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—GREAT CUT - IN - -2 SALE=— o0 PER CHIN'T OFF. From this date until further notice, will cut every article in 9 off owr plain figure marks, At this sale, goods will be sold cheaper than at any other sale in Omaha. COME AND SEE WHAT 50c ON THE DOLLAR WILL BUY. All new and desirable goods. Mens', Boys' and Childrens' Clothing, Hats, Caps and Furnishing Goods Earl & Wilson Collars and Cuffs Go with this Sale. POLACK CLOTHING COMPANY, 1316 FARNAM STREEKT. VISITS FROM SPIRIT LAND. Mysterious Sounds and Sights From the Unseen Universe. VOICES IN THE CAPITOL DOME. Sarah Graves' Strange Dream—A Spirit Refers to a Passage of Scripture to Explain a Mysterious Death. Btrange Voices in the Capitol Dom Washington Sta A Star reporte saw a fut colored woman the other day standing in the ibout a third of the way up the dome. She was dressed gorgeously in a colored hombazine, and carried a hand bag and a cotton um- brella. She wei bout 2 *‘Laws, chile,” she said in a ened heahs voices. Dis buildin’ full ob voices. Dey’s eberywhare "hout. " them chilluns done goue up an’ lef me, and yer I is. Mun, I don’ much like dem voices! I'se afeard Tll neber get out ob di he was trying to be calm with a great ef- for “Dese voice re a great source of fear and superstition to simple-minded visitors, Country colored people par: ticularly are frightencd at the voice they hear among the clusteriug columns and arched passages. Sometimes the voices come up from under the ifec sometimes from the solid stone arches overhead. Again they sound from amon dows in a corner whe nobod ve heard in the er still more mysteriously in the old where there ave plenty of people stirving around in a flood of sunlight, and more strangely still in the great dowe, from whose height men have com- mitted suicide. The building is al- ways full of eche “Dose voices are ebérywhar,” With these many of the employes of the capitol and others fond of practical joking play upon the nerves of the superstitious colored people. Sometimes the jokes ave played on peo- ple who are not superstitions. The saucer-like canopy, upon which the great allegory roofing the rotunda is painted, acts as a sounding hoard, and will convey the least \\])h[n r with per- fect distinctness from any place in the upper gallery to the point opposite. When sentimental couples get close together in this circular gallery and lean over the rail, watching the people moving about on the floor of the ro- tunda below, and whispering gentle things to each other, meant for no but their own, they are often overheard by innocent looking young men who happen to be lolling on the opposite side of the gallery, as far away as possible. The young couple may be startled by some most inopportune rk sounded in their ears when no one is near them. At a most tender moment an irreverent or jocular remark is start- ling to their sense of security, When parties of tourists climb up to the dome they are often astonished to be addressed by name in the most famil:ar way by a voice from one of the allegori- eal terrors painted on the oDy wbove. Sometimes they are invited to come up and take lunch A party of Ohio people were in the gallery talking 1o each other about their home matters, A young mau on the other side of the galle listened until he got the names of several of the part Then he wlled out, “Is that you, Mr. Blank? Why how do you do? Come up here; we have lunch heve for Ohio folks.” The voice apparently came through the canopy, from some chamber still higher up. Thoy were not astonished that the gov- ernment should make special provision for the entertainment of Ohio folks,and they promptly accepted the invitation. The whole party trudged up the very steep and igerous Hlight of leading up to the worm-light, at the head of which they were met with a no- tice: 4V not permitted to go higher.” And there was no lunch any- wh in sight. Some of the ladies \w\lo anxious to get down as s00u as pos- ible Two colored men leaned over the rail under the great allegory and talked about Lynchburg, whispering myste iously about uunp strictly private to themselves A young man lolled agaivost the rail just opposite them—too far away to hear, They did not mind him. Directly a voice came out of oue of the painted figures over their heads, warning them to go back to Lynchburg, surrender themselves and repent of their wrong doing. Was it murder?” the voice inquired, “Be good Lord!” cried the two tremb- ling men, as they made a break for the stairs. Another very old ex-slave was accused by & voice that appeared to come from the mouth of the tigure supposed to look like Jelf Davis of being “'a runawuy nigger,” and threatened with the whip- ping post and a return to slaver) These things surround the dome w mystery; but such would not be mitted if the perpetrators could caught at it. ) pounds. fright- sitors th per- be Was 1t a Dream? Sarah Graves, of Grand Rapids,Mich., writes to the Religio-Philosophic Journal: Last year as 1 was coming from campmeeting ‘at_ Orion, I stopped to visit an old friend who was a Baptist deacon. We talked of old times, and religion came up for discussion. He trusted in Christ for all his hope. I talked of the spivitual philosophy as I understood it. As he was about seventy- five years old, Isaid to him: **You and I will soon know the future I want you to make me thispromise you o before T do, will you come und let me know as soon as po 4 He said, “T will,” and T hac pression that T should never see him in the body agnin. About ten days ago I w awakencd out of a sleop with a terrible feeling of suffocation and Cistress. 1 sprang out of bed and took some ammonin, rubbed it on my at, and I asked my guides, “*What is am T going toc ’ The answer came, to bed: you are all right.” Tobeyed. ‘Then I went intoa sleep or t 1 don’t know which— and sa riend, Horace Johns, stand by my vas startled, but he spoke and “Don’t be afraid; T will not hurt You remember what we talked about the last time we met. Well, T hove lost all physical desires.™ As I looked at him he seemed to he draped in a cloudy substance, but he re- ferred me to the past, some thingzs th we had talked of years ago. Whe came to myself it 3o and at 11 came son, saying, * i His ol hours, the im- morn- ither Im(l beat the telegrar These are facts. According to the Bible. On the morning of Jul , two miles from Soddy, Tenn., two ‘men were run over and ‘mangled by a south bound freight on the St. Louis, N¢ drieans & Texas Pacific railroad, the New York World. There suspicion foul play, and the general belief was that they had been murdered and their bodies placed on the rails. A corone jury summoned, and, after h all the evidence, it rendered a verdict that the men, Neal Manner and Bill i fell asleep on the track, and thereby lost their liv Now Mr, A, Hurdy. of Soddy v reliable gentleman, says that at 12 o'clock on the night of July 26, two .L.\-. after the finding of the bodies, he awoke from slumber and saw one of the young men standing at his bedside. He was greatly alarmed and for some time thought he was dreaming length the apparition spoke: *Go, said he, “and turn to the Book of Pro- verbs, third chapter and twenty-fourth umlt\\vnl\ fifth verses, and there will find what caused death, and read the fourth chapter, eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth ver: All go together,’ The apparition then disappeared, Mr. Hardy says he im- mediately rose from his bed and going toa table picked up the old fami Bible and d these ver from the third chavter of Proverbs, 24: **Whon thou liest down thou shalt not be afraid; yea thou shalt lio du\\ n, and thy sleep shall be sweet; —Be not afraid of sudden fear, n»'llln of the desolation of the wicked, when it cometh,” and then, turning a leaf of the good book, just on the reverse side of the above verses, he 1 ml from the fourth chapter as follows: **18—But the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfoct d‘l_\‘. 19—The way of the wicked s 1 thoy know not at what ly som, attend to my \\nnl« M H ard linsists that he was not uming end that he never read these chay u the bible hefore that night, and is confident that the spirit of poor Neal Manner visited him to dispel all doubts as to the cause of the death of the unfortunat The fled Specter of the Tuileries. Ameriean Notes and Queries: goblin, kuown also as the Little Red Man of the Tuile , is said to haunt the palace and its adjacent buildings, showing himscli on the eve great disaste i pearance 3 rible 10th of August, toinette’s women we sitti in the Salle des Gardes, when they became suddenly aware of the preseuce of a small man, clothed from crown to heel in scarlet, who looked at them with such uneaithly eyes that they were frozen with terror. They rushed to the apartments of Madame la Dauphine and related their adventure. The next aj purition of the Red Mun was in 1814, 1n the presence of the little King of Ro: and his attendan and he was age seen, according to report, alittle before the death of Louis XVILL—this time in the Galerie du Louvre. In 1815, how- ever, much diseredit was thrown upon the ghost’s existence by the practical joking of some art students attached to Gros’ studio at the Louvre. Some of the Louvre apartments had been placed at the disposal of ruined emigrants who had returned to France and found a ‘nulutnm in the Duchesse d’Angou- eme. Among these were two old maiden ladies and a Knight of St. Louis, who were dining together on. evening when a “grand diable ro came down the chimney and, spatehing a leg of mutton from the table, disap- peared with it by the way lm came, The incident was reported to the duch- esse, who sought the prese of the king and with tears pouring down her face declared her conviction that some great misfortune was impending. The king laughed at his niece's fears and seut for a chimney-swoeper. A boy who went up the .mmn-\ to look for the "dmhlc rouge” did not return. A man was then sent up, but nothing more was :n or heard of him. The greatest ex- citement reigned in the y Jnce, and at length a fireman uadertook to explore the haunted chimney. He returned and explained the mystery. It uppeared that the chimney passed by Gros' studio, ore the ter- Marie An- and that his pupils, by making a hole ! in the wall, were enabled to play these l}‘ ranks upon illustrious personages. hey had made the two sweeps their But the fireman was not e in 1871, Commun A concier making hisaccustomed round one 1 observed in the Galerie d’Appoll human form standing nst the win- dow, with crossed ‘nmw and droopin head. in an attitude of profound afilic tion. Believing he had rised robber, he made to intruder, who thercupon disappeared. e tried to persuade himself that his senses had deceived him, but on reachi 1d Gale he sain, in the same me ; being challeng the form van he official then remembered legend of the *“Homme Rouge,” and lost no time in 1 I street. He re- turned with some ¢ comrades. but this time the search for the goblin was fruitl s cut short by another kind of ari i la sky. The communi sgun the incendiary work t day the flames shot out of cvery window of the Tuileries, the = SINGULARITIES, mmons, near Hot < 1y coildren in the sy s first, then o sin, qually divided as to sex © & Adams, of Rockville, Conn., riosity at their marble wor i ing room is a chopping-block ab and fourteen or fifteen in in diam 'y Ark., ce of thre boy, and at block was brought in last fall, aftc around a farm for son time. Now from it a four-foot sprout is growing, and others sturting. It stands where it is spattered with wat The Wolverhamuton correspondent of the wdon Times states that during a recent vy thunder storm a collier, named Bates, who had lost his sight through an accident, ied home, when u flash of lightaing *d on the spectacles he wore to 1 his distignrement After the peal of which followed he complained of is head. The next moment to his | that he had reguined pos- esight days ago, Jacob Miller, who i, had not walked L years on account of the o muscles of lus leg, storm, while sitting under a tree, o stroke of lightning shattered the top of the trunk of the tree.” Miller says he felt the current of icctricity pass through his body, and he thought death was upon him. In attemptin to got his cruteh he found that his lame log was a straight, and he has walked without '~i~lulu'('l,'\'( since. teamboat James W, Baldwin was coming down the Hudson river a few nights cor dashed through the pilot house, < within three feet of the faces of two at the wheol. It entercd the steam- dow, shivering the glass _into count- rImnents, nd made its exit at the lar- board window. The pilots, though blinded for about five minutes, retained their hold on the wheel and kept the boat in her course. Eventually the effect of the great ball of fire on their eyes passed away, and they called the captain and related their expe- rience. The captein now joins his pilots in asserting the gospel truthi of this story, and invites all the doubting scientists to visit the pilot house in question and be convinced, On the farm of Jucob Groff, who lives near Zodiae Spr in_ the southern part of Missouri, is a large pond where milk cows re in the standing during the day. > of the cows acted so strangely when at the pond that she attracted the attention of Mr. Groff and the farm hands. She would €0 into the water an hour or so befo other cows, and, after wading out a cc , would stop and _commence lowing, us agh calling to a calf, Immediately after would remain perfectly quict and scom nted. No cause could be assigned for strange conduct, although on several oceasious she was clos ched. Recently the water in the pond bécame low.it scarcely reaching to the cow's kne She made her usual daily trip, however, and took up her old position. One_day last < she w, watched very closely, and it was disco that when she ceased calling a would come to the surface of the wate suck milk until 1ts appe The fish was caught by Mr. river a year ago, and was tl pond session of his e Until a fow and s satisfied. T io the S own into the -~ n Dance, City Enterprise: The Piutes and fandango at Pizen Switch About cizhty Indi- A b 1s kin- fty In- out it, all at'once footed upon the bosom wih. The object of the 12 to bring rain, the prin- cipal terpsichorean effort of the even- ing was the “pelican dance.” TIn this about thirty Indians appeared, all we ing head dresses which were good imi- tations of the pouches and great bills of the ‘wlinm n dancing, these huge wooden bills were constantly snapped in time with the drums; the snapping being eflected by pulling a concealed string, The Indians think that by means of their dances they have brought about all the recent thunder showers and cloud bursts, b A el He Did What He Forbade to Others. The Theatre for August: Charles Reade, after seeing *Lohengrin® at “Two or three of us had taken a front seat in a pry nium box. Suddenly a stranger took a seat behind us, and expressed himself in such sentences us, *‘Ach Himmel | Sehr gut! Ach schlecht, sehr schlecht !’ and many other gutterals of the sume sort, clapping his hands mesnwhile and stamping like "a demented cr until he became ahsolutely intolerable. As s00n as the first act was over | sought the usher, requesting him to have the appavent lupatic removed. But I can never hope to give you the gestures or expression with which he replied: *Ach, das ist Herr Wagner,' " S —— Horsford's Acid Phophates, Relleves the Feeling of Lassitude l-o common in mid-summer, and impart Vitality: T parts A Pel Virgin had a g one Sunday night, ans were present, dled, and in sc dians re cirel coming down of Mother I athering ANONG THE ELECTRICLANS How the Invisible Force is Being In- vestigated. THE DISPLAY AT CINCINNATI. Horse Cleaning by Hlectric Motor— Electricity and Rbeumatism— The Edison Phonograph in England, B Horse Cleaning by Electrie Motor, Hectric World: Wells' wchine for caning horses isoperated by o Sprague in the Mo ) street \puny’s barn, This is the second Liation nl Inv- kind made the 1 workod successfully over i wat with po men can_clean as many horses men could by hand, and " do the much bettee. The horses ave to enjoy the pevformance, and stand quicter for it than for hand cleaning. The Nleetrie graph has where it b dison Phonog World been gland. Jdison phono- to Fogland., recorded some notable music phonograph 1 corded a pe nance of Handel's musie, the instrument, reporting with perfect accuracy the sublime strains, voeal and instrumental, of the *‘Isrnel in Egypt,” as received by a large horn or funnel projecting over the balustrade in the vast concert room in the north transept of the Crystal palace, near London. The phonograph was worked by Mr. De Courey Hamilton, one of Mr. son’s assistants, Who took it abroad. The phonograms obtained were sent to M. Edison and will probably be heard in public before long, so that we y practically be able to attend Crystal pala Handel festivals in our own homes. Special Lighting at Cincinnati The Cincinnati Commercial has the following about the centennia *“Just north of the Tyler-Davidson fountain is now to be seen what is, all things co sidered, the handsomest and costliest splay ever made ina decorative way on a public occagion by privat prise in the we At night it is one of the sights of the Ixposition city in her centennial year. Eleven tall arches of iron span North Iifth street from the toot of the Prbasco esplanade to the curbstone fronting Mabley & Carew’s great establishment. They range along the entir of the latter and aglow w \hllum dison incandescent lamps so artisticall imged and col- »d that the effect magical. No scene described in the Arabian Nights, no Oriental illumination could have equalled this arbor of licht. The lamps range over A. POLACK, Mana er cach iron arch from big dynamos in the Brush aht | to md again. They streteh along | pany’s works just the same as cons the center of the t leapi ¥ t seck a slanghter-house for the aech. ym the central span ri blood of afreshly-Killed bullock. letters, read “i(t-e-n-t-e-n- | peoplo would be hanging around tter three feet high and | dynamos all day if wo permitted wti-colored, with | said a superintendent. The d one hue of the rainbo ained upon | upon the subject of eloctricity cach incandescent globe set into a lilly- | ative agent in certain chroni shaped bell of white Centen- | notably rheumatism, has ex nial™ was the only legend put up on the | inter among electricians Fourth of July; there was no attempt at N n( workmen eng advertisement, but now wrought in wire equal beauty one reads in illuminated | ave ci rent | letters of all colors the names of **Ma- to prove that men er ed bley & Curew,” w prise makes ents ave free from all this part of the city look ns if a feast of nd nearalgic troubles. light was in progress. The cost of the ars to be the case in maintenance of such a display durin 1 the three months of the exposition can only be estimated as being great. The ity of the avehe i five no one who sces will forget. and Numerous ¢ ris of the ¢ use ente superintendent is veady 4 stion with the bestinformed s of the land, I Y dynay Underground Light Wires. Severnl deaths caused by shocks from tric light wires have called atten- tion to the dangers of the present sys tems of nigh-potential distribution, and much has been written in the daily 1ls about > deadly eleet light The general reinedy proposed » wires underground, and in o5 have: been es shall be In the twisted out of all natural shape by the insidious di joints were swollen ny times their L size. shoulders, hips and knees were larly affected, and he w sses it himself, so stiff t he v move. | soon swever, when he eame ct with the dynamo 1 he was not his vecovery was sure and less than eighteen months he w wently a well man, He has recurrence of the trouble, prove, within n eertain time close cont ont state of things it “»in e impos- ordir There diftieulties und e \|||'V|~1‘~ inci- dent to any system of underground dis- tribution in our large cities. The enor- mous number of telephone and tele- graph lines that must be putin con- duits with the electric light wires—for the scheme embraces the burying of all wires—introduces the factor of dis- turbance of messages from induction as well as the great difficulty of preventing leakage betwe the different lines, and from the lines to the ground. And in New York wheve this work is be done on lavge scale, the commission which di- reets it is composed of politicians who have no idea of the mechanical and electrical difficulties that must be met and overcome. Again, it is very much a question whether the putting of light wires under ground will dec the danger. The wires have still to be n to the lamps, and in tha branch s there is the same po lent as there was befor 1se now stands, then, the putting of clectric wires under ground will be at- tended with trouble and expense. pos- sibly failure. Tt will not gr i crease the danger of high-potent lighting, and it will greatly retard its development. At the same time an eflicient underground system is much to desired. It would be as foolish to give up all attempts in this direction as to try to accomplish it at once, without the uecessary experience, nothing but the the strong currents of electy! which he been rounded for yi tion of his e: nature of heroic treatment. e own 1ess or by ac two wire, nd upon mained unconscious for ten The shock upon that occasion, he s the with a sand-bag. rather when he be taken would be the most executing eriminals, e pain at all from the shock e he was burned, but he thinks effectual neck ume to his senses. in that way, he Electric Sparks. New evidence presents itself dail Boston to prove that the Street I active efforts practical ope at as carly a day as pany has awavded ing ing and equipping plant for the electric ment of the former. The best way would seem gradual putting of the wir gmund, instead of a city d tion on its hossible the J of the fir Electri Slectric 1i with rheumatism. | portion of humanity ty and Rheumatism. hover around the com- imp- the “Why, ussion wged in handling n- in these vheu- This ap- Philadelpeia to debate 7o when o thus ope 103 [ His simi- as he ex- could - began to im- into 5, and al- cured immediately, apid, and in sap- | repaid for had no and is con- vinced that the cure can be credited to wonderful influence of y with constantly sur- He speaks of ‘a por- perience as rvather in the has been knocked down time out of mind by coming in contact, either through hi cident, with one oceasion re- minutes, felt to him as though he had baen hit in He was surprised to find himself alive If life can | R, thinks humane method of suffered no cept when it has bani shed the rheumatism. it | words to be a under- ecting all the wires to bo placed underground by a certain time. Let them ordey a cer- tain per cent each year, the localities to be determined by people who know something about the subject. In this way experience will be gained in the cheapest many and, if it is found practicable, the end ill finally be red without injury to the comse nies concerned. Several mornings during last week in Boston, before vehicles and street cars be, to occupy Columbus avenue, an carly pedestrian would have noticed and been astonished to sce a machine moving along with lightning-like rapid- ity without cvidence of human aid as its propelling ag . It was simply a trieyele equipped with a small electric or and two accumulator cells, un- ing a series of exporiments, The tted gave satisfaction to the experimentors rds speed attained A mechanical genius in Lewiston, Me., has applied clectricity to wood= sawing. a recent trial his invention sawed a cord of soft-wood slabs in twenty minutes. The only difficulty ex- perienced was in getting wood to the saw fast enough to check the speed. Sty olumn of thisissue will be found an entirely new and novel speci men of attractive advertising. It isone of the neatest ever placed in our paper and we think our readers will be well amining the SUPPOSED display letters in the advertisement of Prickly Ash Bitters. In another Married in a Boat. Atlanta Constitution: Quite a romans= mar| © took place at West Point, , the contracting parties being Dr. “Hill and Miss Mattie Prat of our y. The ceremony took place on the waters of the swift rolling attahoochee. The bride and groom were seated in a light yawl boat, and the latter deftly plied the oars, bearing his lady to the rocks about half a mile above the landing. The hour was splendidly suited to the occasion. The sun was just hiding its glorious outlines below the horizon when the Rev. W, Briscoe pronounced the solemn that bound them together irre- The river was dotted here » with boats of the Chattahoo- filled with joyous friends of Hill. All repaired to Mr. and Mrs. T. Jenning’s, where a bounteous supper and hearty congratus= lations awazited them, vocably and ther chee club, Dr. and Mu: in - ————— West End ailway company is putting forth to get electric motors in uburban line The com- rvis Engineer- company the contract for the build- t steam vlway depart- An Absolute Cure. The ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTMENT is only put up in large two ounce tin boxes, and is an absolute cure for old sores, burns, wounds, chapped hands, and all skin_erup- tions. Wil positively cave all kinds of piles, sk Tor the ORIGINAL ABIETINI OINT: Sold by Goodman Drug Co., at 25 cents per box—by mail 30 cents, el ince Bismarck has given evidence that he is still a skillful marksman. W hile prac- ticing with a rifle at 120 yards recently he hit the bull's-eye every time. 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