f \ . - > - - I : ; ' M'COOK TRIBUNE. ' . g' i ' . V AI. KIMMKLL , Publisher. * ; . ' . McCOOK , - : - - : - NEBRASKA . = NEBRASKA. < Keajiney's assessed valuation U tG18,947. York college turned out seventeen ' graduates. Tiikre were three graduates from Hastings college. The new creamery at Carroll is com pleted and in operation. > In some sections of Nebraska cut- 4 "worms have done mucli damage to corn. The funeral of ex-Senator Hitchcock \ -at Tecumseh was very largely at tended. Grand Island will abolish wood * .sidewalks and no more of that charac ter will be built. The state school apportionment of * 15302,000 is now being disbursed to the various counties. A waoon passed over the body of 'little Jlolcy Summers of Bradshaw • which caused his death. The tow mills of the Nebraska 'binder ' twine eorapanj' at Fremont are " ' Tunning day and night. National Independence day will be -elebrated at the Crete Chautauqua as sembly this summer on July 5. There is not a vacant store in the * ity of Humboldt. Several new busi ness enterprises are now under way. The cream separator at Valparaiso , received on Monday 14,290 pounds of milk , and about 10,000 each day since. " • Fred Hannah , Omaha , out of wosk and despondent , took his life by poi son , leaving a wife and seven chil dren. Burglars visited Red Cloud , forced nn entrance into the residence of G. R. Chancy and secured quite a lot of val uables. Rev. Worth left his home at Platte , Center on Saturday and within thirty- \ six hours drove seventy-five miles and delivered four sermons. That's en ergy. At Sutton a mad dog after biting three dogs and a cow was killed. The three bitten dogs were also killed and the cow tied up to await the develop ments of the poison. The telephone line recently erected by a local company at North Platte is in working order and begins business ivith fifty-five subscribers , who are charged § 2 per month. Says the Bradshaw Republican : "There is now standing in cribs at this place , 152,800 bushels of corn , be sides the immense cribs owned by the farmers in the vicinity of this town. " A strong movement has been inau gurated in AYeeping Water toward rid ding ' the town of fallen women. A committee of five has been appointed to proceed systematically to that end. The supreme court of Nebraska has adjourned for the summer vacation • without passing on the Omaha charter cases. This will send the cases over t -until September as the court does not sit in July nor August. i Mrs. John Alder , wife of a farmer living a mile from Fairbury.committed suicide by swallowing carbolic acid. She was about 45 years old and the mother of twelve children , the young est only a few months old. Rev. J.B. Maxfield , presiding elder , of Omaha , was very seriously injured at Arlington. While entering the res idence of Rev. Stambaugh , he slipped and fell heavily upon his face , cut ting his nose and severely bruising his face. News was received at Hastings of the drowning of Arcule Guilmette of . that place at New York city. He was • well known at the state university at Lincoln and was reared from boyhood in Hastings. He had a sister there and one at Lincoln. An order has been made in Washing ton by the superintendent of the free delivery system to increase the carrier force of the Omaha postoffice by five carriers. This order is made on ac count of the showing of the showing of the office. While building a fire in a kitchen stove in North Platte , Mrs. John Schar- mann 's clothing caught fire and she was frightfully burned , her clothing "being almost entirely burned off. Her wounds are serious , yet it is thought she will recover. Willie Crandall. 17 years old , son of E. Crandall of Ainsworth , was shot with a shotgun while out- riding in a cart. There was a hole in the bottom of the cart and the gun slipped through breech downward , and was discharged "while he was trying to pull it back through the hole. Part of his collar bone was shot away. There is hope of ' his recovery. The Masonic grand lodge in ses sion in Lincoln last week elected officers as follows : Grand master , J. Ii. Dinsmore , Sutton ; deputy grandmaster -master , Frank H. Young , Broken Bow ; grand senior warden , Win. W. Keyser , Omaha ; grand junior warden , A. W. Krites , Chadron ; treasurer , Chris Ilartraan , Omaha ; secretary , W. R. Uowen , Omaha. The farmers' excursion from Illinois arrived in Hastings last week. The -visitors were met at the depot by local xeal estate men , who escorted them to the Lyndall hotel. Next morning they -were driven about the city , after -which they were taken out into the country to see the farms. The excur sion is the result of the efforts of the local real estate men to combine with • the eastern real estate men. George T. Harding , who suicided at Bet Springs , Ark. , was a former resi dent of Beatrice and a brakeman on the U. P. While there he and his wife v lad trouble , and after moving to Val paraiso tiiey separated , a young man * who followed them being the cause of their domestic unhappiness. In attempting to beard a freight train moving at the rate of eighteen or twenty miles an hour between the .stations of Cairo and St. Michael , Dwight Hamilton missed his hold and fell under the wheels and his right ; foot was badly crushed and mangled. He was taken to Ravenna for medical . treatment. . . . ' in i , m i < i rjii in i > Mii > .m iiB aewB MB * a a waB TO FIGHT BUTTERINE. THE WESTERN INTERESTS GET IN LINE. Ex-Gov. Hoard of Wicconnln at the ITead of the Movement Dairymen Propose to Go State Politic * With a Big Vote Farmers Unlisted la the Conflict. To Drive Oat ISutterlne. Chicago , June 21. The creamery proprietors , the butter dealers and the dairy farmers of the big butter pro ducing states Wisconsin , Illinois , In diana , Iowa , Minnesota , Nebraska , Kansas , Michigan and the Dakotas are being formed into a compact fight ing organization of not less than 500 , - • 000 , and possibly more than 1,000,000 voters and vote controllers are being pledged in writing to work unceasing ly for legislation that will prevent the coloring of butterine. It is proposed , before the legisla tures of these dairy states meet again to raise a great fund to drive the but terine manufacturers from their strongholds , and if the industry finds loopholes in state legislation the or ganization will move on Washington. W. D. Hoard of Fort Atkinson , Wis. , formerly governor of Wisconsin , and president of the National Dairy union , is giving the movement all the benfit of his organizing ability and political acumen. Charles Y. Knight of Chicago cage , secretary of the National Dairy union and manager of theanti-butter- ine fight in the Illinois legislature , is secretary and treasurer of the new movement. The National Dairy union has nearly 4,000 creameries in the north Missis sippi valley , and. around these the union is building up its fighting or ganization. Each creamery has on an average of 100 patrons , or 400,000 in all. The price paid by the creameries to these farmers for milk is regulated by the price of butter. As extinction of competition with butterine raises the price of milk , it is expected that the 400,000 farmers will rally against the butter substitute. The farmers who .work up their milk into butter in their own dairies outnumber those who sell to creameries. They are expected to take an interest in this move ment. The same view is held of the farmers who ship milk to the cities , the price of their pro duct being influenced always by the price it will bring at the creameries Then there are creamery operators and their employes , and the men who handle butter in the big cities , the commission men all these are inter ested intone way and another in work ing for butter and against butterine. This indicates why the active spirits of the National Dairy union are figur ing on a political army of 1,000,001 men or more. The creameries are doing the en listing. Every such institution throughout the butter-producing states of the West is being supplied with enrollment blanks , to be signed by their farmer patrons. These pledge themselves to work for anti-butterine legislation and to fight "the men in high places who are unfriendly to the dairymen. " The signers also author ize the creamery manager to deduct 25 cents a month from their bills as a contribution to the campaign fund. This fund will in a short time , it is thought , amount to § 1,000,000. STATE OF CUBAN TRADE VFar Canscs a Loss of 883,000,000 Dar ing the Past Year. Washington , June 21. A significant report on our trade with Cuba from 1387 to 1807 , prepared by Cb ef Hitch cock of the foreign markets section of the Agricultural department , has been promulgated by Secretary of Agricul ture wilson. The statistics show very clearly the effect of present hostilities in Cuba upon the commercial inter course of the United States with that island. During the last fiscal year , 1SD6 , the total value of our Cuban trade aomunted to only § 47,548,110 as com pared with S102S64,204 in 1S9J , the year preceding the breaking out of the war. This was a falling off of more than 50 per cent in three years. Re turns already available for the cur rent fiscal year indicate still further decline , the records for the nine months ending March 31 , 1SL 7 , placing the total value of the trade for that period as low as S14,92G,817. At this rate the figures for the fiscal year will hardly reach S20,000,0 ( 0 , or less than " one-fifth the value recorded for 1893. Killed by a Pot of Coffee. Columbia , Mo. , June 21. The -2- year-old child of W. D. Watts of Dew- ley Mills , near Columbia , was acci- dently killed yesterday. While sit ting with her parents at the dinner table a pot of coffee was turned over and its contents so frightfully scalded the child that she died in a few miu. - utes. Committed Suicldo After Praylnff. Covington , Ky. , June 21. Imme diately after family prayer this morn ing Miss Amelia Baer , aged 22 years" , went into the parlor and cut her throat from ear to ear with her broth er's razor. There was no known cause for the suicide. The coroner's verdict was temporary insanity. Loomli Defends Himself. Washington , June 21. Charles A. Loomis. lafe Republican candidate for Congress in the Second district of Mis souri , called on Assistant Postmaster General Bristow yesterday to answer certain charges to the effect that he has been using his political standing in furtherance of an office brokerage business. The interview lasted some time , and Mr. * Loomis male : a strong impression on the assistant postmas ter general , and gave a satisfactory explanation of the matters touched upon in the charges. wmmammmmmmmmmmmmammammmmmmmmaa THE CUBAN POLICY. Denials By the State Department that It Is Fixed. Washington , June. 21. It can be stated upon the best authority that all the publications purporting to outline - line the Cuban policy of Presi dent McKinley that have been made up to the present time have been in disregard of the fact that up to this moment the case of the United States government has not yet been made up. and that even in tiie discus sions of the subject of the relations to Cuba that have taken place in the cabinet circles the point has not baen reached where it could be said that the executive had finally determined upon any certain plan of action. At the state department an author itative denial is given of the statement cabled to London that General Wood- • ford , the newly appointed United ' States minister to Spain , has been in structed to intimate to the Spanish authorities that if Spain should refuse to grant freedom to Cuba she must bo prepared to yield to force. General Woodford's instructions will be much more complex than are usually given to an American minis ter. Not only will he be charged with all of the details of the Ruiz case , which in itself promises to "present formidable legal problems , but he will also take with him all evidence neces sary to establish the losses suffered by United States citizens in Cuba from the continuance of the war , with much other data in support of the sugges tion of this government that it can scarcely continue to countenance a prolongation of present conditions. Upon the answer returned by the Spanish government to these repre sentations by General Woodford will depend the course to be followed by the United States. Before leaving for Madrid General Woodford will hold several confer ences with Special Commissioner Cal houn. houn.NICHOLAS NICHOLAS FORD DEAD. An Ex-Congressman ami Once Prominent Missouri Politician. St. Joseph , Mo. , June fcl. Ex-Con gressman Nicholas Ford , who for twenty years was a prominent mer chant of this city , and at one time a national figure as a Greenbacker , and who also ran for governor on that ticket , died last night at the home of his daughter , Mrs. E. A. McDonald , at Miltonvale , Kan. Mr. Ford was elected to Congress in the famous "shoo-fly * ' campaign. He served only one term , being succeeded by James M. Burnes. In 1884 Mr. Ford ran for governor against Mar- maduke. He was the regular Repub lican nominee and was indorsed by the Greenbackcrs and one or two minor organizations. He received 207,939 votes , against 218.8S5 for Marmaduke. CONSULAR PLACES. The President Makes a Number of Im portant Diplomatic Nominations. Washington , June 21. The - President dent to-day sent the following nomi nations to the Senate : Charles L. Cook of Pennsylvania , to be consul general at Dresden , Saxony ; George F. Lincoln of Connecticut , consul at Antwerp , Belgium ; Walter Schumann of New York , consul at Mayencc , Ger many ; Charles E. Turner of Connecti cut , consul general at Ottawa , Can ada ; Hector DeCastro of New York , consul general at Rome , Italy ; Hilary S. Brunet of Pennsylvania , consul at St. Etiennc , France ; Addison Davis James , marshal of the district of Ken tucky. * WOMAN'S RARE COOLNESS. Mrs. Kurtz of Peoria Saves Herself and Child on a Trestle Under a Train. Peoria , 111 , June 21. A train of cars was pushed into a large crowd of people who were standing on the trestles of the Peoria Terminal rail road watching men drag the river for the body of William Mittendorf , who had been drowned. Nancy Berry , aged 17 years , was run over and fa tally hurt. Mrs. Lizzie Kurtz , wife of a carpen ter , lay face downward on the trestle and held her babe between the ties while the entire train oassed over her. She was rescued from her perilous po sition in safety just in time , for she was about to drop her babe to the water below. Went Collecting With a Gun. Weir City , Kan. , June 21. Thurs day night G. W. Rosark , a miner liv ing near Kansas and Texas shaft No. 47 , came to town and got drunk , leav ing without paying John Poteau , the jointkeepea. Yesterday afternoon Po teau rode to Roark's house and asked Charlie Roark to call his father out. He refused to do so. Roark heard them and came out , when Poteau shot three times from his horse , fatally wounding him in the stomach. Poteau then snapped his pistol three times at the boy , and escapee Wall Paper Dealers May Unite. New York , June 21. A convention of wall paper dealers will be held at Niagara Falls , N. Y. , on June 29. An effort will be made to form the entire retail vail paper trade of the United States and Canada into one association. It is also proposed that the retail dealers form an international organ ization. Many European Fishermen I.o t- Antwerp , June 21. Seven Belgian fishing boats have been lost , with all their crews , and twenty fishing boats have been lost off Scheviningen , on the Dutch coast. In the pocket of Superintendent Morrison , who was recently killed at Cygnet , Ohio , in a nitro-glycerine ex plosion , there was found a silver dollar lar in the , face of which a ten-cent piece had been embedded by the force of the explosion. On the other side of the dollar is the plain imprint of the opposite side of another dollar ' " * - ' - - - ' " - " - - - - - irr'ii i r ii hi in 1 1 it-ii irm i- ! | 'p"--- , THE BARTLEY TEIAL ' ' C 'OURT OVERRULES THE MO TION TO DISMISS. * Jud e Baker Has no Doubt About the Sulllclency of the Information A Knockout Mow to the Defense How It was accepted by Mr. Hartley. The Motion Overruled. In the Hartley trial at Omaha , coun sel consumed much time in making arguments on the motion for a dis missal of the case. The motion was overruled by the court and the defense was ordered to proceed. As soon as arguments were completed Judge Baker passed upon the motion. He said there was no question in his mind about the sufficiency of the informa tion ; the question was , does the proof support the allegations and is a credit in a bank money ? If a bank credit is money , that settled the whole ques tion. The judge said that of the mil lions of dollars on deposit in banks only a very small proportion was in actual cash. The business of the country was done by means of checks and drafts , and in many cases not a cent of actual money passed , but no one could say that no money was in volved. The state treasurer could not say that because he embezzled the checks and drafts sent in by the. vari ous counties that he did not embezzle money. The court said that the de posit in the Omaha National was not a loan , as spoken of by Judge Post in the Hill case. The bank did not bor row the money , it simply said it would safely keep the money and pay it over on demand. The state depository law provided that the state treasurer must deposit the money in a bank. When he did so the money lost its identity , but the treasurer still had control over it , and when he turned his office over to another he was supposed to have the same money. "When Hartley drew the check in payment of the warrant I am satisfied he did not convert the check , " said Judge Baker. "If the check had been presented and had not been paid then it would not have been embezzlement. When he drew the check he author ized Millard to take from the public money that amount of money. When the money was paid to Millard it was the state ' s money to be disposed of as he disposed of it by placing it to the credit of another bank. If Bartley had had the money in a vault and had said to Millard , 'Here , take this money out of tnis vault and do thus and so with it , ' it would have been the state ' s money that he was disposing of , but Bartley took another method and the transaction was by means of a check. The check was an order authorizing the payee to take the money for him and such transaction makes the whole transaction Bartley ' s act. The case might have been pleaded differently , but I think the information is suffi cient and the motion is overruled. " This termination of % he matter was a knockout blow to the defense. The attorneys had placed great reliance on the conviction that the court would uphold them in their contention against the sufficiency of the informa tion and the decision of the court caused a falling of countenances on the side of the table occupied by the defendant and his attorneys. Bartley , during the trial , says the Omaha Bee , has preserved a calm and unruffled exterior except when a smile would pass ever his. face at some bright point made by his attorneys , but after the ruling of the court on this motion his face showed signs of mental strain , and the ruddy , healthy hue which has suffused his cheeks heretofore , was re placed by a pallor which betrayed his anxiety. While the betrayal of feeling on the part of Bartley 's counsel was less ap parent in their faces than in his case , the manner in which the introduction of proof commenced by the defence showed that the blow had been a se vere one. Weekly Crop Bulletiu. ilB8lHil\ b wm i The past week has been about 2 per cent cooler than usual in the western counties and about 2 per cent warmer than usual in the eastern counties ; the average for the state as a whole has been about normal. The rainfall has been below normal in the northern and eastern counties and above normal in the greater part of the central counties and the south ern counties west of Pawnee. The past week has been the best growing week of this season. Small grain in parts of the eastern portion of the state has suffered slightly from lack of rain , but generally grain is in excellent condition. Rye is beginning to ripen and the harvest will soon be gin. Winter wheat is in full head and promises a full crop in the south-cen tral counties. Corn has made good growth but is still very backward. Some little replanting is still being done. Even with the replanting that has been done the stand of corn is still generally poor. The alfalfa harvest has been delayed and some damage done to the crops by the heavy rains. Cherries and strawberries are ripe and are generally an excellent crop. Apples are blighted considerably and the indications now seem to be that the crop will be below the average. The New University Building- . The state board of regents of the University of Nebraska was in session last week inspecting plans for the new engineering building , for which the legislature appropriated 830,000. The decision was reached by accepting the plans of P. W. Grant & Co. of Beatrice. The other firms to present plans were : C. F. Beindorff & Co. , Omaha ; Irvine & Co. , Omaha ; J. Tyler & Son , Lincoln ; G. W. Schaeffer , Lincoln ; C. C. Ritten- house , Hastings , and Henry L. Page & Co. Chicago. Last week the product of the Raven aa creamery was 9,930 pounds. i i ii. - ; . i.n . . . , + Tm , a * . ; , - , , v. , ri - > , mi.i mw LILIUOKALANI TALKS. Annexation Declared Not Desired by Xatlva.l American * Blamed. Wasiiin a ton , Juno 1. In an inter view , ex-Quccn Liliuokalunl said of the proposed treaty between the United States and Hawaii : "Fifteen hundred people arc giving away ray country. The people of my country do not want to be annexed to the United States. Nor do the people of the United States want annexation. It is the .work of l.f.OO people , mostly Americans , who have settled in Ha waii. Of this number those who arc not native born Americans are of Ameri can parentage. None of my people waut the island annexed. The popu lation of the islands is 100,000. Of this number 40,000 are native Ha- waiians. The rest ure Americans , Germans , Portuguese , Japanese , Chi nese , English and a small proportion from other countries. The 1,500 Americans who are responsible for what was done to-day are running the affairs of the islands. There is no provision made in this treaty for me. In the Harrison treaty I was allowed S20.000 a year , but that treaty never wen tin to effect. I have never received ono dollar from the United States. No one looked after my interests in the preparation of this treaty. Yet my people , who form so largo a part of the population of the islands , would want justice done me. " TRAIN ROBBERS FOILED. Illinois Desperadoes Betrayed by a Com rade One mortally Wouddod. St. Louis , Mo. , June 18. An at tempt was made late last night by three men to hold up a Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern passenger train near Selma , 111. , sixty-five miles east of here , but the attempt failed , one of the would-be robbers having informed the sheriff , who , with a posse of six men , went to the scene and found the track piled high with timbers which the desperadoes had placed at a tres tle. tle.At At the appearance of the posse the gang scattered and most of them es caped , though fired on by the sheriff and his officers. One of the robbers Abe Tweed , a paroled convict was shot and captured , and is now dying in jail at Salem , where he was taken. Thomas Schumaker , another ex-con vict , was arrested later. It is said that the train which left St Louis last night carried more than 3100,000 in the express car. The train men are confident that , if the engine had run into a pile of ties , it , with several cars , would have been derailed and thrown down an embankment , entailing a creat loss of life. THE QUEEN AT WINDSOR. Thousands Cheer for Their monarch Victoria In Firat-CIa - Health. Windsor , England , June 18. Queen Victoria arrived here from Balmoral at 9 o ' clock. Thousands of people lined the route from the railroad sta tion to the castle. Her Majesty looked the picture of health and repeatedly bowed to the cheering of her subjects. It is denied that she is nearly blind from cataract. As to the queen's general health , evidence of its being perfectly satis factory for a woman of her age is fur nished in the fact that it was at first arranged that on returning to the palace on Jubilee day , Juno 22 , the order of the procession woul be re versed in order to enable Her Majesty to return at the earliest possible mo ment , but she has now decided to keep in the same place along the whole route , thus involving another half hour of fatigue in the streets. FATHER KNEIPP DEAD. Bavarian Developer of the "Water Cure Passes Away at Wocrluhofcii. Muxicit , June 18. The Rev. Father Kneipp , known for his water cure , who had been sick for some time , died at Woerishofen last night Father Kneipp treated many dis tinguished patients , including the Emperor of Austria , the Archduke Joseph of Austria , the Archduke Au- gustin of Austria , several members of the Rothschild family and the pope. One of the latest patients was ex-Gov ernor Altgeld of Illinois. It is esti mated that about 30,000 people were treated last year by the priest and his assistants. A Kneippverein was founded in New York and one in Chicago. An Ameri can company was organized a few weeks ago and purchased a tract of land near New York , which is to be made a second Woerishofen. A 75-Year-OId Duelllit. Paris , June li. General Rebillot , who is 75 years of age , fought a duel with swords yesterday afternoon with M. Camille de St. Croix , the author of an article on the part taken by the general in the coup d'etat of December 2 , 1891. General Rebillot was wounded above the eve. Places for Three > iet > raskam. Washington , June 18. The Prcsi * dent sent the following nominations to the Senate to-day : Jacob R Houtz , to be collector of internal revenue for the district of Nebraska ; Charles F. Nester of Nebraska , to be Indian inspector specter ; Clarence L Chaffee of Ne braska , to bs member of the Missouri river commission. Convicted of Assault. GAP.XKTT , Kan. , June 18. George H. Thomas was to-day convicted of as saulting Gertrude Baird. The trial lasted two days , but the jury took only one ballot. Thomas was a "high- toned" ' jointist of this city , and last fall betrayed Miss Baird under prom ise of marriage. He attempted a crim inal operation , which resulted in her death December 28 last Thomas fled to Isquah , Wash. , where he was ap prehended January 1. The case at tracted much attention on account of the many sad features. The charge of murder was dismissed. - - ? ! * t-y. - - -n - . . . - . , . . , „ . . . _ . , | | | , , j T' ' IIMIIIIW I mill iy 1 ti\z \ Texai Property tn Litigation. m Cohstaxa , Texas , Juno ID. Suit ? J was filed in the dintrlct court yester- j ( m day by the attorneys for the Cart- ( dm wright heirs to recover land and prop- \m ortv in East Corwlcnrro , roughly csti- . h mated to bo worth 000,000. On it are | M many people and a half dozen llow /t-M ing wells. f fl linked the Pope' Dread. ' V Notiik Damk , Ind. , Juno 19. Brother- Bartholomew of the Order of the Holy Cross , who , for seventeen years baked f ' all of the bread that was broken oa. the table of Popu Pius IX , died here- , yesterday morninc nt 1:30 o'clock. JOHN M. FRANCIS DEAD. Kdltor ami Former United Stntca HI In- Idler PinKc * A way. Tp.ov , N. Y. , Juno 10. John M. / ' Francis , senior proprietor and editor- in-chief of the Troy Times , died at his- home here. John Morgan Francis was born at. ' Pittsburgh , N. Y. , March 0. 1SU3. He- i was the youngest but ono of thirteen children and was early thrown on. / the world. After serving an ap prenticeship in a printing oflioo- 1 lie became an editorial writer on the j Palmyra Sentinel. He was next con,1 nected with the Rochester Advertiseri J and in 181(5 ( became editor and part. m proprietor of the Troy Northern Bud- M get. Ho was a strong free soil Demo- m cuit , and earned repute by his vigorous - / ous policy. In 1851 he left the Budget. ' i and started the Troy Times , with- J which ho was connected up to his ' M death. V M When the Republican party was or- ? ganizud Tslv. Francis joined it , and in. 1 May , 1871 , he was made minister to- | Greece by President Grant. On the- 4 expicition of his term ho made a tour- * of the world. President Garfield had him slated for the Belgian missionbut- , on his assassination President Arthur j hiMit Mr. Francis as minister to 1'ortu- * J gal. After holding that post for twe 1 years he was made minister to Austria. NO CURRENCY COMMISSION J The President Advised That the Senate. * J Will Not Take Prompt Action. Chicago , June 19. A special to the M Timcs-IIerald from Washington says : "It appears to be well settled that no | effort will be made by the President tAte to secure authority for the appoint- Jfl ment of n currency commission at this | session of congress. Until within a H week or so the President had believed iH such a measure might be passed in the 1 closing days of congress , while the I two houses were in conference on the 1 tariff bill. But the President is now J advised by the Republican leaders in M the Senate that it would be useless to - fl present this question. The silver sen- ' -B ators. it is said , have decided to oppose fl any such measure , and they could easily bring about considerable delay. fl Unless some change comes in the situation - H ation the President will be compelled , H reluctantly , to permit this important W matter to go over to next winter. " RATIFICATION UNCERTAINf j So Chance for Immediate Annexation H of Hawaii. ' B Wasiuxgtox , ' June 19. Opposition- r V to the Hawaiian annexation project fl has broken out much more violently S than was anticipated by the administration - * J tration , and the treaty will be roughly \ handled when it comes up in the Senate - m ate for ratification. Whether this opposition - M sition will be able to muster sufficient 1 strength in that body to defeat ratification - M fication is a speculative problem. It | looks now as though the annexation JH party might not be able to command . the necessary two-thirds vote. . In any event , it is now taken for fl granted that favorable action at this M special session , either in the form of fl treaty ratification or legislation sustaining 9 taining the administration plans , will be impossible. A Preacher Killed by a Mow of the FUfc. / fl Emkt , Ind. Ter. , June 19. The Rev. / jB J. T. Evans of the Baptist church and / 9 Klisha Bradburn went to a field to arfl range a crop contract and settle a fl financial difficulty in regard to it.fl They engaged in a quarrel and Brad- 9 burn struck Evans on the neck with 9 his fist , knocking him down. The- 9 preacher died in a few moments and. 9 Bradburn fled. 9 r M McKinley Coming West. ' f t Chicago , June VJ. President McKinley - / M Kinley and his cabinet will come to 9 Chicago to take part in the unveiling 9 of the John A. Logan statue in the 9 Lake Front park. The President will | review a procession of veterans on . 9 the day that promises to be one of jH the bisrsest in recent years. | LTVK STOCK AND PUODUCK MAKKKT. 9 Quotations From New York. Chicago. St. 9 I.ouis , Omaha and Ktscnliere. H OMAHA. M Butter Creamery separator. . . 15 @ 17 H Butter Choice fancy i-ountry. . 10 65 12 H E5 I-'resh 5 < J $ * . } M burinThickens Peril. 13 5 14 H Hen- > Perth 5xAr' Lemons Choice Muniiiut * 3 00 < & > -4 00 I Honey Choice , peril ) is < & 15 B Onions , per bu 123 © ISO- , fl ISeaiib fianripicked Navy 1 00 & 1 ID H Potatoes Ne 7 , per hu 1 03 Q4 1 Zi | Oransch. purbox ; j 2 > < & 3 75 jfl Hay Upland , per ton 4 50 < & 5 00 fl | SOUTH OMAHA. STOCK MARKET. fll IIO s Light mixed a 15 © : i UO JHJ Hess Heavy weight * : j 10 < & : i 15 flj Beef Steers 3 25 < & i 45 f fl | Bulls 2-JO © 4 30 ' fli Wyoming Feeders 4 25 fo 4 50 fli Milkers and springers 3. ) 00 © 10 00 HJ Stags 275 © 35C flj Calves SCO © 0 25 flj Westerns 2 50 © : i 10 fli Cows 175 © 385 fli llcirers. . 3 CO © 3 SO'fli Stockurs and Feeder ? . 2 75 @ 4 50 fli Sheep Wethers , gnusMirs 3 23 © 3 75 H Sheep , Western Ltmlrv.lMrn. . 3 25 © \ 00 fli CHICAGO. Wheat No. 2 Spring. 0354 © 70 91 Corn , per hu ; t © sjv V | Oats , per bu is © 18 } * * fl 1'ork. . . 755 © 7 60 H Lard Per UK ) lbs. 3 C7 © 3 70 ' fl Cattle Native beef steers 3 h0 © 5 00 flj Hogs Prime light 337 © ; j 4. . Ji # 1 Sheep-Lambs 3 25 © 5 33 W II Shee ] > Natives 2 23 © 4 00 O U J NKW YORK. HT f ! Wheat No. 2 , red. winter. . . . 73 © 73./- j Corn No. 2 tf © ai5 * \ Oats-No. 2 22 © 23 J ' * ' ' T , ° rh' " 00 © 8 00 y I Laru 3 SO I © 4 00 > KANSAS CITY. 1 Oats-No " " ZVAf 21 * . J ' Hn f.SF"aiS * * " & : : : 2 75 % . - , S 11 Hogs-Mixed * Sot M 3 25 © 3 bheen-Muttons S50 < j l T