Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 16, 1893, Page 17

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s A et et OO OOED R el mw - "HE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE _msm TWENTY-SECOND YEAR. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 16, 1803—TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. NUMBER 20L A MILLION AND A QUARTER DOLLARS A MILLION AND A QUARTER DOLLARS BEGIH‘SE WORLD'S ORE ATEST WET COODS sAAIf’EB,IL O O BEGH\‘]ESWORLD‘S CREATEST WET COODS SALPERIL COR. BEDFORD AND KINGSTON STS. Eoston Mass. DEING THE S8 TC(K — OF From the SIX MILLION DOLLAR BOSTON FIRE BROWN, DURRELL&CO Boston’s Largest Dry Goods House uOLD BY THE INSURANCE UNDERWRITERS BOSTON STORE, OMAHA, BUYS THE STOCK ON THE MAIN FLOOR AND IN THE BASEMENT BY WATER ONLY It is well known and authentically re= corded by all the leading papers, not only by the Omaha papers,but al<so the New York Herald, PPhiladelphia Led= oeor, 3oston Herald, &c., that this was the most disastrous Fire in 13oston, and the greatest loss ever sustained in the the dry goods world. 2That the upper stories were come= mlfil(-x(*ly' gutted, whercas THIS PTRST PLOOR AND DBASEMIENT were thoroughly rilled w ith water from fire hosc that on breaking down the front doors it flooded the adjoining sircets, \\'hil\'t in the basement the water ame up even with the street. BOSTON STORE. red head as a boy, thouzh his hair il A L el BT a beautiful brown and his whiskers 3 st black. Two of his garls have red *'Carp" Gostips About Northwestern Nabobs | and Their Palatial Resi . St. Paul and ) - apolis d in those : § Cleveland or Ciucinnati, and y is \&e. God. bless baby MAGNIFICENT MANSIONS OF MINNEAPOLIS | i oveled out here on architecture, art, and I | e Ve A h R We might say religion us well e nnest | heads in this family already wous Far. | Young Men's Christian association bui Senator Washburn's Home, in the world is here. The inea Senator Washburn and Mr. Lowry are in club has f quarters than any ciub | terested in the Soo read together and they i o wre rapidly pushing this on to connect with K ayesnly oity, and there ure o | B8 G an Pacifie, When this is done it | will form the last great trunk line across the here which have fing marbles and ! continent. Iam told by Senator Washburn Roman mosaic work than the cathedral of | that the Soo road has now mo k's ut V' These men have made | do to haul its local freig! iad . shipments are enormous I psota are thicker A mosquitoea in | }!nn money quick] u‘ulllu y spend it ”,”J [ie% >h I‘L‘Mf ’”:u \'H‘ este | Their homes are full o stuliChingsy| 85 daR LA e eorisss 10 from all over the world b, for instance Speaking of Washburn. his residence is 4 : that of Mr. Thomas Lowry, the street rail- | worth a fortune, It is an immense white out hitting a Crasus. The wonderful de- i 0 i 4 way willionaire of Minneapolis is a big, | Stone surrounded by ten a ground, velopment of the country is rolling the dol- | NAY I ORI 0 S b | avery Toot of which is val He has lars into this hopper of great northwest B a gotten out of his financial troubles and is and there lumber millionaires, milling ] strics, so again rich kings and real estate magnates and railroad R 1 2 Jim HIl's Mansion. gold bugs gulore. This is the greatest lum- 4 ber ceuter of the union and J. Newton Nind the editor of the Lumber tells me that Minneapolis will sell more lumber than any city in the y in 1803, Some of the richest timoer dealers of the w and Weyerhauser, the lumber k his home. No man in th S0 1 amber as W timber all over the the millions. Just th over #,000,000 for 5 pine in cate v King Visit with number of million-dollar busiess blocks MinseAPoLis, Minn., April 14.—[Special Correspondencoof Tue B Millionaires New Jersey, and you can't throw a stone on the streets of St. Paul or Minneapolis with f 1t houses which Iy eastern city. but the y have been irranged ‘that it is a How Tom Lowry Made & Fortune. ch turn out hundr Y feet of lumber aunually, and whose product is worth close o IXCUTRUTTY It buys | new luml gions right looking out for new fields northwest From Beer to Builion The syndica rich men, but ¥ richest and the bra German and came t worked brewer time at §1 his way lions He he labors in his b lumber cawp i t ¢ luck with his men a ; gh | b for o AR L R.| mote 414 e knowledge of i He Is & min ¢ scuse, zud his four sous, v luwber business, take have been well ¢ of Syruc her mar lower classcs « charitable work T. B, Walker A anot lumber ki . i be worth §10. 000,000 and Y utains some of i the finest pain you will find 1n the | which he was \ Uunited States. | election to the s At sideboard and other places about n { room, for ice, the'bed, of | than thosc of ordinary houses, and the result | 1ses of the world. Speakin A4 . W. Cor. 16th and Douglas Omaha. illumination. There are fourof these dia wd baskets in the h: ie in the dining another in_the library, and others in | the music, reception and drawing rooms. A | chandelier always looks out of p house. 1t makes a big room look larger cr, but these dismond and they are the we ey T'rom the center of this ase betwo e fluted ¢ You comc rlass, which throw 4 8ofb light into 11 At the right and leftbf t i by mantels er these is a pai iher of Mr. Hill The Dining Room. The dining room % about 50 feet long by 20 1t is finished in South American 10 the furniture is of the same alls from your feet to above are paneld in the richest of ma- which has a polish equal to that of i The ceiling 1s made up of panels framed in great mahogany rafters, and the panels are of rough stucco covered with gold leaf. Window s run around the cnd of the dining room, sitting upon whick you can look out over the Mississivpi There is a great sideboard of mahogany 12 feet long filled with the finest of china two corners of the d with beautiful @ . and on th s of china al Dr niake them look s She did y haviug the prox and the regult house } homelike char is nondous.’ in is six f v but it does not thau an ordina snd 1 was not g that i il s wntil my atte calied 1o it sofas are very the and * tubles match the ps haye been made is a ¢ ation which you will uot fiud in the gre sces of Europe uc um center table in the two feet high and is .. Mrs, Hill h d finally had it mad i found which just harr ¢ coloring of the roon The Den of a Mwilroad Magnite, 1 of the house is the a this is Mr. Hhil's der re than ten feet square 1 mahogany. 1t has ¢ eat authors of fiction and scienc »und upon the shelves, and you wi Sowe Minnesota Mansions. teller, und it is said that he kuows | 1 y ele b ng from | e ey n German books as well as beare by heart, and ean reveat P ise bes behind thew apa reflected by mirrors I wish I could wke you into the houses of from begiouing to eud, , wmake & wost wonderfully effective English. Mr, Hill is a good Freuch sc aud both himself aud his wife have good | their dc WEDRESDAY, APRIL Boston Store hegins the greatest sale of wet goods kuown to the worid--invelving more ready cash than has ever been required by us for any purchase here- tofore. THIS STOGK GUNSISTS OF GRADES OF DRY GOODS, Linens, Damasks, Towels, Table Linens, Lawns, Nainsocks, €ilesiaz. Prints, Calicos, Dimities, IMuse. lins, Shirtings, Sheetings, IMen's, Ladies’ and Child- ren's Underwear, Hosiery, Corsets, Gloves, Laces, Em. broideries, Veilings, Quilts, €preads, &c. T ™) —25 experienced salesladies, | 10 experienced bundle wrappers | I cash girls and cash boys. Apply Monday or Tuesday mornings béfore g o'clock. literary taste. They are both well read and | his ideas. s did « » received | Guthrie of Louisville and has §5,600 a yeap estic relations are of the happiest | more thau hal to do with as s nature. : The Lasement and the Attic. i ich should ug the Civaan S iterais lon't kn hat Hill Catholi s ago by archb yoms. The house must h LT . Ahel 1 father, in ci i pastur of anacre of floor space and the | ~vs Hi \ 1 L SR ¥S was e “directors basement is a house in itself. It has a hall . < h yne hope | famous railroad,’ 80 wide that you could drivea wagon througn | FeCently sent « H The | after the passage of the fugitive sla it without grazing the walls and its 1oor as big g [ : our | helped by ) i s north are all large, airy and well lighted p | DN v a senddl wa oors are of m Tho halls ant entle.« As w @ remarke are pa m SR Al g o on the sweetness of the expression of the polished that you c oVl 50 | good father's featurcs, and Mrs. Hill said and the whole is lighted by electricity, | Y% be is a beautiful eharacter, and 1 only these mart g ys clod | wish he was fiftecn years younger.” I then bed of Ay 0 | asiced her question or so about Bishop Ire. pounds 5 s ! | land, and she said that a lady of St. P; b iy 4 v N (’!’”’1 ,1 who had recently been in Rome had met the | SobHe the ’fl’\ it e ol alokan heeedl Hill says it is i and that he had spoken in the highest ) ¢ e e el proof, and itial i Roane so | terws of the bishop, and had asked her if she - ity e L N s one of bis friends. She replied: *Yes, I °d in gram- aver it without injury. The attic has been | B¢ 2 of the northwest are all friends of ter mariy me turned into 4 theater for the s usemenr f | Bishop Ircland.” Whereupon the pope said e affohd it He kin Mr. Hill's children, anc is a miniature | ,18m £lad to hear it, for 1 think he nceds it now. but he woan’.” *“How do you stage here aud an audience room about | Fiends FRANK G. CARPENTER. | kyow lio can afford to marry you?” asked thirty feet wide by fifty feet long. The . 3 = the judge. **How d' know! How d’ I know! " stage has scenes and footlights, and it is, in HIS IDENTITY. cried the girl. “Why, hiton'y tecks 50 fact. a complete little theater, The boys 1 _ 3 fur a license. and 1 seen him' flashin have u magic lantern and they sometimes Clothter and Furnisher lah larse night: dat's how I know.” give exhibitions. Asdown the avenue he rolls Two Tous of Coal & Day. R young colol girl of delphia thus 1 her grievance i ) t the ulhrt Mah name's riny y Luzby,t but I has hopes « i t's wot lIze hyar f ever mind that,” interrupted the magise trate. *Go on with your story ‘Well,* - S EDUCATIONAL. takes 0 LONS 01 CO: " i 3 ‘\fH\ mien that's humble AL KOKER biro § il coal to keep this rock d up quite tight Ex-Governor A Gill of Miunesota warm, and [ spent s look not & ] cin has just been appointed by Mayor Wright of Ktipronicoe vig St. Paul, a member of the Bo; of Kducae r g J0thi By every critie who h Eaul g me but atte I tion of the city | that the ring the | Missilk hat, with its e . President John I, Goucher of the Baltie more Woman's college, announces that the ?, f ved a gift 210,000 in n riend whose ays that » has juss ser ersity 00,000, and nos ey AR t ) under the auspices Ameri= CONNUBIALITIES, 3 the University of wpear before the torical writers s dur- ersily exs the ‘same kmar to Hill's Famwily Life, said above, the stror evolution, 000, buty use des vard like t him call upon him and that h pody over her, will have her own way | W¢ but as the aunex has no official come would give hit a check which would enable | and marry the yoi g gentleman next month, | Bection with the university its students cams Blm 1o carry out w0 @ certain degrec | She is the daughier of the late B. Frauk | notreceive Harvard degrees.

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