Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 21, 1894, Page 13

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDA T .._______._‘-—-"':_=_—«'_ e - st o e — ce— o ation” in the foreign trade, as Mr. Wllnon‘ sible show that English wages were about 38 b suggested to the assembled Englishmen at| half this amount. The figures given for Eng- i the 12nden Chamber of Commerce banquet. | land above were computed by Mr. Giffen on { 1t Mr. Wilson, a8 allegsd by the president | very incomplete data, whereas those reported | DO *C Wil € , 1 , ; . ey | of the Chamber of Commerce of Huddersfleld, | by Mr. North are complete and include re- § THE / | bad never heard of that famous center of mr"n|lnr the entire country. It s generally For Frost B / sive Viow of the Woolen Fac. | Pritish textile energy, it I8 possible he may | conceded that wages rule highest in the great “onr ~0S R A Oomprehensi of the Woolen ibe in an equally advanced stage of ignor- centers of industry, and lowest as a rule in | b A\ —4 4 y tory District of Englaad, | ance in reiation to the West Riding in par- | the outlying districts. If this be true the | I\Ew . . | ticwlar, wnd aa (o the strongth and concen- | wages should be good In Bradford and the Or Snow! *l ° TN TOWNE OF SHODOY (AND WASTE | e, e (b Uoitod | the Wetvers. Lhemastyen. ‘a0 wor siony oo DI‘." G()()(IS C()”)I){) '].‘ S\STEM tration of the textite Industries of the United immediately surrounding districts. Yet the | the United Kingdom for 18 o v themselves, do not accept Mr. | I ® :F 90 ol A tve Giffen's ures which 1 h e give p- | D e e g OPMIDRINYE | rvvenitiny (he tfiata: ropostn, e prostient| - NI 13R1 14 SIXTEIENTH aso FARNAM =5 -fio .- . '7. v A Begion Remarkable for Ecterprise andi FABRICS. N : ‘Fh.nlg‘f.‘.‘.:v.:fi ‘.fil"".:‘,!L'éi'in,'.'"L“-?-J'S”"lv'!?i = i .\'clling - : ) Buide Goodls, i e s bl T Commission on Labor that the average | Total number Total number | Wages of this district for weavers was 9s, or | i i Succes i - RIS f“ LB il | 3830"per week, "The accuracy of this state- | Lots might be written about Unparalleled saving on every counter, in every aisle, on A Success. We are bound te 0l orste . ment was questic n ee 0f ol \g ! ™ S o ) ! : CHEAP CLOTHING AND CHEAP MEN |¢ (T i inown citizens appointed to ascortain the real | our prices on Blankets and |every floor. We have a large stock of New Goods, do the CASH TRADE of Gk | s e {nfl'T. ‘/.t{!"r“n painstaking and extensive in- I iy f % o OMAHA. mp, Jute, e, estigation they reported that for 1891 the i c urs is busy s Goods coming, poods going, : Rl Comparstive Output and Wages in the | Mivgt o oni i e i e crnings wort 148 40 (ahont Comfortables for l'hlSA\VCCk.blll a y store. Goods g, goods going, all b : United States and England, | e vomy | Do relinble; the American woolen and worsted | tO give you convincing proof | for Ly ML B b e operative will be able himself to jud; 5 3 s Yi i '. \ RLVIEW OF THE TiXMILE INDU.TRIES }iumber e oyed is less in the United King- | to when freed from the estimates and mys- AL fdomi than with us, we are etill a very long | tery which generally surround the figures o | part of the following: the crowds to our stores. /¥ bebind Great Britain in our textile in- | the British Board of Trade. The plain. = > W 3 dustries In actual strength we do mnot | Simple facts about the woolen and worsted | — — — — —eee . . Au Array of Significant Figares for the Kdi- | represent much more than one-third the | industries have been presented above and > | . | & : gregate of the United Kingdom. ‘Those | from them the most buoyant free trader can The following prices are less than | tication of Protectionists and the Con- engaged in these industries know that with | hardly obtain much encouragement. On the |, 1 | - 1 fusion of F'ree Traders—Facts Com= the excoption of the coarser grades of cotton | other hand those who have struggled against | it €0Ost to produce the same quality of | ; Is we are less able to stand British com- | these odds and built up an industry employ- Blaniot | plled by fon. Kobort P, RPorter, pefition in the textile industrics than any | ng nearly a quarter of a miliion of our popu e | i ] _ & sther branch of manufacturing. Yet the | lation wages averaging fully double the - — | J post reckless and senseless changes have | wages puid hero must foel that (his | The greatestof all chances, the newest and BRADFORD, England, Oc:. 6.—(Special Cor- b made in those schedules, changes | portant branch of manufacture fis going P e 'hi 7c Pair choi a8 ¥ {021 i R BRaAary Naloos | TAAE: raay wige olit entive industelsa.: ifn | through ihe srucl moni orins Chacoiae | 104 Blaket; w hite, . o7c Pair| i .,mm st Dress Stuffi at lower prices tha ever. ’ b ~ Charmming and cultivated youn lady on being | ¢, 05¥e " comparisuns has been included | The bicsent rate of duty s aliogether in: | | | B N ing an ated young 1ady on being | ik ‘minor and speclal industrios exported | udequatv. In Tt blkee; DednTse it i [ : t uced a 10 n ° hodd busi- | un he 0 extiles” e sh o N § 1 ¥ y o y . . ¥ o 1 « introduced, “but mot in the shoddy b ter th 1 of “textiles” in the British | doos not cover the aifferenca in the cost of | 10-4 Blanket, gray, . . VQIL| Srita valles:andexten: Tow setcen tn-thls | AlL Lo Srash bt L L) lack Goods } ness,” [isensus hat are mot n.’w-md‘«»]“l in M‘r ls ’;\] labor; in the second place, because it {s not | department, | That any one should come from Dews. | D. North's report on the “Principal Textile | specific. Without this, free wool will be | i 92 Pair % | 62 inches wide damask 0c | 50-inch Storm Serge, the $|.m60 bury or Batley and not be n that or Kindred | INUstrics of the United States " The com- | bu small advantage. It merely strikes down | 10-4 Blanket, white, . $1.23 Pair| chudren's extra heavy rivbed vests ana | HuRItoifor i Tt [ parison, I therefore believe, fairly represents | an jmportant industry and to that extent | | i 35¢| Wide and heavy bleached damask 49c | i ' industrics Is indeed a matter worthy of com- | (he relative strength of what may be | impoverishes the farmer deckaantie tis | & 5 pants . . 35¢ L L ask...... 49 . meut, “Shoddy,” “‘Mungo,” “waste,” “soft | termed textile and allied Industries In both | ability as a consumer. 1 am satisied tha | 11-4 Blanket, gray, . $1.25 Pair|pagies' fine heavy rivbed fleeced tined | 62-inch red bordered damask 5o | ine English Sarge o 5 00 ' rags.” Thise are the aigns which greet you [ countries. If this be true, It ls smply I&- | woolen schedule was framed by those who G VeRte and pants; 50| | B 4 i on all the gloomy, gray stone bufldings, with | forance and folly to talk of our measuring | tiere but partlaliy informed of the condi- 1 Bank she 1.08 Pair | ik A Large, full sized crochet bedspread...... T3¢ Choir torbidding fooking wale and. impene. | 100 U tna ingn e 5" kvt s | Lons, RIS controntou” manutactirers on 0-4 Blanket, white, . $1.98 Pair|radtes' non-shrinking vests and pants in 18-inch Choviot, $1.00 quality, 650 ' trable green flint glass wiudows. But what | (o come, a gencration of protection (0 | written In all seriousnass, after & eoretn] | HARGLILORIEERI TR IO WhILO WOk 4 v iyyeiis 150 g - LD CRkB & bill of fare these places turn out and all | American industry and labor. Of €ourse | congideration of the facts v 1-4 Blanke Ay, 2,33 Pair . | \ | K s 4 ool atiol the facts and after having - anket, gray, . $2.33 Pair| speciat tow prices on Iadies' tights, both 2 1 i from the vilest of raw material—from the | hey do mot thiak so here. I have talk ’\"I" free trader side of the question dinned St 1 . l. ik g el gths, 80-inch Storm Serge, #1.25 e ¢ [ with score or more of British manufactur- | {fe, free trader uide of the question d open and closed, in ankle and knee lengths, quality, tor ST WU TN OL Wurope NG the|as in:iNess wesien towns and Theed te | pian T G, L K THerS 6 oot & 10-4 Bl ot wlh 2 0R Pai; |all wool and cashmere. | [ Al R S T aweepings of woolen mifly. Glance at it cfrain from all of them. [ know it | SRS of partisanship ln what has been said. | 10-4 Blanket, white, . $2.98 Paii | ¥ I8 L 50 3 Flushings, druggets, paddings, short ends e You'will gat It in all tho fres | LAPOLICH, 2 28y Ampelling, facts aro here- | Ladies' fast black tights, opened or y J 0L DU B S 6-inch Brondeloth, $2.25 qual- 1 & « ue Irish frelze oloth, witneys, mo- organs as soon as theme lotters be-|pey 6" yoea great Industr b " 3 5 =3 pai | closed, tor = .. 48¢| Ly 8 IO SR e fS e . o | gin to circulate. Al the new United States & stries, even In part, | ] |. ke Ay e 823 he ! | hairs, pilots, tweeds, strouds, army goods, | ot (8 CCEATE O o e e State de. | from our side to this side of the Atlantic | I-4 Blanket, gray, $2.73 Pair | ORTiAter's At Botion. ribbed: Hoks; doubly Black and White Silk and reversabies, linings, velvets, sealskins, unfon | partment in their reports. 1In every imagin- | Me&NS a great loss to the American wage- i il ¢ i) o " Wool Mixtures, T5¢ 181 L en eir e ¥ Lo BN loes to, the a 2 A # " SEITANA. Toe (8 PATFN 0r 5D c| Our new fail veilings now Mixtures, T5¢ and C U1k oLk, “AFa#n loths, ‘ohsylots Sikoa iEie inow. o Uiy (o stiie I A EREa st oo Amstoai {1114 BTN Whife | $3 43 Pdir | o Rttt e (B (or B0A 180 | kEibna . New dotoer,;ak qURLLy, PORIE SR e All out of shoddy and waste and mungo \H;ul::’ T'"'f .r;\\\‘x{hl»\hws‘ it s |L.|'«‘- iRl SORoR 5t ‘x?m;;l Ladies' extra fine cotton lhose, prices. and old r 1 know Dewsbury and have [ 2" bpedidt b Iop s an s il s LD R Bt B e i deseev. % E s spliced heel and toe Vi Ta | ~ -1 y lieve it will only realize its falsity when | Bard g and deserving people here, but k . 23 Pair ‘ | C d G ( S been there before, Long before it embarked | (hiy geo branches of our once prosperous | that must bring corresponding misery and 10-4 Blanket, red, . . $3.23 pair | An elezant line of new black and cream | olore 0ods in the shoddy business it had made a repu xtile industries ruined and the opes .m-w“‘“-"‘r'l": to the n‘n«:avs \\‘n: hl':uws“ul‘«mlr | - silk laces in new patterns; low cash prices. All our 65¢ to 81,00 itisal tation as the town in which the first arch- | standing idle ard hungry in the market | 9Wn laboring population. at has Mr. Wil- e anket: white €2 Dy | o Tantare o N OV bishop of York once peeached away back in | Dlaces of decaying centers of the textile | 590 10 suggest for them to do? Surely he 10-4 Cal. Blanket, white, $3.00 Pr. | We are closing out an elegant stock of fur| Heuriottas, Serges, Whip- s i nth. century, This comprises the | F2€: The principal feature of the nhw‘h‘l-: siven up & prosperous and hopeful pres- | g | . 1 trimmings, jets, braids and dress sets for| cords, Diagonals, Armures, 1 e s venth centur s comprises argument is to dilate on the greatness, the | @t for a life interest in an uncertain and | ., u . 2 il 4 7 | ete, st e rombina- ancient history of Dewsbury. The modern | i ltion 5 G e e e e Amor. | Bloomy _future | 11-4 Cal. Blanket, white, $3.98 Pr, [ one-third cost; ‘seo the bargains offered for| OW I‘x‘llm“iv:x:h\l:' y combina. C | hix Ll o 4‘:w ey TL“I MOTE | joan. (Johm Bull can always be humble | The West Riding of Yorkshire is reaching | | tomorrow. 1 \ cleanly little neighbor, Patie was a |4, harmless until he is master of the situ- | Out with its tremendous concentration of | “ : 5 A fine line of new trimmings; all the latest , 5 5 ¥ B Fo scheming genius of Balley who originated |yiion) He, the American, can easily pay | force and its low-priced labor and economy | L1-4 Cal. Blanket, white, $4.17 Pr. in fet, Van Dykes, braids, etc, at special| ‘> 110 Of very fino Noveltios gl the hap ¢ up old rags into | Gouble the wages and yet compete with Brit. | of production for the woolon and worsted | [ cts for Suitings in all \\'...\1,5 0 : new el s r, unknown ish goods. He can likewise pay more for | trade. which is scattered all over the United | 3 . o | 3 also Silk and Wool, for, ... C { 7 fam and his progeny are oot in the shoddy | iy ‘capital, more in local taxation, more | States, bringing prosperity and employment | 1{-4 Cal. Blanket. white, §4,47 Pr. ’ | business.” My first visit to the twin towns | for evarything, In fact, and yeb by his re- |to many communities _ From Bwansen. ) | Wo open Monday a snle of Fino Imported of shoddy and waste was twelve years ago. | markable ingenuity he s to go into the mar- | Cardiff and Liverpool will be organized a | | SUIT PAT 1l the Iatest Novelties It rained hard. The streets were NArrow | kets of his own country and of the world | tinplate combination that will have for its | NS el | jnot received, ught tosell for two times aud_crooked; beer l~‘|l"\|'- and gl shops on | and compete with the United Kingdom. Free | especial aim the overthrow of the newly | A first class decorated toilet set (value LI |our price. Weo will turn them Into exsh 3 every corner, mo less than 150 BEINE re- | wool is to be a great boon. ‘The fact that | started tinplate industry. From Manchester | 1 A e : S| $4.00) Monday at . auick ] 1 auired o quench the diarnal thirst of the | an important branch of agricultural Industry | and the great cotton districts wil o forth | FUll sized Comforts at from S0c | inickias | { fnhabitants 4,('nu- town—one to every 200 |5 to be stamped out is to be brushed aside i Innumerable agents bent upon repairing Another tollet set, much finer (value d i souls, Including babies. The windows of the | 45 unimportant. The American manufac- | some of the ravages of the cotton schedule each up to the finest at very $6.50), Monday at s $6.50 clothing s ! only corduroy and | turers can mow mix and blend the various | of the McKinley bill. Shefeld has already i y 8 duck. suits check shirts. Dews- | grades of wool and make a superlor grade | doubled its exports by sending fmmenss L ALPBULC R O A b AR ; ; bury bookscllers retail books very much as | of cloth for less money. In short, make a | quantities of cheap cutlery, thus closing our low prices. sauce pans, 3 the costernmonger of the Seven Dials sells | coat which the farmer and wage earner will | Connecticut factories. The cheaper goods 4 d } yegetables Saturday night, by the aid of |like to buy, but will not because part of |of Nottingham may shut up our new lace 16 18 20 22 24 26 f Baring lights, the books’ being piled on | tieir consuming capacity will have de- | fuctores, - while the miscelfaneous. expores Tt - = = = — = | euply packing boxes. In and around the | parted with a mixed sheep husbandry and a | from London, now agsregating. $50,000,000 8c 10c 12 1dc 16 18c A line of gowns and drawers, made of public houses loiter the men without a job, | reasonable wages. It Is with this sort of talk | will bably double 1 1 hs. A : 800od muslin, trimmed well, fo 47 and at the entrances of the numerous little | {hat Bradford’ thlena, hexil ALY HO U MOk NeLye Hrouthh. ind) , 5 5 AR wouien shivered and gossipod. The tactorles | iraders, ~ Trade in the West RIding may | o ns Uned Seree e e itish exports S T vete (vl heyFals i L lo Monday morning ........ ise| Asents for Bulterick's Patterns, are large gray-stone buildings, walled in like | pick up a bit, but the United States is to ; EIRRRY, | Aprons made of fine lawn, hemstitched Publications and Cutler rigieen N ., 8 100 | ports means a loss of not less than $150, ¢ i LM piisons, withh vigllant porters statloned at | great, too boundless, too plethoric with raw | 500000 ot home pradurtions. " Protasts ot Try our Mail Order Department. Pokers (value 15¢) at T and fancy trimmed, Monday for all the entrances, lest strangers should ac- | material, too generous of its favors to abfect | can just as well be manufactured at & : cidentally get into the factories and ap- |to this increased business, While this is the | ° @ MANUIACIUTE AL NOMIE, | ———————— e e e o e ——————— propriate the new designs or otherwise find |outward talk, what are the inward facts? e L L REORTR L | 1 oul something of thelr internal economy. | (ONCENTRATED WOOLEN INDUSTRY. e “'HICH lS CH IST’S CHURCH | On the program for today are the following | is known of the size and welght of the stars, | hard times. The performance represented ag E SRS 0 A wotuThrs Seor ADoK C a8 Batd b s s N INDUSTRY. EDUCATIONAL. g numbers | and how it is known actunl outlay of about $75,000, It was pretly - \ sharp as the machines which weave their | 1 4m writing from a district that might b Chorus—0_ Tamb of God ... Stalner | First Church of Christ, (Seientist)—A. 0. |hard pulling through the great strikes of i . mungo and shoddy into cloth, 1 was not | Included in a circle of fitty miles fn ey Quartet—Cod, that Madest Farth and | U W. hall, Patterson building, Mrs. A. F.|July, but now the business is all right, and L} Aincasaad; - T BOme teanaots. t as | diameter, from a local division that contains | Chicago has inaugurated the check system Heaven ... Chadwick | 1), . > ore it looks as though M, el i br n some respects the town ha e AR EELIITY , y M A AbDOt Birs ek [ De Long, pastor. - Public cordially invited. hough Manager Henderson knew i Bt muoh. (chAtigad) though & better station -Inul\l_ a u\llllhl)[n mlm Ll::mcflu}nr:r‘ru‘ ‘nf} acres Pl;f;ly Xl'Kl ltxflf'“’“‘»fl ; A Rev. 0. W, Savidge and T. W, Williams | * W e et Ol | Reading rooms in same building, open dur- | What he was about, after all. * and a finc town hall have brought it out of | A0 a population less than that which may hladelphia has fiity-six night schools in s : | Solo—Jerusalem . 2 Rodney | Ing the week from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m., t In a befo the o cec) “New | ) the straggling wretchednoss of (welve years | Do included in greater New York; from the | full blast. Will Hold Theological Debate. Ll AR e et e oRivie et ket B O e { ago. Today Dewsbury has a mayor with a | third of one of England's counties. And yet| There are elght daily newspapers published Organ—Andante from First Symphony.. | e ere is 5o large an audience here tonight n red robe trimmed with sable and massive |0 this limited area Is concentrated the | in the colleges of the United States. Ik 1 Iliwlllmv;‘n, MUSICAL AND DIAMATIC, that 1 almost decide upon the umdwnb!;‘ll! 5 jowels for [ have seen and handled them. | woolen industry of the world. There are| The University of Missourl is almost the| PROPOSITIONS TO BE DISCUSSED | Lmproization . g “Guilmant e 3 o giving new plays. When I give new B } Undisiaayed at not inleriting a coat of arms | employed in the West Riding, according to [ sola western (or southern) university to show March—Pontificalc % he imens |y M > plays people stay away; when 1 give old A Dewsbury proceeded to manatacture @ suit- | the census of 1801, no less (an 218,202 per- | a decrease in attendance this fall. Mrs. F. T Ao T O ainite 'ls mentioned &8 | onexi!they: come'tol sge’ et i, NewADINYE @ble armorial bearings from the historic |sons in the manufacture of woolens and | Prof. Clarke, who fllls the chalr of - BEChRIEO SPIOSIE FY0unE Sviolnists ol et allidoimana to of. e, & e > . osto st a loi of money, and actors like money, ¥ #hoddy and mungo and waste of the past. | worsteds. A number equivalent to the total | botany in the University of Chicago, is not | PFOE™am of the Epworth Leugue District S RlC AR Boston X | 80 it would seem better for me to give yod 94 \ ¥rom the old De Lacys one part was taken, | number employed in similar industries | yet 21 years of age. Conventton to Be Held This Week— | a0 o pine formerly a missionary | , After appearances in opera in Nice during | old plays and save my money, for, after A from the ancient Warrens another. Then | scatiered throughout some forty of our states |~ A city ordinance provides for the punish- First Congregational Vesper Serv- among. the lodging house (bums, Itoughs, | Lonoary next Mme. Patti will be heard in | all, it is money that the actor ds afters! [ e 2 they put in some filigree work of thelr own |and territories covering more square miles | ment by fine and imprisonment of any one Omuha Pulpits, i 5 j{n e e Sh AR The 8reat French comic singer, Paulus 2 and finally surmounted the whole with a | than there are acres in the West RIAIng. I|who dares to stop, stana and look ai the i tramps and unfortuniates on the Bowery, Will| Fyve orchestral concerts will be given by |should be a rich man. In additin to Bis % crest, consisting of an owl in front of a|am writing from a town that has sent to | buildings occupled by the Woman's college speak at the Y. M. C. A. building at 4| the Lisat society at Lelpziz this winter. | lncome as a performer and the proceeds ot j ss. Some of the irreverent aldermen | ihe United States since the war nearly $400,- | of Richmond, Va. : { the People's | ©'€lock this afternoon. Mr. A. Lansing will ried Wagner and Richard Strauss will| his vineyard, he is the proprictor of the ¢ suggested the motto should be “Sheddy, our [ 000,000 worth of manufactures! An amount| While the Rey. Charlas W. Savidge of the Peoplos |\ J%igy "y gt opo act one concert each music publishing conce o | B a o st shouldl hile there is a marked falling off in the ; e Reor- | %8 v 8 concern which issued (to | abantonet Tt put this 1dea was | lmost equal to the combined valuo of our | incoming classes at Harvard and Prince- | church and T. W. Williams of the Reor- | e association’s evening classes are start-| Johann Strauss has eom his mew | Bame no others) the two famous songs, “En Rbhudoned; l)w\h“r.‘ o u‘.::\l‘“s ]u'.‘n] owir woolen products in 1870 and in 1860, and | ton, there is an Increase of 10 per cent in the | ganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter |ing in with a swing. Sixty-eight tickets of | operetta, “Feast of the Apples,” which will |Revenant de la Revie, " the Boulanglst hymn, L AT sbury Is & fledged | far exceeding the value of our total woolen | size of the ‘freshman class of Columbia. Day Saints propose to do to some extent in | membership have heen issued in the past ten | be produced at the r An der Wien|and “Pere la Victoire,” of which nearly § " THERE 1S MONEY IN T products for elther 1580 Or 1890. This, from | Thaddeus Stevens, who was a good lawyer, | 1o field of religion what Homs. John M. |days, chiefly for the classes October 31, during his artistic jubilee. 0.000 copies have been sold at 50 centimes 1 SRE 1S MONEY IN IT. one town in England. It Is possible Mr. Wil- | made provision in his will for an industrial i William J. Bryan have re.| A.W.Jefireys takes the lead of the debating| The monimophone has been invented by |®2¢h. As the expensos of production are & To be sure the people are engaged fn a dis- | son may have heard of Bradford. Here is an | home for boys in Lancaster, Pa., but it has| Thurston and A Nabatical olub, which is starting in with good stuff|an Italian named Allessandro Bertinelli. The | S°Yered by the sale of the first thousand, the agreouble business and the enormous quanti- | interesting comparison between the six states | taken twenty-six years of litigation to render | cently sought to do in the field of po |to make a successful organization. The or ention enables the player to play four | PTOfits must be enormous. ties of rags from all over the world one | which employ the greatest number of hands | it certain that the home will be built. They have arranged to hold: a series of st an Wil be por{edion Tussday svonti o Y oNTER T would think hardly conducive of a happy | in woolen manufacturing and the six West| The popular movement for broader edu-|debates on propositions as follows: The Choral society met for its first re-| Mme. Bello Cole, the American contralto NDER HEAVE BAIL ¢ genltary condition.” Sull there i money | Riding woolen, worsted and shoddy ‘centera | cation for artisans and mechanica has re- | proposition 1, “Tesolved, That the Book |hearsal last evening. under the direction of | whn kes moleod o Eiost ahepicafl contraltol ¢ . in it, and in their own peculiar line Dews- | which I have visited this week. This should | cently had an impetus given it in Detroit, s 1s of dlvine orlgin and worthy | Mr. Torrens. S Tad s A iatrallan tour rst ot the Alleged Land Robbers Are 5 bury and Batley can beat the world. The | give some idea of the concentration of this | Mich., by the proposed erection of a college | 0f Mormon is of div | 7 for which she rece AE 000 Al 6o Tass. relgnad ln. KedorsliCourte new tariff bill suits them exactly, and the | industry in England for night classes in the advanced lines of | the confidence of all people.” T. L Baptist Young 1" st X ok f MADISON, Wis., Oct. 20.— The first one A vilest and cheapest and nastiest shoddy | ENGLISH TOWNS, study. liams affirms and Charles W. Savidge denies. | mp, \itorary and mission committee in con- Faust” will be given its 100th perform- | o yye guenonee™ i ato e : y 4 it i indicted by the federal grand lfi\lm‘:ls wm\ soon !n’f»rm ]hr::' fn;m these oy mploved dn woolen and worsted | william M. Singerly, democratic candidate| Proposition 2. “Resolved, That the church | oo oo™ ina Young People's society of byt l||n r:x?".ll e rl‘: o eaten Fa, e | ury for alleged traudulent entries of timber pluces. A class of goods tkat have not 3| for governor, i asented $10,000 e i s s, am a membe anta i R ODR Ol oD 4 » B W iantiad An i Wi red Bt taav ey i [ x “r-dll)'“(’)l _n"‘l*:mgg"\":*l“'["‘":“ zfl 00 'lf’y “:'l:‘ of which I, T. W. W ||-||.\|fv.. xrm a m.‘-‘xm,rl' the First Baptist clurch has prepared a | subject of which is founded upon Longfel- | lands in the Ashland district, Arthur R. Ose eneration. This is the cheap clothing Mr. | Hudder trustoes toward the erection of the proposed | Viz.. the Reorganized L_mmh of Je us ChrISt | o rogram for October 26, on “Papers and | low's “Hiawatha borne of Ashland, was arralgned; before Wilson and his friends have talked so mueh | l\!:-\\\\:;_xw | new dormitories. of Latter Day Saints, is the church of Christ | Books. Among the papers will be the| Mr. Charles Dickson and his manager, Mr. {Judge Bunn today, Osborne pleaded not about. While infinitely more enjoyable than | jitiey | Dr. Sticket, proZessor of orfental languages | and identical in faith, organization and wor- | ‘‘Baptist Young People’s Union,” by Rev.| Edward J. Al separate on October 27.1 guilty and was put under $10,000 ball, which my former vislt, it was far from hilarious | *Approximiiciy, " T and literature at the University of Jena, who | ship.”” Mr. Williams, afirms; Mr. Savidge |J. O. Staples; “Edward Brighth and his| The parting is entireiy amicable, and Mr 1 3 this time. A melancholy-looking fellow AN gave his first academical lecture In 1827, is | Services to the Baptist Denomination;” “The | Dickson continues the tour u wn | Wil be furnished. ~ The others named In fer his tal number employ ool d worsted J 2 > he indictment with Osborne are Rob 3] was droning forth some funereal ditties on a 500 00 ployed 1n ‘woolen and woested ec g N g1, | dentes . Leading Denominational Pap by Mrs, | management, presenting b nt reper- | ¢ orne are Robert C, 4 Thourntul trombone, the Taclopien. stemed 1y | Fabuniy:, JXE | And chat ‘b expects o, stiek It out a whg| Proosition 3. “Resolved. That the ehurch | <296 GRICGUAIEL SRR M i, S heng fnd A dolly Hordiaum raosiyverat the Asklesdiiendlor frown at me as I walked from the wild | Massachusctts .0 is shown by the fact that he has prepared | of which I, Charles W. Savidge, am a mem- | .y,gazines”; and a ‘Literary " A| Miss Lottie Mills, a young n pian. | SRCer Harrison; Warren B MoGord)npEoHiEs dissipations of Dewsbury to the drab re ew York. ..... | his syllabu of ex-Congressman Myron T. McCord; Harry for the coming winter sessions. [ ber, viz., the People's church of Omaha, is | cordial invitation is extended to all. ist and a pupil de " Island t Leschetitzky, will be the | ;' b f4 Al i k spectability of Batley. Aside from the eticut A hitherto unknown work of Malmonides, | the church of Christ and identical in faith, g saloist in ths first concert of the season ‘k' a% “‘f::‘ “';‘f\':l"f*;* . Ric hu";l Broder- town hall and a new bank building 1 ob Hampshire | the greatest Jewlsh theologlan and phil- | organization and worship.” Mr. Savidge Sundey Nehaol Nanduy: EReIC Y. be BAlaN os ahoeti/ ini Waa I Etan e thirty-ilve indictments, served no improvements in the decade save | Here we find In six cente all \\‘llhm'nsn[!hrr of the middle ages, has been dis-|affirms; Mr. Willlams denie: that the front door pillars of the Royal|a radius of about ten miles, nearly 110,000 ered by Prof. Gaster among a number | The debates are to begin Tuesday evening, | s e (A Took a trifle more mottled and the stops are | persons engaged in these industries, a num- | of Hebrew manuscripts which he acquired in | November 20, at a place lo be announced | Trinity cathedral, the services to be as fol- “‘whitewashed” a deeper yellow. I had for- | bor exceeding the total number employed in | the east and is soon to be published by him, | later. lows: 8 a. m. Corporate Communion ot| *, B0 o gotten a most forlorn looking steam | Pennsylvania and Massachusetts combined, or | with a translation and notes. It Is a short| The King James translation of the scrip-|teachers and pupils; 10 a. m., Bible class 10 CODASTYRIOLY h n : some including other parties not yet under Qutahert Miss ‘\l “1“. AR reakian) for | @rrest. The indictment contains two courts, Vishington prior o her departure fof | the first charging conspiracy to defraud the : ienna, . United States of the title to public lands; 71 puplls | second, a conspiracy te commit perfury in This will be Sunday school Sunday at|October 23. at Cologne has ““tram-ca which, it you go on|of New York, Rhode Island, Connecticut and | treatise written in Hebrew, entitled *‘Com- | tures shall be the standard of evidence, all | (open o all); 11 a. m., morning prayer and Hu;u””v: eyen. Aeachon) G 1{‘..“‘11-(.”“‘: L };u.l & necesary afiidavits at the land office, the ~top, covers you With & mix-|New Jersey. And yet we look upon the | mentary on the Sacred and Profane Names |other proof to be taken for what it is worth. | sormon by the dean on *“The Necessity for | Lyt con®etVAIOT¥ S T08 BUps and minelss (1t is charged that Broderick acted as agent ture of steam and smoke, and if you |woolen industry of these states as of con- | Of God in the Pentateuch, by Rabbl Moses for the aihers o making - pretendetssis Sunday Schools under Existing Circum- g 4§ | pupils and thirty-two teachers. At Munich | (ament stances”; 3 p. m., Sunday school, with an|{he proportion Is 269 to thirty-six. At | guo | address by the sup ride inside suffocates you with ‘fetid air. |siderable importance to the sta Ben Maimon.” Epworth eague ¥ Among the graduates of the Chautauqua| mpe Omaha district of the Epworth le and the ogrR The conductor s not allowed to take the|nation at large. Destroy or cripple them and proof of homestead entry for nefit, but in reality for specula- Lis own b intendent; 7:30 p. m., | Wurzburg it is 694 to seventeen are, but passes around te as : St Sy _,i Aing tirole "4 Is " Toee Ly the euperl Dk A0 = sburg tion to benefit Heydlauff, McCord, Osborne ;" Tt e gl i W‘H'l“',‘,“’m" P f,”" e ,“’“’::‘ 1\:-::“(4‘":1”;’ 43;‘“““.:'{';““': ffif“t‘;‘f flreie. o :f,',kfif,:“"‘,:,:',“,';“',’,‘;fi P& Wil hold a mission at the First Methodist | special evening service o intereat of Sunday | patiniiza” was brousht out by the Bos-|and Box. Broderick entered Khe lands the pennies. a S {.{’,,,,,pf‘.- paplt sl bl ‘employed | M. o 6:30 p. m., yet for four years ho has | church, in South Omaba, Tuesday and Wed- 3“"&‘}'5i“‘:l“'l:'u:‘jfl:fi:;: resses by the deam, | onjans at the Columbia theater, Brooklyn, | which are in Bayfield county, at the Ashland In a published speech the chairman of the | iy the woolen and worsted industries of this | Steadily followed the prescribed course of the | nesday, October 30 and 31. The following |** "'* rlind Avge] lagt woek. _ The f{'“wl of this -"lr“m| Was | land office, November 2, 1891, The cases Chamber of Commerce of Huddersfield this | o i C. L. 8. C. This is another illustration of v od; out marked by thorough attention to detall and | will come up for trial at the December city of Bradford is greater than those program wiil be carried ou Briat PalnitiFosacasts. o ot Lo i week declared that the Hon. Willlam L. |gimilarly employed in the wholo states of | (R fact that it is usually lack of will rather TUESDAY AFTERNOON. sumptuous scene J a avis | term of court, €. A, Lamoreaux of Ashland, ‘Witson had never heard of Huddersfield unitil | Massachusetts, It is this concentration of | tHAD lack of opportunity that stands in the| , ;. oo VP40 S ERA 0PN o 0| Plymouth ~Congregational—Rev. J. A.|sang the title role, a part in which she|a nephew of the commissioner of public Do read the speech of Sir Albert Rollit be- | ndustry. in one spot that gives Tha sl | Way of man's progress. Another Interesting | o PeYpional seryie ¥ * | Fisher, pastor. Regular services. originally obtained pronounced success lands, defonds Osborne. fore the Chamber of Commerce of that im- | % s connection is the democratic | % |a tremendous advantage over the United | ot 0 this connection ls the s 0 4 character of Chautauqua work. In this same States. He r'u we see It again class of '84 were to be found graduates of | 1891; West Riding of Yorkshire—Total | yyle, Princeton, Cornell, Rutgers, and other uumber employed, wool and worsted, 218,202, | American colleges. First Presbyterian. Preaching 10:30 a.m nce her famous suit with E. E and 7:30 p. m. by Rev. T. V. Moore of | which she came out triumphant,, mille New York W Iy Bauk Statement. Helena, Montana. D'Arville has been in receipt of no less| NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—The weekly bank Park Avenue United Presbyterian—Rev. ‘\,’j;‘;]'( “:‘}’,‘; “(’l“.’(; ""“ ‘“‘g":““-\;‘:““I\,‘-"_""“ statement shows the following changes: Re- Rice, In ——— of welcome, J. B. Maxfleld, D.' D, tof kpiritual " w ance of this Departme Hazleton, 2. “The Selection portant center of cloth manufacture. 1t this be true, it only illustrates the ignorance | of the most intelligent of our tarift reformers n relation to the character and extent of cts thus how is it $90: The United States, scattored In forty- | - aoe ¥ S : Rev. E. D, Gideon. 3: “How Thomas McCaguo will preach in the morn- | YOk with Ma e Makls orve, Increase, $1,116,350; loans, Increase, the competition to which they bave exposed |, 1890 o he ARILE AL, RahELatad 10! o Y- | According to a recent statement from the | IO N e SUOOR o e | ing. No svening servios She will not 1 n there, however, until | 4 4 Py American labor and Industry. Hudderafeld | U0 States and territories-—Total number em- | Chicago Board of Education the Droperty | fieones wh ynoes . 42 tow § 3 0 ! i 1| February, when st opens ai engagenient at specie, increase, $1,047,000; legal 18 by no means the most important of the | P107ed. Wool and worsteds, 219.1 owned by the city in trust for scliool pur- | Devotlonal Meetings r. I D | . Gaod Shepherd—8ervices at 1L a. m., and | yppey's” theater | te Increase, $1,681,300; deposits, in- Facing the real e et ki poses, including buildings and furniture, is Appointment of Committees. 7:30 p.m. 1In the morning the Sunday school | " ;" s tno 1ast season of the famous | < $3,847,800; circulation, increase, $163,~ ,::om;::m! |Lvl.l.n,'l|..“|':: that llm’l\x‘w\r‘; (hp1oYS | sible for the American manufacturer to b valued at over $14,000,000. The real estate —Song service, Rev W, Mille | will hold its annual children’s day service il'rf‘, S iooat AaasL oF the. Shmau 94l % state of Connecticut, and within about 3,500 ' compete with the British producer? It | belonging to the school fund consists of some rmon, Rev. , B, Priest. | ward Street Methodist—W S mer . [ e IL) head Catmarale” Cupaanias The banks now hold $62,613,675 in excess of ¢ the number employed in the state of | 'S doubtful if he could in this particular | of the best down-town property, the appraised WEDNESDAY "MORNING | pastor Morning subject Tost Of | noxt year. | The reason ascrihed for tho dis. | the requirements of the 25 per cent rule, hode Island, the fourth largest woollen | INdUSETY, even (f wages were the same. They | value of which in 1885, since which time| 8:30-Devotional services, Rev. W. D.| Discipleship. Evening Tree | golution is that Freder.ck Warde intends to o LSS @adufacturing atate of the union. Should |Ar, or rather were, very much Righer In|valustions have sreatly incieased, was .- | Stampauh. 1l o “Methods for | Chiristians produce several Shakespearean tragedies next . Mictim Mhde ignp we compare the town of Huddersfleld, which | the United States at the’close of the pros- | 266,260.09. ~The annual income from the | STDepagtment, of Mg & Doy | Al Saints—Sermon topic in the morning: | season In which there no opportunities T. PAUL, Oct. 20.—A St. Cloud, Minn., 1 Mr. Wilson had never heard of, to his own | Perous high tariff period of 1892 before u...‘u:yym_[ rent ;_!’ Ul_b“ n."‘n‘-’{'y "Mnmlm? 1:"1 S e nemiant | od Jiterary w | “The Effect of Modern Research on the | for a star of Mr. James' abilities lal to the Dispatch says: A. T. Peffer, | - - state of West Virginia in the manufacture of | fear of adverse tarlff legislation brought | 326767765 here are 206 schools fully |, 3™ yy e PAERRRE HOp it he Literar: Christlan Faith,” B I The Church | Of the three comic opera companies now | who reported to the police Thursday that i % subsequent de- | equipped, in which seating capacity for 190, | it MOGEL Lroxram For, U IR B Yen DAY OF tha e s | 000 children has been provided. The board | arh Teamie: Reahmg Course," 7| AR Ils Belation w. P. Hell Franais Wit ) g T . > e A has entrusted to it the expenditure of $6,600.- | B. Murray First Baptist, Rev. W. P. Hellings, D. D., | Francls Wilson, presenting “The Devil's | an assignment for the ber 000 a year, of which $3,034,000 goes to the | 10—Department of isotlal work ‘Qur | pastor. Preaching 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p.|Deputy,” at Abbey's theater, is playing to .‘“” John M teachers. Duty ‘to Strangers," Roy Lucas “The | m.; bible school, 12, noon; Bethel Mission 3:30 | maximum price of $2 a seat. The experl | Y. Model League Socfal’” W. C. Blackburn. |p 'm.; Chinese meeting, 6:30 p. m ence has been not that the public of the those engaged in wool and worsted manu- | We take the returns of the census. In both | There is just now much uneasiness, not to| “1i—Reports from (local chapters. hodist—Rev. F. H. Sanderson, | Metropolis objects to the price, but that woollens it would appear as follows: Hud- |00 the Cleveland pan dersfleld, 15,659 hands; West Virginia, 307 | bression. For Englas bands. herewith submitted are taken from a care- However it may be with Mr. Wilson, I ro-| ful report made by Robert Giffen, statisticlan gret to say that during the next two years | Of the Board of Trade. For the United States ew York public one, that of | pa had been robbed of §2 M last night, made fit of his creditors Rosenburger. Liabllities are ought 10 be heavy. - THE REALTY MARKET, | . LR - 4 . clectrical circles at the pros- | ’ y LN v Trinity M: : e . ¢ g8l acture throughout the United States will [cases I show the actual amount of money | say alarm, in e W DAY AFTERNOON, B bl it i A PAS Py buyers complain when they cannot get §2 | 1 ear Dot only. from Huddersfield, but from | recelved by each class of operators. Sum- Bect b & mrave busm’of: peblio, oentdeucr 13D nall se Rev. 3. P Yost. D i WULROED SLIIONN: Aot A o NRTRUMBIE e e 4 ho towns of the entire West Riding of York- | marized is is as follows (B sty ld fsleglrichia " -| 2 Department of Yoot heln: L | Bvening at 7:30, subject: *Evil Pursuits| Buenos Ayres will soon see the completion | 1gg RPLPN o d ¢ Y N INITED STATES: | Dest popular seeking for information on all | “Christ Our Example,” Kev. A. L. Gray, | Evening at 7 je 4 L > . k 1804 ::L"‘ I(\"“f;"h'h" stupe “"““" center of | UNITEL VNFTRD A7) electrical matters, says what is heralded | “Our Mission to the Needy,” Miss Her- [ and Their Consequences. “"m“‘ .‘;““:“’:“' :_'"""‘ I' . “‘l ';“ world. it ward to Oscar Manger, lots & and 4 world’s cloth iudustry is preparing for W WOOLEN MILLS. as the course of instruction of certain | rick, deacone: 2 Immanuel Baptist—Frank W. Foster, pas- | VIl seat 5,000 spectators, an the stage will ok fn “wabdly "ot block W Al L the industrial battle which will begin in & Annual, Per Week. | “igohools of electrielty is of doubtful bene- 30-The Epworth league and missions, | or ™ "garvices at 2418 North Twenty-fourth | Bold 800 persons hs bouss Is 89 con- |, Ruthertord, lota 12 and 13, . sarnest after January 1, 1895, when the new |Men ... & s 837 0 to many of those who may be induced | Rev, F. M. Sanderson O, e A i of the Y wuren | structed that box holders can have their | a0 o ASNE law will be n full force. A week's | OED 23 | to enter on it. To the amateur who wishes | S The Hpworth league and reviy bulldin The pastor will preach fn the | CArFlazes drive up to their tiers, and for 3W Nizum, iot's, 'block *yd2a sojourn here in the West Riding and a visit [ “ @ 00, 0 (0 o MILLS. | to learn something of the rudiments of elec- | El“:;l'fl_“"{h'“rr" R »"h\ul- R ‘IH 'mm“: s wl Ry the occupants of the gallerles there are ele- w0 ! . STED LS, LS ? el Lo el g the e | Ig. o serv o The pi . bl it Arabeile Gray, p* to Leeds, - Huddersfield, Halifax, Dew l\nn(y‘nrx. $204.00 .15 | trical knowledge such a course may be of | Fisher. 3. “After the Kevival,' A | Grace Evangelical Lutheran—The pastor, Vfl‘l‘ "-. ll.nl parquet seals can be removed Y and Batley would have opened Mr. Wilson's | Women 111 ‘15100 6.63 | scme service, but its usefulness in practical | W. Mathews. parace Evangelleal Lutheran—the pustor, | and the auditorium converted into a cirous eyes o the real meaning of his woollen | Chiliren o 8000 3.2 | training is questioned. The old “schools of | 3:3—Junior league work: 1. “How to , in three hours. 10, South: Omana Interest and Help the Boys, J. M. Gillan, | services at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m., and sohedulo far more effectually than a dozen| While the ubove may be taken as the act- | telegraphy” fraud Is recalled, and it is pre- i 4 3 Chicago's blg spectacle, “Aladdin, Jr.,' x O'Keete British Board of Trade banquets. 1 propose | ual cash received by American operators in | dicted that schools of electricity conducted | yb=AJuntion league meeting, conducted by | preach on “he Christ Family. and on | which has been running all summer at the | Mt ot block o this letter to present as clearly as pos- [ the woolen and worsted mills proper, higher [ on a commercial basis may also lead many At on Nra e hrist's Sinlessnoss, Our Salvation. Chicago Opera house, is about to be taken QUIT CLAIM DEEDS sible some facts which I have gathered and | amounts were paid In the carpet and hat In- | poor young men ill able to afford it to waste Prals rvice, Fletcher W. Young. Central United Presbyterian—The series | on the road. It is said that a train of nine | L Howell to Oscar Manger, lots 18 and obsorvations I have made during the past|dustries, in the first branch the men re- | their money In the expectation of becoming vival sermon, Rev. F. M. Sisson. of services which has been in progress for | cars will be required to transport the scen- | * 13' bock 6. in subdly of Glock o0 AL week in the West Riding, Those who be- | celving over 3500 per annum and In the | electrical engineers. The supply of eleetri- - - the last three weeks will close with com- | ary, costumes and the company. But twelve | bright's Ch 1ot 24, block 34, Al Meve In home industry and labor should face | second $550 per annum. The week's earnings | cal engineers is already greater than the ngretational Vesper Services. munion services this morniung, preaching by | of the principal cities in this country will brigava Cholos, W # feet lot 3, block 1, s Mr. Wilson and his friends with these facts | of e classes of woolen and worsted workers | demand, and every day the standard of % the pastor, and the usual evening services be played during the scason, and we are on fvies Topla z g | ¥ The vesper services at the First Congre- DEEDS. and demand that they explain how they pro- [ in the United States, after deducting lost | skill and knowledge necessary for responsible : Unitarian—Rey. Newton M. Mann, pastor. |the list. When Manager David Henderson | roi . & . g ;i the tion of th Sheriff ta South Omaha Savi - pose, even with freo wool, to compete for | time and holidays, etc., averaged for men | positions is rising, and the examinations in | Sational are attracting the attention of the | gorijeos at 10:45. Sunday school at noon. | first produced “Aladdin, Jr.” the first of last | 5% ¢ L | 710t ®, block 12, Albright's Annex $9.02; for women, $5.94; for children, §3.34. [ elcctrical branches at our leading colleges | musical people of the city. The first half|[n the evening Mr. Mann will give the nml June, people thought im {oolish to spend o | A slmllar comparison would If i were pos- | are becoming more exacting and exhaustive, |hour is given 1o music, vocal amd orgaa. | lecture in the Unity club course, telllug what [ much money on a stage production in these | Total amount of transfers....... the home trade against such stupendou: #dde. to say nothing about “beating all cre

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