* ' , . at- % • ( • A NEW ELECTION LAW. PETAJLB OF TJIE MEASUJtE JiEIXQ PERFECTED. Iio Sundry Civil Appropriation mil Submitted to the Iloimo TIio Silver ( i rca nro Still Under JHncukkIoii In the Senate Conference Report on the Dependent VciimIoii Rill A Re cord of Other Proceeding * in tho Senate and House of Rcprecntu- * tlVOK. Preparing n National Election Rill. Washington , June 14. Tho house 't caucus committeecharged with tho preparation of a national election bill' on lines agreed upon by the last caucus has been industriously perfecting tho details of tho measure and has sent a rough draft to the printers. When tho proofs are returned tho committee will continue tho work. Tho changes mado already in tho original Rowell bill are : A provision that in cases of conflict be tween returns sent in by tho state elec tion officers and by those of United States supervisors tho latter are to con stitute prima facie evidence of tho right of tho member to a seat , and a provision that the United States court within tho election district shall ap point a board of three persons , repre senting both political parties , to can vass the returns of the supervisors. _ Sundry Civil Kill. Washington , June 13. Chairman • Cannon from the committee on appro priations yesterday submitted to tho houso a sundry civil appropriation bill. It recommends total appropriations of $27,850,000 , being $13,298,000 less than regular estimates , and $2,029,000 in excess of tho appropriation carried "by tho last bill. The report states that the apparent excess is largely duo to features not incorporated in tho last sundry civil act , among which are the • eleventh census , § 175,000 ; artificial limbs for disabled soldiers , $279,000 ; homes for disabled volunteer soldiers , $606,000 ; aid to state homes for sol diers , $100,000 and a largo number of appropriations for public buildings. SB U CONC.KICSSIONAL IMEOCKEIUNGS. H In the senate on the 9th Mr. Call of- fered a resolution ( referred to the com- I' ' mitteo on foreign relations ) requesting ' the president to institute negotiations i with Spain for such modifications of tho -treaty with that government as will en able American cattle to be shipped from the United States to Cuba. The senate silver bill was then taken up. Mr. , ' Cockrell addressed the senate. After the close of Mr. Cockrell's speech tho 8 house silver bill was laid before the | senate. Mr. Teller moved that the bill I Ie printed and laid on the table. After' J -a brief argument it was so ordered , i Itfr. Vest asked the .senate to take up and consider tho bill "to prohibit monopoly in the transportation of cat- • , " "tie to foreign countries. " Mr. Piatt thought the senate should go on and dispose of the silver bill. He had been waiting to bring forward two bills which seomed to him not only of high 1 i importance , but of highest privilege , bills for the admission of two territo ries as states. He gave notice that , .henceforth the silver bill could not be laid aside except on a yea and nay vote. Mr. Stewart asked unanimous consent -that on Friday next at 3 o'clock the senate vote on the silver bill and -amendments. In the house on motion -of Mr. Comstock of Minnesota the title ' . -of the silver bill passed Saturday was -amended so as to read as follows : "A bill directing the purchase of silver bul lion and the issue of treasury notes , -thereon and for other purposes. " Mr. I Lodge of Massachusetts offered the fol- r lowing resolution , which was referred • to the committee on foreign affairs : t That tho secretary of the treasury be | 4 -directed to inform the house whether it ft -is true that the Cunard steamship corn- Is ? pany Saturday last refused to obey the h -orders of officers of .the United States * -to give return passage to certain immi- | .grants landed at New York by the said I company in violation of the contract r labor laws of the United States and if I -60 what steps , if any , have been taken f. to refuse entry to the steamships of said i -company until said company has com- [ j -plied with the laws of the United States r -and made due reparation for their re- h fusal to obey the orders of the officials pj -thereof. | 'l ' In tho house on the 11th on motion of fU Mr. Morrill the house silver bill was J referred to the finance committee. Mr. % Blair introduced ( by request ) a bill to ( a prohibit tho sale of intoxicating liquors % -on grounds of expositions for which | j appropriations are expended by tha [ ) f United States. Referred to the com- J -tnittee on education and labor. The f following bills were passed : The sen- f ate bill granting to the Chicago , Kan- | 6as & Nebraska railroad company power I to sell and convey to the Chicago , Rock * i Island & Pacific railway company all I -its railway property , rights and fran- f • -chises in the territory of Oklahoma and § in Indian Territory. The silver bill f was taken up and unanimous consent ) was given that after 3 o'clock Friday | next the debate shall be limited to five $ • minutes by any senator on any ques- * tion. In the house the senate bill | -amendatory of the internal revenue ' , * laws was passed. It authorizes the . commissioner of internal revenue to i | | -formulate rules and regulations by | d which beer may be carried direct from j - tho vats to the bottling department jjf ? without passing through the intermedi al • * ate process of being drawn into kegs. W | The senate bill was passed changing MM * the present system of drawback on ex- j ported beer and fermented liquors and M& r permitting their exportation in bond in ' H the same manner as distilled spirits are B now handled. B In the senate on the 11th adverse re- B -ports were made from the financo com- B itnittee on Mr. Stanford's bill for gov- B -eminent loans on liens on real estate and on tho bill to abolish metal money. Tho bills woro indefinitely postponed. Tho senate bill extending tho criminal jurisdiction of the circuit and criminal courts to tho great lakes and their con necting waters , was passed. Tho com mittee on financo reported back favora bly with sundry amendments tho houso silver bill and gave notice that at tho proper time it would bo offered as a substitute for tho senate bill. Tho sen ate silver bill was taken up and Mr. Eustis addressed tho senate. He spoke in favor of unrestricted coinage and was followed by Senator Turpio on tho same side. Tho bill then went over. ' The senate bill to prohibit the mono poly of tho transportation of cattle to foreign countries , which was under dis- ' cussion last Monday , was again taken up and was passed without further dis cussion , Mr. Vest having consented to . the amendment inserting tho words "not already contracted for in good faith by persons or parties having cat tle for transportation at the date of such contract suflicient to occupy such storage room. " The senate joint reso lution in regard to the export trade in cattle was then up and Mr. Vest mado a statement in explanation and advocacy of it after which it was adopted. It requests tho president of tho United Suites to cause correspond ence and negotiations to be had with tho authorities of Great Britain for the purpose of securing the abrogation or modification of the regulations now en forced , which require cattle imported into Great Britain from the United States to bo slaughtered at the port of entry and prohibiting the same from being carried alivo to other places in said kingdom. The senate bill to pro vide for tho inspection of all live cat tle and beef products intended for ex port to foreign countries was then taken up and passed. It requires the secre tary of agriculture to cause to be * made a careful inspection of all live cattle and beef products for export to foreign countries from tho United States with a view to ascertaining whether such cat tle products are free from disease and for this purpose he may appoint in spectors who shall be authorized to give an official certificate clearly stat ing tho condition in which such ani mals and beef products were found , and no clearance shall be given any vessel having on board cattle or beef products for exportation to a foreign country unless the owner or shipper of such cattle has a certificate from the inspec tor stating that said cattle or beef pro ducts are sound and freo from disease. In tho senate on tho 12th Dawes pre- sented the conference report on the dependent pension bill and , at the re quest of Cullom , proceeded to explain it. After considerable discussion the report was ordered printed with the bill , as agreed to by the conference. The senate silver bill was then taken up , and Evarts addressed the senate udon 'it. He characterized the act of 1873 as a "murderous thrust" at silver. After a review of the international con ferences on the question of silver ( out of whicho nothing had come ) , ho said now for the first time in the progress of the matter of redress , the question con fronted the republican party , which had a majority in each house and the control of the executive power. It was for that party to determine that the in terval of lassitude and delay should bo no longer extended. In the house a vote was taken agreeing to the con ference report on the anti-trust bill and resulted 25 to 56. Stewart of Vermont raised the point of no quorum and tho speaker being unable to count a quorum a call of the house was ordered. A quorum having appeared the conference report was re jected 12 to 115. Stewart then moved a further conference with instructions to the house conferees to recede from the house amendment. Stewart de manded the previous question on his motion. Agreed to. Yeas , 111 , nays , 97. The motion was then agreed to. Yeas , 106 ; nays , 98. The house agreed to the conference report on the military academy appropriation bill. Hender son , of Iowa , from the committee on appropriations , reported the urgent de ficiency bill appropriating $3,708,000 for the payment of pensions , and $3,076,000 for expenses of the eleventh census. The senate bill was passed granting the Chicago , Kansas & Ne braska railroad company power to con vey to the Rock Island & Pacific rail road company its rights , property and franchise in the territory of Oklahoma and the Indian territory. In the senate on the 13th the reso lution offered the day before by Mr. Edmunds appointing Edward K. Val entine sergeant-at-arms of the senate was taken up and agreed to , an amend ment offered by Mr. Harris substitut ing tho name of Henry W. Wall of Tennessee having first been voted down. Mr. Paddock said he had received sev eral telegrams from Montana in regard to tho outrages by the Cheyenne In dians in that state and asked the chair man of the committee on Indian affairs whether any action was being taken by it in regard to the matter. The senate silver bill was then taken up and Mr. Morgan took the floor. Mr. Morgan's speech was mainly an argument for free coinage. The close of the gen eral debate on the silver bill ha3 been postponed until Monday at 3 o'clock. Tho house bill , as amended by the finance committee , was substituted for the senate bill. In. the house tho sun dry civil appropriation bill was consid ered. Mr. Cannon said the appropria tion carried by the measure was $28- 000,000 $10,000,000 less than the reg ular estimates and $13,000,000 less than the regular and special estimates. The sundry civil bill for the current year provided for the expenditure of $25,000,000. The apparent excess in this bill was more than accounted for by certain extraordinary items. The fourteen regular appropriation bills re ported , to the house exceed by $35,000- 000 the appropriations for the current J m year. This excess was nearly all ac counted for in three bills pension bill , $18,000,000 ; postoffico bill , $12,000- 000 , naval bill , $2,160,000. The other $3,000,000 resulted from the expansion incident to tho growth of tho country. Tho only bill not reported to tho houso was the general deficiency bill , and , this would bo reported before tho closq of tho fiscal year. There was pending tho sundry civil and Indian bills. In. the senate committeo on appropria tions aro tho agricultural , diplomatiq and postoflice bills , and in tho senatq committeo on commerce , tho river and , harbor bill. Pending in tho senate il tho legislative bill. The fortification , bill has passed both houses. Tho Dis trict of Columbia , naval and pension bills are in conference. Tho army and military academy bills aro in tho hands of tho president. This was a favorable showing compared with tho condition of tho bills two years ago. AVAMIINGTOiV NOTES. The secretary of tho treasury has asked for $86,000 additional in tho ju dicial appropriation bill. A bill has been introduced to donate 80,000 acres of land in Louisana in aid of the Louisiana state university. Tho secretary of tho interior has asked for an additional appropriation of $60,000 to pay for the survey of pub lic lands. The houso committee on post offices and post roads has reported favorably on tho Bingham bill , prescribing severe penalties for robbing post offices. Tho secretary of tho treasury in structed the collector of tho port at San Francisco to send back to China fifteen Chinamen who entexed the United States. Gen. W. B. Franklin , United States commissioner general to the Paris ex- sition , has made his report. Ho says the United States section received high praise and secured a number of prizes. Senators Paddock and Manderson called upon President Harrison in > the interest of General Hawkins , who asks a promotion to the commissary general ship to succeed General MacFeeley , to bo retired next month. They presented a lot of good papers in behalf of Gen eral Hawkins' claim. Mr. Morse of Massachusetts has in troduced in the houso a bill prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors upon which are located exhibition and expo sition buildings for which appropria tions aro made by the government. The same bill was introduced in the senate by request of Mr. Blair. There is a good deal of inquiry as to what has become of the bill to relieve the United States supreme court of its pressure of business by the creation of a number of circuit courts of high juris diction. This bill has passed the house arid is now under consideration by the senate committee on judiciary , of which Mr. Edmunds is chairman. Senator Edmunds has introduced a bill providing that all the funds or other property lately belonging to or in tho possession of or claimed by the corpo ration of the Church of Christ of Lat ter Day Saints , to which it shall appear there is no lawful private right , shall be devoted to tho benefit of public com mon schools in Utah , the money to be disposed of by the Secretary of the In terior in such manner as shall seem to him to be most expedient. The Wilson Liquor Rill. Washington , June 12. The housa judiciary committee yesterday took up the Wilson original package bill and considered it for several hours without reaching any further conclusion than that on the motion of Colonel Oates of Alabama. It was referred to a sub committee with instructions to report next Tuesday. The Wilson bill will not be reported to the house as it stands. The mem bers of the committee are unanimously of the opinion that the supreme court made a mistake in its decision , but they do not think the Wilson bill furnishes the remedy. In whatever form the bill may be reported to the house it will meet with strong opposition irre spective of party lines. This was de veloped upon the report from the com mittee on commerce on the Boutelle bill on the same subject , which as amended in the committee is prac tically identical with the Wilson measure. Thope who manifest the most opposition take the ground that , * as clearly set out in tho decision of the supreme court in the Iowa case , the authority for the restriction must be deduced from that clause of the constitution which empowers con gress to regulate commerce , and is in no way to be associated with the police powers of the several states. To do this under the power to regulate com merce is to declare affirmatively that it is injurious to the physical and moral well being of the community , but the dairymen are urging this same objec tion against the manufacture and sale of oleomargarine , and they , too , since the decision of the supreme court , have come before congress asking that the same legislation be enacted for their benefit. In tho state of New York oleomargarine is prohibited both as to the manufacture and sale , just as liquor is in the state of Iowa , and they argue that if federal control is to be exercised in one case it should bo in the other. It is therefore evident , the objectors of the Wilson bill say , that what is now proposed is but a beginning. Amendment to the Tariff.Rill. .Washington , Juno 14. Senator Washburn proposed an amendment to the tariff bill , which was iefdrred to the committee on finance , providing for the free importation until January 1 , 1892 , of all machinery imported for tho purpose of manufacturing beet sugar , with a rebate of the duty paid on such machinery imported since January 1 , 1890. The valedictorian of the Union Law School at Chicago was a negro. ALL FOE TEMPERANCE VllOCEEDIXGS OF T1IE XATIOXAL 1'liOIITJtITIOy MEETIXG. I State and National Prohibition Dc- Hirablo and Feasible "Tho Rattle of Omaha" Anxiety In "W'joiiilng I j ! and Idaho Concerning Their Admls- I * Ion Chairman Fuithorn Reads the Riot Act to the Itallroads A Num ber of Them Fined. • National l'rohilitloiii t . New Yokk , Juno 13. Rev. Dr. Deems was made president of tho na tional temperance congress which con vened hero yesterday and began its work by discussing tho question , "Is State and National Prohibition Desira ble and Feasible ? " Ho hold it to bo desirable , and instanced tho condition of Maine now and before its temper ance legislation. Robert Graham , who was introduced as a representative of the chuch movement in behalf of tem perance , took tho ground that national or state prohibition was neither desira ble or leasable. Tho total prohibition of the sale or manufacture of wines and fermented or distilled liquors , ho said , would bo an extreme law and should have an impregnable basis. Prohibi tion he asserted was not effective. In spite of it , the sale of liquor goes on practically openly in Portland , Bangor and other towns in Maine and in Now Hampshire , Vermont and Iowa. Ho was in favor of a high license. Tho next topic taken up was "Tho Battle of Omaha , " tho opening address being made by Prof. Cornwall of Aber deen , South Dakota. These referred to the pending struggle in behalf of tho prohibition amendment in Nebraska. The speaker said the struggle was sure of the * success that they ought to have in Nebraska. Tho result depends upon the city of Omaha. They needed as sistance in their battle against tho sa loon power. If prohibition lost the fight in Nebraska Iowa would bo wrested from them , but if suc cessful he could force the en- tiro northwest from liquor. The day was given up to the discussion of pa pers on kindred topics. At the evening session Rev. Dr. How ard Crosby denounced prohibition as untimely and impracticable at the pres ent time. He favored high license. He urged unity of action in the tem perance cause on the part of prohibi tionists , instead of cavil at workers who differed from their views , and in conclusion said that if prohibition could be adopted by force in New York city , the floodgates of vice would be thrown open. Wyoming and Idaho Rills. Washington , June 12. There is a good deal of anxiety felt in Wyoming and Idaho as to the condition of the bills admitting those two territories to statehood , and inquiries are coming here constantly as to the prospects of their passage. The bills have passed the house of representatives and have been reported favorably from the com mittee on territories in the senate. I asked Senator Piatt , the chairman of this committee , to-day when he in tended to call them up * and whether he thought there was a prospect of their early passage. ' 'I propose to get these bills up at the first possible moment , " replied Senator Piatt , "and I am going to try to have this silver debate shut off so that we can get at some other legis lation. The senate is wasting its time listening to speeches that are not in tended to convince anybody and that nobody wants to hear , and I think it is about time to quit and take in some thing else , but there is no danger of the bills failing , because we on this side of tho senate are determined that they shall pass before congress adjourns. " Senator Allison , as chairman of the committee on appropriations and a member of the committee on finance , as well as the Teadinyr man of the re publican steeringe committee , which makes out the programmes for legisla tion , knows more about the condition and prospects of business than any other man in the senate , and I asked him about tho Wyoming and Idaho bills. 'They are all right , " he replied. "We will not adjourn without passing them , and I shall not allow them to bo interfered with by the appropriation or tariff bills. " Reading tho Riot Act. Chicago , June 12. Some timo ago tho interstate commerce commisssion decided that lines situated as are the Alton , St. Paul and Kansas City roads , ending at tho Missouri river , could le gally shrink their local rates to meet the proportions of through rates quoted by competitors between the samo points. For instance , a rate from Denver via the Rock Island to Chicago might be $1 , while the rate to tho ilissouri river and from the Missouri river to Chicugo might each be 60 cents. Manifestly the lines ending at the Missouri river must charge the propor tions of the through rate instead of the local rate or get none of tho business. The lines ending at the river have con sequently been shrinking their local rates in accordance with the views of the interstate commerce commission , but the rules of the Western Freight association have not been changed to meet this situation and Chairman Faithorn was compelled to fine the St. Paul $100 on eighteen different com plaints brought against it by the North western because of this shrinkuge of local rates. Chairman Faithorn's decision is the most important in many respects he has ever made. He was undoubtedly com pelled to make it under the rules , but it may bring on a serious conflict. About 5 per cent of all business from the west is through business. Under Chairman Faithorn's ruling the Alton , St. Paul , Wabash , Hlinois Central and Kansas City roads"would have to aban- don all participation in the freight bus iness originated by tho competing liue3. They will not do this , and systems like tho Northwestern , Rock Island and Burlington , which havo lines west of tho Missouri , will fight equally as hard before they will allow competitors to take at tho river Waffle originating on their own line ; west of tho river. Chairman Faithorn likowiso fined the Burlington $100 for a wrong classifica tion , tlio Kansas City road $100 for tho illegal paying of drayage and the Bur lington & Northwestern $100 for an un authorized quotation of a reduced rate. Souvenir * From an Odiei * Seeker. Washington , Juno 13. Each mom- her of tho senate has received a souvo- nir in tho form of a photojf a man dressed in a suit of store clothes with a nicely polished silk hat upon his head and an umbrella under his arm , gazing at a knot-hole in the "dim and distant far away. " On the back of this photo graph is tho following inscription : "Peter West , attornoy-at-law , Reno , Nov. ; graduated from Iowa state uni versity ; candidate for United States district judge to fill vacancy in Ne vada ; ago forty-nine ; height 5 feet 10 ; weight 195 pounds ; May 20 , 1S90. " Those letters are accompanied by a let ter from Mr. West , in which ho in vites tho senators to whom they havo been addressed to co-operate in secur ing him an appointment as United States judge , and ho encloses the pho tographs in order that they may seo what sort of a looking man they aro assisting. This is a novel way of seek ing office , but it is not proving any more effective than the orthodox plan. The Rook Trust. St. Paul , Minn. , June 13. Tre mendous opposition has sprung up hero against tho American book company , the school book trust recently formed. Six months ago Van Antwerp , Bragg & Co. , tho Cincinnati publishers , entered into a contract with the St. Paul board of education to supply the 30,000 chil dren of this city with books , and for several days an agent of tho company has been here seeking to havo the con tract transferred to the American , tho Cincinnati firm having become a part of the latter. Outside firms not in the trust have made lower bids and the board of education claims tho light to place tho contract elsewhere. It is declared that the American book com pany is not a genuine concern , bul merely a combine whose capital stock is $5,000 , of which less than one-third " i paid up. The St. Paul book and station ery , company which becam a member ( ' the trust and has tho contract for sup plying the state of Minnosota witl books , is trying to draw out of tho con cern as the state made its contract with D. D. Merrill , its manager , individu ally , and will not permit an assignment to the American. Cheycuues on the Rampage. * St. Paul , Minn. , June 13. There is gieat commotion among tho Cheyenne Indians along the Tongue river in Montana , and General Rugar tele graphed from St. Paul to Fort Keogh ordering a detachment of ono troop of tho Eighth cavalry and three compa nies of the Twenty-second infantry to proceed to Sweeney creek , the center of the trouble. Governor Toole of Montana received a dispatch at Helena , signed by ten prominent citizens of Miles City , re questing that he send 1,000 stands of arms and 10,000 rounds of amunition to that point at once. In reply arms and amunition were sent tonight in charge of Col. C. O. Curtis. The Cheyennes have left their regu lar camps and are gathering in small ones of from fifteen to twenty-five and are firing at settlers' houses and mak ing the most threatening demonstra tions. Ranchmen havo been bringing their families into the settlement all day.Cattle Cattle are being shot down by the Indians through pure malice , as no parts of the animals are used for beef. Eighteen cattle were shot in one bunch on Otter creek. A Rig Failure in Chicago. Chicago , June 13. Robert Warren was badly squeezed on the board of trade to-day. When the clearing house hour came for checks on margins he failed to come to timo and announce ment was made on the board at once of tho fact. Within ten minutes more ' than a hundred traders and commission men had crowded into the office of the company and were yelling for a state ment. Mr. Warren was not in , how ever , and his clerks were posted to tell all comers that they were at liberty to save themselves tho best they could. j I No settlements were offered in tho office I and no satisfaction could be had from i ' any of the clerks as to the causes that j i led up to or the amount of the failure. The check asked for was $5,000 , but J that does not represent anything more ' than the amount which the company J could not raise at 11 o'clock. The fail- j i uro is a big one. For weeks the firm has been buying largely of wheat and provisions , especially ribs , and yester day sold 2,000,000 bushels in a fright , losing a big chunk of money. It began buying at 85 cents , still kept buying up to 95 cents , held on past the turn and sold too late or too early at 88 or 90 cents on a falling market. Most of the provision business was on London and Glasgow contracts and tho wheat was bought and sold here. Train Robbery In Arkansas. Texarkana , Ark. , Juno 12. The Texas & Pacific train which left here at' midnight was robbed at Four Mile Junction. Tho switch was thrown open and the train wrecked. An un known man who was stealing a ride was killed. Express Messenger Nev- lin resisted the robbers and was shot in the light hand and ear. The rob bers then went through the express safo and made their escape. The amount of money and valuables taken has not yet been learned. A posse of men has gone in pursuit. • ' I Work .Hupped Out In Congrcsa. .1 Washington , Juno 16. Tho silver < i | debate , which has been prolonged for ,1 so many weeks' , comes to an cud to- | day. By an agreement reached last ' Friday general debato on tho bill end at 3 o'clock , and then debato continues J under the five-minutes rulo until a voto | i is reached. Tho pending mcasuro is f } tho house bill as amended in tho .senate ' committee on financo. It will then go - j into conference , tho chief point of dif ference between tho two houses beinjjf tho proposition to make tho silver cer tificates legal tender and to make thom redeemable in bullion at tho option of j tho secretary of tho treasury on do- | mand of tho owner. Tho matter is not | likely to bo disposed of finally for some lime. Following tho silver bill , Sena- M tor Piatt , the chairman of tho commit'I tee on territories , has arranged to call I up tho bill for tho admission of Wyom- I ing into tho union , and after that th I Idaho admission bill. M Senator Allison , tho chairman of tha committeo on appropriations , has promised that ho will not antagonize those bills with any of the approprio- fl tion bills. fl It is tho intention of tho democrats H to offer an omnibus bill ( including H Idaho , Arizona and Now Mexico ) as a H substitute to tho Wyoming bill , and , H tho debato will bo on that measure. iH Senator Piatt has said that ho will- IH present tho report of tho committee H in favor of tho bills and mako no H further argument. In this event the H debato on the two bills is likely to ba H brief and they may be disposed of by M Thursday. | H Senator Frye , tho chairman of the M committeo on commerce , will havo the. M river and harber appropriation bill bo- M foro tho senate by that time , and he l M has tho assurance that Senators Allison M and Aldrich , of tho committeo on , M finance , will not call up the tariff bill M ( which will by that timo havo been re- . | H ported ) until tho river and harbor bill ' J is out of the way. M Senator Morrill's agricultural college. M bill is down for consideration Thurs- H day. It may bo crowded out by soma | other measure. Tho legislative ap-i H propriation bill is on tho calender andi | likely to bo called up at any odd. M minuto. H Beforo tho end of the week tho houso , H will probably have passed tho novr H federal election bill agreed upon by _ H the republican caucus. Tho bill wilL * H probably be introduced in the house H on Monday and after tho committeo on H tho election of president and vice- H president has mado report on it tha H house will take it up for consideration. H The consideration of the bill may run , ' H into the following week. M The consideration of the sundry civil H appropriation bill will take the place | on Monday of general suspension busi- M ness , which the rules of tho house pro- M vide shall occur on that day. M Tuesday the contested election case | H of Chalmers ( republican ) against M Morgan ( democrat ) from Mississippi M will be taken up and speedily disposed M of , as the election committee has de- M cided in favor of Morgan , the sitting M member. „ , M The national bankruptcy bill will | also be taken up during the week. M Will Examine the Rooks. H Washington , D. C , June 16. W. H M. Thompson , the bookkeeper of tho | office of the commissioner of railroads , M started west yesterday to make tho an- M nual examination of the books and ac- H counts of tho subsidized Pacific rail- M roads , in order to ascertain the amounts | due the United States for the last year | under the Thurman act. He was ac- | companied by the assistant bookkeeper , H F. E. Storm , and George W. Evans , H the disbursing clerk of tho interior de- | | partment , who has been detailed to as- | | sist in the examination. They will stop H in Chicago and Omaha and look into H the affairs of the Sioux City & Pacific M railroad and the Union Pacific railway H companies , after which they will pro- H ceed to San Francisco , Cal. , to ex- H amine the books of the Central Pacific | railroad company. They will be ab- H sent about five weeks. H The commissioner of railroads will j H make an inspection of the Northern H Pacific road , leaving this city about H August 1. Mr. Hassan , tho chief en- H gineer , who is now in tho northwest on H official business , will accompany him , j H The Iowa Crops. H Des Moines , la. , Juno 16. The H weekly bulletin of the Iowa weather | service and crop report bureau issued H to-day says : A marked improvement H is noted in the condition of grass and H small grain. Corn is also well ad- H vanced in growth and general condi- j H tion , except in localities where an ex- | cess of precipitation washed it out or H prevented timely cultivation. A H special effort was made to secure H date as to the amount and present | conditition of wheat and the result H shows a small increase in the acreage | | of recent years. The increase is esti- H mated on the basis of reports received | | by Secretary Shaffer to be 2 per cent | of winter and 1 1-5 per cent of spring | wheat. The condition of this crop H promises an average yield in nearly all | parts of the state. There are no | depredations of insect enemies reported | and the cool weather favored a healthy | growth of the plant. The present out- H look is good. Clover is making a | heavy yield and pastures are in fine | condition , The fruit crop will be good. | Cholera in Spain. | Madrid , June 16. Tho first of tha . | cases of cholera at Puebla de Rugal H manifested themselves a month ago , H after extensive excavations had been H made for the purpose of paving tha H streets. Nine deaths from the disease H have occurred , and on Saturday there | were seven fresh cases. Two-thiro3 of | the inhabitants of the town have fled. H Seven deaths and seven fresh cases ara H reported at Monticheivo , a village neax H Puebla de Regal. H * !