% f - > # M " M'COOK TRIBUNE. j V. M. KIAIMKLL , I'ubllsher. / McCOOK , - : - - : - NEBRASKA nebeask ! Wiiimno Watkh will have two sa loons this year. Howaicd Rai.kv of Crete was very "badly injured in a runaway. ; TinIWcCook hand has been engaged- to make music for the state fair. Two fatal eases of black diphtheria are reported in .Pawnee countv , near | Table Rock. Fkanic Ditxi.ai' fell down an elevator ! " hlutft in a ( J rand Island business house ; and was instantly killed. A l'ooit man looked for work for months and finally found it last week in Seward. The first day one of his lingers was amputated by a buzz saw. Coi.r.Mitus is afllicted with an epi demic of measles. New eases are reported daily. And out of one school a I room alone twenty-one pupils are \ 6 down. I A okaxakv on the farm of A. P. is Shephard , six miles north of Fremont , m "was burned. About GOO bushels of wheat and L'OO bushels of outs , belong- I ang to Homer Merrill , the tenant , were | 9 | "burned. J ffi Tin : body of Andrew Anderson was | M found Moating on the Gothenburg lake. f M The deceased was born near Stock- j m liolm. Sweden , and was 78 years old , jh and rather childish in disposition. The II drowning is reported as accidental. 1 \v is denied at the state house that U the legislative examining committee is I making any discoveries in the auditor ' s I oflice. Ex-Auditor Aloore says the re- I E port was started for the purpose of ; I prejudicing his cases now in the i courts. ! } Iatt Bksch. a Bellwood farmer , had > ' eight hogs stolen on as many different nights , lie watched his hog yard one I night armed with a shot gun. The ' thieves came , but his aim was poor ] and he did no more than frighten them away. 1 ' > i Hikam Smoki : , who has been feeding ! ! a flock of sheep at Hattle Creek the j , past winter , had eighty-three of them | | killed last week by dogs , lie has se- I cured the services of Attorney Kilburn J and will iiroseeute the owners of the ij dogs if they can be found. W Tiik crop acreage along the irriga- 1 tion ditches in Lincoln county this < i jf season will be unusually large , wheat { ! and corn being the principal crop. IX "Wheat at present promises a more R abundant yield than at any time since the ditches were completed. S | Two tramps were arrested in the 181 railroad yards at Beatrice and they an- S | swer closely the descriptions of the isy chaps who robbed the postoffice at | | Ames. The authorities have been wired iJH and the suspects will be held until an mm officer arrives to identify them. ' Wai.t Powell , a farmer , was found B on the IJ. & aI. right of way near H ( Siltner shot in the mouth and nearly H dead. Opinion differs as to whether it B ; is an attempted suicide or murder. K Powell is a pioneer resident of Ilamil- * m ton county. The coroner"is investigating - ing the ease. K IJuiigi.aks entered jiIvohn ' .s general jX store at Aurora and robbed the money H drawer of S3 or 54 in change and ear- K ricd away some clothing. They evi- jH dently took fright before completing H their work , as they had dropped a B Imndle of clothing at the door. There H is no trace of the robbers. Wb A caiu.oat ) of corn of G.IO bushels w was shipped from Pawnee City to New 9 York City , where it " ill be loaded into B a steamer and taken to the starving ; B people of India. This is only the first IB move on the part of citizens of Pawnee county to assist in relieving the suffer- , B ing humanity of India. 'M ' P. P. aIokgaxthalll a traveling ISj liquor salesman , who tried to force an jE entrance into the house of Mrs. Olaf jj Olson at llartington. was arrested at M "Wayne and brought before .Judge | | "Weed of llartington. Morganthalli II pleaded guilty and paid fine and costs , 8 which amounted to § 00. M Tin : body of Leonard Ouy. drowned m in the Elkhorn river on the 4th of this | month , was recovered about ir > 0 feet § from where it fell in. His clothes had p caught in a fallen tree and the body § was held under water. Some of the 1 searchers took a notion to shake this ' I tree , which released the body. ] I At Arcadia the other day when Mrs. | E. JI ill lighted the gasoline stove to ' prepare supper , the stove and tank I which feeds it became enveloped in ] ilames. Mr. Hill was present , and ' with remarkable presence of mind ] wrenched the tank from its supports ; and threw it into the street. He then j threw out the stove. Mr. Hills hands j were slightly burned , but the house I was saved. | Oxk of Uncle Sam ' s large naval guns passed through Columbus westbound last week and attracted much atten tion while in the nion I'acific yards for about an hour. It was a ten-inch "breech-loading rifle of the telescope pattern , was thirty-two feet long and was transported on a .specially built 1 ilntear supported by eight pairs of . trucks. The gun throws a projectile | wcighHu "Of ) pounds a distance of seven miles. | A Wasiii.no io.y dispatch say ' the lands comprising the abandoned Fort Ran- i dull military reservation in the O'Neill ! land oflice district in Nebraska will f.hortly be appraised preparatory to ' 7 . > eing opened to settlement. Tlie reservation - ervation includes about : t. . ( ) ) ) acres in Nebraska and something like 00.000 acres in South Dakota. In the latter ] the state has one year in which to , select lands for educational purposes. ' I nt.il that is completed the appraisement and of the 1 ment opening lands will not take place. ' The postoftiee at Arapahoe was ; "broken into last week by burglars , i Tliey entered through a window in the 3 rear of the lmilding. drilled through : the safe , broke the combination and . secured about-10 in silver. There is ) aio clue , but it. is supposed to be the work of tramps. > 1 Sam Davis , the fake advance agent ' for Ringling Uros. circus , who J swindled some Nebraska City mer chants and left with one of Ixn'i Uros. ' horses and buggy and was captured in ' Shenandoah , la. , had his hearing be fore Judge Eaton and was bound over * to the district court on the charge of 1 Jiorse stealing in the sum of § 800. ( Jl - „ , ! 10 llHf 8 MEMORY. PHILADELPHIA'S MONU MENT UNVEILED. PRESIDENT OFFICIATES. Mr. McKlnloy rays Tribute by Act and Word to the First Chief aiaRlstr.ito of the Nation Tlio 1'arado and Ceremonies in Fnlrmount 1'arlc 20,000 lllcyclcj in the Varado. Pinr.ADKr.i'niA , May 17. The mem ory of George Washington was hon ored here to-day at Fairmount park in monumental bronze and 'the cord which released the flags which veiled the figure of the first ruler of the re public was drawn by its latest execu tive while , surrounding him , were men in whose veins runs the blood of those first patriots who battled shoulder to shoulder with "Washington and with him made possible the scene enacted to-day a scene conceived end planned by those very comrades in arms and completed by their sons in peace. Major "William "Wayne , president of the Cincinnatiwho formalh- presented the monument to the cit } ' , traces his lineage straight to "Mad" Anthony "Wayne , and William W. Porter , the orator of the day , is a grandson of David liittenhouse Porter , twice gov ernor of Pennsylvania and a great grandson of General Andrew Porter , who was on Washington ' s staff in the revolution. At sunrise cannon from the batter ies of the United States troops camped in Fairmount park aroused the city , and soon steady streams of people be gan to move toward the Green street entrance to the park where the monument ment stands. The decorations through out the city were lavishand decorated stands were erected all along the line of the parade. The ceremonies proper began at noon , when the parade moved from Inroad and Spruce streets , under command - mand of Major General Snowden , and at the park passed in review before the President. PRESIDENT M'KINLEY'S TRIBUTE , The unveiling ceremony was impressively - I pressively simple. Dishop Whittaker ' opened with prayer and Major "Wayne ! I i followed with an appropriate address. i Then came the unveiling by President McKinley , marked by the national sa lute of twenty-one guns by the artil lery and by the foreign and American i war vessels in the Delaware. This conI I . eluded , President McKinley spoke as ' follows : , ' "Fellow Citizens : There i- a peculiar - j liar and tender sentiment conueeted j i with this memorial. It expresses not only the gratitude and reverence of the living , but is a testimonial of affec tion and homage from the dead. The comrades of Washington projected this j monument Their love inspired it. j Their contributions helped to build it. j Past and present share in its complc- [ 1 tion and future generation. will profit by its lessons. To participate in the dedication of such a monument is a rare and precious privilege. livery monument to Washington is a tribute to patriotism. Every shaft and statue j to his memory help to inculcate love of J ; country , encourage loyalty and estabj j 1 lish a better citizenship. God blesses I ! every undertaking which revives patriotism - j | riotism and rebukes the indifferent ! I and lawless. J "A critical study of "Washington ' s i career only enhances our estimation ' of his vast and varied abilities As J : commander-in-chief of the colonial armies - j mies from thu beginning of the war to ! i the proclamation ot peace , as president j j ! ofwthe convention which framed the j ! constitution of tlu > United States , and [ ! as the first President of the United \ States under that constitution , "Wash- \ ; ington has a distinction nVering from j j that of all other illustrious Americans. ! | No other name bears or can bear such a relation to the government. Not only by his military genius his pa tience , his sagacity , his courage and his skill was our national independ ence won , but he helped in largest measure to draft the chart by which the nation was guided , and he was the | first chosen of the people to put in motion - ! tion the new government. His was not" the boldness of martial display or I the charm of captivating oratory , but j his calm and steady judgment won men's support and commanded their j confidence , by appealing to their best I and noblest aspirations. J WASHINGTON'S CHAKACTEU. j "And withal Washington was ever so modest that at no time in his career did ' his personality seem in the least intrusive. He was above the temptations - tions of power. He spurned the sug gested . crown. He would have no honor which the people did not be stow. An interesting fact and one which 1 love to recall is that the only time Washington formally addressed the constitutional convention during all its sessions over which he presided j | in this cithe appealed for a larger • ; representation of the people in the , national House of Representatives. and his appeal was instantly heeded , j Thus he was over keenly watcufui of i ] tli' rights of the people in whose . ' ' hands was the destiny of , , ur governj j ' inent then and now. | ' "Masterful as were hi. inilitay j campaigns , iiis civil administration commandi etjual admiration His ; foresight was marvelous , his conecp- ' \ tion of the philosophy of government. ; ] his insistence upon the necessity of | ] education , morality and enlightened j . • ' - ( g - i i i ii in hi nr ii i nnri nm-TaTi r liHTr Vl ii ' citizenship to the progress and perma- nance of the republic cannot be con templated even at this period without .filling us with astonishment at the breadth of his comprehension and the scope of his vision. His was no nar row view of government. The imme diate present was not his sole concern , but our future good his constant theme of study. He blazed the path of liberty. He laid the foundation upon which we have grown from weak and scattered colonial governments tea a united republic whose domains and power , as well as whose liberty and freedom have become the admiration of the world. Distance and ime have not detracted from the fame and force of his achievements or diminished the grandeur of his life and work. Great deeds do not stop in their growth , and those of Washington will expand in influence in all the centuries to follow. TJEQUEST TO CIVILIZATION. "The bequest Washington has made to civilization is rich beyond computa tion. The obligations under which ho has placed mankind are sacred and commanding. The responsibility ho has left for the American people to preserve and perfect what he accom- I j plished is exacting and solemn. Let us rejoice in every new evidence that the people realize what they enjoy and cherish with affection the illustrious heroes of revolutionary story whose valor and sacrifices made us a nation. They live in us and their memory will help us keep the covenant entered into for the maintenance of the freest gov ernment on earth. "The nation and the name of Wash ington are insepai'able. One is linked indissolubly with the other. Uoth arc glorious , both triumphant. Washing ton lives and will live because of what ; he did for the exaltation of man , the enthronement of conscience and the establishment of a government which recognizes all the governed. And so , too , will the nation live victorious over all obstacles , adhering to the immortal .principles which Washington taught and Lincoln sustained. " ' The oration was delivered by Mr. Porter. The formal presentation of the memorial by the society to the city was made by Major Wayne to Mayor Warwick , with short addresses j j ' by both , and then the mayor trans- I ferred it to the Fairmount park com- I mission , which body exercises juris- j j ! diction over the great pleasure ground. ! The night was devoted to various j j \ phases of celebration apart from the j I dinner to the President. The wheelmen - j men ' s parade , with nearPy 20,000 in { i line , was the nrincinal feature. { ' 1 Z APRIL'S GREAT IMPORTS. . They Were TO I'er Cent Larger Than Those of a Year Ago. Washington , May 17. The April comparative statement of foreign trade issued oy the bureau of statistics shows : Merchandise , domestic ex- ports. S7G , 170,997 , increase as compared with April. 1S9G , 0.775,000 ; imports , 3101,305.101 , of whicn nearly 5u per cent was free of duty. Compared w ith April , 1S9G , there was an increase in dutiable imports of over § 20,000,000 and of over § 22,000.000 in non-dutiable merchandise. The imports last month were 70 per cent larger than in April , 1S9G. For the ten months the exports of domestic merchandise exceeded those of the same period of 1S9G by over 5151,000,1)00. ) The imports of merchan - disc during the last ten months , how ever , were over SGG.000,000 less than for the same period last year. The total exports for ten months amount to $1)01) 10. > ,4-ii and the imports , $000- 105,411. The amount of gold exported during April was S(5ii29,419 ( , and the imports S018,452. During the last ten months the excess of gold imports over the ex- ports was SSS2,10G. ; ! : : The exports of silver during April amounted to 54,390,695 , and the imports - ports S5s7,121. For the last ten months the exports of silver exceeded the im- ports by 542,313,092. General Forsytho ISetlres. Washington , May 17. Major General - eral .rames 1J. Forsythe , commanding the Department of California , was placed on the retired list yesterday , on his own application. He was con- firmed in his present rank Thursda3' . The nomination of his successor as major general will go to the Senate Monday , and it is the common under standing that Brigadier General Hliss , commanding the Department of Texas , wiil receive the nomination. Hold Kootlosrsins ; . Fort Scott , Kan , May 17. C. E. Carroll of Fulton , Kan. , was arrested last evening , charged with bootleg ging whisky at the door of the court house office of Countj' Attorney Shepard - ard , who recently closed the saloons here. For .Slaying His Son. Sf.dai.ia , .Mo. , May 17. Eddie Brink , the 14-year-old son of W. N. Brink , a well-known Kansas Seventh Day Adventist - ventist , was shot and killed yesterday morning on Muddy creek , west of town. The circumstances of the killing - , ing were so suspicious that the father - of ( the boy was arrested and lodged in \ jail , pendiug an investigation. Brink for a number of years resided at Louis ville , Kan. , three miles north of Wa- mego. where .he was engaged in the ; hotel and butcher business. 1 1I I Vow Xail and Wire Trunt. i I'lrrsuria ; . 1'a. . May 17. Manufac- ' furors of wire nails , wire and rods are about to lorm a grand combination to control the market for all three pro ducts. Jf the new combination is a go , it will practically drive out all competition - , petition in the manufacture of wire nails. All the linns who were in the nail pool have.sjgnifiod their willingness - ] ness to cnti r 'the new combination < More lloiinr for 3Ir. Dai Is. . ! Wanimor , . May 17. Assistant , Secretary < • ! iIk Interior Webster Das - ] \s ! iia- > been ; nvjcd by the local G. A. f 15. organizations of Washington lode- ' liver the Vnmori-tl day address at \ Arlington. tlc ; . ) ; comet cry. s gW3HB BB2J 22S2i. 222 S , , , -.wy * . . , . ! ft 7MiM ri Hiiiimiri DE. FALI/S TROUBLES TEXT OF THE * FORMAL PRE SENTMENT GIVEN OUT. Commlndloiier "Wolf Appears as the Com plainant Ineompetcnoy , Innubordl- natlnn and DUresppctfuI Conduct Alleged , With .Speclllcatlons Set Forth. Ferbln Minded Trmtlrut * Dinleult .r. The board of public lands and build ings has allowed the public to iuspeet .lie charges brought against Dr. C. I * . j all for misconduct as superintendent of the institute for feeble minded at Beatrice. They read as follows : Lincoln. Mav " > To the Hoard of Public Lands and Hulldliigs of t lie State of Nebras ka : Gentlemen I hereby clisirire Dr. ( ' . V. Kail , superintendent of the Nebraska insti tute for feeble minded youth , with Incompe tency , insubordination and disrespectful conduct and malfeasance in oniec. Further specifying wherein he has been guilty of the same. 1 would slate the following : Incompetency : I. The said ( ' . I * Fall has shown himself unable and incompetent as superintendent of said institute to conduct the same in a suitable and satisfactory man ner , and has shown himself unable to coi.iuet Mie said institute in such manner as to pro mote harmony among the employes theieof. 'J. He has shown himself incompetent to properly care for thochildion placed in said ' Institut 'ion and under his care and as a icmiIi \r.o of said childion have UM their live- , ivhile he lias been in charge of the said insti tution. Insubordination. 1. The said C. V. Fall as superintendent or said institution has failed mid refused to comply wilh the orders and directions of the boa id of puiilic lands and buildings in the following particulars.i / : ( a ) .M. .1. Kennedy of Norfolk was designated by said boaid on Fob. 1U , 1K 7. as a night watchman for said institution , but the said tJ. I' . Fall has failed and refused to permit the said M..I. Kennedy to enter upon his work , ( b ) Fied Allen of Butler county was on February 1 . ts' .lT , selected by the said boaid as supervisor in said institution , but the said ( ' . V. Fa. : soon thereafter leduced the said Fied Allen to a position as attendant , at a less salrr > than that of supervisor and placed in saiC institution as supervisor a citizen of Gler.- wood , la. , all without , the knowledge or con sent of said boaid. ( c ) The board of public lauds and buildings on February 1L' . 1M > 7 wdor. 'd that t he steward in said institution 3houId keep the books theieof , but the sab ? C. I' . Fall , in violation of said order , refused * o permit t he steward to keep said books , bul without , the knowledge or consent of tin. board cf public lands and buildings employed II. Bush to act as bookkeeper for said institu tion , ( d ) On Mav 5. 1W > 7. said C. I' . Fall re fused to permit C. W. l'helps. who has there tofore been duly chosen by said board a ? steward for said institution , to enter saifi building for the purpose of performing Ills duties as such stowaid. ( o ) On t lie 5th day May , lS' .i- . the said C. IV Fall refused to per mit J. V. Wolfe , chairman of the board of lands and buildings , to enter said Suhliu uildiug or to go through the same L * . his official capacity , but attempted to e\clccli him therefrom. Disrespect fill conduct : 1. On May . : ? ? : the said C. 1' . Fall did attempt to exclude C. V. Wolfe , chairman of the board of public lands and buildings , fiom said Institution , and did cause , incite.and permit the other employes and attendants at sueh institution to use disrespectful language toward V. W. Phelps. II. A. Givens and .1. V. Wolfe , chair man of the said board of public lands and buildings. I further charRC tJuit t' ' < > con duct of snid t' . I\ Fall , while .superintendent Of said institution , has been such as to bring Baid institution into disgrace and disrepute , and has been contrary ft ) and against the best interests of said institution.it- > inmates and the state of NeW'ska. .1. V. Woi.ke. lloasts of Her Nebraska Homo. Washington special to the Lincoln douinal : For several yeiK. st Cen. Jj. W. Colby of JJeatrice. Nebraska , has been protecting and supporting at his home in this city the little Indian girl , Zintka Lanuni. whom the general is reported to have taken from its dead mother ' s arms on the battlefield of Wounded Knee. This was in the clos ing days of September , seven years ago , and the Indian child has since Chat time been cared for by General and Mrs. Colby , as if she was their own child. "Lost JJird , " ' which is Zintka ' s name rendered into English , seems to enjoy living in Washington , although her restless Indian spirit lias not j t Cettled down to eastern methods am eastern manners. She plays w ith the children of the neighborhood on the street and in the house , but despite the warnings snd admonitions of .Mrs. Colby , is not always choice in the se lection of her companions. Ziutka. being of a dark complexion naturaUy , perhaps , sees no crime in the dusky skins of the darkey children , who are almost as numerous in Washington as the whites. Jt is Mrs. Collw ' s constant care to guard her from association with children with whom she should not associate and to aid her and in struct her in the rules of propriety. Mrs. Colby being a prominent educa tor and editor of the Woman ' s Tribuc ? , ) s well able to instruct children in the A'ay they should go and is doing her best for little Miss Lanuni. Xintka is quite popular w ith the boys and girls of her acquaintance , to all of wkon she frequently boasts of her home ii Nebraska , which , she sometimes says , she likes better than Washington. She is a very reserved child and sel dom speaks unless first addressed , and then only in short sentences. Decause if her peculiar ways , romantic history ? nd of the fact that she is a full blooded Indian , she is one of the at tractions of her neighborhood. The Doctor Found Cudgeons. Seward Ulade : "Dr. " Monroe , the "Quaker " ' tapeworm tamer , came to grief in York , and lit out for greener fields. The minions of the law got after him for practicing medicine with out ' the required authority of law. He carried ' au'ay a good healthy "wad"of "boodle " ' from York , as ho did from David City and Seward. Nearly every community i has run the gauntlet of the washing machine fiend , the patent sickle i sharpener , the well auger , fence machines ' , and other fakes too numer ous ' to mention , and yet a kind provi dence permits us to live. How thankful we ought to be with all our willingness to bite at every fraud that comes this way. that the fool-killer has boon too busy elsewhere to make us a visit. The Burlington railroad has em ployed from l. )0 to I7. > men at Teeum- seh for the past two weeks , putting the road in passing condition after the Hood. It will be be quite a while before - fore the bed will be again made sub stantial. Hank at Kradsliaw Close * . The other morning as the businc-i * men and citizens appeared on tln- fitreet their attention was drawn to a placard tacked to the door of the Jlradshaw bank beaming notice to the effect that the institution was in ' the hands of the state banking board. Particulars at this time are unattain able , but as the concern has always been conducted in a careful and con servative manner it is believed that the assets will equal the liabilities ' Hard times and poor collections ar TPjpjiosed to be the cause. ' THE UNION PACIFIC. Nothing Certain an to When the Ittmil Will lie Sold. General Solicitor Kelly of the I'liion Pacific system will return within the next few days from New York City , says the Omaha Bee. where he has been engaged for a month in legal matters connected with the foreclosure of the government's lien on the U. I\ railway. Considerable testimony has boon taken in regard to the interests involved in the foreclosure before • Judge Cornish , special master in Chancery for the Union Pacific Bccciv erships. In regard to the time of the actual foreclosure sale , there have been all kinds of conjectures. Guesses on the date ranging all the way from May 10 , next Monday , until .January next , have been made and printed. It was a Bos ton publication that started the story about the sale ' s being set for May 10. and cited Mcssers. Mink and Amos as authority for the statement. It is evi dent now that the report was a pure canard , and was directed at the time by those familiar with nion i'acific matters. Said a man who is in a position to judge of the progress that is being made toward foreclosure to a Bee re porter : "In my opinion it's a goo 'd , safe bet that I ho foreclosure of the Union I'acific railway will not take place this year. But my opinion is no better than yours or that of any one else. It's all a matter of conjecture and one man ' s guess is as gooil as an other. Every few days a statement setting the time of the sale is pub lished , but as a matter of fact there is not a man under heaven who can tell when the foreclosure will take place. "I understand that Master-in-Chnn- cery Cornish has been in New York taking testimony from holders of vari ous liens against the Union I'aoific other than that of the government's. . Now , after all that testimony has been taken , its going to be some time before the master will give his report on the cases to the court. Even if these re ports were accepted by all parties con- concerned and at once confirmed by the federal courts it would take a month or more , but it is pretty well understood that there will be no pro tests from the holders of certain lions. It is natural in a case like this , where their intererts might be adversely affected , that there should arise objec tions. These disagreements w ill cause more delay and even after that there are a half dozen legal processes neces sary before the sale can take place , in cluding the advertising of the sale for sixty days. "That's the reason I seriously doubt if there Avill be any foreclosure this 3ear. Put one guess is as good as an other. There are even those who are almost willing to wager that the fore closure sale of the Union Pacific rail way will never take place at all. The receivership may. they argue , be ter minated within a. year , or possibly somewhat loss time , but the road will be operated by the owners in the way they think the most profitable. If any man tolls you when the foreclosure " proceedings will be terminated , you may politely tell him he is mistaken , for there is no one. absolutely none , who can do anything more than hazard a guess on it. There are as many legal points in the foreclosure proceedings as there are points to a pineapple , and it will take some time to solve them all. That's why 1 say one guess is as good as another. " lleet Sugar Interest. Washington dispatch : The beet sugar interests are hero in full force , represented by Henry T. Oxnard of Nebraska , and are working for the abrogation of the reciprocity treaty with Hawaii , which admits Hawaiian sugar free into this con try and thus competes with domestic grown sugars. Mr. Oxnard. who is one of the shrewd est managers in the sugar interests in Washington , is strongly opposed to any annexation of Hawaii , because it is a sugar-producing country , whose pro ducts might come in competition with those grown on our soil. For the same reason he is working vigorously to secure an amendment to the tariff which would defeat the free admission of sugar under existing treaties. Mr. Oxnard printed a long and interesting statement in the 1'ost a fc-w days ago showing that the treaty was a lopsided arrangement by which Hawaii received most of the advantages and the United States all of the disadvantages. He is very confident that when the tariff bill is reported from the finance com mittee that the Hawaiian treaty will be one of the subjects discussed and that enough republican members of the senate will be found to secure its abrogation. Mr. Oxnard is indefatigable in inter viewing senators and representatives and has spent the greatest part of the winter in working upon the sugar schedule. Ho is known as an expert and with his assistant. E. Ham. for merly Beprescntative Laird's private secretary and private messenger for Senator Manderson. lias prepared and printed many of the ablest arguments and pamphlets presented to th" house and senate in favor of the high duty upon sugars and proper protection for American re fineries. IIonor for an Kx-Nohraskaii. 1'ort Townsend ( Wash. * dispatch : Private advices from Washington indi cate that C. > . .lolmson of Alaska will be the next governor of the district. He was sent from Nebraska to Alaska during Harrison ' s administration to fill the position of United .states at torney for Alaska , and is very popular. .Joseph Herrod of North l'latte lias lost several head of cattle > n his farm south of town by a disease which ap pears in the shape of running sort's on ' the hind logs , followed by a dropping off of the hoofs and later l y the death of the animal. j A a\orabt * Indication. The mortgage record in Buffalo , , the Kearney Hub. county says is not i what it used to be. Formerly the re cord showed principally filings and few released , but now the order is reversed ( and the releases exceed the tilings h\- • ' aliotit four to one. During the month of April the actual "farm releases ex- , recded the new filings by more than < thirteen thousand dollar * , and during ' tile same period the actual releases f ' mortgagoson city property exceeded the now filing by about twelve thousand I dollars. In the matter of chattel ! mortgages the proportion of release& ] is still greater. t : mes = aseMMWMMMm - , 1 Croat Decrease In Immlcratlon. & H Washington , May 15. The returns. T H received by the immigration bureau1 H during "tlie'last several months show : t < | B marked falling off in the number of | M arrivals. During the nine months J. - Wended ended March 31 , there were 142,041 , uh j\M \ compared with :209 , : iO for the J& * $ M period in ISM. During April tK. ne „ f W crease at New York alone was 1J,4h : > , jM and during the first eleven days in the V present month 10,800. Commissioner General Stump estimates that the decrease - W crease for the entire country during | the fiscal year ending June 30 will not. M be less than 93.000. M TO SAVE DURANT. ,1 s-ciiHutlonaal Allldnvit or n Convict of S'au OtifMitin I'riHon. V San Fkancisco , Cal. , May lo. Theodore - B odore Durrant , under death sentence. | H for the Emanuel Baptist church intir- B tiers , through his attorneys , asked jM Governor Pudd to-day to pardon him- on the ground that the real murderer j J of Blanche Lament had at last eon- < U fessed his crime. J The lawyers declare they have not fl been hoaxed , nor is it their purpose to fl impose upon the executive. They insist - H sist that in John Kosenberg , a convict J M in San Quentin prison , they have found J the man who is guilty of at least ono- k of the Emanuel Baptist church mur- * M Rosenberg has made a sworn confession - J fession before a notary publio and in / > J the presence of several witnesses that J ? A he killed Blanche Lament at the instigation - ? gation of a stranger and in considera- \JF tion of the payment of S700 for his I work. Bosenberg is a Russian sailor. He arrived here on a sailing vessel from * Hamburg , Germany , during the last h week of March , JS05 , or on the first W' day of April. He is now serving a term for horse stealing. EX-SENATOR COKE DEAD. An Kt-Covcrnor and for Three Terms / aiembor of the Upper JIoiko. J Waco , Texas , May 15. Senator j Richard Coke died at i : . " ( ) o ' clock this J morning. His body will lie in statu M until Sunday morning , when a state M funeral will be held. Richard Coke was born at Williams- / | burg , Va. . March 13 , IS O. He was / educated at William and Mary college , ' and was admitted to the bar when 21. In 1S50 lie came to Waco and had lived here since. He entered the Confeder ate service as a private and became a < captain. In June , IbOtJ , he was- appointed a district judge , and M\ \ was elected judge of the su- | pre me court Jjy the Democratic J party the following year. After * B r having held the position one year he , ) ' 1 was removed by General Sheridan "as J an impediment to reconstruction. " In jM ls73 h'j was "Sectcd governor of Texas 4H by a majority of IOL' ,000. He resigned ' B in 1377 , after having- been elected to the United States Senate , to succeed M Morgan C. Hariil'on. Republican. He ' J was re-elected in ISf. 'S and m 1SSD. In 1 lM r he was succeeded by Senator / 'j Chilton. * ? J Thought without purpose is like seed'r > fl spilled upon the ground. H The Teb-plione Monopoly. M The patent issued to E. Berliner of 1 Washington. D. C. Nov. 17. " ! > L for M seventeen years , is the sul > ject of much ifl litigation and newspaper comment. M The application was filed .June 4 , lb77. and consequently was pending in the 1 T. Is. patent oflice fourteen years. The m law allowed two years for the applicant - M cant to reply to adverse action of o.v 9 aminer and this in a measure accounts 1 for the interval between the date of MM filing the application and granting-the | patent. MM The present rules lin.it action by the fl applicants to six months in place of two years as heretofore allowed. The validity of the Berliner patent fl has been sustained by the highest A tribunal that has jurisdVtion and the claims are generic and broadly cover MM essential features of the Boll telephone MM that is in general use and supposed to WM be prblic property after the expiration ' mW of the original Boll patent. The Boll 19 telephone company , as assignee of the 9 Berliner patent , will endeavor to maintain - tain the monopoly of the telephone ton W years longer * M Valuable information about obtain- r 9 ing. valuing and soiling patents sent I free to any address. • fl Printed copies of the drawings and . | H specifications of any United .States < .4H patent sent upon receipt of : . - , cents. ' | H Our practice is not confined to Iowa. MM Inventors in other suites ean have our S service upon the same terms as Hawk- M Tlio * . O. axh.I. Ralph Oiwig. A \M Solicitors of l : itcnts. , A\j. Des Moines. la. , Mav V-i , l. fj7. . WM t.nistock ami I'Konuci : aiakkkt. M Quotations Ironi > Vu Yorl * . Chi iSt > . St. 4 , L\ . . , , I.ouiv. Oiiii ; ami KK.-uIhtc \ 9Mt OMAHA. / / ? V Hutter-Creainery separator . ; S > p. I [ ' " " i'pV. . " ' ' ' full"i' country 11 * J2 ' * M < li7el < ens I.ne. pei ' - ' n. . " , ' ; 'A . ' . ) * fl Lemons -Tlinire Messinav. 75 tfX" = MM llmieyI'aney white i : aney V Onions i , per hit ' , . .VS > , Ij % fl , , , , , , , , " | N"y : , iNrt .KIa"kwl I Ol.UOCS - o- ) , 1 . > ' M , A llay-rpland. per , „ „ . . . ' . ; . ; ; ; 7 , g - % V Apples , eli.uoper bb ! 3 ro • . , SOCTII OMAHA ' Bov'v-l.lKhl mi\ed. . . . sToi'K MAttkW .5 ; .v . , _ , Iteef Steers. ; . - ' -j g • • < - M Bulls. - ; J : * @ ? m ! . . , „ , ; : : . : ; : ; ; ; 5 ; g. 1 < • " . W C3000 J * Heifers- : : . ; - ; : : ; ; . * ) Mockers and l'e.d. . . ; : ? - H if Hicep-Wes.erns. . . . „ : : : ; " " " } " @ < ? ! ( Sheep-Lamb- . . . . riJ@i'- { % Tf , Wheat No.riSpnn- - , „ _ . Corn , per bit. . . ! / ; ' © 7 , Oats per bu @ ' S , Lard-Per I. . . lb. . " . h . " , g § 70 / * HojM-UenM l'a.-Mie " • . 4' • " g 4 CO / Sheep-Lamb- , . . . . : { © -I U5 _ jf / Wheat-No. - red. uhue- K'K , Corn No. - . ' . G ® 81 OaLs-Xo. W © ; kiv l'ork 2H fo 2.IU Lu-.i : • . ; • . ; . ; ; tSU10- : KANSAS rVrv " ° --450 . . , t ) lieat-Xo. • _ • . hard. . ll X' • , c. . SSS S : ! : : : : ' $ fclieep-CIIpped. . . . * - • * < " 0 © a C2 y4 " * 4 W < & 4 00 J