J —~ Nevassa or Navaza is a small island of the Caribbean Sea, off the west coast of Hayti, It furnishes guano, It is owned by a Boston syndidate. The questions as to jurisdietiod are now before the United States Atforney-General, and the place has just ok made interesting by & guano labor strike and riots. According to a Russian paper there are actually in Russia more than 500,000 beg- gars who carry on begging as a business with the indorsements of village, city and church authorities. Upward of 8200 of them are of noble blood; 3491 of the clerical calling, and 181,032 peasants, Moscow, of all Russian citiss, contains the most beggars of noble origin. The Mormons who expect to find an asylum in the Canadian Northwest where they may practice polygamy undisturbed will find, asserts the San Francisco Chron- cle, that the Dominion authorities are not partial to any vagaries on the marriage relation. The ‘‘sants” would do better to str.ke for some South American coun- try where the morsl lines are not drawn so strictly. Private letters from Honolulu indicate increszed discontent with the manner in which the affairs of the kingdom are be- ing conducted, and a growing feeling in favor 0” the annexation of Hawaii to the United States. po England, Germany and the United States wers Three tre aty —are bound by compact not to annex the islands, but Hawaiians argue that there % nothing to prevent them from petition. to place them 1 I ing the United States its protection. Laborers digging a sewer at Tic rogs, N. Y., found a st was a partly decayed oaken cf taining a well pres bones, was the g Howe, the English infunt French a Relic fell before the July, 1758. difficulty the coffin place of & A vote was taken at the St. Lo position on the national flower resulting in favor of the golden rod vote of 6347 to 4743 for the Sixty-one different flowers were voted for. but those running the highest were; Rose, 3241: daisy, 1342; 951; pansy, S42; 741; tuberose, 643: pink, 556; morning glory, 451. pinks, pansies, daisies, and tnd violet, Nile iy, violets, modest flowers of beauty drew ballots largely from ladies. The admirers of Prince many are developing plans marck museum in Berlin on the f gd} Chancellor. day anniversary ¢ tious have been made already quests sent out for all relics pertaini the Prince museum, wi of Frederick the Great. s} = J Lae aea. is flattered by Colonel W. W., Rockhill, rece i Pekin, China, after retary of lez stion at returned to Washington through Thibet. lation of ti 3 He estimates th rxreben ub 9 O00 O00 to country at < VOD 0 s Ones third of whom are lamas or priests, who practically monopolize education and " There the grand lama, but the country is gov. is a nominal King, beside Ne wealth, erned by the Chinese minister and resi The country is poor and largely a wilderness dents, and pays tribute to Chiga The controversy as to the island upon which Columbus first landed when he reached the New World and which he named San Salvador is likely to be rein. vigorated by the coming celebration in The honor of his great achievement. New York Sun says the trouble is that | The death under very peculiar ciream- | | stances is reported in the township of West. of a middle-aged woman | Bhe | tithe hardy old mariner in his log book gave anything but definite and minute descriptions of the many islands he visited, His discovery of Cuba, the crowning achievement of his first voyage, | distracted attention from the Bahanias, Ther were very little known for many years after Columbus discovered them, and were never correctly chartered until this century. Washington Irving made the long narrow island, now known as Cat Island, the scene of Columbus's first ap. pearance in America. His theory wus long ago discarded. Other students de- elared in Savor of Grand Turk, Maya. guana, Samana, and one or two other islands, but serious flaws have been found in their arguments. The supposition advanced by Munoz nearly a century ago that the little Watling's Island lying | ernment, " | the propriety of shortening the term o | minster, Untario, ] Jatin Janet Jackson a fow days ago | TELEGRAPHIC TICKS. An Interesting Budget of Late Dispatches, A Mexican Military Escort Mur- ders Its Sergeant. A serious mutiny has occurred among the | eo, A Corporal and four privates attacked | their superior officers, severely wounding | the Lieutenant and killing a Sergeant out- { right. The affair occurred about 5:30 v. M, The object of the mutineers seems to have besn to stop the train and make their escape. seule which followed this officer was run through by a bayonet, which lero his left lung and stood out several inches behind his back. The voung Lieutenant, who was smoking a cigaretts on the platform, hearing the disturbance entered the car, and, seeing the dead body of his Sergeant, drew his sword and began to lay about him, wounding one or two of the soldiers, On the fall of the Sergeant other soldiers | who first had wavered joined the mutineers, { and by one of these the young Lisutenant was | shot, the bullet entering his body near the shoulder. He then caught hold of his sword | with his left hand and continued to defend | himself, but was at last overpowerad and | thrown to the floor, By thix time the train was almost due at | Boltepee and the mutineers now directed their efforts to climbing on the engine witha view of forcing the sngnesr to make a halt | The escort car is always attached to the tender and no difficulty was experienced in resching the engine, but to intimidate the engineer and fireman, both of whom were armed, proved 0 bs no such easy matter, | The engineer was an American and the fire man & Mexican Seeing that they would probably fail in their object, the five ring leader from the tr but so un skilfull thi one was run over and cut in other four were re or less injured They succeeded, ho wr, in got. ting up and making off The greatest alarm provailed in the senger cars, and several ladies fainted On arriving at Soltepse a detachment of rural irrounded the escort ear, and, enter wiked rifles, they ucoseded in (isa E + remaining Hiu Pe 5 | guards s ing it with o Desertions in the Army. given eased desertion the army posed and CBU that I ioae he i= sab al treatment treatmer with some could be aX tend H n in proposinga remedy inappropriate, however IXgest that a 1 Wat femal a mit gation of the evil, may be found in a change f recruiting the army ate, a recruiting offi city few ex. is sslann The recruits enlisted here men of whom hing is known, The recruiting officer has practioal Ivy no means of Aading anything them or their families, who their friends ars or what the character of the applicants may Such men having been sent to their reg. iments become disantisfied with the discipline ips of military life. A large pro. such men desert I am of the opinion if : : bw «i by which service in the army a { recruits, & class whose fan ¥ and Inosl associations are known, we should ! thereby reduce largely the number of such desertions. Again, | am decidedly of the opin. jon that if 3 soldier could, after a reasonable term, sever his WI De wi with the military service by a payment of the amount whi h his enlistment and servioe had cost the Gov it would go far also toward § desertion. 1 would also suggest f at oi not EE gt bout out about yer sone we venting hi listovent,” Heavy Smuggling of Opiam i that a work and overs @ has made i 4 3 1 in Man Fras have defrau the United out 8 large amount ousbons The largest firm in Chine exe “ting opium is the house of Ring Wo & Co, Hong Kong. TT! ey export three-fourths the opium out from Chins A grominent Chinese merchant griors have heen a a number Slaten | ment f due anit in San Fran. cisco has taken am inventory of the ship. ments made by Sing Wo & Uo. in 1888 and for the year, Last vear 1845 boxes wore shippad; in the first six months of this present | Soar S40 boxes, and sinos July 1. 5% boxes Figures at the Custom House demonstrate that soarcely any opium has been received there through the Custoru House, The net to the Government in customs duties daring the last half of 1880 will approximate ! B00. 0X0, They of opium consimed. On the other hand, it J to be presumed that the consumption is Jose renter than ever, and, as the smugglers furs | trish all opium not brought througn the Cus | tom House, the ring has, daring the last six months, been making a profit of over 82,000 a month. Sweating Drops of Blood, been nursing her aged mother, who was mother it would be all right. she was taken seriously fll with and those who withessed her su tug which lasted for about fifty hours, un i desth came to bier relief, say they never saw anything so terrible in r lives, Two hours before she died the WOMAN Was wen BIG CAPTURE OF TRAMPS, Thirty Sent to Jall in Twenty-Four Hours In twentv-four hours officers arrested | | Thay first attacked the Sergeant, and in the | | | i2 no decrease in the amount very ill, and, overcome with grief, remarked | to a friend that if she could only die with her | fmmedintel~ | RRTIIN, | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle States. A wast freight train jumped the track at Rahway, N, J. Three men received fatal injuries, Cares Dinsmore, of Claremont, N. H., aged fiftesr, committed suicide by placing the muzzle of a gun to one of his eyes ane firing the gun with a cane, Tre Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, accompan- fed by his wife and daughter, left for the Holy Land on the steamship City of Paris, The steamer will carry him to Liverpool; | after a short stay there, the reverend gentle rain escort on trains near Vera Crus, Mexi- | man will take a steamer up the Meditara pean. Tur steamers Cleopatra and Crystal Wave were sunk in a collision off the Capes, T. W. D, Pmicrars, of Burriliville, R. 1, has become sane in CONMUeNCe of Lis re | t moval from the postinastership in that town, Etanr workmen were seriously injured, | i Delaware | | some fatally, by the collapme of two houses | | built on Buddensiek principles at Passaic, N.J. Wirriax Hexny Cressox, cash fradesmen's National Bank, of ( ca, Penn, is a defaulter in $50,000, bank is closed, r of the South and West, Five men are to be banged in Hancock, Teun. December 24, for the murder of Henly Sutton, a prominent stock buyer, The murder was the result of a family feud, and the Tennessee Supreme Court has confirmed the sentence of the lewer court Mu. Ann Mus, Minien fred pear Unadilla, Ga, 1 dered by thieves, and their house and robbed, P. M. Anvinvr was reslectsd Chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engines: the convention at Deaver, Col on nn old « Hiple who brutally mur ransacked OLIVER GARRISON, seventy-ning who built the first steamboat New Orleans and St. Loud suicide at the Intter city. Brnoxaxt T. C. Banox, Thirt ment, ULB A, was fatally w butcher named Taylor, during brawl in Guthrie, ne Fine in the packin Ar in Kansas City, has cansed & Jows « 4 £3 GREAT excitement exists at Lexington, N C., on acoount of the thirty white men, charged with Robert Berri inlaw Five Chinese leper to Hong Kong from San Francis Tux forty r. who third annual " American Missionary Society open meets CREO The drug establishment 3, Ubilo, has been which arrived at ¢ brought the body of maker, of the 1 Vandalia, whe torm of Mar Tie Indians State Board of He tion that hog ch Captain ( Staten wine HL evived inform lenit in rithern and n ties of the State the n Ox of the large badlers « furnaces at Bells rible force, crack main battery and wi ts the S00 (00 wi V HILE a portables engine was being » rier] r ox and seriously she Doe on a farm near Hamlet, Ind ploded, killing Adam Mann sealing | { Washington, Przsroext Harmison bas appointed John C. Blocum, of Florida, to | eral of Florida SECRETARY TRACY has awarded the con tract for the bs Bg the new 20.4om cruiser to the Columbia Iron Works and Dry Dock Company, of Baltimore, st their bil of $1,285,000 Privare Sgongrany Harrono has re turned to Washington from Fortress Mon roe, and resumed his duties at the White House Jouax F dent Har ACTING BRORETARY BATOHELLER cided that Chinese lawndrymen are within the meaning of the Chinese act, and are therefore prob ing in the Unitad States, no they have been here before or n Arronsey-Gesenat, Mriixe has pointed James PF. Van Rensselaer to be sistant District-Atiorney for the District of New York Ream ADMIRAL, Wanker was entertains at dinner by his friends in Washington: and Admiral Franklin, in the same city, gaven dinner to the delegates to the Maritime Con. forence y De Survey or-en t.0 has been appointed by y ison Postmaster at Philadelphia has de Inbwrers youly +i sited fy ap As rathern Tue annual report of Brigader General Nelsomn A. Miles, commanding the Division of the Pacific, bas been received at the Was Department He recommends appropria tions of £90 000 000 for sites, plants and guns Sponerany Brame bas aoquitted Consul Lewis of the particular charge made against him by Ramon Azogue, interpreter at the Tangier Consulate of withholding money dae the iatter, Tue President has appointed William B Sheppard, of Florida, Collector of Customs at Apalachicola, Fia.: also the following Burvevors of Customs : John Mabood at Galena, Il: William H., Alexander aft Omaha, Neb; Henry ©. McArthur at Line coin, Neb Tug Government Directors of the Union Pacific Railroad in their report to the Secre tary of the Interior say that the interests of | the United States demand early action to se. cure the payment of the company’s indebted. | i ness to the Government, 1. P. Dawsox, son of ex Education Com missioner Dawson, ix under arrest in Wash. | | ington for stealing postage stamps from the | | roomie of the bureau. Postaasten-GENERAl WANAMAKER has made public an order fixing rates on Govern. ment telegraph messages for the curren? flernl yoar, Foreign. A CANADIAN Government organ has ane nofineed that proclamation of the Weldon Extradition Act is deferred until the United States Senate takes action on a new British Extradition Treaty, Taw United States ship Mohican, which ar rived at Honolulu from Callao, received ore ders to proosd to Bamoa to reinforce the Adams, which is there now, Prison Fraxcis Harzesror has been married to Miss Clara Huntington, jlangiiien the American { of C.P. Hun the in raven Emmanse, Ix a railway accident near in India, fiftesn persons were killed and forty injured, Tur British ship Bolan, from Caleutta for Liverpool, has founderel at sen, Thirty. three lives were out | stone National Park | many may die of starvation bel nshobocks | The | | several persons wer machers, and the crew of the society's vessel, the Mary, in New Guinea, IT has been announced that Mr, Balfour, the Irish Secretary, would introduces in Par- lament a bill providing fora large systom of land purchase, Tux railway system on the island of Ja maics has been sold by the Colonial Govern- ment to a syndicate of American capitalists. Foun Peruvian revolutionists were caught while trying to capture a cruiser in Cal Harbor. LATER NEWS, Hannrison Lorine, awarded the contract for building eruiser No, 11, one of the 2000-ton type, for $674,000 of Boston, Ix a saloon row at Nashville, Tenn Grigsby, of Dickinson County, was shot to | death by J, C. Arelidge, a distilie: Tur 2000 River Wind Yellow Indians cocuplying the Leservation, just north of the Ww 1 are in want and ore spring Tnx attempted assassination of Chinatown, San pitched battle between highbinders in a Uhina man in Francisco, led 10 a whieh wounded ¢ Tur estimated stock o wi wer coln in the United States Tream enh shows fail Jegal a bwibcdinry gold tenders silver silver, $70 638 Tx] Tir total gold « nl ail Li ing October age was $2 570,006 COLDREe £1 310.504 NLOIS 159.44 Fue Treasury Departament delit redu ited to about #6 ate that the publi May arn min r the Disted THE LABOR WORLD. STOX's slacird start n nion Maxy Bouthern unions are gether of oolorel m Tre National sociation of Engineers Tan «igh otmerved Ly Cintinnat } rd of Public W fans are gol npomed alto Ntationary —_— the Wks Te Huareau Oye BUSDHARD typewriters will yod by the Unite Tux K: ined thei “ilwr om, I Miates Ueneges al =540 men and Sep ake Workers Ph pr of San £ 20 well dealers yey] on ®igars made started gran Rani 52 I i trades unions and the t has hoes { Labor oo operating the Knights of Labor josh umd International Kore tadlors vo days, has he men have returned to work the oot and Shos Won Union Tux journeynien whitch lasted | iwi fey Si strikes in Chicago, iared off Tweety dow STONE Er = Lomis complain that tions are threatensd by the CO thon of convict stomecutters in Lilinois Jd, Guerasury, candidate of the dl other workingre: hae Dew fayor , LIL, after an CUTTERS in St miners ehocted of Streator tang oon i% New Hampbire working children be ween the ages f 14 and cided 10 go to school three Car A UNox of machinists whinpapolis, Ind y y of that city s g ih Years ar months com of the i® to be formed ab Bookindery’ Assom Rg Uo reorganiss Be An fs Lindon mood of Painters and Decora. ws has 70% members enrolled in 135 local nions The rex ciple last your were 86401 : tpetses, $5000 Tax Brother Tre «lk trade in Hoagland is threatened by ‘rance, which is running up s large number { dik mille and producing some of the finest work in the world IROORLYN has the largest and winted labor hall in the couniry. und managed by workingmen, as the Labor Lyceum. TRADE ix very good in the iron and steel in- dustry at Youngstown, Pen. All the mills are running at full blast and no one is idle best ap. Lt is ownsd it is known 1 who is willing to work A rrexcH letter, which reached the office vy the American Federation recently, states that a number of nuions in Paris have begun to agitate for an eight-hour workday. Oven seven hundead men are now smployed at the granite quarries of West Sullivan, Me, ha product of the quarries averages from thive to four millions of paving blocks a year, benidles other work, Tre strongest labor organization in the : | United States is the Fling Glass Workers Union. There are 0000 flint glass workers in the country, and all ‘are union men with the exception of less than 100, In 1870 there wers 790,167 children under sixtosn yoars of at work in factories in the United States; in 1850 they had inoreased LUIS E66, and it is believed that in spite of fartory laws there are more than ever of children employed, AX investigation made into the con. dition of colored labor $he South in blast furnaces, rolling works, iv hws 000. selva pd 4 wore so OF these 2500 are workers, pol. Ton Intost schema to relieve the | has been | MANY WOMEN CRUSHED. Buried Under Falling Walls in Glasgow, Scotland. A New Building Blown Down on a | Carpet Factory, | A terrible disaster hag occurred in Glas gow, Beotland The wall of a ing that was being erected alongside of Tem build | pleton's ( ‘arpet Factory was blown down, and Sheriff | | their way out through the crush safely | trie lights, | twenty-five | ing fre i | | Calves, common to prime... 2 h ' the the factory, crash a large mass of debris fell on the roof of weaving department of Ing it in, and burying fifty girls snd women wuipioyed in the weaving rooms There were 140 girls inall at work in the carpet factory, All made sx rash for the exit, which quickly became jammed. Many made but eighteen were badly were MALY DBAITOW escapes It was at this small exit that the casualties occurred. The work of searching the ruins was begun immedicieiy By 1 bodies twenty-five were still missing thetic scenes wi bryos parents and friends of the The acchdesit happened alter 1he workmen had left the new building, which was 300 feet long. Survivors of the accident relate that a sudden extinguishing of lights was the only warning. The tremor result me the fall was felt for a great dis tance, It was rumored that ‘he foundation of the building was laid listused coal pit injured There with the abd of ele wk im the morning wore recovered tind Many ja among the victims SOON och were vir 4 THANKSGIVING DAY NAMED The Pepident’'s Proclamation the Date, Fixing Thursday thanksgiving By the JRO N A highly favored peg dependence of 3 Providenos, should seelc i testify gratitude a: + 32 the author eho : : ankf fio for amataon the b Te a henris His Infinit Done at 4 = day of etn ber sand eight the indepen me hundred snd Bus fice of tin urisctl AMIS MH rete ARTLINE President { Bint the James GG. SENTENCED TO DEATH. Men to Hang at Fort Smith, Nine Arkansas Judge Parker, the United Sintes Court r ti Distriet of passed sentenced of Arkansas, has rt Ky Woewtors loath at ¥ ith upon Austin J ily, Thomas W i. James, Jeffs Charley Bul raday. Jao gost num ber { one the, and are no extenaatis CIrCumstan oes ITI with ane of Lh anon, they will all likely be axed ont the same day and at the mame time making the largest number by three ever hanged fn" Arkansas on the Hamme day Goins and Jimmon Burris, Choctaws, killad Houston Bodce in the Choctaw Nation in November, 1888, Harris Austin, Chickasaw, slew a white man at Tishomingo in 1884 Jolin Billy, Thomas Willis and James, Chex Harris ST ard sary If CVE ey as the fod hed taws, Choctaw Nation in April, 1980. Jefferson Jones, Choctaw, killad Henry Wilson in the Choctaw Nation arch 18 1888, George Tebler, colored, slew another colored man at a dance in the Choctaw Nation, Charley Bullard, colored, mutdered Walker Dean pear Gibson Station, Cherokee Nation, in March last ———— Tix New York Club won the series of games with the Brooklyn Club--the forme epresenting the League and the latter The American Association--for the world's cham plonship, Score, six games to three, THE MARKETS, 4 NEW YORK Beeves. .... “ot ws 350 @4 Milch Cows, com, to good... . 80 0 @ho oD 00 260 on 5 80 om 3 50 4 685 Dress 6) Flour--City Mill Extra Patents, Wheat-No, 2 Red. , Rye-State ik Barley Tworowed State Corn Ungraded Mixed DatsNo, 1 White, Sutter Elgin Creamery. ... Dairy, fair to good. West. Im, Creamery Cavan RE! | SREY la EE chan Lass nann usa ndannn knees BOSTON, Whett Pat's. mn White. .....cnns PE EET hd CATTIR : ] murdered Matison Williams in the & SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 10, I Lesson Text: “David's Grief for Ab. salom:” II Samuel xPHL, 18-83 Golden Text: Prov. xvii, a5 ~ Commentary, Ditvid,, hearing of Absalon’s rebellion, took his servants, and followed by six bun- dred faithful Philistines under Ittal the ‘Git. tite, fled from Jerusalem, Y>adok and Abla- thar also, with the Levites boaring the ark, went with him, but David sent Sack the ark, saying that if God delighted in na He would bring him beck to his city and throne | Hushal, the archite, David's friend, was also went back, in order that, perchance, he right be used of God to defeat the counsel of Ahithopliel, who had turned traitor to David and ‘become Absalom's counselor, It turned out as David bad trusted it would: Absalom aocepted the advice of Hushal rather than that of Ahithophel, and Hushai sent word to David which bed him and all who were with Mim to cross over Jordan to the other side, and they came to Mashanaim, a Levitical city of God, where long before the angels of God met Jacob (Gen, xxxii., 2 A baaloms and bis army also crossed the Jordan, snd then follows the record of the conflict end the death of Absalom at the hands of Joab as be hung &y his bead in an oak. The verse immediately precoding the one which begins our lesson says: “They tock Absalom and cast him into a great pf in the wood, andiiaid a very grest heap of stonesupon him Thus perished beautiful Abaslom 18, “Absslom’s monument.” This is the RV. trensiation Instead of “Absslom’s place.” Here is the record of something this wicked, willtul, wayward son has done in his [{fettme that his name might be perpet- uated In Absalom® life everything was for Abss- Jou, nnd his naIne, and his plemrure it tight fae wl of Belshazzar, “The God 1 kresath whose 1 not glorified i®, and 3 I will give in Mine houses, My walls, 8 place and a na ons and of daughters everlasting name that 12 Then sald Ahimeaz the som « dok: Let me now run and bear the King " This was the son of J shall not be cut of oy Zadok the sy endangered his oe, 2 Then : the plain end ove ful brother.” for « his name, Was 30 eager 1 be agnin pleaded with Joab n after Cushi, and Joak finally consented was 50 swift of foot that be ¢ got to Dmvid first, Thi other disciple who « first to the sepulcher 24. “And David sat between the t and the watch man went the gate Wenow pass {5 with its twenty thousand sian n the monument which Absalom dd not bu for himself (the heap of David as be receives the tidings from peppers Ahimany and Cushi 25. 26, “And the watchmen cried and told the King He soos first the other running alone, and he reports wach to the King as he comes in sight. and now we ay fancy the anxiety of the King's trem- bling heart till he hears the tidings. We arers. minded somewhat of El as he sat in the gate waiting to bear tidings of the battle, his heart trembling for the Ark of God (1 Sam. iv. 13, but Ell seems to have been nearer to God than David for Ell trembled for the Ark, not Sox his sons while David's only anxiety was } 3 - Lb ts un VOree stones: to behold the mes A ne and then the A 1 27, 2%, “All = well This was the shout of Ahimaar, as he drew pear to the King with the tidings that the King's enemies wers overcome, The watchman recognized All mane by his running, before he came noar enough to be seen us to his features. Some of ox wan to do things just like other peo ple, but Scripture teaches us that God takes a nan as he 1, and works through one hone way and ssother in another way and all equally for His glory. Let us see Jesus only, and vielding folly to Him, let Hins work in and through us by His spirit as He pleases 29, 30. “And the King said: Is the young man Absalom safe” Allmans had cried: “It is well” but the King replies “It is well with Absslom™ He seamed $0 baveno heart for but this wicked son. It Ba wonderful picture of human love 31, “And Cushid sald: Tidisge my Lord the King: for the lord have avenged thee 4 this day of all them that rose up against thee V Thus from the mouth of tgo “ithesses the fact is established that tle enemies of the King are defoatod 32. “The enemies of mv Lord the King be at that young man 6." Still saaffected by the wi tidings of the defeat of the enemy the King again asks: “Is the voung man Ab- salom safe? and recsives his reply in these not doubtful words, which declare that Absa. tom fs dead. The thing which he feared has come upon him, and now in hic heart shown forth, and it is proved that wicked Absalom ix more to him than his faithful soldiers or captains or all his people 88 “O myson Abmiom' my son, my son Absalom! would God 1 had died for thee, O 5NY an looking at then, Absalom appears to be in. deed a lost soul, passing out nto the black- pest of darkoess forever, and well might David wish to have died in his stead, for he { (xvit., 10, and He is infin David was in this {i 8am, 4. 90; bis great love js commendable, not, ries. parcels at an average cost of 1A WATERTOWN iN SiaeAew ib 2 under twenty-four degrees north lati tude is Columbus's San Salvador best stands the test of investigation and re. eent geographers, by a comparison of the rest discoverer's Ing-book with the cor cents each and make a profit of $2, a A——E——— £32 angs agg
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers