Review of reviews and world's work . ed address twolarge mass meetings in Providence, R. I. April 3.—The steamer Missouri, carrying food fromNew York to the starving Russians, welcomed at Libau The Belgian Conservative Association declares against universal suffrage 80,000 bales of cotton destroyed by fire in New Orleans .. .Sixty-seven arrests for violationsof the Excise law in New York City. April 4.—The Geary Chinese exclusion bill passed by the House of Representatives Mr. Springer cl ises the general debate on the free wool bill in the House of Rep-resentatives Quiet is restored in the Ar


Review of reviews and world's work . ed address twolarge mass meetings in Providence, R. I. April 3.—The steamer Missouri, carrying food fromNew York to the starving Russians, welcomed at Libau The Belgian Conservative Association declares against universal suffrage 80,000 bales of cotton destroyed by fire in New Orleans .. .Sixty-seven arrests for violationsof the Excise law in New York City. April 4.—The Geary Chinese exclusion bill passed by the House of Representatives Mr. Springer cl ises the general debate on the free wool bill in the House of Rep-resentatives Quiet is restored in the Argentine Re-public. April 5.—It is announced that France and Great Britainwill prolong the Newfoundland fisheries modus Vivendiduring the present season. April 6.—Brown, the Republican candidate, electedGovernor of Rhode Island by a majority of 229 votes—theelection for State officers and for members of the legis-lature results, as a whole, in favoi- of the Republicans Republicans are generally sucxcssful in municipal elec-. .# ]vffA\<^ -^?\^^ , THE LATE DUKE OF CUMBERLAND. tions throughout the West The Senate passes the Indian appropriation bill. April 7.—The House of Representatives passes the Free Wool bill—190 to 60 Venezuelan rebels are reported to have sustained another repulse. April 8.—Massachusetts Democrats elect delegates tothe Chicago convention. The platform urges the renom-ination of ex-President Cleveland. The delegates are notinstructed. April 9.—The bill placing cotton ties and bagging on the free list passed by the House of Representatives In the annual university boat race on the Thames Oxford winsover Cambridge by two and a quarter lengths. April 10.—The voting for presidential electors in Argen-tine Republic conducted quietly, the coalition candidate meeting with little opposition Five hundred cowboys set out to exterminate the cattle thieves of Wyoming andMontana. April 11.—The New York Presbytery chooses anti-BrigKS delegates to th


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