Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 9, 1888, Page 14

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9. 1888 -SIXTEEN P’AGE LADIES, THIS WILL BE A GREAT BARGAIN WEEK HEYMAN & DEICHES' 518120 Farnam St The Liargest Cloak, Suit and Fur House in the West. The continuation of the warm weather into the Fall has left us a large surplus In Ladies’, Misses’s and Children’s Cloaks and Dresses. In preference to carrym over the same, we have decided to make a &= AG]{]B‘I ) DA We offer 250 Ladies’ ang Misses’ Cloaks and Suits, single garment of a style - AT ONE-HALF THEIR FORMER PRIOES =SALE COMMENCES MONDAY DECEMBER 10 AT 830 a. m., SHARP.7== FROM NOW UNTIL AFTER THE HOLIDAYQ OUR STORE WII.L BE KEPT OPEN EVLNINGS UNTIL 9 OCLOLK 1 [ D CRUSHED | the risit, the other to the left and [ like a litlle fiend inearnate, and the that he evor i TASHES T "I DY Y N line, or by a_telephone ou a neigh- | Clan stroet 1o the of e left of their hovses respe would | turned hiniover to one of the eapturca (vyu Il to the s or 6 to be unintelligible, Be ret | the Hmiis of Santa Clars. the boad . . other, fiving they Vs, 1 iginal being upon by 3 1ly to the employment | covering a distance of four T Mackenzie's Successful Expedition ww-ld llh;-\ = N n(‘H Com nl--‘? nerd ”-“l"';‘\"nf s n:'d*;x'- H‘-*]’ Hmflvnn Su an cxpres- | Facts, Figures and Fancies Anent | of the Morse instrament. as this is { double t sounding lik a-ha-ha-ha, would be | © illago and stores were destroyed | rom smmanding - of- R one most generatly used in field Against the Comanchos. followed: by the Tonkawa, Ah-kun-uk- | by five, the six hundved ponies shot,and | ficer — would have done more (elitotbiporsd b tions, il it AU ha, commeneed ina whisper, but P squas and - children brought 0 | to destroy the fighting morale of th Blae it S e o i voice. ATBYThIN FE00 ¥ SY S tectricity iculture ol le or hour thro HE TAKES SUMMARY VENGEANCE | [0 the full power ulf Al 3 3 children were subso- | BXmY thith i suc ul flank movement | NEW SYSTEM OF TELEGRAPHING Philadelpl i W | the city,and ten on the Alaneda out- war-cry would be followed by such 1d_children were subsc ) 3 e N A S s At e ; taunts as: “Come on you Tonkawa wunjull\ Fort Sill for two | jy io of Munich, | 13 4 faut ”\\lvl! ‘... w'\'\’ : Duel Between a Comanche and Ton. | SQUAWSs,” “Come on you Comanche old | White girls who had long been held in | ¢ v rough exterior he | A PPeculiar Case—ielephonic Rovolu R LU didvitmog binlt by the Detrolt o Vi ShEpe women. el ©o ‘hose to appear, maintained a conscions | tion—Amer Slectricians T LY O Lo DL e orks; ptdn ot epran Kawa—The Village Surprised, bt Lo Tobinvie . Phis expedition of General Macken- | chost 10 APHEAL, matnta :‘(’m" onscious L Bieetricians i) opoyimented on v divided inth plots | Sl worls. adllielion il and the Warriors Corraled— named by the soldiers “Joe;” z1e's 1y put an end to depreda- 5 trifle with which in & g st i) S, four motors square, plutes of zin thivty | r01" lead is ‘orude. petroloum, The Depredations Ended. the medicine man of the tribe; tions in The Indians, after the | would ]m., h. BhR e ena With Tornadoes. centimeters br and two meters long | CoEta -»3.‘ uc "I petrol *""‘u. which but little over five feet in height, hi*-uf - ponics and winter sup- 4 L it g plaged at opposite ends of - eavh arrel i Sin Jos almost as broad as he was long. Becom- | plies, were only too glad toreturn to the | Spapidan did say. as 1 s 4 e A square. he line v i Indian Warfare. O R L T W G veservation, and their raids complete i L‘l‘,',‘."fl,,l,‘ry Ll ""‘;I‘l’l‘,’]"‘ L . A Pecutiar Onse. ding BOuiT o Boet Comanche he challenged him to a duel. | ceased. Lips s o command that must 1ot be dis- | jag rene | inl Advertiser: There is a | ser s cireuit. The test was kept For some years prior o 1872 north- | It was uccopted. Both turned their | General Mackenzie.n major gemerul | ooy to whioh ho aded Wl lich 1ad; now living in Cleveland. O., upon 2 d time to harvest.but neither A Lol western Texas was the scene of more | horsesat the same time and dashed | Of volunteers hofore he was twenty-five. Tout of them yet.” | s an electric shock has loft tho | corn, potatoes nov any other vegetuble Aol e massacres, murders and abduetions by | towards each other ving on_one | tnd who was vegarded most highly by | e nover stopped to see whether the | Yy O MR b NS oo e o liesia e N —— Indians than any other state or ter s:;l« .;fllm I\H\\'!vll_\."lh\-\inlv;‘l]l:‘l un‘lh oppo- n.\f“n:-.'»,.l-Lr"h-'{'ig _fn:llfiwul!«"‘l,;) f‘l '\‘.: men faced the other way or not. but | s so shocked SR e Spain's New Electric Torpedo Boat. Ak Recairiobun site side. he 3 a few ¢ 4 relessly h i es clos s vk A ) s L cetric Phenomena. 2 VRS it tory in the union. One day after an- | fwo pulls of smolke wore > | insane in Bloomingdale asylum, in Now | Nierers o oahed on 1o tancl | lyzed for somo s and s 3B et ends S S En olfics of leetrical Review: Spain is turning other brought to the frontier posts | Comanche chief dropped ily from | Yorik. imme TR, W || RIS L) the war department, in anticipation oy lonf, and propacing 1o, take some harrowing tale of a family being | his pony. He had ruck the = S i AeviveH sthep BRI BRI o o B L D §19 104 | gtaining duta of future storms, has pro- | Fowpac® Song, the wival powers of killed, their houses burned and the | ground before OId Jéo was upon him. | ‘mak e b 7 | and exclaime P whip. | Conscousnss, sho Josos ull MUsCWlAr | pared for circulation o formuln asking ! lntost sin L L Jhionnt gu NCIL BrLurrs, Iowa, Dec. 1.—To v ! guin 1en the | o information. relative to tornadoes. | 1 Eh D0DI0 pustiL i o 1 The civeular is being distributed | [ : S children carried into captivity worse | His Kuife gleamed =ty in the | . b Not by a d—n sight,” veplicd | \ wa! ot She feets sharply U t aiv as he stabbed s opponent > —In your 1ssue of Sunday | who proceeded to give him | (he difference in o ,.,l,,,;-.l,,,.i,":;‘, ; throughout the west, and among the | o Tt st udition of the 10 questions are the followin ting 0 | pado bont. 11 the should be than death. ‘i to the heart. With a ecircular moye- | appeared an article under i rders what to dog I, was standing | the upper currents and one that stirs the electrieal phenomena ompany- | guecess, “the glorious uncertainty ™ sent price being £20 per tor iding the high price of there is a differen 0 per cent be- tween the cost of operating the These storics were, uvon investiga- o Fomb veaitheen : ; ; Gkl .' 8 e f» L1}, SMAA) tiga- | ment of his knife he removed the scalp | of * cts about Little I’h v ;| within twenty feet of them at the time. | 41) the al deeps. In o tai s, the troops, amply verified. Lit- | and ears of his enemy. and shaking the S £ e c ‘s 3 1 b bR o0PR S L NP AN O RNOUS, ) ) Henry D..Gregg, a formor private sec- | Out column was aty onve faced about | broesy region, sho says, the olect e children, too young to travel, had | ghastly trophy in the face of the Com- 150 v and the Nineteenth and th corps | > AL AN LA ing tornadoes: W thunder and | . D y anches wh ore ch r b = L ¢ PE 1 fluence is not so strong as in one where | ;0 < e 2 etk naval warfu Iml Minitely their brains beaten out on the dootpost, | MANCes who were charging up to cap e \ commenced to form in line with their | 1ho | is level and t lightning observed. and if soin what | She will be la ) of the cabin, the men were staked out | 191¢ bim. he dashed bacl to the lines. The writer faces townrds the endmy! We wer AL TR on Ty e ot 3 4 |un'lim| of the horizon, at what time of | onr —and i b e Ay i inding it impossible to accomplish | 1t is popularly supposed - | beyoud the e of thd enern, 5 i A i lent or othe BolRuppliBaNbYA 000 BRI Gl or e 50 that they could not move, and flres | anything in the then condition . of bis | chanan Read’s poem that he dan] was [ 1ot e e ey indoo hut b any manifest ippliod Uyguoo inulion iand built upon their stomachs, and the | horse, General Macke veut into | dddicted to using strong langu i Myt B e A ot autiliywith & Sctrieity) soon!in thoy funnel- | Rorstioieab Ty oy will hinve 0 women, afterbeing outraged were Gk A AcHaNELo Awen tulnto This Is @ mistake. Al “the time 1 was with aineEst i l”“hlhfl'll iroc ‘L“ e, if the storm lusts u fow hours, | Lon of cle ““)“‘,m}:,' WA ,f)‘,'l‘;l Hhnas Ry i 8 Stated that for two ) 4 amp. T T RO maRle i ous golumns and to [ giig i i ERLHEIA] L lo ¢ as it approached. | days she ean remain submerged without, in that position to die by inches, held, and th r chief of the Tonka- | Few people know what “the terrible oath’ iienly ot e\l dwanl torastinacll o erence in her condition ingit to the north and west? Note the | Sho will be furnished with torpedos of RIS isnataaney s pkotehihutL o foss | a8 stated it as his belief thatthe Com- | mentioned by Read really w Riding | til quite late in the aft oon, I think e 3 detlection of a magnet needle before | 411 kinds, and will heeself. if it be de- for which thero tre many livine wip | manches wero simply trying lo draw | glong the ranks of his reuted troops at | uutil about 4 o'clock, when “attention” i and after a storm. s there any reason | desired, be capable of heing converted are many living wit- | the Lroops awsay from the Sillizo which edar Creek he shouted “Face the other | wag sounded and General Sheridan mm»' Electr o corgo Westing- | 1o suppose that the clouds approached mmense explosive 1 to ness L e are going back to our camps. T'll A 3 " L 2 i n immense explosive. fatal to the s ; ; ly as ho belicved some twelve miles | sloop n iy camy tomiht oo Tl Slosp - in | 8long the line appareatly looking o house’s electric ny has been te dircctions prececding theel Jpgest iron-clad. 1 all this con be. This having continued for some timo, | east of their position. Acting upon this | heil”! Truly this was & terrible oath but an in the face and remarking, awarded the contract for a plant to li wance of the funncl-shuped | alijea, of the invincib the United States troops were catled uqv',..(.{ “m.,.hl ,\1.-,;; a strong guard | there was nothing vulgar about it. ¢ sry man to do his duty: re | the city of London. to cost about %300,- v electrif] Note | Apmada upon to act, and they took am we. | With the pack-mules. General Macken- £ 3 .. Greas | £0I0g 0 €leep in our old camp grounds | 000. It will be the largest plant in the i oud ShiE Nl p y plere- | Jio ag midnight moved out with hiscom- | 1 o7 ith all due defference to Mr. Gregg | {05t The result is well known: | world. We understand that the sale | appeurs to be acceleruted at the mo o S I wish to enter a protest against a part | e aid sleep in our “'old camp grounds” | above referred to has been made to the | ment of, or immediately following any )"I‘[V "“fl!" (l '?"']“fl'l“" e 2o IMerald: Prof. James Conley “I"f‘ ¢ . .| mand, enjoining the strictest silence. he state of Texns did organize | At about 3 o'clock the village was of that statement. It was the fortune f and the neafest our thoughts —ever | Metropolitan electric supply company, | clectric discharge. What portion of | : 2 tornado cloud pr sthe lightest | is an Englishman, but he came to Chi- n, rangers, but they were found to be of | and dispositions made for an attack at | of my regiment the 116th New York | came to the warm regions b ¢ wis and that the apparat for a first in- X 0 3 5 3 little use at the time. On their nret | daylight. One troop was sent to the | Infantry. to be with General Sheridan | when Sheridan would remark he | stallment of the wotal 25,000 lights con- | color? Did the upper portion of the | cago from Hoston. TIe is by profession expedition they were attacked and their further nd of the village by a cireui- | in his campaign on the Valley of the | rode among the boys who were pursu- | tracted for is al on the spot. W tino prosent a glating ap- o "'”'1‘ el S LI horses stampeded and they arrived in | tous route: one was posted on the left, | ghonand 1‘ E\v- Ui oo | g paily. vouted army, “Give them e glad to se Ameriean electr ke the colors of w brilliant | eral Junas tood l‘l'«” he can whip any Fort Griffin packing thelr saddles; o |and another on the right,. and two | Shenandoah. We wero at Cedar Creck | jell, hoys!™ It was not elegant, but we | lichting machinery has once more cap- | SUuse “balls of fire™ obrorved | man thit evee stood on two feot, Tn very scared and dejected looking crowd. | troops at the upper end. and participated in the defeat without | 41l felt that it was appropriute. tured the English market. to occapy the'tornado cloud at any *"‘l" 108 sheiwon bikind ofinludimen, In the spring of 1871 Goneral Mae. | The signal for the attack was to be | Sheridan and victory with him of that . HUBBARD, Al e of its progressive movement? and whi o hojtoutsiSlor MOlakly streot GUaT0 ved orders for an expedi- | two shots from General Mackenzie's re- | historic battle. No soldiev will ever e Now Byscomol Teloxrophing, cffeet had the storm upon smull veg M O LGRS O AL SRR g e o s hb ot reoTver: Al s R N TS I s, Boston Advertiser: A new system of | tion and the foliage of trec living he does most his wing Fa Rt sl yo.yer ; Ty i g e e saw § e ABner : .| telegraphing has heen invented by Dr. | eventof death or injuryto any person or | #bout his tighting ities. He out one hundred Tonkawa The moments pass slowly 10 | dash upon the field. He came as an Detroit I'ree Press: s J. H. Rogers of Washing D. « animal observi v i been in the ring several times Indians scouts were ordered out; in all | the waiting troop: iés could bo | jne i T e hio remarked to o orowd in & grocery | Which. is e siaimed. will Sendon. uimalionens oy sefuliygnhiothor i A a3 1o about six hundred men. After marehs | he pinoona et incarnation of irristible energy and in- ar: o ag which, it igie : the ecet rosulted Teom the clectrcal | among local spo looked After march- | heard eryingand roosters crowing in the | 15 ; the other I know how we | 1o T el R o e i ths Horaat ol ith 1. | Tlight Second only to . fng for several hundred miles in a | village, the day was beginning to dawn, | Yincible power, and it awoke the can hay fun. i B L O O e | b rolomsor waaPL YN northwesterly divection, into the then | but still no signal shot was fired. Just | and file of that retreating sveral pi asked hin cplain, AL Beecucer il off DLy oninoH 0. Yook LI O OB e e G Pl N At e txlnlmg\n‘l region of the pan-handle of | before the sun rose an Indian came out | army to & consciousuess that | o s c repar l't‘.'»’.‘]:'f B S e B o o 10‘:1:(»:1“)!:,“' 8 n’ of the village was of the wigwam nearest tothe lines where | that which Sheridan r was 3 ies n tornado cloud in |‘L-«|v s- | diana came along. He was tall, lank A but being entirely out of ra- | Mackenzie stood and stretehed himself. | theirs as well as hi S ala el Ay i ; | ] 3 R T AV v and rawboned, the breeze disturbed the u?.w[‘nx.x&lu nzie returned to a point | Immediately the signal shots were | the soldier responde Lind wvant 10tk hor douiaflinge f te o for_cuch chaructor, | from ordinary thundor |-H;n|r:‘«t"-‘;\m- 5 1 and his m/’\"m:-“ l'l“f‘l':le‘l‘ll:“'mi:llh : fired and @ simultuncous attack was | the general,and the invineibili [ Dbelieve she'd scare like t message « written, distinetly heard o ating general appearance was that of o man genmtor rooruiting his command tho | made The surprised redskina dashed | line joined Rands with o et ‘one. of. y0u" 10 70, £0.tho hAGk G Y S o T | T O e G ] who had taken so much quinine for the B or mndo n forced march and got [ outof tho tepees, rifle in’ hand. They | ergy of its horoic leader. On the part | door ind do ugly and sassy and demand | heel :h'end of the line, re- | telegraph wir tod. chills and fover that e hud no vitality iEpin/about ol of the village, | first charged to one side and were ro- | of the army it was an instan supper, and seo” if she won't fly out of | volve si usly, and the inventor |, - — left. As he plumped a venerable look- nding that the Indians were on the they then tried the other side, | recognition of its own power which it [ the front. do the work The San Jose, Cal.,, Electric Road. i rpet sack on the ground he asked alert, by seeing them on the hills in his | with like result. They were completely | had lost sight of in the suddenness of One of the crowd said he'd cheerfully 1t now takes ten to accomplish by Electrical World: California has o ticket seller: “How much to New front, he again halied, . All this time the effective | Early's attack, and the confusion which | go.and go he did, while the others | he present method. T proved o good fieid for the introduction | Yorl At about 8 o'clock in the afternoon cavalry playing havoe | followed. Sheridan was intuiti posted themsclyes in front. By and by of clectric railways, and bids fair to while the horses were grazing and the h y, with o frantic | conscious of all this, and he impiicitly | & woman came to the door, looked up IpLorcoption (f iMossaren, have a number of such ronds out of all troopors wero proparing their supper, a | rush thoy broke through the lines and | relicd upon it,else he never would | and down, and said to a boy who was | M. L. Dischor, controller of the Aus- | proportion to ifs population. One of the | Youwrs .;... d‘.,, l"umk was made by about five | made their escape. S have ‘“‘right about faced” the retreat- |m~~\nu trian postal service,in a communication | most noteworthy ofits electrie roads is Just then something happened. That undred Indians, mounfed on their [ On the field the hodies of fifty-three | iug columns or dared to assume the of- Bubby.won't you go over to the store | to the Berne Journal Telegraphique, | that which has been infalled and put | granger’s zood right hand lit ot His :‘;l‘{ll‘n P“H}J{'{:m!::!d“"lf\l::‘tlt::ll"L\:K in great [ were hmnd: and over one hundred and | fensiv o tell my husband to come ov s sts nmethod of ,..-f-mn_tiu.lg the | in operati y Mr. ', | big brown fist landed on Professor Con- '} P 2 g in hot | fifty squaws and pappooses were These were the conditions created by s in r time. | the clectric L cirl ley’s left eye and the | list went roll- haste,” and the Tonkawas on their war [ ured, and in the neighhorhood of Sheridan’s appearance, and he was too sthat whereas it was for- | works. and of which we give an illust ing o the mud. He rolled and rolled ponies lod the advance. A charge |hundred ponies. Their whole winier | great a soldier Lo hazard any ndvantage to cut the line. the in- | tion on this pa and rolled, and aftor ho wus through was ordered; but the juded horses of | supplics of pemmican (dried mes . | which they gave to the situatio elophone now rendors it 1T 1 Hlec rolling he lay where ho stopped. He the cavalry could not begin to overt The loss to the troops was very the emergency wh > signal | 1 y has ) couldn’t g while that tall, the fresh, active ponies of the redskins. | the surprise was so complete. Sheridan’s appeal was not to brute | in the rear yard, sious, und his | passing along the li 1 tion sincy > )| b, 3 g m iana went ]A(w'm\ ineffectual charge the cav- | A sergeant,ns ho was passing over | foree, but to the heroie soul of his sol- | nose broken. a > wife sai able distance by crecting a par pussenger o averages 130, sty whistling 10, himsolf alry would halt, and the Indian scouts ) after the fight, sawa little | diers. It was not arequisition for more “He supper and was uely | of short length with a telephone in ci month. I)u- equipment con- L man, the pugilst who could would then take the field, Then fol- rec-year-old sliding through the long [ cannon, or a demand for more bayonets, [ about it, and so I laid him out with enit, He recommends the employment | sists_of twelve car X dummies and { whiy nl\ but Sullivau, the prize- Jowod a most interesting exhibition of | grass.” Reaching down he gripped him | but for the ignition of the fire of uuu. flat-ivon.” of the duplex system, one station send- | six closed street cars. The construc- | fighter that even Willimn Bradburn Indian warfare, by tho breech-clout awd hifted him up | service in the consciousness of eve And an hour later, when the poor | ing the proper telegrams while the | tion is underground throughout, a little | said he was afvald to moot, had 10 bo About widway botween the lines, | ta tho saddle in frontof him, Heenngh | veteran, In doing this ho callod upon | man felt of his nose anc ited to | other transmits some text determined | conduit on the Fisher system, with de- | picked out of the street and carried to about three hundred yards apart, they ‘tar, however. The baby did not | the flying soldiers to ““face the other | know who was to damages, echo | on beforchand. The signuls then re- | pressed rail, being used. The roud | neighboring hostelry. He knocked would meet. One line would turn to /, but he bit and seratched and fought | way” “with terrible carnestness, but ! sadly answered =Who?? ceived by any instrument interposed on | starts at Fast San Jose, following Santa | out by one blow, - ARTISTIC CHRISTMAS PRESENTS! FRRTRRRRIRRRRRrTrsrsteperreTRTERRTTETERTSTSTTRTTRRRREsErETsRRETIRETEERRRERREREEREREER TR EE R e U LIPS of General Sheridan. “Needn't hurry any. but just dvop in if-it’s convenicnt When the v eame over they found the volunteer ing on his back [ possible to read A Fine Etching in hard wood frame, at A. HOSPE'S. A celebrated Emerson Piano. A genuine steel Engraving, framed, at A. HOSPE'S. A beautiful Hale Piano. A beatiful water color painting, framed,atA. HOSPE'S. A rich Hallet - Davis Piano. :n A historical picture in oil colors, at A. HOSPE'S. A New Kimball Piano. A fine outfit in artist’s materials, at A. HOSPE'S. A Renowned Kimball Organ. A handsome screne in oak or bamboo at A. HOSPE'S. A fine lot of Music. m A bamboo brass or wood easel, at A. HOSPE'S. A Washburn Guitar. A plush or bronze lined album, at A. HOSPE'S. A Stewart’s finest Banjo. A Christmas card or novelty, at A. HOSPE'S. A Swiss Music Box, WHICH WILL MAKE ARTISTIC AND THE MOST SENSIBLE CHRISTMAS PRESENTS YOU CAN THINK OF, AT HOSPrHE, - - - - 1513 DOUGLAS STREKT,

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