THE FRONTIER. VVBLttHKD EV1UY TiltfUBDAY BT Th» Fhontieu Printing Co. O’NEILL. NEBRASKA. OVER THE STATE, I ■ ft: I - * ! I;. *pt ':f ; ft '• "ft if;;: ¥ ■ » The new Catholic church at Harvard was dedicated last Sunday. . I’rairie chickens cannot lie legally killed until after September 1. Tub independents of Nuckolls county Will hold their convention August 20th. Thr German Evangelists dedicated their new church at Harvard lust Sun day. Nkls Benosto.v, an inmate in the Lincoln insune asylum, suicided last week. Thr Shiekley Creamery company, with a capital of 9*1,duo has been incor porated. Thr David City creamery has closed owing to the failure in receiving u suf ficient supply of milk. Harvard is not suffering from hard times, judging by the amount of building going on there. Thr Hastings county independents willhold their annual picnic the second Saturday in September. Jacob Drnnuth of Bellwood has been sued for 910,000 by Nick Ilas trel 09 u charge of slander. If. S. Ei.moke, who died in Kansas City last week, was an extensive owner of realty in (iage county, this state. After thirteen years absence in the Sandwich islands Mrs. Ella McDowell is visiting her old home in Cage county. Wilson A Sutherland, hardware dealers at Tekamah who suspended last week, hope to be uble to resume ut an early day. A gentleman from New Mexico is in -Grant county looking over the sand hills with a view of establishing a targe cattle ranch. Steuben Hkos. of Norfolk have es tablished a jag cure at Key West, El a. There are very many elegant subjects to work upon there. The barn of J. II. Hunt at Madison was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. A valuable horse was cre mated In the holacaust. Mrs. J. S. Elliott, of Blue Springs, was found dead in bed Sunday morning. She was 04 years of age and had previ ously been in good health. Tux two-year-old and only son of Dr. Cummins of I’iattsmouth took a swal low of gasoline from a freshly filled tank and died in nn hour. The Dunbar Alliance Elevator com pany bought 2.'>,000 bushels of corn last week. The prospect for corn being good, most of the farmers sold. William Ernst of Johnson county finished harvesting his l.oon acres of fall wheat and thinks he will thresh out from ten to twenty bushels to the acre. Mr?. Whalkx, of Omaha, worrying over domestic troubles, attempted to take her life by morphine, she was rescued by the timely arrival of a phy sician. George Robinson, the 15-year-old son of J. W. Robinson, a farmer living six miles north of Crete a few days ago lost threfe fingers by getting his hand caught in a self-binder. Mb?. Tooaoon, widow at Geneva, has received notice that she will receive a pension of $3 per month fur herself and 92 per month for each of her two children, to date from July 1, 1809. Sneak thieves broke into the cellar of the Clancy drug store at Beatrice and stole therefrom fifteen bottles of wine. Most of the liquor which had not been absorbed was found in possession of the thieves. Word was received in Beatrice last week of the sudden death of Mrs. E. T. Root, at Chicago, from inflammation of the stomach. She, with her husband, bad left Beatrice for the world's fair a week ago. Two-year-old Johnnie Jansen of Beatrioe, was so terilbly stung by bees that his life was for a time des paired of, but he is now recovering. Twenty-five stingers were pulled out of the little fellow s flesh. Thr animal that has been killing young cattle up near the bead of the Clearwater was killed a few days ago, reports the Neligh Leader, and instead of a mountain lion it proved to be a monster gray wolf. H. H. Warren, a prominent resident of Nelson, died July -’1 at Colorado Springs, Colo., where he had pone for the benefit of his health. He was til > years of ape, and leaves a wife, three (laughters and two sons. Tub commissioner of insanity has is sued a discharge for Mrs. A. Gushard, who was taken to tho hospital for in line at Norfolk a few weeks ago. She is reported improving and her husband desires to care for her himself if pos |y sible. The business men of McCool Junc tion are notifying Omaha and Lincoln wholesale houses that here ufter they will buy of St. Jos.ph and Kansas City. This is done because Omaha and is Lincoln banks are charging exchange on checks. Souk wheat of the new crop at Wilber :' tea already been brought to market , ~ nod the opening price was 42 cents. -* The pieces threshed yielded from six teen to twenty bushels per acre and there are many pieces that will do bet ter than this. Durino reunion week the tire depart : mentof Grand Island will give an ex hibition of its skill. A parade will take place fc’nd a false alarm will start if the various fire companies on a run to the firev which will be extinguished as tnpidly as possible. "Si?, The harness and saddlery establish ment of H. M. Heck, of Heatrice, was closed by creditors. The liabilities are abont >3,800, with a«s_>ts approximat ing that amount. The cause of the ffcilure is attributed to slow collections and business depression. Several deaths from scarlet fever have occurred at Stafford lately, and the board of health of O’Neill have passed a resolution forbidding any per fc,: sons who have in any way been exposed to the disease from coming into the t;; city for a period of thirty days. A little 3-year-old child of Homer Wray, a farmer living south of Nelson, accidentally fell under the wheels of a loaded wagon, the wheel running over ; , Ml head and making a severe scalp wound besides breaking his jawbons. The child may possibly survive. As Michael McNamara, a prominent farmer living1 northeast of Wiener, wus coming to church at that place with his family, the horseB attempted to run away. Mrs. McNamara jumped from the vehicle, ltoth limbs were broken just above the ankles by the fall. Tim little 3-year-old child of J. N. KunotT of l’awnee City, fell a distance of seventeen feet from a second story window to the sidewalk, alighting on its head and shoulders. Medical aid was summoned and no bones were found to be broken, but it is feared it muy have sustained severe internal in juries. 1 he mnchincry for the manufacture of the Noble (.owing machine which belonged to the Chase manufacturing company has been bought by two Lin coln men. Messrs. Adams and Kearl ing. The machinery has been re moved from Weeping Water and ia to be set up in the Seaton & Lee foundry in Lincoln. John Shipman, of Fremont, hasgone to Miller, llufTalo county, to close a deal on several tine farms in one body a few miles north of that village. His aggregate purchases amount to 811,500. He has a herd of the finest breed of cuttle to put on the ranch at once The attractiveness of the Wood river valley is becoming known. The Lincoln Journal says that fore handed citizens who feel like putting in hard coal against the coming of winter are considerably pained to learn that the price is now $11 per ton, whereas the usual July rate is 82 less. The temptation to indulge in a little pro fanity over the exactions of the coal operators is often too strong to be re sisted. Han Athlen of Beatrice, posted the following notice on the door of his butcher shop the other morning: ‘•Owing to the stringency of the money market this market is closed, with the usual remark, 'Depositors will be paid in full.’ This may not be a proper notice to place on the door of a meat market, but it is an explanation of the trouble—lack of confidence (cash).” Athlen, it is said, has gone to Okla homa. A Princeton dispatch says that the long continued dry weather and the hot winds of lust week have done great in jury to crops in the southern part of Lancaster county. Oats are turning out from ten to twenty bushels to the acre. Corn will not make more than a half crop, and if the dry, hot weather continues a few days longer there will be very little, if any, raised. Some farmers are cutting up their corn and feeding it. Grasshoppers have again appeared in sections of Dodge county to an alarming extent, says the Fremont Tribune, John Boss of Pleasant Valley has a field of oats with over one-fourth of the heads cut off. Peter Emanuel's field is also damaged. Moses Stubbert ■ of Maple Creek has a field of corn stripped of leaves by the hoppers. With drouths, cyclones, hailstorms, grasshoppers and occasional lightning rod agents, the farmers are having quite a mixed experience. At Friend Michael Kesler, aged 70 years, set fire to his son's house and it was burned. His wife, old and feeble, narrowly escaped cremation. Keslar was arrested and made a confession, saying he wanted the old lady, from whom he was separated, out of the way so that he could mortgage some land, she having refused to give her consent to the transaction. Some of the excited villagers wanted to lynch Kesler, but the officers had no trouble in taking him to a place of safety. The Gage County Democrat says: Thirty-six years ago last Monday. July 17, 1857, Nathan and William Blakely, together with George and Isma Mumford, and some others whom they had fallen in with at Weeping Water falls, reached Beatrice. At that time there was not a finished house in the city. “Pap's cabin” having been only commenced, and its walls of logs having reached the height of about three feet. Mrs. Isma Mumford, who was one of the party, was the first white woman to settle in Beatrice. A sad accident resulted in the death of the infant child of A. O. Smith, a hardware merchant of Newport. The child was playing on the floor and it is supposed picked up a nutshell or some other hard substance and put it in its mouth, and in swallowing the sharp edges stuck in the child's throat. After all had been done for it that was pos sible by the local physicians, the stricken parents started on the train for Omaha, in hopes that the doctors there might give some relief, but the infant died on board the Elkhorn train near Fremont. Tiik agitation begun some weeks since to secure to Lincoln the National Grand Army of the Republic encamp ment for 1S94 bids fair to result in something. The Grand Army men have been talking the matter up. and it is probable that a public meeting to take the preliminary steps will lie called, shortly. It is generally believed by gentlemen who have been looking into the matter that Lincoln can get the en campment without a struggle, and all that is necessary at present is to ap point a committee to visit Indianapolis and ask for it. Thk Nebraska City News takes this incident to point a moral and adorn a tale: “When boys want to hug the girls we advise them to go to their homes, or at least wait until the ‘sun goes down,’ so that others eannot wit ness the performance. We saw one at that kind of business last Saturday evening right on the most public cor ner in the city and at the front door of a store, and it almost became neces sary for us to push him aside to get into the store, but he did not evten see us, he was so interested in his occupation. What amused us was that another young lady stood near by looking on, and pefhaps wishing there was another young man. Who knows?” Thk weekly crop bulletin issued by the Nebraska weather service for the week ending July 25, compiled by Cap tain G. E. Hunt at the United States weather bureau in Omaha, is as fol lows: Seven days of hot sunshine without any rain caused unfavorable reports from most correspondents this week. The growth of all vegetation has been checked, but it is doubtful if any injury lias resulted to the principal crops that will not be repaired bv the good rains within the next few days, and as this morning's weather bureau reports show that the drouth has al ready . been broken by showers last night in the northern and western por tions of the state, we may reasonably look for more cheerful reports next week. FRIENDLY TO SILVER THE WHITE METAL ADVOCATES HOLD A MEETINQ. What They Resolve la the First Doty of the Coining Congress—Operations of the Treasury Department Should be Investigated—Buffalo Bill Gives the Waifs of Chicago an Opportunity to See the Show Free—Electrocution of Taylor, the Murderer, at Auburn. N. Y. —City Electrical Power Secured to Fin ish the Job. The Advocates of the White Metal Give Expression to Their Thoughts. Nkw York, July 29.—A meeting of the delegates from this city to the bi metallic convention, to be held in Chi cago next week, was held for the pur pose of effecting an organization. A preamble and resolutions were adopted by the delegates, as follows: Whereas, Official statistics prove that the market price of silver bullion has controlled prices for most products of American labor, and those especially of wheat and cotton ever since silver was demonetized in 1873; and. Whereas, Decline in the price of sil ver bullion and contraction in the vol ume of legal tender money has caused such a fall in the price of American products as would require more pounds of cotton and nearly as many bushels of wheat to pay the remainder of our national debt now outstanding as would nave been required at prevailing prices in 1805 to have paid its entire amount at that time; and. Whereas, Depreciation in the price of silver bullion since 1873 has caused a decline of over 200 per cent in the price of our cotton and over 200 per cent in the price of our wheat, and about 100 per cent in the price of silver since that year; -and, Whereas, England’s control over the coinage laws of silver-using India ena bles England to put the price of Amer ican wheat and cotton on the same level with the gold cost of India wheat and cotton when laid down in English markets; and, Whereas, England requires cheap wheat to feed her people and cheap cot ton to keep them employed in her cot ton factories: therefore her influence is behind nearly all efforts to put down the price of silver bullion in order that she can obtain the products of labor in all countries at the starvation prices paid for labor in that country and its dependencies; therefore, Resolved, That it is the first duty of congress to carefully study the effect the price of silver bullion has on other products of labor in this country before determining on any fixed policy chang ing its present ratio with gold, or be fore ruining all American producers by withdrawing the slight support silver now has under our laws; anil, be it fur ther Kesolved, That it is the best judg ment of the delegates from the state of New York to the Chicago Conference that congress should at once thorough ly investigate the operations of the Treasury department, and especially the action of the director of the mint in selecting the market price of silver in a foreign country to govern his action in purchasing silver bullion under the act of July 14, 18110. and that if any officer, or officers, shall have violated that law, either in that regard or in relation to purchases required under it. proceedings of impeachment should be immediately commenced against the person or persons so offend ing. Resolutions were also passed deplor ing the riotous proceedings precipitated by an organized body of men, which invaded the meeting recently held in the Fifth Avenue hotel for the purpose of creating a disturbance and bringing the meeting into disrepute. The delegates adjourned to meet at the Palmer house, Chicago, at 8 p. m., Monday, July 31. Buffalo BUI'* Bit Heart. Chicago, July 28.—Six thousand rest less heads tossed on' what passes for 0,000 pillows until late last night before they quieted down to dream of the time when the possessors of those heads should win halos of glory by slaughter ing Indians until the yales should run red with gore and kill buffalo until the plains were dotted with the dying brutes. For today was the day of the waifs' annual picnic. Since the time picnics were invented there has never been such a one as this, for the crowning event of the day was a visit to Buffalo Bill's Wild West show. The youngsters paraded to the Central station. Here the children were loaded into special trains and taken to Sixty third street. At Sixty-second street and Stony Island avenue is a tract of vacant ground. Here a booth was erected for serving the lunches and here the races, fourteen in number, came off. It was intended to form in line and march into the Wild West show in a body. But at 12:30 o'clock the children began to gather at the gate, though the performance did not begin until 3 o'clock, in ten minutes a stampede for the gate begun that even the news of the arrival of two wagon loads of ice cream could not stem. At 12:30 the gates, though tMy had been braced extra strong, yielded be fore the sheer weight of numbers, and whooping and yelling like mad the children raced in. The boys took the appearance of Indians in the grand city in comparative quiet; the French and Herman soldiers stirred their blood a little, and the cowboys roused them to enthusiasm, which was increased by the appearance of the United States cavalry. But when Buffalo Bill gal lopped in they just went wild. They rose, swung their caps and hats, and screamed until they were exhausted. Colonel Cody smiled and waved his hat at them and the cheers burst out louder than ever. Every time he appeared the scene was repeated. After the Dead wood mail had been captured and rescued come something that docs not take place every day. Buffalo Bill was sent tor. He galloped' up on his handsome charger. Superin tendent Daniels stepped forward, sup ported on his right by a diminutive messenger in uniform from the Waifs mission and on his left a picturesquely dirty urchin with only one leg, but a pair of sparkling brown eyes and a keen countenance showed beneath the dirt The messenger was James Dur ■V" j I?-, *V ',V ' ■ . .1 gan, the one-legged boy was John Tar tuff. Superintendent Daniels expressed tile gratitude of all the boes and girls there for the rich treat Colonel Cody had given them. Then little Johnny balanced himself on his crutch, and reaching up a small box to the figure on horseback, piped: "Here, diill; here’s somep’n f'om de gang.” I Bill bowed his acknowledgments and took the "somep’n.” It proved to be a red morrocco case containing a plate of solid gold, 3x6 inches, in imitation of a messenger ticket. Tajlor Electrocuted. Auburn, N. Y., July 28.—William 0. Taylor was electrocuted at 13:45 p. m. The electrocution of Taylor was not a success. The foot rest of the chair broke and the dynamo gave out, so that a second current could not be applied. He was not dead from the first contact and soon began breathing heavily. He was placed on a cot and conveyed back to his corridor, where he continued breathing and groaning, with the pulse growing stronger. It is now thought power will have to be conveyed from the city electric plant and Taylor will have to be placed in the chair and elec trocuted to death. The physician says he was unconscious after the first con tact of 1,700 volts. His condition at present is analogous to a man stricken with apoplexy. Morphine has just been administered. The witnesses are not permitted to leave the prison. Auburn, N. Y., July 28.—Taylor was rtlrried again to the chair at 1:55, and a current from a city electric light dyn amo was passed through his body. The second attempt proved successful. Estimate* to Congress. Washington, July 31.—No special haste is being1 displayed in any of the executive departments in the prepara tion of estimates of expenses for the next fiscal year, as the secretary of the treasury will not submit such estimates to congress until the regular sesson in December. He has called on the differ ent departments for their estimates ‘‘not later than September 15,” and none of them are expected much before that date. It will be impossible to sub let them to the extra session of con gress unless that shall extend at least a month beyond September 15, as it will .take the treasury experts at least that long to put them in shape after they have been received. This statement applies to estimates of the regular ap propriations for the support of the gov ernment and the river and harbor im provements, etc., but not to any special estimates that may be required to meet deficiencies in the appropriation for the current year. It is the purpose of the treasury department to have all the es timates of regular, expenses in the hands of the committee on appropria tions before the 1st of November in order that that committee may be en abled to consider them in advance of the regular session of congress, and thereby facilitate the presentation of the appropriation bills for the consider ation of the house. The failure of the treasury depart ment to arrange for the submission of the estimates to congress at its extra session would seem to indicate the be lief of the administration that the leg islative branch of the government will not consider any of the appropriation bills before December next. Senseless Bank Runs, Washington, July 28.— Comptroller Eckles has broken over precedent by again making public a part of the offi cial report of D. A. Cook, examiner in charge of the Missouri National Bank of Kansas City, as follows: “This bank suspended on the 17th inst., because of a run on the part of its depositors. There was nothing in the condition of the bank to warrant the run or to occasion suspicion as to its solvency. It seems to have been prudently managed and its resources are unusually free from items of ques tionable value, there being no bad debts. The bank is solvent and should be permitted to resume. The deposit ors very generally express a desire to have the bank resume and promise every assistance in their power. The available assets of the bank amount to $964,283.95; its liabilities, $708,258.75. The remainder of its resources consist of cash and items readily converted into cash.” The idea of the comptroller in mak ing this statement public is to show the fallacy of the theory that everything is going to ruin because banks are closing their doors here and there. If the peo ple who have money on deposit were not panic stricken and did not join in wild and unjustifiable runs many banka which are now closed would have re mained open and be doing a healthy business. The comptroller thinks that to give publicity to such cases will show the public the folly of being frightened without cause. Populist State Convention. Lincoln, July 27.—The executive committee of the state central com mittee of the people's independent party met in this city yesterday to issue a call for the state convention. The members present were: Chairman O. W. Blake of this city, Secretary Pirtle of this city, O. Nelson of Colfax, Daniel Freeman of Gage, and D. Clem Denver of Douglas. Messrs. Barry and Brooks were absent, but were repre by letter. Mr. Small was also absent. There was considerable dis cussion as to the best time for holding the convention, some of the committee holding for a late meeting, owing to the approuching session of congress. Fhe dates discussed ranged all the way from the middle of August to the 10th of September. The 5th of September at 2 p. ra. was the time finally selected and this city the place. The represen tation was based on the vote for Van Wyck for governor, one delegate for each 100 votes, or major fraction, and two at large from each county. There were 08,000 votes cast for Van Wyck, so that the call provides for a conven tion of nearly 900 delegates. Judge Maxwell was the only candidate dis cussed and. the sentiment was about equally divided, some of the members holding’ that there was plenty of good material in the middle of the road. At Metropolis. 111., Richard Shoe maker shot and killed Richard and Lukens, and then committed suicide over a trouble of long stand THE FAILURE RECORD COMPTROLLER ECKELS PUTS FORTH A STATEMENT. Wot as Xanj National Bank Failures as Reported by the Newspapers—How the Failures are Distributed—Number Now In Operation—The Figures of Sugar Beet Industries—Distillers Must Pay Their Taxes on Time—President Cleve land Too Busy to Make any Public Ad dresses at This Time. national Bank Failure*. Washington, July 29.—Comptroller of the Currency Eckles gave out the following statement tonight: “Recent dispatches having appeared in the newspapers to the effect that since Jan uary 1, 1893, 200 national banks have failed, the following statement has been prepared that the public may be properly informed: Instead of 200 having closed their doors but 105 have gone into the hands of the comptroller of the currency. Fourteen of this num ber have already resumed business under favorable conditions and pos sessed of the confidence of the commu nities where located, and during the en suing week it is expected several others will have complied with the re quirements of the comptroller and re opened, while prior to September 1 an equal number will resume. •‘Out of the total of 105 closed but thirty-seven have gone into the hands of receivers, the balance either having reopened or are still in the hands of the examiners with strong prospects of re opening. Five of the 105 banks arc capitalized in the am'ount of $1,000,000 each, one at $800,000, six at $500,000, thirty-six at $50,000, and the remaining at $300,000, $250,000, $100,000 and less, but more than $50,000, the greater number, however, being from $100,000 to $150,000. “By Geographical sections the fail ures are distributed as follows: New England states, 2: eastern states, 2; middle and Mississippi valley states, 15; northwestern states, 6; western states, 55; southern states, 25; total, 105. _ “The following table shows the na tional bank failures in the states men tioned and also the number of national banks yet in operation-in each state: Now Sus otate. operating, pended. Colorado.. 38 15 Iowa..1 8 2 Idaho. 13 — Kansu*.130 8 Montana.1 6 Nelfraska..12 5 South Dakota.43 2 “In twenty-one states and territories there have been failures of national banks. No national banks have failed in Boston, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Baltimore, Washington, Buffalo, Cincinnati, St. Louis, New Or leans, San Francisco. Minneapolis, St. Paul and numbers of other great com mercial centers, and but one has closed in New York, two in Chicago and one in Milwaukee. The causes of the fail ures in New York and Chicago are due largely to mismanagement, as were numbers of others. Local scares have caused many of late to suspend. Nine of the banks that failed were robbed by officials who are now under arrest. ” Nebraska's Sugar Production. Washington, July 29.—Commission er of Internal Revenue Miller declines give out the figures of the production and bounty of each of the two beet su gar industries of Nebraska. There is a law which prohibits any revenue officer from making public the operations of any private business of any man or firm which he may visit in an official capacity, under the severe penalty of $1,000 fine, a year's imprisonment and total disability from future office hold ing. The law was passed before the sugar bounty was created, but Commis sioner Miller, in answer to the repeated request for a detailed statement on the beet sugar industry, has decided that it applies to that as well. The aggre gate production of beet sugar by the two factories in Nebraska, Grand Is land and Norfolk,was 3,803,500 pounds, and the sugar was all of the first grade and secured the full two cents bounty. Revenue Taxes Must Be Paid. Washington, July 89.—A petition, signed by many of the leading distill ers of the state of Kentucky, has been, presented to Secretary Carlisle, asking that the collection of the internal reve nue taxes due on spirits remaining in bond that were distilled and bonded in May and June, 1890, be postponed for ninety days. The forced payment of these taxes at this time will not only embarrass the distillers, says the peti tion, but will also withdraw from cir culation and also from the banks large sums of money which are now needed for the mercantile use of the commu nity. Secretary Carlisle replied that the law providing for the collection of the tax was obligatory and that he could do nothing to relieve them. Siam's Only Hope Gone. London, July 39.—The Bangkok cor respondent of the Times says: The prompt enforcement of the blockade, which virtually damages only Great Britain, has, seemingly, convinced th# Siames that the assumed friendly at tempt at intervention by Great Britain st Paris has not availed to modify the conditions of the ultimatum. Siam, therefore, will probably concede imme diately the last difference remaining between her and France by accepting the ultimatum, puqe and simple. Siam has not received the slightest official support from Great Britain throughout the difficulty. No Time to Addrcia Negro Democrats. Washington, July 39.—A call was Issued today to the negro democracy of the United States by James A. Boss, vice president of the Society of Demo cratic Clubs, for a meeting of the dem cratic clubs in Washington, August 34, to secure co-operation in all ranks of the party in the fall campaign. Mr. Ross invited President Cleveland to ad dress the meeting and today received a reply stating that his engagements with reference to matters of state are such that it will be impossible to accept He adds that it is gratifying to him to know of the interest that the Afro Americans are taking in the p«»ticai questions of the a. Omaha, «K brnska’s senate* in congress is ^ natures, asking fluence at the^.^® Press that convene, * the adoption of a the operation*^. “d the appointment,^ t° draft a substu™*. ....1 place of It 4. ~~ » I regular session In dLIS?* tition is receiving hearth and will be presfnkdto t?4 congressional delegation Si of the members den«*?b'!? the first of next vrwk. ^ **" CommercialClub.XsKsjj Hastings, Neb wia ^ financial question ofhthefe K,,£SS2h*H^^ view with regret s&Btassafts ff°P,e“ad?an unwarranted. We have plenty of oon United States, but too much concealed in stockings »ti under the bed and in private* ppsit vaults for the good of ih, The banks are all right if # w,ll only give them a%han«, “• Toe hherman law man bt Bible for some of the financial tude, but I do not think it j cause. In the firs^ place, as I ed before, two-thirdsof it is, tion and fright. How to tan agination and fright into cod a proposition. Congress out thing, and that may add tod whereas it may do somethin! time considered very insij which would cure all the ills believe anybody knows the pro tion of the problem. Yours tr D. 11. M •. Two Mnrd«rer> ConrlcUi St. Louis, Mo., July 28.-th in the case of Henry Kaiser. Heinze and Charles McO charged with the murder and of E. E. Brown, a live stock d gaged in business in Chicago Louis yesterday brought in i of murder in the first degree, Kaiser and Heinze and of teepd McConnell. Brown was a March 20 last, dying from a the stomach inflicted bv the who secured *200 and a gol containing a picture of Brown son, for the defense of which lost his life. New York Banks Come to tlw New Yoke, July 28.—Several banks here today decided to« the large exchange houses which may be necessary tof» the importation of gold. Owing lower rates of exchange sewn houses considered it a favonb) to purchase gold paid to this they approached the banks tow if the necessary accommodation be extended. The banks roplit every facility would be afforded and on the strength of this neit 000,000 of gold was ordered for day’s shipment from the otherr1 this Lazard Freres imports ft J. & VV. Seligman, Sl.OitO.OOO; Vt man & Co., $200,000. The mer the clearing house committee stated that the clearing house hi ing whatever to do with this a ment for importing, it being a solely between the various ban! their customers. Use Bloodhound* for f< sas City, Mo., July2k robberies have been co« ly in Kansas City, Kani have been unsuccessful r the robbers. Chief of is of that city has dectdjl oodhounds of the “an* j used in the south wtU tralue to the police (ok* s are to be of t he Russian" once given the scent c 1 they find the obje.t ot Senator Martin I« tot » Topeka, Kan., JnlV Martin has started for ^ He said in an Interview that m vote for the repeal of tne j, law only upon the condition better silver legislation be for it. LITE STOCK AND PKODCC**** Quotations from * Louis, Omaha and OMAHA Butter-Creamery print.. Butter—Packing stock.— Eggs—Fresh. Iloney—Per lb.. tbiciiens—spring, per dot- J jjo Lemons.• .ij] Apples—Per bbl.." 2 O' Oranges— . ti, ft New Potatoes—.. -Beans—Spring, per bu.bol- - J# Onfons^So'mhern,per bW.-•••;4 * Beets—New per dot -- - ■—t £ S!aDc«r£er&-;;L H ogs—AO x ed pack I nig.l'») ft eers—Fair to good Steers—Westerns. fcheep-Natives.----^ Wheat—No. 2, red winter.- - Oat*—Mixed western----- jj S Pork-. Lard. .CHICAGO Wheat—No. 2 spring. Corn—Per bu.. © \ Oat*—Per bu.'S w t Pork. . Hogs-Packe'rsandjpjjjders. jj| Cattle—Stockers and lee . 3. tattle—Com. steer.to it’ tbeep-Lambs...----^ ^ ( Wheat-No. 2 red, cash.---;;; :«j Corn—Per bu.. j Hogs^-SIixedpacking—. ;5- j Cattle-Native Meets-. Sheep-Good Natl^- clTy. ^ , Wheat-No. 2 red. cash..---; i2 Corn—No. .., „ Hoge—Mixed.