ft 4 t. J. munam, rrto HAUiaotr, JTEBtUSKA A Xhrilltec Maty. WAJHnwTOX, March 28. A. dis patch not WitneomyiM, Vv, uys Captain Find Lends, of the : Pries, which wu abandoned at Ma, arrived from Liverpool. He r- lausa tfcrilfcng story otto trials of llf tticww before they wan res cuad. The Teasel m bound (or New Paw, Cam, and whan off Cap Mar was dlaawad and driven oat to at Tha aaOs ware aet wbaa the etorm aroaa and-heavy Mai washed tba deck. carrying over the water eaaka and deck load. The men were compelled to cling to the mute. Then tha steering fir wm disabled and the Teaaal waaattae mercy of the wares. During a loll the men eoeeeeded in lowering the foresail and immediately after the Teasel's hold began to fill. The pompa were broken and valueless and the captain thought at waa lest From Tuesday, February 21, to Thursday they had no water and the suturing from thirst and cold wu inteoM. During the storm they tried to catch the rain, but the spray turned this to salt Than they ate icicles that formed on the rigging, but they were salty and increased instead of dimin ishing their sufferings. On Thursday at noon they were sighted by the White Star steamer Coftic, which rescued them and took them to LirerpooL I'hlaaee taiM lata tba Coantrj. Portland, Ore., March 88. Cus tom Officials hare confirmed the truth of the telegram from Washington stat ing that sixty-seven Chinese were Illegally smuggled into this port lut Thursday night from the steamer Uaytien Republic. The steamer ar rived here from Vancouver, B. C, Thursday at 6 p. m., with 122 Chinese en board. Acting Collector of Cus toms Pike instructed Deputy Collector Cardinall not to recognize any of the certificates that might be presented, but to let the Chinamen be subject to aabeu corpus proceedings. At 10 o'clock at night Cardinall and Inspector Armstong permitted sixty -seven of the Chinese to land. Acting Collector Pike wu not notified of the action until next morning. Cardinall, in explanation of his action, stated that his instructions had always been to land Chinese whenever they presented proper certificates. Acting Collector Pike tben suspended Deputy Cardinall and Inspector Armstrong, pending an investigation, which will be under taken u soon u Collector Lotano, who is now in San Francisco, returns. Captain Dunbar of the Haytien Re public uid: "Wo have an arrange ment with the Canadian Pacific by whieh we get $6 for every Chinaman we bring to Portland, and if they are denied permission to land we get 6 each for returning them." Daring Tiain Boabery. st. L.oui ; March 28. confined in the cells at the four courts are four men and women, the principals in a most daring and complete train robbing conspiracy. They are: J. F. Gosney, alias Lowe, alias Huntington, abas, Road; H. Conner, Louis Lutz aliu "Kindergarten." Clark Goodwin, aliu C. Ilarley, John Reed and Minnie Meyers, aliu Lowe, Robert Weatherfield, aliu Leach, tha fifth man escaped from the city. Chief Desmond received the first informa tion of the plot Friday morning, in the nape of a message which conveyed word that a scheme wu on foot to loot one of the outgoing trains Saturday night on the Missouri Pacific. Seventy patrolmen in plain clothes arrested the gang before they had an opportunity to put their plans into execution. In the rooms of Minnie Meyers, in a disorderly house, were found the masks the men were to have worn, together with three sticks of dynamite and fueea and percussions caps. Goosey, Lute and Goodwin said the scheme wu to rob the Saturday night run on tha Missouri Pacific which takes out $70,000 every Saturday night. If succeuful their operations were to be continued on a large scale, , Qaletlng- Dawn. Toledo, 0 March 28. The strike situation is the quietest ithu been since It started None of the great labor leaders have yet arrived, although Chiefs Arthur and Sargent and President Gompers are expected on every train. The order of railway conductors held a meeting yesterday afternoon to take whatever action aslght be necessary regarding the report that Conductor Benshaw wu discharged from tha company's Mrvioe witboax sufficient or just cause. It wu f enad that he wu not a member of the order, having made application time ago and than withdrawn the advice of the Ashlers. It wu aJu diecoYefod that only thirty Urw members of the order were em 9Ti m the Ann Arbor road. It la mOely therefore that the strike will extend to tha trainmen. waM Kaw Tom, Jflareh .--The bank ftsossnont shows tha reserve incroMod Ptant aewhoid C00 excess CatrretlKl rsua ia tat werid Vt3 t3 Kl lal rjtjtt WKSMf. V. . ffafaf MCres. Bptte, Moat., April 1. Sheriff White ot Conway county, Arkansas, ar. rived here and will soon leave for same with Farnk Hickey and H. W Burkhardt, the former of whom is the alleged murderer of John M. Clayton, and the latter the man who informed on him. Sheriff White had an inter view with Hickey in the jail. Hickey told him that he wu in the penitentiary at Walla Walla, Wash., when Clayton wu killed, but added that from what he had learned from Burkhardt since the occurrence, burkhardt himself was one of the murderers. Sheriff White will receive requistion papers. He is satis tied that Hickey is one of the men wanted. Hickey offered to accompany him without requisitionapers, but the ArkansM sheriff will not take chances on starting without them. Burkhardt claims to have driven the wagon for the party that killed Clayton and uys he will point out the spot where th tuns are concealed as soon as h reaches Plummerville. Little Rock, April 1. Sheriff White of Conway, county, who went to Butte. Mont., with a requisition for the alleged assassin of John M. Clayton telegraphed the Daily Gazette u fol lows: "Find the evidence against Hickey is good. The testimony will show that he and a man here and one other hired a conveyance at a livery stable in Con way and drove to Plummerville on the night of the assassination and thai Hickey and one of the parties stepped up to the house and murdered Clayton The witnesses claim they got 12,400 for the job. if the witness produces the parties he claims will corroborate the statements, there is no doubt we have the right man. The witness is well ac quainted in Little Rock, but asked to have his Dame kept a secret." Cholera on the Warpath. St. Petersburg, April 1 Cholera has again appeared in this city. It is known that fatal cues are of daily oc currence, though the authorities have not resumed the policy of last year of making regular daily announcements of the new cases and deaths. All the news is suppossed. Disquieting rumors are afloat as to the situation in the interior. The sani tary stations in the Volga provinces, where the disease created great ravages lut year have been reopened. Special steamers, with sanitary officers, cruise the Volga to pick up the cholera patients. It is believed the govern ment has grave secret lUibrmalTPry. still in the Financial IVorliS. New York, April 1. William C. Whitney arrived at, bis home here. It has been rumored that Mr, Whitney means to withdraw from the financial world and that his downtown offices have been given up u the first move in that direction. To a reporter's inquiry u to the truth of the rumor Mr. Whit ney replied: "I have made no plans as regards my future business connections and consequently am unable to say what I shall do. You may know that I have been down town very little dur ing the past year, having been so much occupied with other matters, and I really have had no use for an office. Another Bank lu Trouble. Washington, April 1. It is author itively learned at the department of justice that Special Counsel Henry -W. Jackson, employed on the Gaty City "National bank case at Atlanta, Ga., bu not been removed, but any further action on his part in the case hu been suspended till Attorney-General Olney and Secretary Carisle of the treuury agree on the course to be pursued. The case has assumed a very peculiar phue. The bank is in the opinion of the treuury officials, in a position to oi ea its doors and pay every dollar of its ulebtedness caused by the defalca tion of Cuhier Re wine, but there is said to be a disagi ement u to wbo shall constitute th board of directors. The present board i open to a charge of having wrong! nlly taken money from the bank. Jackson wu formerly counsel for the bank. His son com mited suicide shor ly after the Red wine defalcation came known. This overwelmed Jacks i with grief and it is said he made some very wild state ments as a result igaist the members of the old board of directors. They were so grave that the government felt called on to stop further action on his part in the case till a searching in vestigation of the bank's condition is made. Cader tha Baeelaa Treaty. Washington, April 1. The senate, smarting under the criticism on the Russian treaty, hu decided when it is made public to make the public at the same time the text of the treaty u it came to that body for comparison's sake, and at the same time to publish the correspondence between the United States and Russian officials during its negotation. It is pointed out that the extradition clause in the treaty with Belgium is almost iden tical with tba one which hu been so criticised, and that similar clauses are common in our treatiu. A prominent republican opposed to tha treaty uys the Russian aud French treaties seem to hare been used to heel along the Bering sea negotiations. , Tafaaaalte Haau.RaJa. London, April 1. In the commons yesterday evening Gladstone made a motion that after Euter tba govern swat business have precedence. After objections by Balfour, Goscben and others, tha motion waa oarrled. Lemon, April L The goramaMnt hwuda Mat , book rcoatatninr. thai t-fltt Gnat Britain aI tt Uxcted fttatea relative to tka ImT. aaaatrsratif . .:. Aaetaef SaHls. Paris, Tax., March II. The tela tlons between tha rival Choctaw factions are still strained to the ut most, it is believed another battle will be fougbt at Antlers la a few hours. The eighteen militiamen arrested there yesterday had a hearing before the L nited Statu commissioner as soon u released they bought new nincnuiers ana men lanxea up on whiskey and boarded the north-bound Frisco train at 6 p. m. Passengers on ihe south-bound train, which met the north-bound at Antliers, say Locke had fifty men, and declared that if the tnilitamen stopped and made any lemonsration he would fire upon them lhe militia were in the smoker, with the lights out All efforts to reach Antlers by wire have faild, whldh is coo lidered a bad omen. DeputlM who went to Antlers returned reporting w quiet up to the time they left, but they say the people of Antlers fear the '.own will be burned. The Panama Scaailal. Paris, March 31. At the session ot the parliamentary commission of inquiry appointed to examine into the Panama scandal, M. Andrieux. ex- prefect of Parisian police, offered, if the government would place a special officer at his disposal, to arrest Arton, the alleged go-between in a number or the bribery transactions, within a .veek. It has been more thaa hinted hat the government was not at all inxious to have Arton arrested. tearing the effects of the revelations e might make. The government showed that they really de.sired to have the man in custody. M. Ribot, the prime minister notified Andrieux that his offer to ar rest Arton had been accepted, and tbat M. Clement, an experience officer, had been detailed to assist him in captur ing Arton. Kxcltlne; Sconce In Lincoln. Lincoln, .Neb., March 31. Nevei since the impeachment of David Butler has there been so much excltment and interest at the state Capital. Four well known men, leading citizins and high officials and one ex-official have keen accused of iiigh crimes and mis demeanors, unworthy of their reipec tive ofnees. A resolution sometime ago was introduced in the House ot representatives calling for the im peachment of Gov, Crounse u and ac complice in the Mosher frauds upon i lie state. His hasty approval of a worthless bond of the bank wu urged as suHicieut grounds for impeachment oon after an investigation of the pri son and the cell-house job led to sim il ir charges against Attorney General Hastings, Land Commisioner Hum phery, Secretary of State Allen and ex reasurer Hill. Three eoiment at 'orneys were chosen, one from each political party, to examine the evi dence against the officials and ascertain whether there wassuffclent ground up on which to bue an imneachment Yesterday their report wu submitted to the House, and wu for Impeach ment. At 4 o'clock p. m. the Senate and House met in joint session but no resolution ot impeachment wu massed. The joint convention ad- joumedat four this afternoon, when it s believed resolutions of that kind will be adopted. The cue will then be tried before the supreme court. Further investigation of the intan hospital here reveals a wonderful amount of speculation in making purchases of medicines and other necessary articles. A Trlpla Marderer Caaght. Jackson, Mich., March 31. R Irving Latimer, the triple murderer, was caught at Jerome and brought here, and wu again lodged in the peniten tiary. During the long ride from Jerome he told the story of his escape He said he had been at work on the plan over a year. He made an ex haustive study of the effect of poisons ana declared that be had no intention of killing Halght and gave Gill the ume dose as he did Haight. The dose he gave to them wu a mixture of opium and prussic acid. The intended effect wu for the opium to cause sleep and the prussic acid was to make li take effect at once. He administered u in a glass oi.iemonaae. mere wu certainly a mistake somewhere, as he had no Intention of doing anything more than to make the men sleep half an hour. The rattling of a dish when Haigbt feu disarranged all the plans, as it brought Rice to the scene. But for that he would have been able to leave the prison, drive rapidly away in a buggy, and before succeuful penult oould be organized be would have bun 200 miles away He declared that Gill wu not to blame in any way except for carelesnuu. Latimer told the story of his wond- srlngs after his escape and said he might hare escaped anyway, bnt h iprained his ankle, which handicapped his movements and settled all chance of his getting away. " Bishop Kip Vying. San Fraxcisco, CaL, March 31. Bishop Kip of tba California Episcopal diocese is reported dying. Kaln Haeelan Freaabla. Washington, March 81. To a few congreuman President Cleveland hu Intimated tbat be will call an extra session to dispoM of tha tariff question It will begin either In September or October. ;' j-;;.rf - ' Silas Jaaneea DIM karate!. , MfatTBia, March 31.-MIW LllUe Joknaoo, indicted u acceeeory to the ftaawar of Freda Ward by Alice. ptaaetl. wu dlecharged, then betas, has ettdeaoe against her. twi ttm feaeUla, Uodoloiv, ru 8a FKASCtsW, Mann 80. The uncertainty which prevails u to the probable fate of the talaads. u far as the question of an nexation to the United States is eon earned, is having a depressing effect hare, not only on general trade, but on the morale of the people, and a feeling of unrest bu arisen. The inauguration Of a new party, the Hawaiian patriotic league, last week, having for its object the avowed purpose of maintaining u far u possible, the autonomy of the country, shows bow the opposition to annexation grows with delay. Many members of the league were not at first strongly against the prospect of the government from Washington, but dispatches in certain American newspapers received here, telling o the apparent doubt existing in the minds of some of ttie people of tha United States u to the justness of accepting the proiosals of the provis ional government are having their effects on the minds of the Hawaiian natives, wbo are naturally prone to change, and it is an open question whether a plebiscite would show any thing like the vote that could have been obtained for annexation two weeks ago. A REI'LHI.IC proposed. The royalists are jubilant and openly assert that the queen expects the in formation soon that her throne will be restored with a United States protec torate. The women of the islands are almost all pronounced royalists and are a factor in politics. The influence on any proposed action is expected to count for a great deal. The disaffected militiamen, under he lead of certain officers would also like to see a change of ministry, and the proposal of a liberal newspaper that a republic be established for the interim that it is popularly supposed will elapse between the present time and that at which the Uni; d States govern ment arrives at some conclusion re specting annexation is meeting with some favor. It is believed the change could be effected by a vote of want of confidence in the ministry, accom panied by an act creating the republic. in justice to the moderation and patience of the provisional govern ment and prominent men of the annexation party it must be said, however, that they are quietly awaiting the action of the United States with faith in its good intentions and no doubt as to the satisfactory conclusion of the labors of their com missioners. JAPAN WANTS Till; ISLAND. The plea of Sir Edwin Arnold of England for a Japanese protectorate over Hawaii hasag ini called attention to the danger which a tew sinewed ob servers have foreseen, Colonel Volney Ashford, in conversation with an Asso ciated press correspondent, said he wu satisfied the officers of the Japanese warship now here would make an ef fort to annex or establish a protector ate had they not been forstalled bv Minister Stevens. Geueral A. S. Hart well also holds that if the United States withdraws its protection it will force the Islands into the bauds of either England or Japan. There are twelve to fifteen thousand Japauese in the is lands, who on a popular vote cut a powerful figure. Chief Justice Judd also thinks Japan bu designs upon the islands. The British minister, Wode house, is on friendly terms with the Japanese commissioner, and is quoted u having said lut week, "The flag of the United States will have to come down and her troops be removed." add ing that no commissioner would be sent here from the United States to inves tigate the situation. Other remarks of the British minister in liuewith this have given much offense to Americans. SULKS IN 11 KR TENT. i-i-tueen Liiiuonaiani remains se cluded and refuses to see anyone, with the exception of certain persons who stand nearest to her. To thou whom she does consent tc give audience she declines to talk about the revolution, further than to say that her entire in terest! are iu the hands of Paul Neu mann. The news of the visit of Princess Kaiulanlto America and her written appeal to the neoDle of the United States provoked only amusement at Honolulu. A story is current that the prinoew is engaged to marry the son of uavies, her guardian. CELESTIAL BEAUTY CAUGHT 1UM. 'ot the leut Interesting bit of gossip In Honolulu is the formal announce ment of the engagement of Com mander Whitney, of the United States man-of-war Alliance, to Miss Etta Ah Fong, daughter of Ah Fong, a wealthy Chlnew merchant of Honolulu. The father of the prospective bride is very wealthy and entertains her in princely and oriental style. The bride that is to be, one of a family of thirteen children, is a beautiful and accom plished girl of seventeen while the pros pective groom. Captain Whitney, hu already passed the meridian of life and Is said to be fifty years of age. The armed force from the cruiser Boston is still on shore and the Ameri can flag still floats over the govern ment building. An Afe4 Hang arlea Patrlat. Turin March :!0. -Louis Kossuth, the aged Hungarian patriot, wbo Is living in exile inthie city, received a deyatation of his fellow-countrymen and admirers. In discussing with tha deputation the political situation la Hungary, Kossuth Mid tbat tha eoekw. 1 programme of tba Hungarian government wu the key to H notary's fatnra-and that this Drorraante oagat U be aapaortsd uneondltlonally by aO lews of tte country. iewMdaWataaiv tortttniLt, Km,, March .-Th Can ey Valley bank, at Caney, Ku, wu robbed late Monday afternoon and $4,000 secured by robbers. The job is uid to have been done by two men named Starr and Xewcomb, both of whom escaped. Shortly after 1 o'clock Starr and Newcomb. entered the bank when no customers were present, and levelling revolvers at the cashier and three other employes demanded all the money on hand. The argument was unanswerable and something over four thousand dollars wu banded out. (obbers then backed out the door, after the parting assurance to the bank people that they would meet sudden death if an outcry was raise! The men hurried to their horses and bad a good start on the way to the Indian territory before the bank people recovered from their fr.'ght sufficiently to give the alarm. As soon u the matter became known a poesee wu organized and started in pursuit, but up to yesterday the robbers had not been found. Starr is one of ibe notorious Dalian gang and only recently escaped from jail, where be wu imprisoned for com plicity in the sensational Coffeyvi:le robbery last fall. Newcomb is" also a notorious criminal. A Startling DlaeoTery. Detroit, Mich, March 29. Some thing in the nature of a startling dis covery bu been made by H. F. Chip- man, a son of Congressman Chipman in regard to the title to the lands of a large part, if not the whole, of the upper peninsula of this state, and if his conclusions are borne out by more minute investigation aud sustained by the courts every acre ot land in the peninsula west of Sault Stc, Marie and Mackinac to the Montreal and Monomlnee rivers, and from 1. superior to Michigan and die straits, inclusive of city and village lots, will be handed over to the rightful owners, decendants of the Chippewa Indian nation oi the l.ake Subenor region. Chipman asseristhat his investigations have convinced him that no cession oi :ne upper peninsula lands was ver made to the United States ;overnment, aud therefore, the title leeds in every registration of deeds in in the region indicated are as worth less as so much blank paper. Compelled to Step Onl. Washington, March 2! Dr. F. O it. uair, for more than twenty-seven years, the head of the consular bureau of the state department, has been re moved. Late Saturday afternoon Sec retary uresbam sent a note to Dr. St. lair, notifying him that he desired ii i in to tender his resignation at once, ana further that his assistant, Mr. . i. Faison. of Xorth Carolina, had ilready been appointed as his successor and would assume the duties of the office. This was naturallv a suroise to Dr. St. Clair, who never before re called that his official conduct had been called into question. He sought an ex planation from the secretary. The lat ter is said to have told him that he bad been guilty of holdiug back official papers on the score that thev werd ner- sonal letters, and for this offensd hi resignation wu requested. These papers it is said, contained charges against a certain United States conaui n Germany, and instead of being reated u private by Dr. St. Clair thev should have been sent on the remUm department round. Dr. St. Clair produced the letters in question, which he claimed to be hit private correspondence, but he did not succeed in convincing the secretary that they were other than official P pers. Will Knforee tha Liir. San Francisco, March 2'J. The Jhinese vice-consul states the position of the Chinese on the Geary exclusion law u follows: It is expected that when the law goes into effect an arrest will be made. Then the matter will be taken up to the United States supreme c urt, which will enjoin the enforce ment of the law till the constitution al ty is determined. The men who framed the law are becoming daily n.ore fearful tbat it will not stand the t-rt of the courts, and if an attempt is made to enforce it before its constitu tionality is determinded the United Sates will be uked some questions by the nations of the earth which will be hard to answer. With affairs iu Hawaii in tbeir present condition, an imbroglio with China on the question of trestles is not desired by Cleveland and his cabinet. Manager Tine, of the Six Companies, uys advice received from Wuhlngton are this Cleveland a assured the Chinese minister that H e United States will do what is right about the matter. Probably Hnrder. Budapest, March 29. The body of Baron Lous Kalla, a conspicuous Hun garian politician, wu found in the River Tbeias, near Senta. Blooded Nana Baraad. Mason City, la., March 29.-TJ,. stock bams owned by Kirk Bros., burned. The famous Storm, holding the fastest pacing record, burned. Wlacaaela Father PerUae With T.. -t Hie ChUarea. Neillsvillr, Wis., March 29 Olivet Sanders, living about six mllu from NelllsTllls, discovered : that his boom wu on fire early Monday morn. inf. Ha aided his wife and one child rat and returned for two other chU iron, on thru sod tba other six years aM, and never came out alive. Tba Uuw bodies wen found in the ruins iftcc the Ore wu extinguished. XEBHA9KA NEWS. Verdon s free library now hu over 300 books. The Custer County Normal institute will open June 24. ' A Modern Woodmen camp bu bun irganized at Clay Center. An I. O. O. F. has bun instituted at Elsie with a membership of forty. - Rev. Mr. Samla of the Wayne Baptist :hurch hu resigned and will remove .o Canada. The present editor of tha MUford tebrukan is negotiating for tha Nance Jounty Journal. The Western Scythe bu been reuur ected, after a few months' repou and a brighter than ever. C. H. Harp, an eastern gentleman, alks of establishing a plant at Fremont or the manufacture of store clothes. , The right eye of Richard Grace wu nit out by a splinter of boiler iron dipped off while he wu hammering at he rivets. While hunting Chu. Aspinwall of Kearney, shot himself In the foot, t-ndering necessary the amputation )i tbat member. As a result of the revival meetings just closed in Belden a Baptist church was organized and thirty-thru joined ihe Methodist churcb. Oscar Liberty, of Alma, while hunt ing wu killed instantly by tha accident al discharge of bis gun. His parents are distracted with grief. A Columbus man asserts that all the saloons in Omaha, with thru excep i ions, were closed lut Sabbath. This Is encouraging If true. 1 he authorities of Otoe county are gunning for the man wbo deliberately defaced and ruined a monument in a cemetery in that county. Judge Jackson, appointed u Senator Allen's successor, granted four divorce at his first term in Madison. Tin petitioners were all women. The Xorth Platte Telegraph hu en tered upon the fourteenth year of lu exsitence. It is next to the oldest paper in western Nebraska. In a wolf hunt near Wallace, tin horse of Abe Melton fell upon the ridei with no worse result than to Inflict pon him several bad bruises Rev. Joseph Gr putor of th Methodist church . 'ring, hu been transferred to th vtfiu.alPennsylrenii conference because of poor health. Jjseph Lord an employee of tht sp.irney cotton mill was accident!) t in the hip while hunting ducks ne wound is not dangerous, thougb aiuful and inconvenient. A cra.y c w attacked James Mc Keu.ie of Ponca, and before the animal could be driven away it had knocknjfcv U 4 d&wf )Kiid badlv bruLse44ilsjJaaVna 1 knocking oiTrWfaTof his teeth. .lames O'Donnrl1, a brave Dadgt rnnty, walked from Hooper to Fro m nt because the couductor would no; -de in the baggage car with his dog his example of devotion is without I iraltel. II. A. Hull of Sheltou hu decided to be gii the issue of a magazine entitled Tne Iteautiful in Nature and Art" Il will be published monthly and pot upon the market at the low price of ii ents per year. Daniel Troxel, aged seventy -lire years died suddenly at his home lc Harvard. He is one of the earliesl settlers in Clay county, having taken a homestead in Marshall township twenty years ugo. He wu a charter member of the first church organized in the countv. Efforts are being made to annex tht town of Crovington to South Sioux ty, aud a proposition to accomplish :!i;.tpurposo will be voted on at the city election, April 4. If the two places unite, they will be known u South Sioux City and notorious will become an unknown place. Wallace Burch, yardmuter for the Union Pacific road at Kearney was seriously Injured while coupling cars, lie fell on the rail, and the wheel pass tdover the fleshy part of one leg,' teparating flub and bone from ankle to knee. It is thought he will recover without losing the limb. Clark Olds of Heminford fought a nad bull with no weapon but a pocket tnlfe. The weapon saved him from innibilation, though he had tha worst f the battle from start to finish. The mill occurred ten daya ago. and the nan Is still encompassed with bandages ind stripes of adhesive pluter. This paper is in receipt of theSorin ind Summer Catalogue of Tba Hub Clothing Co., of Lincoln." It is a "Special Columbian Edition" and offers e greatest inducements m clothing hat have come to our notice. Not nly are prices quoted but a niece the cloth Is shown and aahoto. engraving ot tha suit complete so that man can order with fuU understand. tag of what he is getting. In this unique way Men's Suits are shown at K.0 7.80, $8.76, 10. and tit and Boys' Suite at 11.60, $8.96, ta.90, ind 18.00! Our reader should write for lhe catalogue and see let theauelrw. As the fast Burlington train waa run ning through Culberteo at a speed of lixty-flve mites an boor to make up lut ume a wheal broke on the bondage and mall car derailed the hind end of tha tar. It ran about M0 yards on the ties, taarlag them up at a great rats. Luokl V no other cars left tha tmk a. aeyofaooupleofkeursspent MaTHO and " fain procoadad on ite way. Aoerc is a minister at Broken Bow whose name is Ply, hut note not what. Haw oc termed a fly minister