Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 8, 1888, Page 5

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1888, @ P> @<t > oooeite b E K &, leccccsicocccscsl > @ <> @ <> < <L cobeoowsse B, K. & (o, DB DD B BIDDP DD DD + GLOTHING At the Lowest Living Priges, Money Returned if Goods DO NOT SUIT, B DS & & I16 & OB & K& G POV ODDDODeD SRS e <> e SIS USROS minated the streots: Hundreds of wildly enthusiastic republicans promendded the streets shouting for Harrison and Mor- ton. It oan be truly said that bedlam reigned all mght long. A sleepless night was passed LINCOLN NEWS AND GOSSIP. How the Election Returns Were | i the Capital eity. It goes without saying Reoel the that the republicans of Lancaster county Tved.at fhe Cgaeal. Worled Bard for the success of the nationi, —— state and local tickets and suceceded beyond ALL REPUBLICANS ENTHUSIASTIC | the most sanguitie expectations, SERIOUSEY WOUNDED: 9 An accident happencd during the trip of the flambeau club to Rooca, Monday unight, the gnrln'ulurd of which have just come to lignt. The club wont to the place stated participate in the republican rally, and whi ©n route one of the company aecidontally dis charged one of the chambers of his revolver and the contents lodged in the shoulder of Herbert Gorton, who now lies on & bed of suffering at his home at 1626 Q street. How Pemooratic Headquarters Practically Deverted at Miduight—An Acci- dental 8hooting —Emmons’ Cawe Postponed -Notes. RaxcorN BurEAu or Tie OMana Bas, . 1020P Srerusr, it was done mno one seems to know LaNcowN, Nov. 7. or cares to tell, but all agree that There was a splendid opportunity to study [ it was a pure accident ana _that blame attaches nowhere. ‘The name of the young mani ent secret for the reason that ha is excessiveiy quiet, and earnestly begs that he be spared in his carelossness. = The accident dampened the enjoyment of the occasion. - Harry was brought home, but the rest of the olub continued in_the_enjoyment of the oecasion when it was found that the rosults would not prove fatal. The wound is an ugly one, but by careful nursing he will pull through all right. EMMONS' CASE POSTPONED. ‘The trial of Editor Emmons for distrib ing and littering the streets with his adve tising card, containing President Clevelund icture, was postponed until Friday morn- ing at 9 o'clock. Mr. Emmons has com- menced an action against Oficer Mitchell in Justice Snelling's court. for malicious arrest. ‘This case will be heard to-morrow. Police Judge Houston wil pass judgment upon the editor’s guilt at the time designated. O#T¥ NEWS AND NOTES. ‘The kuights of the star say that foewer ar- rests were made terddy and last night than daring any efection day i the history of the cfty. This tells a story of moral pro- gression. the workings of human passion with pride at Funk’'s opera house last night. As has been stated by Tug Buw, the opera house was selected by the republican state central com- mittee as hewdquarters for election bulletins, Loug before the operntor was at his desk the great roow, parquets, boxes and gallery was & perfect sea of human faces, the picture of expectation and anxiety, and suppressed ex- citement was manifest on ‘every hand. From 8 to 11 o'clock hope alternated with fear, and anxioty desporied rather than diministied, but occasionally cheers broke the monotony, and especially when republican gains from the nterior of New York broke the democratic majority cast of tho Broex. Hut party pride ‘weighed heavily in the balance until the first telegram came from Chairman Quay, snd bodlam broke loose. The great throng of men, women and children shouted them sclves hoarse. Checr aftor cheer went forth for the republican standard bearera. men dnn::‘:)[l ivelier_jigs than they ever did in boyhood days. Hats whizzed through the foom, ladies imbibed the inspiration, waved seonial ! Hon. 4. €. McBride got the [srgest major- ac’s winning qualities, however, are pretty well known. Goveinor Thayer was not soratched te any remarkable extent in Lincoln. He run most ind in some of the country precints. The prohibition vote in Lancaster county was lighter than it has been during auy of tho past half dogen years. Intelligent repub- licans bave ovidentiy ot their eyos open at fast. Z. H, Thompson, a prominent manufac turer of Conneaut, O., is in the city. He Iikes the west and may put some money in Lincot, Excitement runs high here to-day. The re- publicans elaim the world, and it almost seems that they have got it. The years never turned out a bluer set of democrats in the Capftat City. The only thing that people are interested in is the result of the election. A Don't Give up the Ship. You have been told that consumption for fully a quarter of an hour. But the scene beggars desoription. From that time onno one seomed to entertain any doubt about the result. The first cheerful news, however, that came from Indiana was the signal for another outburst that revenled the first. It was the happiest, jolliest, loudest crowid that ever assembled in Fuuk's opera house. Shortly after midnight when it seemed possible that New Jersey might join the phalanx of the victorious “army, the erowd burst forth in that patriotic no:!. ‘‘Marching Through Georgia,” followed by ‘‘Johm Brown,” and other inspiring songs, The welkin fairly wrung. From time to time the Lincoln Quartette club favored the audience with excellent music. And during lulls be tween bulletin re{mfl.n, frequent calls were made for speeches from Judge Mason, Pat rick Egan and J. L, Caldwell, but these gon- tlemen were too happy to talk and wisely kept their seats. » Sogu afler miduight the chosen head | iy incurable; that when the lungs are B ckorally dooctod ey oula aut | attackod by this terrible malady, the Sland the biast. It was & hard dose ou | sufferer is past all help, and the end is some of them from more stand- | @ mere question of time. You have points then eme. It ie stated [ moted with alarm the unmistakable gne = Lincoln = demoerat ~will lay | symptoms of the disense; you have tricd JERpoe i cold ‘&m.fl‘:“ fo- [ all mapner of so-called ‘cures in_vain, Sotiie of the ¥its bore mu"h': wag. | and you are now despondent and pre- But don’t give Pierce’s Golden paring for the worst up the ship while D Medical Discovery remains untried, [t is net a cure-all,” nor will it perform miracles, but it has cured thousands of cases of consumption, in its earlier stages, where all other means had failed. Try it, and obtain a new lease of life. der over the defeat of Kelly for the legi: gure than over the defeut of the national demooratic ticket. They made a bitter fight on Hall, aided by a number of gl runtled republicans, but failed by riearly o0 voren, 'he wonderful vote cast t:;d“. ster Qounty was a surprise to everybody. _It was l\nua nm’ cast -&:r ago. Ne one dreat the like. servasive citizens hud placed tho vote gt 80 and by some R s was considered e Ty > i e A A ce a doul Pathetic Story of an Exile. announced is ? that over 10,000 votes had been cast From Mr. Leunan’s Siberian paning the Cantury: - To me perhaps the. most in the county. But other surprises were e Century: naps the most ®iso in store. It was found that Leese and | Attractive and sympathetic of the Tomsk Connell were well up with the party vote. | exiles was the Russian author, Felix McShane's and Morton's boodls bud failed | Volkhofski, who was banished o' Si- cut °F'{'gn-rlud figure, The railroads had | beria for life in 1878 upon the charge of lovaed, 4, Loclr owa villanous gauwc | “helonging to 8 society that lutends, at g . . o or mote ure, ieoat wote. Note Governor Thayers | ® Wdke or lass remote time in the fut to overthrow the existing form of gov- ernment.” He was about thirty-eight vears of age at the time I made ii- ac- quaintance, and was 8 man of cultivated vote in the county and then swile at the in- fluence the duddy dollars had over the aver- a0 voter. At 4 o'clock great bomfires illu- mind, warm heart and high aspirations. He knew Linglish well, was familiar with: American history and literature, and' had, I believe, transiated into Russian many of the poems of Longfel- low. He spoke to me with gréat admir- ation, 1 remember, of Longfellow’s ““Arsenal at Springfield,” and recited it to me aloud. He was one of the most winning and lovable men 'that it has aver been my good fortune to know; but his life had beem a terrible tragedy. His health - had been shattered by long imprisonment in the rtress of Petropaviovsk; his hair was prematurely white; and wheu his face was in repose there seemed to be an expression of profound melancholy in | his dark brown eyes. I became inti- mm.o\f' acquainted with him and warmly attached to him; and when 1 bade him good-by for the last time on my return from Eastern Siberia in 1886 heé put his arm around me and Kissed me, and said, ‘“‘George Ivanoviteh, plenise don’t forget us! 1In bidding you good-by I feel as if something were going out of my life that would never again come into it.” Since my return to America I have heard from Mr. Volkhofski only once. He wrote me last winter a profoundly sad and touching letter, in whicg he informed me of the death of his wife . by suicide. He himself had been thrown out of employment by the suppression of the liberal Tomsk newspaper, the Siberian Gazette, and his wife, whom I remember as a pale, delicate, sad-faced woman, 25 or 30 years of age, had tried to help him support their family of children by giving private lessons and by taking in sewing. Anxiety and overwork had finally broken down her heaith; she had become anm invalid, and in & morbid state of mind, brought on by unhappiness and disease, she rea- soned herself into the belief that she was an incambrance rather than a help to her husband and her children, and that they would ultimately be better off if she were dead. A little more than a ear ago she put an end o her unhappy ife by shooting herself through the head with a pistol. Her husband was devotedly attached to her, aud her death, under such circumstances and in such a way, was a terrible blow to him. In his letter to me he referved to a copy of James Russell Lowell’s poems that T had caused to be sent to him, and said that in reading “After the Bural” nhe vividly realized for the first time that grief is of no nationality—the lines, although written by a bereaved Ameri- can, expressed the deepest thoughts and feelings of a bereaved Rus- sian, He semt me with his letter a small, worn leather mateh-box, which had beeu given by Prince Pirre Krapotkin to his exiled brother Alex- ander, which the latter had left to Volkhofski, and which Volkhofski had in turn presentod to his wife a short time before her death. He hoped, he said, that it would have some value to me, on account of its association with the lives of four political offenders, all of whom I had known. One of them wae & refugoe in London, another was an exile in Tomsk, and 4wo had escaped the jurisdiction of the Russian govern- ment by taking their own lives. I tried to read Volkhofski's letter aloud to my wife, but as I recalled the high character and lovable personality of the writer, and imagined what this last blow of late must have been to such a man—in exile, in broken health, and with a family of helpless children de- pendent upoh” him—the written lines vanished in 8 mist of tears, and with a choliing in my throat I put the letter and the littie match-box away. = e Cloveland & Harrison agree on one gnlt, that tho best out is Jarvis' old randy. Pocketbooks and Money. Detroit Free Press: He came with the circus to’ Lowell, and might have passed for a minister, but never for a fokir, as far aslooks went. A crowd gathered around. “T have here Ru an leather pocket- books that I am actually going to give away. Pay me 50 cents and T will give you your money back and a pocketbool. There are enough of you here to hold me to my word. Merely an advertisin dodge, gents. Deposit your money with the driver and come around to the front of the wagon and get your money buck and a pocketbook.’ oTwenty customers took him at his word. The next round was: ‘‘Make it #1, gents. I will do all I agree to do.” Thirty or more this time, while the oubled in numbers, all intent on getting something for nothing. crowd all had paid in. -‘“Here, gents, are your pocketbooks. Now, gents, did I say I would give you your'money back this time?” “*N—no,” stammered a man near the wagon with a rather mournful expros- sion on his face. “Well, fiunts, I will bid you good day.” And he wont, apparently satis- fied with his half-hour's work. MAKENOMISTAKE—If you have made up your mine to buy Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced "to take any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculinr medi- cine, possessing, by virture of its pecu- liar combination, proportion - and com- bination, curative powers superior to any other article of the kind before the pple. From all affections arising rom impure blood or low state of the system it is unequaled. Hood’s. For Chicago Tribune: The remains of a BDakota desperado who died a few years ago were exhumed: last week by rela- tives from the east and found to have turned to stone. It was then remem- bered that for several months prior to his decease he had'eomplained of feel- ing rocky. Whatever tends to iicroase usefulness, by banishing secure notice and approval. Salvation Oil. h Insure your life for, 2 conts against all the dangers of a_consumptive's h by keep- ing a bottle of Dr. Bult's Cough Syrup con- venient. It is the best, Be sure to get in asd éring, will certainl, Sty We wiioas iy i < FTEE Mularia Fever cured by Jarvis' Brandy. b e ik Moy Mr. Barr,of Philadelphia, a long- whiskered republicam, bas agreed with Mr. Myerhoff, an equally long-whis- kered democrat, that 1if Cleveland is re- elected he will let his right whisker be cut of and go for the full space of twen- ty-four hours to market, mill or muster in that lop-sided condition, while if Harrison gets there Myerhoff covenants and agrees to do and suffer the same in his hirsute adornment. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When sho was & Child, she eried for Castoria, Whea she became Mias, she slung 40 Castoria, Whea shohad Children, she gave them Castorla. *“Make it two dollars this time, gents. T will do all T agree to do.” Sixty cus- tomers paid in, “Make it a V, gents—five dollarst it | . is worth your while to get a pocket- book.” As many as seventy-five paid their money to the driver, while tne fakir kept drumming on the wagon seat.until The Old Man Had Grit. Atlanta Constitution: “Old Sammy Anthony was the gamest man I ever saw,” continued Colonel Hardeman. “Two young fellows courted a girl at Montezuma once, andshe gave one the go-by and promised to marry the other. The day was set and old Sammy was to marry them. The young fellow who was discarded went to the old man and said to him: ‘If you marry that couple Pl kill you.” “‘Well, if I live and the Lord’s will- ing I'll marry them,’ said the preacher, “'When the day came sure enough the fellow was there. The couple stood up PORINTe IT.WILL CURE YOU & i L et e Bl e PR i and old Sammy commenced the mar- | [lland riage coremony. The fellow came to STl .51 BT Mgl the door as the ceremony was_going on i ik rewory, commlssion merchiit Blea and shot the old man down. He rufilsed HATHATE S up, leaning on his elbow, and finished the ceremony; but the wound came near killing him. S'JACOBS O], For Lumbago. FRESH, STRONG EVIDENCE. PR, ST S e o e Bure. ave you Paf i sipemnigeidl & R R DR. HORNE’S 3Eloctro-Magnetic Balts | The Grandest Triumph of Electric Science—Sci- entifically Made and Practically Applied. DISEASE CURED WITHOUT MEDICINES 'Iohel(.l"“. ad 2 T Rpiual Disoaseer i ; N oo Tt Fadeor: l:&m"‘"‘; 14 'fin-g:"s“'g{' i&l&" W. G. ALBRIGHT, Real Estate, 218 S.15th St,,Omaha. Foaten, Wish b AY DRy LERS. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Batimore. M4 SteckPiano ALBRIGHT specifioations utility,comfort,econemy & uty.in & way nd be house that coste from. 91,00 te As more ikl e butr s, T oan af¥ord 1o Offer a copy FOF 5, tho usual tees otherwise betng from 0 | §ta7per cont.Patanteppiied for. ns 'or & variety of sald #per cont more, cute of Goaczrhea and 870 sordially tavited. Gleet. 1 prescribo itond fecl safo in ¥200mmond- = = - sun niiizss | DRUNKENNESS | prrcr o300, | OF the Liguor Hablt, Positively Gured by oM by Drugglots. Admiaistering Dr, Halnes’ Golden ——— Publie sale of tmported draft stallions and trot- ting stock at York, Nub Nov. 21, commen- cing Wt h:@a’ m, We will offe, stock of hor rencl several . grado draft and one trotting stallion. The balance fonsiats of trotting bred mares, fillies and driv- Orses. 'ERMS: One years time, good bankable 10q0ired. o per.cent d nt for cash. SALE~— RAIN OR SHINE., Send for catalogue FRY & FAHRBACH, F. M. WOODS, Auctioueer, JUDICIOUS AND PERSISTENS Advertising has always proven suceessful. Before placing Nowspaper Advertising cont LORD & THOMAS, ADVEBTISING AGRATS, 45 0 69 Randelsh Birssts CHICACO. ADYIOR PRRK. HOW T0 AOT. . T e RICH, SOUTH OMAH Epa, IS 57 -—BEST AND CHEAPEST— S CHOICE! la tor BUY NOW fons TERMS EASY soluve dyrability. Temos of tasge instr M“"Efi C. L. BTAU! l'aln.brxonowud Bt., Omaha, has drawn plans and i Original and splendiq designs furnished, as can be judged form the sets of plansot completed butldings of - ) deseriptions. from 4,000 to 400,000, My unusual experience will guarantes satiafection and reliable contractors only sre engaged on my works. Pariies wishing to build 1have in my office, ranging in cost (BICAGO™ SHORT LINE OF THE ‘ Chicago, Milwaukes & St. Paul R'y. The Best Route from Omaha and Councll Bluffs to =——=THEEAST: TWO THAINS DAILY BETWEEN OMAHA AND COUNOIL BLUFFS Chicago, ——AND—— Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapoli Rapie Bosok Ttand, Broopers ™ Srorord v\ , Clinton, Dubugue, Davenport, Elgin, Madison, Janesville, belol Winona, La € Tosse, ‘And ali OAber 1mportant points Nash, Northesst and R Suraek 1 Barcer mioct of oo dat BLidd s 0 = W.J. GALBRAITH, on and thu:ltlm. g148 BL. Office N. W Corner st and Teloplione, 146, Itesidence to ophons, 533, Oftice { [ | i ¢

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