——————— or The returns from an scre ot beets in Germany are £40 while that from wheat and other cereals only $20. Sir William Vernon Harcourt nounces an. British the intention of the to the Government stand firmly on gold basis, The share of land falling to each in- habitant of the globe a partition might be set down in the event of at twen- ty-three and a half acres, prolific is *“This phrases,” says the Christian Standard, “Wy ‘the and the ‘submerged tenth,’ and now we the ‘the ity. striking Age 18 have had masses’ he AT expression ’ 3 unreached major- It is now stated science that in- caused by microbe, the Washington Star arks, makes the microbe responsi- by digestion Thais rem ble except the overhead times, 13 0 discovery, for known inconvenience every trolley and hard Marion Am at Tass ) Crawfor erican lelivered Sor- rento, an address on Italy, the celebration of thethree hundredth of the 's de address, which was in Italian, the at anni Thi WAS Versary great poet ath, Francis leclared that portat: the nterest could be would n Mr. Stone nthusiastic on the subject, and a porous pusher. J. 8. Buckley ex- pressed himself in similar language, In tide of immi thwar i, TORR Fallin eCessarily loliow, Lis opinion the ration MIO MON Indian reservatic ful that it ns has $ Ce8s i8 80ND schools will also that part of the country, found best to educate the Oud far as possible in kindergarten than in boarding schools, time tb . able can be » wh IS CAses #d ith from their parents ably would bave objected taken the scl MO ls at transferred v position ngly the children had been away toa The pres industrial eduen- cook. lothes and the boarding schoo outset. principal work of ent is in the line of tion. The girls are beng taught ing, sewing, washing « like, and the tending boys plowing, tilling, cattle and rather using tools, than even reading and writing, They warn English with able « ase, but have no inherited aptitude for mathematics, apprecistion consider Indians have very little of being fa miliar only with addition and sub traction. Some of the Indians have reached a high degree of proficiency, and the Indiun Office is daily receiving applications from Indian girls, who have been graduated from high schools for positions as teachers, found for some, but not many, and the remainder usually return to their tribes and relapse into their former ways of life. Saperintendent W, H, Hailman, of the Indian schools, is very anxious to find positions for more of these girls in nearly any class of work, He says they make excellent servants, and be would like to hear free any one willing to employ them, numbers, Places ar | the men in Brazil, of which more than half are settled in the province of St. Paulo, A correspondent of the New York World says that there is now a man in the United States Senate taken a prominent part in lynchings. who has fifty-four The from steam railways the CO roads, and n the pleted of their traffic are suffering the raised mpetition of th bein [*4 by rolley that dee 1 cycles, cry 14 trollevs are alls the b pani the 13) Says Chicago Dis; in le ll atch : we have the Spanish tro mistake in our oc 1 by the nber about unt fatalities thus far reports ps in Caba nn three times the total population of island. A plan 18 fork City to es ment half d be ing 1 ul New apart. scussed in achelor suburbs, tablis w hie re hom forts of a rural An economist has figured ont that fou nu this a per month, ar hat may live in fair styl way for 835 eac they hed, large results | Mulhall, publishes in the | that the int i | | age being able t | The English statistician, Miel North ican Review an article on “lhe and Wealth of the United Mr. Mulha ael (3, Amer- Power : " States, possesses al (ireat Britain, ur France, in Austria, One pers nt br thirty hall calls epecial att Hectual great the gress, r Pp 100C 1] in and eighty-seven industrial total population over eig read asserted, YOAr ‘It said h ) tae and writ may be fairly ‘that in the no Nation ever bi history of human moe fore 41,000,000 instructed possess i citizens,’ gots forth in regard to the growth of the the United States that the average annaal ine ment from 1821 to 1890 w a1 jards of sam i milliard over the In wealth of the writer wealth | re. mill- na dollars, whioh gf One of Great the under the heads total wealth « Britain. classifying whole Union of urban aud rural, he finds that rural agricultural wealth has only quad- urban In an important series of figures it is rapled in forty years, while wealth has multiplied sixteenfold, shown that the rise in wealth and the increase of wages came almost hand in Ia dealing with the of Mr, Mulhall makes the following statement: “If the United States iad no urban popu. lation or industries whatever, the ad. vance of agricultural interest would be enough to claim the admiration of mankind, for it bae no parallel in his hand. develop ment farm values There are smd to be 760,000 Italians of the Grand I #in's personal re wy resentative, to the Fait port by rail, th Admiral and Commander in Czar's navy. Alexis presented to the Gerry | Kniger an autogr letter from Nieh congratulating the Emperor on the tion of the epoch-making event, Imperial Hohenzollern the train of warships and pleasurs dropped anchor t vening at Ho it nau, near the pince | with the raised or who travels ugh he is TH KIEL CANAL FEES With Pomp and Pageantry Germany Opens Her New Waterway. | GREATEST OF NAVAL REUNIONS. nitie the Kie (6 Alexia, the Czar of Nusa. | riers of Baxon 1 | the other (iran Chief of th nn ome The | and er oh vy. Wortemburgz, Bavaria and of the Conleders. wis closed by the commanded by brothe After of the "Ge rman anal, and paraded A ir port, {esent vereign states tion. The long procession Prussian fron-ciand Worth, Prines Henry, the Emperor's this ceremony all the ships | fleet passed through the before the Er 4 the f whi 15700 fot through steamer bassadors, Were bas in y-flve deep, the {aiser Description of the Elaborate Dedieatory Ceremonies Conducted by Kalser Wil- helm «<All the Great Nations Assist in the Festivities---The United States Rep- resented by Four Men-of- War, tu pe (ierman ink be eas, and Hmensi THIRD Takes the New Waterway. DAY The Kalser Formal Possession © Bear-Admis The great ngicatl 1 : 4 ing was held at ors Holtenau tewar that marks the spot where, in 1887 late William 1, broke ground for the with a 1. The Xai Lu plicated the visit to Poses | 1 numerous distin rmils jad : { tha al in front of the the canal : er first form. THE CANAL. One Most Modern Engineering. of the Stupendous Works will be 200 fod tha hn excessively : onl it { entirely frozen over. The canal is | broad batwoen. 1 the tops of the embank- Al ites bottom it is seventy-five foot The avon ge depth is thirty feet, are constru Ql hn ( j ment | broad, The walls 4 stone ao $ y ut st pes and Taso oted partly of sand, 1ST DAY His Guests Fntertained the Hamburgers x LP oN Py yd WINN SECOND DAY, fhe Banguet and Ball ina Tent Modelled After a» Warship ROUTE the projector and o [ which, He re Baensch, was t} inily nored by his delighted sovercign, This gentleman, wi he pndertook to construct the North-East Bea | Canal, which f(s the longest in the world, measuring 61 miles, caloulated the cost at {| £30.000.000, and not only did he keep within the mit, but saved $175,000, On the Sth of June Herr Bacnsch celebrated hic seventioth birthday. The most P werful fleet of war vossals ever assembled, numbering upward of 100, took part in the naval display which followed. The list of fghting ships of all classes was as follows German, ¥ battleships, 6 const defence ships, 8 eraisers, b despatch vessels, 8 train- | ing ships, royal yacht Hobensollern, yacat | Kaiser Adler, 4 torpedo division boats, torpedo boats, numerous small orafts. British, 4 battleships, 3 cruisers, 2 torpedo vessels, roval yacht Osborne, Admiraity vacht Exchantress; Italian 4 battle ships, royal yacht Sarvia, 2 cruisers, 3 tor scdey vessels United States, 4 cruisers Fron sh, 1 battleship, 2 cruisers; Russian, 1 battleship, 1 cruiser, 1 gunboat Hungarian, 4 cruisers, Danish, 2 cruisers, torpedo boats; Norwegian, 2 gun-vessels, torpedo boats Swedish, 2 const ships, 1 gunboat: Spanish, 1 battieship, ornirers: Portuguese, 1 battleship: Rou manian, 1 crulser, 1 gun-vessel, Turkish Admiralty yacht Fevaid, The grand procession of flotilla through the canal was led by the Ger. man diapateh boat Grille, followed by the Emperor's steam yacht Hohenzollern, with | His Majosty on board structor en espe 4 0 2 EMPEROR OF (Under whose personal dire peued, ) IERAMANY, tion tha Canal YAR Geran Empire from Hamburg to Kiel and through the cand, The route they took was bythe Elbe, The Kalser ran ahead of his y \ GLUCKSTADT OF | TRE yom | 3 { sard's Bay, Austro- | delegoo this formidable | | through the | of appointments or of action In other mat. | the car fares for the purpose, but agrees to after which came his | gusts lo order to be present at the reception | other yacht, the Kaiser Adler, conveylug the Woden CANA THE PRESIDENT'S VACATION, fe Leaves Washington for “Gray Gables," Buzzards Bay, Mass. President Cleveland, accompanied by Pri- vale Becratary Thurber and Dr. O'Reilly, left Washington for "Gray Gables," Massachusetts, Buzzard's for the summer. When the Presidont’s tralo arrived in the Pennsyl. vania Railroad depot in Jersey City, N. J. the President, Mr. Benedict, Mr. Thurber and Dr. O'Reilly boarded a launch, and were quickly conveyed to Mr. Benedict's yacht Oneida. In five minutes the Oneida was steaming down the river on its way to Bus. Bay, During the absence of the President all of. flelal business will be transacted as usual White House, Announcements ters will bo sent by mall from Gray Gables, and made public by Mr. Pruden, the Assist aut Executive Secretary, a——— The Ublquitons Rieyele, fearcely a day passes without requests from one or more postmasters that thelr oar riers be permitted to use bMeyeles and to re tain, 38 an offent to the cost, the oar fares now given to them. In every case the De. partment declines to permit the diversion of grant from $2 to $3 per month to each oar rier, to be applied to repatrs for his wheel, tears HUDSON WEDS THE SOND The Harlem Ship Canal Opened With Imposing Ceremonies = nigters | LAND AND NAVAL PARADES. | | The Waterway in New York City Joining the North and East Eivers Thrown Open to Navigation Amid the Booming of Guns, the T ooting of Steaus Whist les and Fireworks. > 1 iz tr re hibits 13 Oo t i "rep nting the [ so ral munieipal departme and a long lin fa isading induftries marched BAross town gay with the perations mits ate (llustrating he city. The parade through streets The National Game 34 il ws t is next to I Ha i Yaiun Duffy, of Bostor the finest outfield Brodie and Keele ting for the Baltim Of the new Pitts! oels in fSeiding an res this season urg J i 0r ayers Clingman we in b ut of ¢ last ting loston won fifteen th mes played on the home grout Hawley, of Pittsburg, has shut ~Boston, New York and St, | The St. Louis are fast on specially Brown, wd, Cooley, Juino, Bannon Is now tha star batter ton Club and ocustaptly impr fielding Some of the most promising yo in the country can be land League, Stafford, of New York ity, played twalve games without an error this year, which is surely up to the Ward standard, It lent often that ball players sucoumb to sunstroke, although they wear heavy flannel shirts that soem to weigh a ton The Boston directors have instituted a pew fonture at the Boston Ball Park io fitting up a bullding for the checking of bicycles, Otleago has signed a new pitoher of the name of Frank Howe, a son of J. J. Howe, the millionaire lumberman of Brainerd A Cinsinnati contemporary advocates the introduction of fag signaling, as used ia the United States Army, to direct the movements of @ ball team. sixteen BA ds it three wie, the bans, Peltz and men D of the Bos ving in his ng talent found ju the New Eng
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers