Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 14, 1888, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OMAHA DAy BEE SEVENTEENTH YEAR. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 14, 18SS. NUMBER 210 BlC STOR“ | cape. The steed became frightened when | was he was badly bitten by the frost, and it | the school house for his‘children and hae not | was several hours late, and on the Prairie du 1 r out D. P, Erwin & Co., dry goods; George DEATH ]N M, | they reached the center of the river atthe | will be some day's before he will be able to be | been seen since. ~As quite a number of | Chien division of the St. Paul road passenger ) S“ pT BY F]RE. W. Stout & Co., wholesale grocers, and Peard flaunting drapery of a neighboring cutter and | about. farmers started for home just before the | as well as freight trains were suspended on son & Wetzel's building, unoccupied. Tha ran_away. He dashed up the river on COAL AN PROVISIONS FOR THE POOR. Dlizzard set in it is feared that some have | account of the big drifts in the cuts. Snow. flames caught in the bulldings on the oppoe the ice at a furious rate, narrowly missing | County Agent Mahoney was surfited from hed. plows have been at work all day, and it is not site side of the street and many firms are Victims of the Blizzard Discovered | scveral holes left by the ice cutters, and fin- | early dawn to candle light yesterday dealing LixcoLy, Neb, Jan. 13.—(Special to the | expected that passenger trains will be started | Some of the Finest Bulldings Are [ vertain to be burned out. % ally ran into the Iowa shore and over the em- | out orders for coal, flour and provisions tothe | Bek.) —Every kind and character of railroad | on any of the Wisconsin divi 1:30 4. M-—The firc is now apparently During the Day. bankment into a deep snow drift. After | poor of the city. Thecgld wave swelled the | travel was blockaded at Lincoln to-day until | RaPip City, Dak., Jan. 18.—(Special Tele- Completely Destroyed. under control. It is impossible to give the floundering about here for a few moments, | list of applicants for assistance preceptibly, | noon, at which hour No. 1 on the B. & M. | gram to the Bre.]—The blizzard which set in losses to-night, but ail the firms carried both men succeeded in getting out. Gross | and all day long men, women and children | arrived from Omaha, The branch iines to | horo yesterday morning still ragos. The mer: vy stocks and the estimates vary from CHILDREN REPORTED LOST. | with a badly sprained avm, and Hardin minus | filed in and out of Mr. Mahoney's supply | the north were buried in drifts and the Elk- | cury showed 22 below at 6 o'clock this morn- | THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS LOST. 000 to #100,000. The loss on both builde his elegant cap. The horse and cutter were | room in the county building. The procession | horn, Missouri Pacific and Union Pacific were | ing. The Elkhorn road is blocked by snow . ings and stocks scem at this hour almosy extricated after much - dificulty, the former | comprised all classcs and nationalitics, and | not running trains, Al roads, however, wore in both directions from this place. No loss _ total. being none the worse off for ‘his wild run, | all had pitiable tales of want and suffering to | making strenuous efforts to overcome the | of life has yet been reported, but considera- " DETROIT, Mich., Jan. 18.—At 11:30 to- Harrowing Tales From Many Places | but the cuttor had sustained o couplo of | unfold. snow and open the roads. At noon no reports | ble damage to stock is feared. Many of the Goods Rescued From | goiipokeout in ' building ult})uln::m“l!l‘l‘: of the Effects of the Terrible broken ribs and a big hole in its back. The | My customers are increasing daily." said | of loss of life in the vicinity of this city were [ JAMESTOWN, Dak., Jan, 13, ~The storm still | the Flames Are Ruined By Water | Froo Press, quickly enveloping the Jattes z 5 men came over this morning on the dummy. | Mr. Maboney, “and this cold snap is bring- | reported. An employe at the packing house | continues, although much sbated. The ther- sScheduleof 1 Towa' building with smoke. The fire appears to ba Cold—Judge Post Said Will Krug, who was reported lost in the | ing them in by droves,' was missing, but it was thought he was | mometer at noon marked 87 below. The ex- Sl AL LA ond control, ° to Be Lost. storm, turncd up late in the evening with a Appended is a list of the fuel and provis- | safely housed in some part of the city. Th treme cold forms a crust on the drifts which Legislatare. Tne Arcade building adjoining the Freq couple of nipped ears and_rubicund nose, re- | ions dealt out yesterday: Twelve tons of [ police were called on for aid in only one in- | almost proves too much for the assaults of Press and occupied by a number of weekly ceived while walking in from a_ pointbelow | coal: 2 000 nounds of flour: 35 pounds of teas | stance, and that was to assist home a young | the snow plows. Yesterday's westbound publications and job printing establishments the Bluffs where he was uuccremoniously | 75 pounds of coffee; 150 pounds of beans; 175 | girl who was lost and wandering on East Q | limited, snowed up at Wheatland all day, ar- Disastrous Fire at Sioux City, was complately gutted by fire about 11:30 toe Official Storm Data. dumped by his uncontrollable steed. Later | bars of soap. street. rived this evening about forty hours late. Storx € Ta., J 18.— [Special Teole- | Might. Th firo is still burne A Bee reporter called at the signal service | his horse and sleigh were brought g by some RAILROAD TRAFFIC RESUMED, ANOTHER MAN BADLY FROZEN, The Northern Pacific mamn line and branches SIOUR R I ar e = (SPSCIRL LS ing flercely but it is now ofice yosterday morning. and in abrief chat | Towan. who, with others, had gone out to aid | The demoralization experienced by the | Nreuian, Neb., Jan. 13,—[Special Telegram | are all blockaded and all trains are delayed | €ram to the Bex. | ux City was visited by | heieved that it will be confined to the Arcade th Otiadroes Ohanpell [oarnsd 8Os Very assist_{he unfortuniate victims of the | railronds was partly straightencd out late | to the Ber.]—Yesterday's storm was the | from twelve to thirty-six hours, fire again last night and very heavy losses | building. Thé total loss will aggrogata e B o rat | great sleigh ride. Mr. Irey, the real cstate | yesterday afternoon, sand trains were sent | worst ever known he and the weather Feraus Fanis, Minn., Ja ~—The bliz- | are the result. Yesterday's storm was oue | $36.000, of which §10,000 is on the buildin queer things in connection with the night's ter- | ., "Billy Townsend, and others, all b out and”came in from the cast and west, | changed from pleasant, with the wind from | zard has subsided and is ‘succoeded by in- | of the severest on record and the night was | And the remainder distributed among severa rifie blizzard,and meteorlogical matters gener- | most enthusiastic experience with 1 y | though somewhat behind time. The fiyer | the south, toa northwest blizzard, and the | tense cold. The roads ure drifted full and ; Propitious for a canflagra. | ATMS. The insurance is unknown, ally. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon there was | horses, and for a time it was thou 3 the B, & M. steamed into the depot at | temperature fell 20 degrees in twenty min- | business is at a standstill. There has been | o€ of the most unpropitious for a conflagra- | "3y yixauam, Eng., Jan. 15 Morris & o freshening b from the southeast which | Townsend's companion had been m., nearly two hours late, and pushed | utes. Large numbers of cattle have been | no train in either direction on the Manitoba | tion that could possibly be imagined. Be- | Norton's furniture factory, the largest in the b s nts to n voloeity | irrecoverably lost. She taken out tle later, The local train'due at 5:30 | frozen to death. The only person known to | since Wednesday night. The Northern Pa- | tween 10 and 11 o'clock, when the storm was ,is on fire. The fire sbread 1o the printe increased with a few moments to I of w drift, however, by the rescuers | from Lincoln did not get here until 11 o'clock | be seriously frozen is F. W. Taylor, of Clear- | cific enger train got in yostercay ut noon | at its greatest fury, an alarm of five was | i rooms of the Daily Post in_an_ adjoining of four milles an hour. At 4:18 there Was | 4nd taken to the Ogden house and resusci- | last night. Most eastern trains did not wait | water, who was picked up this morning through to Wapheton but ot stuck fod, T oy A ded | building, stopping the issue of the paper. Tha oneof the most remarkable changeson record, | tated. Will Krug hiad with his usual fore- | for conncetions, and the Kansas City train | barely able to speak and will probably not | on the return journey. No reports of suffer. | Sounded. he department - responded | o il be hea the wind shifting from the southeast to the lhuuulllul‘(r‘n \I‘Illl hnnu.h r q'u.n'( bottle of \l\-;-m out last night m‘_ ]* 0, scheduled time. | recover. inu\;u © \ul‘un) |-m;q-|vrd l‘"""‘l"li" ln": l:;‘-ilvd l:u‘ x“|w in lh:fl"r: o ik i b 4 ehivl. | arnica, and had it not been for this, it is [ There was a resume of the freight runs on the Mixor, Dalk., Jan. 13.—No trains are mov- | story of T. 8. Martin's building on Fourt " northwest in a twinkling of an eye.and whirl- | Jiiee™, itiin that several of the gentlemen | main Jine, but branchi lin re_somewhat | e iXaway A ing yet. The storm has abited, Wit 1ho | street, just cast of the Hotol Booge The fre | s aorers erv® Lealslature. ing and nowling along ata speed of thirty-six | et cortaiuly have succumbed 1o the rigors | neglected” owing to- impassible barriers of | S10UX Crrv, Ta., Jan. 18.—[Special Tel- | wind is still blowing. Tt ‘wis 5 dogrees et e R et bl R IOISRY (18 Tary 19, S8 [SneciAl SIS miles an hour. ‘The snow drifted badl of the Towa climate. They do say, however, | snow. egram to the BEE.]—A great many cases of | below zero this morning. An attempt will a o RUELLE B A - | gram to the Berk.|—The legislature settles air was filled with flour-like particles, which | that the specches of Messrs, rkson | None of the roads from the east running | frozen ears, noses, checks, hands, feet and | be made to-morrow to open cuts und move | OWing to the absence of the fire chief and as- | down to work very slowly. The speaker has el L SXOuTs10n Tk 3o blod I Lhe PAROL at tho | AR tso- WIght. Sealus. ask bt oyer. Hhg | OUhEF Parts of the ody are roported today | BATRCRStR, | Tote ls fourtcon, inches of | RiETAIS, Ao WEM AL 106 Bromeris ootig | ot yet announced his committeos and the atmost impossible. Mhis condition of things | gyrgen, were almost us severcly eloguent s | Chicago & Northwestern, Chicugo, Milwau- | 88 Fesults of last night's storm, to_say noth- | jumes Smith und two sons, aged fifteen and | without loadership, and whs conscquently fn- | 1oute therefore is doing nothing but passing continued until 7 o'clock, when the storm | the storm had been. The delightful spread | kee & St. Paul, Wabash, and other roads | ing of more harrowing fatalities. Quite a | seventeen, started to a stack of hay Six ; ‘ joint resolutions aud indulging in much talk. N Both houses to-day decided to con tinue tha reached the acme of its fury, and the wind, [ and thedclights of Terpsichore which follow- | were from two to six hours late. The fiyer | number of the firemen were frozen badly, | miles from town on the 1ith and have not | CfTectual to extinguish the lames. However, having increased in velocity to forty-four | ed went a long way toward counterbalancing | from the west over the Union Pacific Was | one Charles Eslick, having both feet frozen | 8ince been heard from. Searching partics | 81l night through they worked, aided by the | 314 practice of going on a tour of the various milos on hour, wont shricking and creaming | the vicissitudes of the wross the river, | tardy three hours, and the morning train due | {5 tho aukles, During almost all of last | 4 to-day on_ the lookout. Several other [ policemen, as best they could. The building | seate institutions, nominally called an ine spection, but practically quite a pienic for the( a and until & late hour in the night all went | from the west at 8:20 a. m. came in a few | © ; : pcople are missing, but ure supposed to have | is a comparatively new brick struct i through the streets like fiends from the | yorryag a sleigh bell. miliutes after 6 o'clock Jast night, nearly ton | ML searching parties were out hunting for | {yicen refuge. - 2 eysals o’ WHAE another :;::;Ts(l:::\:: h hyperhorean regions. The temperature, too, C. B MAYNE Lours behind time. The main lind is reportea | Brownie Higman, a young son of W. E. Hig- |~ FAULKTON, Dak., Jan. 13.—The most ter- [ R¥¢Ttl, Stare a0 after ghother dis ¢ | Statesmen, who have nice trip and are gong kept going down, until 1t threatened to drop | Mr. Mayne's team did not get away from | clear, and freights have been put in motion. | man. The boy did not reach home after | Fific storm ever witnessed in this section has | ¢ Bad, done its awork. "The occupints of | goveral days and find all their expenses paid out of the bottom of the tube, and did not be- | him, as stated in the morning papers. Mr. aftic continues suspended on the Omaha & | school and was supposed to have lost his way | Deen upon us for the last forty-eight hours. 15US. 1088 ARG AN TOLBWAT . Tkt N by the state. The legislature ham come anything like stationary until it had Mayno did noL oMl 10 prose the river, but | Tepublican Valley, Stromsburg and Norfolk | ip tne blinding storm and perhaps perished. | It b L G Y Pixley & Co., wholesalo and retail clothing, | ©© meet ~ next Tuesduy in- _Joint Hod 18 eirrass - Holow. ¥aro:. Notwiths ‘ounc s orning, | divisions. HBLLA, Bt L shed. | o'clock until dark there was not ten minutes S i Hess] % | convention to vo 3 i S T e ot ot the amew | When he drove over and arrived ‘ail right | | The Missouri Pacific got a train through | The ercatest excitement prevailed on this uc- | Gurimg which the Duide o the mumsite Ay L nasystcny I1; OINIGRYS |l suridtor but it 1 thovght (b will Aciouris continued to - fill - the _air in_ blind. | Without accident. from the west last night, but the Chicago, | count. The boy turned up all right this | side of the strect could be seen. The air | & W0 Mot pif fant tallors. INSUFANCe | for o week while the commiticcs visit the' ine quantitics, and for hours it was x MCORMICK'S TEAM, St. Paul, Minncapolis & Omaha and the Fre- | morning having remained over night with a | Was full of snow and was blowing a_gale [ FHpi WGt Bl fose. Hocond foor Carn | vayous ustitutions, Tt was ureed in dofense impossible for ofe to mako out objects on the | - Dick McCormick was not m the mont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valle family not more than a block from home | from the northwest. The mercury grad- | pifBhe Shelebaion, physiciins, total 108 | of tho visit that the logislature would not be onpoaite side. of the strect. The snow was | but his_team was driven by Harry McCor: | quite s fortu However they expect by | (eifey HOLI0ke Hidh & bloekt fr ually _ dropped from about 10", above | P sty BN SItIE tad INStremontss | able to appropriate money intelligently for banked up in great drifts at’ irregular inter- | mick. They also left the road, got into a | to-day to have their roads agam in apple-pio | JUIE unable to reach there, Quite a number | 1o * 16" “below — av dark ~last | ption & Bovington, uttorneys, D Erown | their institutions unless personal writs of ind vals along the sidewalks, and uniucky pedes. | hole and broke the whiflictrees, 'The horses, | order. of the men employed in the Silberhorn pack- | night. The teachers and most of | {AtIHID almost entiroly savec o tion were made by the members them- trinus took many a shivery plunge into their | however, were uninjured and were brought | = THE FIGHTING CIAPLAIN KNOCKED OUT. ing house yesterday did not return to work | the scholars of the two lower departments of [ 414 We b o e e nkL | selves, so they will make the usual trip, A depthe. . Finally, th Ly of the storm | to this side intheafternoon. T. H. Lozier, of Mount Vernon, Ta., | to-day. Two at least of those missed were | our schools were compelled to remain in Airnitute: Shotdon & Noa e pooks and | joint resolution memorializing. congress in was such that those v ent forth to braye | The team of Harris & Harris were driven shting chaplain,” is at the Windsor, | supposed to have perished and men were | of the school rooms all night. Provisions s s o enTuArthun, Qressmak- | favor of a postal telegraph passod tho house i aropeanis O Deitg overwhelmed | across the river in the morning, having beeu haplain hiis been holding a series of | kept hunting for them all the forenoon. One | being carried to them. Ropes were stretehed | Qo 1055 (b almost everything savid | 1o/q0y and was buried in' @ committeo in the EHA Toat. (AN ToR Ho b tHomtroateTol the/alty || houl Thursday night in the Bluffs, the | v sful camptire entertainments at | has since turned up alive and safe, but the | from the corner of Main strect to the Tschool | {rehfEet Muvti aito sutained considerable Tho contested olettion: case of Case Were s tenantless as Goldsmith's ¢Deserteq | owner having returned on the dummy. points in this vicinity, and was booked for | other “one was found near the new | house to enable those carrying provisions to [ 108 Onthe third floor Georie A, Mead lost t vs Young in the senate was deferred till: Village.” Long toward 3o'clock in the morne WENKY HOMAN'S EXPERIENCE, Wathoo lst night. Wisher to-night,and Wayne | bridee on the Floyd, ~ dead, Ho was | go and come with safety. ‘1t was impossible | {000t houschold, furniture. e Swedish | {05, T80 S Yepaad was wcessation in | | Henry Homan, driver for Joo Withrow, | and Hortington Monday and” Tuesday, but | onc of the Kelline gang. A telephione mes- | to reach the railroad station after 4 orelock, | forvekian Goad Templars® lodwo had g0 | FOEREAE 0L the tremendous force of the wind, [ the Harney strect Livery man, had a hard | the blizard has knocked his appointients | sawe from the stock yards confirms the report | and the agent and several others were com: | isurance: mothing suved. | the aSlogad et | ] Livis: R b AL, and by the break of - day the heavens | ttme of it in returnmg ' from th | higher e . He spent Thurs- | that a lady has been found on the Floyd be- | pelled to remain over night without dinneror | feetfgmts of shis floot were holp cmployed at | house was considered and a substitute offered were unflecked, and the wind had died away | Bluffs. The wind was blowing directly from | day » 0 o near Weeping | tween the foot bridge and the new bridge. | supper. No definite reports of loss of life [ fie IOt Heok 1% by Mr. Woolson which retains the present to an unpretentious breeze. 1t was intensely | the west and the horses, refusing to face the | Water, and reach Omaha twenty-four hours | His brothers are séarching for him. *Another | have been received. It is believed some | e bullding was owncd by, T, system of legislative visiting committees to cold, the thermometer registering 18 bolow | £ale, kept turning to the right and left. Mr. [ late. Fhe ehaplain all further Nebras man from Silverborn is also missing. He has | must have perished. A T ORI T ras e block, in | state institutions, at iho signal service obscrvatory, and any. | Homlun was obliged to get out of the slciht | appointments are "ot till the north pole | not yet shown up at the boarding house. He | | RavNoxb, Dak., Jan. 13.—The damage to | 14 Was an imposing three il S e e where from' 18 to 25 below at other pli and lead the frightened animals across the | leans the other way. He will fill his appoint- [ was'a total stranger here, and it is surmised | live stock will be t, while the reports of f"‘;‘['."_ ik ac V"-f“"“ \"”. he | A bill was introduced making it the duty o throughout the city. Al Thursday after- [ fe. Hencirly froze both hands, and when | ments in western Towa, and retura to Ne- | that he wandered away and perished. Be- | suffering and death are constantly coming in, | Building adjoining, owned by Schuloin Bros, | directors to fusnish all text books for schools noon the snow-storin was _general all over | he reached the Omaha side he’was so be- | braska in about three weeks, sides these two othor men are missing, a man [ Two sous of William Driver were frozen to | A% SCEMIWIAR CIHARCE, T8 MALIOWS OCCUC )y their districts. this state, Dukotu, Iowa, Minuesota, Wis- | numbed that it was with dificulty that he STRUCK BY THE NORTIT WIND. named Swerin and Peter Johnson, two fore- | doath within a fow feet of their barns, | [t of this bullding all sustained more or | ™, Y 50 tho election of railroad commis- consin und Ilinois.” At Bismarck, D.r,, the | could climb in the sleigh and drive tothe | Washington Jackson, an old gentleman | men of Holseth's carpenter gang, Ole Hasen | Charles Heath is missing and J. H. Clapp has | 1055 damage by smoke and water. ST PR e s a mercury marked 2% degrees beldw zerd; at [ stable. - Homan says hencver wants another | from Chicago, slept fn one of the South | who was reported lost last night’ was found | been discovered badly frozen, having been | A1) shoe stoclcof Martin, Skinuer & Adams ‘caso their power and num- Fort ' Custor, M. T, 24 and at Helona, 32 | like expericne Omaha hotels in a room_ fronting to the [ late this afternoon at Morning Side, very | out all night wandering upon the prairie, | Poth sustained heavy losscs, | s SC MR BerR e GY G North Platte, 205 St. Paul, 18; Lacrosse, 6! WILTON'S FINGERS. north, When the blizzard struck the town | badly frozen. It is thought he will live, how- | The elevator of Archer & Howe has Q(“’;, T ancon Sheibloak ‘l" as ‘:fl"'-'“! The house held a short session, and a cons iy Ghrtts 6 Dok Hsiues 18,0 andibse Mr. Ed. Mcadimber and family and two | he felt its ful force, and yesterdiy morning | ever. Many instances uro reported of people | gone ‘down with 13,000 bushels of grain, | St Paul £1,000; Continental, &1,000: Ger- | oot resolution was passed appointing Worth, 8. lady fricnds occupied a fine family cutter | he was found nearly dead from chills, Med- | being overcome. The fatalities in this local- | Other minor casualties are reported. b T e o | comamiteas | 0L threo! Trom /cach HbWE0 (LIRS ROUND DX, drawn by the famous “Cieveland Four,” | ical aid was called in and he is now doi ity are numerous and severe. ‘the storm was | Hrrcicock, Dak., Jan, Emil Gilbert- "“‘.‘”,l "L ‘”“}jtl ';‘:'I!lyx;hfll, ';;i (lllw eaLIERLan 0 RAPOFE il PAas I eE P Yesterday morning at 8 o'clock a telephone | with the ribbons in the hands of Wm, Wilton. | well as could be expected, but the pl undoubtedly ono of the worst that ever vis- | son, formerly of Chicago, was found frozen | S} IK (0 the eqat of the Martin black 1s the | vestigate And vepert on the foasibility of cone ispateh reached the central police station | Shortly after the storm broke over the town | States that another hour of exposure would | ited this section. Stock has suffered a great | to death two and one-half miles west of here, | Schule o o sarioe R e 5 ""1 o S— from citizens, that aman was lying dead in the » party started for home. Near Pusey's bank | he deal. At one time last night it is said the | He had left Wednesday for his claim. 0; “us{xlru :{N«*{':«'}kmxnln\lnl ut»_lllu-untnm'etfgqrx l.lbu‘}l-‘hmx the offices of state prijts snow at the corner of Twenty-third and Leay- | the horses were run into by a single cutter on i mereury went dowi to 40 degrees below zero, | .CANToN, Dal., Jan. 18.—Two children of | 97 the MArt bIOCie, & partial et of the in- | bIger ' = 0 0 b ihe governor! enworth streets. Sergcants Mostyn and Pu- | a cross street, but fortunately no damage TURNED BACK AND WERE SAVED, DunuQuE. Ta., Jan, 18.—The thermometer | Inwood, In., were caught in tho blizzard | g0+ B e §118005 ONIrars. . €550, | messagt and inugural addross ke G laskiiwere immediately dispatched to the scenc | was done. Afier considerable trouble and | | C: A. Jucobson, publisher of the Swedish | fell from about'the froezing point at midnigiit | while eoing home from school and perished. | §400% Hartford, $1,60; cNingara, €500, | message and inaugural addross in ‘t§e Gor- with' the patrol wagon, and the man was | confusion the dummy depot was reached, the | Post, and wife started to cross the Missouri | to 15 below at 7 o'elock this mosning and 10 | _BuaiNarn, Minn,, Jun. 13.—A procession of | 1€ Brown block to the cast of the Schulein | man and So sr b Stk dekel el m& fonud s aunounced. Ho was frozen almost | party” diseiburked to take the train’ for | from Broadway on the Towa side of the river | below at noon, No traing arrived or departed | Northern Dcific: irains headod by a snow | block is only damagod by water, and tono | ferred bt Bk A sohd, ond looked as if his suffering, before | home, and for five minutes Ed. turned | on Thursday night and were caught in the f cast or west to-day, and those on the river | plow and a snow bucking force left here to- | &reat extent.. Pisley & Co. occupying the | reform, = hich Ceen s etting under the influence of the cold had | loose’ his wrath on the treacherous ard. Aftera hard and trying struggle | roads were much delayed. The heavy snow- | night to open the road southward to St. Paul 40000 S atDels o nortien BTy A ke i e L) een intense. He was put in the wagon, elements that destroyed the pleasure [ With the elements, during which Mr. and | fall of rday b s blocked all the roads in | and at last reports was proceeding slowly, It ved b't 1w & po; ‘"ll ¢} wi by m;”nl I{:F he house journals daily, riod o the police station, and thence later to | of th return trip. The storm groaned and | Mrs. Jacobson had their faces frost-bitten, | northern lowa badty includes eignt_locomotives, nedtly thirty | §a¥ecs bub ol Was move oF foss damaged, Tho | reported tavarably. P tho offico of thie coronor, whence his remains | the snow billows were thawed: by, the fury | they succeeded in regaining the Bluffs, where P passenger coaches, three dining cars and | ISurance carried was as follows: National, | = Mr. Russell, of Adams county, introduced ofl coroner, Wh i SEe ALl A Y| oy e ninga BT By oa A R In the Northwest. ut one hund o £2,000; other companies, £,000: Phoenix, | a resolution providing for a special commits now lie. In the morning,theannouncementof | and warmth of his expressions. The party 3 mained yesterday afternoon, about one hundred passencers. 3000 Atna, $1,000; Glonn's Falls, $2,000% | tee of twelve, to which shall T 1 the man’s death attracted a number of people | reached home at 3:30 o'clock. The driver,ac- | When they returned to Omaha. Brsvarck, Dak, Jan 13.—The stage | ~HELENA, Mont., Jan. 15—The thermome. | $20003 Atna, §1, e e B G T s to the morgue, and among those who called | companied by Thomas Swift, brought the e left Washburne yesterday morning for this | er registered 40 degrecs below hiere to-night. | 1ritish Aumer Lenonl [ansaarit U ilestpg o s L LI were some who identificd the remains as | horses and cutter over on th o'clock OVER THE STATE. ity 3 5 ¢ 34 e | The cold wave extends over the entire te T B0H00LY : 3 K city, a place fifty miles north west of here, 2 ¥ ik 1 312,000 8to s saved. The committee on the Cassott-Young con- those of Fred Ellgr, a cigar maker, and mem- | dummy. Mr. Walton had several fingers | o = bt : S8 tory, ranging from 15 to 40 below. No tr g I i I ber of the union of that craft in this city. He | frozen during the trip. Norfolk School Children Snow-Bound | and should have arrived here last evening, | ardmoving. Two men have been froz ) American Cen- | test in the scnate was ordered to report to- is 0 young man and h ded in this city MALONEY'S FOOT, —Traffic and Business Suspended. | but nothing has as yet been heard [ death at Marysville, twenty miles from S0 Silaidian AgnONL Hambiig | oS moming The, Rangie: jafiinee for some time, having worked for Mr. Boeck- | Michael Maloney, employed at Fowler's wroLk, Neb., Jan. 13.—[Special Tele- | of it. Itis supposed it is lost in the blizzard, | Helena. Lo maniaienonn, S0, The room il 1o.morrow wnd IBo HOVReMARE A hoff,the manufacturer at 1712 8t. | packing house at South Omaha, foolishly at- | gram to the Ber.]—Probably the worst bliz- [ The stage left for Winona this morning und [ Lircneern, Minn., Jan. 13.—No trafus | JoXb east was ocoupjad by Lo 13, Martin's Towa RonaTORay Hand, Coroner Drexel set about | tempted to — walk —to ' thi e e e i A | TR Gl are entertained for its | have reached here since Wednesday night. T s, Wi Mol xo- Oasong SNANEos EIAD . mmediately to secure witnesses who could | through the terrible storm. He starte 5 LLOX neec prevailed here from 21 gafe ™ arrival, ~ The wind last night Pxrer, Minn,, Jan, 13.—The last train | OV ANC 8 HICIY SHINMECG bY water. He Des Moises, Ta., Jan. 13.—[Special Tele- RO ROLIO KN RAE B Ene T Catea R avhion il iLetarhansie But Hadtnot! ot s ilo | o'clock yesterday ufternoon until midnight | was - about ' forty miles an hour | reached herd Weduesday night and none are | Curried insurance in the Lowdon, and Lanea- | gram to the Ber. | —The Des Moines, Osco- rocght about the death of the deceesed. when he began looking for shelter. A few [ Jast night. The storm came on full-fledged | and the mercury stood 25 below. This morn- | expected before Sunday. $1.000, 1iiatirod 6 tho Olont) Saskett l‘,’,}“”- ola & Southern railroad has been turned over K LOST. yards away he saw the light inasmall cot- | without a moment's warning and therefore | ing it was 30 below jon gan re worl MANKATO, Minn., Jan. 13.—All trains have Bl 'N %0 o it oL et IR e H et natartr. My LM VB BoBaiviar tage and attempted to reach it ere he Al 5 ifo cit. | ing on the snow drifts on the n Pac been abandoned. The snow 18 pa S noy & Goss #1,500, insured in the Continent g ¥ Mr. M. . Edgerly, uTa Rl ins ear Hotalt oy Ll | much suffering and loss of life seems inevit- | ¥ 71, N EEFE B FIC S f ARl BT STh M v Peters & Dwieht 1,000, m the Phoenix: Mc: | Spring by E. R. Mason, re- {1y he yas found'a faw moe “Guo | able. Twenty childron were storm-bound | {6 snow plows will not go throtgh it. 1t expected SHGAUIEL LD il £1.000, in_the ‘Girard: Foley & Bluitt iver. Mr. Edgarly has appointed James whelmed with the most dreadful apprehen- | of his feet was frozen, and it is feared that | and remained in the school building during | to beshoveled. STy ADRIAN, Mich. n. 13.—Several farmers | 3 -'W:- n:_;ln- Fire association : I‘)mll‘\“w iy, | Donohoc ntendent of the new com- sions. The little fellow left the school house | he may lose it. the night. The temperature has fallen to 20 | The farmers in town dare not venture to | living twelve to fifteen miles north, st . pimner & Adams: stock of bootsand | puny and his representative in Des Momes., shortly after 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon, THE PASSENGER TRAFFIC, below and this morning it is clear, return to their homes. One of the early > from here about 3 o'clock yester 7“"\1‘!2 by ,‘:;““l n’"l‘ CIng "““._“ "‘{“'; I'he name of the new org ation is the Des just about the time the terrible storm set | Both the B. & M. and Union Pacific pas- S obnion Dakota pioneers pronounced the storm of considerably, but the loss is not heavy and | Moines & Kansas City vty company and in and as yet has nov _ reached | senger depots w owded to their utmost ” ¥ g last night one of the worst cxperienced in y they ‘are continuing busincss a8 befor the syndicate is one of the strongest finan- s " home of boen heard . from. | capaciy by waiting elara s ay | Lour Ciry, Neb., Jan 13.—[Sygeial Tele- | many years. Trains will not redeh here till v They —carrvied = #2000 jusurance. The | cially in the castern states. As soon as the Dilicent h was prosecuted all through | T St train to leav r road was | gram to the Bee.]—Abbut 12:15 p. m. yester- | next week. The city schools are closed for ;,;mn!~ '_“f. -”'{l Jney Ji l|'I|~- ]}hm! weather will permit the road is to be make the terrible hours oY the night, and yos- meil Bluffs dumuiy, which departed at | day a territic blizard struck this place and | several 1 Crear Lake, Minn., Jan, 13.—The north [ (0% B P, SRR, e SO BOGKS | standard gauge and extended to Kansus terday his grieving parents, worn out and lock. by 8 o'clock all trains on the B, & M, and | , At Winoua, Minn., the mercury is 16 | and south hound Northern Pacific trains are | Wore tbout atl destroyed. | The badrogm fix- | City. "It ulready runs to Cainesvitle, Mo, bausted, were ready to give up in despair. | Al of the Union Pacifie traing were | % T CPEEET TEES L RE T T L S | below and the railroads are having hard | snowed in here. ph Onned il Tk GheNCRok W Boos, They seemied to be possessed with # horrible | very late. Train No. 1, -~ which should | KO8 (FRPRC BATS, WOHe SHOWROAIE SR | work with the drifts. “No trainsare ¢ :d | Crooksto , Jan, 13.—No traina for | L USCE AY ARG 8 B00UY O o aoactl Reappointed Adjutant General sboding that the poor little lad, ove leftOmaha at 9 o'clock at night left at | PUSINGSs i town & e B thiadeds AU | at Fergus Falls, Minn., until Sun Phe | two days od. - The snow is piled | 1710 Shit S neubance, SLLresin Dis MoiNes, TaJan 13, —[Special Telegram in the ul’ storm, became bewil- Jlock inthe morning. Train No. 6, known | © D M- the thermometer had fallen 25 de- | yorcury there is 30 below, and all s s | cighteen feet high and it is bitter cold. LEA ] o destroyed. . Governen | 1o the Bre]—The governor to reape and wandered helpless away to his | as the Columbus locul leaving at_5 o'clock p. | Er¢¢s: are closed. A heavy wind blew all night — 4l e Dl lostoyornon: WL Albxandasts b < death, The neighbors and police were hard [ w., did mot go at all. The Omaha | o NeATCADION. | ecial Telo. | CWUsing immense driits. Two Carloads of Cattle Frozen. At o Evaliad csbinllihistl noiniad e bolextndan to bo adjutaneiny b work in seaeliof the missing chuld all day. | & Republican Valley No. 42, was abandoned HiThON, e ] T b B0e ‘l“‘n AT“]"_‘ o 5E v, Minn, Junary 18 o Amair ST. Josern, Mo., Jan. 13.—[Special Tele- ’a,“:,‘l;f;‘ raad At Rae M0 E1 a5 fop tho st Vd geare: IRORGR LLLAN BRRTen) before reaching = the = Unlon Pacific | gram to the . e hardest storm this | throughout akota and Tinnesof gram to the BEE.]—The mercury to-night is | o o' Siutprelidding ket T 380 Tt is foarcd that Tittle. Georgie Allen, son | line. Train No. 2, due here from the west at | scason, a matured blizzard, is now raging, | are fmproving. “However, the temperature | J oo EieE )] FeR plele e D HBR o] i el vioarmiedji A Brakomanis Miraoulouy) Eaoape; of a prominent farmer hving about one mile ) o, m., left Grand Island at 9:30 a. The wind ia in the northwest Trains are | it the following places was below zoro at 10 [ 55 = fl 0 R padily. | #500 nsurance. J W. Martin, architect, will | = Warentoo, In, Jan, 13 —A brakeman at- west of the city limits, on the military road, ceded by the snow plow, and the time of | abandoned and it is feared the road will be Ik this morning. Crand Forks, SHLGyyeatardnysine gthormometor slood (|30 8UI8 k0 A8YE M BAKS 05HIL8 008 FILC tempted to cross the track in front of a snow= perished in - the storm, Mr. Allen is | its arrivai could not bo determined, .| blockaded for a number of day: Grafton, 30: Neche, 45, Fargo, 23; | higher than 40 degrees above zero and when | M 2800 poliey T i o fix. | Plow yesterday, but fell, and in an instant a well known milkman and member of the Snow is reported all along the line, but is AT M'COOL JUNCTIC Jamestown, 2 more, 28: Devil's Lake, | the blizzard struck at 6 o'clock fell to 10 de- furea } Badly. ' & was hidden from sight beneath the ponder- firm of McDonald & Allen, He is nearly be- | only drifted in the cuts. The seven snow- McCoor Juxerion, Neb., Jan. 15 ot #23 Minot, vgus Falls, Minn., 257 | vroes below in half an hour, A great deal of “'\\fx:.‘s‘fib "\u i S atall | ov 1 i fl 1 ontl; side himself with grief and from his ramb- | Plows belonging tosthe Union Pecificare | Telegram to the Bie.|—Yesterda, Brainer Duluth, 22. It was 15 to | g, 0 e = B sured for €700, Attorn I 18 mass of jron and snow, and apparently de L R R b R TS T b0 i caierday ufternoon | o ogrocy colder. than, these fieares at ‘g | distress is reported from the country tribu- | his fixtures: insurance#300, Ch under the wheels of the engine. The ens L L e P STREET RAILWAYS. atorm_ of the scason. Al the Kansas City | 0'clock this morning. Manitobn 8 reported | tary to St. Joseph. The cold wave wasmuch | and W. P. Whitten carried #1,000 msurante. | gincer saw the man fall, and, reversing the Thursday morning about 8 o'clock. The | n the morning the horse car lines resumed aha trains were abandoned. Stock | frozen up. A6 uis morning reports from | severcr north of here, between this city and | it fixturs are baaly damaged and in part | lever, stopped the train, but not until th school house is nearly ono mile from the Al- | their usual trips, the brushes and snow plows | suffered considerably. ‘The thermometer | Various points along several roads were dis- | the Iowa iine and sonthern Nebraska and | Gesn somphiors. hot hie Spuomiie wits wet. | vietim of the accident had been drizgo len residence, Since that time the father | having gone to work clearing the track as 0 dogrees below zero., couragmg and it was qimost decided 10 | northern Kansas the farmers are reporting | houly demmos. Bavton & Banice 18 not | about fittean teet. Ho was taken out and has not seen his son. When the storm came | S00n as the storm abated after midnight. A UNTER'S PRESENC MIND, abandon everything. Trains were sent out | troar logs of live stock, which last nim.‘i ‘_{-".l-‘_‘glmdfi-‘-. “n|u_on|n: ’I;\Im(n:‘mll '“.'('( 'ound to haye susta no injury. on, and the - boy Qid mot return | It wasannounced by the officers of the xeTER, Neb., Jan. 13.—(Svecial Telogram | With snow plows, but were stuck all along | Flo 1o Geah in the stalis, o stocktrin | jomty welly their office being flooded but the e S home Mr. Allen, in company witha hired | ¢:ble tramway —company yesterday that A thirteen.year-old son of | the line of the Northern Pacifie. The Mani- had been delayed arrived tonight with | watar . Tl wors o g maged o ; The Burlington Will Retaliate. man, started out to go to the school and see | the ~stopping of the cars of that road | Clark Johns, s farmer thrée miles we toba & Milwaukee, on its Minnesota & Da- head of cattle dead. Most of the pas- | Arthur, dressmakers, got out o “y y e Ciicaco, Jan, 18 ie Chicago, Burling= that'the lad_got safely home. When they | yesterday was occasioned by the breaking of | here, was caught in yesterday's blizzard | kota division, make no effort to start. Branch | songer trains are abandoned and others are | of theis hoveehold saode. Thos oo ton & Quiney compuny insists that the reduc- reached their destination they found the | several of the gripsand not of the cable, as | while out hunting. He was only a mile fr lines were ali abandoned at junctional points | Fre Rt velve to twenty-four hours. The | ahane ! P11 BoCs. nia X ke atae oh B et s house closed, A careful search was made | Was rumored on' the street. It was also | home at the time. last night and there is no predicting when oud running (ts Cars on Lime L0-diky was | abesnt from the city and s olice o i st S ol along the homeward road but no trace of | stated that the line would uot be in operation | five minutes from a light snow from the s they will be opened. 'The wind is filling up | tre’Hannibal & St. Joseph. whoso lmited | 5 1 Preoss ey i his offlce is locked. | southwostorn Missouri points will affect the the boy could be found. M. Allen then se- | until next Monday. toan_impenetrable sheet of blinding snow f 1l euts us fast us they are pumped out. The | L8 G the CEI Trom - Chucago, ot in | wa i o™ fared budly, Mo lost il he | movement of corn out of Nebraskn, as i cured the assistance of neighbors, and with EXASPERATING MISTAKES, 3 from the northwest. It wus impossible to | 8torm of yesterday is now raging in Iowa. | 1is morning two minutes ahiead of Schedule | clathing, e, Chiries Darrie Jost 1is roms | Will_dvaw the current toward St. Joseph, Janterns they searchied the neighborhood | At3o'clock inthe mornmg the centralstation | see fifty feet, and he wandere ver the | Manitoba reports from the northwest indi 4 Missourl Pacific between Omaha ‘";'m‘|“':-'|",r e I"‘“,."‘""kl‘ ""“ s room | o113 it to.day g Al Knail AR throughout the night. The blinding storm | Was wrung up and a call from Park and | prairie until about 4 p. m,, when, coming, to | ¢ate a cold wave sith high winds comir and Kansas City is closed and 0 is the B. & | lost n Althainhonsehiold: goads.. ! be the case it will ma it rate from handicapped them gres n their search, | Leavenworth streets came in,to theeffect | a snow drift near the B.& M. railroad, he | from that direction. Fach line is putting | A voad between here and Denver, the St | carried $500 isur FRREH: ¥ | Council Bluffs to Chica als are of but eve ft of snow was examined, and | that a man had been found frozen the dug w hole in the drift_and crawled in with | forth every effort fo keep the Chicago line | Fou R cimn 1elnd S oy e SL | carried 500 insurance. the opinion that there will be no possibility still no trace of the lad. The search was con- | patrol wi was manned and was s y- | his dog and gun, allowing the snow to drift | open and even that is almostan impossibility. | iy eton & Quincy roads are also blockaded > of the reduction spreading in every divection, tinued yesterday ng to the s id sure enough the Y, | over him. Search parties were organ- | At noon to-day no tram had come in. All RS TONA. 00,0 pact, A PANI The Wisconsin Central is about to introduce It is learned that_the school closed Thurs- | covered with snow, something wh ized, but abandoned the dificult task ing over western divisions have becn Another Cold Wave Coming. Chicago Scl S te- | the same element of discord into the north- duy at 3 o'vlock. Shortly after this young | Very much like the form of some belated | at dark, not daring to go far in the blinding idoned and no effort will be made to clear | Dyxygr, Jan, 13,—A cold wave strock this B R Dl M wost that the Rock Island has into the west Allen started for home and had scarcely left | Wayfaver. The sturdy policeman jumped to | storm. ' The search was renewed this morn- | the tracks until the storm ceases and tho | o6 1oon o day i T e e . it s 4 i southwest, being in negotiation with im- the house before the storm broke forth in all | the ground, and thrusting his hands down | ing and about 7 o'clock they met the boy | Wind falls. The limited Omaha from Chi- ) Ao g Cieaco, Jan. 13.—~The wood work on the stock car companies to introduce its fury, - neath the supposed body he lifted it up. | walking up the B. & M. track towards home, | ¢a£0 was stuck at Knapp at noon to-day. The colder um_wl at 9 o'c t the the Trving public sc I engine room took f ars at reduced rates on its line. The T A YOUNG LADY MISSING. @ next moment a choice seleetion of quota- | He fainted at sight of his rescue Rock Island abandoned all trains last night | mometer is r: at zero, having dropped | this afterncon. A thousand children were in | S and Burlington will make the sume It was veported that Graham Brown, the 18 from some very old masters were ut- | carried home and a physician summoned. | #nd up to noon to-day no cffort had been | from 40 above. All trains on the Union Pa- | the building when the smoke filled it and for | fight in that direction. well known raiser of fancy poultry and fine | tered by the officer. “He was about the mad- | His dog had loft him oariy in the evoning, de to move a wheel, except on short linc [ cific are siow bound at Columbus, Neb, | b oy o b b et A stock, went to the Blufis “Thursday, accom- | dest mun iu the world. He held in his arm | but, he, having presence of mind to ins. Outgomg trains have been aban- [ Trains on the ave als0 blocked; and | Yhile 8 panio-was lmmlnens. Though itho Danicd by three ladics. On the way back the | ® section of old gas-pipe. The wagon [ gy, ad 1ain with no_ shelter bt & snove L but offieials intend to start onta | from twenty- aix hours bebind, | pupils left their scats the teachers heid the tean ran away and overturned the sleigh, | returned posthaste to the station, | drift for fifteen hours in one of the most ter- | t2rough train tonight unless reports show | 7 hogurlington trains delayed but two or | doors shut until they could give the danger . v a f Each one was left to buttle with th only to find awaiting there another summons | yible blizzards, with no bad effects but a few | this w be inexpedient. three hours, signal, which the children iustantly obeyed, | t0708Y 4. W. Wilshivo testified that Hopkins Blone and when the bank of the: pive to the corner of Twenty-seventn and Leaven- | frozen toes and complote exhaustion. On the Northern Pacific the storm is the = AL UL first strike of the wong they caught up | W8 present when he called on Harper to are reached one of the ladies wus missing. worth, Another frozen man had been found, veral school teachers in the country were hich has eyer been felt, and to-day The Atlantio & Pavifio Blooked, their wraps and books, at the second formed | ¥ange about going to Chicago with 100,000 ,{mw" wrrived in town Just evening and said | This, too, proved a wistake, The supposed | compelled to stay all night in the school | there is a regular- bliszard raging in Idaho, | Arnvquenque, No M., dan. 13.—A heavy | 50 it el i oo 1ot | foi brokers. * Hoplkins went out to telephiona that all his party werd s. congealed gentleman was nothing more or | houses with the children, not daring to dis- | With the thermometer at an unusually low | fall of snow between Plagstaff and Williams, . Out of & thousaud cluldren but one | for Hoyt to go with him. This was to show PICKED UP IN THE STREET. less than a pile of snow laden bricks, miss in the storm. Two' of these teach point. The last overlaud train reached Aviz, on the Atlantic & Pacific railvoad, has | lost his presence of wind. He was a lad of | Hopkins’ connection with the frauds, Thursday evening about 5 oclock P, LAST NIGUT'S DEVELOPMENTS, were Z. O, Du\'ln,!lu'-.'r miles south, and Miss [ Paul Wednesday and officials suspended business on this road. No trains | ¢leven and became so excited that he threw > e Heafey, of Barrett & Heafey, was driving in st night, twenty-feur hours after the | Ada Robinson, two mifes east. say - when the mext will have left Albuquerque over this line the past | 1 Slute and books through a window aud 'he Atlanta at Alexandria, the midst of the blizzard along Twenty-fourth | terrible blizzard that prevailed on the pre- A CHILD FROZE . storm has been Torty-elght homs A rranscmonts have st | then dashed his fist through o pane of glass, [Copyright 18 ordon Bennett,] street, in the vicinity of the shot tower, to | ceding day and night, found the weather con- [ Davip Ciry, Jan. 1 ’ clogram | throvgh - Minnesota, Dakota and I o Cith tho Sonthern Bheiie wopoim ( His teacher forced bim into line after he had | Avexaspuia, Jan. 13.—(New York Herald South Omaha. He found a little fellow ious branches | to the Beg.|—The worst storm ever reported ul tr due’ this morning hay:* Vot AR a0 Souiern engen i | budlygeut himself. “This was the only “aceid- | caple—Special (o the Be.]—The yacht Ate named John Uller, who was roturning home | of trade, and _transportation af- | in this country struck here yesterday at 2:50 [ been heard from, No Northern Pacifi® ARl 0.k T ACHID DAMSDE 1 | ent, Wl e building was not damaged much, | | Ayt ? from the German sehioolon South Seventeenth | fected by the demonstrative elements re- | p.m. 1t was impossible to see any distance | trains have arrived or departed. LR pyhe ihiaulne Bt they bookade 8 -~ anta arrived hero to-day. street. He was orying bitterly and did not | covering, slowly but surely. Many s whatever through the blinding sheets of A 10 p. m. the thermometer was 20 below. [ opencd: , ¢ salo of vickets has been stopic Other Contlagrations. 3 w known in what direction he was going, al- | tional reports of loss of life that had gained | snow. W.J. Aust, of this city, had his | Adyices are the same from gDuluth. Pierce, | and it wit be several days before traflie 8 | cyyepao, Jun, 18,-~The three u floors Arensdorf in Wikconsi though he was really retracing his steps. Mr. | eredence in the excitement of the hour died | hand terribly frozen, and three children be- [ D. T., reports an abatement of the storm, | resumed. - of a six-story brick building on Clark street MuLwavkee, Jan. 13.—John Avensdorf, of Heafoy took him info his wa rried him | out from lack of confirmution, and the people | longing to John Denlinger, of Garrison, who | #nd the thermometer 23 below and fallin Weather Indications. ST Eta R e e Jux City, who was recently acquitted of the to South Omaha, more than @ mile distant, | aguin settled down to their usual quict und | hadatfempted to go home' from school, lost | Great fears ure entertained for the freighters | o voyagka and Tows: Colder, followed [ el aitan. Iilake, Snaw & Page. ownam | ¢harge of killing Rey. Haddock, is in Neenah, found his parents and thus saved his life, peace of mind. The various sources of in- | their way and were out all night, When | and farme ught fu the blizzar XU 3 wherly winds, | TUUY insured. Llake, Shaw & Page, ownors | w50 ot s 0 the purchyse .0f & er, the same gentleman in re- | formation, the police, coroner, doctors and | found they partially® burried in the | . To-night's weather report shows the fol- | by warmer, fresh to brisk noXherly winds, | of 1iie building, sustained a loss of $25,000, o turning to South Omaha from Ham- | undertakers were visited by Bee reporters, [ snow. One of them was frozen to death and | lowing below zero temperatures: —Devils | fair weather, followed by snow. | The remainder of the 75,000 is divided about, ——— mond’s packing house, found a [ and all were unanimous in saying that | the others, though suffering intense agony, | Lake, Dak., St. Vineent, Minn,, For Dakota: Slightly warmor, ’I‘ equally between the American Electrotyping ancis Xavie farmer lying unconscious in the roud | nothing additional from that already reported recover, Judge George W. Post | Helen Bis Moorhead, Minn., | weather, followed by snow, light to fresh any, H. H. Kohlsaat, H. C. Tiffany VINNIPEG, Jan. 13.-~In St. Francis Xavier and almost covered with snow. His team | had been received, and another 1 who were out hunting were St. Paul, 24 ukton, Dak., 15: Swift | portheasterly winds, becon variable ANy, . AR ) \ gl dpminadi ‘\ ;3 | “‘_ 12" Aatentan A. stood shivering i the blizzard & short dis- DISCOVERED 1N TOME, caught in the storm and are yet wissing. In | Current, N W.T, 23: Qua Appelle, 53 ——y > T. Hulla & Co., and the Chicago nment candidate ia.defoaiel: tance away. The man was picked up, car Last evening an enguieer on the B. & M al school districts scholars and teachers | Minwavkee, Jun, 13.—Reports from the An Iron Ore Protest. and Stereotyping company and onfidence will be made in d to a saloon belonging to J.J. Donovan on lied breathlessly into the train dispatel ompelled to shelter themselyes in the | interior of the state show that many cities | CrLeverasn, O., Jan. 13 —The annual meet rge Alber strect, whore at Tast accounts | ofico wnd reparted that u man was lying | schoolbouse during the night. are completely shut off from railway com- T wan was still unconscious. frozen to death beside the tracks near Gib- DIED LN SAVING 1iis CHILDREN munication with the outside worid. At AROR A0 MDA r S =) iy e A CHAPTER OF RUNAWAYS. son's siding, Without delay a switch enging , Jon. 13- (Specisl Tele- | Superior no mails have been reccived for | 104y adopted u memoriul to congress re- | owned by Schoit & Shoop burned lust wighty | gy Axroxio, Jan. The much talked of grand sleighing party | was mauned and dispatehed under full Speed | gram to the Be: During the stogm yester- y-8ix hours. The the thermometer reg- [ Monstrating a; t the removal orr r{* tion | us did also a churd h ucar by, The total loss to the Bluffs, which took place Thurs- | to the desiguated spot. Just as the | day afternoon J.” V. Hines, diving in the | is R w this morning and all trains | of duty on ivon ore. After reciting the im- | is #3,000; insurance, $5,000, 8 ibked 5 b the noltea h day afternocn, could mnot have been | relief pawty rcached there twe | morthern part of the city, started to bring bis thern Pacific ar abuandoned | mense interests involved in iron and the | INpiaNaronts, Jan, 13.—A flerce firc 'r;‘; R L 2y set for @ ‘more inopportune time. | men put in appearance, and hustled | children home from schéol. On his return | or snowbound. ve reached | transportation of it and its products the | peen raging in the wholesale district an South Many more inlsadventuyes, privations { the supposed frozen individual | he becume exhausted just before reaching | Madison sine i wmemorial declares that if duty is Merid ot for “one hour und is not yeét The T 0d “accidents have come talight. Messrs. 1| off to his home vear by, While in a beastly | the house and had to b helped tn. He soon | It is 20 de moved or lowered it would el . | under control. Two concerns. ave 06 Shlr , Hardin and Fred Gross were driving o | staieobintaxication he had laid ‘down, and | after died from the effects of his exposure. A | from other parts of the state arve to the effect | 1t is also claimed that if the prescut dut been burned out and scveral others are in 2 ) g oot s Py spirited animal, and they had a most thridl- | had it not been that ke was discovered when | report comes from the conutry that Michael | that it is p colder i some portions. [ eents per ton, is insufiicient to allow compen- | dauger, % : S48, Vi IIA|\\l4iI”A e . lhd'm“"‘cil "\iu 1‘ " . log expericnceus well @8 & hulrbréadih es- J b was be suicly would Lave parished, As it | Klgues, living seven aulles uorih, started to | Nearly every tral from the west and nerth ‘».mun with forcign wavkels, 290 % we—The fire hay already burned | thirtecuth victin of the Bradford accidedty The Hopkins Trial. Cixeixsai, Jan. 18.—In the Hopkins trial ing of the Western Iron Or sociation Davriny, ¥ Jan. 13.—The car works 0is, en route to San B

Other pages from this issue: