- to THE SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL U 1. SIMMONS, ProprieOr. HARRISON', - - NEBRASKA A DANGEROUS LUNATIC, Jaj Goald is Interviewed by Man Who Demands His Money or HU Life. tot. Mua Kataftalaa the Vtoltar aad Hl Ait U. Had Naw Ton, May 8. Inspector Byrnes he penonally arrested a lunatic who ttuaataoad to kill Jay Gould unless he was bouaht off with a large amount of money. Ha imagines himaelf the vice president of a band of world reformers tylin tbemaelvee as Chiist Followers. and to be doomed to carry out the de cree of the order. The man's name b Charles Dixon and he comes from Pu eblo, Cola, and the method of bis mad - neat is shown by the following story ol bis campaign against the Wal street millionaire: It was yesterday morning that I nkp eo tor Byrnes rewired a telegram from Mr. Oould's house re questing him to meet the railroad mag oeteat bis Wall street office. The in spector went down aa requested an socn after his arrival Dr. Munn, Jay Oould's physician, came in. He tolc the inspector that a man who calls him self Charles Dixon had some to hi. house the night before with an intro daoiion from a friend in Pueblo and told a long story. Dixon had said hi belonged to an organization known at .Christ's followers, Tery powerful in this country, and had been made a deputy by the counsel to kill Jay Gould. Hf thought the matter might be fixed. Ir the year 1888 ha had been engaged by a certain newspaper man to carry copy and through this employment he got into the order. At the end of a year oi so he was asked to take the last degree and did ea This was the way of it: We want to Owl's Head, on one of the lakes, by order of the secretary and that night knelt in a circle ot fifty masked aaaa unknown to him and took the oath to become one of Christ's Followers and obey the laws ot the order. Its purpos es was the equalization of money and property, there being too many rich and too many poor people in the country. Its methods aa will appear, were origin al On April 12 Dixon was ordered to piooasd to New York, obtain by book or orook an interview with Jay Gould and demand m)00,000 down, f6,COO,0O3 in ten years at the rate of 500,000 a yea, asd still another 15,000,000 in the de cade uniaaa Mr. Gould diedf ri the mean lifdl. In case of emergency Dixon was to demand that ha provide in bia will for part of his entire fortune for educa tion ud charitable purposes, all ex oast 81:000.000 for eaoh member of his family. : That was the limit. Dixon aid that unless Mr. Gould consented to pay the money ha would be killed. If anything happened ha (Dixon) would cetoh it from tbe Christ Followers and mU km to dui. He sot his Pueblo friend to give him -an introduction to Dr. Munn. Gould's physician, on tbe pretenee that he was going there for led foal advice. Since ha has been here it occurred to him that ha might fix things with the order for $60,000 down and $20O0O for obsrity, saying that Mr. Gould was an old man and aould not lire long anyway. But that was the cheapest. In anticipation of refusal and the possibility ' that he would lose his own life insured for &O0p tor the benefit of his family and rather than suffer death at the hands of Christ's Fol'owers he determined to kill himself. Ha would go to Hartford, aboot off his own pistol, tear his watch ohaia and scatter his papera in the road and make it look likjtobbery and than shoot himself with another pistol to complete the fraud. Thus his in.ur- anoa would hold good. Dr. Munn lis- 1 to the Long story and then had the i arrested. Today ha was commit- tad to await examination as to his san ity, an w craiy or course, out a v.y daasjeenes lunatic. .. ' " - , WntJsnBUewei By a Geaand ati-ike CaTuuoo, May 8. There (a every pros pect that hs notion' of the northern nUsxia coal operators in refusing the rasjnaat of the miners' representatives 'IsMoonterance to settle the quart ion of veca win be followed by a general strika of ail tbe miners in that district 1 miners are employed in i Mai fields and all of then i of the United miners' as- , taJkinf about the matter yes aret said that the operators are In no saw," ajid he, "we made sa advance of tAene9ttoeoatingentunoaa like tdvaneo twang mad by our oompetitorr aaaowthaniand western Hllnota. W aaal It, bwt na advance was made ia the suswansBjBBk aer to wiwmmn ww saw t evict sZasstly with our own aaea f3 Jilialeal tot shall Wad wsf rjerfcaCaetsU,! eaaaot aaa what ..tacts' 9&fm with V,' t' V, IsnsV" tttbi,iK yea A Funnel Shaped Cloud. Ciscwmati, May 5. A Paducan, Ky, special to the Commercial-Gazette ea6 that between 5 and 6 o'clock last even ing a hurricane with heavy rain ai.d bail swept into that town from the west The funnel-ehaned cloud, characteristic of a tornado vaa present. In a few minutes the streets were rivers of water. Tbe first work of destruction by the tor nado was the unroofiing of the New port News and Missippi Vulley railroad freight depot. After .this the tomado cut a zigzag swath through the city. Tbe roof of tbe colored people's school house was torn off, as was that of the the freight house of the Paducan , Ten nessee fc Alabama railroad. The third street Methodist church was swept up and dropped into tbe middle of the street, a confused mass of debris. It had just been newly built. Severn! mills were more or less damaged. The steamer Clyde was blown into tbe river with such force against a barge as to sink the barge. On hundred buildings were either totally wrecked, moved from their foundations or unroo'ed. Mrs. Henry Meyers and her three children were badly cut by flying glasf and debris on Tcird street. Wesley Orr was burieu under an over turned wagon and suffered internal ia. juries, and his little son was alec badly hurt The street car service was interrupted and the telegraph wires were damaged so that no communication is to be had with the rest of the world until morn ing. Crossing- the Casrade Mounluius. Tacoma, May 5. The Great Northern is said to have decided to cross the Cas cade mountains through the Natchez pass. This information comes from an authentic source, although it could not be corroborated in this city. When the Northern Pacific was making surveys for its line through this state, Naichez pass was considered one of the best places to construct a line over the raoun tains. Surveys were made of the pas and plans were carefully prepared. Tbi surveyors of the Great Northern have been at work for several months in tin Cascades securing information to aid the company in securing the puss. It was said that they had been unable t find a better pass for ihe line than Natchez, and that President Hill called upon the North jrn Pacific for such in formation as they had in reference to it The Northern Pacific has turned over its maps, surveys and plans to the Great Northern, said Agent Lehao, bu' bow much truth there is in the report 1 do not know. ' Gone Insane. Bridoewateb, Cosn., May U.Ex Governor Jessup, one of the most prom inent citizens of this placi has gone in sane. He was taken violently "ill a few days ago, but refused to allow a doctor to come to the house and lived solely on the faith cure. Jessup at leugth conceived tbe idea that he was a second Abraham and thai tbe Lord required a human sacrafiae. Thursday, being left alone for a few mo menta, he prepared for the terrible af fair by constructing an altar in his bed room, around which he piled a heap of combustibles. Then be caught his lit tle grandchild, 1 year old, and placed her on the altar, and prepared to ignite it. The child's cries attracted a mem ber ot the family, and the old man was nearly killed in the struggle to restrain him. Forest Fires, Eeib, Pa., May 5. Forest fires are raging with great severety along the line of the Pennsvlvania & Erie road, and it is almost impossible for the train men to endure the suffocating smoke ilong tbe mountain passes. At S cf deld the owners of oil derricks are f'g'it ing the fires and eo far have managed So save everything except one or two derricks. At Ludlow the mountain ire full of fire. Around Johnsonburg nd Ridgeway tbe fires are raging fur owsly, but the tinvoer and low moun aih growth does not come in close to 'bt tewns and they are not in danger Down on the middle division of the Pennsylvania & Erie the mountains ar. ua of fire, and while it is disagreeabl raveling it ia a weird sight An Eig-bt Hear Day. Evahbviixe, Ind Mar 5. The min rs of the five mines of this city wen) iut for an eight-hour day. They took heir grievances into the Central Labor inion, a body composed of delegates of ill unions in the city, and requested hat a committee be appointed to wait m tbe operators and demand an adjust aent of the difficulties. Ths operators efueed to treat with the committee, md after several attempts to get to fether the matter was referred back to i meeting held this morning, at which i large bod) of miners resolved to back i p the previous action of th union I'his indicates a long and bitter strog ;le between the opposing forces. TV isrnsetmalters, saddlerr. coliarnakcr md car pen tors demanded a nine-boui Isy May 1 and got it Tbe painters n n ong since demanded and got the ei,ht lour day after a short struggle. stinelsVeJ(sfi5ie Vby One of the naive .confessions of a gbft character was made on a street ear the other day. aayi the Detroit Free Press. A wettr jroang German fraa arM telling her friend about her mrUblp and ntarrfar ' loot know' aha saU Umpiy in kreken Enffash, "bow Ifet so goad I no paint aa' no powder, an' i t creamy Ulr tarj." x rd bOi waathe i -it1 i- v NEBRASKA STATE NEWS. The Norfolk roller mill is obliged to run night and day to supply the de mand. The Exchange batik at Western!! was closed and its business has been consolidated with a bank at Arcadia. The government has commenced pay ing the tirst installment due the hantee Id Jians by the recent Sioax treaty. Ravenna has a young girl who thews tobacco in tbe most artistic fashion and can t,pit through a knot hole with neat ness and precision. Prof. Hurlbut, the showman who was so badly burned by tho falling of a gas oline lamp last week Friday, died Wed nesday afternooa. The body of Henry Brandt, a furmir residing twelve miles west of St. Paul, whs found toe other day buried in acave which he had used as a stable. Ho had been missing f )r two weeks. Thirtv-two more carloads of machin ery for the Norfolk beet sugar factory were shipped from New Orleans Wed nesday. Twenty-five carloads are al. reedy in position in tbe building and it will require about sixty carloaJa be sides ibese mentioned to complete the plant. The four-year old little girl of D. P. Greyer, a farmer living about two miles northeast of Valparaiso, was burned lo ts a crisp by running into a small patch of prairie grass, which had been set ou fire by her father, who waa plowing near by. Tbe clothing was entirely burned off the body before her father could get to ber. The will of the late Father Martin has been filed for probate at Dakota City. He left one-third of bis property to his wife, one-third to bis younges1 daughter, Rose, of South Sioux City one-sixth to his eldest daughter, Mrs. Lucy Bullock of South Sicux City, nod onc-3ixth to Mrs. Bullock's children No mention is made or is anything be queathed to his daughter, Mrs. Fred Martin of South Sioux City, nor her sod Charles C. Martin, who is in a lu'ly ciippled condition. The estate is most ly all in land, and in time will probably become valuable property. The coLBtruction of a seventy five barrel roller mill at Randolph is pro gressing rapidly. The ilartinglon creamery has opened for the season with a capacity of IX'V pounds per day. John Haney ot Columbus lost forty head of hogs the other day from eome mysterious disease. The northwestern Nebraska - normal institute will be held at Wayne from June 22 to August 28. The next annual meeting of the." inter-stale Grand Army encampment will be held at Superior June 2. Quite a number of Grand Island farmers have taken tbe contract to raise sugar beets this summer. Bert Lynch, from near Humboldt, died on the 13th inst from the effects of an accidental pistol shot received in 1883. Fire cars of immigants arrived - dur ing this month in O'Neill by the Fre mont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley rail road. A gentleman living near Humboldt was obliged to kill a steer last week on account of its showing signs of hydro phobia. Cedar county is getting (jtnte an in flux of settlers from northwest Iowa this spring, and they are a good class of people. Tbe barn of Farmer Harglewood, near Roeeland, waa destroyed by fire and four horses were consumed, togeth er with other valuables. Reports from Bancroft say more small grain has been sown in that part of the state than for many years past, and the prospects are for a large crop. A farmer near Blair has a colt which is maneleM, without hair on its tail flat-kneed,in-toed on its fore legs and' hangs its neck acd swings its bead like a camel. Fairfield ia having a buildiog boom Work has been begun on the new Kyne hotel, a brick block is nearly completed uu wu .vauvuvva nil! UV UU1H Hi lg eeassn. Fire, suppov ri to have been started by incendiaries, was discovered in Mon roes eievator ai rremont, but the names were extinguished before much damage waa done. uinvinniu me orrolK SUar oeet isciory naa contracted for over b!t. ty acres of sugar beets with the farmers living near Inman, Holt county, tbe Dcew w ue ueu verso this fail. The plans for Nebraska City't new opera nouse nave arrived. Th h;u. Ing will be some three stories hiirh of stick who aion ornaments. The tnee- we win d ntt-xj with modern improve ment, auu is 10 cost 180,000. Richard L. Douglass, agedtwenty.fi ve V. I in ai w with a32-cal.br. Colt's pistol in one of the rooms ot ths Pacific boW atSidn.y A love affair was ths immediate ai.' um. relatives at Muakegau, Mich A Frrn"in Ml . ( , """h soon begin the w-... nt.ua oi waterworks at Schuyler. Aftersevai-A I jii...!. . ' ...ujui io naa water it was found atadepth of s...nty fe.ti at uepu a aeven-foot vein of sd and ravel wa, .truck, which it i. thought illaunnl all k. . 1 XL.yoKK. May 7.-JuUgmg oerta:n developrmenu that have tikeJ and from rumors that are preva .nt in businee. circle, down town, tb. actual seat of the Chilian war Joca ted in this city. It is claimed that two prominentcommercia! l.ousw,both bar ing ve'y large intewsU in Chili, are fur nUhiog arms,' ammunition and mony to the two fictions-lhe government of Balmace.la fore and to the revolution ist. The bouses mentioned are oppos 16g'each other commercially and each is doing its uttermost to Lave the fao .ir..i.annoorUwin. Tbe prizs for which both mArchaDU are ea d to be struggling is valuable .oesions w to have been proaiifced :hem by their re spective parties in' the event of vie xiry. One of the New York houses interested backing therevoluti iDiBtsis aid to k ,.i.allir m.ntrollina tb boulD ' ---- .... t,.. American repuuuca ji. -- large Brazilian interest. It was aaiu Chili was being kept going by f tie e - forU of the two merotiBDls uere ia Vork. There have len several repre sentatives or botuor me wu forces in Chili here in New York for the past 'en days. It is presume! they are purchasing arms lor smpmeuk CowraliUc In 'oo. Bipp.ua May 7. Senators Hoar, Dolph, Hale and Cray of the (enatecom mittee on trade relations with Canada have begun a session cf the committee. Ex-Mayor Munning, presenting the malting interetU, sought to ohow that Canadian barley is better for malting than is grown on this continent and tha it is very important tint it should be admitted into this country undor favor able conditions. Inferring to the duty put on Canadian barley by the McKin ley bill he said thereaultof the thirty lent duty is that our Canadian barley business is annihilated. Not a bushel is coming over. Twenty cent rates would ruin it. The duty does bot help our agriculturists. We cannot beg:n to raise the barley that is nee-'ed in our Bountry. Thomas Loomis, coal dealer, thought that if the duty on both sides 'A the line should be lakes off the re ?ult would be a greater comumplion in Canada if American coal. N. W. lUn iow, live stock dealer, said that tbe chief change desired was cne in regard to transportation in which there was discrimination; 'o One Knnws Yt hy. New York, May 0, A man who was known only by the name of Wilbur, i hot and killed a woman known as Laura, Ida Brevoort in the Excelsior concert saloon in the Bowery and then shot and killed himself. There were about three hundred people in the saloon when Wil bur entered and ai ked one of the wait ers to conduct him to the woman. She saw him coming and lied to herdrewing : room at the right ot the stage, saying that she did not want to meet lain. He followed her to the room and pushing open the door tired two shoU. in her head, killing her almost inrtantly. Then he turned the pbttol on himself and died a few minutes later. No one knew much about the woman, nor the relations existing between them. Both wcre about thirty years of age. A Lock-out. Chicago, May 5. Tbe coal operators of northern Illinois, inclujing Braid wood, Larialle and Wilmington, decided to Iock their mines nut several weeks ago in the event of a strike for higher wages May L Ihe strike materialized May 1 and the oflioers of the state min era' organization requested the oflioers to meet the men and talk it all over The operators assert that long before May 1 they announced thai they did not care whether the miners struck or not. .Now they have rep'ied to the overtures to a conference with a resolu tion setting forth that they have already offered their men the same prices and conditions as last year, and as tbey can not do any better they decline to con fer. Must Have Uussla's Consent Moscow, May .The Gazett is in dignant at the English and American preas igsoring Russia's connection with theBehnng sea matter and declares that any agreement made, without Rus sia e consent will be worthless. Th, Gazette speaks with respectful svmna. thy of the American claims and says it ib time Mgiand was taught that the poseeaions of an all powerful II doe not entitle her to treat the tea as her peculiar property. The Gazette propoe es that America and Russia settle the question without reference to England. Ariested on Suspicion. KlNdPiHiirii ) T M.. r answering every description of the Yn" dian abssiah was arrest! near hll attire and hi w.tiv .v.L V H-Ul'ar lions. He say. his nan. is 6 lU' .ndthath.iadeeeenT.nto'nhefc in ail Hiff ."i"' "iuu1d W k in six different languages, but i came frnin .i.;.r- TMrUr her he i " - " ' tinjr tin s kiii n,l i. the Messiah, but says he ha i, . bu.is.as with the X.V and other tril,- "pahr Jian. lo thi ThaKioOranda Or.rli.naBk Sasta Ft May 7 Th. i:. . 'nowaithlnifewiBch" 7,. A7uut or ma largi snow In n,. ... (f amount 61 here, Tha hri.l-. . i. at Los Luoaa .t Al0U(Uerniia.r..l Sooorra and . " l ", :,'"a- re wrecked. tui. a ajwiua A CGEAT HYHTHtt Aflor Mny Ve'.ra Hi" Ma-ljln m rTf--tel, And Work Suti(utoiy. ar-RlHof rholl at a laar Uy i:t1relly. Ci-KVFisn, O, May 6L A ompscy is organizing ia this city, w.th f l.OtXt.OO which will operate one of tne grasttst mventioLS -if the age. Tbe inventor, Mr. Parkhurst, has devoted severs' years at leisure intervals to the perfec tion of the device which ii calculated U reproduce nd variable aurfaceaeleciric ally at a distance or locally. The tlrs r.fi i, a! result c?he invention is th ( repr(xiU( t;oa 0f 6 phoUgraph at a dis iKn, hv moans of electricity. 1 he lua chin is a email contrivance of bra and iron ettebding ten inches into th air from a pedestal 10 by 1 inches coo nected by a tingle w;re with the tel graphic battery. The wor1: ia done di rectly from the photographic negative sbicli must be in reliuf olxiut Ibl thousandth nart of an inch. By Uienni if a tracer a perfect engraving is madi n war on metal at the other end of thi :ire, from which a prmt can be taken The phot j is euti ly in parallel straigh' lines running from right to left, reoull mg in a ahaded picture. The whoh thing including the making of the re lief negative can be done In three 0 four hours. When the tranetnitte' passes over a light portion of the sub ject, the receiver cauws a depreaasloi or a inaiimum cut to be ma lo upon tin surface, and when the dartc portion oft ubject is umh-r the transmitter the re iter will nuke no record. (Should the ubject present a high tone, the receive! will interpret the same as s half tone. Hie product of the .receiver is in the shape of engravinga from which stereo types can be mado for pru.ting ujo: ordinary printing preie. The fro Teas is adapted to making embossim, Jies automatically from a a'tern tnd reproduce any variab!ea'jrfaoeeiiectr,e -illy at a didtance or locally. Mr. Parkhurst says of ti e inveDtioB "We think we ha-e found a way to send i picture by telegraph. In fact we did telegraph a picture by it the other day picture consists of three Inures that of a man and two women all in party costume. The uroupe vas reproduced correctly at the other end jt the line except one of the women lack .'d a part of her head. The result was cn the whole much lx-tter than ha could have expected. The machine itself is just a cylinder. A sort of little pivot or point er goes villi it. J'ou Uko the picture you wish to send nd wrap it around the cylinder and the point treses th lights and shadows ot the picture. In reality the surface of tbe pic'.ure is not smooth, but uneven, and it is traced at the other end on s sheet ot gelatine. From tbe picture thus taken on tho cylinder at the enM a photo may ba taken. The only reason why our recent experiment was not wholly suciessfu! was because our cylinder at this end was not exactly round. It requires an absolutely round cylinder for such deli cats work." rittkertou Mrn WsnlrtJ. Nkw Yokk, May (J.-No sooner had the Pennsylvania troops been cullec away by the governor than the owi er of the coke mine, communiiaitod with Pinkerton's headquarters aai demand ei that at least 1VJ detectives, fully pre pared for emeigency, be sent to the im meeliate vninity of the ceko mines, ft that if any uulooked for oul rea cc curred they would be on tho ground to protect property and prevent riot. In answer to tbH summons the Pinkertor. agency in Chicago has sent fifty men iris i ennny:vanm agency the same iuu. ber and these were reinforced by a aim! lar number from the agency in this city iui nigni. ma me,, wuo .Urted fron mm ciiy are lully armed w th rl,. and instead of leaving here, ai formerly u ouueues ot i jur or live, the whole par . .rrng2u uieir departure and left f, oi ine cone regions m the is,m ner. open man AI. the men left at No. 4 1 rtr.,ltt, " ; patseu around to M,.rri treet and thence down west street t, ih r;i...... . . . ... .tjr strwt t,rry, Xher9 U( uoai was taken to , the New .Tr.. r ua.umoro & Ohio railroads ""ere a special tram was m ,,ir.... for them and it Mi as soon .n on board. It was understood amons lb. f:.,L.. ton. that they are to go to certai, '"JOndwherMhey wi! be In iradmess cm a : . Wrens H"..s el Hrry, Kassa Ciry. Mu ft tendau is reported m..,.. . .. morning and .iron hope, of h:. reeot -yarsnlerUiner ra Tras, A ftuwlan civil offlcird reports to the lovwnraent that in January he saw s 2,000, andUmt a half Mh(mt UtM , war Mother pack .bout loo strong, aj nilnly In food condition a"m ai lior-f txt i v.- . the New liri.' ' fc.iii..-.. -"N lhemeford,csJ thedepareot rf 1 -aid that the VxA icitd no iurpri7. .u.ejo or li ecas.. tltnipt topa-ii..,,. lawbyotr.Mtic.,,.1 tjury fiTA. riartmunt i.... r u"l , -pinion on th. ,.,. ' -el the ewe will U ba- . upon the turbulent 7 the United State,, make clear to thftttJ cannot rely oa trt, ' , 4ponaib:iitiei toi iheir unlanfulacd, r" The reiHjrtof tb, expect,!, react Sw ' J :ho course of tiMT Jial OorreaiK.tiJ,,!!;, ' State and Paly. j-J leliev thatiofcu, 'rom lharej ort ti uenlof jusiios by rant and notably B J" ' istionality of the n-Ji' jury, re ik.u found alizej American ctir-. -'e-'a'od hia ictentwtJ vixeJ. District attonsl tieliovetl, found ob 4 Italian nati.-r.aliUJ raped convict, and ionality was wdjubtl unsafe to haj-ard mEJ rnlii t),o T .. i .... ... 'l rowed down lo atW, J of them being an esJ hough the I oitodS-iJ aliznlion tri!y .u .. , . . . ri.meu naiion i iu Il!r joinity recixn ztdoora z-jn. as free fr.,n ni sasfti: native gavernnierit. TJ these two viclniii n question iriimnlitUii treaty .tipulntiucitu ken. This qiit-stios t m in the corren.iiriJM.av iroverruenls an mm a'il; ernment ia re;,Jv tn fi. Jf f the usual d- pli uitU tC' f ing a subject TjizV' iook issue w ith ano'.i-- ' it sppears clear', tli! -S'- ? IxSu violate.! the It, afa . the (rtouod, and lav --S rtiinfta ivf iha (.lalAt- " 1 !5 ut "r (- that this fact caneollnat' '.PC ' 1 1 is learned thai IVv tr' t at iVm, applied leti A " atate for lenve of nmm t, f .- New Orleans affr "'' f len constanUi i d-'-5 h 1889 morethar. V )vT the sickly eeai 'D K ' '4 l.ote, su that it pU' feqiiHBt will be-graslri 1 AtUjrncy General X L tha report of the grid & jlined alMolutely tofipir on regarding it or too ay. secretary I (iter, v. pinion on the report,! tot time to rend it, hA s lot in a position U)im( egarding it. A lllploinslie M WiiirroJ, May & It uievielent that tlx H ter has g"in nfiaiwl ihoae. and that as twe?n the Uni ed Suuesl ish government reialieS pa'sing. The oulcomt i pondeooe, if any ha bi not yet been mad pu" ult of it, if only a lemOT jarue apparent at U M tnent jeetcrday, ahist 1 contemplated treasury 4 IJehring sea, pe ndiof 1 now going on iKitweeoM ad Lerd Salisbury. T tbe Instructions to tlrf and Hear, which had bK the iusirucliona to S! Brown and Inspector T-X J NswORLBALAa, to fVirt. the Italiat city, beina intervieeJ jf aaid that he was not nnnnliiainriaLrriVed1 nir and ijecams very a .tianiiaainer it. "I h! U". 7 . .. bring before thow gi uorte,"au i". ui mfurmll ion in n,y 11 Hva (n the record of d in IV,. Hnnef V l"'-"'1 that ka arand iUD' bi formation a. I had fliw .t. u .!. I did lJ IsnsJaussof. 7h0& to what transpired in 5 . fmfl lt,lM4 nie me f 10 tubj l wrtM,,5 . . hat v thlnir moreou tha a mnf of the rer my action, to th tery shortly. .1 Have an noverms - t a.- n,.,, Cl, StstM Mar.hl -teamar Iuls, "''cnh. of supplies here. fl!Z uum under .rresi- art ei.1 Minme d beM hovering ffd citrdtheltalf i btiquo. the wate 7 Al ". water aeeaed. - flV tat maklTiilS asU lieatL and M 1 kx Berry .-a s.urnosW !"'" f V-Z urpow I I :r,