——— ~The Seminole Indians in Florida seem to be Sncrenng in number, % Tho European crop of sugar beets is many thousand tons greater this year than usual, and this will most of it be made into sugar, It is rumored in European court circles that the Kiag of Greece will abdicate his throne early next summer. He has purchased a residence in Denmark. A London author has written thirty novels in three years. This beats tke record of any living man, but the writer's enormous labor has brought him only $1000, Under the laws of France a person who is reported dead by a legal official must remain dead, no,matter how much he comes to life. If he wants to live he must take some other name, The lot of Gloucaster (Mass.) fisher- men cannot be a happy one. Fourteen of the boats and sixty-three of the crews who went out of that port this season “will never come back to the town.” A man at Laramie, Wyoming, laughed | at an Indian who fell down on the street man got around to stab him in the back as areward. The Indian is no joker. | the flagship of the expedition, The New York Post reminds the copper | syndicate that the American law of real i the Charleston property enables the Government to take | charge of land in which the copper is | charge of Lieut -Commander Farenholdt and found. This is the doctrine of eminent domain, | Lieutenant Shipley The Mining Review takes up the news- | per alarmist's favorite bugaboo, the i préspective failure of the world’s fuel | supplies, and knocks it into in a cocked is concerned. Marriage must be a failure among the Lussian peasantry. vict ship conveying women only to Sagalien seventy-five per cent. of the Upon a con- | i | miral Luce, although an unsrmored wooden { er {rely in the dark hat fo as the next few million years | i and her gallant ORDERED 70 HAYTL Four War Ships to Demand the Haytian Republic's Release, The Galena, Yantioc and Ossipee Prepared for Service. The United States Government has deter- mined to enforce its decision that the steam- ship Haytian Republic must be delivered up by sending armed vessels to Hayti, : Action has been taken by Secretary Whit sey which leaves no doubt as to the policy of this Government with regard to the case. The release of the vessel has been demanded through the proper diplomatic channels, and if the demand is not complied with within a easonable period of time steps will be taken to enforce it, 2 With this end in view Secretary Whitney went telegraphic instructions to Hear Ad- miral Gheradi, commandant of the New York Navy Yard, to have the ships Richmond, Galena and Yantic prepared for sen as rapid!y as possible, They will be sent down to Hayti to enforce the claim for the release of the American steamer, Haytian tepublic, illegally seized by the Haytians Warlike preparations stil go on with un- slackened zeal and alacrity at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The Galena is now ready to sail at an hour's notice, her conl bunkers are full, ber sails are being bent to the yards, and she is provisioned for fully six months, She will carry ber full complement of officers and men ~225 all told. G. M. Bumuner commands her, and Lieutenant W. kh. Reeder is the execu | tive officer. . five years ago, and the other day the red | Orders have also been issoed for Rear Ad miral Luce, com maading the North Atlantic station, to transfer his flag from the Galena to the Richmond. and to use that vessel as Orders were received at Boston from Washington for all the naval recruits at Navy Yard to proceed at once to New York. One bundred and forty-four of them left via the Old Colony line at two o'clock that same afternoon in Unly the ship's com any, forty men all told, were left on the Vabash. “Whether all the men, or only a rt of them, are to be shipped on the Ga ena, which was expected to start for Haytl, | equld not be learned at the Navy Yard The officers are planscd at the ine on the cruise, t as to the time of start ing, or the point of destination ] that it looks like Hayti,and express a feeling of confidence, if such happens to be the case actuzl hostilities are begun, that the Galena crew will not disgrace the merican flag Aer hor which was the flagship of Ad- cruiser, would be a formidable antagonist. {| Her main battery consists of six 0-inch Dahl prisoners had been convicted of killing | their husbands. The potato crop is larger than ever be- fore known, it being nearly 225,000,000 bushels. With an average of over three | ries two 20.pound howitzers, { breech-loader, one 12-pound howitzer, two grens, one Sinch muzzleloader, and one 50 pound bLreech-loader. In addition she car one | Gatlidy guns, and the usual supply of small bushels to each individual in this coun- | try, there is no immediate danger of any- | : | guns, one S-inch howitzer, and one Gatling | gun. All haste is being made to put the Rich. body starving. The Queenslanders propose using Q peSpa © | lacks 100 of that number. | is Captain Allen W, Heed She carries 14 | | wrecked by collision five miles north heroic methods for the discouragement of Chinese immigration. entering the colony illegally are to be Mongolians | imprisoned for life, if the Queen gives her consent to the law. In an article on immigration the Chil- fan Times expresses the opinion that it is inexpedient for any more European emi- grants to settle in Chili at present, on | the ground that the cholera will re ap- pear in that country in the spring. vestigate the French penal system. She js sending thousands to New Caledonia every year, and it is said that ‘heir suffer ings are much worse than the Russians | ‘ | Carolina average less than $1 a day. Tur Pi by od to | HE Pittsburgh glassworkers are going | Hospital at Balti ¢ are obliged to endure. On account of the great magnetic in- | fluence of the vast quantities of iron and | steel in the Pittsburg mills, the magnetic | needle is of no practical use in that city. | § : : | earning a living in industrial occupations, Civil engineers, when surveying land in Key | the city, are obliged to abandon the use of the ordinary compass. The largest artificial basin for docking and repairing the hulls of ships in the | United States is being completed at New- | port News, Va, It is 600 feet long, 130 feet wide, with a depth of 25 feet over i the sill at high tide. It is furnished with | pumps that can empty it in two and a half hours. Yankee inventive genius, reports the New York Telegram, has made the Cape Cod fisherman independent of our Cana- dian neighbors. The great bait question has been settled and New England fae- tories will now turn out the squid in . quantities which the Kanuck fishermen found it so profitable to catch for sale to other fishermen, ——————————. The Catholic Church in Great Britain is keeping pace with the increase in pop- uiation. There are now 5,641,000 com- municants in the United Kingdom. Of these England and Wales claim 1,353, - 000; Scotland, 826,000, and Ireland, 3,. 961,000. There are also now in England and Wales 1314 priests, as against 1728 in 1875, serving 1204 churches, chapels snd missionary stations. In Scotland there aro five bishops and 334 priests, serving 827 chapels, churches and stations, arms. Her maximum speed is about ten knots an hour. The Yantic has now all her stores abroad, complement of 150 men. by Captain O. F. Heyerman and bas a small armament, consisting of four reguiation mond in proper condition. Her full crew of officers and men numbers 357 and she now Her commander A fr Joader regulation guns, one S-inch breech-loader, one Gatling gun, and two Hotchkiss guns The powder will be taken on board at Ellis | | Fireman James McCoy and Brakeman Pat Island as the vessels zo out to sea. A dispatch was also sent to the Command | ant of the Norfolk (Va) Navy Yard to pre- pare the corvette Ossipeo for sea service as | | soon as possible It will take a little jonger to do this than will be necessary with the vessel at New York, but it is thought she can | be fuily prepared to follow them to Hay within a few days, THE LABOR WORLD. per month, 81. Louis, Mo., is next % Lynn, Mass, as | a shoe manufacturing center, THE strike of 10,000 coal miners in various districts of Belgium has ended. TRERE are national Typographical Union. Mica miners and “trimmers” in start a national bank of their own, Tux stone-pavers of Omaha, Neb, have organized, with 100 charter members, Tur United Tin and Sheet-Iron Workers | are moving to form a national union, MAssACHUSETTS has over 230.000 women GIrls employed to strip tobacco in West (Fla.) factories earn #6 to week, RAILROAD engineers are subject to a peculiar nervous disease brought about by i continuous shocks, THE now stesl-plate works to be estab ment for 1000 men. PARISiAN cabmen have to pass an examin. ation before they are allowed to hire them selves out to public service, Tux Northumberland (England) coal miners have accepted the advance in wages offered them and tho dispute is settled. Tunke rtHOUSAND Pennsylvania coal miners are thrown out of work for an in- definite period by the closing of the mines Tur Cigar Makers’ International Union, which was organized in 18%, now numbers WH) members and has in its funds over $850,000, Brxwonkens' Crrremion Assemary, K. of L., of Union Hill, N. J., has employnd teachers to instruct its German members in English, Exorisn employers fear a struggle for an sight-hour day. A goveral movsinent will soon ugurated throughout reat Britain und Ireland Mone than sixty per cent, of adult English women, marred and unmarried, are work. ing for daily sabsistence, and the number multiplies every year. Last election was a harvest for the ers all over tha land. In New Y for imtance, there were about 10,000,000 ballots Tug Philadelphia fireman gets onip486an and Cin idea of go- | wugh they say they are | They admit | | Ind., has been declared S-inch | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle States. AX explosion of a ladle of molten steel in Shoonberger's mill at Pittsburg, Penn,, in- Jured seven mon, one of whom #8 dead and wo fatally burned, The ladle of steel fell into pool of water and exploded. John Bwaellzer was burned until his features were unrecognizable, His tongue was burned out und his face burned to a crisp. Two freight trains were demolished and three lives fot by a collision on the Central Railroad at Solomon's Gap, Penn, Angry Canvvcer and Rocco Linsio, two Italian laborers, were instantly killed at Harrison Station, N, Y,, by a train bound past, Du. Cuanves Goopspren, n young physi clan of North Abington, Mass, was found dead in his officefunder circumstances indi cating suicide by means of morphine, Fink at Cortland, N, Y., destroyed a large rt of the great wagon works there, entail ng an estimated loss of $211,000, Amon, the property destroyed were 700 cutters nnd a large stock of wagons, Caxoxcuer, Governor Sprague's mansion at Narragansett Pier, R. I, owned by Colonel Wheaton and Mrs, Sprague. has been sold to a syndicate, including New York and Rhode Island men, William Clarke and Banker Earle of Earlescourt, for $800,000, It will be used for hotel purposes, A GANG of men were engaged at work in the shaft at the Nesquehoning (Penn.) mines, when the water from the Hackelbarne Mine, which was flooded and abandoned years ago, forced ite way to where the men were and buried two of them in a watery grave Jorern Trospson, President of the Dominion Steamship Company, while crows. ing the Pennsylvania Railroad at Elizabeth, N. J., on his way to church was struck by a train and instantly killed. Hus body was carried to Linden on the pilot of the en- gine before it was discovered. Providence, R. L Troy, N. Y., shot and killed James Logan, bis dearest friend, over a trivial matter. South and West, i Township, Ohio, and a confirmed opium | eater, went to bed, pulled the bed clothes | over his head and shot himself twice in the | forehead. killing him. Tue court house at Georgetown, Ohio, has | been destroyed by an incendiary fire, to get rid of evidence being prepared for the Grand Jury against the White Caps Tre recount of votes in the Charleston (W, Va.) District shows that Anderson (Demo erat) has been slocted to Congress by seven | teen majority. George B. Wrrnenzrt, the brutal mur derer of Charles B. McCain. was taken from jail at Canon City, Col., by an srmed mob, | who overpowered the jailer and guards, and lynched Tue switchmen's strike at Indianapolis, “off,” the men ao knowledging themselves beaten. Cuier Giryorp of the Birmingham (Als.) | fire department was thrown from his horse | while going to a fire and was instantly killed, Tue Navajo Indians are off their reserva. | tho 4 ; 2. Cal AY | but lacks twenty-five men to make up ber full | Hon, near Fort Wingata, Cal, ‘and bave She is comumanded | gone over on the Colorado River, Fearing they mean mischief United States troops have been sent after them to force them A SWITCH engine ran into a street car con- taining fourteen passengers at Detroit, Mich, | Youngstown, Ohio, | yards at Cleveland have been burned. | cago millionaire, has offered a reward | $50,000 for the apprehension of Tascott, his i alleged murderer, 35,000 members in the Inter | | himself the best shot in North | {| and four of them were killed and four more | seriously injured train were of Conductor James Ken- was killed; A rassexorn and a freight nedy, of the passenger train, | rick Riley were fatally injured, and Engin | eer Albert Lindsay was badly injured Woops, Jexks & Co's extensive lumber The entire stock, valued at E5000, was de stroyed. Murs Ssxre, widow of the murdersd yp o ELEVEN HUNDRED new houses, costing . | 80,000,000, is Dulutt's (Minn.) building record . ; Lovisiaxa sugar planters pay their men | , : «x | from £10 to $20 To offset tne Century's articles on Si- beria, some magazine will doubtless in- | for 1888, Joux FP. Ricnarosox has been inaugurated as Governor of South Carolina for a second | term, Papsioexr-erecr Hanmsos returned to Indianapolis from bis brie! hunting expedi tion in the Indiana woods, having proved the large party that went out TWENTY-FIVE humanity are now lyin miserable imens of in the Hay View 4d. afMicted with diseases caused by exposure, ill treatment and insufficient food, while at work of oyster dredging for the brutal pirates in Chesapeake Bay Washington. uniswfu! Trusts and combinations in re September, Tux Court of about #1400 from E900 official fees whick he collected and turned over to the Government while Vice-Coneul at Hong Kong, China, plurality for Cleveland. unlawfully seized by the Haytian gunboat Dessalines in the harbor of St Mare, and that the eaptured vessel must be released and reparation made, Tux United States Senate cost us for the yoar ending June 30, BALE Ralaries and mileage of members amounted to £304,157, Brucapien-Oesenat. A. W. Guemiy, Chief Signal Officer, in pursuance of orders attended the annual meeting of the Ameri can Forestry Congress at Atlanta, Ga, PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has resumed his afternoon receptions to the publie, Tue River and Harbor Committees has fixed $10,000,000 as the aggregate amount of appropriations to be covered by the bill, Tux District of Columbia Appropriation bill, which the C Ng on oo has to 1 onse, appro 84,005 108, being $143,017 Jess than ing for the current flsoal year and 1.022, 942 Jess than the estimates of the Dis triet Comm ssioners ‘ Tur Pension A Bill has been completed by Ouse Avpropriaions Committee. It appropristes $51,767, 500, and Ir idention] with Jak years Diy. To), v DMIRAL Curr , Toliedini, Min ar ol in dead, was made the head of the navy in 1981, Minister TYPHOID fever prevails as an epidemic in | Greonoe Downs, a wealthy young man of | from Duluth (Minn. | telograph poles for the use of military tele {| graph lines in Dakota, Joxan McCurrovan, a farmer in Poland | Both bullets lodged in the brain, | i sat of Claims has docided that | | Colonel John 8. Mosby is entitled to a refund lished av Joliet, IIL, will furnish employ. | teTU RNs of the popular vote for President | compiled in Washington show about 8000 | BRCRETARY BAYARD has decided that the | American steamship Haytian Republic was | 11% wife of Michael Dwyer, hor dang and three Srandohiidren wers burned to death about three miles from Blythe, Canin. The house took fire and they were unable to escape, Tre British steamer Hartlespools has been wrecked at Kgersund, Norway, Only four of her crew of twenty-one were saved, Trike men named Fournia, father, son, and a nephew, left Gaspe, Prince Edward's Island, in af open boat for their homes on Darmouth River, but died from exhaustion and exposure on route, = YELLOW fevenhas appeared (nan spidomie tor on the West Indian Island of Mar tinique, i —————— LATER NEWS, own Goopwix was burned to death In Ferguson's sash factory at Kennobeck, Mae, Groce W. Quisy and Abby L. Wiggin, of Chelsen, Mass, were killed by a train while walking on the track near Everett, Mass, Jonny Weiser and wife, an agel G erman SRE UERR] THE TREASURY REPORT. Secretary Fairchild on Matters Relating to His Department, A Year's Receipts and Expendi turgs of the Government, The Secretary of the Treasury has mad: public his annual report. The total re | colpts of the Government for the fiscal year | of 1588 were $079,200,074,76, and the total | expenditures were $250,6503,008,67, leaving a | surplus of $110,612,116.00, As compared | with the fiscal year of 1837, the re-eipts for | 1558 have increased $7,802,797, 10, There was | an increase in the ordinary expenditures of | $8.278.221.40, For the present fis al year | (1545) the revenues, actual and estimated, | are £517,000,000; total expenditures for the | game period, actual and estimated, are 8278, 000,000; estimated surplus applicable to the purchase of bonds, $104,000,000, couple residing at Burnt Hill, N, Y., at- tempted to cross a pond on thin ice and were | 20, | revenues from that date to | estimated, drowned. Two men lost their lives by suffocation | while cleaning out a still of the Peerless Oil | Refining Company, at Findlay, Ohio, BAMUEL PrLuryer has been hanged at Yorkville, BC, for the murder of Lucy { Smith. At the same time and place Adolphus | Wheeler was hanged for the murder of | George Bechbaum. Both confessed, Tux American Forestry Congress, which | has been in session at Atlanta. Ga adjourned, The next meeting will be held in Philadelphia | Governor J, A, Beaver, of Pennsylvania, was elected President, Tur National Government nas ordersd i dealers three thousand | AnxY and navy men at Washington say | the bursting during the test of the Bessemer steel gun at Annapolis was due solely to the | fact that cast strength, elasticity nor tensile power to be stool has neither sufficient | utilized for heavy ordannce. AX award of $60,000 in favor of repre sentatives of Charles Von Bokkelon, a United States citizen, has been filed at the State De Embassy, Von Bok debt at Port ag Prince, and the suthorities refused to allow partment and Haytian kelen was imprisoned for bim to make an assignment for his creditor and be released, Presioesr © has appointed Emory H. Taunt, formerly Lieutenant in the Fro EVELAXD Navy, as Consul to the Congo River State, with beadquarters at Boma, Africa ORDERS have been issued by President Cleveland for the vessels of the revenue ma rine on the Atlantic coast to crulw along the const during the season of severe weather for the purposes of affording aid w distressed | navigation, Ma Wake, an artist cornocted with the London Graphic, has been killed by the Arabs who are besieging Suakim, Africa, IT is reported that in various districts of Ireland, in Limerick especially, the distress among the agricultural laborers is enormous Many are asking to be assisted to emigrate to Juenos Ayres A sTROXG shock of earthquake lasting | nearly half a minute was felt at Rimouski, Father Point, Sainte-Flavie and Trois Pis toler, Quebec, Canada, GexEnal Cassora bas resigned the port | folio of the Ministry of War of Spain. Tminry head of Texas cattle, after being brought to Rochester from the Buffalo stock yards, were found to be glandered The local meat mspector killed twenty-five bead and established a strict quarantine, The other butchers and cattiemen are greatly alarmed. Tux last beatos the Delaware and Hudson Canal has reached tidewater at Romdout from Honesdale, Penn. The caualers ay they have had a profitable season. The work of repairing the canal at various points will be begun as soon as the water is drawn off. i Marcus Bion, a rich farmer of Galen ville, Ulster County, was thrown from his | wagon and run over by his vehicle and killed | | near Cromomer’s Hill, in the town of New | burg. Tix Senate Finance Committees has under | per | consultation Mr, Sherman's bill to declare | straint of trade and production, which was reported, with amendments, to the Senate in He was sixty-seven yeas old, Davin J, Wirreronp, a farmer, has been found dead in the road between Heuvelton | and Melville crossing. 88. Lawrence Couny. It is supposed that he fell fiom his wagon Gronor D. Bricas, the Buffalo lumber dealer, who failed a few davs ago, with lia | bilities of $161,000 and assets of $55.000. has | | been arrested at the instance of the Bank of Bulfalo on account of an overdrawn bank ! account, Mr. Brigze furnished bail, : Tax Monroe County branch of the Irish £- National League has decided to at once for. | ward $1000 to aid Parnell in his fight against | the London Times A POWERFUL ORDER. Proposed Secret Union of All Amer can Ratlroad Employes A Pittsburg (Penn.) dispatch states tha a movement is on foot to organize a federa tion of all railroad emploves in the United States, excepting conductors, and a meeting looking to that end will be hell carly in Jan- wary. The uolon will embrace the brotiwr: | RL0084, 000 howe ver, | The excess of exports during 1557 i BGS 440 {was $28 002 607 | Men, of all three were w | thrown into the river The accumulated surplus on eptember | INES, was $06,444, 545,54: the surplus | June 80, 1550, us are 875 805,208 25, muking the | total accumulation on June 30, 1250, which | could be used in the purchase of bonds, §171,- r sot ween sald Beptember 29 and November 22, $44 S09. 500.50 has been foid for bonds; consequently if no more sonds were bought between now and June | oh { 90 next the surplus would then amount to | $127,000,000, About 8188000000 of the four and a-half | per cent. Londs are now outstanding: they are payable September 1, 1801, The Secretary of the Treasury goes on to say that be cannot too strongly repent his | recommendation of last year to reduce taxs- tion as far as possible, without too sudden | disturbance of existing interests, During 1587 the yalus of our foreign e=- ports was $716,153,211; during 188%, 8008. ME0T. In 1857 the imports amounted to 8002.510,708; in 1858 they wre "§7 25,957,114, was $23. Of imports during 1558 the va ue The total value of the im porisand exports of the last fisoal year, when compared with that of the fiscal your 187, shows an increase of §20 002 oe” The total number of alien passengers coming into the United States by steam or sailing vessels, from foreign countries other than Canada snd Mexion, during the year ending June 30, 158%, was 507 510. of wh eh number 20.621 were tourists or aliens not in- tending to remain in the United States The total re eipts from objects of interns] revenue for 1558 are #124 : for the year 1557 they were $118 537 501.06 It ap pears that the increas in the collections on spiritadaring the last fiscal year was £7 48, Bid, 50 on tobacen, $551.64 3 fermented liquors, #1,405.050. 9%. and on © COIBATEAr. $140,191.84, There wasa decreases of A382 in the receipts from bank circulation, and of $10.510.6¢ in the collections under reposied laws. There was also a decrease of $64.057.. 22 in penalties collected The work of the revenues cutters included | the saving of the lives of sixty persons, who were picked out of the water, The number of vessels in distress assisted is 596 The umber of lifesaving stations in commissic n Is 2.2. There were during the year 411 dis. asters to documented vessels. On board | thes: were 3055 persons, of whom 3641 were | saved, i tere i8 8 Det increase, over last year, in movey in circulation of $90.045.616. “The net increase of money and bullion beld in the Treasury is R107, 440,440 The repor: closes with an earnest appeal ! for a fireproof building suitable for the storage of the flies and records of the several | departments of the government. and wish information as to expenditures, etc, in the District of Columbia | ' . on —————— ATROCI Women and Children Shot Down by Government Troops. Advices from Peru, received in San Fran cisco by the Panama steamer, report terrible atrocities committed in the interior country by Indians. The Curate of Moyare was shot and beaten to death with stacks and siOnes, and when his old mother interfered she was shot and ber bead cut off. Another woman Who tried to save her was kilie 1. The bodies rapped in hides and At La Pera street a riot occurred owning 0 an attempt to head a movement for | Camacno, the revolutionist leader. In the indiscriminate firing by the (Government troops 137 men, women and children were killed and sixty wounded. FE ——————————————— | herself without leave, DEPARTMENT OF JUBTICE. Summary of the Annual Report of the Attorney-General The annual report of Attorney-General Garland, shows that 5560 clafms, represent- ing 23% vessels and involving about $30, 000,000, have been flied in the Court of Claims. The majority of the cases have been. cortifisd to Congress, The penitentiaries in which United States prisoners are confined are found to be in good ition, and the risoners humanely He sdvoeates the passage of appointing a commission tw inquire into the advisability of building Government penitentiaries. There wers 1575 Government prisoners in custody during the year. Tha exclusive control by the Government of the District of Columbia jail and the erection of a separate jail for women are recom yin API pHation for preserving court records and certain changes in the judicial systetn are recommended, as also the erection of a suitable building for the Bupreme Court and the Department of Justice on | adjoining those now occupied by the de- riment, fy urges a special appropristion Jor the payment of special Aopity marshals. An increase of salaries and a reorganization of the clerical force are also among the recom. mendations, MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. Tue latest London success is “Widow Wine | some.” J ANUBCHEK, the famous German actress, i i still acting, Boor axp Bannerr will produce “Mao both” next season. H. RB. Jacoes, a New Yorker, manages twenty-two theatres, Rosknt Masters has added the “Corsican Brothers” 10 his repertoire, 17 is suggested that Jefferson and Florence will appear together in comedy, A Ginv dancer in Paris named Lisuado, only seven years old, has created a sensation, Many AXpERSON'S engagement is the event of the season thus far in New York ety, Wirtson Barnrerr, the English tragedian, will make a tour of the United Slates next SERSOTL Cray Grex is writing a comic opera on the lines of Longleliow’s “The Courtship of Miles Standish.’ Tax performances of “Ia Toses” given by Miss Fanny Davenport this’ season, have realized $96,000 Actor Ronenr Dowsing has married Miss Eugenie Blair, the leading lady of his com. pany, at Minneapolis A wew play which Tennyson has written for Mary Anderson is on the subject of Robin Hood and Maid Marian Tur Tennesse Jubilee Bingers and the “Black Patti” sre now drawing large houses at Colon, Panama, in the tropics “Tae Brits or Hastemene” has beens a dire and disastrous failure in Chicago with the best cast possible to procure. Thx Sultan of Tarkey has bestowed the highest decoration in the gift of the Em. pire upon Sir Arthur Sullivan, the composer. Loivtiax Russerl has been discharged from the Duff Opera Company for absenting Lily Post has taken $e 105 ber place Josgra WnerLocx bas been specially en- gaged to play Macduff tothe Macheth of Charles Coghisn anll the Lady Macbeth of Mra Langtry. Exiry Sorpexe is about to profit by a benefit performance in London, in oelebira- tion of ber completion of twenty-five years of stage servic, ALEXANDER SALvING will be the leading | man in the company supporting his {llastei~ ous father, the Italian tragedian, in this country next season Hrvrese HAsTERrTesn. the American vocal | ist, has achieved most extraordinary success in opera at Rome. Allthe Italian newspapers are full of her praise, Tux sixteenth opera of “Faust” has bean sucoesslully produced in Koenigsberg, Ger. many. The author is named Zeger, first operatic “Faust” was written by Spohr in 181% Ewya Nuvapa-Paruwes bas made a tri amph in Madrid, where she sang in “Lakme” before Queen Maris Pia of Portugal and Quaen Hegent [Christina of Spain on the same evening, Tux Rusisn Opers Company, which has been visiting the principal capitals of Europe, completely failed in London: the members of the troupe are to be sent back to Moscow by public subscription. Marp Bass, daughter of General NX. | Banks, of Massachusetts, is playing at | Haymarket Theetre, Chicago, She was PROMINENT PEOPLE, Barer Harte is now in his fiftieth year, a Princes of Wales is forty-four years JAY GorLy's beard, once black and glossy, is now almost white, Tux Queen of Greece has never worn any color save blue and white, Qurrx Vicronia contemplates writing, or | rather dictating, ber memoirs. Mus, CLEVELAND i« devoting a great deal of time to the study of French, i Mus, Josurn Cravagnrary took with her | to England a fortune in diamonds. ! Tux widow of Stonewall Jackson has made Charlotte, N. CC, ber pormanent residence. i Tue richest woman in the world, Donna { Isadore Cousino, of Chili, is coming to New | [ ork. Miss Rose JE. CLeve«asxd will, it is said. make a farewell visit to the White House this winter, Gexenar Hannmsox's home st Ind Tis has bean nearly stripped of Shrabbery or the relic hanters, Grapsrose fe his own Jotter writer, and " does not use his secretary for the purpose correspondence, Cant Scnune has accepted the Amerfoan Directorshi » of the Hamburg American i. Davin Bina, the 0 ‘her, is 20 home! Sy mpiedrriner Sen / SBwipes's monarch, every inch a which is deal, for his height is six Tie German Emperor and suffers (rom neuralgia, The lives 100 much in the blaze of exe | received in Chicago last year. By her and energy she bas won an enviable | upon the American stage, Tux English actors in New York are gi to cape coats and long hair. It is | shrewd observer of things tuoatrical in a { land that Henry Irving set the long | fever, | did during the sporting period of 187 ! pers At all events, it is certain a mine ex THE MARKETS, 4 SEW YOoRg ® ow Mich Cows, com. to good... Calves common to prime... Hoge—ldve.... Hi SugssssEa Eaunee EE Er ET “al Se EE A ad POPSPRETS E8882 8 o a =, — EEE EE nt vues HENS] 28% 52 a; Voorn, . .. « see viva Eggs—Btate and Penn... .... , BUFFALO Floors Western a 2 pi Surio, ho LTT ae 3 4 fawn ann Barley 30a. oo cov ivaviis Ee he te nt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers