Twenty-three States now have Bu. reaus of Labor and Statistics, One of the largest manufacturing con. gerns in Brazil says that American ma. shinery is superior to anything made in Burope. Bradstreet’s states that there are in New England half a hundred stock farms, where twenty years ago there were prac- tically none, and in California the breed- ing of fast horses has become almost a Eraze. In 1890 the largest number of Italians arrived in the United States in any one of sighty per cent. must be classed as un- skilled ; in fact, 15,235 stated to the spection officers that they had no speeial year, being 52,004, whom nearly in. gainful occupation, The New York News predicts that this will be an exceptional year for immigra. tion. dicate a larger influx twelve during the same period in 1800. The figures for a recent month in- of foreigners by 3 : } i EA The or fifteen thousand than we [talians predominate. citizen of St. A living by renting turtles to restaurants Louis makes a good lor advertising purposes. He gets $2 per day for each, aod they are alw ays in demand. Thuy are left outside the door the day before turtle soup is served, treate a run the next day for the but they are not in it A wciences might recent writer sug receive would be self-explaining. give us birdlore in place of Gshlearning inste plantl we for botany ; tronomy, ete. Some of ally used already, and reason why we should no them. A Italian and tured by brigands in Italy during last fifteen aine were murdered because tl The Italian a hand New pre Cs] have be American tourists years, and of this no Pay no ransom. Govery ment moved not ease, nor did England or America make any threats. in any Herbert Spencer opposes socialism be. cause he says that it turns back progress Com 3.4 and is a foe to personal freedom. pulsory co-operation, he thinks, wo result 3 Peru, where the people in groups of 10, 50, 100, 500 and 1000 were ruled b; officers, tied to their districts tended in their made hopeless toilers for the support of in a society like that of anciet y Superin work and business and the Government, The British Medical Journal ticle commenting on a case of hypnotism y 0 AR Ar described in a New York paper, insists that England shall pass laws to prevent the reckless practice of hypootism in Great Britain gret that reliable The article expresses re. information is at hand of standing are assumed traveling in Eoglan un aames and practicing that several physicians 4 d h applicants, regardless of and life. rpnotism upon all 71 pon? risk to health gh standing in a recent paper on our new navy said that in general workmanship and in many details the new ships built in this country that the armament of the battle ships were were equal to England's best, and more pow rful than that of any ships of the same class built in Europe. In con- cludiog his address he declared that the American ¢ work of the mitractors was worthy o” study by ali Englishmen in. terested in the subject The German press is pot allowed a» special spondence, the Government making no discrimination. In all other countries press dispatches are greatly reduced rates, but Dr. Stephen, Director of the German Telegraph, re. cently declared that he saw no reason whatever for favoring the newspapers thus, Asa result of his illiberal policy, notes the Post, the press messages of Germany coustitute only 14 per cent. of the total teaflie, and the German newspapers are among the dullest on earth. rate on its telegraphic corre. transmitted at Chicago A groom's right to wear a moustache bas been tried In England, with the court's decision in his favor, When Mr. Grimshaw's groom was engaged he was smooth shaven, but after a cold he grow a moustache by his doctor's ad. vice, whoreupon Mrs. Grimshaw ordered him to shave or go without notice, The Judge bold shat the demand was un- ressonable. If he had been a house servant, wearing powder and white silk stockings, suggests the Boston Tran. aeript, “wight have been required to shave; wat u groom was an outdoor ser The mortgages on farm-lands are said to be increasing in numbers at a very rapid rate throughout the United Btates. The importance of economy in feed. ing is illustrated by the statement ac. credited to Dr. Collier, of the New Yurk Experiment Station, that a saving of one cent a day upon the dairy cows of New York is over $6,000,000 a year. The demand for Percheron horses for export is so great, avers the New York Herald, that the purity of the breed is seriously threatened, and a stud book has been recently started in France by which the pedigree may be preserved and the race kept up to the standard, The richest heiress in the world is re- puted to be the little Wilhelmine, Hol. land's child-Queen. vent litdle girl, speaks four She is an intelli- languages finently, and a constant eflort is made by natural those about her to preserve her ngeaunity and childish simolicity, Last year was the fourth vear of suc- ofl Great Britain, according to the from Wail nh { English pro portion of emigrants has tended to grow, cessive falling In emigration Ezxpress, and, while the ’ ile t RLERIIY alien the Irish proportion has off, Ab + 100 goes to th fourths of Laverstroke, Hampshire, by a family named Portal, de. there are Dow more martments in the city, average attendance of an ance of ): the salaries of loves n WwW Ag and the ex weuditures { yearly exceed nsiderably Another ten tural growth of ' ) its p ypuiation and not less than wenty-five per cent to the number of ool buildings, to swchers and the ex. should under the attendance, the penditures, the project which is now consideration for consolidating New York, Brooklyn and their suburbs, have been present system will have more than doubled its proportion in ten years. The report of Sir Adolpde Caron, Min ister of Militia the Canada, has just been lssued. for It shows the strength of the armed and organized | 87.000 | Canadian militia to be about men. As the population of the Dominion | is about 5,000,000, citizen soldiers the people is obviously vury much greater than in the United States, where with 63,000,000 people we have not far from 100,000 members of the National Guard “Our Canadian coursing seem to be much more strongly imbued with the military spirit,” admits the New York News, ‘than our own people. They possess a plentiful assortment of artillery, more or less modern; they have a government curtridge factory, where plenty of fist. class cartridges acd artillery projectiles are turned out, and the fact that half of their 37,000 militia spent ten days iu ao. tive open alr defll in camp last summer Indicates the probability of a fair degree of efficiency in the entire force, When one of these days Canada takes hor na. tural and rightful place in the great American Republic, her well organized body of militia will prove a very wel. come addition to the military strength of the United States.” : effected, the | Dominion of | the proportion of | to the whole number of | BLAINE ANSWERS RUDINL The Secretary of State’s Reply to the Italian Government. The Rights of Foreign Residents Fully Set Forth, The second chapter of the diplomatic cor. respondence relating to the dispute between | this Government and the Kingdom of Italy, | arising out of the lynching at New Orleans, ! has been made public by the State Depart. ment at Washington, It consists of Premier | Rudini's reply to Secretary Blaine's first lot | ter, and of Becretary Blaine's reply to Italy's | second demand The Bec etary's reply, which was the sub | ject of the conference between the Presi lent, the Becretary of State and Assistant Becretary Moore was furnished the Marquis Lmperali, in charge of the Italian Legation, who immediately sent it by cable to Home. The salient points of Necretary Blaine's letter, which he quotes the Marquis Imper iali's last note of April 24, are as fol lows: Wasnixaron, D. C., April 14, 1801, The Marquis Imperiali, Charge d 1 fair Sir—I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your note dated Thursday, April 2, 1801. It contains a second telegram from the Marquis Rudini, a part of which 1 here quote: “The Government of the King of fta ¥ has asked nothing beyond the prompt institution of judicial proceedings through the regular channels. It would have been absurd to claim the punishment of the guilty parties without the warrant of a regular judgment. The Italian Govern. ment now repeats the same demand. Not until the Federal Government shall have ex plicitiy declared that the af resaid pro hall be promptly begun © atic moldent be constders This Government whatever « guis Rudini's teleg in wed. mgs in the diplo- i as closed.” certainly had no desire the meaning of the Mar. ram of March M4 It delivers State Departa Baron Fava : my ’ w ritter in b | ye : chang was « and wor pez ex pedit Providon i= made Code of louisiana in the Articles iid, TE an 2M) for redress of such grievances as the | widows and children of the victims of the wob may plead The Government would feel Justified in restin ment and conclusion of Mr mob of March 14 Chara levistica differ from the mob of 1851 Hut it is due to entire candor, dus to this Government and due to the Government of Italy to point out certain differences © which the Government of the United Mates Is honorably bound to take notice As promptly as possible after the lament able cocurrence at Now Orisans the Pres dent directed the Attorney General to cause on the arge IV abetar if th through his department a full inquiry to be ] made into all the facts connected therewith and solicited his opinion whether any crim. inal proceedings would lie under the Fed eral laws in the Federal courts against per sons charged with the killing of Italian sab Joots. He ras not yet received the official report. If it be found that a prosecution oan be maintained under the statutes of the United States, the case will be presented to Whe next grand jury, socording to the usual of criminal administration Revised Civil ] of the United States | 151, did not in some of its | our territory The foreign resident must bs content in such cases 10 share the same redress that is offsred by the law to the ! made a 1, It in nob believed that If, therefore, it should appear that among those killed by the mob at New Orleans there wore some Italian subjects who were resident or domiciled in that city, agreeabls to our treaty with Italy, and not in violation of our immigration laws, and who were abiding in the pence of the United States and obeying the laws thereof and of the State of Louisiana, and that the public of. flcers charged with the duty of protecting life and froparty in that city connived at the work of the mob, or upon proper notice or information of the threatened dan- ger, failed to take any stops for the proser- vation of the public peace, and afterward to bring the guilty to trial, the President would, under such circumstances feol that a case was established that should be submitted to the consideration of Congress with a view to she relief of the families of the Italian subjects who had lost their Yioiencs Accept, sir, the renewad assurance of my high consideration, 4 lives by lawless James G. Braise, ———————————— PROMINENT PEOPLE, P. T. Banxuvu left $5 000,000. BroneTany Husk fond of riding JUREN ready Ture Emperor of China is insomnia BENATOR-ELECT FrLTOX, of a bookworm Exrenon WinLiau, of Germany, spect Alsace Lorraine fortresses in horseback Vicromia writes Hindoostanee suffering with California, is will in- thirty. Renate the % Epsuxps, of Vermont only eight years old when he entered the Ma linist EMPEROR Fraxcol doesn't regard Eur wns DRID has presented Sarasate with a crown of sliver and a gold pov Austr Mn au of Josern 3H WAI as TENNYSON is grieve ifn hi inst poein st culled by the Wt annoyed bess 50 mi pre at Hasting Urindslon A BARBER ENERAL Trea al the iu pers ut ng Ny 811 mistauen { 3 Bed mediun tama before the ws A RARE PRIVILEGE. A United States OMoer to Serve With a German Regiment The papers at Berlin, Germany, bave printed a brief statement that Lisuten Clarks, of the Tenth Unite bias Fowhattan H Hiates Cavalry beens detailed to swerve with the Waostphalian N 11 This is the first United States army officer tO serve in a German regiment. and th fact that he ls permitted to join the West phalian Hussars shows the kindly feel ng of the German Government, and that there b BO eniotsy on the part of the military a thaoritivs there Lieutenant Clarke is a kinsman of Lieu tenant. General vou Versen, the comamande of the Third Army Corpse. General von Ver son offered to what he could do toward getting Lieutenant Clarke a chance to learn by actual service the practionl cavalry work of the German army. provided the con sent of Mr. Proctor, the United States Secre. tary of War, could be secured. When the matter was laid before Mr. Proctor, the Sex retary of War gave his consent to the pro pomition The matter was laid before Gen eral Von Kaltenborn, the Prassian Minister of War, and be gave his consent, and ao cordingly the detail was made Ihe Wastnhalinn Hussars are stationed at Dusseldort, and there Lisutenant Clarke will Join them, William Walter Phelps, the American Minister thers, onlled upon the Minister of War and handad to him a letter from Secretary of War Proctor thanking him for his interest in the matter and for his kindness in consenting that an American of fier should serve in the German army, URBAN POPULATION. The Census Bureau Issues a Balletin on That Salyect, I The Census Offloe at Washington has issued 8 bulletin giving the population of the cities in the country containing S000 inhabitants or more, The total urban population in 180 was 18 305, 670, or 99.19 per cent. of the total lation. In 1880 the urban population or WAT of the Hussar Regimen! insane of » being detalles tal " increase has been quite reguiar from up to 1850, while from 18% to it made 8 leap from 20.57 up to 20.12 | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, J Eastern and Middle States, ANN Lockwoop, sixty-five, died at her home in North Salem, Westehester Counts . N.Y. trom injuries snflicted by her husband Jowse Lockwood, seventy was insane from the grip CAPTAIN Gronor Hexny Ma« KENZIE, the famous chose player, was found dead in bed at New York City, Heart wrouble wed to have been the of his fe was a descendant of an old 8 and was born near March 22, 1851 QUO warrsulo proceeding gun by Judge Morrie, the Demoorati ernatorial cisimant against ley and Livutennnt Go Judge Prentice at Hartford, ( years of age, who in wp. denth, sol family, Moeotiand, on C180 Aberdeen have been Die (Gut wernor Bh Merwin before mn ONE Nuss cattle and Liberty (Pew by into the fame AED ARD THIRTY y weres of } Yards wore SEVEN head of amt lest roved hoods at the 0k Josern wenlthy Nes wo and itted sui cide beside th ! « biter Rosa ir Salem Field " EX-Prestoext (N. H Nhe ong Adolph Moyers & Con ar mns embers) Lie company 10 the amo of §& INGRAM AM tow] hargel with int Junek Grorae 1 perior Court, wa Domini bry Hill, of New York to fill the VACAHCY on the Supreme Court Bench, thade by the death of Judge Brady: ex Judge be named to succosed Jud A TERIIBLE exp occurred at No, WO of Tamaqua, Penn killed, tw: of the overt Ullderslesve will and firedamp few miles cast fatally and { Somath and West 4 | | s } Washingt prided Ine retary Nobile « Over LB cued the farmers in Mus Many KS of Elijah W i i My the President, died at of bw val fer meany years Tue following repress ntatives were named ar the Congressional Committers to attend the funeral of General Spinola in New York Messrs. Cummings, Tracy and Ketcham, of New York; Springer, of Illinois; (Neill, of Pennsylvania; Andrews, of Massachusetts and Tucker, of Virginia THE 4) per cent. bonds redeemed by the United States Treasury make a total to date of FIA AM NN Rev, Janes MoManox, of Bt Andrew's Church, New York City, bas given New York and Long Boanch property worth {| moariy $500,000 to the Catholie University at Washington Fux official report of the trial trip of the Kunbont Bennington just received at the ‘avy Department shows that the horse power of the malo sugines was B802 & which with the auxiliarion, made the total hors power MM. 8. The revolutions, with the Steam pressure at the bollers of 100 06 weres tarboard engines, 150 52; port, IM Tux Treasury Department has taken stops to mcure information in respect to the ro | ports that migrants for the United States In many instances first land at Halifax, Nove | Bootia, and then come acrom the border by rail to ssonpe the operations of the new Im migration vy Ha vate Ne 3 4 ber hot Lhe chron claitis She had been a —— ——— hit | — w——— Bt Tue British ship Catharine was wrecked off the Caroline Islands, and ninety Spcnerany Paooron left Washington for | Bis home in Vermont, to spend a few days with his family, Poreign, A Russian war vosssl onrr mi workmen was while tring to pa Shiough She Furk Dardanelles, t alter nS ET ATER XC persons drowned A TERRIBLE explosion of fire damp occurred in the Hugo pit, near Kattowitz, Prussia, re- suiting in the instant killing of ten miners and the injury of a number of others, A spoon ballot will be neosssary betwoss Prince Bismarck and his Socialist opponent for the Reichstag from Gesstemunds Tuxre was serious rioting in Bonares, Ine dia, caused by the anger of the natives at the tearing down of a temple 1n Holy Clty Tux Newloundlanders are supplying the French fishing vessels with bait upon a payment of lHeense fos fr supplied as (recly as though th 3 foundlanders, but the Canadisus are ously excluded from obtaining any circumstances A TELEGRAM from Chi Provident Balmscods’s vanquished by insurgents losses, at : 00 of yr eta RY Fy thie Pia H ’ Tur influenza i» spreading Fogland, Medion! m ane prevails wo an extent leled in that part of in Linool thant hire, dis. hithert Antey New } 113 MUI ever recs fd the re $i] Garis the « TRE revenue last year of was $1,470,000, the largest The expenditure in exes E IRIE The ¢ detit in land od, was i Ve 3 x THE LABOR WORLD, Ax English Tix Feder ETREAT Bo a SS ee $ " FROM THE TOMB A Pamily Bible Found in a Coffin Furnishes Needed Proof A curious story of the records in a tomb has been dev oago, ll. in connection with the discovery of the inheritance of a fortune. Mrs Ri they Hendricks, of that oity, has been inf wined that she bas fallen heir to #2 OX L000 from the estate of an uncle long since dead. Jwac Phillips, from whom the estate desornds, was born May 2 1764, at Baston, Mass He went South in 1813 engaged in the slave trade and accumulated a large fortune. OF this he de. Rowitad the cash in the Manhattan Hank of New York City, and invested the rest in land al Long Branch, and in Holston, 8. ( and in houses and lots in Baltimore. The cash now ig the Manhattan Bank agETegatos £5 - O00 0x Ho died in 1834, his wife and only ehil® baving previously died. In 1871 the heirs began to search for facts to prove their right to the property. On an appliontion to the curs to compel the Manhattan Bank to dis close al the facts relative to the depomdt with that institution. the court beld that the heirs must first furnish exact information as to the time and place of Isaac Phillip's death, is they were unable to do, and matier dropped pext thi was Lo gel an suthontie record of his bir It was finally discovered that the family Bible of good old 3 Deacon Paillips, Isaac's Father, bad de woended 's brother, preservation of doped at Ch Thebal, has met and detonated a foros of 300 § ! » TH
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers