— 1 The leaven of annexation is work in Canada, | fhe United States is rapialy forging | . ahead as a first-class maritime power, | Germany is said to be very mad be me —————— cause France is lending money to Russia, | Muy 3 i Philadelphia has just consecrated a church for deaf mutes— the only one ix the world. In the North eloquent stump spéaki are now known as “‘spell-binders,” a an organization recently started in York. a Hop growing is on the decline in Eng- land, the area devoted to that crop in 1888 being eight per cent. less than dur-« ing 1887, After all the sanitary engineers have done, the average mortality of the cities is twenty-five per cent, greater than that | of the country. - There has been no time m the history of this country, asserts the Omaha | Herald, when assassination was more rampant than now, According to official intormation the Soudan trade before the troubles with the Mahdi's Arab followers began was worth $10,000,000 a year to England, The present Georgia Legislature con- tains more farmers than any of its recent predecessors. There are sixty-nine farmers in the House, against forty-six lawyers. In Mexico the word God does not ap- : pear in the Constitution or laws, Con i sequently a constitutional protest which is equivalent to the oath of office is used at an installation of officials, A Chinaman who, after several years’ residence in this to China, has been telling his countrymen that the Americans worship a mysteri- ous being who is called All Mi-T Dol Lar, | country, returned The highest death rate among white people in this country is 23.55 per thou- sand in New York, whore there are 16.37 people to a dwelling. At Newark, N. J., with 7.26 people to the dwelling, the mortality is 16.49, Says a New York expert in sporting | matters: “There isn’t a fight, wrestle, 4 rowing match, running match, horse trot or sword contest on the square these days. Everything is ‘cooked’ before- hand, and ‘cooked’ to make money.” fays the New York Herald: Tt was railways that contributed so largely to German success in 1870 and to some of the most brilliant feats in the civil war of America, and the nation that cannot utilize her railways for military purposes is beyond the sphere of effective warlike combinations.” As electricity will undoubtedly be substituted in executions for the rope, the Chicago Times suggest that a pew branch of study is opened for young Anarchists, ‘““They should be instrusted in electric volts, and tanght to compute the number of ohms which constitute their power of resistance.” Western hunters comp'ain that wild duck are becoming very scarce, and at. tribute their scarcity to the use of duck eggs in making a new glue that is manu factured in Canada, Their eggs having become valuable, Canadian hunters de spoil their nests and thus materially Cw i duce the supply of young ducks, The phonograph has reached such a degree of perfection that gaps and | ¥awns are produced by it with great dis. finctness, At a recent trial given at Mr. Edison's laboratory a meeting between two lovers was recorded, and persons of experience say that the kisses were re. produced with tantalizing accuracy and fervor, # Two Pittsburg tabe workers have boon hired at $5 a day to go to England snd instruct workmen there how to man- | afacture tubing. One of the proprietors of a great English manufactory, who em. ployed the men, has discovered that American wotkmen ‘“‘are much more mpid and have a better system of doing the work than their English brothers.” | fhe Empress Frederick and her Isughters are sombre figures at Windsor, a London cable. The Empress a widow's cap, with long strings _maching nearly to her feet, and her Banghters, in addition to their crape stipes, wear what would be termed here s caps. The Empress has de to return to Berlin when she leaves instead of proceeding to Italy, wa was her original intention, . - ~The heavy expenses of a college course ¥ heretofore deterred all but the of wealthy parsats from en. the privileges of academic ed. i! This exclusiveness is being ey perceptibly broken into now, how. r, by young women who earn their \y to There are ahundred ‘ways in which an Intelligent an find the wherewithal to go | sickly, g | fect may have bean partly due to the reflec | though looked for | was compelled to follow her in the afternoon when Anna took her com- | | dom, working I LA Fa northern observers the United h all necsssary in foned at various points lity, and as the weather [6 most places, their observa. od Wade under excoptionably favora. ble ¢ and will prove of great HITE scier@®ie value. The Principat work was done by the Har- vard versity party at the William Lick Observatory, astronomers at Norman, Pro- fessor Swift near Chico, the Chabot Observatory, and people at Clover dale. The latter party was in cha of Profesor Charles Buckhbalter, included no less than twenty-five eo i enced amateur photographers, Besides cam. eras and smaller instruments, observers were equi with 10 half-inch reflegtors of Chabot University and a siderial click set to automatically record the time. inging to their | branches. These fefitures of the land. scape were brought ou ith weird effect during the solar obscurgon At 12:30 rp, a. the firgt contact was The sky was clear, few lacelike oi aver, did not, noted, clouds, which, how. t at rare intervals, crosy the 0 the sun Slowly the moon pt onward, until the Sun was a crescent. like the thinnest of new moo Then the faceof nature as sumed & gh ly aspect, Faces became of a ish yellow hue, though this ef tion of the dim light from the emerald lawn, Six minutes before the totality Venus came into view, A moment later, Jupiter could be seen near the zenith. At this mo ment, while all eyes were strained to catch the first glimpse of the corona, the silenos be came t that the ticking of the sidereal kK was plainly beard The air grew hill, and then all af once SO quickly that 1» e could note how this change was made, there hung poised in the Sky the great black body of the moon, sar rounded by a ring of gl irnished silver, from which extended long rays and Irregular bands, like remnants of golden and rose tinted satin rit raveled ends This was the marvelous corona. Mercury and Mars now came out to join the two larger planets previously noted. One shout of "Oh!" went up. then all was still again save for the of the clock the voice of the timer calling the seconds to the busy company of photographers It was not dark: it was rather twilight--the uncanny twilicht of another world. Objects could plainly be dis cerned, and the motionless, moss-covered arms of the old oaks were not the least awe inspiring feature of the landscape, Une hundred and four seconds were told off, and then. on the lower circumference of the biack ball banging in the heavens appearsd a tiny speck of fire, bright as molten steel, which soon ex panded into a crescent In another second the wonderful spectacie was en led The total phase had passed. Three cheers were given with a tiger for the eclipse of the sun and moon. The corona was observed through the in- struments seven seconds before totality, which began at 1:45:45. M A large num ber of excellent photographs were obtained which will be turned over to the Lick Ob servatory Observers at otber po vorable results. It is expected that the eclipse will aid In solving many long dis puted astronomical problems Professor Smith was stationed at Nelson, California, and telegraphed the fi lowing as the t of his observations of the eclijse As far as affording oppor tunity to search for nira planets it was a failure from haze, All four contacts were the chronometer watch previously set to Lick Observatory time being Five very small colorless protube TALOYR Were seen all having pointed apexes. Near the point of one was another d tached from the sun. Balley's beads were soon at the second and third eon tacts, but entirely unlike those seen at Den ver in 180M No chronosphere was visible, Mercury, Venus, Vega ard Alpha Cygni were seen. The corona could not be drawn, but as seen through the telescopes it was not very extensive nerfs 0 pert ttering | bons with ticking nts report very fa Louis resy urinal clouds amd well made mer timed A STRANGE EXPERIENCE. A Man's Hand Held Seven Hours By a Girl in a Trance Robert Watts, a your & Chatham, Ill, who came to Springfield the other day to attend a faith cure meeting, an- nounces himself quite satisfied with his ex Among the recent converts is Anna Delaney, of Taylors ville, a young woman about twenly years old, Since her conversion she has taken up ber residence in Springfield, and is a reguiar Attendant at the afternoon and meetings, going into trances upon the sight. est provocation, While in a trance she some times walks abut the hall farmer from perience up to the present time, and down the aisle passed young Watts, who | Was standing among a group of sightseers in | the rear of the hall. As she did so sheonught nt | hold of bis hand with a grip #0 firm t although be struggled to get foose he was un able to do so. Several girl, but she continued walking, and Watts It was 40'clock panion by the hand, and it was seven and a-hall hours before he regained his free When she walked Watts had to walk, and when she stood he had to stand. All the afternoon and evening he suffered as he probably had never suffered before, and wiped great drops of perspiration from his forehead while He faith-cure band prayed, shouted, and sang themselves hoarse wily before midnight Miss Delaney fell to the floor, She was placed upon a stretcher, and in about five minutes let go her hold of Watts, greatly to that individeal's relief, young farmer Jost no time in getting out of the hall, His band was swollen so that he was unable to use it for several days. Mis ¥ came out of the trance next day, has no recollection of what occurred. A YEAR'S HANGINGS, Logal Ereoutlons in the United Btates During 1888, The number of legal excontions In the United States during the last year has jn. reased over 1857, when It was mach smaller than for many ye number was 7 porte oh) "with wh Hy Kin 18S and 108 In) The » in the several Eaton wore as (o/lowy: bama, 5; Arkansss, 5; California, 5 h theexception of a | : | while working on thesunken French steamer | Iberia, off Rockaway Beach, N, Y, evening | men tried to stop the | 3 — 4% . 4 ig Pi Cola w Priva J. Gras of New York city, AT Dover, N, H. Jl, H. Tanner, & lunatic Killed G. E. ‘Pray, ho had come to take him Dune, & highly to an asylum. respected Vilmington, Del, has com- Cuantes T. gentleman of mitted suicida/by shooting himself through the head, was suffering from consump- tion, and tp@Ffdiseass brought on melancholia, and he dg ined to end his life, Tur nt Republican Legislative caucus at Augits, Me, has usanimously renomi- nate @enator Frye Of en sixty designs nnd ten models have beg submitted by American and European tists for the proposed Grant monument in ew York city. W. E Bannrerr, publisher of the Boston Advertiser and Hecord, has been slected Speaker of the Massachusetts Representatives, Wutre Cars have warned several persons at Ferndale, Penn, to leave, Jonx Souexck and a man named Erb were blown to atoms at James Miiler's dyna- mite factory at Trunnlytown, Penn, by the explosion of half a bucket of ayusmi, The shock was felt two miles off. men wore blown into fragments, Rosgnrr Ernen bes been hanged in the | County jail at May's Landing, N. J., for the murder of his father at Hammontown, N. i J., on August 4, 1588 Jaxps Woons, a diver, was drowned Woods's death was dus to the entanglement of the air pipe, thus cutting off the supply of fresh air, causing suffocation, South and West Tue steamboat Natchez, one of the finest on the Missssippi River, was sunk near Lake Providence, La Tue Richardson Drug Company, of St Louis, the largest wholesale drug store in the West has been destroyed by fire A private watchman was burned to death The pecuniary damage is about $000,000 E. OO. Wat Republican nominated Ly the Legislature « as United States Senator, to Bowen has bean { Colorado succeed Senator Jases W, MoMinLax, of Detroit, has been nominated by the Republican caucus of the Michigan Legislature ar 1 nited States Sena tor to succeed Thomas W. Palmer B. Buenvax, of Wakeman, of the freshman clas at and killed bhersell at Overstudy is sssigned ction portion of Altona, lestroyed by fire I, has been Ax eplden Pekin, 11 Al have been ¢ of measles Is prevalent at the public schools in the city josed by the Board of Health, DE LA Graza and Jesus Barbo Anagua, Texas their shooting on borssback, it * dying with only a between them Cantus fought about a woman at Commend & they finished ’ pie of alnot, distance { Chieago for the past murders were com the murderers was yards THE police reports « w that fifty one of om, N. C.a boiler mel John Ashi sons of man, and Ashford himself, in the hoo rd exploded ro) Ast wil njuring § , Hing tw : olored fatally olone Washington onvention of colored Washington PrEsipENT and Mrs. Cleveland held their New Year's recoption at the White Lu. A great throng attended, A NATIONAL Cath ios began its sess.on it NOREssMAN Bruvoen has introdoosd a bill to extend the Presidential term to six Years, with 1» re election RETARY OF THE Navy Wairsey se ngress estimates and reco iations appropriation of $5,000 for a photo graphi telescom 0 be srected to thie the Government to co-operate in a concerted international movement for photographing the skies, Tue public debt statement for December shows that the reduction of the public det amounted to $14.4.7.505.08: total cash in the Treasury, 5%: total debt, sh in Treasury, $1,154,062 257,19 MALIGNANT scarlet fover is vhry prev alent in Washington just now and many of the handsomest houses are under quarantine, Miss Lizzie Shellabarger, the daughter of ex Congressman Shellatarger, has just died The children of John Hay, the poet, among others, are Hl and there is considerable of a panic in the aristocratic neighborhoods THERE has been a net increase of $3031 480 in the circulation since December 1, and a net decrease of £500,402 in money and bullion in the Treasury Pagsioexr CLeveraxp has withdrawn the romination of leon ©. Bailey to be United States District Attorney in Indiana, and appointed Solomon Claypool to that office SE to for an men en RRO ae : UR Iona Jonx Cravrox announced his contest the seat of C. KR. Breck Coroxer intention to | mridge in the Fifty first Congress from the ! Becond Ard MN q At a mecting the other afternoon the girl i ecoud Arkansas District, was in a trance as usual, and In walking up | Foreign, Eany persons have been floods at Castlemaine, Victoria Crorena at Quilon, on the Malabar const. is said to have carried off 200 Christinos Tur disasthous Rhone floods in France | are subsiding Tux drought in South Australia has been broken by copious rains A SERGEANT who former] Fgyptian Army has arrived at Suakin from Khartoum, which piace he loft on November 2. He says that Emin Pasha was free af the time be loft, and had repeatedly defosted the dervishes in Bahral-Ghasel, Two nUNDRED parsons have been lost in the mow and frozen 10 death in Russia during in the Oller colliery 1» the pin, twenty seven persons were earthquake shocks were felt in Kbojend and Kastakos, Turkestan. Man were killed and a number of build. nge wero Tune has been a series of sarthq hocks of t severity in Nicaragua. At Alajuria sight men were killed, A TErninLe disaster has ha at Ba. bumtschi, in Georgia A train became blocked in an immense snowd rift, and before uake | estimates for the current year are $5,480, | the fiscal | counts being 055,202, House of | | the question of constitutional prohibition be | drowned by | sugurated at Lincoln as Governor I Governor in Four States. Governor Ames Favors Women Suffrage in Massachusetts, A) Governor Oliver Ames was insngurated in Joint convention of the Legislature at Bos- ton, Mass. In bis innugural address he stated that the funded debt of the Commonwealth on Jauuary 1, 1880, was R25 951,610.65, The sinking funds amounted to $0,205 608 84 a decrease of $3,078,001.25%, due to the payment of portions of the Troy and Greenfield Rail road loan, which matured during the year. Actual expenses of the Government as far ns ascertained were £4,085 185.47, against 85.008 585,08 for the previous year, and the on, 16, The Governor reports the deposits in the savings banks and institutions at the end of ear as $315, 185 050.57, an iucroass | of $12,256,440.40, the number of open ac Among the recommendations made are that | ply submitted to the people: that alaw | ho enacted conferring the right of municipal | suffrage upon women; that the subject of grade crossings on railroads should re. | ceive careful attention; that a law be for the appointment of a suitable person to | have a general advisory oversight of all the roads and bridges in the Commonwealth; that Massachusetts should be fitly repre sented at the Washington centennial in New York city on April 50, and thet the initia- | ve should be taken at once for the repre- sentation of the State in the exposition to be | opened in Washington three years hence, The industries at the State Prison are re- ported in a very satisfactory condition, but it is suggested that the law governing prison labor should be amended so that the prison ers may have the advantage of employment with such Improved machinery as the nature of the business in which they are engaged may demand, The work of the State Board of Arbitra- tion, the Governor states has been continued, with increasing benefit to employers and em ployes who bave come within the scope of its action, Governor Burleigh, of Maine The inauguration of Edwin C. Burldgh, as Governor of Maine, took piace at Augusta, and the Governor de livered an address, in which, at the opening, be satel that the financial condition of the State Is one which will soon justify a further reduction of taxation The amount of annual interest, with the refund ing of the debt, cannot exceed § 0 per sunum, and, If the direct tax should re paid by the National Government we may fairly hope, says the Governor, to see it r dood as low a 80 000 per annum total taxation may safely be reduced for the Year IMO to 2 mills, which w roe duction of £117.79 94 per annum The age ate deposits in the fifty-five savings banks amount to nearly $41,000 000, Governor Burleigh commends the pro hibidtive syslom of the State recon isa closes examination and earnest care of the public institutions, aod sayr that both the labor Bureau and the tate Board of Health bave done walusble work PY ferring to fisheries and game be takes occasion 10 say that the rejectiad fish treaty was opposed Ly an over whelming majority of tie people of Maine He opposes ea of changing the date of the biennial Btate election from Neptem! er 10 the date of the National slection vember, but recommends that the ture memoralize Congress asking that Presi dential electors and Hetresentatives shall be chosen, on the second Tuesday of October, beginning in 1% be sa TITY eres the » NO Leginla Governor Morehouse, of Missouri The Missouri State Legislature « at JefMerson City by the choice f J. J. Russi] oral County, as Speaker, and § Lewis County, as Chief Clerk W. J. J Democrat was chosen as Presidont pro tem Gray, of Columbia. as Secretary Governor A. PF. Moret wnt farewell age, wi notes a large crease of taxable we a rapid extin ment of the puld bend sound nditior the pub school system and Siate ’ tions, and says in 1 period of th history has prosperity taken a wider range more lavish in her gift The gross of the State Is FI upon which there is $ 4) interest paid This, the Governor thinks will be wiped out entirely in eight or nine years, The Governor recommends the ap pointment of a bank examiner, dos not think any radical change in railroad legisla tion is needed at present, suggets that the or Bureau be authorized by law to arbi. gards the influence of dram shops as demoralizing and thinks the present law if properly enforosd, sufficient for the Riate’'s welfare He recom mends that the Australian system of voting be adopted, en yinstion and EL or been ndebite M00 Ines at rate all labor troul » -. 1 Governor Lmeoe, of Michigan. The oath of office was administered to Governor Cyrus G. Luce at Lansing, Mich, before the assembled State Leg slature, and in entering upon his second term of office he lelivered an address, a considerable portion of which was devoted to the question of tem: perance. On this topic he said in part “Believing that the sentiment of a large portion of the State is ripe and ready for it, commend to your consideration the passage of a local option law, if one can be devised free from constitutional objection. If our constitution prohibits us from securing an efficient law for localities, it dom not prohibit a general prohibitory law, and if we are de nied other opportunities, no dovbt in the future this course will be resorted to." Governor Thayer, of Nebraska Governor John M. Thayer has been in of Nee second term, stall. of of tw wrve his larraves and lown, were prewnt as the guests braska, to | State. The insugural address of the Gov. belonged to the | ernor dealt principally with the question of an honest allot, urging the Lagisinture to | A reg | rd more carefully the ballot box, fr law was recommended. The lnaugural ball in the evening was one of the most brilliant social events of the year, A GOLD CRAZE. An OM Time Mining Esoltement in Southern California | GOVERNORS INSTALLED. | _ Chief Exeentives Inaugurated | LATER NEWS, NATnAn C, BLANCHARD, 8 wealthy farmer of Aurelius, N.V., bas committed suicide by hanging. Rev, Fieuoen IsRARL, sixty-two years old, pastor of the First Unitarian Church, at Salem, Mass, was found dead by his wife | in his study in the church with his throat | cut. Ho had been unsettiod mentally sincs | the recent burning of the steamer Maryland, on which he was a passenger, barely escap- | | now carried long distances by rail ng with his life, Tux process of refining sugar by electricity | | Btates penny postage between Fn bas been found to be a myth by New York stockholders in the concern, who broke open the gscret rooms in the factory at Williams. burg, N. ¥., and discovered that the mys- terious machines for converting the raw material into absolutely pure sugar wers only cleverly devised appliances to induce them to invest their money. Itis said that $1,000,000 have been sunk in the electric | bubble by eredulous English and American capitalists. Shares dropped in London dur- ing one day from $500 to $00, Tux prevalence of small-pox at New Wil- | mington, Ohio, has caused a general suspen sion of business, Tax United States inspectors who are in_ | vestigating the burning of the Mississippy liver steamer Kate Adams, at Plaquemine, | La. have obtained evidence which convinces | them that forty-two persons were lost instead It appears that eighteen children among the deck passengers and ten of ie boat's crew perished in addition to the vie tims previously reported, ago, Rean Apsinat Navy Kingston telegraphe | to the Wash ngs from to an oul La Department as that m Jamaica f owing break of yellow ver on board the Yantic that ve 1 from Portes Prince Hay, or a Northern port Slates, in the United Tux President has transm A recon be bas theoret ally p pocket, Mr. Hyatt said kK he has Fal during re oent day death the la wry, Uermany y frozen & NEveN skaters ware drowned in wig Canal a2 Nuren Tux floods are extend ng to Bastia and have done mu wh AIMALe in one | aye] twelve persons were Fasise and dro it are pr interior of C} Ba ani are increasing verity, causing terrible province of Shang tang stroyed by an « w of the Yellow R sufferings. In rope have been de werd) ver Heavy snows in the » of Rossia have at enguifed several trains and stopped all kinds of traffic, and privetion tizens in Walsh amilies are sad Most of them 3 , and are liv OE roEen beat and « Wane s number gathered at New Hogw W,. Va, =» had mill at in the completely farmers, who William riers grist re talking boiler house, the boiler exploded, wrecking the m ¥ nstantly killed, burt WC en were ne has died since, another was fatally seriously im iured and two others wer Tie President has approved the act to in. Historical corporafe the Amerion Associa tion and the act to regulate appointements in the Marine Hosp tal servion being A the Panama Canal Company is shareholders A xuw formed in Pars by the present compan y Tux that Corea depose her King, and that Corea declare herself dependent on China of the Ma'abar Coast. has been lestroyed by fire, causing a Chinese Government has demanded COCHIN, almost totally Joss of 81,500 Tux greater part of the village of Brancon, Bwiteeriand, has by fire Many cattle were burned to death was ignited by a madman, LA) been destroved A PASKEXGER train was blown from the Italy, on the Adriatic, Three persons were rails near Flume, during a violent storm, | killed and many injured, Tug German man of war Olga lost twenty | | men killed and thirty wounded out of a | | party of 130 men sent to assist Tamasese, the | rebel, against Mataala, King of Samoa. The | Germans were compelled to retreat to their boats REDUCED TO ASHES. - A Mourning Vather Crematos the | Body of His Daughter, F. B. Goddard, of New York, bas just An ol time mining excitement is In full | blast in Southern California and Arizona as | the result of recent discoveries, Two Mexi. | cans re gold n Southern California, about one hundred miles from Yuma, had ng in a Jooalit been that vas horn ope BB by hosti Indians. who had kept miners out of the country for many years. The Mexicans sid the gold worked, and they woud there longer and brought out more if their provisions had lasted. Ther sot everybody in Yuma crazy with the (OM frver ad 4 Tul to the new fleids has ble conveyance in fitted and fatal accident hap mel 0 Chatiee rhein ei Te gd Jrodenopper. of brought into Yuma a large quantity of | which they said they had obtained | §is axF | about a | to America in 188] The fire — OCEAN PENNY POSTAGE. The Champion of Cheap Transat lantic Postal Rares, Mr, John Henniker Heaton, member of the English Parliament, has accepted an in vitat on to visit the United States early this year. He expects to have the honor of appearing before Congress in advoesey of ocean peuny (two cent) postage, and much of the time of his visit will be devoted 10 the furtheratics of cheap postage. His idea Is that as letters are at the Postoffice United land and America would be perfectly feasible Indeed, non-contract stesmers carry letters for the from Southampton to Yor half penny each that letters go to the pound, and the paid to these non contract steamers forty-one cents per pound), As to profits, Mr. Heaton caleulates that the English Post office makes from $250,000 to $500,000 an- nually on the American mails, Twelve millions of letters, and pounds weight of newspapers, ete penny rate with a profit to the departments of Fngland and the 2 500 600 were sent for which the steamship companies received loss that £50 while the English Postofice received more than $900,000 for stasnpm, 0 THE LABOR WORLD. Tue strike movement is subsiding in Bel. glum, A sTRIXKE of silk ribbon weavers is im. of fourteen, as they reported several days | minent, CLEVELAND (Ohio labor nine hours per day. AT New Bedford, Mass, a new sutomatio show aster is at work. Wome in Lynn £7 and men #12 | try now Jeads the world in the iincture of perfumes city workmen Mass.) cotton mills make 8B Woek Tue barbers are to bave a national organ, y Fer ng 40 employ for cleanis wks are being used EAM machines 18 Ww bartered In Wash I railroad } Iethods ES the 2800 all-night bakers in Phila male and female work anly-two steam bakeries [or the mak- rackers and Kk K- Knacks there are 1300 anton working ie next September, arrangements are Deine made : sans thither n bishop of Bbeim Tax International Trade Association of Hat Finishers of nerica was organized in Philadelphia, June 5, 18554, with local un It now numbers 15 locals with 4000 members and bas aincost complete control of every hatting ceater, IAL relurus in regard to female wkers in all parts of Maine show that the ghest wages ressived by a woman is at the Mills, or cue of them, namely $12 ng ven to one of the fore owest for steady employ- } rr ar 1 of the rehe- ons orm in lw jo the eek, t men, wh ment is § TREY bave an in wen iwprovel method of lasting shoes in some of the Maine shoe factories by which cement is made to take the place of pegs and tacks. The device, which is patented, twenty per cent jess than all other articles for the purpose, and it is said to do Costs {| three times the work, Tur new law in Boston which goes into effet the 1st of May will close one-half of the saloons, THE MARKETS. 1 FEW YORK. Peeves, ... canes Milch Cows, com. to good Calves common to prime... Flour--City Mill Extra, ... Patents Wheat--No 2 Red ' Mixed Western... .... Hay--No | aes basans Straw.Long Rye..... cca Land Clty Steam ....... cow Butter State Creamery .... Dairy fair togood West. Im, Creamery A ate hs Rkims— Mediom. ... SEE os, 3 EAASARRARRARLAEAERAMLES os E2un Hoge—~Good to! holes \ orks Flour—Family....o.oninne Wheat No, 2 Northers. .... Corn--Nao, 3 Yellow, ....... Oate--No, 2 White, ........ Ame ue=pEsss ir Shaan 630888889 CARE o« 836s pe £8ET 3 i . RE Asean Messin ER SEELEY fas F384 PEERS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers