—— ——————" Vo * al It is said that over thirty-eight thou. d copyrights have been granted to American authors during the past year. The amount of real literature put forth is not stated. An Austro-Hungarian exhibition is to be held in Paris in 1892, under the aus- pices of the Austro-Hungarian Chamber of Commerce in the Freanh capital, the project comes to anything, the ex. hibition will probably be transferred to Loudon in 1893, California comes to the front with an invention that will be a great boon to fruit-growers, predicts the Chicago Post. It is an electric frost alarm and consists of an accurate dial thermometer, elec- trically connected with a bell and switch in such a manner that the bell will ring desired when any reached. A census bulletin tells us that there are 140 religious bodies in the United | States, not counting the large number of independent churches which do not ac- knowledge the authority of any denomi- The Cincinnati Enquirer, national organization, increase in sect, declares the has been something remarkable since the dawn of our national history. - A writer in the North China Herald, of Shanghai asserts that the climate of Asia is growing colder and its tropical animals In proof of this he quotes evidences, hise torical of existence elephants, are slowly retreating southward. and referential, the former igers and of leopards in China. Tigers and leopard in China Th grew are, however, not yet extinct and are common enough in Corea. bamboo, it is said, formerly naturally in parts of the country where it now has to be taken care of It seems necessary, exclaims the go News, to again call atten fact that the much-used word ‘‘c which Congressmen so delight in ing with an infinite variety of aececnt nor less than the The | unnecessary importation from the French means nothing more ‘previous question.” word is ao and is almost synonymous with the The question and the debate is ¢ meant by the mysterious Gallic lish ‘‘closure.” demand previou ¢‘olosure” of further The entire country—the entire world, in fact—is interested in the preservation of the giant trees whic attraction in certain portions of Cali fornia. An agent of the Land Office who has been making an investigation reports that some of them are in danger. The importance of Government action to prevent further destruction of the sequoias is therefore spparent. There are 2670 of the giants now standing, the largest being over thirty-three feet in Not ome of them can be form a unique diameter, spared. The origin of the National Marine Band at Washington is most Nearly a hundred years ago, alleges the New York World, a Yankee Captain kid- papped a strolling troop of musicians vn the shores of the Bay of Naples and brought them to this handful of Italians the band was de- veloped. The of stolen Italians among wealthiest people of Washington. Some A T—— curious, this country. From descendants theso are now the of them are prominent lawyers, and others have their names connected with the best-known hotels and the largest real-estate offices in the capital city. The Church of Englanc, as shown bey incomplete returns of the revenue report by order of Parliament, is the wealthiest church in Christendom, the ecclesiastical commissioners is about $5,750,000, nearly one-fourth of which The income of is derived from tithes, yield about $20,000, The gross snuual value of benefices for twenty-one coun ties is 810,000,000 which is distributed among 6600 clergymen, giviog them an | average of a little ower $1500 a year, There are parsovages, however, nud other items to be added, which bring up | the annual average to about £2000 a year from endowments alone. Of the $10,000,000 three-fourths are derived from tithes, ————————— The Boston Cultivator estimates that more than half the railway track in the world is on this continent, and nearly half of the whole is in the United States. This proportion may or not be Kept up, ae Asia and Africa are beginniag to shorten their long distances by using steam horses on the irca track, In the past four years 40,000 miles of track have heen laid in America, and in the United States 80. 000 miles of this, while all the rest of the world built onl 24,000 miles. Railronds in Europe cost an average of §115,000 per mile, Hore the average cost is $60, 000, and this is about the rate elsawhere, Rates of fare ssp, however, lower in Europe than here, the denser population and lighter expanse for running the rods more than offsetting the difference in their original cost, | are: : If | Brooklyn, 804,877; St. Louis, 460,357; ! Boston, 446,507; Baltimore, | and creat:d by the Mikado. temperature is | respects The Welsh tithes | 8. F. Hershey says in a recent article: «Woman lives longer than man, goes in. gane less numerously, commits suicide one-third as often, makes one-tenth the demand on the public purse for support in jail, prisons and almshouses.” —— - The largest cities in the United States New York, 1,513,501; Chicago, 1,000,133; Philadelphia, 1,040,252; 433,547; San Francisco, 207,990; Cincinnati, 206,809; Clevaland, 201,546. ¢ "- Japan enjoys the dignity of a brand | new House of Lords, specially invented It is | posed of “Princes of the blood, men wich high titles, gruy-headed servants of State, young men of bright intellect, and wealthy farmers and their sons.” The Sultan of Turkey is not in all the ease-loving monarch he is reported to be, observes tho New York Worid, of the day with his secretary, discussing mat He passes a good part ing to the empire, god it : boast that he has never signed a State paper without reading it, The German Government, in the estl- mation of the Washington Star, is muni. ficent and far-sesing in its cocourage- of science. It has endowea ex- ment ploriag parties in all parts of the world, Emin in Africa, Curtius in aiding aad the less famous men else Greece where. It is reported that in addition to other aids herctofore extended or agreed upon Dr. Koch is to have 8250.. 000 and his a If that sum for the mamuist of New trop lis is the most world from all hows that New York Paris Seine, twenty seven Venice 356 bridges bridges. He puts down the population of london at over 3.800000, New York commenced with 1656, had 10, people in 1790, 60,000 in 1800, 16 in 1840, 515 i }0 in 1860 and 1,700 1000 pe 30 people in 1756, 33.0 100 in 1525, 312,000 in in 1850, 814.( in 1880 (3) One of the most singular facts about the growth of London is its regularity. It may be roughly taken every month about a thousand are added to London. In August of last year 766,387 houses had to be supplied by the water companies with water; in that houses September that number had incressed to 767,797. In August of 1859 no less than 754,274 houses had to be supplied, or the 12,113 below the number in same mouth of this year. In September of 1890 the companies had to supply 10. 976 houses more than in September of 1889, any one portion of the capital, but » This extension is not confined to preference is still being shown for the north and northwest suburbs. They have been taking a census io Iceland recently, and they are in trouble there. It appears that so great has been the hegira to Cassada and the United States it has taken away from the island fully 20,00) people. This does not seem such a very laree number, except when one considers that the original popula- tion was only about 80,000, Oune-fourth of the entire population, then, has emi- grated | have greatly increased, while properties have become reduced in values. The harvests, too, have been lessened. There secms to be but one way out for the lce- landers, observes the Boston Advertiser. They must follow the vanguard and abandon their island to the walrus and bear. The result is disastrous. Taxes Apropos of a remark attributed to Bismarck, that he had been the means of liberating 80,000 human souls from their encumbering carcasses, a writer in Mar. | per’'s Weekly raises the question whether of lives preserved ever year, must be conceded to be a very great fel. low if his lymph does al! he hopes it will, says Frank Leslie. Bat, after all, the importance of lives lies not ia their num- ber, but in their quality, There are plenty of people in the world, sand in Europe especially there is no little dis- position to consider that the man who creates 80,000 vacant situations does ms well by his country as the one who pre. sents 80,000 unexpected applicants for work. Speaking of England, General Booth declares that it would be more merciful to poison her “submerged tenth” out of the world than to let them live on an they do, There are plenty of lives for use, and if Blamarck's work was worth 80,000 of them, it must not be condemosd beoause of its «we Any more than Stanley's last trip is necessarily to com- | | tinue his speech on the Election bill, a motion TELEGRAPHIC TICKS, Important Gleanings From the Latest Dispatches. The Elections Bill Set Aside for | the Silver Bill. . The Federal Elections bill, which has been pending in the Senate during the present ses | sion of Congress and during many weeks of | last mession, has been side motion with abruptly Republican of seven of = the aid tracked Benator, on who, Republican colleagues and twenty-six Demo | cratic Benators, executed a successful coup | d'etat, . When Mr. George took the floor to con was interposed by Mr. Btowart, of Nevada, | to take up the bill to provide against con traction of the currency, Myr, George yielded the floor to have that | motion made, much to the discontent of Mr, | Hoar, of Massachusetts, who tried to ime press upon the Mississippi Senator his own iden that the course adopted by Mr, George was at variance with the understanding be- tween them Mr. Hoar was not permitted, however, to develop his ideas in that line because from My. Gorman and other Democrats came the objection that the motion was undebatable, ! and Mr. Harris, of Tennessee, who was in the Chair, sustained the objection. The mo- tion was put and carried Thus the Eleo tions bill was displaced and the Financiall bill taken in its place The Republicans who voted for Mr Stewart's motion were Messrs, Jones, of Nevada: Shoup, Stanford, Stewart, Teller, Washburn, Scott and McConnell, of Idaho, who had only been sworn in about half an hour and used his first vole the Foroe bill The vote was taken by yeas and nays and stood Year, thirty-four; nays twenty. nine, as follow Yeas—Memrs. Bate, Jutier, Call, Carlisie, C Eustis, Faulkner, Gibs Gray, Harris Jones, of Arkansas; Jones, of Ne vada: Kenna, McConnell, Morgan, Pasco Pugh, Ransom, Reagan, Shoup, Stanfor | Stewart. Teller, Vanes, Vest, Walthall on, Wilson, of Maryland, and Wal against Blackburn, ke, Danlel, Berry, wkrell, C . Gorman, Allen Allison Dav Dixon, Frye, Hawley, Manders Five Guilty of Marder The trial at 2 m, Ge { six « Dodge and Tel nui and marder in the killi at Normandale in when fury brought in a verdict all but os of the defendants guilty The case, which has wm tria! for four weeks in the United it Federal Court, Judge Emory Speer presiding, is the most re markable in the criminal aansis of Georgia The land troubles from whioh It spr a number of years ago when a decro granted in the United States Court in George B. Dodge, of New ¥ ertain extsasive tracts of land Telfair and Montgomery Counties I. A. Hall a lawyer at Eastman Dodge wl) was convicted of violating this de itizens of nspiracy Foreyth inst was @ been RE] unty wes UY by selling lots fr th jor bogus de and he mprisonment for contmnp Captain J. C, Forsytl of wae be Georgia representative of the Dodge es wte, and as sacl ud in the way of the land rabbers Charles Clements and Richard £ wry. alias Herring, a Dotoraous ox bored man, were hired to murder Forsyth, the srice to be 8000. Lowry crept u under the window of Forsvth's library, where bo sat ending, and shot him dead es Dodge lands u ja served five months New York, wlan Fears for the Levees A repetition of the evile of last spring's werflow fs feared along the lower Missle. dppl, owing to the unfinished and unsafe sondition of the levees, and the heavy snows sorth, with prospects of a thaw Many housands of dollars have been expended in he past year in loves work, which is being sushed forward as rapidly as possible by the ihe contractors, who have doubled their lorees along the line and bope to complete hair work before the spring rise, as that mould prove destructive to the satire system if eaught in an incomplete condition, Re- ays of hands and teams from Memphis Fenn, and ports further north are being shipped to the works, and all possible haste # being made tO completes the Ww wk by March | A lonz delay has been weasionad on that part of the work in front of Helens, Ark. sy the fact that two contracts made for its sompletion and ratified by the Board of United States Engineers were not approved by the Secretary of War when submitted to sim. Consequently a third advertisement and Jetting wifl have to take place before it san be completed The Deadly Danube While an enormous crowd of holiday makers were amusing themselves on the los-covered surface of the River Danube, be tween Buda and Pesth, Huogary, the joe, after a series of alarming, crackling reports, mddenly gave way in several places A terrible panie followed among those who were upon the river. A number of people fell into the water and were drawn under the jon. Those who were lucky enough to sscape, as. dsted by others upon the shore, did their ut most to rescue the endangerad peoples, Many le ars reported aiiteing sod are believed ve been drowned, Four bodies have bean recoverad from the scene of the disas bar, A Joke That Ended in Two Deaths Richard Reid and another colored man, pamed Bill, of Albany, Ga, stole ‘and ate some food belonging to Joe Moore, also col. ored. and then laughingly told him of the joke they had played on him Moore put strychnine on some fish, cooked it and at his invitation the other two feasted on it. They | are dead and Moore has fled, Bismarck is as great a man as Dr. Koch, | who bids fair just now to score his four. | score thousand, and indefinitely more, | | Cal. A load of men was bel Dr. Koch | Killed in a Shaft, Eleven or twelve men were Killed in the : Utlea mine, Angel's Camp, near Han Andress, lowered on a skip and when about one ha and fife feet from the surface the ro pitating all a distance of tom of the shaft. Sixty Mine Victims, dispatoh from Vienna states that sixty A garacus were bills outight o3 Sho sxplotioh Ostran, on Saturday last, TERRIBLE MASSACRE, Three Hundred Foreigners Killed by foot to the bot AA SERA ANSE S530 — ——— a —— broke, preci. | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Eastern and Middle States. MAYOR Grant, of New York City, in his anuual message to the new Board of Alder men, sald that the city had been well gov erned and that the municipal debt had been reduced $600,000 during the year Born branches of the New York State Tegislature met at Albany; Lieutenant | Governor Jones and Speaker Sheehan made | addresses: the Governor's message was trans | mitted to both Houses; were introduced Paterson (N, J.) street car drivers and conductors had their working time reduced from fifteen to twelve hours a day Tue Republicans organized the Humpshire Legisiature and elected Hiram A. "m Tuttle Governor GreEnaL CHances Drviss, a Justios of the Massachusetts Supremes Court, died sud denly in Boston DesooraTs in Benate, dividing that body evenly with the Republicans, allowed the Republicans to organize it, in order not to delay the insugu- ration of William E. Rus | Governor-elect Coxxgoriouvr's Legislatures became dead. locked on the election of Governor. The Democratic Senate declared Lnzon B, Morris elected, but the Republican House refused to concur, CexTRAL PARK lake, Now York City, was thrown open to skaters for the first time sines 1580, and a big crowd responded. Ture Connecticut declared Judge Morris, the Democratic candidate, Governor, but the House appointed a committes to go behind the returons Nenate Govesxor Bunreion, of Maine, was in augurated by the President of the Senate at Augusta JACKEON DAY was celebrated by the Young Men's Democratic Association, Phila delphia, Penn., with a banquet, whereat ex President Grover Cleveland, ex sary Bayard, Governor-elect Pattison, syivania, and WW, C Kentucky, made spe Neo South and West, noe W. Fuexcn met death at the Erie flats, Chicago, 11 Heand an expressioan stepped on an slevator, and owing to the brake not having been put on Wore pro ipitated 0 the rench was Killed and ther Jured, DEMOCRATS Separate Hous at Helena, bu y L837 with a terrible basainent they i fatally the and rest aand 3 MEAG ONY Li Groner W. ernor of Wise ber at Madisor Fywsa penn ngpe of dollars’ worth of § aged mother and 1: inpen enall fren of M. G mer Hv in Barber ( away from bome and go , A search was made for then bodies have bs found frozen to death Tux Lagisiatar Nobraska and 5 several capitals Kan. = in the snow and thelr dead They had wi beeg of Minnesola, t af thar ith Dakota met Oho, NXETY-THRER killsd in the Dakota. Colonel Forsyth at that battle, has tigation squaws and children were t af Wounded Knee, who « fig “oul MRmandag been suspended, pending ] ny Tue Duesber Watch Company Ohio, has assigned. The nominal asset F150,000, and the Ha Milities $430,000 Freprmcx Resisarox, Harper's war art at, was capturad by a small party of bostiles st White Rivor, South Dakota. Remington was unarmed and the [ndians "ant 4 Canton, are turned him loose and told him to go home, alter taking bis tobacoo and sketch book Tax llincis House of Representatives elected a Democratic Speaker, and the Ben sto a Republican President pro tem Carraix Geronae D. Wartace, who was killed by Indians in the battle of Wounded Kove, South Dakota, bas been buriad in the pemnotery at Yorkville, 8. C, his old home Sevan SzaLey, County Treasurer, is be tind prison bars at Chippewa Falls, Wis, sharged with being an embessier and de ‘aulter to the amount of nearly $19,000 LAILROAD towns in Nebraska are full of fugitives from the Indian country who are sande stricken. General Miles takes a more opeful view of the Indian situation. In tians are gradually leaving the camp of the bostiles and coming into Pine Ridge Agency A TORNADO passed cast of Sherman, Texas Beveral houses were blown down, an infant killed snd four adults were seriously wounded A strucore for the control of the Ne braska Legislature occurred between the Alliance members and the combined Demo crats and Republicans Lazurexant Casey, of the Twes infantry, was killed by an Indian near the hostiles' camp at Pine Ridge, South Dakota. Agent Royer, of Pine Ridge, has been dismissad from the Indian Service; be was succeeded by Caplain Pierce, United Htates Army. v.anond Washington, Tag President submitted to Congress cor respondence on the Behring Bea controversy, with a letter from Secretary Blaine to Sir Julian Pauncefote, the British Minister Jepor Brows of Michigan, was sworn in as an Associate Justios of the Bupreine Court of the United States Mason A. F dianapolis, and a brotherdndaw of the late Major Gordon of that city, died in Wash ington of paralysis. Major Farrar was about forty sight years old, and was employed in the Patent OfMoce Prestoast Hannmox gave at the White House the first State dinner of the season to members of his Cabinet HponetAny Wixpon sent a letter to the House asking that an appropriation of $100 000 be made to complets the projected bul ings on Bilis Iviand, means of transportation to and from the city of New York Tug President has nominate] Horace C, Pugh, of Indiana, to be United States Con wil at Palermo, Italy. Tur amount of 43 per cent, deemed to date is 88,177,400, Onpens were issued from the War Depart. that Army officers should act ine Ridge and several other showing istration was bonds re Two Idaho Senators drew lots for terms, and to Mr, MaDunnall, 100 pan-handle mem. ber, fell the two mouths’ term, which expires on March 4. Seongrany TRACY severely osnsures Commander GO, C, Reiter, of the Navy, for falling to give a proper protection to Genera’ Barrmndia in the tomala, last summer, harbor of Ban Jose, Gua He is relieved of . Coronet, Mizxny Cassox has been ap vate Heoretary to rapid trapsit bills | Now the Massachusetts State | il, the Democratic | Fannan formerly of In New York Harbor, | which are being placed in readiness for use | | an an immigrant station, and to provide | Tae Census Bureau angounced the popu- = of Philadelphia to be 1,046 004, of Pittsburgz, 106,247, 288.617, and of Allegheny City, Foreign, A compaxy has been organized in Jamaica with a capital of $250,000 for the purpose of cultivating fruits and vegetables on a very | largo scale for the United Btates market, | NINE persons have dind as%a result of the school festival disaster at Wortley, England, Tur wife Terrell died at Brussels, Belgium, matic fever after an lines of nine of United Biates Minister of racu- weeks, Tie railways of Germany and Denmark are blockaded by snow, Messrs Pannen axp O'Bries held ther confer France, an- qmee at Boulogne | AX unknown English vessel | the Sicilian coast, and twenty drowned Tug Beotech railway strikers dormitory at Coatbridge, near cupied by non-union men, an by the police aftera lively fight The wh millinery houses of J. A Patterson 0... Montreal, Canada, has made an sesiy Phatotal abilities ars plas wd at $000.00 Tuinry families in made homeless Dy $200,000, foundered on four men were attacked 8 (Hasgow, 00 Were repuls d A Paris, Franoe, were % fire; the 1 i wr Foun persons have died of they received by the explosion curred on board the new Vesuvio at Genoa, Italy, Rome, Italy, hurricane and the midst of which th gach of ganda was struck by | ; in juries which Oo steel torpedo ram n few days ago visited by a terrible and rain, io the Props wns ExGrLaxD and the ( from intense ooid and frozen to death in Mantua and Paris, Tar London, SE) CIETEs ian Enivland egiand PROMINENT PEOPLE, Bisxas weight Lhe reputation other Justice wo Bench \ RDACK Munnay has a Yow to mark the spot where Bit ting Ball is buried with a memorial stone Iv Is tw was Killed in figut Boul fell vad that Co n Wallsoe, who nded Knee, The Indians before he consumption, he sarnsd by | MOTE : I INRIYOus lisppeared in mysterious ND expects t make from §75 KE) out of Stanley's lecture tour red is pad 8 ELT f w fifty lectures and bis traveling expenses in addition IESIDES arn guards with the intest improved weapons the Pope has given orders ret rough vigilance in the prot vatican grounds against in. ng his ster, the Princess of pod a talent for litera emarkable. Her to trans viern Greek Govorsor Frasoms T Louisiana, is dismer red to a remarkable extent. He has lost a lez and an arm and an eve. He lost his leg at Chancellorville and his arm was carrie. away by a csanon ball at Winchester : Me Pansgrl is the author known as “Shamrock Green,” which for five vears has enjoyed great favor in Australia, and which has netted its proprieter nearly $15.000. The hand bills announce that “Mr. Parnell wrote this play when a young man at college ™ Nicmors, of of a play Ye Cha You the Corean Charge Af. fairs at Washington, is believed never to have soon his little son, who died a fow days ago as the Corean custom prevents a father from seving @ child until three months afler its birth, and the little one was only {wo months old when it died JACRIFICED THE BOY. indians Commit Marder to Secure Good Luck in Hunting. hunting and Blue Horn, an Indian, went trapping in the Beaver Hills, near Fort Sas katchewan, Winnipeg, accompanied by a boy about eight years old, the eldest pon of a Vie toria Indian. While they were looking at the traps one day, Blue Horn sent the boy back to camp. When he returned he was sure feed to find that the boy was not thers, Fhe other Indians in camp searched for the boy, but did not find him, ! oon afterward a baif-brasd from Beaver Lake found in the woods not far from New | Beaver Lake trail a skeleton in a standing | position, the arms stretched out and wrists fed to two trees. He did not dasturh it, but went tu tell the father of the lost boy in order that he might see if he could identify iit From circumstances surrounding the | affair itis evident the lost boy had been | offered as a sacrifice to secure good luck in i bunting by Indians, As is their custom, the savages had bung about the body bits of cloth and trinkets to propitiate the Grest Spirit, A SHOCKING ACCIDENT, A Sawmill Proprietor Found Dead With His Logs Sawed OR, | syndicate organized at Boston, Mass. | vyomber last, with a pid up capital of #25, | 000,000, has gone —————— APE AS A BAS OMI A 8 LATER NEWS, Tuy American Harvester Company, a in Xo- y ploces, Itincluded all the companies in the country manufacturing harvesting machines, G. B. DeLamaren, G, W. Delamater and T. A. Delamnater, the of Delamater & Co,, wi members of the fing Mead embezzlement, re arrested af with The complaint was made by the outgoing Board of They charge the Delamsgters ville, Penn., charged County Commissioners with embezzling up ward of £30,000 of county funds Goverxonr Boy, Democrat, and Powers, in the late election in Ne the oath of Alliance candidate braska, have both taken office, and Governor Thayer refuses to retire. Slate aH officers recognize Boyd, and the Legislature is divided in Mons dered, robbed and burned to « favor of the three men Perens and her daughter were murs dole, Un contents WwW. Va, and were de BY MAankHam wis Sacramento, Cal, Corowgr, Roper BH. Cro Arkansas, aod only seently at attgart was about forty yer Germany, is 10 in~ f the Kook lymph ber of bactill, Bn THE INDIAN CENSUS LODUD, The Total Number of Red Men in the United States The Census Bureau has issued WT Eaion sive of giving the population and other (nf of the tribes ex various Indian Alaska, i The bulletin shows the total Indian population of the United States to be 244,704, which is made up as follows : On reservations or st schools under control of the Indian Of fice, pot taxed 130.254. Indians In cidentally under the Indian Office and self supporting are as follows: In Indian Tern tory, 25 857 are Cherokees, 3404 Chicknsa ws, #008 Choctaws, 9201 Creeks and Ren poles, There are also about 14.243 people (mixed Indian blood) living with and members of the above tribes. The total pop wiation of the 23s vilioed tribes therefore 64.571. The Pueblos, of New Mexico, number 8; the Six Nations and St Regis, of New York, 5504; Eastern Cherokees, of North Carolina, 2885; Indians minty wight per cent. of whom are not on reservations taxed and self-sustaining cit gens. counted in general population, 35 oT; Apaches at Mount Veraon Barracks (prison ers %4: Indisns in State or Territorial prisons, 184—total, 114.478 The bulletin farther taxed and untaxed, SO.715; t taxed and on reservations, 68.55 males taxed and untaxed, 52 10¢ males untaxed and on reservations, tion Indians on reservations to whom rations are sued by the United States self supporting Indians on reservations by farm- ing, herding, root digging, horse raising fish ing and hunting, 98,044; total sell supporting ludians (32 567 taxed and not including the five civilized tribes, 128 The number of whites on the several reser vations in the Indian Territory aggregate 107.967 as follows: In Cherokees Nation, 27 176; in Chickasaw Nation, 49.444; in Choo taw Nation, 27.991. in Seminole Nation, §6; in Creek Nation, 32380 This makes the total population of the country, including Alaska, evtimated at 3 000, almost 63 O00 (0 hide odored males males un total fe total fe Sera show a tal 11 wi ———— THE LABOR WORLD, ABOUT 4000 strikes occurred last year, Thue are said to be 50,000 Socialists In the United States Assumes of the Knights of Labor have been formed in Australia A Cexrnat Lason Frosnaviox will be started in Brooklyn, N. ¥Y, Nzganry all the building tradesmen work under the nine hour system Druskessess is most common those who work too long or too hard, Dexven, Col, now has 100 mills and feo Lanag landed proprietors in Germany are becoming alarmed at the wholesale emigra. tion to Brasil ane i i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers