Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 6, 1901, Page 4

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THE OMAHA DAILY Hl-' 1t SATURDAY., APRIL_ 6, 190!. Saturday’s bargains offer great money saving opportunities, besides giving you the choice of the finest and most complete stocks of up-to~date Millinery, Clonks and Furnishings. $1.50 Silk Roses 49¢ The finest imported silk roses, ina great 49c¢ 25¢ Easter Eggs 3¢ Your c¢ho; vaviety of fine variety of v'o]url--(m sale hands wor l-l\ decor on saic Ladies’ Tailor-Made Suits Every woman in Omaha should take a walk through our second floor and see the display, which really should have been announced as an opening. The dis- play consists of Eastersuits, costumes, coate, wraps, waists and skirts. A Brilliant A very important " Display of sale of Easter Millinery There is a flutter of beauty and fashion in our millinery department. The magnificent Z display is a glowing tribute to its pre-cminen e, and explaivs its \ great popularity. Every renowned millinery center on the globe has contributed to make our showing a perfect one, and entirely with- out a rival in the great west. . KEurope's rarest creations are Lere. Models from Paris, London and Berlin. Come and make your sclec: tions from the most captivating styles ever produced. We have been preparing for this sale for weeks, and have ready, values that will delightfully surprise you. For while our styles are accepted by everyone as correct, it does not mean expensive millery—quite the contrary. It's the combination of correct styles and moderate prices that has made this department popular. Of course you will find here the most elegant styios thut aro found in the wost— 10 20 Extru Specinl' $85.00 Pattern Hms at $20.00 For today, Saturday, we will offer the choice of all our Easter Hats, Paris and New York models, which cast us from #25.00 to $35,00—your choice of any of them for .... Trimmed Hats at $5.00 Trimmed Hats at 53.68 A special showing of 150 new suits - Maay styles, eton, box and blouse effects, inall the new shades of gray, castor and black—-many new weaves of cloth, strictly tailor made, every one has shape and 050 style inevery detuil—on sale at At $17.80 a special offering of 200 fine suits that created somuch talk. The jority of them are silk lined ma- throughout, every new style will be found among them 17:50 $75 Silk and Cloth Costumes $25 Among these you will find many worth up to $75.00, made up especially for our Eastcr showing, many of them ave imported garments, tailor made, all of them are silk lined throughout, elaborately trimmed. Also handsome foulards, silks, taffotas, esery one will bo recoge $ 5 nized as the latest creation, and go on ts —made of blac sale—choice. ... tifully trimmed. This assortment must be sc to be appreciated, they are all very swell styles—special Silk Skirts We are showing some special At $9.90 nobby cton jac! k and wool dress skirts 1000 in this assortment, model for silk fully 7.50 for nobby spring Jjackets in box or eton style, made of broad- cloth and other spring weight ma- 750 {er ol Very special bargains in salatat, iviee Hosiery for Easter Ladies s fine T and every correct this season is broadeloths, venetians one guaranteed to be made ri feta, peau de soie, broadcloth and venet with silk drop skirt, over 2,000 to select from, net, lace, etamine, ther cloth skirts, each in ot ery and go at 9.85 2 6.98 Muslin Underwear Ladies’ fine muslin and cambric drawers, umbrells styie, hemstitehed with clusters of tucks, lac trimmed —-worth 4U¢ pair, sale price . Tnmmed Hals at §2.50 As this is a most popular price, we have made At $3.98 choice of 200 hats At this price you will find it a special feature to get up the most stylish hats exhibited Saturday for first equally stylish hats as in the for this price. They are all hand made shapes, beau- time, all direct from our own most expensive lots, trimmed tifilly deaped with silk lace, trimmed with flowers, work rooms: every one of with silks, malines, flowers, maline, ribbon. The exasct copies of im- theso Liats displays O slik ribbons and orna- 50 ported hats, and equal to any Lat shown bt bt ot el LR : 2 heretofore a $10—Easter eale price s, e EAGAL Shb S .. Basement Millinery. Ready-to-Wear Hats 50c Flowers 5¢ Bunch We have opened a magnificent A new 1hlpmem of Phipps & Atch- Two tables loaded with fin department In_our bargain ison's ready-to-wear hats, also many oth French flower-. crushed re g and you will find shousunds of populur manufacturor's trimmed hath goon geratinia 1y flower Tmaginanie i e $1, $1.50, $1.98 L $1.50, 2.50, $5 [ sorh o0 vunch, Grand Sale of Easter Handkerchiefs Ladies’ hand em- broideren Handker- chief Irish manuface extra quality— on sale at.. Ladies fine import- ed cambric and hem- stitched handkerchiefs— hundbeds of stylos— worth 25¢— on sale Saturday at Ladies’ and men's finest Swiss embroidered and genuine Iri linen handkerchiefs, all widths of hemstitching— very handsome patterns— 02 values at 18¢ and Special Sale of Easter Gloves Saturday we place on sale a very fine lot of ladies’ extra quality kid gloves—there are all sizes and all colors in the latest styles—in the lot you will find such well known gloves as Werthei- mer's, *“Ci “‘Sovereigns,’ press” and * These gloves have been dis- played in our show windows for some time and are worth up to $2.00 75C pair—on sale Saturday We carry a complete line of the very finest gloves made, every style, every size, every shade $] 98 . Important Sale of Easter Neckwear All the very and styles of ladies’ fine silk Neckwear, plain and fancy, worth 25C up to $1, on sale Saturday at Ladies extra quality silk Neckwear, new automobiles, the kind that usually sells for $1.00- on sale Satur- Stationery Sale Thousands of boxes of 50c paper and envelopes, 60 sheets of paper and 60 envelopes to match, mad to sell at 5 box, zo at All kinds, shapes and styles o opes worth 10c package, for envelopes—at, package. .. o All kinds of 10 writing tablets— efery kind, shape and style— goat, each.......... Thousands of framed Easter pic- tures, with imitation ebony 6C latest colors made 25c¢ Exceptional values in ladies’ musiin and cambric drawers at 39¢, and 69: pair, Ladies corset covers, mad« of the finest long clo'h trimmed with lace and em broidery, wev. IS0 3QC. 40¢ est French style Ladies' fine gowns, skirts f fine muslin and plain black in it and hos riet fa ery neat quality 50 cents parted in inag of patt tra actually worth 25c¢ Misse fine slik with double liced heels pair, fine 49 on ale at pair only Ladic Children's b frames, beautiful dcsiuns—mmlu to sell at 60c—go Saturday at... Fancy embossed photograph frames, worth 130 gout. sands of yards of all ne in dress per , made tast made and worth day at knes on Satur " 12i¢ half hose, and faney Hermadorf dye, worth 2 and cambric, You choice of a superb let of la- dies’ fine neckwear, including the very newest New York 98 styles, over fifty different kinds, master at Running Water when the party worth up to $2.00— on sale at ... had not personally appeared before him. The grand jury made its final report this evening and was discharged chemise, made beautifully trimmed with fine lace, embroid- ery and Insertion—made full size, very dainty garments—worth up to $2—on sals at 49¢-69c¢c-98¢c Men's fine imported cerized, V'ack stripes, pur slik mer pluids and Saturd, Sanford and Inks, Pastes and Mucilage, kind=per bottle, red Carter's age s the 10¢ ed do finest French kidat 9se, $1.5 houses and safety deposit clties. vaults in various | died to llevue hospital of pneu- monia. Mr. Amos arrived in the city Sun- day with several loads of horses. He was 35 years of age. FOR A FORGER'S RANSOM| \ The person who secured the information | which led to the return of the portrait is | said by the detectives té be a sporting man, | but they decline to make his name public. The crime itselt has long since been out- lawed. C. Morland Agnew, son of the original purchaser of the portrait, has been in Chi- cago in connection with the recovery of the picture. He brought with him pieces of canvas taken from the frame and also a steel engraving of the portrait with exact measurements of the original The picture when taken from the casket was easily identified by Mr. Agnew. The box had apparently never been opened since it was sealed many years ago The forgers who were responsible for the stealing of the plcture are sald to have operated under the leadership of Charles Becker, who 1s serving a term in the Cali- fornia state prison for forgery. Gideon Dishman, an educated Indian you who under indictment for raising Urit ates postal money order whil pupil in the government Indian school & Flandreau, wus called, but in the absenc of important witnesses a continuance sccured until the 1ith or 12th inst the trial of the case will be commenced s court in Ransom against the sult jnvolves bonds in October, 1881, upon s due for principal and inter- Carland has taken the ] Sporting Man Gives Clue. The city CANCER CURED BY MIRACLE city of Plerre sued by that Famous Gainsberough Portrait of Duchess | which there of Devonshire, cer of Sibley. SIBLEY, Ia., April b.—(Special Telegram.) —W. H. Barkhuff, a pioneer homesteadcr | of Osceola county, died early this morning He leaves a wife, four sons and a daughter, William SIOUX In itound April b.—(Special.) Willlam Smith, a resident of Custcr county, has been bound over to the next term of the state circuit court in that | pixeributes Wroming School ¥ county on a charge of attempted assassina- | A tion. He and & neighbor named John Sel- | phe state superintendent of public in lers are sald to have had trouble over the | wiruction has made the annual apportion possesslon of wome land. The other day, | mong of funds for school purposes and dis while Sellers was working near his Bome. | (yihuted it amoug the varlous countie he was twice fired vpon with a rifle in the | go1iows 80, B Mo hands of some perscy concealed in @ clump | s of timber 200 yards distant. Sellers was R struck by one of the bullets and wounded | A e | " the koee. The evidence against Smith : & purely circumstantial, with the exception | ged of the assertion of the complaining witne who claims that he saw Smith at a distance of 175 yards as he backed away from (ho elump of trees from which he had fired the shots. Over, Sisters of Convent Fray It Away When, Death Beoms Nigh, X Wil ! whe | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS IN TNIEVES‘ HANDS! SORE GOES AND ONLY WHITE SCAR STAYS 3 25,000 stone ond brick building has been in this city by T. Matthews, a tleman of this part of the Black huilding will he three storles I have a theater on the sccond Jowett of - Deadwood fur Valued at Fifty Thousand Dollars the ed from Sight and Mas Adventures in Three Countries, qun weulthy Hills bizh | After Kighteen Years of Suffering the tient Goes to Sleep and Awakens with All Pain Vanished. The rue Natural Sleep Comen, and v Actual changes take place in the little corpuscles of the blood, and these changes are brought about by changes in our habits or instance, the coffee hablt is sald to | produce a thickened condition of the bload, that is, under the microscope the little rcund corpuscles show apparent fibres, un unpatural condition, which makes trouble with the heart in cases of coffee poisoning It also affects the complexion, frequently Lringing on heart disease in some ca: |and stomach and bowel troubles are com- mon with coffee drinker “Coffee treated me very badly indeed Cart CHICAGO, April -After traveling through KEngland, America and. the Fu- ropean continent twenty-five years the fa- mous Galnsborough portrait of the duchess of Devonshire, which was stolen from tha art gallery of Agnew Bros. in Lon- don, England, May 16, 1876, Is reported to have been returned to Its owners. The painting is valued at $50,000, A Chicago detective agency claims to have been Instrumental in recovering the pleture. The holder of the plcture, who it is sald was one of the band of thieves who stole it from the gallery, s said to have received a large reward for the re turn and exacted an agreement to drop the prosecution. According to the detectives he had carried it with him for years, care- fully packed and sealed. The picture, It is announced, will arrive In London to- morrow. The theft of the portralt was remarkable in many ways. The doors of the gallery were found locked and bolted on the in #ide. The policeman on the béat, the watchman of the block and the janitor of the building had heard no suspicious noises and they had noticed no suspiclous stran- gers. There appeared o be no clue until in 1888 a certain Joseph Elliott, then under arrest for a large forgery, asserted that the Gainsborough picture was still in ex istence and could be recovered, provided his liberty was granted. Porch Climbera Steal It rx of Sate Bonrvds, D. April (Speclal Tele- r Herried today appointed McNutt of Aberdeen member of the State Board of Health and Dr, H. I : fal) | Dickinson of Lead City member of the of Doland, has shipped a Board ¢ Examiners of millet to the Department of Ag- | rleult Washington for inspection by | 13 udmil Crene Indiet. experts. The millet is a new variety the | TYNDALL, —(Special.) ‘" v orn CHICAGO, April | Chronicle from St. Louts says Sister Laura Kuhn of St. Joseph's con- vent has apparently been curcd of a cancer after eighteen years of suffering, at a time when she was apparently at the point of | death from the malady. The seeming miracle which it is claimed was performed occurred St. Joseph's day, | March 18, the feast of the saint after whic the order was named. It came at the end '+ | got 0 I could not have a good night's rest, |of a nine days' novena of prayer for tne “‘How is The Bee Century club getting|and had not for five My eyes and |recovery of the nun, participated in by all along?’ asked Hon. James E. Boyd of a|complexion were duller than my mother's, |of the sisters of the convent representative of The Bee, and was an-|who was also a great coffee drinker. She felt no relief from the sore which swered that the enterprise was a complete | “pPhygfcians told me I had acute kidney |affected her so much until the nineteentb | success h'l_ every way. “I am not at all|and bladder trouble, I was nervous almost |day, when she awoke from sleep with the surpriged,” sald Mr. Boyd, “if there is any to the verge of hysteria, and my memory |exclamation one set of reference books that I admire 'fajled me. I hud grown so thin I was litt I teel no pain.” more than all the rest combined it is the 'more than a shadow, and people were con‘| The bandages which covered the cancer Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia and |tinually asking me how much younger my |were removed and no sore remained—only Atlas. I find it to be the most useful st hustand was than myself. (So comforting |a white scar. Since then Sister Kuhn has of books in my library. It is practical and o a woman, you know). In truth he is five [been doing her routine dutics and does not invaluable to every member of my family, yoars my senior. SUACE brom AL giving us information on all subjects In |~ “Well, as & forlorn hope \ NI i e s VR B R a compact and accessible manner. It is a apd ook up Postum leral days ago, the sister made no attempt time-saver, a storehouse of knowledge. The |year ago. I soon beea to blazon the supposed miracle to th work s considered a good investment at could scarcely stay awake RO ahA (ESanle Ataakad tott wnm Vieh s the regular price, and The Bee's half price | ake care of my baby b ek e B e BB ofier furnishes a doubly good bargain. Thoe |that I was ¢ el ok b dliddiila Bee's easy payment plan brings the work up for lost tim Finally I got pretty well | A Haging, Roaring Flood within reach of many modest incomes, and ‘slept up,' the drowsiness disappe and | Washed down a telegraph line which 1 suppose those with plenty of money are || felt a decided improvement in health. In|Charles C. Ellis of Lisbon, Ia., had to re not overlooking the balf price saving" | (hreo or four weeks I was quite well and |pair. “Standing walst deep in fcy water, —_ only needed to regain my flesh and com- | he writes, “gave me a terrible cold and The correct number of “THE DOTS" and | plexion. [ waited very patiently for an|cough. It grew worse daily. Finally the list of prize winners will be published in ail jmprovement in these conditions, but it was | best doctors in Oakland. Neb., Eioux City | editions of The Bee Saturday, April 1 and Omaha said I had consumption and about five months before I was rewarded, | S — then an almost instantancous change took | could mnot live. Then 1 began using Dr. DEATH RECORD. place, and my complexion became clear and | KIng's New Discovery and was wholly | el rosy. | gained in weight quickly, and|cured by six bottles.” Positively guaran- Colenel Robert Wallace. friends and neighbors commented on th:|teed for coughs, colds and all throat and NEW YORK, April Colonel remarkable change. lung troubles, Fore sale by Kuhn & Co Wallace is dead at the home of his growing better | Price, S0c and $1 Mrs. Alexander Elltott, Jersey City. Colonel Wallace was born in Easton, Va., eighty 3} Natrona S.=A cial to specia heridan, i Uinta, Weston, $1,844 52, sntinfactory M SIOUX FALLS, muel Ebbert, quantit riment. D.. April Grand Jury Falls ¢ SI0UX FALLS, 8. D., Apri government has been experimenting with D. V. Ma in session ~The federal grand jury, now T R T T in the here, has reported that it failed to find an | xperimenta has been satisfuctory indictment agaiust John Bordeaux, who was charged with Introducing intoxicating | liquors into the Rosebud Indian reservation In the United States court tihe case against 1 ry She o Proud of s Frod 4 | and ha: cars. Involving !~'IHI X FALLS, 8. D Arguments have been Plerre ¥ April & (Spec concluded bef An occasio fekly Ash Bt ters keeps th healthy, wards oft o | disease and maintainy strensth wnd energy | tem 1 left off coffee 0d Coffee about sleepy that | long enough to 1 did not realiz ping naturally and making | Elliott said the picture had been stolen by professional porch climbers, who had entered one of the gallery windows and cut the canvas from the frame. The pic- ture had been takén, Elllott sald, not for the reward that would be offered for it, nor for the purpose of its sale, but as the means to secure bail for a member of & band of forgers who had been arrested ' in France for a forgery on the Bank of England. The forger had heen extradited N Robert sister, | 1 have been constantiy and now am feeling in finer condition than ey - ever before I my lite, and I can surely say | The correct number of “THE DOTS" and He and the Agnew brothers were to be asked to sign his bond on condition that the paiuting be returned. Before the plan could be completed, however, the forger was given his liberty on a technicality N tiations were later made with the thieves to return the painting for a larg reward. The sum offered was too small, in the opinton of the burglars, and the ne gotlations fell through. Recently trace was again found of (he thieves and negotiations were reopened A larger reward was offered, which resulted fn the return of the picture in Chicago. When returned the picture was hermet- fcally sealed in a box made especially for its reception and was pronounced in per- fect condition. It was carefully packed in cotton batting. The casket was brought | trom England to this country ffteen years wgo and has remained In storage ware- crved as 4 captain in the | that I owe it all to leaving off coffee and list of prize winners will be published in all States army in the Mexican war and was mado colonel of a western regi meut in the unlon arviy in the civil war After the war he lived many years in the state of Washington. Burlal will be in Mauch Chuuk, Pa “My 16-year-old si coftee from a child of the time, not study at coftee, fair complexion It will be months before sult she wanted plexion and flesh produces a change all Wil M. FREMONT William H Maple creek yeurs Denning of Neb., April Denning died at yesterday morning, aged 67 He was a veteran of the civil war, having scrved three years in a New Englind reiment, and has been a resident of this (a4 month, usually, county fer many years. A widow and one case, that it son survive him. corpuscles of she (Special.) his home on n b requir the lonwa Horse S new. YORK, April orge Amos of Knoxville, la., one of the most prominent shippers of horses Lo the easiern market, rapid Name and Postum Cereal Co,, 'erh. noticed this woman secured the re- The change in this particular within | Chamberlain, for assault upon a young In- address using Postum Food Coftee r, like myself, dranlk For the last four years she was able to go to school only & part| and the doctor said she should stel 1 induced her to qui and now her bright eyes and fresh, | Telegram.) , | day ow the result.” that it took some ) the matter of ut it is evident, ed time to ¢ blood, and in he ge the that when that change was made the recovery was very Ltd, at Battle Creek com- from coffee editions of The Bee Saturday, April 13. FOR & TO LING LIQUOR INDIANS, Frederick Benedict of Slous Falls In- dicted by Grand Ju SIOUX FALL D, April 7 pecial In the United States court to- the grand jury returned indictments | against Frederick Benedict, an old resident of Bon Homme county, for selling lquor to Indians and against George Campbell, a pupil “in_the government Indian school at t | r | dian girl” also a pupil in the school The cases against Michael O'Shea, ex- 2 | postmaster at Running Water, and William Crook of Bagan were dismissed. The lat- | ter was charged with selling liquor to an can be given by the|Indian, while the former, who is a justice of the peace, was accused of acknowledging @ signature to Lis wite's bond as posts dishes, silver, kettles, pillows—everything. Get the large package. It's more economical. Boston, Philadelphia, Chicego, Makers of FAIRY SOAP. \ Why don't you try GOLD DUST Washing Powder and dacide for yourself? GOLD DUST cleans everything from cellar to gnrrnt-—cl..thn’ furniture, wood-work, House work is hard work without GOLD DUST. Made by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, New York, Mentreal, St. Louis.

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