' sial log rolling i the woodmen at “of P. Il The features of the reception speeches and banque an recorded as one of the great su cesses of the opening wint On Wednesday the carp umion No. 148 gave a grand ball and reception at the Metropolitan rink, that was an en- tire suceess in_every purticular, and the tradesmen and the friends |||l|u|wl~ are now reterring to the e g This was the first by the union and its unquali ss will lead to many others of like character in the future, The pro- mme consisted of eighteen nuwmbers. el is a sugeestion in itself, as !nl!nws: and )lmnh g . Lincoln U Waltz. . lllsal Lulm;’ 5 nternatio Quadrille... Polka Virgin Qundrile Waltz The Chatuag and Scientific cirele held its sgular semi-monthly nicoting at the rooms of the state super- intendent in the capitol building, Some fifty members of the eirele and audience of spectators drawn by the at ness of the programme, being m In addition to the reguls programme of study the circle ¢ brated Bryant's day, aud the papers coneerning the life and work of nature’s own poet f & high character of ex- cellen ed with instruction, A ature of the evening was ocitation of Robert of Lincoln, by 5 P'avker, who as an elocutionist, is uppreciated by her Lincoln frienils. The programme for the nest meeting of the circle is as follows : es by the Cirele. us business Questiol shnell. t 8 \pin adustry—B. Tremain. Hod Carriers K. of L. 4649 Powderly aa Friends n Geology —{llustrated by o1 Mountains—Mrs. M of D Loy s & Outtin Hudson In | o, ! Age-\ 10. Query Box 11. Rol! zall, quotations, about E historians. On Wednesday monthly recepti held at the association roowms and the su attending former receptions was fully maintained’in this. An interesting programme was rendered for the enters ainment of the uudience, in which mu sical seleetions were rendered by Mrs. of Early English History— to Carbouiferous glish evening the regular M. C. A" was SUNDAY 0% M oggan Hoods! THIS STILE, L correst re; of our §1 Tobogzan Hood all our putrons that it is s good as shown elsewhere for $1.50 and $1 Our price £1 Hemstitehed Thudkerchieh 35¢ 1 Do, Ve will sell 159 dozen of Col Ilmuh-rv-\l Hemstitehed Handkereh I'hese have usually sold in Omuhs b adozen. For ( tren’s School Hand kerchiefs they are unsurpassed. Think of the price— 35 cents a full Dozen I' "ll)l(!i' & ('0 sentation 1t is snid by ny 1l ofs, Next Week. RIBBONS. We will sell nest week another lot of Satin and Gros Gram Ribbons in choice colors, light blue, garnet &e., just the thing for tancy, work and children's s 57 9 12 16 56 66 10c 10c t These Ira Worth Boukl Spellman, Mrs br. co, M. Roose, v Datby, M. Chapin ¢ i M. to young Minehart delivered an address men, and reports from other asso and 'the prog; of the work for the month completed the programme, except the social part, that was lng prolonged. Among the new societies of the present season rvu'nll\ organized and full of promise for fuiure meetings, is a musical and sozinl eircle organized among a num- ber of Lincoln Jadies, The plans of the cirele include a monthly musicale 1 the meetings will be held at the homes of the members. The membership inctudes Mrs. P. V. M Raymond, M S. Dales, Mrs. A, 8 Raymond, Mrs. E. B. Coons, Mrs. Lippincott, Mrs, E i ' . W. Jansen, Mr Miss L 1, Miss ¥ nie Latta, Miss Clara Fanke . Parker, Miss Maggic Baitd and Miss Cochran, Tuesday afternoon and evening was passed at the chureh of St Paul's M. E. church, the being the regl ng of church o’clock in the ¢ mission v with a 6 reunion ainment of nd the the entc ming for he attendance was soet Mr and My Zav it entertainment the past week to W. Q. Bell very H number of the young people of the Congregational sumln) school at their home on C stre During the progress of the evening' l-njn‘uu-nl an clegant lunch was spread for the guc and all was hospitality and good chee There was a very pleasant gathering at the muu, of C.C’Munson, in East Lin- coln, Friday evening, the ocoasion being a Sunday school sociable of the young (nlyllks amfuf older people who never grow old a pleasant reunion sbration was held at ul Mrs. Guy A. Brown Brown's pircits, Mr. Holmes, the day being _th.- and anniversary the home of Mr in honor of Mrs and Mrs. Vory genial company were gathe together, the oceasion being oyster supper and a social time open to the enjoyment of ull, and a pleasant com pany atiended Irs. R. M!Seott, visiting in Lincoln. Miss Maggie OVKcef was in Lincoln Tuesds of Bushnell, IIL, 15 of Plattsmouth, Mrs John) McManigal visited lowa friends the past we Mr, und Mrs. . L Ruh have removed to Portland, ¢ their home, zon, which city becomes at Ilrul;:- port, Cann and Mrs, M. Casey, of Fort \lml.wn visiting in Lincoln with Mrs. W. 8. Humilton M f of West ern Nebraska, visited Lincoln friends on Lhur y last while in the city s, West wis v ) woek with friends and « Nebraska City Miss Mary Walker left the for Salt Luke City, where she enters upon work as missio among the Mormons, Miss Jennie Wells, the past quaintances at pust week sister of Mrs, O Lippineott, who passed the summer months in Lincoln, has roturned (o her home in Cineinnat Mr. and Mrs, M. A. Hurtigan, of Platts mouth, were in Linceln Tuesday and | enlled while in the city upon i friends Mus, Stelli Jerome Pr Lincoln's NOVEMBER 14, 1886, BLACK SILKS 87 1-2¢ | W nave ctosed out prom the targ- estomannfactuver in Lyons, his entive stock of black | fivst quality that sillis: the uswally sells for $1 .oo Each | #1225 @ yard. witl be offered at 87%c a yard. - — Black Silks $1 This quality wsnally vetails for S L35 a yard; we have only five pie- ces to sell for $1.00 Black Sil $1.40. This quality wsnally seils at $1.7 is vich, tustre and very heary and a great barvgeain at $1 490 urah Silks $1.35. A special new lot of exira wide French Suval Silks, in all the new colors, absinthe, orange, cocquelicol tavender, shrimp pinl$ icmon. ete. 8 At $1.35 a vyard was a guest at the silver wedding of Mr. and Mrs Bames in tha 1 . 1. C. Wise, accompani Miss Loewenstein, uf Cinel m were guests of M Omaha the past w tain wimln\v~ in this be dealt with by the s suppress noxious literature tionable display is to be sef ity of all the windows of t and ¢ in which cigarcttes are for sale. It is composed entirely of the figures of young women, who are seen posed in e conceivable shape which permits or aflo: civious sug- zestion. The purpose of this is plain. The kers of cigavettes are almost wholly composed of boys and young men, who are necessarily of a susceptible age, and on whom 1t 15 1ntended by these pictures in the nature of smoking of these products is somehow a part of the volup- tuous exhibition The feeble-minded noodle who puffs the cigarette smoke of s cigar shops, Is the burnt papers and tokacco through his nostrils associates with each ex something of the window exhibitions the suggestive i rounded Timbs, th languishing pose of the figure ciously a part of his and he is Gonbly demo once by the ervating pract again by the libidino ’nru|n|)ling~'nf|m- meretricious displ: The whole thing, both the smoking and the painted invitations in the w isa :h-}'lor )le debasement, ap- ping of the slende ock of \IIIhI) of I!lv youth who of the incense of the ¢ ette at theshrines of these semi-nude \ul I become rette zod— uptuaries. Thero is nothing about 1t, cither in the effeminate smokers or the painted sirens, that is manly, robust or strengthening, Itis an to ate these gaudy presentations, to them to influence the weak sonls prurient natures of the cl that the reach sduction offered by the win- dow exhibition has tendency, in conncetion with viee of cigarctic Smoking, (o produce civious in _thought, gination, rickety in b eble, narrowness, and exhausted in body. It may be that it would be well to Misses May and Luna Dundy, of : "Ihey \\uul:lm o disapp Omaha, were’ guests of Mrs, L. C) Buer | and socicty would be relieved ofitheir the past w pre Unfortunately, their vee s Miss Minnie Lett, of Denver, is visiting [ contagious; — they communicate it to in Lincoln, a guest at the house of My, | others, and thus their existence is per- und Mrs. MeCreery petuated. Mrs. Thomus Fitzgerald was a passen Let the society having in charge the ger Wednesday for visit with relatives re snd similar matter of obsee damaging prod into conside it an evil, and a possible that wh this condition @ is certuinly in owing one. Jt may be ‘n WELVE PAGES, France, | California NEXT WEEK' Blankets, The same $12 a paiv. California Blankets These of the ool and sell els hey are the be our store Eidcr Down Comforts, We have r Satine Doy other hous week, $12 Down | Pillows 18x18 that is shown elsowl arc very finest Merine where for §18 a pair, t bargain in Blankets in cda lot of fine Frencl 1 Comforts that are shown by at 816 each inches h Pillow f1.00. ve received astock of the abov ated P D. French Corsets, lo and short waisted; all eolors. We now sole agents in Omaha for these cele brated goods, S.P.Morse & Co NABOBS ANONG THE NEGROES Notable Colored Pravlc Wha Live in Fine Style in Wasbington. THE RICH AND Patrician and Flebeian Jostle Otherin Public—Caste in Colored Society as Common as Among the “White Trash.” ch 8950 313 .. $12 Our price next contains almost a pound of tine down; worth fully e THE POOR. S gREE LFIBEC KID GLOVE $1 Monday we will sell onr fivst tot of sens® lined glovesand mitts, regu= Mens Knitted Ca % 38¢c \ Thisstyle. We have opencd another 100 doz tot of these knitted Scotch caps, that we offerfor 38e: they have always sold for §1; colors* ek, olive. blue, » Suit- ed for men or boys® wear. miless BUCEKSKIN Undershirts And Drawers $6 We have just veceived a large lot of mens® perforated Guckskin Un= devstivis and drawers, that we offer Jor $6 cach, $12 a Suit. e — S.P.Morse & Co bought the lunds when they were eheap, and after the city ¢l wlits direction they held onto “them. = Now on almost any of the fashionabie streets of Wash- ington you may see the cabin of a negro gainst the n i thing about 1t is that the labo more anxious to sell his | the statesman is his. Colored men who make less than - dollar w day own lands here worth §1, 3 and $4 per squ 1 | foot, and the eolored people of Washi ton have ehurel ’ 5,000 most fashionable Of course the v population are poo) noorest of them ority of .the " colored but muny of the up money, and A Washington correspondent of the | M5ed for s subnlisd byl Cleveland Leader writes: More i one- | fortme ey an fourth of the popuiation of Washington | one hunc and more with two city is colored, and it the 60,000 negrd Columbia, The and poor, educ anand pl 15 estimated that nd unedu an. The some of the best element of the negre population of the United St among them the most noted colo men of the country. Senator Brug though he still holds on (0 s ostate in at Washington during ters, and John Lynch, who was L national his cotton in the fall and does not roturn to them again until the Mr. Lynch was prosecuting tne | #6¢ well Miss the wi one of the presic republican eonver plantatior sippi, lives nts of the n, leaves near Nateh spring. study of law here durin the past winter, and the booksellers tell me that be bought many books. He is well educated and cultured, and is worth, I am told, about £100,000. Bruce is also rich, and his little boy, Roscoc Conkling Brueo fortune should his father die Inss does not live home is 50 ne the street e residence on i red Doug- hills above Uniontown, n the district of care of all classes, rich ted, va- number , will have a 1 Washington, but his vit that he can reach it by He owns a very pleasant y at §25 a month apiec v, the famous cook who land with Reverdy bitl 1o please the b lords, and th u-hv et them it us n better treaty, was a colored He died nov long um), leaving ) £100.000 invested in one of the best hotuls wd his sons now They | in Washington, on this business. and statesmer anrry have diplomates s, and chirge in high S many negrocs ton \\hn use bette provie of the articular Ly in Washing lnngunge than white o standing. Thoy are about the use of their nd the lives of the better classes a continuous strain toward 1mprov- ing themsolves. A Jurge number of them educated, thongh the jority of them of course are ignorunt. “They have public and private schools here, and Howard university turns outa num- ber of colored graduates of both sexes every r. Some of these become luw- yers'and doctors, and there are o great many colored tedchers of both sexcs Itis not un uncommon thing to ride in the street cars here with woll dressed col- ored girls, \\I\u have Latin and Greek books in their amms, and whose dresses fit them ws well as do tho: i of senator’s one of the \HIAHXI!\ of \\ ashington. It i3 ¥ i lored worth, perl 2, om his win daughters, The colored people, indeed, d \\wn can see th pttol and the whole )b.\ll of the Van Hook estate, 1 which was divided into re him, and his home dress petter in proportion to their moans than the whites, and the better colored girls at W ashington ticul Lout their kids as their clasy of a8 par- iver sis- y lots and sold on the | vy “"Thore are numeroos colored swells condition thut no colored man should | {1 %y Gins S PUY e be over allowed to purchuso thom, AP IR Y R O AR ] fine clothes as well as the white swells. congresst in a threc-story brick house ionable northwest portion His house is in the same block suator Cockretl, of stone’s throw . in which Representative voards of the city, i Seeretar lives s...m Carolina, but Tund he th his du iters have n edu seminaries of Massach 8 Cooke, the tax sotor of the D snid 1o be worth his present oftie in M. Langston WU, is vich, and the of the Washington fine houses 1 Columbia, is and he has hel toen years. minister to & large 1w be; men who owa a8 that of Missouri, and it is You may sce them in the parks of an evening, and on Sundays they promenade with the fashionable throng on Conueeti- cut avenue not averse to hiring they court their arts with ice-cream and sents at “he theaters There is us much easte in ne; here almost as 1n white 80 ter educated und littie to do - with the i those whose blood the pure as theirs, Thoy and their parties, their and their social clubs, | o muchi t | brothers, 10 suciety oty. The brod have it, und with do not think so jave Lheir balls literary socioties and they enjoy life their Cadcasisn better SUIe Wi form the servants of ow incontinent | lands. I went to buy a lot on the | _‘::);{ youth can no longer be stimulated by | above Washington the other duy | 84 DAL 4 imorous suggostions wiien he buys his | found that sone of tho best property of | JHG1 PORGOE I e REREHETSER cigarette | Washington wus in the hands of | (&0 ‘I’“l T x’ i :--‘.‘ vy u colored estate ot Awong his footanen, ook, waiers, yid peddlcrs af A lurge oyster bed has been discovered | properiy I found u house which 1 con o ooks, wallore, shit GRS on the flats near Fall rive nd the | sidere 8 baranin, and upon nsking for A A o Pat e people in the vieinity are helping them y Dwus told that he was 4 col- | TNy ST B slves freely Several since a | ored barber 4 i At per schooner laden with oysters capsized in a [ George W. Williams, the first colored | DA Fay Finees squall oft Wiliiam Slude’s tlats. This is | ) ever £al in the Ohio 4 S il ook wid thouglt to be tie origia of bed. At |t vhom Art ; wany g s the und in | to Hayil, und Bayard | Goeoo, " or Wash y will in their | tells e ¢ I T - carry | negr in at one ar the v t least lifty wo shore found | v thousaud worth Iy nt elusters and are in good condition. Far ) out of doors ther out inty de rthe oysters are | Much of the best proper 0., gar et REPEERERE P RS ¥ A ——— T T