I THE M'COOK TRIBUNE I F. M. KOIiTIKLL. , Publisher. I McCOOK , NEB. I STATE NEWS. I NEBRASKA MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS. Alliance will roast an ox on the Fourth. I There are no saloons within the I confines of Pawnee county. I Tho Gage county republican con- B vention will bo held July 22 * Eight new brick blocks will be I built in Columbus this summer. I John Austin is held in durance I vile in Lincoln for forging a $30 check. H Tho Security state bank at Frank- I lin has closed up its business. I Tho republican convention of I Pawnee county will be hold July 19. I The Nuckolls county fair will bo I held September 30 , October 1 and 2. I Seventy-four persons wore ax-rested M\ in Fremont during tho month of June. It There is said to be an excellent I M opening for a livery stable at Turling- r ton. I John M. Fagan , an old sailor liv- I ing in Dundy county , has become in- I sane. I Tho Beatrice Chautauqua assom- bly opens Juno 26 , and will close July 8. I A Young People's Society of Chris- I tian Endeavor has been organized at Gordon. I Tho Eagle hotel at Wymore caught I fire the other day , but was not much damaged. I Tlio Presbyterians of Wilsonvilla I are building a new church to cost nearly $2,000. I Lincoln has voted $50,000 to the Rock Island railroad and it will imme- deiately build to that city. I Fremont's population shows up 1 about 6,500. The citizens are a little r disappointed at the result. I Chadron boasts of a composer who I • sends thousands of his musical compo- I sitions to all parts of the country. I Blue Hill recently suffered heavy I loss by a lire started by an incendiary. I Seventeen business houses were burned. I Seven prisoners will be liberated I from the state penitentiary on July 1 , I under the provisions of the good time I One hundred and fifty delegates I attended the state Sunday school con- I vention of the Christian church at I York. I Fremont's city council has passed I an ordinance prohibiting the building I of barb wire fence within the city I limits. I The Farmers1 and Merchants * bank I of York filed articles of incorporation I with the secretary of state , capital I § 60,000. I The barn of W. H. Stephens , near I Juniata , was destroyed by fire , two I valuable horses perishing in the con- flagration. I Band concerts are given in Hans- I comb park , Omaha , twice a week , Sat- I urday and Sunday afternoons , at a cost I of § 75 a week. The commissioners of Cedar coun- I ty have decided not issue a license to I a saloon on tho sand bar opposite I Yankton , S. D. I A barn and its contents , including I a horse , was burned in Nebraska City. I The small boy with his box of matches , I did the damage. I Tho people of Omaha are taking I steps to secure additional aid for the I Bradshaw sufferers. I The new management of the Union I Pacific is getting in its work early by I ordering a reduction in the force all I along the line. I At a picnic of colored Masons at I Waterloo last week two of the par-tici- . I pants Charles Fairfax and Ida Bruce I were drowned. I Bryan McDermott , of Austin , Minn. , Avas asphyxiated by gas iix an Omaha hotel. His death is supposed to have been accidental. At Table Rock a small touched a fire cracker off under a mule with the result of a bax-n burned , a span of mules and other property valued at § 300. The ladies of St. James Guild Fre mont turned over to L. M. Keene , § 37.00 , the net proceeds of their festi val for tho benefit of the Bradshaw fund. A brakeman at the B. & M. yard in Omaha received injuries the other day while in the performance of his duties that it is thought will px-ove fatal. fatal.Mrs. Mrs. W. W. Jones of Tobias is the only lady undei'taker in the state and it is said that she understands her busi ness equal to that of any male under taker. taker.William William Carson , alias Miller , who was once convicted and sentenced to be hanged for the murder of Chauncey Weston one year ago , was acquitted the other day at Beatrice. Retx-enchment of expenses is now the watchword of the Union Pacific. A large number of men have been laid off in the shops and more , it is undei'- stood , are to go soon. * - " R. A. Jacobson , an Omaha black smith , was struck and killed by light ning at his home in that city a few nights ago. His wife and child were t quite severely stunned. * * A number of wind mills in the vi- | - cinity of Hardy were blown down dur- § ing a recent storm , and a stone school p Irouse , an old land mark , seven miles f- ' north of town , was demolished. § L . The Omaha Indians are making % ' ' - extensive preparations for an immense | | > * -blow out" on tho 4th of July , says W the Pender Republican. Twenty-five E' beeves and a number of hogs is the & size of the bill of fare. Racing , danc- .V • ing and feasting is to be the orde for f the day. I ! -I . I I. I I I I. I I I | -II I I I I I I ! Harvey Craig , a ten-year-old son of J. S. Craig , a prominenticattlo feed er of Cxaig , was drowned while bath ing with a boy companion in Silver creek. The body was recovered. Tho census supervisor announces that Lincoln has 53,902 people. This does not include four manufactux'ing and educational sxxburbs that , it is estimated , will swell the total to 60 , - 000. Tho members of tho Nebraska City Driving Park association ax-c hav ing an elegant grand stand erected on their grounds , and when completed will havo a seating capacity of over 1,000 people. Harry Gordon , a 13-year old Omaha boy , son of Conductor Gordon , was drowned in Cut-Off lake , near that city , the other day. He was bathing with some other boys and ventured in too deep water. Thos. Blackburn of Omaha , a dan dy young chap , will have to answer to the next tex-m of the district court to tho charge of bastardy. Katie Dona hue is tho girl who finds harself in an interesting condition. The following approximate census figxxres have been furnished by Super visor Cooke : Omaha , 134,742 ; Lincoln , 55,000 ; Beatrice , 13,328 ; Nebraska City , 10,444. It is reported that Den- ver will show 189,000. A hog rooted the foot of a ladder on which two paintei'S were at work at Clay Center and precipitated the whole outfit to the ground , a distance of twen ty feet. The men were not badly in jured , but the hog wjxs. The siockholdex's of the North Ne braska normal college at Madison have passed a resolution characterizing tho present management of the institution as a failure and a committee was ap pointed to devise a remedy. According to the Edgar Times , tho farmer's near that place made a x-aid on blackbirds in the vicinity of Northrup's lake and killed over 1,800. The birds had been doing considerable damage to small fruit and grain. Judge Clakson has fixed the bail of J. II. Clampitt at § 1,000. This is the man who was bound over for shoot ing a boy at Elkhorn , and jumped his § 1,500 ball and who was recently brought back from Baltimore. N. A. Renstrom- Oakland has filed a complaint against C. M. Mag- xxusoir for slander , claiming § 10,000 as damages. Renstrom claims that Mag- nxxson has giveix out the report that the plaintiff had poisoned his father. G. H. Barnes of St. Louis enters a vigorous denial that he ever main tained an agreement with C. H. Mc- Kibben , late purchasing agent of the Union Pacific , whereby enhanced prices were charged the company for lumber. The commencement week exer- cises of Deanc college were inaugu rated under very favorable circum stances , the br calaureate sermon being preached by Rev. Willard Scott , pastor of St. Mary's avenue Congrega- tional church of Omaha. Doane college commencement ex ercises were attended by a lax-go con course of people , proxninent among them being the former teacher gradu- ates and students of the college who came to visit their alma mater from various parts of the country. Rumor says that J. A. Griffith , now disbursing auditor of the Union Pacific , will be made general purchas ing agent , from which position Mr. McKibben was recently fired for call ing Vice President Holcomb naughty names and refusing to apologize. The 7-year-old son of T. J. Hig- ginsorx , living xxear Burr , got posses- sioxx of his father ' s revolver and while playing with it the weapon was dis charged , the bullet passing through the boy 's bowels. He lingered in great agony until ixext morning , when death relieved him. J. W. Love , one of the board of control of the state normal school at Peru , says the attendance during the year just closed was 556 , from all parts of our state and many states in the union. Tho faculty is the finest the board can secure , which was unani mously re-elected. A man named Hurd in Washington county , had 150 horses in a large pas ture. During a hail storm the other night the animals stampeded and run ning towards a wire fence , those in the rear crowded the others oxr to the fence and a large number of them were badly exit up and many killed. President Clemmons , of the Fre mont normal college , has just decided upon the erection of another new dor- mitoxy. A lot has been purchased and the second structure will bo built ad joining the first. Though the latter has been completed it is already over- run by the large influx of students. A delegation from the board of education of the United Brethren church arrived in Kearney last week and held a conference with the boai'd of trade with reference to establishing a state college 11x010 under tho auspices of their church. A committee was ap pointed and the matter will be thor oughly canvassed. A distressing and fatal accident occurred to the baby of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Carper , says the Juniata Herald , who live southwest of town , last Thux-s- day. Mrs. Carper was washing clothes and'the baby in playing around climbed up the wash-tub during its mother's temporary absence , and fell in. When the mother found it the little one was drowned. A seven-year-old of Mr. Higginson , Irving seven miles north of Sterling , stole an old revolver out of tho house and went about a quarter of a mile away to practice shooting , when in some unexplainable way he shot him self , the ball entering about two inches below the heart. Ho walked back to the house and three doctors were called but they could do him no good , and he died in less than twelve hours after the accident. " CEIGIN4J , PACKAGES. THEIIIOVSE SUBSTITUTE TOR THE SESATE MEASURE. As Reported on Bcliulf of the Judlclu- ry Committee Northern Democrat * Prepare a Formal I'rotcht A truiimt the National Election Hill The Omaha Public Building No AVork Becauxe Title to tho Site In Vet Unsettled. The Houftc Substitute for tlie Senate Original Package measure. Washington , June 28. Repx-csen- tativo Reed of Iowa has prepared on behalf of tho judiciary committee tho report on the bill agreed on by the committee as a substitute for the origi nal package bill. It first points out tho differences between the bills , the eenato bill being applicable to a single subject of commerce , intoxicating li quors , and the house bill being appli cable to all articles of commerce. The report says that in the opinion of the committee all property which has been imported into a state and kept for sale there ought to be subject for all pur poses to the jurisdiction of the state , and all pex'sons who engage in the tx-affic within the state ought to be sub ject to tho rules which it may enact for the regulation of that traffic. The states are the proper judges of the needs of their own citizens , and they ought to be free to enact and enforce such laws as they may deem best adapted to their situation and best calculated to enhance • the pros perity and happiness of their people , and when a non-resident imports his * into state and then waxes a en gages in the tx-afflc therein it is but just that he should be subject to thosame restrictions that govern the citizens of the state who woxxld engage in a like tx'aflic , and this would be the effect of tho bill if amended as recommeded by the committee. It would in no manner intex-fere with the right of a citizen of the state to purchase abroad any arti cle of commerce which he might desire for i his own use and have the same transported and delivered to him at his place of residence. The state would have no power to prevent the importa tion of any article of commerce nor to obstruct commerce through the terri tories except in the necessary enforce ment of their health laws. Its only ef fect would be to subject such property as may be imported into a state and there held or offered for sale contrary to the laws of the state. The power of congx-ess to enact a law of this charac ter - be doubted in the can hax-dly , judg ment of the committee. The report concludes that it would be much wiser to enact a general law applicable to all articles of commerce than to meet an exigency with reference to particular articles , as it may seem to arise , as would be the policy of the senate bill should it be enacted. The National Election Law. Washington , June 28. Northern democratic membex"s of the lower house have prepared a formal protest against the national election bill , which is termed tho ' 'Extraordinary , dangerous and revolutionary measure now pro posed by the leaders of the party in power. " The protest says : "If the power claimed by the majority resides in the constitution , which we deny , the republic has gone through tne diffi culties of a formative period , made a heroic struggle against dissolution , tri umphed and successfrxlly readjusted it self to the charrged coirdition without the exercise of such power by the federal governmexxt for 100 year's axrd over. The bill is purely a partisan measure , intended primarily to control elections for congress and presidential electors in all the states and intimidate , hound , ob struct and harass by political pex'secu- tions in unfriendly hands adverse ma jorities in cities of the north. To cax-xy on this schemo of impex-fect govern ment millions of dollax-s will be taxed from our people and the judiciary of the United States px-ostituted to the basest partisanship in the management of elections. And these invasions of the liberties of our people will be left for safety to partisan juries in fedex-al courts , composed entirely of men of the party in powexv' The protest ap peals to American freedom without x'e- gard to power to enter a timely protest by way of a public meeting or other wise against this consolidation of the government , the destx-uction of popular rights and the very foundation of Amer ican liberty , as this vicious and un patriotic measure is the most serious menace to the very life of the republic. The issue is , shall a political party elect itself and keep in power by paid agents who are to coxxtrol political elections in all the states ? The Omaha Public Building. Washington , June 28. Senator Manderson , who has been punching up the treasury officials in reference to the Omaha public bxrilding site , re ceived another letter from the supex' - vising architect today in which that gentleman says that absolutely nothing can be done by his office under the law until the court officials in Omaha re port that the title to the site to be vested is vested in the United States. Although more than a month has elapsed since the money to pay for the block was sent to Omaha , the depart ment has not yet been advised that the title has been perfected. Until this is done nothing can be accomplished in the way of clearing tho lots of the buildings which , are upon them , and the law prohibits the expenditure of a single dollar on the plans , consequently the whole matter is at a standstill awaiting the action of the United States district attorney at Omaha. Great Rejoicing in "Wyoming. Cheyenne , Wyo. , June 28 Never before in its history has this city seen such a day as yesterday was. For thrco days the feelings of tho people have been worked up to the highest tension. The Wyoming bill has been up before tho senate and thex'e wei'e the most pos itive assurances that it would pass. It had hung fire so long that nothing short of its absolute passage would sat isfy the people. The associated pi'ess report closed at 2:30 p. m. , leaving the people under tho impression that the bill had been under drscutsion until the hour of ad journment. Men came poux-ing out of the business places into tho street and collected about tho bulletin boax'ds to see if tho news was true. Once satis fied of this the decorations began. Neai'ly eveiybody had their decora tions ready waiting for the signal to flash them to the breeze. Tho feeling then was that the bill would go over till Monday and evexybody had about settled down to that conviction when the news was x-eceived at 3:25 that the bill had passed. In less than five minutes thereafter there was an upi'ising of tho natives. Many of the business houses were com pletely hidden under tho tricolox * . Flags floated everywhere. Soon there began to appear upon the streets young men in fantastic costumes composed of tho national colox's , and even young ladies ax-rayed like Columbias. The bicycle appeared nearly ono hundred strong , their wheels beautifully decor ated. ated.A A detachment of men with muskets went through the residence portion of the town and made tho welkin x'ing with their shouting. Tho fire alarm was set in motion iix a very few min utes after the news reached here. The refrain was taken up by the church bells axxd echoed by the locomotive whistles. An extraordinary supply of ih'e crackers and other combxxstibles had been laid in by the toy stores and soon a din almost equal to pandimonium was raised. No Hope lor the Entombed ITUucrs. Dunbak , Pa. , June 29. There is no longer any hope. All faith in the in dustrious rescurers has been aban doned. The entombed miners cannot be rescued now. A furious fire has scaled their fate , and if the dead bodies escape the hungry flames the pilfering rats that infest the mines will have gnaAved them beyond recognition. Death never came to men in a nrox'o x'e- volling fox'm and affliction never fell heavier oxx the bereaved. This has been awful , yet even a greater diaster threatens. A fire fiex-ce as a whix-lwind is raging for 2,000 feet down into the yawningmouth of the Hill farm mine. Deadly gas has generated back of the burning mine and the ponderous hill into which the Hill farm , the Ferguson and the Mahoning pits ax'e driven is tonight a mighty maga zine , fairly pregnant with death. The slightest stroke of a minex's pick would explode it and the effect of such air ex plosion would be awful to coirtemx > late. The rescuing party has been with drawn from the face of the Mahoning pit. A strong guard has been placed at the mouth of the Fex'guson mines to keep out the impatient , restless miner's who would rescue the unfortunates on their own account. Tho flames at the Hill fax-m mixxes ax'e hot enough to drive away the invadei'S. Fire bx-oke from the mouth of the Hill Farm pit shortly after 9 o'clock tonight. It followed promptly after the drill entered the burning mine. For two houx-s before the flames bux-st out huge billows or smoke , black , dense and deadly , rolled over each other ixrto the air and dx'ifted upward , forming a ponderous monument of moux'ning to the dead iirside. A rumb ling , rushing sound like a swiftly mov ing train through a tunnel preceded the flames. Secretary Watchorn , Superintendent Hill and the reporter were at the pit mouth awaiting the outbr-cak. To the experts the smoke indicated approach ing fire , axrd for half an hour before its arx'ival its coming could be heard. Long before the fire reached the pit mouth it could be seen licking up the timbex's in the mine , and the steady stx'eam of water which rippled down tho slope seemsd oixly to inspire and encourage to wilder efforts the angry fiend. World * • Pair Presidency. Chicago , 111. , June 29. Ex-Senatoi Palmer of Michigan was unanimously elected president of the world's Colum bian exposition at the meeting of the national commission and J. S. Dickin son of Texas was chosen secretary. The committee on permanent organ ization recommended that tho officers of the commission consist of ; > , px'esi- ' dent , five vice presidents , treasurer and secretary , the first vice president ' to be of opposite politics of the pi'esi- ' dent , and the other four to be equally . ' divided between the parties. The re- ; port was adopted and the election of . the px-esident and secretary settled as \ above. The matter of vice presidents was re ferred back to the committee to report 3 x'ecommendations. . The executive committee of the Na- ) tional Live Stock association called on ' Px'esident Palmer this afternoon. He j told them that his heart was with them in their desires x'egai'ding the live * stock exhibit and px-omises the com mittee that ho would carefxxlly look . after tweir interests and advised them , to present their petition at once , ini i sisting strongly upon space being al lotted and on a rough estimate being , made. He further advised them to 1 ask for an even 200 acres. e The president sent to the senate the I following nominations : Lieut. Richard c N. Batchelder , deputy quartermaster " * genex'al , quartermaster general with the rank of brigadier general. i THE SENATE WILLING i i THAT WYOMIXII SHOULD JIF ADMIT TED TO STATEHOOD. Tho BUI for the Satuc Pum > m the Up per Hoiihc by n Strict Party Vote CouNidcrntlon of the Pedcral Elec tion BUI A Beeord ofother Proceed ings In the Senate and House oTJCcp- rcscutatlves. CONGKKSSSONAIi PKOCKEDINCS. In the scnate on the 23d tho houso bill for the relief of settlex-s on tho Norther-n Pacific railroad indemnity lands was repox'ted and placed on the calendar. Tho senate then resumed considex'ation of tho agricultural col- lego aid bill , and MoiTill offered a sub stitute for vax'ious amendments pend ing Saturday , as to the division of the fund between colored and white schools of the state. The amendment was adopted and tho bill passed. Tho con ference x'eport on tho dependent pen sion bill was then taken up and Berry spoke against it. Gorman also op posed tho conference report. The ex penditure under the bill would aggre gate § 78,673,105 and this added to tho § 125,000,000 under the existing law , would leave tho treasury bankrupt in 1891. Vest spoke of the monstx'ous abuses that had gx'own up under the pension system , and declared his belief that the pending bill was being pressed for personal and political motives. Finally the discussion closed and a vote was taken and the conference x'eport agreed to yeas 34 , nays 18. A con ference was ox-dered on the fortification bill , and Dawes , Plumb and Gorman were appointed conferees on the part of the senate. After executivesession the senate adjourned. Iix the house the speaker announced the appointment of Messx'S. Brewer , Butterworth and Say- ers as confex'ees on the fortification bill. The house then went into committee of the whole on tho District of Columbia business. The committee rose without final action on the bill. The conferees on the general peixsion appropx-iation bill failed to agx'ee. The house insisted upon a disagx-eement to tho senate amendments , and adjourned. In the senate on the 21th , the confex-- ence repox't on the naval appropriation bill was presented and agreed to. The senate then proceeded to the considera tion of the postoffice appropriation bill. Some amendments were adopted and the bill passed. The senate then pi-o- ceeded to the considex-ation of the diplomatic and consular appropx-iation bill. Senator Shex-man , from the com mittee oir foreign relations , moved to increase tho compensation of the min ister to Turkey from § 7,500 to § 10,000. Agreed to. All the amendments hav ing been agreed to the bill was passed. Senate bills to .adopt regulations fox- preventing and in l-clation to collisions at sea were passed. ( These bills em body the rules agi'eed to by the international maritime conference. ) The conference report on tho pensions appropriation bill was presented. The senate x-eceded from the only amend ment xrot arranged in the conference , that for the appointment of two addi tional pension agents , and the pension appropriation bill now goes to the president. In the house MxButte x-- worth presented a report of the appro priation comnriltee upon the senate amendments to the legislative bill. Tho x-eport of the committee was agx-eed to and a conference ox'dei'ed. A conference was ordered on the bill to : increase the number of managei's of I national homes for volunteer soldiexv. I Tho senate amendment to the house } bill to extend the time for thepay - j meirt of the purchase money for the j lands of the Omaha Indians in Ne- bi-aska was agx-eod to. Debate took place on the silver bill until the hour of adjournment. In the senate on the 25th the house i bill for the admission of Wyoming to the union as a state was considered. The bill was temporarily laid aside and Ingalls oii'ci'ed a resolution instructing the committee on px-ivileges and elec tions to inquire ixrto the publication of the recox'd to-day of the personal ex planation by Call , and report whether i it is in accordance with tho rules , etc. j This led to a sharp spat , in coux-se of which Ingalls charged Call with hav ing "delibex-atelv falsified the recoi'd. " He was called to order and modified this , making it "changed" ' the record , j The resolution went over without ac tion and the senate proceeded with the ' Wyoming admission bill. An effort ! was made to have a vote taken on the ! bill , but Vest objected and moved an amendment and the senate adjourned , xn the house the conference report on the naval appropriation bill was pre sented. Tire previous question was then ordex'ed and the confex-ence report idopted. The silver bill was discussed. ! md at 3 o ' clock the voting began. * 5pr-inger moved that separate votes be J \ treld on each section , and the fixt vote j taken was on tho proposition to concur j in the first sectioir of the senate bill. : providing for thefi'ee coinage of silver , j ' , he coins to be full legal tendei' , in j i olace of the fix-st section of the house , ' jill providing for the coinage of § KI I ' 500,000 worth of silver per month , j J Che motion to concur in the substitute ] jroposed by the senate to the fix-st sec- J ion of the house bill was defeated , reas 135 , nays 152. The announce- < nent of the vote was received with \ iheex'sonthex-epublicanside. Springer ] hen withdrew his request for a separ- \ ite vote on each section , and the house hen , by a rising vote of 146 to S5 , ion-concurred in all the remaining sen- ( ite amendments. The house then voted j hat a conference be asked with the < enate on the bill. Hitt of Illinois iresented the conference report on the ] liplomatic appropriation bxll , and it ras agreed to. J In the senate on the 26th the follow- ag bills were taken from the calendar l > 4 \ and passed : Houso bill to provido for c / term of coux-t at Danvillo , 111. , senate ( I bill to aid tho state of South Dakota to ) \ support a school of mines , donating 50- > per cent of tho money raised from the / sale of mineral lands , not to exceed \ § 12,000 a year , nor to exceed the { amount contributed by tho state. The / resolution by Call , directing tho score v \j taxy of tho senate to proparo a table , VI showing tho number of bills introduced [ I by each senator , and the number or Vj them passed , was taken up and Mi * . ( \ Edmunds moved to lay tho resolution " | j on the table. After an explanation by ( j Call as to his motivo in offering the fl x-esolution , the motion to lay on the- ll table was agreed to , and tho house bill J j for the admission of Wyoming as jk. JI state was taken up and Jones of Ar- II kansas addressed tho senate. No defi- ( J nite action was taken. In tho house , l\ \ the regular order being demanded , Mr. ,1 , Lodge of Massachusetts began the de'I bate upon tho national election bill. ll lie. proceeded to sketch tho bill in out- ll line , and said the act which it was pro- JI posed to extend had been called into- ll existence by tho gigantic frauds in tho 'I city of New York px-ior to 1870 and J 1871. Hemphill of South Carolina ar(1 gucd it was unconstitutional , and was II not national , but sectional. There was- ( I no mox-e iniquitous provision in the bill jl than tho ono px'oviding for tho ap- i I pointment of an unnumbei'ed number ll of men absolutely under the direction ,1 of the supexwisor. Ho examined in de(1 tail the provisions relating to super- I visor's , and said tho whole bill seemed \m \ framed against tho voters , and in fa- jl vor of tho supervisox * . Tho discussion ( I continued till adjournment , no final ] l action being taken. [ I In the senate on the 27th considera- \1 \ tion of the bill for the admission of Wy- \1 \ oming as a state was resumed and Mor- I fl gan began an address in opposition to jl it. Payne and Gray argued against tho < l bill , and Piatt favored it. The qucs- \1 \ tion was taken on Jones1 substitute , ll ( the enabling act for Wyoming , Idaho , Arizona and New Mexico ) and it was ' rejected by a strict party vote yeas [ I IS , nays 29. Jones , of Arkansas , then | l moved as a substitute an enabling act ll for Wyoming alone , and it was rejected ( M by exactly the same vote. The bill jl then passed by a strict party vote I yeas 29 ; nays 19. The bill for the ad- jl mission of Idaho went over as unfin- < l ished business till Monday. In the house 'I consideration of the election bill was { I resumed. Haugen of Wisconsin ad- I dx-essed the house in support of tho I measure. He declared it was not prti- I posed to touch the state elections , bin , I did px-opose to supervise national elec- ( tions a clear right of congress. The bill jl was not a local , but a general one in its application. Covert of New York said the bill was an evidence of tho distrust felt by the republicans of tho 9 government of and for the people. The republican party was used to meet- jl ing emergencies. The conference re- ( l port on the legislative appropriation { bill was px-esented and discussed. The fl house acceded to the amendment in- jl creasing the salaries of commissioner /fl / and assistant commissioner of the land 11 office and another conference was fl ordei-ed on the amendments relating to { fl increase of salaries of senate employes. fl The speaker announced the appoint- fl ment of Messrs. Conger of Iowa , Wal- fl ker of Massachusetts and Bland of fl Missouri as conferrees on the silver H bill. < Sonic IHciiltoii of ? -IiHlcii. . | Omaha , Neb. , June 26. The chic ! | fl topic of conversation upon tho streets jfl of Omaha yestex-day was the x-esult of jfl the investigation of the accounts of C. ( H II. McKibben , late purchasing agent of | H the Union Pacific , showing that he M nuxst have gotten the best of the com- > ] H pany by a sum ranginy betv.fcn § 200 , - H 000 and § 400,000 , and all inside of ifl eleven months. And many interesting H things arc told in relation to McKibben. i S The whereabouts of the latter is not H definitely known , but it is known that H onlv about a week has elai/scd since JH Mrs. McKibben sent out to her cin-Io \mM \ of friends handsomely lilhographed fH | cards announcing that her family had 'fl removed to Chicago. Mrs. McKibben ( l | also led her friends to believe that he- | H husband had accepted a situation in ' M that city at about double the salaiy he | H had been receiving here , which latter JH is said to have been § 3u0 p jr month. | One thousand silk mills employes of M Yonkers , X. Y. . have struck against a M reduction of wages. M J.iriC STOCK ASI > l'RODUCK MJKICKIS. ,9 | Quotation * from Xrw i'orl : . C. ' iirmjo , St , 'j fl /old * , Oiiitttiu iiml KliK'rUf'S. j J OMAHA. | | Wlirat No. 2 71 < < ? : ii M Corn Ni > . 2inix ! S % 30 M Qat Per bu - " 0 < fll 10 H \ly \ VLWrfr & 1 M ISuttor Cr'-atnery 10 * % 1" H Huttfr Datrv. . . " . V-i * S IS H MiPork Kt bbl 9 75 ( i/,10 75 j H l'X Frh 10 < f II M I'liic'iki'ii * Livijkt do/en 3 00 U. . * > V ) . H > prniK Chirk * " ! ! ' ptr ( W „ 2 0" ) St. 'J 2" t M [ , cmon Clioice. ir box 5 00 ( Q , G CO M [ Jnnist IVr Ixix : : u ft . ' . 0) j H : ) iiioiis > vw , I'erbbI 4 o < * > 4 .7) H [ 5in Xi\ir : 1 • Cj 1 " , H ft'ool Fine , unwufheU. per > . . . . IS & 15 H ! ' tito - > UJ ? ' - _ .TO M \ppl * > < ; Chnic , p : r bbl .4 0) Cp 5 OT j H II.iv I > r ton S < J ScIOOO • f M lUizMixed packing ' • ' . " - ! 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