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e T N THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY NOVEMBER 27, 1887.~-SIXTEEN PAGES FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS | WORTH OF CLOTHING and FURNISHING GOODS, AT A GREAT SACRIFICHE Owing to our removal and change in business we are offering our entire stock of Ready-Made Cloth- ing for Men, Boys and Children, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, &c., at a EDUCTION of 25 Per Gent on OUR PLAIN MARKED FIGURES., THIS IS NO ADVERTISING SCHEME--BUT FACT. Call soon and getsome of the Bargains we are offering, as the store must be vacated forthwith. B. NEWMAN & CO0., 1216 Farnam Street, Omaha R N AN N [ his home with Frank. John- i were the gang to Kkill her member of the testified against | once convieted in Dallas county for | e i k. i W pars is agazine THh ]:\MLS GANG OF T0WA, son then came to live with » hired a de » 10 spirit | Joe Rainsbe s Jesse James of [ stealing n cow and got eighteen i v inal sum .“.:. Tr6 oy OBl A g his daughter. During the summer of vay. The 17th of Junu 1 Hardin count Villiam. Joe | months. Through his shrewdness he ‘s, ay be ordered through | asupplementary reader in sehools . 1884 the boys were hard I ek + Rainsbarger had been indicted for shooting a | has only served fou and twenty- | any book d Lor from the editor at | ney St. Nicholas has a groates Murderous Deeds of the Celebrated \|'w\vl| (« plen to make a v v o y D th the nm{-u.- ' |.| Ge |v|n[w|v’ lhr \n\m.-n»n.-ul the pe '~4[vn- one days in the penitentiary. s | Lancaste . progiamme than cver, Mrs. Burne i, X the life insurance companies, Johnson [ preliminar ion and were held | ator of Jesse that he went gunning for | paid but one fine of $100, This remark. e author of ttle Lord cro; Ralnsbarger Family, 1A Tk WA A1 D et o p RO | LOR Y b R e e ] L e e S e diwenty- | T Arr REViEW for September, ) LA T e some $7,000 insurance was taken out for | May term found a bill against them. [ shot, and e st blood. Mon- | seven times for stealing and “‘shoving | October and November has appeared ‘handler He y John Burroughs. A REIGN OF TERROR FOR YEARS. | the henefit of Mrs. Johnson, and a ike Rainsbarger was put on trial at | day night, Nove - 7. John Bunge the queer,” and has defended himself [ and proves itself fully entitled to i ik IR, Stockton, H. I, Boycsen, J, GAIAT ! the bene ank Rains- | Marshalltown December 28, 1885, He [ William_ Seott, ¢ Hathaway | seven times, and has only been con- | name. This number contains ten inter- | P Trowbridge, Colonel Richard | M. < Aml his wi Ja Reed, o | was defended by C. L. Albrook, one of v S i 1 victed four times. He has helped | esting articles on art and artists to- luh\~lm|v and Louisa M 1o The Johnson Murder—Two of the r sves and noted for his ||u-mn~| brillitnt young attorneys in | fiest named made affids ffect | thirteen criminals out of trouble and [ gether with sixteen photogravers each, | among the many distingai § Gang Mect Their Fate at the | shrewdness was sent for to | Central Towa, assisted by Judge Weaver | that their lives had been threatened by | has paid out as bail for others $1.900, | cxeeedingly pleasing. The ®et Review | who will contribute serviai and short Hands of the Mob—The help curry out the scheme. Juck | and Hon. P, M. Sutton. Hon. H. L. nsbargers; also to some facts | 300 us security debts. He has | is published at 81 East Seventeenth | stovies to this famous magazine fop ey promptly iiformed the conspirators that | Hufl assisted District Attorney Stevens | very damaging to the Three of | used thousands of dollars for bribing | street, New York. young people. their scheme would not work that the | for the state. The case lasted two ainsbargers were watching them. | j s and witnesses, and has found it o i ° nee companies were onto the [ wee nd over one hundred witnesses | When the boys went home they took a re successful than the nsbarger THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE for De- ALLTHEmonthly uuml»,...rh.l»\\ md Eldora, 1a., corvespondence of th [ racket, and that it was o stale | w imined. The defense sought to | cut-off to avoid a heavy body of timber hod of shooting and reatening | cember will be a Christmas numl Its | for 1887 are out and bound Chicago Tribun N events of the | ¢hestnut, What was to be done? prove alibi, and that the horse was on the rond. When crossing the field [ witnesses. Ho operated in nine | leading article, by William H. Inger- | with a cover as pretty b2 While Enoch Johnsonand one Winans | vicious and had killed Johnson by throw- ) ds hum the woods they heard | states and t tories, using as many | soll. will discuss the pecul ties of the | pages inside. That cover appears to bo were turnin their uttention towirds ing him off and dragging him. The gnals given down the road [ different allinses. He is now fifty-five | accepted likeness of Christ, and re- | a world full of ehildren, shy and curious ! t “shoving the quec Frank and N minate the weree expected to have taken. |y of age, broken in health, and | count the 1 nd of its origi This | children, with apple blossoms and but- Thirty years ago there located in this | consummated a plan to furnish lnhuwu & ver, of Nettie | When they arvived at Scott’s the three »d of his property by dishonest | line is trae in the sacres sof all | terflies under and flying around it. A county afamily «d Ruinsbarger,and | himself as o subjeet for the coroner. ins! y have suc- | & ted, und Bunger started home on 1s and in defending himself. He | Chris ions from the beginning | beautiful book it is!” But the best of it B aioons, Wil Pinley, Nathan, | The pln ccted for the terrible erime | coede neing her they would have seback. While crossing a bridge on upon a three years' sentence a | of our « M vsoll will more | isn’t the beauty. muy not have a S iniel (Manch v and Frank, | Was a ravine surrounded by brush and at large to-day. Nate wascon- | alonely rond, and nearly a mile from | livi iple of ihe truth of the | expecially doser ndeavors of dis- | very keen eye for beaity: but he under- who were destined to give this country in a book as the hundred last few years ught Hardin county, Ta., into unenviable notoriety. timber and half o mile from any farm- | victed and senteneed to life imprison- | his home at Cleves, he” was run into ‘1- 1e way of the transgres- | tinguishe utersandsculp- | stands easy” pictures and stories and 2 ! : house. The spot was one mile north of | ment in the penitentiory. As soon as [ by a horseman going quite fast, tors to represent 1|n~ ideal. The arti- | puzzles and finger play, His mammi the prominence in history which. the | Gifford, four miles south of Eldora, and | he was convicted other ‘witnesses were | and his horse shot. Four men then cle will be abundantly illustrated, makes him understand.” Just theve i James brothers © to Clay county Mo, | thirteen miles distant from F and | re stify ad before be came forward and fired six shots at him. W * ¥ the best of Babyland. 1t There were also five daughte Wili- [ Nate Rainsharger, On a v : wnd when Frank’s trial came | 1o foll from the bridge, shot througl RonerT Lot INSON ark- [ Drings out all the mother’s bright- am, the eldest son, was mareied when | ML he 18U of November, 1984, they | off last Mareh at Marshalltown nis con- | the right leg. and several balls 1| “A cnuLp or s is a sketeh- ad rog ich | ness, iner her brightuess, gives i AT K araand hns raisedinl family induced Johnson to go to the [viction was eas He was also sen- | through his clothes. He lay pe 1y hoo R Wood, of Wood's will appear in the Christmas S her something to talk about. Mothers U ; ot place selected, ostensibly to (| tenced to life “imprisonment, Last | sill, however, and, after looking ut Qe 008 | yill bo splondidly illustrated from dvaws | need but little prompting to sing and of four boys who J yesron|igtocley i te and ank | March the supreme court of Towa | their victim and concluding he was | ook store, Hudson, Mich. The | ings made by twoof the author's friends | tell stories to their little ones, Nature their notoriety « i s, Will- [ went ) thre milesve | granted Nate Rainsbarger anew trialon | dead, the red-handed fiends withdrew. | book contains a numberof other sketch- | —William Hole, A, It. S, A. Vil | affords the stimulus. All the mother lam had se aterm i peniten north of the H.IHI\]\ erplace. and a writ of error. Bunjer crawled a quarter of a mile to | es each well written and thoroughly in- | H. Low. the Americs nd illus- | love wints is the story. the rhyme, the ary in Missouri before he came fo this | teen miles from the scene of the mur- [ The confliets between members of this | the i e, fv vhich he was | teresting. trator of *Lamia,” to whom Mr. Steven- | jingle, the picture. The baby respondg county. They were all poor when they | 9¢r- 1t was 4 o'clock in the afternoon | gung and the oftic and witnesses | taken to his home. ) ag * son recently inscribed two pocms. with confidential crow. M G R e L they left home, They were met | Sinee the arrest of Nate and Frank Rainsharger & won nomed | \Trw Omvrone COSpANY. hts ta ! What are such relations worth? came here, and to replenish their lard- e 1w i L b e R ot samle 6ol THE CENTURY COMPANY has issued ) RNETT in | ¢ a > it Ryt R ITey Lonader trenuont. Lol ves by their nephews, Joseph and | Rainsharger for the murder of Enoch [ Krull entered Bunjer’s house, knocked |10 coventh number of *Battles and RS, ', T BURNETT'S new story will | “Babyland™ costs but cents in tho (0, i O LT AL L B Rainsbarger. Going outof the [ Johnson, would muke a volume of thril- | the father downstairs, drew their revol- s o sin in the Ch nnm\u v of St. | book.” You ean get u sample monthly ol maluh bork ataok. 1 "";. I“f"'_‘ o short distance, Frank and | ling intevest. On the 4th of June, 18 vers, and threatened to kill the family, | T-caders of the civil war.” These publi- | Nicholas. 1t is called rew part of it, or of Our Little Men and ing with them reachec gL art, xchanged one of their tes | Coroner Underwood and Dy, Ritenour | and eriminally assaulted one of the | cations consists of articles which have | and it depiets the life of « , or of “Pansy.™ or of Chuus butin a heicoun ityEnaatiyaoye O travel for a fast s, | who had made themselves obnoxious to | daughters. For this they were indicted, | appeared in the Century Magazine, is [ & boarding-school in London. is e ung Folks™ Journal, ov of steals timber. The sons under such in- 7 0'clock Frank and N " the gang by taking part in the prosceus | but the torch of the gang was applicd to | jssued in parts and sold exclusively by e of St. Nicholus will have s Wide Awake, by sending 5 cents to fluences, took as naturally to stealing as | south flllml"h Hllm\ driving ¥ | tions of Iy and Nate, wi fired | the Bunjer home, some of their stock | ¢iheerintion When completed the v Washington Gladden, T . Boy Lothirop company, Boston. a duck takes to water. The oldest giri | They met Johnson at the upon in the Rainsbarger district. The | killed, and their own_ lives threatened. | i “_'_“ Tt ‘”‘1‘ i 1k R, Stockton and J. T Trowbridge, i Snariled Henry Johns, a man of ene pointed, and were met by Fin attack made by four men with | This had the desived.effect upon the | Prts will make a valuable and hand- | with an illustrated account of the voy- | BELFORD'S ANNUAL for 1887-8 is oA : ; ! | barger and one or two “other part handkerehicfs tied over the lower part | Bunjers, and Joe was acquitted. Sinee | some book, agze of the World baloon, written by / w Book for American childreny i Rainsburgers are all powerful men, | of their faces, then John Bunjer has been much in *e reporter who took the trip from rdited by Thomas W, Hanford (I2hno)e and at least four of them nad assembled | Pl doetors escaped withouta serateh, | the company of the gang ‘and has | “IN THRALLDOM,u psychological ro- | Louis lust summer. This book is worthy of a place in to murder o fecble old man. After | yjthough their clothes and buggy were | learned many things valuable to the | mance” publication by Leon Mead and houschold in America. Tt is illust crushing Johnson's skull with heavy | pruck by several bullets. The next d prosceution. Tnordertoseal hislips they | 1iyiied by 7. L. Ogilvie & Co., Chi THE u.\n\m.rnn-r.nnu\ volume | with 125 original drawings, by Wild knuckles they set him on his horse be- | YlALL h Rainsharger | planned to murder him, and supposed | PuPlished by J. L. Ogilvie & Co., Chi- { 5,,01yd0 some notable papers. Heve liams, Jones, Kendricks, Vaughn and ) ! nd Mauch Rainsbarger | planned 0} 5 puy d fore he was yet dead, and carried him | wope aprested on the charge of shooting [ they had done so. The attack and d (A = o Prof. Atwater's valuable econom others, with elaborate colored frontise W yards from the scene | 4 tho doetor. Willinm gave bail and | fense were so_well planned, howe PERTODICALS, studies on the food question—pavers | picce and cover, and full of stories, In Feb. | of the murder. Making his foot fast in | ¢ 1. while the other two were | that it is doubtful if they will be con- RECENT TELEGRAMS from Russia | which have attracted wide attention | sketches, fables. faivy tales, pos m~ B i | the Tines they allowed him to fall from | jjgced in joil ot Eldora. That night [ vieted, For scveral months William | show that the government of that coun- | among scientists 5 0 y M: Aleott, Olive Thorue *“_'“";1'_1} the horse, and dragged him some dis- | {0y were attacked in the jail, taken | Rainsbarger has been keeping his sou- [ try ~nlnl puhnm‘tl)w policy of ar Furope: seve Mrs. vi ; P, 1. Barnun ) et Sleanb, ity qot | tance. “(\" "’ .‘H“"‘.m‘l“""-‘f\”"‘-‘_ l"“‘ ¢ amob of 100 men, riddled with | in-law at his house. When asked by e eRT e ssion” which is :un. d s, W ennell's 3 cy Larcom, Hel AL, O s 0t | on top of tho Ll 300 yards north o md their bodies left lying in the | Jack Reed why he kept him when he | described by Mr. Kennan in a paper o t|‘|l|4m~ (to be continued in 1~_~\, . 1. | Beecher, Elizabeth - Stuact Phely 7 where the body was left. street, had such a large family of boys to help e last appeal of the R . Buekl 1 Science and [ D, Howells, L. 1% Tolstoi, Bl Wheeley T S R e oy ezt imortine hal dand : THEIR TIME HAD COM him on the farm, his. reply was that [ liberals,” in the November Century. | ) : i i yutions and oth Bollord, Clurke &) B pa et oYy A B only v Tohnsonwas fovndion ¥ ¢ o e ep | they had all been impeachied, and he | A number of young army and navy of X oft, ‘0., Now York, are the publishcrs, the most cowardly murders cver com- | the lines looped around the 1 ; want son-in-law there because ‘ers in St. Petersburg Tave just been s 3 - Gl mitted in this country. When he rve- | tached toa part of the harness, e G i e i | [ s been impeached, and sentenced to penal itude in the Si- -.| 0 sy o Some of Brigham You s Wives, turned from the penitentiary he gave | flesh of the leftleg was congested unde g . Threatening letters were sent £ ¢ in Nebraska. l\l. ian m|||n-l:(n| Il“‘l v T-llin;r(ul'fl in s | ts by I8, C. 4 St. Louis Post-Dispateh: The other REDOL 3 4 A 3 o1 > 1inos ¢ Bl'e ware & num- i pigis offor oA The four |{.|m~h'||m s who took part in | the course of a debaté the advant: +i||gl<‘ ill ted o . . o | wives of Br n Young were Augosti ll:(lll‘l‘l‘t‘”'l\'l!)‘l(llr“-lly Ixrfii:-rh:mi::?‘_‘_“n:l{:‘ll]::_ ith ‘}"}'N"'} “'_::‘n'l]j FORICEG N Ml Lopuin ““I'I'.“:W:m‘: foub mado o)}, 7% bl iine: the ‘mother of the mur- | which another governmental system | Pharaoh,” it Cobb. 1 proxy, who died before her huse ally more industrious, and who.if left to | Buek of cach car the skull was broken. | strung and killed ami 1 | derers, the dnughter and son-in-law would havo over tho present ono. | Julion Hawthorne, cte, f WEDZST O PR (LT Ty thémselves were not bad citizens, were | The horse was feeding nes > | out. and several persons shot af. e nry | twe women belonging to the gang, | There ix said to be much excitement | cludes the latter ha Mr. ¥, who is now living in Detroit, and by degrees drawn into pating in [ mavk of the body being d as | | L the brother-in-law, whom they hmuuh' to their house and indignation among the friends of | “Hundredth Man.” with notable short ( Augusta Adams Young, his very fivsty his erimes, The people, x.]-fl.m-. al | also found. One wheel and one of the | o dark night by one of th Sunday before, may all be > the young ofticers in military cireles, | stories, among them “Jack,” by CR. Snow, the Mormon poctess, now tal atte cmpis 1o establish the | fills of the bugey were broken. The | o' R e L 0 |80 Rustuin the Albe, and 16 will'be nine und ‘the circumstance furnishes another th Stuart Phelps, *Azalia,” by | ¢ ighty-six, who elaims to hava of th . spokes were broken at the hub and the | ¢ ut back for teial th op- | Witnosse lnsuone. illustration of the way in which the Rus- | Joel Chandler vis, ete., ete. The sealed 1o Joseph Smithi Maomi K. fill upward the ard as if it were sl R TR AL e 2 It is such bloody work as this, through :x |i\g:|\| i nment, ‘l:.\"]‘::ll‘llld:‘llvl’k’ I\\-n‘h 'ri\;i War I':I[|n‘||>ln]tl ~\;|hum-h;«{\A;;'n\--k'-‘ll gt l{\\\ \L\l-'l.i‘ u-\u\\" ; i .1“ III‘M: N Inc 15 v the mi « | done by hand. The bug Was not | jesses, Writing threatening letters | @ long series of ye that has led the | (0Ssive s b AT G ce some of the later battics of the war, 't Am olsom, This make: :,‘,'rl',:‘;,ff:m N,‘,,,l,..,,:\‘;l',.,".'d AT e i I e s IR L people in this ‘community up o the disousslon, excitos and koeps alivo the | with Sherman’s Murch to the Sea, and | tirouty-two polygamous wivos whom tho courngeous that it was dangerous busi- 3 shed home about 12 o'clock that | and they determined upon a bold and lunm of taking the m\ InEthoii owni|RSY0NUQNATVANRIGHA SIS Shanal I“ many minor engagements, Prophict .ri; .M‘.m P : cd ..“..\(H, "l’ A T DT T G aRERD id the next morning Nettie dis- [ daving “scheme. A number of eut- | hands. The people of Hardin county | 2OF ) ting appeal to lifetime and” whom knowledgeds who was not averse to turning a pe by questionable methods, So suce was he that at the time of his de he had ama d a fortune stimated at from $100.000 to The Rainsbarger method of doing busi ness frequently led to the arrest of some i 1 N C Nate' E i ar v-ubiding 3 4 2 'y in Mr. Kennan's ar- 2 ST, N1CnonAs bound volumes for now, Miss Twiss and Marthu R 0 ) Lo tify neninsb them. | Not 1blood on Nate's overcoat, and | thronts wore imported and were detailed | are as law-abiding as can be found any- | t quoted _in M 1 ) ; I : e o e e nson. | his bloody overalls were found by her | fora wholosale slaughter. - M, Johns, | where in the country, but they have \ principal reason fov the mor- | 184 rice 81 Tov the two parts). con- | Bowker, all ehildless, have rooms in the bid form which the contest with the two thousand pages of de- " L nd. like the other widows government has tuken is the absence in | lightful matter for young folks. Critics eive life annuities from the Russiaof any opportunity forthe free de- | of the press have about exhaus sted their | e 8 Snow isa living skeles velopmedt of public opinion and the free setives for St. Nie b ton and cannot last much lon exercise of public :uu\m i vurk Advertis id v 9 S8t [ has written three volumes of poetry November 18, 1884, which aroused the [ hid in the barn, v the wealthy widow, was to be burned | ready suffered their rights to be tram- people of this and adjoining countics, | also bloody. > 3 out and mide to believe it was the work | pled upon too long. wns there any concert of action in was -*"HNN'“ the | of the vigilants, Tt was then expected Jack I d is one of the shrewdest and bringing them'tc ad kille but the f:-r'Hh‘nl his eq }lm( she would deaw upon her fortune | most notorious .{.-;..»»‘\- in Towa. He was The events whi followed the i e § 0_suspe or the purpose of revenge, and thus nw oldest son of Robert v 4 i e My i attempts to make crime. odious in this D t day after the | snpplied with funds, they would pay in DuPage county, Illinois. st ok Nicholns s so exaspc Shoge Hiosoniersiglan ".,',‘,‘f,‘: county and the cnergy with whicl val Dlood was found in e vavine: their imported murdérers,” Lotters put- | was early educated in crime and took | 18 ‘ovory res .} S o monthiniand.monthiol T ST gang have defended themselve: A coroner’s jury was impancled and | porting to come from the vigilants were | natu 11\ to stealing. Juck’s first ar- D A {\ h 005 0] "‘]l" rmay well wish, oncein o while, L 1 i of thrilling interest and hai rody taken up. *The_ jur ub | written und given tou trusted friend to | o , Towa, when | S s o teoduced |‘mj,‘l;;: asto, M, 1x..}';.\'":'h.”,,'.wl"\l'll."(1."" k -:{"'” i T A T R ST escapes. Enoch Jolnson was Yer | “deceased came ) copy. These lotters never renched Mrs, s o | Stall has introduced into the eccles 2 ast year the leading sk R Ol Tt s blunt instrument in- the hands o i AT S e B e A B s Hchlanuunia saotiohartelng aiags es of cliolas have ineluded | has gone into histor s e fuvority son’s daughtor, vank | sons to the jury unknown.” No evi- | officers of the | When the conspir- | & of the court house, in which he | &5 thos P nthac ,‘“"‘ ca | ton’s “personally eon- | wife o Rand e A A B i ce was found implicating the Raus- [ acy was discovered, members of was confined. - He was next heard of in | 5% IS e the growt 3 and “”‘,h 2 BUEEGRING DXUltip o iy i e five y United States marshal swooped down | bargers. g began to suspect each other, i allus county, Towa, whers he operated | o, 100 GRS BiesyARknE slnk od, 3o Businag St QUOAN L | R IR R i upon Goldfield, Ta., and arrested John- ska aftor the murder Nattie [ it was not long before this murderous | fr with the clange. e foaiire b0 valuabls i de ] for oye ndg ol et st e son and a man named Biggs for counter- avgor sent word to the coroner | brood were warring with themselves, | gang he came fhat all other church annuals will likely | serials, s“onny's Bourding Tt v | woman. She lives in ier own twe feiting moncy. Biggs jumped from the [ that she was afeaid of her lifeand | 4 . ack Reed was convieted of Jehlaw thed oaumnia, Institutions 6f | James Ot d-uanamddnaniist hvelveinin, o ANes i Nes eaey train and_escaped. . Johmson, after [ wanted help to get away from home and : and sent to the peniten- ping;home mbssloniswilonsialo. are |Ivancla Consteneylauylon SuENichalialiiholss i the colion o o, sranilata Iying in jai as bailed ‘out by | a guarantee of protection. The next | tiavy for three years, and other mem- apaohine Hn et dogistanida r vl i KL ARSI R0 5 said to'drive a good bare his son-in tainsbarger, and | day she was brought to Eldora and had | bevs were indieted. ‘ted twice from this connty and sen- aken a new admivation | serie soyhood o neng : i Y ) pous g 20, . 3 ; & s seople so fully ¢ ated in every ers on eadet life at Wesd | gain, She never marvied after Brigs his brother Nate, who made ! to be guarded for nearly a yeuar, so de- Recently William Seott, a forme | tenced to the penitentiary.” He was Mnm‘] H il iy religious and | Point, ote,, ote, Within the past | ham's death. Amelin hud no childreny A Great CATASTROPHE!CHINA andART G00DS Just Arrived 30 ST YLES We Invite Your Inspection of the Finest Line o ———OF OUR—— $14,$15,$1I7 &$18 SUITS . Goods in the West. ' HAYE FALLEN TO China, Glassware,Brass & Bronze —=$$10.00=—"— Silverware anid Cut Glass in Great Variety. This is the cheapest lot of goods ever sold in Omaha. If you want a suit of clothes, buy now, as this cat will o nly la T N YORK AN OWAWA cLOTHING o PERKINS, GATCH & LAUNAN, 1 Tew Paxton Building. LEADING CLOTHIERS, 1308 FARNAM STREET. 1514 Farnam Street, I 8