THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 4 , 1887.-SIXTEEN PAGES. ASK YOUR DEALER TO SHOW YOU THE Union Sewing Machine , It ii the latest and best In every sense of the word. If he is not enterprising enough to get it for you , send your name and address to the Union Manufacturing Co. , IGOlt HOirARD STltKET , OMAHA , NEB. FURGUSON FURNITURE COMPANY , 7IS North Itith Street , Omaha , Nebraska * l'r ' STILL BOOMING- . Is now Selllnir nt Facto FURNITURE ry I'rloci. Now 1) the Time. LET A GOOD BARGAIN SLIP. It Being the Only Ono Price HOUHO in Omaha , And Everything Marked in Plain Figures. " = tt = s JAMES"STOCIOJALE ; Bsteut © DDesuler S 113 North 16th Street , Omaha , I have a lftrto Hat of the most doslrablo Insldo property , lno.ito'1 In all pirts of tbo city. My lilt Of outside property In prluoj ami location bus no equal. Kipeolnl attention glvou to visitors to tbo Valrnnd Iteunlon. Call and see mo when In town. OMAKA FAIR , SEPTEMBER 5 to 10 We want one merchant tn each town to handle our good * White Machines. Supplies for all machines. Tuft's Soda fountain * wholesale. Write for terms to Till : TJUOJtNTON MACHINE CO. , 121 North 15th Street. hjhhhhhhhhhhh h bg _ h h hh h GEORGE s. MILLER ; The x Live x Shoe x Man 612 North 16th Street. Omaha. Nebraska. ill give you more real value for your money In firat class foot wear , than nnv dealer in the city. Fall stock just received. Uig bargains during the Fair. Ue sure to see him when in town at , l12 ! North l(5th ( Street. NEW AND SECOND-HAND FURNITURE AND STOVES For Spot Cash at Your Own Prices , 117 North 16th Street , . . . - Omaha , Neb. GATE CITY EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Supplies Male and Tomato Help for ah kinds of work. 314 J South 15th Street. SURVEYORS , Oactf.Soatti Omabt EoomV rtun Omaha Bo m 8. CoamercUl National Bauk. \ 1,000 CATS WANTED. The Eric Clothing Co. , 820 North 16th Street , th& only exclusively One Price Clothing House in the city , do not want cats , but want you to sec their mammoth stock of fine clothing , ALL marked in plain English figures. Erie Clothing Co. 320 North 16th Street. T. I . "WOOD. m m sTOOID C0.i Real Estate and Loan Brokers , 1406 AND 1-JLO8 CAP11OL AVENVE , EXPOSITION BUILDING , OMAHA , NIIHUAHKA. PATTERSON x BROS , , WAGES STOVES & RUES Real Estate. Tin ttud Hollow Ware. Happy Thought Cook Stove & Range For Cent Loans a BpocUltr. Call on us for AT C. F. O-jftu DiTEia'S , lion ins 1 and 9 , . . . OKAHA . UU NORTH Killl ST. . OJ1A11A. NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. Good Couds nnd Law Prices. ES. Hardware Stoves Tinware , , , CUTL.EUY , XAIIS , 1IA11BGD WIRE , ETC. Promptly Attended To , Satisfaction Guaranteed. 010 NORTH hl.XTKKNTH STRKET , OMAHA , NEII , ! V r 4 I OT7JR , A. W. WA.N fc 40. , Auction of Furniture every n'ednvn-luij and Saturday. ft7 § OUTII ISTII sTHiir : : , OMAHA , IN THE ELECTRIC FIELD , Some Strange Things Done By a Woman Seemingly Charged With Electricity , * SOME QUEER HUMAN FINGERS Electric Iht Fixture-An IraproTed Motor The Coming Electrlual Kihlbtlon-A ! Swept Farm. Electric Finger * . Anton Snvcrne , a Belgian cabinet- ranker , employed ( it n Kcnsingion ship yard and living nil nlono in thu little fraruo house 003 Sohlcswle street , has tlio wonderful power of producing electric sparks by rubbing his fingers. Savcruo is n little , swnrthjr follow nbout 40 years old , with a bushy head of black hnirkrcn blue eyes very rare among oia country men and ho is excessively nervous , and his senses of hearing , Right and smell , as ho assured n reporter of the Weekly News yesterday nro unusually acute. Ills parents still llvo on n farm m Bel gium near Brussels , and he is the young- ist of n family of eleven children. "I know not how I do it , " ho said last ivoning , as the reporter saw sparks hoot from Savorno's fingers. The cab- not maker rubbed his iinger-tips rapidly up nnd down upon his pantaloons. Then , holding his hands out , with the lingers widely extended , jets of tinv yellow flames , or long sparks , shot out. They iccmud propelled by so mo unseen force , en or twelve Inches jnto the air , when .hoy vanished. The right hand appeared more charged with electricity , if the iparks are olontric , than the left. The amp in Saverne'a front room there arc only two in the house was put out. so that the suarks might be seen m all their brilliancy. It was a wonderful sight. "I was not always EO. " said Savorne , light- 'ng the lamp and the black pine , tilled ivitli villianous tobacco , at tlio same iinie. "When 1 had boon sick , ten years ago , it was said 1 would die. I lay so weak one night in my father's house , when there ; anic up a storm. Such thunder and ighlning 1 never new before. And r.iy aody had such queer sensations. While [ lay covered up with bedclothes , mv mother sat holding her face in her hands ' > y my side , and 1 seemed to fuel a housand needles pricking tny limbs and ihcst and the solos of my feet. It was not so painful , for queer thrills came with every priuk , and when the thundur rolled away and the rain stopped , I rose .ip , loaned back and pnt out my hand to , ako that of my mother's. My eyes wore closed , but 1 heard her cry , 'Anton ! ' " What1 1 gasped weakly. " 'Yourhaml. ' " 'I looked at it. The ono nearest to her. It was allamo. God preserve us. I was terrified. My cry brought my father and sister into the room. Tlioy looked at nio in Horror. I took my other hand from the clothes to rub my right. Sparks shot from the left. Soon they died away , but 1 have but to rub my hands as you 'mvo seen and the lights conic. " A Woman Does Strange Things. Coi.iT.MniA , S. C. , August 2f ) . There is an electric woman in Greenville county. Her narno is Airs. Lockaby , the wife of a poor farmer. She has been visited by curious people from nil sections of the stato. About two months ago she bo dante to hear what she believed to bo super natural noises about the , house , such as slamming of the door , tapping on the walls , the moving of furniture , and the like. The manifestations became so fre quent as to alarm herself and husband , and they abandoned their homo and went to live with n neighbor , believing that their house was haunted. But thn noises wore oxen more pro nounced than before , and the frightened couple were compelled to return to their own homo , as their neighbors believed them to bo possessed of evil spirits , and refused them shelter any longer. After returning to their homo the manifebta- tions continued a few days longer and then stopped. About this time Airs. LocKaby began to have strange sensations , similar to the shocks of an electric battery , at times so strong as to bo painful. Then it was that she discovered nor extraordinary power to lift and move large and heavy bodies. has exhibited hur power in several ways , although it is only by great per suasion that she can bo induced to do so. She is very superstitious nnd believes that she is possessed by spirits. She re gards the matter very seriously , and ex presses great alarm lest it should lead to something dreadful. Artistic Electric Light Fixtures. "There have been more ingenuity ana artistic taste developed in designing fix tures for the elcotriolight during the last year than a half century developed for all other kinds of lights together , " said the head of ono of tlio principal oloctrio lighting companies in the city. Ho was silting in his ollice , ono end of which was completely occupied by beautiful and novel samples of electroliers , brackets and globes in nil materials , colors abd shapes. Ho pointed toward this collec tion as ho wont on : "The best designing talent in this coun try and in Europe is being utilized to turn out just such work as this. Hero's n design for a bracket in the shape of n. branch of a rose bush. The loaves and thorns are perfectly imitated in brass. The roses are small colored globes. When you turn the current on the effect is indescribably beautiful. Similar de signs in lilies , blue bells and tulips have got to bo comparatively common. The natural tint of the tlowor is repro duced admirably in the glass. Some times two or thrco diU'uront ( lowers nro united on the same bush , nnd the owner gets n sort of garden out of his illumi nator. Such things are very costly , anil nro only used for decorative purposes. Wo can duplicate any design that the makers of gas chandeliers can invent , and then improve upon it greatly. You see , the electric light will burn in any po sition. Wo can have long stems and boughs , with the light drooping at the end like n blossom , as you see it there. Or we can have lights nestling in a vine running over an old tree , like they are arrangt-d in a 130,000 piece of work now buiim made for an English nobleman. That will bo a great piece of work , by the way. Tiny lamps with an intermit- tnnt arrangement will bo fixed in the boughs of the trco to look like glow worms. There will bo an imitation o moonlight , too , that , it ia thought , will bo something remarkable. "For the illumination of ball rooms something that has the general shape o the old chandelier is very popular. It ia much more artistically made , however and is thickly covered with globes , everyone ono of which has n different tint. The general effect is of n bright , sparkling glow. "Sconces are now made of hammcroi brass , with jewelled glass incanduscon burner * at the side. Another favorite wall ornament is a brass panel covorei over with little branches , bearing brigh colored lights. The brass is highly pol ished , and the effect of the reflection o the different colors is very bright and warm. " An Improved Motor. Isew YorkTimos : There was shipped from a Yonkers machine shop recently n now electric motor , to the constructloi of which Stephen 1) . Field , of the Fioli Electric railway company , has devotee himself for a 3 ear past. Thu now tuotoi akcs iJ ( power , atiaTo all these which lave been experimented within the past , rom dynamos in oJct-ntral station , which s conducted to tMJ bnolors by n third all , upon which fans a "traveler , " a mall wheel from Aq motor. The motors o bo used In actual sorvlco will bo small and compact affairs , weighing nine tons each , which will take the place of the present trucks under the ordinary cars , ono at each end of each oar , and can bo controlled by gatomen at either end of the oar. The ixperimentat motor Is shown In the pic- ure. Besides doing away with the ne cessity of having a motor separate from ho cars , Iho now machine has various mproved devices if crlgu latins nnd con- rolling the motor Wl for prolonging its Ifc and economizing on the expenses of Is maintenance. The dynamos are also different m several respects from the ones ordinarily used for generating clcc- ricity , nud nro expected to do much bot- er work than the present style of ma chine. A Now Bnt Extensive Special interest is manifested in the electric motors. Manufacturers of them say there is no business in the country more active than theirs to-day , although t is. as n commercial development , prac- ically the growth of but ono year. There ire now ton thousand electric motors running in this country , nrarly all of which are on electric light circuits , whloh now have a double duty to perform , sup plying power by day and light at night. The Coming Klrotrlcal Exhibition. A New York letter says : 'The Now York Electrical society , which is to hold an exhibition at the American institute his fall , is still receiving applications for space from intending exhibitors. Al ready more than twice the number of square feet of space at first thought suf- icient for the exhibition has been ex ceeded , and then : is no longer any doubt lint it will bo the greatest affair of the kind over held. The soclnty has already received applications for 12,000 square 'cet ' of space and for 700 horsepower to operate the exhibits. Among them will ) o 2,500 incandescent Inmps , 203 nrc amps , 300 motors , several storage bat- cries and throe electric railways , bo lides countless miscellaneous inventions. This , in itself , would constitute an inter esting display , but as new applications nro being received daily the indications are that the electrical exhibition will be the finest nnd most varied , ns to exhibits , > ver held. The society having tlio matter n charge has made n classification of the exhibits as follows : Section 1 , production ) f electricity ; section Ii , apparatus rcquir- ng strong currents : suction 8 , apparatus requiring comparatively weak currents ; section 4 , electric conductors ; section fi , electrical conductors ; section 0 , historical , educational , bibliographical anil miscel- ancous exhibits. A series of lectures will also bo givnn bv several of the most noted electricians of the world. A tjiglitnlni : Swept Farm. Correspondence St. Louis Globe-Demo crat : There is an opinion prevalent among the public that lightning does not strike twice in. thti same place ; this , iiowevor , is a falWoy , as it is well known to these who studft electrical phenomena that lightning clods strike in the same place more than , Jontie , and that it will fall upon a certain /place / just as of tun as the natural condirionsjaro such as to de termine the lightning discharge to that point , or just as often as that place lies within and forms. ; he # ath of least re sistance. * Probably ono of the best illustrations of numerous lightning discharges falling upon ono place that has ever been re corded in the United Status is upon thu farm of Mr. W. F. French , who lives near flushing , Gancsce county , Mich. Mr.-French is nn industrious farmer , ami ifrom the , numerous lightning visitations ho has had , ho might well ask when and were will it end. In the summer of 1871 his barn was struck , doing but slieht damage to the barn , but killing a line team of horses , worth $400 , which were in the b.irn at the time. In 1873 the same barn was again struck in exactly the same placu nnd another fine team that ho had refused flOO for , were killed while standing in the identical stalls occupied by the team that was killed in 1871. In 1831 a fine Clydesdale stallion , valued at $1,000 , was struck mid killed aud during the present summer ho lost another valuable horse , valued nt ? 200whioh was struck while grazing in n field. At various times between the above disas trous strokes a creat many trees were shattered , and it is a frequunt occurrence for lightning to strike the earth in an open field , often tearing a hole in the ground. The great frequency with which lightning strikes upon this farm suggests forcibly that thcro must bo some natural cause for it. The land is rolling , and a small stream meander. ! through one part of it. The soil vnries , and there are several kinds of trees on the place , such as beech , maple , oak , basswood and ash. Mr. French states that he has found what ho supposed to be nn iron orv , but that ho hna never investigated the matter to learn the extent ot the body of ore or ascertain its nature. Ho believes that there must be something on his farm that attracts the frequent discharges. If it is n fact that the ore ho has found is an iron ore , and if it crops out at the earth's sur face , that alone would in a measure ac count for the frequent lightning strokes , while it may bo that there are other natural conditions surrounding this farm that facilitate and invite thu electric force. Fl h Killed by Elootrloltjr. New York Mail and Express : Fisher men of the city have been interested for several days in a report from the South Side Sportsmen's club , of Long Island , that during a recent thunder storm sev eral trout in ono of the ponds were killed by lightning. This is a rare occurrence. In talking on the subject with Mr.Charles F. Imbrie , ono of the nest known anglers in town , who has fished in almost uvory Inko nnd river of prominence in this country nnd Canada , that gentleman said that while fishing in the Grand river he saw some salmon struck by lightning. Ho was fishing in the largest pool of the river , known as the "crand pool.1 'I ho day was very hot and perfectly still , and it was not possible to raise n fish Suddenly ono of thbse "regular Canadian river thunder sforrrts set in , am : as it was dangerous to stam ! under the tree ? , Mr. Imbrio took up a position tit the foot of the pool. Ho thus had a ftf ( r nnd full view of the entire shoot of water. The light ning Hashes came ilearer and noarpr.am : presently thorn was n perfectly blinding Hash instantly accompanied by severe thunder. Thu whole air seemed to bo on lire. Feeling certaili tint somuthinir mus have been struck,1 Mr. Imbrio lookei about him to .senyJiat tall tree or trees had tallon. To his',4urriso ' | ) there was no evidence of the llghtnirig having struck anything. After a motannt or two ho saw several salmdn Uouping about in the water In a most curious and unac countable way. Soon ono of them lloatud down to the end of the pool where ho was standing , and although it quivered somewhat , it was practically dead. Two more soon floated down. Mr. Imbrio and his gallers took them axhoro , and before leaving the pool had secured seven salmon in the condition spoken of. Upon cutting open tlio fish it was found that the blood along their backbone was con gested , otherwise there was not the slightest mark of any injury done to them. _ _ A Transferred 1'lcture. A recent letter from Hillsdale , Michi gan , says : A curious electrical phouom onon Is reported from Fayettu towiiMii P Last evening a lively thunderstorm passed over that region , during whicl the play of lightning was peculiarly ro queut aud vivid. Just before the stum broke , Amos J. Brlggs , a farmer living midway butwpcn Hillsdale and Jones- ville , who Is quite bald , his head being smooth and slilny , wont into his back fard to frighten away some cats that ivero lightine on the wood pile. So in tent were they on exterminating ono nn- other as to allow Farmer Briggs to approach preach within a few feet of them. At the same instant there was a great crash nnd an electric bolt struck thu wood pile , scattering it and stiffening the cats in an intense rigor mortis. Aside from a prickly sensation and sudden contraction of the muscles Mr. Itiggs experienced no unpleasantness further than that the fluid passed down liis body , tore the workc of his watch ull to pieces , breaking the cover , ripped his loft trousers leg from top to bottom and burst his left boot , tearing the upper clear from the sole. When he entered the house his wife fainted. Unconscious of thn cause the farmer hastened to bring liis wife to , nnd thu first words she ut tered , "Oh , Amos.tho devil's set his mark- on you , " excited his curiosity and ho locked in the glass and found the Imago of a black eat photographed in silhouette on his bild front. Mrs. Biggs being fully restored they examined the picture closely , wluoh they say was perfect. It was about live inched from tip to tip.nnd in The ' "whls- perfect proportion. cat's - ors , " tooth and oven the hairs on its tail were produced with exquisite minute ness , Curiosity being satisfied they tried to remove the obnoxious marking , using sorno homely remedies as soapsuds and scouring brick , vinegar , nnd nshos. etc. . but to no purposu. However , in the morning thu picture was much faded aud by noon it had quite disappeared. Klnctrio Ijnntcrns. Electric lanterns will , it is thought , take the place , lu course of time , of the ordinary mining safety-lamps. A porta ble electric lamp can now bo made pos sessing the following features : Weight , about three pounds ; illuminating power , five candles ; ui/o and shape , similar to present lamps ; duration of light , ten hours ; cost of repairs , charges of battery and material , two cents for ten hours ; these facts showing that there is nothing to prevent its adoption as a substitute for the present lamps , anil oven for candles in many minus whcro they are still in use. Another Ijummoun Klcctrlo Dnll. Correspondent Now York Post : At 6\ : \ ? p.m. on February 18 , 1837 , 1 was , during a heavy shower , sitting in a second-story room in my house at 80 Brcvoort Place. Urooklyn. The house is surrounded by trees. I happened to bo looking out of the window when I saw a ballot brilliant light slowly descend among the trees about 250 feet from whore i was sitting. At a point about fifty feet above the ground the sphere exploded or collapsed , emitting brilliant scintillations of light. These appeared to be composed of incan descent matter , though I supposed this was not the fact. At the instant of thu explosion or collapse there was a report , short , sharp and deafening , but utterly unlike ordinary thunder. No damage was donu. The temperature observed after the shower was 50 digrces F. , but 1 should think that it was slightly lower at the time of the explosion. The ball or globe of light appeared about ten incher in diamctor.and , had a violet color. Although frequently observed , no ex planation has ever been ofl'ered as to these luminous electric balls. Their electric condition appears to bo unknown. A Portable Telephone , Two Belgians , Colonel llcnard smd M. Nothomb , the latter professor of telegraphy in u technical college , have just made known at Brussels a wonderful discovery uamely.a portable telephone , wherewith telephoning is made easy on open ground from anywhere to anywhere by means of ft copper wire worked by a small but astonishingly powerful genera tor of electricity. In warfare , soldiers could carry the wire , and would bo able to communicate with others by simply throwing the wire on the soil and rolling it around a sword fixed in the ground to form the circuit nnd then speaking through a small bov. The said telephone also nets as a tele graph , and can bo used as n substitute whenever telegraph wires are cut. Ex periments made between Brussels nnd Antwerp shows the transmission to bo FU perfect that sound can be heard oven nt several yards from the receiver. Thu portable telephone already exists in Germany , but costs so duar and so constantly guts out of order as to bo im practicable. Electric News Urcvitlef ) . A Daft car has just been started on Mansfield lino. A now oloctrio road is to bo built in San Francisco. Dayton. O. , will have a fully equipped electric line by October. Four cars are running on the line ia Detroit with Fisher motors. A 11,000,000 electiic railway company has boon organized in Detroit. * Scrauton , Pa. , will hnvo 300 electric lights in operation by October. A great ninny small machines are being - ing run by electricity in Galvuston. Electricity is boine applied as a motive nowcr on a number of street railway lines. A London company lias ordered 800 cars to be , ruu by electricity instead of horse power. It has been estimated by electricians that it will cost only f 127,000 per year to light Chicago. The electricians and manufacturers of electrical supplies are not only moder ately but extensively busy. Six thousand feet of electric track aroused used in n Lykens Vallev cofil mine. The wuight of the train is fifty-six tons. An electric road , to be thirty miles long , is to bu built nt Los Angeles , and eight motor ear-s will bo used ou an eight milu road to San Jose. A Chicago man , Bi dwell by nnmo , has planned an electro railway to run fiom the United States throuzh Hritish Amer ica and Alaska to Bearing's Strait , cross ing a bridge into Asia , and thencn con necting with the railway system of llus ia. HEALTH. DR. OTTERBOURS , Cor. loth nnd Dodge Sts. , Omaha , Neb. A Itcgiilar Ciruilimtc In Mc-cUt'lno mill Special I'riK'lllioiifr , Authorized to trent all Chronic. Nonous and "bpcclul Diseases. " ( Wlictlior caused by Irr-prudoncu. Kxccss or Contusion ) Somlnul Woaknuvs , ( iiltflit loinoi ) i-oxuiil Dt-liilityloss ( of sexual | ionurl , Noiv- ous Uolnlity , lllooil Disorders otu. Ourunlociisoa Kuarnnioaii nr tnnuuy nifuniliiil. UtmrK"low. . Tliouvtiuila of CHIOS cured.KO anil i < ip rlt < ncu arc Important , All mixllcinLS especlully | ire- pnrod for euuti Indhldiml ca o , i\o liijiirioui or roUonoiii C'nin- pound * I/nod. Nn tlmo lost from builacsi. I'ntlcnUatH itlittuu.fi treato I by letter anclexpri-w * Motlcinu Bum ovcryw liuru free from KIIIC or breakage. JVo I > t > layln rillhiKOiMlvm. For 4 cents In stamps , will mail frco , all our prlntua llturuture , ombracliitf B"Symptoiiil.l3t' on wlilcn to got H lull tiUtory of DUua- , etc. State ynijrcsso and semi for tcrinq All no ask Is H trial , hucrocy observed cither In par- ton or by mall. OFFICE HOU11S- 0 to 12 n. in. . 2 to A unit : to 8p. in. Svintlayd In cludod. Consulting room NO. 4. CIRCUS AND Omaha , , Thursday , Sept , 22d Twenty Time * Greater , Grander and Higher than Ever. Derris and Colvin's Colossal Shows Combined. Circus , Museum , Grand Wild West nnd lloninu Hippodrome. Grand Tripplo Circus of L'OO Performing Stars. GltAKD WILD WEST. Full nml Complete , comprising Host' } of Indian Scouts ami Cowboys. GICAMnw ICOIUAX iiii B oi > uom : . Troupsor lnrln ItMors In Anclonl nml Modern linens. Tlio HrlKht I'artlculftl mar ruaturoa oC the GroiUcst Rtollirnrong AK iotmtlon Ivor ! ( Iriratil/oU , TWISTY JTIAIU UIIHHCS AM , ISAKKIIACK. Iod by thn Invincible Quartette , Wmmplon O'niOr 1 Haiolmek ItMtir T fYWRV World fnmou ! , of thoWorW.l'ltil.iLi , IMrnorUlnary.lAJWlVI , Hunllu. . First tlmo In ' Only 31 llorjoIUJeriu 'PRT ? HMTV Tl OAT lHUiJJNLi I IjlliUiN Amorlra , - - , thn World. T\VIJ\TV rntiAM ; itAitim.u'it itimit : * . l.c.l by tlio brine , the bewitching , the bountiful Qnartutto , Miss ILLA : STOKES , MISS ANNIK CAKKOLL. MIS * ALICK MCDONALD. MI.-H INKZ INSON , The four fair women who ilro i divinely , clmrni comnlotoly , and rldo ostonlshlnplj 2OO Two Hundred I'lrHl1ltm < * fireiu Slurs 2OO In as many acts , Aerial , Killing , t.onplntr , Tumbling , Contoi lion , Gymnastic , Aililotlo and all kliiils known tochoiis i-ntoitiilnmcnt proper. A MONh't'KH W-CAOE MF.NAUEItIK with Dons , i-nlrm Droves. Herds nnd CngCs ot Wild Annnnls. rrpresontln , , ' uacli anil inory fiimlly of ( loolotry. illi'l'OUltOMIO ACI8 without number. Roman Chariot , llomnn Standing. Itomnii Vault * Inir. Itoman Steeplu It-ices , llriiwny Itldors , Illoodoii Steeds and a U of rallo truck. Kxcltmtf/ fapoctucular , Dramatic , Thrlllinjj mid Astounding Wild West. Spectacular and Uemarkublu Hippo * drome features of nil kinds. GENERAL OUSTER AT LITTLE EIG HORN. resonated by the Kront LC UOV. Thn mn ncro'n masterly rcproicututloo. The ambuscade ; the attack ; tlio ropnlso ; the defeat anil death of our Hero Cutter. ' , . ' . , , ' Horses at Fullest Spend arotmcl 'Jhu ONI ! the ONLV. the (1 lU'.AT IIXN ) itldhiK'Jhirty-ono tho'i ot n milo ultclo ThOKrontost net of iinuiont or modern dnjs , never before Klven In Amor * lea. The wbolo the greatest performance ocr K'h on on out th. Indians. Cow boys , Con boy ( Jills , Scouts , Frontiersmen , Mexicans , and Crack Shots led by th "CJ ° ub'"U" ' CAPTAIN ELMEB E. STUBBS , The Pliamp'on Wlnjr Shot of tlio World. HUMAN 11IDEHS. Grecian Uidora , Modern Trotters , Trottlnar n 'I Running Rncoa , such at wore never witnessed boncuth nnv tcntod pavllllon , A PMSTHOIM OK AMl'SKMKNT of nil Kinds. Circus , 'i'licntrlcnl. Hlppodromo end Wild West. A World of Wild Itciisls. A IU77llnir. Sulillrao Spuctuclo. The Whole tlio Ut cutest on tilt Continent. MiumKod and Conducted liy ItrnliiR and Capital. l oors Upon at l and 7 P. M. lixcurslou Itatos on all railroads. " > The Ultf \\lll exhibit la HnetlnjTH. Monday , Sept. 12 , Fremont , Saturday , Sept. 17 , Oiand island , Tuesday. Sept. 13 , IlPatilct1. Monday , Sept. 19 , Kearney , Wednesday , Hrpt. 14 , Lincoln.Tuesday , Sept. 'JO , Columbus. Tlnit idity , beiit. 1 % Walioo , Wednesday. M'pt. 1 , Norfolk , Friday , and Council limits , Friday , Sopt. 2X HILL & YOUNG , 121J and 121X FARNAM ST. FURNITURE Carpets , Stoves , House Furnishing Goods. Weekly and Monthly Pay ments , Iir.AK IN MIND WK AKT. SIBLING Furniture , Carpets , Stoves and Household Goods Of every Description , on Credit at Cash Prices. PEOPLES' ' INSTALLMENT HOUSE 613 N. 16th St. , Between California and Webster , ROSENTHAL & CO. , Proprietors. RILEY & McMAHON , Real Estate and Loan Brokers , 310 South Fifteenth. Street. olio Ion In Patrick' ndd , from tl..WO ; llOOcnah Porao Ocalrablo trackairolots down , Lmhmcu to suit . ' D iicri'S irood liuikaRu , cheap. CornrrWHIi nnd Cnllt'ornln , ISOtlM Uooil ImriMUMhin nil | n\rt of tlio city. Ho01 ill phone lot * In South Omuliu Nlcu acres In Uonlleltl cheap. A line ucro In Wiuhlniftoii Hill JUMBO IS DEAD And Maud S. Has Retired from the Track lint we harr tin- Lament and Flimtil H c of L'arriaw * , Harness , Itithi- * Hianhcln , Uorne ClHtltln/ ; untlall Minis of Turf Good * , ever carried b\i \ ana Jii'Hi in tint fiii. 200 Sets of Team , farm , lirprrm , Ctnifn ; LiuM , Double. Hlnule liar- ni'i.v , for * ate , reuardle * , of eot. ttoln at/ent * for the California llorxa JiootH. .Vojic genuine UH/I-SS / f > t < nni > < - < l. " , l. A. Melferron , S. I' ' ' . " Western- Aijents/or tint eelebrated Tomncy Stilt.i.S7i > ; > around and ii'lient/ou are I'l VII KLI , .I1 HA Ib Ks , readto ! buu rail on , . , S. W. Corner Kith hi. and Capilal Ave. , Omaha. OK THK SACRED HEART , The HehnlantloroarcotnmancoH on thu I'lrst Wodnosdnjr In K ptuintiur. DIITerence of relK plonTho no obstacle to the adtnisslon of joung J'xdlcn 1'uplls uro roculvud at any tlmo of th IKT Hoard , W'MliIng , Tuition in Knglidh nml I'ruuuli , Iintiuiiicntul Muslo , Use of llodks.iKiriunilon of rtv .Miinth * , . $159 00 I'nlntlng , Druwlnif , ( Jordisn. Vocnl Muslr. Iliirp. \ Inliii-MHtriti. Kefiironom are roqulrud fniin p < 1 40111 unlfnriwii 10 IntUtntluit , tor f urtuor laformalloa apply to thu HUbtltuv JAS. O Oi NOjt.or t the I.iily , ( purcir. )