“HE LABOR WORLD. Tae boot Prosperous, A GOOD se the work of and shoe arests ara qalte wing machines is supposal 2 do LWelve women. FIFTY-RIGHT THOUSAND women belong to the trade unions of Eagland RAILROAD builders in Cuba build their own cars hereatter, Tre long continuel Durham (England) miners’ strike has ended. The men lost THERE | propos an increase in activity in a good many of the cotton mills in the Gulf States, IRON moulders are agitating for the for. mation of an International Union of their trade. Tie American Flint has at present 7218 m ymbers, 0405 of whom are employed, Tre Order of Railroad Telegraphers has decided not te admit commercial operators to membership, Tsig hullders of locomotives are busy again, and two or three of ths works have a summer's work secured Tre Br neers has granted monthy' leave of absen Tar Natio Hungary has and binders, tol 2 nent New York City dry goods firm, erks are regularly ployed, the young wom refer to ong Other as Glass Workers' Union quite larger therhood of Locomotive Engi Chief P. M. Arthur six , with full pay. ml Agricultural Society of wranged a trial for reaper held on July Oth and 10th, an iat sustain Alliances will who refuse t Tae B men employed in hotel fice their mustache order of hot Mi» ompuand me pe al . ————————— THE MAURITIUS CYCLONE. Au Eyew ItNess’ s rible scene COLUMBUS CELEBRATION, ot the Five Days New York « The Programme Exercises in ity. General Horace Porter meeting of the ( of the C House Plan ar nn LOSSES REACH $50,000,000, Appalling Figures of Damages by the at § loo 1. rroat fn | has beg in to pass wos occasioned thereby econ made fr n statistics gath ered fro ards of Trade, ex- » afflicted dis 10, divided changes, otc tricta as foll Missour OX) acres homes ruined 000: cattle dro , KX erty destroved, # 0): Tennewee loss, $1,200,000; total, #1. 50, 4%) Arkansas Farms inundated, 9998; lose ag follows: Corn, EL500.000; cotton, $5 000 X¥): other products, 2 500.000: total, $10. O00), (XK), fissianippt’™s loss is $1,000,000 Louisiana loses $5,000,000, Kentucky's los, lx) 00 This estimate does not include stagnation in business among the merchants and trans portation lines A conservative estimate of the amount of damage cause | by tha lows from the high waters from Kansas City to New Orleans will reach the enormous fig. ures of $50,000,000 SHOT HIS thr The total rea YWA wel 82 Wheat and corn destroyed (39, £1.00 railroad prop total, #11, 700 C00 00. 000: wheat cattle, $100 000: otton loss, homes and AGED FATHER, Mr Greatrex Would Not Allow Hu Son More Than $5000 a Year, G. F. Greatrox, an old, respected ant wealthy resident of Leamington, Warwicl County, England, was shot and killed by hi only son, because he had refused to ailow thy son more than $5070 a year, and had threat ened to strike his name out of his will, The son shot his father from behind » clump of bushes, one bullet entering the bead and the other the heart. The mur derer was selzad, and expressed joy that bi aim had been so true, EE .————— Tue monument erected by the le of New Orleans, to the memory of ths late Su. perintendent of Police, David C, Hennessy, who was assassinated by the Mafia in Octo. ber, 1500, was unveiled a few days since, at Metario Cometery. em- | rusLiC DEBT STATEMENT, Pensions Cause an tnoreas Lint toy Month of 81. 023 374. The United States Trea Dopariment's ury monthly public debt statem crease in tho aggregate of the mt shows an fas Inst debt 17 VY Dension payments in May, the month amounted to 3,000,000, against about #9, 000, 000 May a year ago, brought about increas in the during the month There was an increass of $230 in the Interest bearing debt and a decrease of £5,512. 523 in the sarpius cash in the Treasury a=d a decrease of $550,149 in the non-interest-bearing debt, The total debt, less $20,005,887 net cash balance in the Treasury and the £100,000,000 gold greenback redemption fund is $343 353 356, National depository banks hold £15605, 820 of the Treasury surplus—an increase of about $250,000 since Mav 1. Treasury gold coin and bullion assets aggregate $271 5237.- oul, or about $2 000 000 than on May 1. Bilver nggrozato $443,420,- WS, an increase of nearly #4 500000 during the last month Against in and bullion assets there are $171 765,70 in gold corti fleates, £53) 004,002 in silver certificates and £07, 301,080 m silver Treasury standing. Government receipts from May aggregated $38 408,705 against 417.425 in May, 15801, Custom receipts last month were £13 121.301, or a million and a quarter more than in May a year and internal revenus receij were § ), 156, an increase of fully three-quarters of a mil. lion over May, 1531 I'he coinage of the mints auring May ag- gregated 5,888 000 pleces, ¥ slusd at £5079. Of this amount $4 115 90) were in g id $016,170 in silver, and $47.20) in month amounting to 84.0258. 4 #4, 023, usually which near; y loss Aasels those © notes out sources nhl a FTN plec ano THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York 23 BEANS Beans—Marrow, fod Hum, AND PEAS 1891, ch TT Western — Fresh, pri Western, Squabs—Dark, Light, per « POTATOES AND VEGETAS Potatoss—Southern, new, bbl 12 State Rose and Hebron, per 150 Ib, State other kinds, 180 Ib L. 1. in bulk, per bbl Bweet potatoes, Jersey, Lb. Cabbage, L. L per Wu ...... Norfolk, per barrel. ,..... 1 Onions--Connecticut, Orange County, rea, bbl, Orange County, yellow, Eastern, yellow, per bbl, Eastern, white, per bbl Squash~L, [; marrow, bbl, L. 1, Hubbard, per bbl Turnips, Canada, por bbl, Celery Fla, por doz. roots, String beans, Fla, per crate Lettuce, Southern, per bbl. , Tomatoes, Fla, per bush crate, Asparagus, new doz. bunches tireen Peas, Va. basket. .... LIVE STOCK. Beever, City dressed, ....... Mileh Cows, com. to good... Calves, City dressed, .....vus sh Dressed EEE LE LEE EN ARERR GRAIN, RTC, Flour—City Mill Extra. .... Patents, ....... Wheat-—=No, 3 Bed... cove Ryo8tate........coovivnns Barley-rReo-toved Htate... Corn—Ungraded Mi sanas Unte—No, 3 White. ....con0n Mixed Western. , ....u00 Hayter $0 Cholow. ...». . Wm ATI i WT ee A — wn - +SEE EE8BR oa BRED 5388 8 ge debt | SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL T.HSHON JUNE 12 Fon Lesson Text: “The Daniel vi, 10.28 Daniel vi, 23 Den of Golden dong” Text; ( ommentary 16. “Then the king commande, and they brought Daniel and cast him into the den of Hons.” After the k . ingdom passed into the hands of the Medes, Darius made Daniel the first of three presidents over 120 provinces, But the princes and other presidents hated him and sought to ace ymplish his death, as recorded in the previous part of this chap- ter. Daniel is fearloss of man, and faith- fully waits upon his God. The result is that Danfel is cast into the lion's den, and to all appearance has perished, The kind words from the king are a hope that it may Le so, rather than an assurance that it will be so, “17. “And a stone was brought and laid upon the mouth of the den: and the king sealed it with his own signet.” Bo the un- godly prospe r in the world, and the devil is permitted to put the saints of God in prison and ofttimes to kill them (Ps lxxiii., 12; Rev. ii, 10; John xvi, 2), But the child of God is to be prepared for these things, and not to think them strange nor be offended when they come (Math, x. 28.1 Pet, iv, 12.1% John Xv. 1). 18, “Then the king went to his palacs and phased the night feasting.” Although the ing loved Daniel and labored hard to deliver him (verses 14, 13), yet even the king, with all his power, was powerless against the law, from which let us learn that love cannot always deliver, nor can the law save any « Even the law of God, which is holy and and good, cannot give life nor justify sinner (Gal, {ii., 21; ii, 16; Rom Hi. 1¥. “Then the king very early in the morning and in haste unto the den of lions.” Th roing r and liveranoe of Daniel is very sugges of a morning of ell r+ Daniel opie which is now Roa Ps b; xivi., 5 mv Bam, xxii, morning There is cla whom there will 20, R. V). “Ob eal de rance | h XXX. CXxXx in the an fed s thy God, wh to deliv eal an Lthly monar t not of assur nugel as seen in t) Peter remet minists unseen and unthar 8. “So Da the law, ar death, bey ot any manner of believer risen z+ shall fall hall 17. “He delivereth and rescueth, and He worketh signs and wonders in heaven and in earth, who hath deliverel Daniel from the the lone Darius had seen the deliverance of one man from a Hon's den: but Daniel could tell of the deliver. ance of millions from the bondage of Egypt of their food coming from heaven every day for forty years, of sta and river divided for them to pass through on dry land, « { walled cities falling down as men shouted, and many such wonderiul works of a wonderful God. We can tell of dead bodies actually raised from their graves as Lazarus and oth. ers, and of a time when all in their graves shall come forth, and of some who will pever die. Let us maguify the name of Him who only doeth all these things, 28, “So this Daniel prospered in the reign of Darius, and in the reign of Cyrus the Persian.” And all because he was a man of prager, and Gol was with him. He feared not the face of man, nor did he fear death; but he feared only to sin against God He honored God, and God honored him, even in this world (I Sam, i, Lamson Helper, power 4 Mi James Berry, retired hang mat of England, has a record of one hundred and eighty-three hangings He {a now delivering a lecture through England, in which he condemns capl- tal punishment. His chief reason is that murderers are insane at the time of the deed and truly repentant when they come to be hanged. Mr. James Berry's repentance is better lato than never. If every hangman and other executioner in Christendom would quit officiating at judicial killings the state would soon quit killing mur derers and dispose of them In some more civilized way, GREEN FLY ON ROSES, Vick tells that the green aphis which infests a great variety of cultivated plants ean be destroyed and kept under by spraying the plants it may seem necessary, with a strong so lution of the liquid may be applied by sprinkling it on with a small whisk to the up- occasionally, ns whale-oil soap; or being care ful have it wet the under as weil as per sides of the In and conservatories these insects are com room broom, eaves, greenhouses monly destroved by Another method of fumigating with to bacco, using to ¢ 1 0 1 bac 0 steep it in the ¢ recnbouse New York World, and squash upon the sa ing the squash feed In Lhe The bage An ple nted cabbage result Was A maximum and a minimum croj ssfu gardener ther equally SU the on every put omitted the third The result was a IWO ¢ rops row, pias ting his squash seed thers large crop of both products harveste il at the same time, Squashes and peas Ww grown profitably on the same land, One dener result of the « a harvest of ean | gar rops 200 Rives as A grown simultaneously bushels of green peas and five tons of squashes on the same pice? of land, Bat when we attempt returns from either simultaneous or second farming we must understand that land must be matured accordingly, as the soil cannot be cheated out of a crop. Irrigation Age. to get HOW TO RAISE HEIFERS, “Right here,” says Mr, King, in the Ohio Farmer, “I want to say a word about feeding those choice calves that are to build up our herd. 1think it best for the cow, and decidely best for the call, to let the latter remain with the cow al least three days. I «lo not wish you to | quietly drive the cow out, letting the call remain, so she does not see you take it from her. can neither see nor hear it,if possible. Leave Keep it where she Offer it some It will zen. about the drink alone. You fresh half skimmed 1d Oia it alone for twelve hours. warm from the cow, the finger, milk erally SUCK and next feed it should should not feed it along, Gi ni milk right BwWoeet when it will milk until two wel ' better for UT IMO ) r animal Jot i purpose make a I ping it, fact, 8 manner A week may steeping ea COT ounces of saltpeter in and having it all soaked 1 seed Diversify the poultry business, as well balance of the industries aod turkeys give as good nes pay much as the farm Ducks, return as hens, and sometit (FY ORO Hoon better, Do not be persuaded that there is no profit in washing your bel shearing. If well done the a ided value of the wool will pay excellently for the time and labor required. It is said that in firm land the frost will go much deeper than in land that is As it is desirable that the frost sheep re loose, should go deep it would appear very ad- | vantageous to have the land as firm a possible. Draining is generally admitted to be the correct remedy for wet lands, and for the bad effects from wet seasons. Now we must learn that it is almost equally efficient in preventing damage from ex | cossive droughts, understand me to advocate letting the | oalf have all the milk fer this length of | Dairying has « fourfold advantage over most other branches of farming. It time. Take all you can got twice a dav; | brings spot cash, it yields more money the calf will be sure to get enough. When you do take the call away, the bet. ter way is to bate them lu a stable sud | for the feed consumed, it saves the natural fertility of the farm, aud it make: increased fortility easy. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, A BALAD OF Have t lentils salted water, with onjon, and ful of tils: add some chopped egy and LEXTILA, cooked in buttered, rub a bowl stir in also a tablespoon and drain; ( hopped parsicy to a quart of lene finely it i with salt Q he AG, BERHON { Oh, and little pepper, decorate with parsley New York I TIPS ON LAYING While it is diffic in fitting ollcloths cardinal rules must venture “0 suggest linoleum from at the ends, If i allow also a nkage is pro s disgram correct VALLUA BALOE Short Strawberry ARE = NI JUArts strawberries and sweel oden spoo i butter into a qua slightly with a w yances of sifted flour, add a teaspoonful of salt and two of baking powder, with sufficient sweet milk to make soft dough. Mix qui roll thin, put in a greased pan, and bake in a very quick oven. When done from the oven, split into halves spread each lightly with butter Place the lower hall in a large, flat digh, put half the berries over this, cover with the other half of the shortcake. Spread the remaining berries on it, pour whipped cream around and serve, Strawberry Pasfait— Whip a quart of cream to a froth and sweeten, add a pint of mashed strawberries, mix carefully, put into an ice cream mold, press the lid down tightly, pack in salt and ice, and freeze three hours, Strawberry Water Joe Stem a quart of strawberries, add a pound of sugar and the juice of two lemons, mash, and stand aside ove hour, strain, add a quart of ice water, pour ina freezer and freeze. Frozen Strawberries—Stem a quart of ripe strawberries, add half a pnt of sugar, let stand one hour, squeeze in the juice of three oranges and a quart of thin syrup, stir, turn in a freezer and freeze. EC —————————— The arrivals in this country from Swe. den, Norway and Denmark are next in importance to those of Great Britain and Germany, and exceed by ove fyurth those row Ireland, Ki¥y take and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers