A ———————— M————— Emperor William, of Germany, ex- pressed himself in a recent speech before the students of the University of Bonn a8 being in favor of dueling. —————— Large beds of phosphate have been discovered in Brooks County, Ga., and reports are that there is plenty of it in that section. Preparations are being made to utilize the The Georgians are determined, remarks the New Orleans Delta, that Florida shall not have a monopoly of that business. discovery. Experiments are being made in Euro- | pean navies with captive balloons as points of observation. From one sent up from a French fronclad, ships and the details of the neighboring coast could be seen, in clear weather, for twenty or twenty-five miles. With silk as the ma- terial of the cable by which it is held, the balloon could rise in calm weather to a height of four hundred yards. The subject has attracted the attention of the naval authorities in Germany and England. The Germin Emperor, who expressed | at the conclusion of the recent school conference at Berlin his dissatisfaction with the manner in which Prussian his- tory is taught, has, according to the re- port of German papers, commissioned Professer Stengler, of the Cadet School. at Litcherfelde, to write a new history of | Prussia under the Hohenzollerns. The work will serve, in the first instance, as a text-book for military schools, but is expected to be used ia time at the high schools of Prussia. ‘‘An institution peculiar to New York, which has been recently Atisata ( civil marriage contract established,” alleges the onstitution, *‘is a If with. bureau, you want to get married very quietly, out even the newspapers finding it out, you go to this bureau with your girl, pay your fee, which is $25, and a civil mar. riage contract is prepared for you to sigu, and the affair is guaranteed to be kept quiet. No record of these marriages are made, and they are not, strictly speaking, legal, but a lawyer who was the doubt legalize them, if any legal question ever arose to make it necessary to test their validity in the courts.” consulted, said courts would The Latin-American department of the World's Columbian Exposition is very soxious to obtain information concern- ing a copy of a little quarto published in Rome in 1493, containing the important bull of Pope Alexander VI, by which he divided the New World between Portugal sad Spain. Oaly two copies of this pamphlet are in existence, so far as can be ascertained. One is in the Royal Library at Munich. The other was sold In London at suction by Puttick & Simp- on, auctioneers, on the 24th of May, 1854, and was bought by Obadiah Rich for four pounds eight shillings, for some private library in the United States which he declined to name It has cer tainly disappeared from the knowledge of bibliophiles, and no trace of it can be found. Any person having knowledge of the whereabouts of this historical tressure will be kind enough to notify the De- partment of State, Washington, D. C. The Scientific American declares that “the need of fast war vessels was well illustrated by the recent incident ia the harbor of 8an Diego, Cal.. when a Chilian cruiser belonging to the insurgents en- tered the bay, anchored, took on board recruits, supplies of provisions, ammu- mition, and then sailed away. Thisship, under the laws of nations, was in fact a piratical vessel, and as such was seized by the Government authorities at San Diego, and a United States vessel placed onboard and in possession But the Chilian rebels paid no attention to the Jaws of the United States: they may be said to have captured the place. When they had obtained all the supplies they wanted to assist them in carrying on war against a friendly nation, they upheaved | pun bas been largely driven out by anchor and steamed away, curr yiog off as | 8 prisonar the official representative of the great republic. This was a small ship called the Itata, carrying four guna, eapture or bombard San Diego or other towns aloag the coast, Indeed, while the Itats yas taking on supplies at San Diego, other vessels of the rebels were hovering outside the harbor. We have 00 navy worthy of the name, and nearly all our seaports ‘are without proper de- fonses. Like Sun Diego, they are at the mercy of any single piratieal boat that chooses to sater. This is a vory hamil. Iating position for a country like ours to be placed in, no | United States now exceeds the wealth of the whole world at any period prior to the middle of the eighteenth century, All true Flemings are called to the rescue of their native tongue, which is evidently in great danger. The Ghent { Federation of Liberal Flemish Sonicties | bas published a pamphlet report of the speeches made at a recent great meeting to protest against the pressure toward ex- | tinguishing the Flemish tongue. The Brussels Court of Appeal has refused to permit counsel to address the court in | Flemish. An advocate who persisted io asserting his right to speak in Flemist was brought before the council of disci. | pline, and it was ordered that his name should be erased from the list of law yers. The practical abacdonment of the | Koch lymph ia all the Philadelphia hos- pitals for the cure of tuberculosis is | highly significant, confesses the New | York Pres. It that skilied American physicians, after is another indication thorough and long-continued trials of the lymph, are coming to the conclusion that its value as a curative agent is slight that it is nct worth while to use it, in behalf of the fluid wspired many san- The extravagant claims at first made guine persons with an implicit belief ir its invincibility in pulmonary diseases. This belief was quickly dissipated in of lymph to produce the desired results most instances by the failure the Doctor Koch's remedy has been for some time discredited in public « pinion. verdict returned against it by a great majority of the ablest pliysicians in New York and Philadelphia must tend to con demn it utterly. “The American girl has effaced herself,” says Charles Dudley Warner in the ‘Editor's Harper's Magazine, the daring, Drawer” “She is no longer In in Courageous creature. England, in France, in Germany, Italy, she takes, as one may say, the color of the land. no more abroad the American girl of the he old type whom he continues to de. scribe. The knowing and fascinating creature has changed her tactics alto- gether, and the change has reacted on American society. The mother has come once more to the front, and even if she is obliged to own to forty-five years to the census-taker, she has again the position | first bicoming and the privileges of the woman of thirty. Her daughters walk meekly and with down-cast (if still ex pectant) eyes, and wait fora sign. It is enough now to notice that a change is | going on, due to the effect of foreign so. ciety upon American woman, and to ex press the patriotic belief that whateve: forms of etiquette she may bow to, the American girl will still be on earth the last and best gift of God to mas.” Bays the Pittdbury Dispatch remarked that the sewing machine and ealth of the So wil ne wi. nothing but a pine box, Edison’s Latest and Most Sur- prising Device, An Instrument for Reproducing Motion and Sound, Bome time ago, while Edison, the electric wizard, was in Chicago, he was asked what he intended to prepare in the way of some. thing new for the World's Fair. He replied that he was projecting a machine that will 80 happily combine electricity and photog- raphy that a man can sit in his own parlor and see reproduced on a screen the moving forms of the players in opern produced on a distant stage, and as he sees their movements he will bear the sound of their voloss as they sing or laugh, When this was telegraphed over the coun- try people laughed and thought that the fa- mous inventor bad been guying his inter viewer, and the matter was soon forgotten, duced such a machine, called the fection The kinetograph is nothing more nor less than a photograph camera arranged in a new way to do new work, its use. The name is derived from the Greek words meaning “to move” and “lo write,” and the machine literally furnishes a oom plete record of all the motions made before it. It photographs action. As Edison ye: “The kinetograph does for the what the phonograph does for the ear.” In this saall box camera Mr, Edison places « roll of gelatine film about three-fourths of an inch wide | | similar to that on which | cameras are made, and of any length desired. The interior of the camera is of course arranged on a plan the ordinary roll The gelatine strip is un rolled from one spindle and rerolled on an- | other, and in passing from the first spindle | shaft also works the spin ies The | | before the lens, | part of a second the phots | shutters of a decade age | of | to the second is carried before the lens of the camera. The shutters of the tamera are arranged to be worsed by the shaft attached to the cylinder of the phonograph This which carry the rolls of film The mechanism of this camera is 80 ar ranged that when the shutters open the spindles stop and the gelatine flim is fixed In less than the forty sixth graph is taken, the i turn, and the es on fora new phot rapt Ls #1 suap, the flew geiatine slip mov The arrangement six perfect photographs ars pt is 20 comple st forts ak n one E on he trouble with ali heretofore to reproduce action and motion by photographa” said Edison as that the photographs could not taken in series with sufficient rapidity to cateh ac urately the motion it was desired to re Hemument, the man wh photographs run ning horses in the thousandth part of one second, had the idea, but he failed bece use be could take only half a dozen photographs allempls mace be rodace | &t a time." The satirist will fiad | i ] | | | ing the hat and making the bow was ] | | | | | } telegraph are rapidly making one people | of all that dwell on the face of the earth They are destroying the national pecul larities of the dress of men in the coun. tries of Europe by giving them the styles of everyday clothing from London, whict is the great centre of traffic for that pan of the world. Ready.made garments from London are sold in the shops o Amsterdam, Berlin, Vienns, Copenhagen Christiana, Stockholm sod St Petersburg, ened and in many of the smaller cities, which obtain their supplies from the great ones on the hst or from London direst. Form srly an Eaglish sailor could be readily distinguished from a Dasish or Swedish one, and each of these from the other by bis distinctive costume, but at the pres- ent time all of them are dressed alike, sad quite possibly their garments came | from the same factory. Fifty years ago the homespun garments of New Eagland differed from those of the Western and Southern States, and these again from those of Canada, but nowadays the home- “store clothes,” which have found their | way ioto the great majority of the towns | nod villages all over the land. The busi- | ness of manufacturing clothing on the There is nothing to prevent the Chilian theory that every garment that is made rebels from sending in other boats to i will fit somebody and find a customer is increasing year by year, and though the a trousers thus created are sold at a price that defles competition on the part of the weaver of homespun, the trade seems to be a profitable one for all con- cerned. Tn many of the large establish- ments the cutting is done with great wpidity, the cloth being piled in thick. aes of 100 or 200 lagers, which are cut by a floe saw that follows a metal aader the guiding hand of a single opera. tor. Thus, with the aid of machinery, one person can do the work of fifty in cutting of garments; the sewing machine follows closely and rapidly, and in this way the whole world is clad, With eur clothing of one pattern, and the telograph laying before us every day all the news of the world, we are not only dressing slike, but thinking and talking of the same things at the same time, | ] | ! | | | showed it to the reporter | Open ton was nearest To illustrate what he had said, Mr. Pdison took one of the rolls of gelatine flim which bad been through , the kinetograph and Un it was photos raphed one of the boys in his laboratsey he photographs were about ball an ined guare and were taken in the film at inter. vals of about one inch. They represented the boy in the act of taking off his hat and wowing. Between the first view and the last of the series the compels motion of rethoy early discernable, but between any two coansscs Hive views there was no Apparent coange a the position of the GoY's arm or head In the View the boy's hand was at his ia, radosily it was raleed toward bis boad, and fis head inclined forward. Then the hat was removed and the bow completed, which the hat was replaced “To reproduce pertectly a complets record of a pure motion.” continued Mr. Bd aon, "It Is neosssary that the photographs should be taken at the rate of forty-six per second Any smaller number would show rregulari ties and a break in the motion. [ve eXperimentiog with this thing for a | R time. Now I've got it. That t= I've nt the germ, or the base principle. Come u stairs and see the germ wor He ran up stairs with the step of a boy and asi y hea ded the procession to the spot where the “germ” was expected to prove that the reproduction of motion by photography was an established fact To outward appearance the which after ben “germ™ is OOK very much as if it might have been originally in- tended asa packing case for shoe: or boots It stood on end in front of a lathe, and the the lathe in the upper end was cut a bole about an inch in diameter, and in this bole was st 8 lens Un the bottom of the bax was arranged a series of wheels and spindles. A role of gel Atine Alm was placed on a spindle on one side of the bottom. The end of the gelatine strip was thea carried over one of the Wheels and past the lems in the probe in the top of the box to another wprinncdie on the other side of the box bottom an fastened Asmall belt ran from the lathe to the shaft, on which was set the spindle. & which the end of the gelatine fim was fast When the motor was tarned on the roll of gelatine sirp was traosierred from the first spindle to the second. and in the transfer passed under the lens The photo pias on the slip one « As able to nguish ever ognize the action of al face, Ina few weeks Mr Edison will be ready to make a test of the practionl powers of the “germ” on a much Inrger scale Mea which has actuated our Edison in ork on the kinetc tion of opera. He his white oreen the muscles of the | and, as it wore, | of the interior that first attracts | the eye magnificent | . | thir Now, however, the wizard has actually pro- | A kineto- | graph, although it has not yet reached per- | Its name implies eye | | of Columbus, | the bullding, this would be a w } JiRtaring crystal ! friendly | position by a convention ¢ THE WATER PALACE, One of the Most Brilliant Features of the World's Fair, The “gem” edifice of the World's Fair will be the Water Palace, Bo said a prominent architect, and, undoubtedly his opinion will be that of all the world when it views the | harmonious proportion, unique use of falling water and the marvellous electric transforas ations oncentrated in this building, The “Palace,” the first impression of which will be that of a su verb luminated foun- tain, is to be situated on the larger sland in the northern lake of Jackson Park, facin A answering to the great 0 ministration dome. It will be bounded hy the IHinow State building, the fisheries, the | buildings of foreign nations, and probably the temporary art padaoe There are tour entrances, reached by wnall brid e8 Or causeways. The interior.” which isa oy circular hall of 230 feet diameter, gives the impression of a transparent build- Ing: or rather, the building as a whole pre- sents this appearance, the entire construc tion being concealed by glass, The feature and delights column A glowing color at the base, summit the whips Is the oentral pillar of foot in diameter upon its bearing EE Ab Ng YLLK) | Fp Wi aaa | deieing tm e rat d NM -_— THE WATER PALACE. Independent of the rest of wrthy mem- arial of the great discoverer. These ship by the way are facsimiles of the ancient Spanish fleet La Pinta, La Nina and Saata py and will mocommodate between four and five hundred persons. Hut the center column is intended for a greater servios than ere eye pleasure, ita softly colored Klass concealing the stand pipe that carries the water to the dome a aise the four sleva tors for conveying visitors to the decks of the ships, a distance of over 2% fest. Ar riving at the top of the dome on the deck of the vessels, the eye is delighted by a surface of rippling waters upon which the slips ap pear to be Boating Farther out sUH meets mm WAY, of an apparen i the ground Gress that and dari distances is aus Riven Ly the circ ome and is somewsLat shiftir the vision ving while on thu tly re Yerge Lar MOT toned Ly tly E wWals As a variety i entertainment an carries one to an inter small rooms for refs are eight starting from LT utr ¢ ow sides the four In the centre ( with the interior gallery 0 be known = Promenade” encir foot wide, about 125 feet level, and will be one of for resting ana quiet enjovinent convenient height View of the grounds snd the =u one will be kept cool by the sight an of descending water behind plate glass protectio umuns he dome is supported by Corint umns through which, as before said, the de sosnding walters discharge These pillars are square lattice girder, of steel. The gal lerios (orm circular trusses strengthening and taking the thrust wieval akon Lat ¥ where t The two Ts re ! these olevalors i ts nnecling I AR exterior one, ¢ The % twenty ground favorite spots rs ie om Lhe it nixy the is alforded a « wu plete aay i sound shieels That INCOArge into the friest xsl MAL oO of the dome thus ocoutiteracting deformation by wind pressure The dome is covered by continually moving Waters and in the day time will look like a fn the evening the build ng will afford unrivalled opportunity for spectacular, sloctrionl effects, of whics it ie unneosssary to sy the most will be made As an engineering feat this structure will attract the attention of mechanical minds of every nation while its bmuty will captivate the dmplest artistic sense cn —— SOUTHERN PROGRESS. A Great Exposition to be Held in Raleigh N. C., Next Fall The fourteen Southern States. and Now Mexico and Arizona. have Joined in estab lishing in the city of Raleigh, N.C. » per manent exhibit of their products and re sources. This effort is made under the dire tion of the several State governments From the 1st of October 1 the 1st of De oember, 1891, a great Southern E xpowition will be held. Northern manufacturers and dealers in machinery and manufacture goods are invited to join with the 8 ath an | show at the Southern Exposition the lates: labor-saving devioss of every description A unique feature will be an exhibit show ing the advancement of the NOgrons, al aged entirely by themselves Each Southern State will have ite special negro Commis sioner, who will preside over and have the control of the exhibit from his Niate Hom. John T. Patrick, the lender in dus trial pre in the Southern States, has been m: Neoretary, and bas fdircady os tablished his headquarters at Raleigh. Hie efforts for the past ten years, to bring about business rgations between the North and South, specially ft him for this work. He was unanimously elected 10 the | more than x os appointed by the Governors of the several Southern States, and Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commeros of all large Southern cities. Mr. Patrick is not only Secretary of the Solithers Ex position, tof Information of the Immigration Bureau to fur.ish information subject. This is dome | bor | | this land and squire reosi ves directly aad authentically the information desired. This is all done without any cost to the inquirer, as the Southern States have joined in sus taining this organization, DEATH OF A PEER, Lord Romilly and Two of His House hold Are Smothered, At midnight Lord Romilly upsets paraf- fine lamp in the drawing room of his London (England) residence. He was alone at the i he : i | lowed by the accidental desth of the | deror, ococurred in the lower part of Deuver, 1 became irritated at a neighbor's cow {| bad strayed on to his most | troleutn reservoirs, | who ware powerless t | established, i | Important Events by Telegraph | and Cable, | AT HOME AND ABROAD, | THE NEWS Zertourze, Eastern and Middle States, ; AN attempt was made by four men tw 106 a railroad train near Bangor, Mo. For five minutes the fang kept up a hot fusiliade, the mail car being the particular object of ate | tack | Young Bwedes Deserting Their | Country for America. { * Tur Rhode Island Lagislature convened WwW. Ladd and the other for Bate oosrs at Newport, H Republican candidates 1 were declared slected by the Grand Commit tee, Governor Davis resigned his office to | the Governor-elect, who replied briefly The Government of Bweden has ordered | | an inquiry as to the condition of parts of | that country said to be almost denuded of young by emigration to America. Young women for domestic service are also men becoming scarce, and the wages demanded by servants have risen to double the figuras of a few years ago The supply of conscripts is running short, and the burden of military service falls | more heavily on those that remusin, As the aged and crippled are generally left behind, while the young and strong of both sexes emigrate, the country in many places looks as if the effective population bad been car ried off by war, leaving only the physically worthless Another {act that causes regret and anz. ety to the Bwedish Governuent is the large proportion of the pure, light-haired Bwedes among the emigrants, this being the akin to North Germans and English that has herstofore upheld toe country both in war and in peace. Their places in Northern clasy | Bweaden are largely taken by Sit | Finns and Lappe, who are akin to the Mon. ole. In Vermland, called the cradle of the wodes, the people are leaving in throngs, | mod nearly every young person wants to emi- grate The Murderer Was Drowned A borrible murder, shortly afterward fol mur. Col.. on a recent evening Pepino Feliergo who owns a truck patch in the Platte bottoms which land, and when the little son of the owner of tha animal was sent 10 drive it out he seized the child and 0 chastise him Coney Glutz, 8 young man about eighteen Years oid, was passing at the time an { inter ered, requesting Feliergo to let the child Lome araw began This further in whsed him, and Mig a revolver he shot Gluts instantly The neightuors becoming exci murder, started hundred And sure the purpose of taking him « hun He escaped by a rear door and for the Twenty. thi rect viaduct, by a mol WW hae 1 confr Beving mn into the Pl swim ashore however, and drowned befor Killing him a wer Lhe sr of several house [or nd lynching Started ursued ball way ao ¢ the viaduct he wa ung toward hie ans of escape, be leaped River and attempted to The current was to be wa ried down the eves { his pursue bry m i mited by sa crowd « strong and Ten Dead From an Oli Fire It is only now possible to state ble results of the explosion of Condekerque, Fran The ignited ofl was thrown in every tion with great foroe, large sheets falling upon the adic ning houses and settling them on fire. Seven of these burned so ficrosly that no efforts could be wade to save them It is now found that ten of the inmates are missing. They are supposed 0 while betwesn twenty and thirts seriously injured that the majority of are not exyectied to live Although the firemen and relays of + dun teers have worked incessantly throughout the night the conflagration was not subdued Goll nextday It burned over 5000 yards, and heroulean efforts were made to confine i. sinos in the immediate vicinity were eight other a. besides several store bundreds of barrels of the terri. petroleum st be dead, are sO them houses containing naphtihs. The damage done amounts to $75.00 A man who was escaping from a burning buliding was caught by the Samer ane cremated before the eves of the spectators, save him To Breed Reindeot The Government bas asked Captain C, A Curtis, of Madison, Wis. a retired army | officer, to go 1 Lawrence Idand in the Bec ing Sea to take charge of a station. about to be established there, for a year. Tbe Inter mrtment desires to bave a station on begin the breeding of rein deer there for the Innuits and Esquimasux 0 use instead of dogs It is the purpose of the Government to im- | port reindeer from Siberia to the idand and a number of Riberians | the natives bow to raise and care for the with them to teach A be Le reindeer and as som mals are obtained in sufficient nem bers some of them will be taken to Alaska and distributed among the people of that country, And thus the GORK, now used for sledging inthe United States arctic Possessions, will be displaced by deer, which will form nutritious food in case of ees Kency, whereas dogs do not furnish the most palatable meat animals park will as the Lynched Before His Mother A mob lynched Green Wells colored at Columbia, Tean . for the murder on May R of John Fly, who lived two miles from Columbia Wells, who was taken in*- ~astody at lron City, was pursued by a mob, who overtook | the Sheriff and his prisoner and forced them to go to Columbia. The mob gathered on the public square and around the jail, and some of the best citizens tried to Induee them to await the action of the Grand Jury. they determined to him. mob battered downy $2 and took Walls from bis cell. The prisoner was thea taken from the jail. He was @ oe brilgeand buried over, falling noe of “igh or twenty feet before the long rope about bis peck became taut. His neck was broken. The lynching was witnessed by Welles mother, Horrible Deed of a Mother The charred remains of Sir W. A. Upte. | gro, aged twenty five, and ber three cull. I girls, from fiftesn months to | five yoars—were found in the rains of a small i house burned early on a recent morning | at Topeka, Kan. The serrounding cir. to | Paris green | Philadelphia and elected Richard G | City Treasurer | Servant | selves by taking poison in | The Jour Bavkexyuie, a German, about forty enrs of age, was found dead in his home in Jtien, N. Y. Hix death was caused by Bome wispicion rests upon his wife, Bhe had three husbands before this one. One was drowned, the second ran away, and the third died under suspicions circumstances, poison being found in his | stomach. Two boys named Btillson ani Contes ware struck by an expross train near Union, N. Y. Btillson was killed and Costes fatally | injured Ciry Couvsonas met in Joint session in Owliers Mr, Ocliers was also ele tod by the County Commisdoners Wans Major Blanchard and his colored Peter Huff, were EXErCIning a pair of horses at Morristown, N. J. one of the wheels of the wagon came off, throwing both men to the ground, Hoff was killed ipstant. ly and Major Blanchard fatally injured AFTER 8 weary fight against poverty and sickness William Breithopt and his wife Mary, an old German couple killed them Row York City, They bad no children and lived entirely alone Jonx J. Bravry shot and instantly killed Lis fourteen year yd sister Veronica, under the most distressing circumstances In New York City, He was testing a new rifle and the girl was watching Tbe ball flan wi from a brick wall, pier her pert, sag — South and West, GREAT damage has been occasioned Kansas and Nebraska by rains which amounted to floods ABout forty fartoers in Was ington Township, Jewell County, Kan drove Owcar Kindisperger, a tetant who had taken charge of a farm under 8 m rigage fore Closure, from the place, and re unstated Josep H. Bennett, who had been «jected by the Sheriff A rrrened battle between ussians Look place at Denver sh i an Italian An in have Italians isEian was 1 an Fives extrs R R Lhe police in H I | Lax | 1, of New cipitate risis upon Atlants the 1a mortgage for % vu Hyan's Bons largest dry goods house n the 8 tic Bate Liabilities are over § Gexenal B. B. BocrLesrox. ex of Mississippi and war Governor died a few days & grand nephew Sonary war her Tux Ohio bus repud Farmers Convention the BubeTreasury strong opposition to lated there was third parts AT the Prestyy to Genera] Awsem Detroit, Mich. Judge 8B. M. Breckinrid Bt. Louls, who spoke on legal phases © , fe nal f had # of the church came 10 his assistance, but he di minutes. Heart dis was th Gent? Mas Er E Hassvnzk a wealthy w= man Of Santa Rosa, Cal. and widow of the late Colonel Hassurek, Minister to the South American Republios dering Lis minmstration, was burned to explosion of a lighted lamp Prexry Homszs, the Indian Lieutenant ( SSeY, Was soguitt Falls, South Dakote wn aint and Nevers Sw xi a the ins isath by glaver of od at Sioux Washington, Exar Apminal Canrer dieiat his home in Washington. Admiral Carter was placad on the retired list in August, 1951, and pro moted to his preseat rank Ly an act gress in May, 1852. He was bors see and sarved as a brigadier zener army daring the war, being detaile! t duty from the navy. He served Years in the navy House of yamitlee Or esenta. Taz following members of the Represontatives wer: appointed a to attend the funer al of the late R tive Leonidas C. Houk, of the Second Dis trict of Tennessee: Taylor, Balos and M Millin, of Tennesse Crisp, of Ge win: Wil son, of Kentocky, and Dalesll of Penney Vania Tax United States Supreme Court. dur. ing the term just ended, completaly smashed the previous highest record of cases dis posed of at one term of the court, settling G17 cases, against 470, which bad heretofore been the largest number passsd upon at a single term Evorxe G. BLackronn, President of the New York Fishery Commission, presided at the fourtesnth annual meeting of the Ameri can Fisheries Society. The meeting was held in the hall of the National Mossum, Wash ington. polygamists, fall within the Jrobibitad class of immigrants and he there. ore ordered their return to the country whenoe they onme at the expense of the Steamship company which brought them over, is Ie the first time that polygam- ists have been debarred. Tux President gave a » members of the New Coal Ex The visitors were indi. vidually presen to the President, Tux Postmaster General awarded the oon. tract for furnishing the Department with ol aden urin, the year ending Jans 1 to D.C. McMillan, of New York contract price is §I8 80 Secarrany Traoy approved the recom. I reception to ‘ork and Brook. negligence, wiffering two the Galena and Nina, to
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers