In Australia no newspapers are pub. lished nor railroad trains run on the Babbath. Telegraph offices are closed, snd all business is suspended. The nations of the Old World are now so well armed, avers the St. Louis Star. Sayings, that none dares fire the first shot. The Rev, L. M. Kennedy, of Ohio, says that he can persuade another fellow to the uses and pleasures of cycling, he feels that that man's life has been lengthened. whenever morta! Judge Furst, of the Forty-ninth Judicial District of Pennsylvania, states that he will naturalization papers to an applicant who has not read the Constitutions of the United States and Pennsylvania. The Guatemalans are evidently adepts not grant in the arts of the ward politiciaa, thinks the San Francisco Chronicle, In their recent the Esquitia are reported to have voted the election Conservatives at soldiers in the morning in uniform and again in the afternoon in citizens’ dress, It is estimated that the expenditures necessitated by the World's Fair will exceed $28,000,000. Over 818,000,000 of this will be expended directly by the commission in the erection of buildings, pay of employes, The will be expended by the States and for- ete. remainder eign Governments. The production of pig-iron during the last six months of 1801 dented, but the output for January shows was unprece. a further increase. It looks to the New York Commercial Advertiser as if Eog. land had been permanently passed in this West Virginia the Southern States showed an line of industry. Except increase in production last year as com- pared with any earlier year. Pennsyl. vania and Ohio showed a heavy falling off, due largely to stagnation in the rail trade. The consumption of those delicicus crustacea, crabs, 1n both varieties, hard and soft shell, has the goodly sum is invested in the fisheries. grown so fast de. clares Boston Transcript, that a At Crisfield, Md., which has been the principal point of production since some. started the body there business about fifteen years ago, to the amusement of unbelievers, there are hundred to seven hundred boats are in use, capital employed nine a thousand people, over amounting to nearly $40,000 is required, and the catch foots up about 5,000,000 crabs a year, valued at $150,000, Souther Farm, near San Leandro, Cal., has constructed and fully equipped a saltwater swimming tank, lieved to be the first os a horse-training farm. Experi. use of ment so far have all gone to demonstrate the practicability of the swimming tank a8 a labor-saving device f training, which will sooner or Ia come jato general use. Horses, like all other ani mals, require baths, and it is claimed that while taking his bath he indulges in swimming, which affords a but as helpful exercise as does the track. Swimming is now claimed to be a great assistance in leveloping speed, and the work is The tank has a concrete basin, drudgery of track and road thereby wonderfully reduced. at Souther Farm ninety feet long over all, twenty feet wide and eight feet deep. From each wall water, making it sale for a horse to walk there down. the from the roof, A platform is constructed over centre of the tink, which swings Upon this elevation a the horses, giving them the required amount man stands and guides swimming ol exercise. Pleuro-pneumonia is one of those things, admits the American Dairyman, that will not “down.” We can keep it pretty well under control in this country, where the air is comparatively dry, but in moist Eagland it keeps bobbing up serenely. Just now it is making consid. erable trouble and great losses to the farmers in various parts of England and Beotland. Sixteen outbreaks have been re. ported and 872 head of cattle slaughtered in the past eight weeks. This looks to us in this country as a fearful slaughter, There have been a fow outbreaks on’ the Atlantic const, where the air, we presume, is more moist than in the interior, but this disease has never taken on an epi. demic form hese, as it constantly threat. ens to do In some countries in Europe, and will do unless the most energatio remedies are constantly employed. Long Island seems tc carry the burden of these ills for the United States, at least such is the frequent report of the authorities, but always denied by those who live there, It has the misfortune, so far as plauro-pneumonia is concerned, to be entirely surrounded by water, thus mak. fng the atmosphere damp and arousing the suspicions of the doctors. Like conditions, they think, are liable to pro. duce like results, | made, what the St. | force. ical | the Government print an | are involved, | the scrip on a silver basis, | ness differcat | I8 an easy grade to deep | For the International Musical Expo- sition to be held at Vienna, Austria,this year, a theatre with a seating capacity of 16,000 is being built, Professor Langley, of the Smithsonian Institute, that he found the tomb of its founder in an obscure ceme- reports tery in Genoa, Italy, without a mark of any kind to indicate his great services. The Boston Transcript declares: ‘The great apple crop has been as unfortu. nate for the New England farm, 1elative- ly speaking, as the great cotton crop has been for the Southern plantation.” has raised a M. Jules Simon hubbub in Paris, France, by his state. ment that he knows at least a dozen ac- tors, artists and literary men who, if they nice are permitted to live a little longer, will certainly become mad. The Interstate-State Commission says that a passenger riding continuously on a train might expect immunity from death by railway accident for 158 years, but an engineer, a brakeman, or acon ductor under the same conditions musi expect a fatal accident at the expiration of thirty-five years, M. Camille Flammarion, the prose nas just poet of the planetary spheres, Louis Star esteems, a startling ammouncemer | has discovered that the sun is losing its | Heo notices a gradtal decline in | solar power, accompanied by giganti { upheavals on its surface, which further tend to deplete the caloric resources of | | our great luminary. After an astronom trifle of twenty million years | has elapsed, M. Flammarion thinks the sun will be a noiseless and blackened crater unfit for business, In the mean. time mankind will watch the mometer as anxiously as since f of the day A leaumur and Fahrenheit and th | dangers of coup de soleil will be ap | parent for some time to come. Boston merchants are expressing a de- sire, notes the New York Post, to have I issue of frac. tional scrip currency to facilitate busi. They compelled to ness transactions on a small basis. complain that they are handle at a loss great numbers of postag stamps which are received in the mails in payment for goods purchased. And they all think that the charge for mones small sums orders is exhorbitant where Une prominent firm says | that it rece ntly had on hand 8500 wort of stamps which it could not dispose of Let Shepard, says that he often receives Mr. Lee,of the publishing firm much as 830 a day in postage-stamps and it is imposaible to work them off, He suggests that the Government issue Other busi men say that a return to the fractional paper currency would greal convenience to themselves their customers. The English Horticultural Times cone : tinues its assaults upon the American apple, and is growing bolder in its as sertions, that ‘it is admitted that the American | apple-growers are compelled to depend upon the use of arsenic in soluion as an insecticide in their orchards, | until it is completely saturated, that it is applied to the fruit several times be. fore it arrives at maturi’y, and, if the weather continues dry, the arsenic clings to the fruit, and what is not absorbed | through the skin remainson it, forming a fine coating, which must evidently be detrimental to health, especially where the fruit is cousumed to any extent.” A little further on it remarks: “The best throe sorts of apples as regards quality that are put upon the English markets are those raised at home and those consigned by the Tasmanian and American growers. Our own take the lead, and the others in the order as. signed them above. Now, if we compare the three together, we find a delicate tint about the American fruit which is not to be found upon either of the others. Agnin, if the American apple, before it has been bandied in the barrel as it comes first to hand from the vessel, is carefully rubbed with the flager, it will be seen that a fine, delicate powder in most cases is removed. This is the ar. senic adhering to the skin, and, if the fruit is eaten at all, it should certainly be wiped first with a cloth, We assert that the delicate and unnatural tint re. ferred to is produced by the arsenic which is absorbed throagh the skin. Medical men inform us that, when ar- senic is administered in small dozes, it stimulates the action of the skin and gives clearness to the complexion, and It is for these reasons, especially in Amer. fea, that it hat been extensively used by the fairer sex for year.” The Times then proceeds to declare that these facts are published from a sense of duty and not solely in the interests of home pro. ducers, In a recent number it says | that this | | insecticide is used upon the fruit itself NEWS FROM ABROAD. Late Foreign Happenings as Told by the Cable. I'he French Cabinet Resigns Be- cause of an Adverse Vote, All the members of the French Ministry have tendered their resignations to Presi dent Carnot, The cans» of this was the action of th® Chamber of Deputies in connection with the hill dealing with associations, M. Hubbard demanded urgency for the bill as a reply to the attitude of the French Bishope. M. de Cassagnac described the bill as an iniquit- COUN measure Premier de Freycinet demled that the measure was intended as an act of pre caution of the Church, or that it need be regar ied gs a precursor of the separation of Church and State He warmly com. mended the conciliatory spirit of the Pope, who, he said, often gave evidence of sympa thetic sentiments toward France He ocon- tinued: ‘We sandl doubtless he called upon some day to treat with the Vatican on the religious question A portion of the clergy may possibly refuse to enter upon the path pointed out to them, but universal suffrage will judge between the two policies.” In conclusion, M. de Freycinet gave his assent to the demand for the urgency, though he sald that would not give the measure the significance that M, Hubbard desired, An excited discasgion ensued on M., Hub. bard's motion Finally M. de PFreyeinet again demanded that an order of the day be moved, indicating the ~ the Chamber on the subject, in accordance with the Premier's | mand, Boisserin moved that the Govern | ment be requested to continue its republican policy. M. de Freycinet accepted the mo tion and intimated that he considered it a Cabinet question The vote of the Chamber being taken M | Boisserin's motion was rejected by 304 to 202, The Ministers, reco izing their de- | feat, imme fiately loft the pe y in a body, The Chamber then rejected the urgency | motion by a vote of 29 to 240 de The Bark Tamerlane Wrecked. The bark Tamerlane, which was wrecked {| off the the Rocks of Puna, Hawail a few {| mornings ago, cleared from San Francisco with a crew of thirty-six men. The voyage down was satisfactory, but it appears that the vessel her reckoning loers thinking her at the time of the wreck to Dae | near Kalakeakua Bay, almost two degrees {to the westward No breakers were sighted when the Vesa] struck {and the sudden shook threw the crew into great mfason Only two | small boats were available, and one of them, | when lowered, floated away, before it se cured an ocx pant. Captain Howland, the first mate of the boat, the ocarpester, the cook and two others entered the second | boat, but the ship was rolling heavily and {it was stove in and the occupants were washed away. Those of the crew who remained on the bark were picked off by the waves one by one until the vessel broke up | Eighteen men, including Third Officer Par. loo, managed to re the shore with the aid of a plank. The othors, seventeen in all ware all drowned, { The Tamerlane was built Me She had 115 $ oat Jost the in Wisonssette barrels of oll aboard when Snow Storms in Purope A cablegram from Paris The wonther is colder thas at ing the present winter. the France mars any time dur The sufferings of poor and destitute are intecsr. The snow encumbers the streets and causes a suspension of traffic. The tramways have ceased operations, and nearly all the omni buses have stopped running Central France and Germany are covered with snow to a depth that has bros : } way traffic to a stand. Sou ty five trains ars ried In the de Chatres Railway communication with Augspurg, Metz and othe stopped, trains way or afraid t In Bwitzerland travel is pen ~~ The =n heavy, and with A thaw the usual 1 | from avalan Mannheim eastern either stalled : start out wntres ia being a toget ywialls hav been ner = very tirat 1 of Mmugerous the slightest in utes will be 1. More Trouble in Brazil, | A dispatch from Rio de Janeiro, Braz | states that advices have been received from Fortaleza, Capital of the State of | Ceara, that disturban broken out in | that State, and that the people of the cap | tal have driven the Governor fron the city Ceara is ome of the Northern States of Bra zil, and has a population which is estimated at over 720 (0 The State abounds in med cinal plants, balsams, gums, resin: and | fruits, and among its minerals are go'd. iro | copper and salt The trade statistios of the | State show that a very extensive commerce is carried on there ww have Five Heroes Perish France person Five men lost their lives at Lille in a galiant attempt to rescues a wu posed to es within the | & burning bbuildiag When the building was wrappal in flames a re port was circulated that one unfortusat person had failed to sseape, and the five men ravely entered the building and began to feel their way throug the blin ling smoke | and flame They had beens In the building only a few seconds when the walls fell with a terrible crash, and the five heroes were buried beneath a huge pile of bus ning debris smallpox in Bombay Smallpox has been prevalent at Bombay, India, for some little time and has now be come epidemic Daring one week there were twenty -Laree deaths from the disease PROMINENT PEOPLE, Trosas A, Evisox is forty-five years old, Lo Pope promises his aid to the World's mir, LORD TRNNYSON is not very strong in his pailing, * Prestoesr Derew, of the New York Cen- tral, bas but 2000 namesakes, Mus, Azria E Bann, the ist, in the mother of fifteen Tax African explorer Junker, well known 8s a friend of Gordon and Stanley, is dead. Hexny Crav's motheriodaw, Amelia Beott, is dead at Washington, aged 101 yoars, Oscar WiLox is to give Chie the honor of his presence during the World's Fair lar novel. Tur Emperor of (Germany stands twenty. first in direct line of succession to the British Throne, FxBexaron Evanrs, of New York, bas Just passed his seventy-fourth birthday an- niversary, SQUAW MEN ORGANIZE, A Soolety by the Indians, for the In dians, With the Indians, The Indians at Pine Ridge Agency, in South Dakota, have organized a soclety called the “Progressive Ugalialas” to en: lghten the members and teach them the SWS of { Jackson, Miss, walls f | whole | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Eastorn and Middle States, Cranes 1. Rarapounne shot and killed Daniel Cheesoboro, whom he found talking with Mrs. Rathbourne in his house near Btonington, Conn. THE taking of the census on which logis- Intive reapportionment will be based was be- gun by one enumerator in encp election dis- trict of New York State. A TRAIN struck a buggy at Paper Mill Crossing, Mass. The buggy contained John Westgate and hid son, both of whom were killed, The home of the men was within a stone's throw of where they were mangled. James Haxnox, leader of one of the Dem- ocratic factions at Tarrytowny, N.Y , was shot dead by Chief of Police Hackett at the Democratic primary, Hannon attempted to strike the Chief with a club AN Italian who had arrived at New York a fow days before on the Massilia died at Carbon, Penn, of what was thought to be typhus fever Davip Dusan Wirnens, the acknowl edged head of the American turf and known among horsemen as the ‘Sage of Brookdale,” died in New York City, where he was born on January 22, 182¢ Tre Department of Buperintendence of the National Educational Msociation closed its twenty-elghth annual convention in Brooklyn, N. § South and West, A. A. Orive, of Red Bluff, Ark., shot and | killed his stepdaughter, who interfered while be was beating his wife, Warren Austin, colored, lynehod near Arcadia, Fila, for the murder of Bert Hard, a white man, foreman of the Moore head Phosphate Works SBueniry Tuoras B, Brack, of County, Mo., is § 000 short Tue fire at the State Lunatic Asylum, destroyed two-thirds of the main building. The loss is about $250,000, J. D. Brown, a recaptured lunatic in revenge set the institution on He perished in the flames Erwan HorrMax, aged sixty-five, living near Rod Oak, lowa, was attacked by eight wolves late at night. He escaped by stab bing one; the others turned wpon th wounded wolf was Franklin in his ae counts ure Tue sawmill boller of Jacob Kisling about ten miles from Lima, Ohio, exploded killing Mr. Kisling, his son Frank, and John Schiverdocker, an employe The men were blown into fragments Tux marriage of John Sanford, a mem. ber of Congress from the Twentioth District of New York, to Mims Ethel Sanford third daughter of the late General Henry 8. Sar ford, formerly United States Minister to Belgium, took place at Fla, The ceremony was performed by ple, of Minnesota Tux Warmoth faction of the Republican arty, of Louisiana, met at convention in tow Orleans, and nominated a State ticket headed by Jobn C. Breaux, for Governor Finx broke out in the drygoods store of A Bcharz & Sons, at New Orleans, la. and before the Sames were extinguished more than 81,000,000 damage had besa done Nanfor A SMALL boat, containing and four seamen of the soho Hattie, was APs god at KN and all hands ’ was in search of several deserters Captain Gault wer Uscar and stuocca, Oregon The ware drowns party has 1 Cruiser Tae ‘city of Detroit, } present the now Lowe & handsome « oost $150 ver | and Tux People's party in avenlion andria placed a full State fleld ninating for Bruce, of Rapids There fleld in Louisiana two publican and one People's party vers are Democt Washington. Tae President made inations: Robert BE. Bowne be Assistant Appralser of the Port of New York = lows, to be Consul States at 81. Gall ff Michigan to be Secretary « at Comstantigople, Francis District of Columbia. to be Legation at Madrid Presioexr and Mrs tained the United States Suprem dinner in the White House, Tar Navy Department has authorize] the use of the United States steamer Konrsarge to convey Minister Durbam from Port au Prince, Hayti, to San Domingo. Tux Preadent sant to OC calling attention to the 1 & 11 {ren oral { Harrie R # Marna Secretary Harris MEress A Mosse the Choctaw and Chick asaw claims for the payment of which Cor oss appropriated £2.91 450 in the Indian ppropriation bill passed by the last Con gree He speaks of corr apt contracts be tween the Uhoctaws and Chickasaws and their agents Mr. Vox HoLLemex, the newly appointed Minister from Germany, arrived at Wash logton. He was met at the depot by the Charge &' Affuires and two leutenants and escorted to his hotel, He then called at the State Department in company with Mr Von Mumm, Charge 4' Affaires, and bad an interview with Secretary Blaine Tur marriage in Europe of Mis Mars Fuller, daughter of Chief Justics Puller. to Collin C. Manning, of South Carolina, at one time the private secretary of Senator Butler, bas just been ansounced at Wash ington, Mion Fuller until recently was studying music in Berlif Tur Secretary of the Treasury has awarded a gold lifesaving medal to Harry T. Thompson, of New York, for having saved the lives of ten persons at different times between the years 1582 and 1886 and a silver lifesaving medal to Reuben Held, of New York, for rescuing a boy named James Morse from drowning at Marion Mass, last summer Foreign, Mouxt Vesuvivs, in Italy, is again ina state of eruption. A stream of lava fssues from the base of the great cone and flows into the Atrio del Cavallo, Tarnz were heavy snowstorms throughout the United Kingdom of Great Britain and in France trate was seriously im: « A fishing boat foundered off New ons Down, Ireland, and five of her drowned, Prors to kill General Cante and President Montt, of Chile, have been discoversd and thwarted , County orew were Tyros and black smallpox epidemics are spreading aoross the frontier of Austria. ungary into Galicia, SEvEx Arabs who has sought shelter ina to at Kouba, near Algiers, were killed y the collapsing of the roo” of the grotto, WirLiax Ruooes, ex- Minister of Agricul ture for Canada, is deal. J. Hverdrup, ex Prime Minister of Norway, isdead, He was at the head of the Cabinet from 1984 wo 1881 E. P. Deacox, an Amerioan visitor at Cannes, France, shot dead bis wife's para faonr Mus, Crirrexa, of Wmnipeg, Manitoba the largest woman in the world, has dies Nhe was fortyais years old and six Teel Ligh, weighing 70 pounie, Tex coyote bounty law, which was passed to holp the sheep raisers, promises to cost California dearly. One hundred thousand dollars have been paid out in nine months as 90,000 sonlps have boen turned in, and #3 for scalp that is certified to as illod In the county where it is presented. Kern County heads the list with over 3500 coyotes slain, Tux Sims at Portsmouth, pean powers, and has been al lor may or | come in for something handsome 814) | are | HELL a little further | Are separaied act found dead on t FIUATe | In The wolves wore TELEGRAPHIC TICKS, Important Late Dispatches, Hot From the Wires, Injured American Sailors Demand $1,305,000 of the Chileans, F. Alleyne Orr, an attorney of Ban Fran« cisco, has sent to the Btate Department at Washington the claims of the sailors of the cruiser Baltimore who were crippled or otherwise injured by the Chileans at Valparaiso, The claims are sccompa nied by affidavits which rehearses the stories told by the sailors at their examination at Mare Island, They amount to the total of $1,805,000, John Hamilton leads the ist with a demand for $150,000 for stab wounds in the buttock and right groin, He was frequently stabbed by the Jotam, and clains that there is still a portion of a broken dagger in his body, Jeremiah Anderson, conlheaver, also wants $150,000 for two wounds in the back, and a bayonet wound in the lung. John MoBride, and William Lacey claim $100,000 each for bad wounds Three others demand §75, 000 each, and others sums ranging from $60,000 to $30,000, Mr. Orr explains the enormous sums de- manded by thess men. He says: “Suppose the Chileans give Mr, Blaine a lump sam of 82,000,000, Then these wounded sailors will and we Chile you don't want the « back to There is no use make a claim nn of false modesty when to go im any Government, Thunder Storms to Order Profesor Elihu Thomson, (Mass) electrician, claims to have discos the knack of making I The Inventic n ered ghtning is at present of more than practical interest, althe will be plenty tical eventually The Pr by very tremely sClen. thers for it succeeded magn Le uring ex In an are perioaps Na ssarche smpie means in ws high electri IAT, three-cighths of an is hapart ar Thomson's pew machine, | tanoe is eight inches, and n | far | thrown off withou {| ports like the The result is that torrents of sparks are tion.and with re. case of cracker charge seem of the mack the Profesor 1 e 1 5 with Dr the firm fu 5 partnership yen! under storms to Death of a | amous Shaker Elder Harvey | Shaker Chur few days ay eightyseventh 3 in the Shaker Eader the head Tora to Pieces by Wild Dogs have invaded from CO The wild dogs wi north west corner { Kansas have Ix a wile from 5 nly tarted to Vor ress ins ware verturned wag i and the bo rat's ros g and the fut mrad fon of ki the for life Jealousy Canses Murder and Suicide A newsboy, whe liverng an Fed newspaper at the house of John Molloy at Toledo, Ohio, looked thr the window and discovered two bodies lying on the floor He informed the poli and investigation revealed that a murder and suicide had boen committed Molloy and hs wife wore floor. which was ocoversd sod man had a bullet wound behind her right ear and Molloy had one in the right temple and another below the ear, They had twenty-four hours Though seventy-two years of age, Molloy had bean so Jenlous of his wife, also aged seventy-two, that be made ber life unbear able, evenir ugh with bi The » Deen dead A Wolf Drive in Kansas, The wolf drive, after being in preparation for two months took place near Girard Kan, At 9 o'clock in the morning about 4000 men surrounded a section of conntry measuring ten miles square Wit 1000 men on each side of the thers were 100 to the mile. or ’ man 0 about every fifty feet The firing & cannon was the signal for the final closing not to be killed until they ware rounded up in the centre, The chase began at 1 o'clock, and as a result twenty-two wolves were killed At 5 o'clock the forces left the feld feeling jubilant over their success, Horse Flesh in Demand in Paris, The rise in the prios of besf and mutton, cansed by the new tariff, has led to an enor mous demand for horse flesh in Paris France, According to a report of the Police Prefecture, the horses, asses and mules now Saufftitensd t over onsthird of the w quantity of meat consumed, Fillet of horse or key is retailed at twenty conts a pound, steak at fourteen cents a pound and inferior parts at four cents a nd, Worn-out animals are ris ing in value, and are being bought up every where within a radius of 300 miles Paris. Lost Bight of Her Crew The Norwegian hark Margarsther Padang, bound to New York, put into Cape Town, South Africa, with her crew prostrated by malarial fever of which the secont mate and seven men died on the voyage, SUN SPOTS, A Big Spoé Breaks Up Into Twenty Small Spots, Observations made at the Naval Observa-. tory at Washington by Professor Rdgar Frisby showed that the large spot hitherto observed on the sun, which covered a Pace equal to one-sixteenth of the sun's surf or an area of 140,000 miles miles wide, has by some great been broken into about | sessions of OC | of maple sugar last 1] FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS, In the Senate, Ip Dav.=The Public Printing bill was passed An investigation of the admission of typhus fever immigrants at New York was ordered——Mr, Casey introduced a bill to fix the fees on domestic money orders as follows: For orders not exceeding 85, three cents; 835 and not exceeding $10, eight cots: between $10 and §25, ten cents. between $25 and $40, fifteen cents, and amounts exceed. ing $40 in proportion«—Mr. Hale reported the Urgent Deficiency bill Mra Day Mr. Sherman's credentials on his election to a sixth term were laid befors the Senate by the Vice-President and filed ~The Urgent Deficiency bill was passed The case of Dubois and Claggett was reported favorably 10 the former —— Mr. Hiscock introduced bills to provids for the sale of Navy Yard lands in Brooklyn and appropriating $15,000 to complete the monument commemorating the surrender of General Burgoyne at Saratoga, N.Y dru Day.-The Bennie assed the resciution 10 return to % x the captured battle flags now in the museum at West Point The Claggett contest was discussed Myr, Morrill reported a directing the Becretary of the Ti admit free of duty the wre ships Trenton and Vandalia the United States Governme of Beamon, and to ref being the amount of the Collector at Ban Dubois | passed re Day | popular elec Lio | Introduced =» Constitution ng table for the duced a joint resol stitutional amend shall hold his offi and ‘ pres shall not b Laid on the table f were given on th Kansas In the House ~The Sp pecial dian servios f ir. Stwilpecker ints nlerasi reve all paper-wrapg troduced a res intoxicating muniost McMil y Clerk Kerr from the Spe of Tennessce, r a statement sh bursements NEWSY GLEANINGS, HERRINGS are soaroe APPLE exports are growing Uscre Baw has 73,045 pauper ExGraxp has 20 000 women farm Brazit has another civil war on hand England, has 65 000 Germans RK Loxpox New Y dents THRASHING Dakota SMaLLyr Mexico. Misxgaron Is, Minn reds of four in 1891 Vensoxt produced over 17,000, 0 year has 5X00 tenement resi Tux wheat crop in Tennessee has been badly injured by a frees Tux Kbhadive of Egypt shows signs of ob- jecting to English dictation PORTUGAL is too poor to send an exhibit to our Columbian Kx hibition THERE are 50,000 members of the Grange in good standing in New England Tur people of Xeres Spain, ars thor oughly terrified by the Anarchists Tux Chicago Common Council has decided to Umit the height of buildingx to IN foot. THERE are only 1100 vacancies in the enlisted strength of the United States Army Pusisunext by the kuout bas been rutorsd in Russia, That cruel punishment has just been abolished la Egypt AURTRIA had 4744 postofices in 1800 and sl offices. The postal service om 174 persone NATURAL gas bas been discovered at Fair baven, Washington. It flows readily and burns with a clear light, Our of 1293 steamships in the grain oarry- ing traffic between this country and foreign ports last year only four floated the Ameri oan fag. A reteotees well, sunk by the Asam Rallway Company of India, strock a vein atad of 650 tet which yields 700 bare reds dally, James GG, Farm, son of ex-Senstor Fair, died in Ban Francisco, Oal, of heart dis. ease, supermduced, it is alleged, by the Bi. Chloride of Gold cure, In weveral districts of the wine iy difflou th a of coping wi ili, the land are rising tobacco and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers