Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 6, 1881, Page 7

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THE DAILY BEE MAHA PUBLISHING CO., PROPRIETORS 916 Farnnam, bet. Oth and 10th Streets. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Onocany 1year, In advance (p etpaid). . . 8 months 8 months “ “ _RAILWAY TIME TABLE, MR CARD CIHICAGO, ST, PAUL OMATIA RATLR Leave Omaha—No. @ through passenger, 11 « m. No. 4, Onkland passenger, $:80a. ni. Arrive Omaha—No. 1, through ‘passenger, 2:50 Onkland passenger, 5:30 p, m, @ OMAIA BAST OR KOUTII BGUND. c 40 p. m. C'&N. W., 6a. m.—3:40 p. m, C, R.I. & P, 6, 10.—3:40 p. K'C, 8t 0. &C. B, 82 m, . Louis at 6:25 a. m. and 7:46 . m. WEST OR SOUTIWRSTS. h Expross, 8:35 &, m. NINNPAPOLIS AND ». = e = n, 1 \ for Osceola, ght No. b, freight No. 0, troight No, 7, @ treight No. 11 8:26 p. m. ARRIVING—FROM RAST AND ROUTH, B. & . & N, W R. p. 1. “Bmigiant, NoRTH, Nebraska Division of tne St. Paul & Sioux City Koad, No. 2 leaves Omaha 8:30 a. m, No. 4 leaves Omaha 1.30 No. 1 arrives at Omaha at No. 8 arrives at Omaha at DUMMY TRAINS ERTWERN OMAIA AND COUNGAL BLUPPS. Leave Omaha at 8:00, 0:00 and 1:00 2:00, 8:00, 4:00, 6:00 11:00 o, m.; o ; 2:00, 4:00 and 6:00 p. m. Lea :25” and 11:25 . m.; 2:26, 4:26 Opening and Closing of Malls. RouTR, § L ol 4 Owmaha & Northwesiern. 4 Local mails for State of Towa I cay, viz: 4800, . Lincoln Mail is also opened at 10:30 a. m. Office open Sundays from 12 m, to 1 p. m. THOS. FHALL P. M. OML.AELA. Buginess Directory. Abstract ard Real Estate. JOHN L. McCAGUE, opposite Post Office. W. R, BARTLETT 817 South 13th Street. | ote. Pawnhrokers, J ROSENFELD, 3 10th St., bet. Far. & Har, A. Donaghtre, plants, cut flowors, seads, boquets W. cor, 16th an i Dourlas streots. Civil Engineers and Surveyors, ANDREW ROSEWATER, Creighton Block, Town Surveys, Grado and Sowerage Systoms & Specialty Commission Merchants, 18,1414 Dodge Street, ils oo large advertise- JOHN G. WIL D B BEEMER. ment {n Dafly and rs and Tobacco. BER, manufacturers of Cigars, 1306 Douglas, 514 10th strect. manufactur Cornlce Works, Western Cornico Works, Manufacturers Tron Cornice, Tin, Iron and Slate Roofiing. Orde trom any locality promptly exccuted in th Factory and Of Dodge St be Galvanized Tron Cornices, Window Caps, ote., manufactured and put up in any part of the country. T. SINHOLD 416 Thirtcenth strect Grockery, 1809 Dougias stroet. Good line. ERSON. Also Hats, Caps, Boots, s and Cutlery, S04 8, 10th street. " Fence Work OMAHA FI Co. QUST, FRIES & CO., 1218 Harney St., Tmprove- ed Ice Boxes, Iron and Wood Fences, Office Railings, Counters of Pine and Walnut. Retrigerators, Canfield's Patent. C.F. GOODMAN 11th St. bot. Farn. & Harney. 8how Case Manufactory.; 0. J. WILDE, Manufacturer and Dealer in all kinds of Show Ipright Cascs, & ., 1317 Cass St. . GERITARD, proprietor Omaha ase manufactory, 818 South 16th strect, Detween Leavenworth and Marey. All goods warranted first-class, Btoves ana Tinware. A. BURMESTER, Dealer In Stoves and Tinware, and Manutacturer of Tin Roofs and all kinds ot Building Work, 0dd Fellows' Block, . | 9- BONNER, 1809 Douglas 8t. Good and Cheap. Seeds. J. EVANS, Wholesale and Retail Seed Drills and Cultivators, Odd Fellows Hall, Physiclans an 1 8urgeons. W. 8. GIBBS, M. D,, Rsom No 4, Crelghton Block, 16th Street. P. 8. LEISENRING, M. D. Masonic Block. C. L. HART, M. ., Eye and Ear, opp. postoffice B. GRADDY, . W 16th and Farnham Sts DR. Oculist and Aurist, Photograpners. OEO. HEYN, PROP, Grand Central Gallory, 212 Sixteenth Street. near Masonic Hall, First-ciass Work and Prompt- nesy guaranteen Plumbing, Gas and Steam Fitting. P. W. TARPY & CO., 216 12th St., bet. Farnham and Douglas. Work prowmptly attended to. D. FITZPATRICK, 1409 Doulas Street. Painting an Paper anging. HENRY A. KOSTERS, 141 Dodge Street. Shoe Srores. Phillip Lang, 1320 Farnham st., bet. 18th & 14th, Architects. 4 DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, ARCHITECTS Room 14 Creighton Block. A.T. LARGE Jr., Room 2, Creighton Block. Boots and Shoes. JAMES DEVINE & CO., Fine Boots and Shocs. A good adsortment of homo work on hand, comner 1th and Harney. THOS. ERICKSON, 8. E. cor. 16th and Douglas, JOHN FORTUNATUS, 605 10th street, manutacturcs to order good work at fair prices. 'Repairing done. : Second Hand Store. PERKINS & LEAR. 1416 Douglas St., New and Second Hand Furniture, House Furnishing Goods, &c., boueht and sold on narrow marvins. aloons. HENRY KAUFMANN, In the new brick block on Douglas Straot, hag just opened a most elegant Beex Hall. ‘Hot Lunch from 10 to 12 every day. * Caledonta " J. FALCONER, 679 16th Street. Bed 8prings. J. F. LARRIMER Manufacturer. 1517 Douvlas st. Books, News and Btatlonery. J. 1. FRUEHAUF 1016 Farnham Stroet. Butter and Eggs. McSHANE & SCHROEDER, the oldest B, and E. house in Nebraska established 1875 Omaha. CENTRAL RESTAURANT, MRS A, RYAN, southwest corner 16thand Dodge. Bost for the Money, Batistaction Guaranteed. Meals at all Hours. Board by the Day, Week or Month. Good Terms for Cash. Furnished Rooms Supplied. Uarriages and Roaa Wagons. ‘WM SNYDER, 14th and Harney Streeta. vewellers. JOHN BAUMER 1314 Farnham Street. Junk, H. BEPTHOLD, Rags and Metal. Lumber, Lime and Cement. FOSTER & GRAY corner 6th and Douglas Sts. Lainps and Glassware. J. BONNER 1309 Douglas St. Good Varlety. Merchant Tallors. G. A, LINDQUEST, One of our most. popular Merchant Tallors fs ro- celving the latest designs for Spring and Summer Goods for gentlomen's wear.~ Stylish, durable, and prices low as ever 215 13th bet. Doug.&Farn, Millinery. MRS. C, A. RINGER, Wholosale and Retall, Fan. v G ods in great variety, Zephyrs, Card Boards, osiery, Gloves, Corsets, &c. = Cheapest House in the West. Purchascrs save 80 per cent, ‘Order by Mail. 115 Fifteenth Stroet. roundry. JOHN WEARNE & SONS, cor. 14th & Jacksonsts Flour and Feed. OMAHA CITY MILLS, Bth and Farnham Ste., Welshans Bros., proprietors. Urocers. Z. STEVENS, 21st between Cuming and Izar T. A. McSHANE, Corn. 28d and Cuming Btreets. Hardware, Iron and Steel. OLAN & LANGWORTHY, Wholesale, 110 and 112 L6th street A. HOLMES corner 16th and Californls. Harness, 8addles, &c. B, WEIST 20 18th St. bet Farn- & Harney, Hatels. ANFIELD HOUSE, Ge, Canfleld,0th & Farnhan) . DORAN HOUSE, P. H. Cary, 018 Farnham St. ) T i — BLAVEN'S HOTEL, F, Slaven, 10th 8¢, Southern Hotel, Gus, Hamel 9th & Leavenworth Iron Fencing. The Western Cornice Warks, Agents for the Champion Iron Fence &c., have on hand all kinds of Fancy Iron Fences, Crostings, Fincals, Railings, ete. 1310 Dodge stree. apl$ Clothing Bought. C SHAW will %hluhu Cash price for second band clothing, ruer 10th and Farnham, Dentists. DR. PAUL, Williams' Block, Cor. 16th & Dodge. Undertakers. CHAS. RIEWE, 101% Farnham bet. 10th & 11td. P. PEMNE] mi Tenth street, between Farn- ham and Harney. good and cheap work. 89 Oent Stores. P. 0. BACKUS, 1205 Farnham St., Fancy Goods To Nervous Sufterers THE GREAT EUR_OPEAN REMEDY, Dr. J. B, Sin;aon's Specific MBDICINE. 1t {8 & posytive cure for Spermato hea, Semina Weokness, Impotancy, and_all ‘diseases resulting trom_Self-Abuse, au Mental Anxiety, Loss: Memory, Pains in the Back or Side. and discases that lead to Consumption naanity and carlygrave The Bypiclflc W [Modicine is used | Famphicte ‘Write for thom and get full par. ticulars, Price, Specific, #1.00 per package, or six pack- ages for 86,00, Address all orders to B. SIMSON MEDICINE CG. Nos. 104 and 106 Main St. Buffalo, N. Y. Sold in Omaha by C. ¥ Goodman, J.'W. B, y C. 3K Ish, and all druggisteoverywhere. e i T ~ KENNEDY'S EAST - INDIA ] sent free to all, g dq & 5 R (=3 b g A g ! R ®3 BITTERS ILER & CO., Sole Manufacturers, OMAHA. ST . LOUILS PAPER WAREHOUSE. GRAHAM PAPER (0. 217 and 219 North Main 8t., St. Louts, ~—WHOLESALE DEALKAS IN— BOOK, %% | PAPERS 1\ ENVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND Printers Stock. £3r Cash paid for Rags and Paper Stock, Scra Iron and Metals. o Poper Block Warchouses 1220 to 1987, North Drugs, Paints and Olls. KUHN & CO. Pharmacists, Fine Vanc Goods, Cor, 16th &nd Dougls® trects W.J. WHITEHOUE E, Wholcsale & Retall, 16th st, ©.C. FIELD, 2022 North Bide Cuming Street, . PARR, Druggist, 10th and Howard Streets. Dry Goods Notions, Etc. JOHN H. F. LEUMANN & CO., New York Dry Goods Sore, 1310 and 1812 Fan bam etrect. L. C. Enewola_also boots and shoes 7th & Pacific, Furuiture. A F.GROSS, New and Becond Hand Furniture nd Btoves, 1114 Dougiss. Highest cash p ald for second hana gooos. BONNER 1309 Douis st. Fine goods, &c. Planing Mill. A. MOYER, manutacturer of sash, doors, blinds, moldings, newels, balusters, hand rails, furnishi croll .';"lnx, d&:". oor Daxv aud 9th strects. a rice | 1606 Farnham 8t Prof, W, J. Ander's Select Danc- ing Academy, A. Hospe, Ur. Hall, 1610 Dodge 8t. Class for gentlemen commencing Tuesday oven: ing, Oct. 4. Class for ladies commencing Thurs- day evening, Oct. 0. Terms liberal. Tho cas method s have for teaching the Wi uarantee perfect mati lolars, For terms, &c., call at A, or address 1116 Capitol Ave. NebraskaLand Agency DAVIS & SNYDER, + ++ Omaha, Nebraska MA00,000 AORES e e 1 mproved. s aad B ing lo v h Omaha city property . 0. F. DAVISY Late Land Cow'r U, P. B. «. WEBSTER SNYDER —— “w ¢ finding out their Agent Tiffany's Apaches. murder somebody, and who according ly Dattle, as a once famous poem | phrased it the joy they have to sco the white man fall,” has received | a severe blow from closer study of the | aborigines, and ter facilities in views and purposes. | learned that in nearly every instance our hostilities with the | Indian tribes have resulted from tho | bad conduct of the whites, and that even in those instances where the men were not justitied, i ,cin resorting It has been they were | own, At last, in the of the southwest it really seemed that we had found a family of Indians who killed settlers from pure deviltry, sueh was ir plundering and Dlood thirsty Yet even our wars with the Apnches have nearly all been traced to some arbitrary, faithle fraudulent, | Gity. He has JOtHERATNe, but fioe or simply blundering , which at body seems to know whatit is. It has east furnished the octusion and eXcuse | Jud form off the the wmpper some for an ontbreak, way, and 8o the boys called lim € A few weeks hefore the recent stam pede of the White Mountain Indi Liffany warned the wmilitary authe ties that the medicine men of this tribe were brewing trouble by repr senting to the Indians that their ¢ sensions, which had resulted in the death of many war sprang from the evil influence of the whites, and that they were preaching a crusade against ‘the settlements. Having [, found that this veport > } was in a_measure true, the y authorities proceeded to arrest one of the medicine men, in order to check the trouble at once. The result is | ¢ well known, but it is now becoming clear that the whole of the difficulty was not told. 1t is true that the im- | mediate act of treachery committed the enlisted scouts in firing on the white comrades could be accounted for by their reverence for the medicine man as a bein of supernatural power, whom it would be perilous and even sacriligious to seizo, still more to kill. Tt was unfortuna matters turned out, that the scouts to be on this duty, but all campaigning is so largely dependent on the Indian seouts for success that reliance upon them becomes habitual. onable to presume that men themselves, in d medicine preaching a crusade against the whites, the were only shrewdly responding to a sentiment of dissatisfaction that already existed—in other words, that the tribe had either grievancesor what they supposed to he such. Gen. Ord, when the outbreak oceu that probably 1 been ous observances on the Apaches, and that he had sought to get rid of the medicine man as a pre- liminary; but of this there is thus far no proof. Gen. Crook suspected that an attempt had been wade by the In- dian oftiec to force the White moun- tain band out of their hilly country down upon the low, sandy, and dry reservation about San Carlos, H said that at a former time the moun- tain part of the reservation was cut off and the hill Indians were nearly all in- duced to come down to the plains, but subsequently refused to stay. Still, there 1s no evidence that this had any- thing to do with the outbreak. A third supposition, equally at random, has been that the Indians were an- gered at the completion of the rail- road, from which the medicine men feareds cedysettlement by the whites and the ruin of the Indians., A fourth allegation, and one as little sat- isfactory as the others, is that the Ari- zona pe sought to get posses- sion of the San Carlos reservation, as the Colorado people did of the Ute lands. But the transactions of Agent Tif- fany in regard to the reservation coal lands furnish the best attested set of facts to account for the dissatisfaction of the Indians, Some time since a valuable coal deposit was discor on the Indian reservation. Last Spring Mr. Crocker of the Southern Pacific Railrond sent an expert, it is said, to examine these coal lands, whose report was so favorable that negot once begun through Agent Tiffany. Iy is averred by George and Benito, who, with forty of the White Mountain band, recently smrendered, that many of the chiefs did not wish to sell the lands, while others thought the price too small, and that Agent Tiftany, by representing that the Great Father needed the Jund and would eventually get it, induced them to touch the pen while their signatures were severally attached to an agreement of all the coal lands on the|q veseryation, When this was sent to Washington for rati- |, fication, Secretary Kirkwood disap- | a proved it as being a private transac- tion to secure a part of a_public reser- vation. The Indi reluctant and suspi set, were then informed s from the out- that they could not be paid the price agreed upon, because the bargain had not heen ratified at Washington. Accord- ing to the story now told by the chiefs who have returned to the ageney, this | apparent duplicity on the part of the agent made the Indians concerned in it very angry, and it is easy to under- stand that the chiefs, remoembe that they had signed away & pa their Iands and yet had not rcccived their money, may have believed the whole scheme a trip to cheat them. Whether this transaction was the real or the whole cause of the discon- tent which caused the outbreak it wust be left for the government to find out; but it is clearly possible thut the medicine men may have used for their own purposes of prophecy and self-aggrandizement the incident which had so mortified and angered all the chiefs; and, further, that Tiffi knowing the real source of the trouble, sought to check it by arresting the medicine man, Of course, must be largely as yet a matter of j iut the promptness with ich the returning hostile chiefs com- plained of this grievance to Gen. Carr shows that this is probably the true track on which an investigation should begin. 8o far as this individual trans- action is concerned, while any has been charged, in public ramor, with trouble, and his wife made complaints long-handled shovel on hér, g convinee her about some obstruse the- Calamit that as soon as they got over the rush their suppers, one of them s Calamity. and went down to the Big Lan things ready for the exercises to hogin, so that he could speak dom, and, holding his pantaloons with the other, he said: monstration toward me is entirely un- sought on my part. I courted notoriety. scurity is good enough for me. is the first time I ever addressed an rassed and ill at ease, hang me because I secmed harsh and severe entered the hallowed presenca home-life asswmed the prero subverting my houselold diseipline. long as my authority is quesiioned. cabin through the long hours. I could on my part, but I will not take up eternal calm and its shoreless sea of rest, is a glad relief to me. Ileave in your midst a skittish and able-bodied camp. isall I have to give, but, in giving her to you, 1 feel that my untimely death will always be looked upon in this gulch as a dire calamity. look back upon this awful mght and wish that T was alive again, but it will be too late, soul infeli hill, w | bumble grave.” promptu caucus was called, and, when it was adjourned, Calamity went home ¢ 5 to his cabin to surprise his wife. She tions for their purchase wereat [ hagi't fully recovered from the sur- prise as wo go to press, Detroit Free Press of sule | market for a hired man,” he exclaimed agreement | nibbled at an onion. , who had been | hired man no more. good any longer.” foremost, times have changed, and the AN sir, it makes me sad when T think war— great strength of an ox and the vim of a locomotive. ng | my lungs out to git one of ' bed at 2 o'clock in the morning, and it bed at 10 o'clock at night. that we shan’t never see no more hired men wuth keepin' around for their T said, T want a hired man. ing to pay 811 or 8128 month for a sart one, to work all day and all night, but that 1y, | git out of bed before 8 o'clock —never, Lallus give my man three-quarters of an hour at noon, unless the hogs git all this [ out, or cattle break in, or a shower is coming up. farms till 8 o'clock, after that is to feed the stock, cut a little wood, mow some grass for the THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: 'l'l»ll"lth‘h;\\', OCTOBER 6, 18 interest in procur New York Times, | ing this transfer of the coal land, and 1f the Arizona outbreak is nearly | while it wonld be credulous to suppose ended, and if the greater part of m..;..[flm« he would take so much trouble, who took part in it have returned to [and risk his own place, merely to be the agency, as the dispatches decla | obliging, still it is conoeivable that lo | it will now not be amiss for the gov- | Mmay have acted from the pardonable ernment to investigato prompt nd | motive of wishing to utilize much- thoroughly its_origin, For the old [ needed fuel for the railrond notion that Indiart wars are due solely | leaving it where nobody could profit | to the satanic instinets of the savages, [ by it. But the strangeness of his pro |who canmot control their desire to [ posal caused Seeretary Kirkwood to | send inspectors to find out how things were going on at the San Ca en- | ey They found irregularitii mixing of private with official enongh perty and accounts——and one inspec tor, who recommended the agent's ro- | moval, reported that Tiffany was *'a good man for the outside business af fairs connected with theagency, hut he | seriously lacks the executive ability | and business capacity to manage the affaivs of his agency, taking it as a| whole.” It may be surmiscd, there fove, that, conceding all the evil tiaits of the Apaches, the White Mountain outhreak found its oceasic incentive, at least, in offici agement or blundi A Frontier Inoident Laramic Boomerang. mity is the name of a nan who the gold-camp of Cumming Last spring he had o little domestic that Calamity had worn out an old trying to wy of his, The testimony seemed rather and the miners told him 1 little and had the leisure, they would have to hang him. One evening after the work of the was done and the boys had eaten sted hat it would bea good time to hang So they gotthings ins da; c bridge. Calamity was with them. They ot and then asked the vietim if he had anything to say. He loosened the rope wround his neck a little with one hand ith more fre “‘Gentlemen of the convention, T call you to witness that this public de- have never ““Pluguing along in comparative oh- This udience, That is why Tam embar- You have brought me here to You have my tive of with my wife. “Itis well. T donot care to live so You have already changed my subn sive wife to an arrogant and sclf- reliant woman. ST have always been kind and thoughtful to her. When she had to o into to gulch in the winter after firewood, my coat shielded her from the storm while I sat alone_in the name other instances of unselfishness your time. ‘“‘Death, with its wide waste of I go, but widow who will make Rome howl. T hequeath her to this She is yours, gentlemen. She “The day will come when you will Iwill be far away. My ill be in a land where domestic ty and cold feet can never enter. ‘“‘Bury me at the foot of Vinegar re the sage-hen and the fuzzy bee may gambol o’er my lowly When Calamity had finished, an im- ——— DON'T DIE IN THE HOUSE Ask druggists for “Rough on Rats.” Tt s out rats, mice, bed-bugs, roaches, vermin, fliex, ants, insects, 1oc per box. The Farmer's Hired Man, “I'm kinder lookin’ around the 18 he stopped at one of the stands and “I kinder need me, but yet I kinder hope I shan't be able to tind him.” “How's that?” “Wall, there ain’t no profit ina No, sir, he's no “‘What's the reason?” “Oh a dozen reasons. First and d men have changed with ’em. of the red men we had hefore the big fellers with the 1 didn't have to holler u out of was all T could do to coax "em to go to L'in afraid hat's sad.” “It's sad, and more, too, Now, as T'm will- Some farmers want a man ain’t me, I have never asked one to After a man has worked vight along for nine hours his system wants at least half an houwr to brace up in, They don't quit work on some ut 'm no such slave-driver, At half-past 7 I tell my ead of [ tear from his pro- | ¢ horses, milk four cows, fill up the wa ter-trough, start a smoke-house, and pull a few weeds in | the garden. Tnever hived a man who | didn’t grow fat on my work, and they allus left mo fecling that they hadn't half carned their w [ He stopped long enoug smudge in the h to wipe a eyey and then went on: | “And now look at the hired man of | to-day! He wemrs white Ho won't eat with a knife He wants napkins when ho eats, and | if we don't hang up a clean towel onee week he wipes on his handkercher, | Jall him at 8 and he He | wants a whole lonr at noon, and aftor | supper ho trots off to a singin hool | or sits down to a newspaper. years ago if my hived man was sick for | half a day I eould dock him, If ho| died T could take ont a month's w | for the trouble He ulad to git store orders for his pay, and he would | wash in the main-barel and wipe on the clothes-line. There's been a change, sir, an awful change, and if « reaction don't set in pretty soon you will witness the downfall of agriculture in this counfry. X “Then you won't lireanother?” “Wall, Iean't just say. Work is powerfully pressing, but T going slow. Before I hive hin I want to know whetlier he's a man who'll pass his plate for more weat and tat and whether we've got to use starch in doing up his shirts. The Tast man I had took me to task for not holding family prayers twico a day, and after Thad done so for three months I found it was only a game of his to beat me out of half an houra day. He thought he had a pretty soft thing, and he looked mighty lonesome when 1 cut Old Hundred down to two lines and got through with the Lord’s Prayer in forty seconds.” ——— A Heavy Swell, Bloomer, «f Virgille, "Thon; Eclectric Oil led neck and sore throat ight hours, One ap- wed the pain from a foot was also » that she ¢ould she applied the entirely eodlw shirts and collars, rots up at 6, was writes; on my son in fo ication also Ten wife's much very sore toe much inflan not walk oil, xfiml in twenty-four hours was cured.” ‘Wonders and Beauties of the Elece trioal Lamp in Paris, Paris Correspondence London Nows, The other night I passed three hours at the Palais de I'Industrie. My visual nerves wete no more tried than if I had been staying on a fine summer day under the shade of lime trees. 'T'wo great jets of light diverge from the round windows above the great docr of the exhibition towards the Arch of Triumph and the Place de la Concorde. The tree tops on which some of the rays fall look as if silver- od over. The obelisk of Luxor might be pile a of snow, to judge of it from its whiteness. 1t is 500 meters from the lamp projecting tho mass of light which appears like the tail of a comet, and is 8o strong that, standing in the Place de la Concorde, any one learned in Egyptian hieroglyphics could decipher those of the obe- lisk. M. Godell's clectoral addresses at the corner of the Rue de Boetie (formerly Rue de 1'Oratoire) can be read also. Siemens lights are used in the grand vestibule. They are set off by the artistic beauty of the lusters, and they very rarely oscillate or go out. Jamin's light blink a good deal, and Jablochkoft’s a little. ~Blinking is more or less the defect of all the arc lights. Intellectually one may not be aware of this defect, but the wearines of the eya soon tells of it. Siemens, I think, is the most success- ful manufacturer of lamps made ac- cording to the arc system. Werder- man comes close on his heels; indeed, he treads upon them. The nave is bright as bright can be at the noctur- ral exhibition. Anything more ex- quisitely beautiful “than the gen- eral view it is impossible to conceive. A lighthouse with a revolving lamp stands in the middle. It has a revolving lamp with red, blue, green,purple and orange glasses. The patches of colored light which it pro- Jeets on the cornice of the nave seem to march processionally around it. There is a calmness of general effect, amildness as of moonheams, a light as searching as comes from the sun at noon, and a coolness of tint as well as of atmosphere. None of the hues in old Gobeling tapestries are lost or dimmed, Pictures, of which there are'all that were purchased by the last Salon, have been left, in order to test the value of the different systems of electric lighting, Flowers appear to be in sympathy with Queen Electric1- ty. The talls palms and trop- ical ferns look to peculiar advantage when she is holding her court at the Palais de I'Industrie at night. There is a greenhouse of black glass into which no solar ray penetrates, Elec- tricity stimulates the vitality of plants there and brings them to hloom and bear flowers. ‘I'hey are ina thorough- Jy healthy condition, and do not ap- pear as if they ever wanted to go to sleep at night, All the twenty-four hours they are exposed to the rays of strong electrical lamps. It would ap- pear that to some extent the chemical action of this light will enable garden- ers to dispense with manure, The arc light generally meets with favor from the public than the system by incandescence, on account of the crudity of its glare and the fa- ‘iguing eflect it produces on the eyes, but an ingenious way has been dis- cavered for doing away with this ob- jection, and at the same time for giv- ing more power than the Edison Swan lamp would give, The system is the invention of Douce & Co., a very appropriate name, for the soft. ness of the light is all that could be desired, The light 1s produced by any arc system in elegant vases sus- pended from the ceiling, at o height of abeut eight feet from the floor, and out of which beautiful plants are growing, made doubly luxurious by the powerful fertilizing properties of the light. The light, being thus con- coaled in the midst of the vase, does not reach the eye directly, but is re- flected to a white, tightly-stretched ciroular sheet in the ceiling, from which is diffuses » mild and yet pow- erful light through the whole room. There is a slight loss of power by this method, but this is amply compen- sated tor by the softness and oqual distribution of the light. Look Out for Sudden man to knock off. Al he has to do of weather, and guard against them ~ ‘ THOUSANDS TURNED FROM OUR DOORS EVERY DAY, P. T. Barnum on the Way, | WITH HIS OWN Greatest Show on Earth, AND THE GCGREAT LONDON CIRCUS. SANGER'S ROYAL BRITISH MENACERIE AND THE GRAND - INTERNATIONAL ALLIED SHOWS, United for this season only, the daily expense of £ igurating an experimental tour of the whole country at larnum, J. A, Bafley & J. L. Hutchinson, sole owners, Omaha, Friday, October 7th. 2 FULL PERFORMANCES ONLY 2 At 2and § p.m. Doors open one hour sooner for inspection of the Menigerie and Museum The Feature Show of the Period---The Seven Giant Wonders : CHANG, the Chinese Giant, the tallest man in the world, The Criginal General Tom Thumb and Wife reintroducen by Hon. P. T, Barnum, for the flst time {n twenty years, and 1,000 additional sensations. 3 Times the Largest Menagerie Anywhere on the Globe, with exactly 2) cle- phants, and every other department equally extensive, =, 300 CHAMPION OIRCUS ACTORS, In 8 rings, leaping, wrestling, viding and tum Vling contests for Gold Mcdals and Diamond- 7 Studdod Jewels, _ The higgest, most brilliant, and longest stree = procession ever seen, paling all others to nothingness with [ts gorgeous glory. 100 Chariots, Dens and Lairs, Glittering with Gold and Silver. Miliiary Wardrobe, made of i cold lace silver tinsel and lion. [Noto—No spangles or cir 1 cus gew-gaws, New Waterproof Pavillions, Ever Erected. 5,000 Luxurio Seats for 15,000 Peopl Tonovation wpan_ innovation looking to the woation of Be pa. tient only little Tongor and ‘ See the Brightest Constella- tion of Exhibitions Ever conceived in the brain of he the undisputed | Father of Amusement Triumphs, s upon thousands of happy people s by chieap excursions on every rail- road centering in the city. who it for 5, 98 and 10, from which to Broadway, view the TRANSCENDENTLY QORGEOUS PARADE, to be repeated here in daylight. Windows were sold in New York, alon, Admisslon only B0 cents. Children under 9 years old, half price. Reserved Seats extra: Positveely no free ticketz given to anybody. Tickets oan be purchased the days of exhibition at Edholm and Erickson"s Jewelry store, 0)posite Postoffice, at the usual slight advance. At Council Bluffs, THURSDAY, Oct. 6; Lincoln, SATurDAY, Oct. 8, $OpE24-28-0ct1-4-0d& w28 INVITATION TO ALL WHO HAVE WATCHES AND CLOCKS 'I'0 BE REPAIRED, ENGRAVING —TO BE DONE OR— JEWELRY 5. MANUFAGTURED. While our Work is better, our Prices are Lower than all others. AT TEE LAST STATE FAIR | received all of the SIX FIRST PREMIUM offered for Competition in our line Over All Competitors. For the Best Watch Work, For the Best Jewelry, (own make.) For the Best Engraving, For the Best Diamonds (own importation) FOR THE BEST QUALITY:: GOODS DISPLAYED, ETC. Having lately enlarged my workshops and putting in new .nd improved ma chinery, I hope to still more improve the quality and finish of our ork and fill orders with more promptness than 1s usual, CAUTITON ! My Motto has always been and always will be; ‘‘Firat to gain superior facill ties and then ulf’vurliau the fact—not before--no wild advertisements. Some unprincipled dealers being in the habit of copying my announcements, I would beg you, the reader of this, to draw a line between such copiec. advertisements and those of Yours, very truly, A. B. HUBERMANN, The Reliable Jeweler, Omaha, Neb., 8ign of the 8triking Town Clock. PILLSBURY BEST! Buy the PATENT PROCESS MINNESOTA FLOUR. It always gives satisfaction, because it makes a superior article of Bread, and is the Cheap- est Flour in the market, Every sack warranted to run alike or money refunded. by using Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. octBeodlw W. M. YATES, Cash Grocer.

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