'0 TUEMlDDLElttJRGIirOST. T. II. HAUTER, Editor and Tro'ii. Miniu:nt mm, r.i., t. 4, ism. CHINESE EXCLUDED, Tin; rr.rsinr.Nr signs mi; III Ma, lilt Reason fur Approving It Matlo ilio Subject of a Mrssago to t'ongrcs. Tho Preddent sent tho following messate to Congress in relation to tli Chinese Exclu sion tiill, which lio lia ninc I; It ohm to mo tlwit (oiiio suggestion find rcc immcuditliDns may Toiorly nit- inpiiny my npprovnl f this bill. It object la to more cflWtunlly nccomplixli ,y legislation the exclusion fr m th country of C'tiliifso lnl.onTs Tlio XK'riiii(Mit if blending tlio ociid I. nb;t and mutual raco l.tirvy net (i-ltn of tlie Chilli so lit I oring cln-ses with tlste of the great It sly nf tho et.plo of the United Ktnto has Iscti proved by tlio experience of twenty Je.rs, ninl ever ninco the llurlingamo treaty of ls;s, to I pin every sense nil" is-, impolitic and ii jiiri'ttin to both nation. With tho lio of time, tlio neccs ily for lis nl an donmciit has grown in force, until tho hav ing in rlinro the government of tho resx?c tive countries hnvo resolved to modify and uflloicntly abrogate nil those fintures of prior conventional nrrniigcnicnt which fx?r Tnitted tlio ruining of Chimsj laborers to the United States. In intNlillrntioii of prior convention tlio treaty of NovemlxT 17, lso, won concluded, tvhereby, in the first article then of, it win greed Hint tlio United State should at will regulate, limit, or suspend the coming of Chiiu-m lo' orers to the United States, lint not absolutely prohibit It; and under thin nr ticle nn ad of Congress, approved on May th, la (see Vol. Z, p. 5s, Stat nt large.) atul amended July ., ism (Vol. 2.1, p. ll., Suites at lnrgoi, susp-nlcd for ten voir tlio coming of Chinese laborer to tlio United States nnd regulate tlio going ami coming of inch Chinese Invl orers n were nt Hint time in tlio United States. It wn, .however, soon mndu evident that the mercenary grel of the parties who were trading in tha InW of this class of the Chinos jxipu'ntion, was proving too Htrong for the just execution of tlio law, nnd that the virtual defeat of tlio objuotnnd in t sit of both law and treaty won being fraudulently accomplished by false irotense ami jxTjury, contrary to tlio ex pressed will of Ixitli governments; To such an extent ha the successful viol tion of the treuty and the law enncted for iU execution progressed that the court In the 1'nciflo State have been for some time pn.it overwhelmed by the examination of the case of Chine) laborer who are charged with having entered our port under; fraudu lent certificate of return or neck to establish by perjury the claim of prior residence. Such demonstration of tlio innerfitiva and in 111 cient condition of the treaty and law ha pro ducel deep aentrd and Increasing discontent among the peop'e of tho United Htate, and Wpeclally' with those resident on tho l'aciflo coast. This ha induced me to omit no effort to finish an effectual reme.ly for tho evil complained of, nnd to answer tlio earnest populnr demand forthu ubmluto ex .'luiou of Cliine-io lnlxirers. In August, I""'!, our MinUtr to IVklngre civel from tlio Chinese Foreign Otllcs a votmnuiili'iitiou a:inouucing tlmt Clilnn, of Iier own nc'-ord, proposed to istablit-h a sys tem of strict nnd iibvdutu prohibition of her liilxirers, under heavy ponnlticf, from romiti to the Uniteil stiitei, and likoH jso to proliibit tho return t tho Unite 1 State of any Chi nero Inboi er who had at tiny time gone back to China, "in order," (iti tho words of tlio coniliiiinie-itiun) ,-tlint tho Chines.) laborer may graduilly I hi reduced in nuiiilsr nnd ran' of dui.'T uveitoJ and live pre nerved."' Tills view of the Cliineso fiovnrnnient, comp'etely in hirmony with that of tho United States, was by my direction sjx?edily formulated in a treity draft between the na tion, rmUxlying the projHisitionH n pi-iwnt-el by tlie Cliinese Foreign t)llloi. Tlio deili erutions, freipiut oral diKcusdons and enrro pomlein'.) on the gemrnl qn tions thut en med havo Ix-en fully coiniiiunlc itet by mo to tlie Sen.'itu at tho pi t s tut. n'mion, and, n contaiuel in S..riHto executive ilocument, jxirtt 1 nnd and in Senate executive, docu ment No. VT'J, nviy bo lnm-rly roforrol to as oiiitaiuing n completo history of tho trnnsictioii, It n thus eisy to leiru how f'o j lint ihires mi l unequivocal mutual iiudcrst'iuding of thutwo governments were br ui;h' into ni ticulnto l form in tho treaty, which, aft' r u mutual exhibition of plenary xiwi'is from the riix'ctivo governments, ai aiguiil mid ro'icludel by tlio p!enixitentia ries of tho United States and China ut this cnpitul on March l'Mi la-t. Iteing su' milted for tin ndvlca and cm Heiit of tho Semite, Its continuation, on the noventh dny of Mny last, wu accompanied by two itiiieiiilinouts, nhich that boiy eu graft'd iixin it. On tho twelfth day of the lino iiiouth the Chiiiesit L ster, tho whs tho i leiiipoteiitiiu y of his gnvi'iiiiniit in th negotiutlju mid tho coiielu-ion of tlio tr. aty, in a no e t" thn Secret nry of St ito gnvo hi npprovul of ih so aiiieiiclmuuts, 'as ti.ey did not n ter th i terms of tli. treaty,' mi l the amuiid ' ents "eu at onco te!ejrnphed to Cliinn, w hither the origimil treaty ha I pros viously U en sent immuiiiutuly alter iUsiguus turo on March In the course of hi message the I'rosldnt recommt iiil that Congto by J lint roilu tion, or In some other manner, provide Hint Mien Cliineso luboreri a have uctii'illy em Inrkeil on their return to thi country Iwfore the puHWge of thin bill mny lie perml'ted to land, llo also iccotuineniW the appropriation of the amount numed in the rejected treaty to indemnify certain Chinese subject for daiiiuei sutfero I'througli violence in the re mote ami compurutivoly unsettled porticr of our country. Pan per Mormon Imported. Th tennmhip Wisconsin, from Liverpool, lam lei VA) Mormon, moslly woinon and chil dren at Nw York. Some men in Ike party wero detained n aupora, and 13 children witLuut pareuUor tuai dia i wore also held. THK T? II FAT COnXCIl. Ilntchlnaon Hold Out for $'J for 8-iicnilM-r and Orlrea tbe hort Md. Thn third and Inst of the three big dny that concluded September contract on Chicago 'Change opened with intense feeling on thn port of the trd and much curiosity on the part of tho public, who crowded the galleries arid the floor vt the Exchange. The tap of the bell nt V: V) o'clock on the last dsy wa the signal for a wild rush in tho wheat pit. Prices o)ned about le over Friday night for all future, except Nepteinttcr, which wo qnotd nt tl.iW. HutchiiiRon nsko I 'J for SeptemlK-r or cash whent. In the future there wn a spurt of rolling for 30 niinu'o on tho belief that prion wou'd break when tho 8ep tainlxjr deal close I. An hour Inter the senti ment cl.ange I an I price were put above thn i piiing figure by It o'cl.ick. Before 11:3) Dtcemberw ld from OSJictbe lowest iMnt up tol, a id l eforo 1:15 o'clock it (truck tl.'5. Aftir dlmg down to l7 1-3 tnrly, O tolier bulged to l.O.rf just Isjforo the cUsx'. May rnngeil betwen 11.00 3 8 ami ll.M'f- A ale of Scott-mUT wa r-ported nttl.tV)nnd Car load In ettlennnt wero Mid nt 1 1. 'A 1.45 and Inter t.6- Up to w ithin !M minute of tho close Ilutchln m iu'hIo no concession nnd held cosh w he it nt ti. Tho cke in wheat wasfensatioiinl, ami priis-s declined sharply for future. Tlireats of boilily harm to Hutchinson wero frequent, but no overt act wero committed. It was evldont that about all the local short had sett cd, and it is unknown bow much I yet outstanding. Tho close (how au advance for future of from 1 7-Nc to fie. It- ceipu were &10 cars and 1,700 bushels by cannL It f tlx year since a 'corner' in wheat wn (UcccHsfully carried througli to the close of tho month, with the exception of the prec'iit one, and little over a yer since an nttompt to do o by Harper, of Fidelity bunk fame, Droved a disastrous; failure. TElMtlllM: DF.STITUTION. Indiana Itexort to Cannlbnllain to I'.wnpe Death by Starvation. A terrible talo of starvation ami destitu tion among the Indian comos from the Ala habasca river county. It com- in tho form of a petitionto the Minister of tho Interior for Canada, ami is ligned by tho Anglican Ilishop for that diots-s", six clergymen ami niivtionaries, nnd sevt-ral Justictsi of tho peace. It set out that, owing to tho grent mortality of tho beaver anl other smnll game, the Intlinn, Ixitli last winter and th s summer, have been in a ooiitinunl tato of starvation. They are now in a c-ompleto state of destitu tion, ami are unublo to provido tliemsolves with clothing, ammunition, or fixxl for win ter. The jietition (ays that on account of the starvation ami conseipient cannnbnlism a party of twenty-nine Indians was reduced to three in the winter of lNt. In tho Macken xie river diatrlct there wero aoveral esse of death by starvation and one or more of can nnmllsn. During last winter, among tho Fort Chippewyan Indians, botween twenty ami thirty (tar veil to death, and the do it h of other was accelerate 1 by want of fotxl. Many Indians Cross, Heaver and Chippewyunii st almost all point whore tbere are missions or trading Ksts, would certainly have t rved to di atb but for the help given by tbe trader ami mlssionnrlr at thons place. Score of families, having lost tholr heads by starvation, nre now per feetly helpless and must starve to death or 0it one another utiles help come. Tho jxo pie aro grently ngituUnl over the tint XHctd fnto of these xxir p -oplo no I heart-rending stories of MilTeriugs and cuuiiibulism contin ua to coiuo in. l UTY MILKS OF l LAMi; I'rnirln 1'irc Near . a most own, Dak., Do un Inline inc Amount of l'Miuaue. From Jamestown, 1) k., it i learno I that one of tlio most extensive prairie lire thn ever visile I that section ha t ik 'iiplnc there. All of the western urt of Ijimnurc county uml much of the southern uml wt stern pirt of Stutsumn county, were burn ed over. The strong wind drove tho flames before it at unprecedented velocity. Instill ens of where the fire rnu fatter than horses uro narrated. Many farmers will lose every thing nnd much distress will be experience I, Tho Ore seems to have originated in Coteuux county, about thirty mile west. Hun Ireds of ton of hay ami thousands of bushels of grain wero dostroye I. Tlio fire had lieen extinguished in m my places, t ut Is still racing fierce' y in inany ibrection. Tuss'ineni on tho James Kivor Valley trnui sty the prairie from Iimoiire to within n few miles of Jamestown, a distance of fi 'ty miles, was all ublizo. They could see the bur..ing birns, ilwellins, ami grain, due s from tho car windows. Tho llro was nisi west and n Tth of the c.ty. At yet no re port of l ss of life have come in. IiikuIII cient fire-breaks aro tho cause of losi in many t a-os. The prairie gran is thick and dry, and ordinary flre-hioik wtro in effectual in the fjc of the gulo tlmt drovo tho lire on. EIIUT DOWN. Tlio Sugar Trust Closr a He fin cry Throwing UOO Men Out ot Work.. The Bay State Sugar Beflnery at Boston, acting under order from the sugar trust headquarters in Now York, has closed down for gixd, thus throwing out of r mploymont 3X) men. Thi action of the trust w.. a com plete surprise to tho men employed at the Bay State, a no direct intimation had I ecu given out until the mental roceived their alarie, Saturday, w hen they were inform' d that their service were la the future to be dispensed with for goixl. The Bay State ha been running on full tune since the midd'e of last July, when, after a shut down lasting sovon months, the managers received order to start up and continue until further notice. Five Men Hilled. A train on the Oregon Short Lino wnide. railed by running into a herd of cuttle nenr 1'oont illo, Idii'io, The following were kl led; Daniel Hill, engineer; J. LhjiiUii. fireman; Chsrle Walton, bruki man; tni unknown men who were riding in a box car. Tiiir y car Hero wrecko I, uuUiiling a loot of 150,000. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. GLEANKD I HUM ALL 80UnCE3. The Slain Fact Itclatrtd Without Vn nccensary Word. A secret "Q" circntsr ha turned tip. It begius: "A great many may think the strike on the Q I getting to be an old tory, but such I not the esse; the strike is Just a good as It ever was, and the men are just as deter mined and soli I, and the company is losing money a fast as, if not fnstor than when tbe strike first Iwgan. Wreck are mimorou." The circular put on a bold front, urge brother to be prompt with assessment and siys the brotherhood i bound to win. In nn action brought by a loser in large grain sjieculntion to repudiate his order on tho ground that dealings of thi nature were contrary to public policy and in violation of the law n gainst gam'iling, Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.,nt B mton, maintained lhat the reselling of properly b?for the day if delivery contracted by the original pur chn t wa not prohibited by any law, and flint sp'M'ulation wa. a legitimate transi tion. He took tho brva I ground that (pecu lation wn the life of commerco. - About fifty men were at work excava ting a trench at Little K.x-k, Ark., Tues day, when a ba'ik twenty feet high cived in, burying three of them, the rest csc-piug. Men were instantly et to work, but tho three were dead when taken out An artificial pond 81) feet nlove Val paraiso, Chili, broke August 15. Torrents 13 feet high rushol through tbe street. Fifty-sevon bodits hnve been recovered and ninny will never bs recovered. The loss to property i very heavy. The storm thst was reported In the Ontf of Mexico Suud ly hi develoxs I into a verita ble cyclone. It broke loose into the Atlantic Ocean, Monday, following tlio Oulf Stream Sundsy uml sweeping up the coast at a live ly gnit. On SoptemW 25th the Centre of low bar ometric pressure wo somewhere off Cajsj Mattel as. The s. r nut In c'inrg of the Kquituble Building predicted tint the cycloi would reach that Intitu lb aomelim? in the nf ternoou of tho Siith ou its way to the north cask By granting a subsidy to a private steam hip comsviy running between Russian Pa ciflc port und China, Jupnn and Cores, the Kussinn navy has been materially strength' cut d. Tbe stosmers are lo be pi iced at th tiisxal of tho Cs ir In cue of war. Two unknown men successfully steered John K. Lem m, of Allegheny, intj a room at '.!") l'enrl street, in that city, and worked the ''bunco" game on him, realizing f 10,000 iu cuth. The wom-n 'ot Boston are willing to piy something for tbe privilege of voting. Twelve thousand of them have hat thorn selves registered and nssew.d In order to gain the right of suffrage. At a meeting of the Ohio Methodist Con ference, at Columbus yesterday, two Jewish Kibbis, Dr. Jeaselson, of Columbus, and Dr. Welo'ier, of Missisiippl, were pro sent and were introdui-od to the conferonca. It is said that this I ouo of the first, If not tbe first, case of tho kind on recoid. The worst feir concerning prairie fire los-e in Dakota have boon realized- Hun dreds of small furmeri have sustained losses tanging from 1 100 to l,'00. Nearly oil ths hay In tlio south part of Barn cou ity w destroye I, ami the s line in iy also ue said of whet . Near Moutxlior, names of a dm in htvo bee i h' nnl whoso wheit ecaed Au gust front only tin bum up in Sepioiujer's lire. Still another victim has fallen at the hands of London' famous Whilechnpel murderer. As in previous case, thi last bxly found wu that of a fallen woman, and was mutilated in the si mo fashion. The Ohio and Wabash Valley tobacco crops are tho largest known, as well us of tho finest quality. The Western Kentucky farmer will meet at I'rincetou to discuss til advisability of suspending raising ouo year, to increase prioui. in tlio person who nave beon attached by yollow fever in Jacksonville one IU ton h iv (lied. At Memphis ami along the lower Mis MMiippI iu ls?sj tho death wero one la four. An underground river, supMed to bo of large dimensions, is reported to have been discovered nt Whiteville, the county seat of Columbus, S. C. A roaring and rushing of wster can Ih plainly heard, and huudre Uof erso. s are visiting tho scene. The Sioux Indians want tho Govmiment to buy tho Indian reservation outright at 50 cents wr acre, which would yield them $5, 50u,lK) , on tho Interest of which they wuuld b. a lo to live. Tlie Indian chiefs will have n conference w ith the I'rmiduut on tho sub ject thi week. Snow fell throughout England Monday. The frotU of Friday and Saturduy night seriously dumnged tho tol aoco crop of Vlr giuiu, of lilt h 00 x r cut. i still out. Snow fell in spvurnl p'aces iu Southern Vor niout ami Ntirthern New I umsliiro hntur thiy. Corn uml fruit wereconsidoiubly darn aged. At Chlcngo thn price of bread lit been ad vance I a tout pjr loaf, oivlu lo tho wheat qUut-Zt), Itcport of tlio I lull CoiiunlHHion. Tbe majority rep-t of tho Uth C mmls bIoii, signo I by 11. Ii. Godfrey, A. S. WU bums and Arthur U Thomas, hu bem re ceivotl by th-i Secretary of ths Interior. The recommendation Is renewed t h it Utah should not be I'dmltted to the Union until such time as the Mormon xsoplo shall manifest by tholr futuie uctsthut they have abandoned polyg amy in good faith, and not thin until an amen mont shall have beeu mode, to the con ititution of tho United State prohibiting tha practice of polygamy. Tbe report la lengthy and dikcuhiOi the iloruiou question in all iu phuue. Iturned to Death. The residence of O. S. Slater, a prominent farmer, living Ave mile from Cauonsburg, . a., caught llro and wo destroyed. By he ro o effort Mr. Slater s ivod hi wife and 4 cli Itlren from tha flumes mid then rushed again into the building to remove tho house hold efT ct. 1 hut instant tho upper flxir fell, mid lio was ci us .e 1 and buruod to death with buluinily standiug by ha plos FIVE LIVES LOST. t A Chicago Warchonse Burned And Workmen Rnrlcd In the llulna. The large furnishing warehouse of Wilkin son & Co., nt No. IS and 17 Lake street, Chlo igo, took Ore and wa destroyed. The flume spread with great r pidity, and the twenty-five employe in the building had the greatest difficulty in reichingthe street alive. Many of them slid down a wire to tbe second floor and then crawled along the front of tbe building to the window next door, thence getting safely to the ground. It was at first thought that all had escaped, but sub rqueutly it wa found that five per son were miming. The Ixxlie of two of these have already been recovered from Ilia debris, and it Is believed that three more are still there. Wilkinson & Co. lose $1x0,000 on stock; Insurance 40,000. Tlie loss on the building was a'xnit I"),(MX). The workmen were on the upper flo-w, The back stairway wa the only one by which this fl or could le reached, and before the employe were aware of their danger, esi ipe in this direc tion wa cut off by tho Amies. All of tho employes on this fl xir mnnaied to make good their escajw through a trap door to the roof and thonce to the ground, except the foreman, Wm. Koch, who remained behind to see ths other out in safety, a id a ly named Bete, who wn overcome with the moke ami fire while climbing up the la Idor to the trnp door fell back. Both these were burned to death. . MOKMON9 GOING TO MF.X1CO. Large Purchaaca of Agrlonltnral Land Doing Made and VII Ingca i:talillsbcd. The movement of the Mormnns toward Mexico! a-suming a definite shajie and large prop)rtlon. Special dinpttche have been publishetl to the elTct lhat the Mexican Gov ernment lind granted a concession of 10,000, OX) aensof land to the Morm mi, and that they purxb ise 1 7,000 square miles of Ziini Indian land in Mexico. There is no found i tion for such statem -tit. Every foot of laul obtain I by the Mors mon In Mexico so far bis been by purchase f om private owners, and the Government would no doubt utterly re fuse to make them a concession of lsn L The Zunl Iiidiaiis live in New Mcx.co, and not in old Mexico, and cannot dispose of a single acre of their reservation. The facta are that the Mormons have quietly bought from pri vate owner large bodies of agricultural lands in Northern Cbihunhut, principally in the valley of the Cusu Grande river, and they are negotiating for more. Very flour ishing village exist in the nelghlxjrhood, the principal on being 1'orflrio Dial. These colon ista are the precursor of greater bodie in the future, ud are very quiet and unob trusive. 9 runrosixY wreckf.d. Three Persons Madly Injured, In cluding J. Conway, of Pittsburgh. The Wabash Western passe" per train, go ing wes', was wrecked at a point one mile west of Mexico, Missouri. Only three per sons were badly Injured, and none of them fatally. They are Mrs. Kste McCarthy, thrown through a window when tbe car turned over, cut about the head and face; J. F. Conway, Pittsburgh, l a- k wrenched; T. O. Humphrey, Jerome, Kan., shouidor dislocated ami bruised niwit the body. Several other wero slightly In jured. The three paetigrr named wero ;ared for at Mexico, and th remainder tmns ferrod to another train and rent on to Kan uis City, General Mnnnger Hay stated tha. rail lind I ecu leinove l, and from what hid already b s?u ascei t linetl by the company the flemlish crime ha I Ikv-ii commitel by par lies having unset tied c'alms ngilnst tho com pany. An investigation is now liii made. There was no attempt at robbery. CANNOT KVADK IT. Another DocInIoii Against tlio Liquor Seller in Iowa. At Des Moines, 'a., Ju lge Given of the Dis trict Court has struck another blow at tho li quor sellers of Iowa. The prohlbitary law hns beon evaded in many count. is by sellers who have claimed to lie agents of Chicago men and to be rolling 'iquor in origimil jiackagts, anil several coses gaiu-t sncn di alers nre in the courts. Judge Given, wh(se almost uni form correctness in question of luw give bis opinion great weight, decided iu such cane that the right to bring liqucr Into the State does not curry the right to sell indis criminately, ami that the original paeksge must be th lined a he package of the distil ler, with the Government stamp attscho I, and cannot l.e co'istru i I to me in packages put up by tie ,ler with the express intention of evudiii t-io laws of the Stale. Defeated iii Hat tic. Advices from Africa ray that an expdl tion consisting of 30 Houssas, led by E ig lish oftlc r left Winnebuh, o i the Gold Coast, to punish thn Togo uegrtw) for mur deriiij Oa t. Dnlrymple. The exe I tion wu mat by a well-urmo I force of native and a severe engagement took place. The buttle resulted in tho tlofont of tho native, with a 1 ss of 300 killo I. Tho Houssas at suffered beav.ly, 54 of their nuuilter I elnj kllloi aud niot of tlio survivors wounded. Two Men Killed. Two men iu the employ of ForepatigVs cir cus wore killed in the Ft. Wayne Riilroul yird, neir l nntylva ii avo iuo, All 'glinny. Their'iiamo witj 'Suooiiy' M ira i, a wiiite man, yo ,rs old, wlims borne was at C tm den, N. J., and 'Slieky' lUn for l, a colored man 3'J year old who live I in Now York Bute. Ihey were oinvuiivn and loading baggage on the an. They had wa ked up tho track together. A locomotive on t ie west bound track struck both mo i In the back, knocked them Uowu and liu r illy beheaded them. Twenty Person Drowned. The master, second oflleer aud survivor ot th British ship E.rl Weniy-a, from San Francisco for Queenstown, which was sunk In a collision with the tddp Aniencapul wore taken alMwrd the ship Gr enmorefrom Mun tita for Now York on Septemlsar 0, together with be I'es'rters from tho Ardencupol. The master's wife ai d children and tho Hist ofllo rs ami 19 of tho crow of tlio Earl Wvm ys wore drowned, HFTIETq CONGRESS. In the Bennte, Wednesdiy. Mr. Elmnd reportfltl from the Judiciary Committee, Sen ate bill approving the sett foment of thelMiund sry line (in th- water cf the s-n) tsptween Connecticut, and Kho :e Island. It was txisa ed. Mr. f'hanolcr from the Commute on Naval Affair, repnrttsj tha bill authorising th 1'resi lent to Issue a commission a R ar Atbniral to I'll fl p C. Johnson, to be imt-xl January a5, lx7, and to deliver the fame to hi widow. 'I he bill wa plasd on the cnl en lnr. I he bill reported by Mr. Honr on the nth of February last, 'to provhte for inquest un ler i aiioonl nnthority,' as tekn up, and Mr. Georg" proceeied toa,ldres th S.nut on th Suoject. In the House Imm diately after the rend ing of ihe journal, Mr. Forney, of Alabama, ireiitd the conference teport on tae Snu dry Civil Appropriation bill. Mr. Chendle, of In llaiin, askml that the report lie over for one day, on the ground that Sona'or Voor hots, who was very much interested in the Library provision, was alisent from th city, i be rttpe st was acce tlel to ai d the report went over until Ti.ursdny. Mr. McRic, of Ark inias, from the Con mitten on I'uidio Iamls, it-porUfl, ami the Hons - passe I, with out tlo site, a bill to forfeit c-it In Inmls viant tl to the Northuru l'aciflo llailrcal Conipjuy. TntheFe-'ate Wednej'ay, Hie chai wn tx?cupie I by Mr. Mnder'ni, I v tlesigna Ion of the pros! ling n(Tlt!er, Mr. "Ingall. The Houve amemlment to the Senate bill, ap propriating '(Hi,'iOO In nnl of yellow fevw suffer having Ix-en laid lsfor the Senate Mr. Edmunds soi l tha' he had examined Ii an I was very much nfnitl tlmt It. missel the point aim sl nt in the bill; that wn, the capacity to use nny of the tiioney in aid of thn-e who wero sick and in distress n-id In danger nf starvation, n the newsstiers m pert -i I from day to day so ninny to be. In tho hope, tlierefoie. that something letter could Isj done, he moved that theSenn'e non co' cur in the House amendment ami nsk for a conferenco. So ordered. Mr. Cad offered a rslutlon instructing ihe Committee on Epidemic Diseases to consider an I report be fore the sojournment of this session of Con gr ss, such a id t'onal legislation as may be nocess try ami useful to pi event the inirts tion of contagious or infectious di-ease from foreign oun'ries on th" const or loundni ie of the United Stntos, and to prevent and suppress It In Intor-Htnte c mmerce at d for the su' slstenee of such persons a may be detained by tho public authorities. In con hoetion with it ho re d a letter from Mayor Hewitt, of New York, enconing one re ceived by Mr. Hewitt from Mr. Vnnhook, of Florida. Mr. Hewitt suggest to Mr. Call that the latter should Intro luce some reo hit ion t lint would bad to net on before Con gress a ijouree I. Thesuuject was one (the latter sa il) which interest I every psrt of the United Stales, ami particularly th) City of Now York. The city a sutstcrititng lib erally for tlie toliof of Florida sufferers, but was ower lean, except by local quarantine, to prevent ttie spr ad of contnginu. The rem edy ought to be applied iu places where the fever existed ami on a ysteui so comprehen sive asto assure the country that every prac ticmle effort I mndetostnmpoutthed sose. It was orteivd that whe i the Senute ad journs to-day it la till Monday next. Immediately after the reading of the jour nal, the House, on motion of Mr. Burns, of Missouri, adopted the conference report on Sundiy Civil Appropriation bill. In the consideration morning hour, Mr. Blount, of Gtsargin, called up the bill pro viding for u general sunerinte dent of the Hdiway Mail Service, at. a su'ary of 4,0UO. an assistant sux?rlntendent at a salary of 4VI.000, a chief clerk to b- employed in Wash ington at a s tlury of 9'J.OOJ, and a many chief clerks a may be uec.-ssaty at a salary of 1,500 each. Mr. VcCresry, of Kentnckv, ac'ed speaker pro teni. of the house, Monday. Mr. Iinham, of Texas, offered the following res olution: That it Is thesnnse of this hou that ap propriate legislation for tae prevention and suppression of trusts is imperative! v demtnd ed in behalf ot the great Ixxly of the Ameri can people, and that the remain er of the ses sion, or so much tb -reof ns may binecess tsy, should be d'Voted to the xr feel ion of such legis ation, and to that end ab other legis'a tive business except general sppropr ution an'l tariff bills should Isj sub irdi'iatcd until the purixwe nf th s resolu Ion In attained By Mr. Snowtlen, of I'ennsylvnnin For the i ppo ittnent of a (iib-coinmittoo of the comn. ttoe on I'uUlie bud lings nnd gnun Is to pniciss.1 to Cliics'to for ttie purpose of in spi ding tho ixwtoflliM building ant nscer t lining tho uectssiiy, if any of iu enlarge ment. The message from the presMent, an nouncing his approval of the Chinese lull, wus rentl aud r rro 1 to tho committee on foreign nfl'drs. Tlio house fl tul y aljiurned without accomplishing anything. MANY KILLKD AT KOLWA. Thirty-Four Live Nacriflced to the Ferocity of Insurgent a. A steamer from Kolwi bring tho new that two Germans, 11 of tbolr servant, and Ul insurgoiiU were kille I during tho fighting nt 'bat place. Tho insurgent openly re nounced their allegi nice to the sultan on the ground that he ha 1 no power to trsusfer their country to th Gorman Company. German official from Mikind till and Lindi have arrived horo safely. The German Com pany is thus driven from all point exoept Bagamnyo and D irhulaaiu, whore it people are protected by men-of-war. Trade in the m-auwhllo. Is ruined, an 1 failure are Im minent. Tbe tribe are descending upon tho coast In immense number, but they are badly armed, the British consul having for bidden tbe export of armsj. There is an unconfirmed report tu.it a naval otUoer was killed at Kolwa. Iloih Wero Drnnlc Louis IliMoi'rand, a stralghtener In the Riverside bar mill, Wheeling, W, Va., shut his wife in the bnk iu a fit of drunken rage an I tho woman d ed from the effect of tho wound. The trouble lietweeu tlie two grew out of a division of tho two week' pay, just dtawn by the hushar.d. Both ha I boon drink ing Ittssr ami ench wu to b ani) for the alTruy which bnd such a tra-jlo eudinj. Ths bus baml was arrest d qu etyatr illing up town, and Is In jail without ball to await an Indict ment for murder. Throe Men Drowned. A sad accident occurred near Glasgow, Mo., Jam.) llolloway, a wealthy farmer b id made arrangement to exchange a lot of cattle with Mr. Donham, of Sitter, Mo, The cattle were boiug transferred aero the river in a flttboat, when they stampeded and tho boat wa awamped. There were (even men on board and three wore drowne I, Hollowsy, Denham aud O. B, Brown, tbe forrymtn. Ths four who wore saved olung to the Ixjat, Tamaacae'a Army Defeated. Advice have been received from Samoa that the partistn of th deposed King Ma lietoa have bad an engagement with thi army of King Tnma-ese, and that the latter' f. rcos were totally defeated. King Taint sese's army wo under the command of ths Gorman ullkor, Bran ler. V TUB CONDI tlO V OP Tho Crops Add $100,000,000 Country' Wealth, Despite the fshort Wheat Crop. R. O. Dunn Co.' weekly review of tr sayst Doulit about toe corn crop vanlshtd. Estimate vary either way fj, 2,015,(100 bushels, but it Is doulitlen theltr. est crop ever raised. The lucre iss of mors than 810,000 000 bushel In this crop far cat welgli In vnlueany loss In the yield of b nun aiso any pussiuin loss in me yiem of cot. ton; but the yield of rat I also tlnlsru-. on record, and the yield of hay and putak. excellent. Iti sife to ssy that this agricultural product will reprts-nt, nt leu 1100,000,000 more money than last yssr't,; aversge pricai for both. In view of thitgrttt gain in tb agricultural production of wta!tk it is natural to expect increased octivitv business and manufactures, but as yet tin improvement ha been but motiert- Thi I in pnrt because trade has beon chc nl by nrtlllol 1 prices corners in who it sbJ c itton, ami (pec-uhitive ninveniouts In wool, print cloths and perk pro lucta. Tho iron market is quobd stronger atflin. ielphla, but weaker at 1'ittsbur.r, and tU fhoinas Company continue large rales atns. change I price. Southern No. 1 1 quoted I IS. 10 at New Y i rk, but fear of lutcrruptiag by yellow fever teiiisrari!y alTcots thenitrt et. No iinproveiiuiit appvur in tenl raik of which 18,000 ton were s Id mainly a Westorn mills, their (.10 be tig re ntivel) low. er than the current price, l'., at VmUti mills. With several more furnace odd -lb producing capicity, tbe prosjKCt of m.it taining any advance in pig iron i not clstr. Stocks ail vane j 1 about l pr iharo durltL- the week, ami reports from all interior poiok are hopeful. Tbe exces of import over n-f Mirta continue. For tho eight month toi ng August 31 the exe-si was 7,4',,0,li'.7. Bu-lues failuresduring the last seven Jit, numtier for the Uniteil Stale lSd; CaniiU, 34; total, 'i, a compared with last wi anil 107 for the corresponding week of 1S7. Calculations m ido by DratUtrctli a to tb extent of commercial embarrassment for Us first niue mouths of 1S3 a compared wiu the same period ot each year since 133J, ,h. that tbe number of failures In l&S h is txst lower thtn for any of tha other year except lt2 and 1887, while the proportion of gt to liabilities I larger tha i In any year except IS!, thus making a very favorable shoic( lor th ourreut year. OEXKRAb MAIIKI'.TA. PITTHIIUHtlll. BUTTER Creamery 9 Country roll CHEESE Ohio full cream Now York EGOS FRUITS Apples, U,t Veaches bu oo 1J ii 10 10 75 I 01 h 10'. J 15) 15 l'S i 7S IV) 3V ATI '.': 1 aw 1(0 V) 1 00 'A H u 50 Si 61 65) .') 5 4W HIW '-'40 St 00 llltO aau 50 Damson plums,bu 1 00 uraies, poumt ii POULTRY Chicken, p'r. 4) mTATOES-Irish, l.hL 1 '.'5 Sweet. ii o" SEEDS Clover, country, , 4 S5 Timothy . . 2 aft Blue grass . , lot Millet 1 50 WnEAT OU No. 1 red HH) " a " is New Na 2 red, 3 " l3 CORN No. 2 yellow ear, 5t Mixe-tear, 40 S belle I mixd, 40 OATS New No. 2 white, HJ RYE Now Na 2 Ohio m l l a.. 5!) FLOUR Fa..cy wiut -r twir., A r ancy spring i at , n aft Cleir winta, 5 00 Rve Flour. 4 aft SAY New Timothy, 14 50 Ixne, frmi wagons tti 00 MIDDLINGS White, 81 00 Bran, 15 50 Chop Fod , SO 00 BALTIUOHK. Wheat No. 3 red, Rye Corn '7 $ M .11 ii ai n 1CM fx) 50 !i0 -f) its Western i euuur Egg Huy Western 10 00 CINCINNATI. Whe.it No. 2 rod, $ 00 $ 9T live txtrn Out Eggs I'ork Butter pnti.ADEi.rniA.. Flour Family $ Wheat No. 3. Red Corn No. 2, Mix"d Outs Ungradel White Rye No. 2 Itu ter Crenmerv Extra Cheese N. Y. Full Cream 45 15 M Iti 13i'i i 400 ud ai M 51 15 3 75 05 ft-J M IS l LIVE RTOCIC Movement nnd IMdcea at the Central Drove Yard a. I last Liberty, R MoCall & Co., furnbh the following n port oi tbe market at tn so yards; CATTLE. The supply of ca'tlo has boon lib ral srl niost yot an inferior quality, no goo I cutis being on ue. The market was tlie dulltst of the season, ami 15u to &o p T ewt, lownf oti the class of cittle fT red. A few prims cattle would have sold up tt last week't irice. We ctve the foilowinc n ruling quotatiors, anil not all sold: i'rmie 1.3a' to 1,0 'O pnun Is nominal at t-'i'i to 0; good. 1 2 "i 1 1 1.400 llxt., ii 5n to 5.tK); goo.1, l.OoO to 1,'JOO Ins., J 75 to 4.25; r u:li fit, 1,100 to 1,300 llis., MoO lo 3.5 I; heifrn, 2.25 to 8.00; fiitt o. very tlud n ffj.imw 2.50, and not btlf sol I; bulls, $i 00 to 250; frvsb cows and sprite ers, f aj to 45 pjr benl HOOH. The recips ef hog Monday were librsl and the nmik tuctive. Tu ly uml nesduy Ihe upplv was light nndtiioui rW slow, and 10o to 15e jwr hundred lower tna Mondy. At present I be leebiig is ett We quote: Fair to I est Philadelphia. f'L'U to fl.75; tiext porker. 0. 15 to tl.a5: o inuwU to fair, IV5.1KI to U. 10; roughs, 5 U 5.7"). 8IIKEP, Tbe re eoliit of snte.i and la nil is on M" day, about 7,000, were all s Id a". 1 st week' prices. We quote follows : IViuie ObW and Indiana, ail wetlers, weighing l'fr 110 to 125 pou is, 14 41 to 4.0); good, W 100 pound-, t.25 t 4 35; good liidiuua and Missouri, 8.5 to 100 pounds, $-t 75 to 4.i; fair to good, 75 to 60 pounds, (R25 to S.fK common, 00 to 70 pounds, $2 25 to 2.5); prime lambs, 65 to 81 pounds, f5.25 to 5.1 air lamb, 60 to 00 pound. $4 50 to 5.0U Veal Cttlvoe, 110 to 1J0 pounds, 5.23U 4.75. Wool. . New York Wool fairly active and firm: domestic fleece, 20 to 84c, pulled, 20 to tiWt Texsa, 13 lo 82o, Philadelphia, Pa. Wool quiet; pri tea ly Mini unchanged. St. Louis Wool quiet but steady; prio unchanged. . Boston There I a stand v demtnd aaa firm uisrket tor wool, nn t holder are I"""" fereut about selling except ut extreme Prj! Ohio and Ponnsvlvaiii i fl sjo mim sclluij well at 32o (or XX aud 30 to Bio for X