THE TBIBUKEe A. B. COFjmOTH , McCOQK. ; ; ; : NEB NEBRASKA ITEMS. t ' ' _ The first marriage license has been Issued In Brown county , a Long Plne , couple having the honor Falls City Observer : A German by the name of Henry Welck , living In Barada , had his right leg broken below the knee last Saturday by a kick from a vicious horse. A little girl at Greenwood , named Allen , recently let an axe drop on her fin ger , cutting it off. A Kearney woman proposes to give a ' concert , the proceeds of wnkh will bo used to purchase street lamps for the city. Stuart Ledger : Mr. Orcutt , a bi ake- manon the Sioux City & Pacific railroad , whllebreaking on the switch at this place , on the up train , Saturday , night , fell from the top of a freight car , his back striking the bumper in his descent. The unfortunate man sustained serious though not necesea- rlly fatal Injuries. The poor fellow moaned plteously , and his shrieks were heartrend ing. He waa carried aboard the train and .taken to his home , at AInsworth , where medical attendance 'wa.4 procured.r At last accounts , we are glad , to. state , he .was in .a lair way for recovery. Orcutt had not been very long In the emploj' of the company. Burglars have again tackled Lyons , Bancroft's hardware store' being he last Tictimr. , < - Fairfieldis toihave another elevator. John Steen , of Wahoo , has been , ap pointed deputy internal revenue collector by Collector Post. IPhelps Nuggett : f S ? . Greeley , county clerk of 'Hitchcock county , nietlwith a terrible 'accident ' while preparing for a hunting expedition. . . Mr. Greeley. was exam- Ing a sheli , and'whlle'dolngio' the shell ex ploded , tearinfir'his' hand off. { Physicians were called and the hand wasramputatetd. Juniata Herald : Miss Minnie , Buzzell took the train yesterdaymoniing for Chicago where she will take a course inthe ( Woman's Medical college preparatory fb becoming a medical missionary. MIssr Minnie is an In telligent , industrious young' lady , whom wo hope will graduate with all the honors attending - , tending an M. D. , and while we regret so / charming a young lady sLould leave us for foreign shores , we join with her friends in wishing her prosperity and happinesslln Her chosen vocation. There is a good opening for a briok- uiaker at AInsworth. A number of Sioux "City & Pacific conductors on the west end were let out a few weeks ago There"are Tumorstr Ord * that the the Sioux' City & - Pacific -Is to run-a survey through the county ; * * - ' - The Christian church at Valparaiso" has progressed far-enough to allow services to be held in it. ,1 A. M. Post was renominated for judge and Wm. Marshall , of Fremont , ' at torney of the Fourth district by the republi can convention at Columbus. , Billy Fitz , ex-treasurer of Madison county , who departed a year ago considera bly ahead of the county , has returned , able , willing and ready to pay -back'dollar for dollar. , , v , , - Broken. Bow Bepublicaa : ' Griebel , of-Jefforson , ' last week'lost sixteen tons of hay : 60 feet of shoddlng a couple ot set of , harness- tools < fcc.5 "A party of threshers were threshing neaiy and by : tiielr timely old saved several jstacks of grain standing near by. The fire was started by children playing with matchel/taken from a coat which a workman had left near by. Beatrice is moving for a system of waterworks. A brick hotel , is . t < Tbe built at once 'at Broken Bow. Cedar Rapids Era : A-Tvery serious accident happened to Mr. W.West , post master at Dublin , lastSaturday afternoon. It appears that Mr. Maples , about three miles north of , Dublin , was digging a well , and Mr. West was assisting him , at the bottom tom , the well was , 108 feett deep. Mr. West was cautioned about" the danger of the buckets falling , because of the curbing bulging into the well everal inches ; but he said let it come. When the. bucket was about 40 feet down. It struck the curbing , the hook dropped into the "bucket , and It getting loose" , went down nearly 70 feet , some way striking Mr. West on the head. He soon gained consciousness.and called for the rope ; it was letdown ; he ' [ took hold of it and brought up his tools'fainting away < as soon as they got hold.ot hUn { atthe top. A. horse was -run down after fDr. JIazle , who immediately went and dressed the > scalp wound , pronouncing [ It serious , but has hopes of , hlsrecovery. A bad gash is cut about three inches long over the top and left side of his head. Blair Republican : Last Thursday evening the nine year old daughter of Mr. Ed. Turner , whose residence is about one mile , south of Blair , was kicked by a horse which was loose in the yard. Tha. blow was received on the tern pie , crushing in the ekull in a terrible manner. The parents were ab sent , but Mr. Fowler was passing , taw the accident and picked the child up , as he sup posed , In a dying condition. Drs. Palmer . & Byan-raised the" fractured parts of the skull and dressed the woundand their little patient appears to be In a fair way to recover from her fearful wound ? . HDNTSVILLK , ALA. Dr. J. T. BJdley , says : ' 'Brown's Iron Bitters is a good appe tizer and merit * attention from sufferers. " NEWS OF THE WEEK GENERAL. ' Apollo commandery , K. T. , arrived home at Chicago from ita European tour on Monday. The international convention of cigar- makers began nt Toronto on Monday. District Judge Edgerton of Dakota has given a decision declaring capital remov al proceedings illegal. , The first through freight from Port land , Me. , to Portland , Ore. , started on Monday. It consisted of ten cars , laden with canned corn. The New Jersey republican conven tion nominated Judge Jonathan Dixonfor governor on the first ballot. , Scarlet fever in a mild , form is" an nounced by the state board of health to be epidemic in Illinois. On Tuesday afternoon , while at work at a new barn building at Belinont's < farm , Babylon , N. Y. , five men ona scaftoldjWere precipitated to the ground by the breaking of supports. John Metz was Instantly killed and August .Nichols1 fatally'injured. The other three were seriously injured. The iron-clad Monadnock was suc cessfully launched at MarejJslaml navy.yard Tuesdaya'fternoon. ! > In order1 to nieet > the requirements of congress , the vessel is sup posed to be the old Monadnock repaired , but with the exception of 'oneplank every thing Is'new. The'old-shlp lies'in the same spot where beached , ( whea brought to the navy yard TheFairlawri breaker , in which the accident 'occurred * two' "weeks before at Scranton , Pa. , resulting in the death of two men , burned Wednesday morning. Incen ' diary. Several 'dwellings are damaged. The loss is estimatedat * $50,000. Five hun dred men and boys are out of work. Early Wedndsday morning , .the works of the Enterprise carriage company at Cin cinnati were burned. The company em ployed 200 men. 'Total losf- , " $30,000 ; par- lally insured. Hon. William Faxon , assistant secre tary of the navy under Gideonj"Welles , died suddenly at Hartford , Ct. , Wednesday morning of heart disease , aged 62. The Diamond match company has > rokeii the manufacturers' combination by reducing prices to dealers 00 per cent. 5The. supreme lodge of Odd Fellows in session at Providence , 11. I. , refused to ' strike the word "white' ' from the consti tution. The next meeting will beheld at Minneapolis. Junius Brutus Booth , the actor , is dead. The Northern Pacific annual earnings for 1883 arc given as follows : Gross , $7,850 , - i59 ; expense. ? , $5,816,929 ; net $2,518,529. The water in the river at ; Minneapolis is lower than -ever before , and saw-mills that nm.iby water-power have- been com pelled to shut down. ; B. H. Church , a prominent citizen of Sterling , 111. , was"found dead-Mn the closet of a Pullman car on the St. Louis & Hock [ sland road Wednesday night. The new Masonic temple at Peoria , [ 11. , was dedicated on Thursday. It cost ? 100,000. B A serious collision occurred on. the Ohio & Mississippi road near Seymour , HI. , sarly Sunday morning , a train running at a. rery high speed colliding withthe train ahead jf it. A passenger coach was the last car on Jie forward train , and it was driven half tray through and on top a sleeper ahead of it. The engineer of the rear train and a little child of a passenger were killed , and i dozen others injured. An entire block at Marengo , 111. , jurned on Saturday night. Loss , l$20,000. By the falling of a scaffolding in the Woodward shaft of the Delaware , Lacka- , wanna & Western mine at Kingston , Pa. , Saturday , four men were precipitated to the K > ttom , which was covered with water , and rvere drowned. All left families. The journeymen plumbers of Pitts- ) urg went out on a strike against a reduction ) f 50 cents a day on Saturday. The Gem City , a handsome passenger > oat in winter quarters at St. Louis , burned othe _ water's edge on Saturday morning. Loss , $50,000. CROU : . Henry Mosier , alias Moore , who inur- > lered Jas. Knight and J. H. Wenzell on the ) ralric three miles from Cheyenne , last Cuesday night , the object being to secure 53 In possession of Wenzell , was arrested Saturday at Loulsyilld , Colorado. He made 10 resistance. He said he had to die but nce , and predicted he would not live five nlnutes after reaching Cheyenne , expecting o be lynched. A special from Tombstone , Arizona , he 10th , says : Eight hostile Apacnes at- ack d a hog ranche at Antelope Springs , ixtcen miles from this city , this morning , [ "here were only two "men there at the time -George Ward'arid Amod Williams. The ormer was killed. The latter escaped and irought the news here. Citizens armed hemselves and went in pursuit , with little hi banco of overtaking the hostiles. The In- hia , Uaus came from the direction of Sonora , a : .nd were probably a part of P. hose left in the mountains by Gen. P.n P.F Jrook. They were on horseback : The F ' lorses are believed to have been stolen from tl anches below here. Several parties left tl tla icre for Sonora the past few days , and tlY < jave fears are entertained for their fate , Y lie main body of the hostiles is near Casas UJ Grande. Their overtures lor peace were rejected by the Mexican authorities , and Colonel Joaquln Terrezos waa , at last ac counts , organizing a force to attack them in the 'mountains. NCWH has been received via Sonora that Terrezos , , while reconnoitering - tering , was captured. The report lacks confirmation. Harry Mosher , the man. who committed - ted murder for the purpose of robbing his victim of $53 a few days before , was lynched at Cheyenne on Monday night by a part } , of masked men who hanged him to a telegraph pole in the heart of the city. On Wednesday night , in the Choctaw Nation , near Big Creek , I. T. , four hunters named Taylor , Tipton and two brothers named Gray , of Paris , Texas , encamped. A posse in search of horse thieves rode up and called , on. them to surrender. Then a fight ensued in which Taylor and one of the Grays were killed. The others escaped and the posse plundered the camp. t j Dispatches report the hanging by I lynchers in Kichmoud county , NvC. , Fri day , of a negro named Archie Johnson , for attempting to outrage a white girl , 6 * years of age , the daughter of a highly respected' planter of that c uaty. > Johnson was left hanging on the tree with a placard pinned to his breast bearing the words , ' " 'Our wives and daughters must be protected. " WASHINGTON. J. F. Gardner , of Colorado , was ap pointed agent at the Ou'ray Inilian agency" on-Monday. . / By order of the second assistant post master-general , to take effect September 30 , the star route from Niobrara to Fort Han- dull , Dakota , has been discontinued. J. R. Miner was the lower bidder for supplying service on this route , and wad awarded .the contract , which was afterward annulled be- caxise of technical imperfections. The-rea- son given at the postoffico department * fqr abolition of the route is that since the date of the advertisement for propo i'I.s the rail road system in that t-ection sum been ex tended so that no ineoeneity for star route , service existri. By direction of the president , Cadet Arthur L. Bcebo , of the fourth class of the United State * military academy , has been dismissed from the service for violation of rules in "hazing" other cadete. Secretary Folger has accepted the resignation - signation of Supervising Architect Hill , which the latter tendered on Wednesday. Secretary Folger has raised an- im portant question in regard to the operation of the new civil tiervice law , which he states In a letter addressed by him to the commis sioners to-day. A few days ago he made a requisition on the commission for a person to fill a $900 clerkship. The.commission certified to him the names of the four per sons from whom to make his selection. , The secretary finds himself in doubt as to : whether section 154 of the revi&ed statutes does not limit him in making his selection from four names. He soya in bid letter to the commissioners that this > < ecUon gives preference , other things being equal , to honorably discharged soldiers and bailers of the late war , and that section 7 of the civil service act provides that nothing contained In that act shall be construed to take away the preference given In section 154 to that : lass of persons. The secretary asks for further information on the subject' . His opinion is if one of the persona sent to him u c m honorably discharged > ldier or sailor he must select that one. C Condition of the treasury : Gold coin md bullion , $204,919,388 ; bllver dollars and ralllon , $119,143,013 ; fractional silver coin , 27,265,970 ; United States notes , $52,950- )56 ) ; total , $404,279,377 ; certificates out standing , gold , f56,293,840 , silver , -77- 582,091. FOREIGN. IRKLAND. There was a mass meeting of the [ rish national league at Carnck-on-Shan- ion Sunday. Over 50,000 persons were present. Thomas Power O'Conner , mem- jer of parliament for Galway , delivered a itlrring speech in favor of home rule for Ireland. The meeting adopted resolutions leclaringthe Irish national league would lever cease its efforts until a native Irish lartiament wad established. A large meet- ng of the league wa * ) also held at Marlow , it which O'Brien , member of parliament md editor of United Ireland , made an ad- lre < ? s. He urged his hearers to persevere n the determination to win the independ ence of Ifelond from English domination y peaceable means if possible , but to win tat all hazards. ai RUSSIA. It is etated the czarina lately detected me of the imperial chamberlains in the act if placing nihilistic documents in her apart- nents , and he , fearing the cousequencea , ommitted suicide. ENGLAND. The steamer Athenian , with O'Don- lell , the murderer of Carey , on board , has rrived. He was landed at Southampton. ? h"e murderer reiterated his former state- aent that In killing Carey he only acted in elf-defense , and expresses himself confi- lent of acquittal. * ENGLAND. O'Donnell was brought to the Bow trect police court at London Tuesday after- it eon , closely guarded by mounted poHoe , nd passed through the street at a rapid cc iace. On arriving at the court he was im- bl lediately placed in the dock. Frederick tr 'lower appeared for the crown and stated re tie prisoner was charged with murder upon re tie high seas within the jurisdiction of the thor dmiralty of England and ofthis court. d < Fitnesses for the crown had not yet arrived , j erin nd England would let the prteonpr be re- in manded one week. The court so ordered. The evidence against James McDer- niott In the charge of dynamite conspiracy was found to be Insufficient and he was dis charged from arrest on Tuesday. AUSTRALIA. Kavanagh , Joseph Hanlon , Joseph Smith and other Irish Informers in the j j ( Phoenix park murder trial , who arrived at ; j Melbourne August 9th , but were not per- fmltted j ' to land , have been shipped to Eu rope. | I SWrr/KRLAND. A colonel of the Salvation Army was expelled from Geneva on Monday. ITALY. Extensive preparations are making for the reception of the American bishops at the Vatican in November. There will , be a series of services of reunions , at which Car dinal Slmeoni will preside , and at which questions concerning the influence of th Catholic church in America will be dis cussed. The main object of the meeting will be , to adopt measures for the reorgani zation pf the Catholic church of America ac cording to canonical law , and'to bring it Info close communion with the Vatican. Cardinal McCabe will be invited to attend Some of the meetings , at which the Irish agination will be discussed. KNGLAND , The London Times intracing the an tecedents of O'Donnell , slayer of Carey , finds he is 4T years of age , and a native of County Donegal , Ireland : He has. been to America Key era ! times. Ho served in the American war ; lived for some time at Phil adelphia , and' kept a public bouse on the Canadian border. Ho invested his funds In silver mines and r In Fenian bonds and lost money. He returned to Ireland last May and frequented the company of-Irish-Amer icans in Londonderry. He. carried a revolver ver and was considered * a strong , national ist , but opposed the invincible * . He de nounced Carey when the latter turned informer , and declared he would not shoot , but would burn hlni by inches. He went to the Cape to seek his fortune , because he considered America' played out. He had never seen Carey before taking passage , and bad no idea the informer was on board the steamer Klnfaun * * Castle when he em barked. The defense will probably be that Carey tried to shoot the prisoner , who wrenched' the revolver away and used it to protect bis .own life. It is stated O'Don- nell's brother , who is living In Ireland , will endeavor to obtain the services of Sullivan , II. P. , to conduct the defense. Friends of O'Donnell ridicule the Idea that he went to the Cape "for th'e special purpose of killing Carey. KKANOK. A mooting of two hundred members jf the extreme left on Thursday posted res olutions insisting upon the necessity of con voking chambers in order to ascertain the policy of the government in connection with he Tonquiu question. A committee was ippointed to wait upon Prime Minister Ferry and request him to.call the chambers nto session. ITALY. Aii enormous crowd witnessed cer- jmonies attending the commemoration of : ntry of Italian troops into Rome in 1870. Che municipalities placed a wreath on the omb of King Victor Emanuel in the pres- : nce of an immense concourse. ' ENGLAND. The new Gnion line steamer Oregon , > n a trial , trip .Friday , made twenty knots in hour. The builders promised a ship to ; ros the Atlantic in five days. CHINA. Chinese advices by steamer Coptic a tate that the cholera has broken out In Pc- a jn. v IRKLAND. t ; It is rumored in Dublin that the Irish I ; overnment intends to prohibit some pro- v ected meetings of Parnellites throughout he conntry. Arrangements have been aade by the Irish national league for a eries of moss meetings In America , which rill be addressed by many prominent na- ionalista. P tl Fleeing From Certain Death. SAN FRANCISCO , Sept. 17. A party of ivelve Americans who fled from Guaymos rrived lost night. They said the people ere leaving the city by hundreds. There e' ras hardly a house but contained some vie- ' im of fever. The authorities had given ver the work of burying the dead to a pack f Indians , who went from house to house , arrying the bodies of those they supposed D be dead or dying. The bodies wore , r uried so rapidly that mistaken occurred , nd many are supposed to have been put nder the ground while still alive. This was lainly due to the disease , which at the ivorablc turning point leaves the patient In ' comatose state , mistaken by the Indians as , eath. The "whole dty Is panic-stricken , [ erchants have closed their stores , and ailed their doors. Restaurants are allclos- d. There Is no assistance obtainable. Ke"V orts from Hennasillo state the fever fa rag- ig there. At Mazatlan its ravages are even lore frightful than at Guaynuw. All who auld were leaving for the mountains , car- J. ring oft what bedding they could pack and J.ct little food. ct GUAYMAS , Mexico , September 17. It now clearly established that the disease iging here is yellow fever. All who can re fleeing from the city. The medical a is being reinforced as rapidly as powi- ai le- Twelve of the lately arrived opera ofm oupe have died. Eighteen deaths were m th sported yesterday. Many others were not sported. The streets are almost deserted , "I ic only sounds heard being the rumbling sad carte. The board of health have issued ce ; cew rders that dead bodies be immediately re- w : lovcdand bnried. ve ? A Terrible Boiler Explosion. PITTSBUKG , PA. , Sept. 20. Botwccu 1 and 2 o'clock this afternoon a shock waw felt throughout the city , which shook the buildings to their foundations , smanhed windows and terribly frightened the resi dents of the south side , who rushed from their houses into the street in terror. Immediately - mediately after the shock an alarm of firu was sounded. Upon investigation it was found that the large boilers in the flagging department of the Sligo iron works had ex ploded with fearful violence , scattering flying fragments In every direction , hotting fire to the Lake Erie railroad shops and a number of dwelling houses In the vicinity. News of the disaster spread like wildfire , and soon thousands of people were on their way to the scene of destruction. A fear ful sight met their . gaze. The boiler , a brick structure , was a complete wreck , as were also ; i number of passenger and freight oars , and the master mechanic's shops of the Lake Erie railroad , while a row of dwellings on the opposite nlde of tin * street were in flames. Men , women and children were running about wringing their hands and calling for friends whom they supposed were either killed or wounded in the ruins of the flagging department. Scat tered around w.ere the dead and dying , some'with arms and legs off , some disfig ured almost beyond recognition and othcr > suffering from painful burns and scalds. By this time the police had arrived In force and the work of removing the killed and in jured from the ruins was begun. It wa found that at the time of the explosion twenty men were at work. Of these nine are reported all right. Three were killed and eight badly injured , four fatally , while four children of Charles Douglass , who lived across the way , were also badly hurt. Following is a lint of the killed : John W. Allen , top of his head blown off. Charles Douglas * , side of hi- , head blown off. off.John John McGaviganMaided and hides mz ! i- ed In. Neighbors did all they could to relieve the sufferers. Thejboiler was an uprightsix fuel indiameterand was splitin fourfragaienu * . the largest being blown 200 feet , landing In the middle of the Monongahela river. It is not known what caused the explosion. It was just after the dinner hour , and the steam had been turned off only a few min utes when it exploded. The" coroner ha. empanneleda jury and a thorough investi gation will be made. The Sligo iron welf are owned by Philips , Mcrrick & Co. Their Io s is estimated at $10,000. Loss to the Erie railroad and dwellings , about $3,000. Louis House , one of the victims , ha * since died , and W. M. Stewart and Christ. Miller are not expected to live throuidj 1h < night. i Lieutenant Greeley Reported Dead by an Esquimaux. LONIJOX , September 23. Prof. Nur- lenskjold telegraphn the following from scrabrtter to the Associated Press agent at London : "During my excursion on the ! , iui of [ ce , Dr. Nathon-t , with the .steam * Sofia , n charge of Captain Niinson , anchored > n the 27th of July In a bay near Cage fork , 72 degree * f minutes north. The lector wn : accompanied from God Haven jy an Esquimaux interpreter named 3an.s Christian , who had met at God laven a party of 15 Esquimaux from iValstenholm. They stated that they md been Informed by other natives that ht commander of an American expedition , vhose name they pronounced 'Kaslelgh. ' ind another mem oer of a party which had irrived at a point north of Smith Sound , vere dead , and that the rest of the expedi- ion had returned on sledges to Littleton island. Unfortunately , this information vas not given to Dr. Nathorst until he re- urned to God Haven. I myself examined Jhristlon , and his account seems to be reli- rble. Before starting northward the Sofia act , JulylCth , at God Haven , the whaler 'roteoH , which intended to proceed to Lit- leton Island , and , if necessary and unim- reded by ice , to Lady Franklin Bay. When he Sofia vi-ited Smith Sound , that body wn * neumbered by ice. ' ' . * i Fatal Fire-Works. PITTSBDRG , September 28. An ex- iloeion of fire-works ia an outbuilding of the xpoition to-nijjht re&ulted in the death of no boy and the cremation of three valuable orses , and the destruction of 300 feet of tabling. The fire-worka were intended for display to-morrow night , and were etored i a large frame building adjoining the .sta les. At9 o'clock an explosion was heard , nd the flames shot up and consumed the ulldings and stable ? in a short time. In the tables were many valuable horje-t en- jred for the race ? * which begin Tuesday , 'hree of these Polkadot , Maud II. and rreea Horse were burned , and the otherx escued. In the stabler occupied byPolka- ot was a jockey named Thomas Rogers , of ralamazoo. The flamed spread so rapidly lat he wad burned to death before he could < cape. Polkftdot was owned br W. J. mall , of Kalamazoo , and valued at $2.000. taud K. and Green Horse were owned by : S. Duster , of Boston. Maud R. wa * va4- ed at 5,000 , and Green Horse Via * j.ur- lased last week for$2,000. The exposition Is j.OOO ; partially insured. Every family should be provided with bottle of Chamberlain's Colic.Cholera ad Diarrhoea Remedy , for use in case * f bowel complaint , during the summer lonths. It Is the only preparation in"1'/ ie market that cnn always be relied pon. It is pleasant and safe to take. Mr. Timothy Hay has been very suc- ssful in his business this season"He ill rove Ln clover the balance of the ar.