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'""'EPITOME 0? NEWS. --rt>---
'EPITOME 0? NEWS. --rt> Jydsre James Johnston Shaw, Esc order of Belfast, has died in Dublin. Boys of Wellington College are presenting Dr. Pollock, the new Bishop of Norwich, with a motor-car. Mrs. Skinner,, whose death in her 107th year has occurred at Langton, near Timoriago Vv cJs, leaves 200 descendants. The bcdv of William WaAer, a prominent Wesleyan preacher, was found hi the River Tees at Yarm, near Middlesbrough. A German manuscript Bible ascribed to the fifteenth century has been sold at the Doro- theum State auction rooms, Vienna, for £1,000. Six seditious publications and photographs of Nana Fadnasvis and Shyamaji Krishnavavna, with others, have been proscribed by the Bengal Government. ZI., Profes,ior J. D. Houston, of the Reiormed Presbyterian Church, Ballyc-labber, London- derry, was found unconscious in his study and died almost immediately. The electrocution of the man Wolter, who murdered the girl typist Ruth Wheeler at New York, has been postponed until June. Three men named Gaunt, John Wilkinson, and Henry W"ll -nsoii were injured at Apperlv Bridge, Bradford, by a petrol explosion while testing the motor of a British-built aeroplane. Colonel Kirkpatrick's appointment as Inspec- tor-General of the Commonwealth Military Forces was not ratified at the final meeting of the Executive Council under the Deakin Cabi- net. Owing to the great demand for accommoda- tion in the Allrvn Line steamers on the London to Quebec and Montreal route, a weekly service is to be maintained and two additional steamers will be employed. From the executors of the late Mr. Richard Clarke, £ 4,919 10s. 6d., the amount of the resi- duary estate bequeathed to King Edward's Hos- pital Fund for London, has been received by the honorary secretaries at the Bark of Eng- land. The number of new devices for keeping the microbe out of the sick-room is the most strik- ing feature of the exhibition of the Nursing and Midwifery Conference opened by Princess Christian at the Royal Horticultural Hall, West- minster. In order to commemorate the second phila- telic congress, now being held at Caxton Hall, a special souvenir stamp has been issued, afld a sheet, printed in metallic gold, has been pre- sented to the Prince of Wales, who is the patron of the congress. Several medical men of Galverston declare that Thomas Lewis, who was killed iIOla railway accident, lived for an hour and thirty-three minutes after his heart ceased to beat. William Scott, who was sentenced to death in 1897 for murder at Sunderland, and whose sen- tence was commuted to one of penal servitude for life, has been released from Maidstone Prison. The Royal West Norfolk Gold Club pays the village of Brancaster four per cent. on the gross income of the club for the use of the links, and each householder in the village has just received 5s. 6d. as his share for this year. So indignant is the population of Monaco at the Pope's refusal to receive the Prince of Monaco that it is proposed to refuse Papal five- franc nieces at the tables in the Casino. As these coins are not good currency elsewhere, -the protest is formidable. Master cotton-spinners resolved at Man- chester, with two dissentients, to take the neces- sary steps to secure a five per cent. reduction of wages. Signor Gabriele d'Annnnzio has undertaken to write an historical tragedy in French for the Comedie Frainjaise. One of several seventh century tanks which Jiave been discovered by workmen at Balmonte- Picano, Italy, contains the skeleton of a war- rior, and is surmounted by a bronze war chariot. Mr. Haldane states in the parliamentary papers that the total expenditure out of the Army funds on the Territorial Force in the current financial year in E3,165,000, compared with £ 2,800,000 in 1908-9. An action for slander brought by Messrs. Foster Fraser and Bagley, who were the Unionist candidates for Leicester at the general election, against Mr. Ramsay MacDonald, M.P., lias been withdrawn. "You are liable to a fine of £ 940," said Mr. Dan Stanton, Northampton's working man magistrate, to John Stevens, butcher, of Kings- -thorpe, who was fined at Northampton £ 20 or three months' hard labnr for exposing for sale meat diseased and unfit for human food. The death has occurred at Colchester, at the Age of 67, of Mr. William Duckett, plumber and decorator, who claimed an estate in the Midlands and a baronetcy. It was his practice to make an annual "demonstration" on the 4mtate to which he laid claim. A pair of thrushes have built their nest and are now engaged in rearing three fine young birds in one of the thick ivy bushes at the edge of the lawn by the east front of Hampton Court Palace, by which some hundreds of people promenade almost daily. Whilst jumping in the Tidworth garrison riding school. Viscount Ebrington, of the Scots Greys, sustained a fractured leg. Two more liberal contributions have been promised to the Archbishops' Western Canada Fund, one of £ 500 from Viscount Mountga-rret and one of £ 100 from the Hon. Edward Wood. Permission was given at a Consistory Court, held in St. Paul's Cathedral, for the removal of some eighty coffins from the crypt of St. James', Clerkenwell, with a view of fitting the crypt up n.s a Sunday school at a cost of £2.000. The Pope has received in private audience Mgr. Aniigo. Bishop of Southwark, who pre- eented his report on hit diocese. Senor Juan Vicente Gomez has been elected President of Venezuela. All political prisoners have been amnestied. Mr. Mitchell-Thompson was returned unop- posed a,( the Conservative member for North Down, in succession to the late Mr. T. L. Corbett. Sir J. Rennell Rodd" British Ambassador in Koine, will be present at the unveiling of the bust of Shakespeare, near the legendary tomb of Juliet at Verona, during the last week of May. English touri«ts and lovers of Shakes- peare from all parts of the world, it is ex- pected, will attend in great numbers. "I venture to believe," Sir Dyce Duckworth declared at the Nursing Conference in the Hor- ticultural Hall, "that no country outside the British Empire has yet attained the degree of excellence which prevails among us to-day in respect both of the material and the training and accomplishment of our nurses, which are now available for the comfort and security of the sick of all grades of our fellow !t
OUR LONDON LETTES.
OUR LONDON LETTES. [From Our Special Correspondent.] The curtain has fallen on the first act of the Westminster drama, and all the actors are taking a holiday in the interval before the second act begins. It is possible that things may not go so smoothly when the curtain next goes up. Nothing could have been very ;¡:uch tamer than the passage of the Bnaget, and the proceedings in both Houses of Parliament were in remarkable contrast with those of last year. Members had had quite enough of the Budget, and when it was seen that the Government might count upon Irish support for the j measure everybody recognised its passage as j inevitable. So the Commons got rid of it as quickly as they could, and the Lords, having said that they would not stand any longer in the way if the Commons sent it to them once more, had nothing to do but to pass it. | Those who saw the crowded House and j heard the speeches last November when the Bill made its first appearance before their lordships, could not fail to be struck with the different state of things on this occa- sion. The attendance did not number much more than a hundred, and the proceedings were frankly dull. So far as can be seen at present, the second act will not be dull. When Parlia- ment re-asseniblcs after the recess, tte Lords will proceed to deal with the scheme for the reform of themselves which has been submitted by Lord R-osebery. When that has been disposed of there will come the Veto Resolutions sent up by the Commons. Then will come the tug-of-war. I do not think anybody believes that the House of Lords will sanction them to their own undoing. The suggestion of compromise has been mooted, but it meets with no favour from the bulk of the supporters of the Government, and, indeed, it is difficult to see what kind of compromise would meet the case. It remains to be seen what will be the Premier's advice to the Crown, and what action will follow, but it is significant that the talk is all of resignation or of dissolution. In either event a General Election would quickly follow, and it is with the firm conviction that another appeal to the country cannot be long postponed that many members are spending their holidays among their con- stituents. If there are not many things remarkably good in this year's Academy, there is nothing exceptionally bad, which means that the Exhibition is about an average one. After all, a great many people who visit Burlington House once a year know little, and care less, about pictures. They go be- cause it is the proper thing to do. Some of them study the pictures carefully with the aid of the catalogue, admire -those of well- known artists and sneer at the others, being quite incapable of saying which is a good picture and which is not. This annual wor- ship of Art by the great British public is, as a matter of fact, most flagrant hypocrisy and snobbery. As a nation we are not inte- rested in Art, and we are a great deal more excited over the fact that a postman's pic- tures have been hung "on the line" than anything else in this year's Academy Exhi- bition. The postman's pictures may be ex- cellent, and quite deserving of the honour, but most of the visitors to the Academy will not know it, and would think it just as wonderful if they were daubs. We should all go into raptures if the Academy had ac- cepted a picture painted by a dustman who cultivated Art in the dinner-hour. The Hippodrome has a sensation of extra size, and those of its patrons who are gifted with imaginative vision are enabled to see something of what war will be like when an enemy's airships can sail calmly above towns and cities, dropping explosives and blowing property and people into the tiniest of little bits. The very latest invention illustrating man's ingenuity in the science of destruction is an airship controlled by the wireless transmission of electric power. It is quite the most up-to-date thing in death-dealing machines, and at a private demonstration it worked marvels. It was a very remarkable experiment. Suspended to the model ,of a Zeppelin dirigible about 12ft. in length, and containing 300 cubic feet of hydrogen, was the apparatus in wood and aluminium, devised by the inventor, Mr. Raymond Phil- lips, an electrical engineer, of Liverpool. The airship, perfectly stable, rested in mid- air over the stage, while the inventor, stand- ing by the side of the wireless transmitter, undertook to send the machine flying round the auditorium. This he did with complete success. As Mr. Phillips threw the wireless waves the ship began to ascend slowly, and then sailed towards the balcony at the other end of the building. At one time it re- mained perfectly still, at another it glided backwards or onwards, obeying the man at the transmitter. The inventor explained that explosives could he lowered from the airship over a town held by the enemy, and the destructive material, dynamite or meli- nite, could at the transmitter's will be thrown over any spot with unerring pre- cision. He hopes to be able to show the machine at work to a number of officials from the War Office. There are steamboats on the Thames again. They • d$? not belong to the ratepayers, it is true; the last County Council decided that London had had enough of steamboats which would not earn a profit, and so they sold them at great loss. Some of the Thames steam- boats are puffing busily on the rivers of Europe, but a few of them remained here and were acquired by a private comrpany, which is now doing its best to give Londoners what the County 'Council declines to provide. The company got its boats very cheaply, and it may bp hoped that their enterprise will be attended, with success. There are plenty oi people who are willing to pay for an occa- sional trip on the river, and who have never ceaJilBd to regret the stoppage of the Council's boa;s two or three seasons ago. A three- penny journey from Battersea to Greenwich, is one of the most interesting ways, of seeing London, and given a fine summer there is every reason to believe that the steamers will be extremely popular. Nothing very exciting happened at the May Day demonstration in Hyde Pauk. We are, in truth, fairly sober demonstrators in this country, and respect for law and order is strong in us. So. while Continental Socialists come into collision with the police their brethren in this country conduct their demonstrations as peacefully as Primi- I tive Methodists at a camp meeting. The gathering in Hyde Park was much larger than it has been in reecnt years, and it is estimated that forty thousand people listened to the speeches from the various platforms. The speeches were not in any sense remark- able. Mr. Victor Grayson, no longer a member of Parliament, still takes a friendly interest in the House of Commons, where he made such a stir. The House of Commons, he informed the gathering, is run by a small caucus based on family influence and wealth. And Mr. Grayson has come to the conclusion that the time is over for treating the House of Commons kindly. One might, he says, aa well read Scripture to a lazy cabhorse. And go, in the coming summer, unless the Government makes a move, Mr. Grayson is going to take the unemployed to the gates of the House of Commons. A. E. M.
! WOMEN'S TRAGIC QUARREL
WOMEN'S TRAGIC QUARREL Charged with wilfully murdering her mother- in-law, Mrs. Hannah Walker, with an axe, Fanny Watson, aged fifty-five, of Wood Green, has been committed for trial. The accused woman was further charged with attempting to commit suicide. The accused woman, counsel said, was the wife of Thomas John Watson, a. navvy. Just b^for* Christmas Mrs. Walker, the mother of the prisoner's husband, came to live with them, end'on March 4 last a. quarrel ensued in the kitchen between the pi'j&onvi* and tlio deceased vv'iman. which was resumed in the rooms of Mrs. Bird, a neighbour. Mrs. Bird turned the two women out, and a little later she heard coming from the flat above a cry, which was followed by shrieks of "Murder! A police- man was called, and on arriving found the > upper fiat locked. He called out to the cccu- j pants to unlock the d r. and- this was opened; to him. The deceased woman was found inside alone, covered with blocd. and she collapsed j into a chair, dying at the hospital later. The blood marks were traced down the back stairs f to an outhouse, where the prisoner was found with her throat cut. An axe marked with blood I was found in a cupboard. A medical witness said he considered that the fatal wounds had en inflicted with the axe. Dr. Pearman stated that the prisoner had arrived at an age when she was likely to be subject to depression and excitement, the latter coming on in sudden attacks, which at so critical a time often bordered on insanity.
I.. ! RECITED THE BURIAL SERVICE.
RECITED THE BURIAL SERVICE. The East Sussex coroner held an inquest- at Walstead, near Hayv. ard's-heath, on Saturday, on Edward Lambert, aged fifty- nine, of West Norwood, whose- body was found in a plunge bath near the mansion where he was employed by a London firm of decorators. The man's wife said he had injured one of her children for life when in a temper. For months he would never speak to her. On the day he left home for I the last time he re- j cited the Burial Service nearly all day. She had never had any happiness during the I twenty-nine years of married life. The coroner said that, if true, her story would gain her the sympathy of everybody. The jury returned a verdict of "Suicide whilst temporarily insane."
! KILLED BY FALLING CHIMNEY.
KILLED BY FALLING CHIMNEY. The West Surrey coroner held an inquest on the bodies of Alfred Mitchell, 49, of Woking, and William Thomas Cutler, 27, of Chobham, who were killed by a falling chimney-stack whilst engaged in pulling down the old St. Nicholas Home for Crippled Children at Byfleefc. Tne deceased men had ascended to the second storey to clear away debris, and while thus engaged were overwhelmed by the falling chimney, which crashed through the floor, carrying them into the room below. Mitchell died ten minutes after being extricated, and Cutler three hours later in the Wokiug Co-tqge Hospital. The jury found that there w:,s no one to blame, and returned a verdict of "Accidental death."
.-FORTUNE IN A FORGE.
FORTUNE IN A FORGE. An Athlone blacksmith named Patrick Reillv died in December, 1908, leaving assets valued at 23,000, and this estate was the sub- ject of an action in the Chancery Division, on Saturday, before the Master of the Rolls. It was stated that Reillv, who died a. bachelor at the age of over 70, lived alone in his forge, wlu're he kept a box in which was found .€853 10s. e-d. in cash and a bank deposit receipt for £ 1,806. dated December 8, 1889, the interest on this deposit having mounted up to £ 488 12s. Immediately before hie death Reilly made a will, but under its provisions disposed only f £ 170.
TRAGEDY IN A CAB. j
TRAGEDY IN A CAB. The mysterious death of an unknown man in a cab while driving from Newmarket to a village some miles distant is engaging the attention of the police. A young man, well dressed, went up to Herbert Dracket, a cab- man at Newmarket Station, late on Thurs- day night and inquired the charge for being driven to a village several miles away. Ten shillings was agreed upon, and the cabman drove along the country roads in the darkness until he reached his destination. Opening the carriage door, he saw his fare apparently asleep. He shook him, and was then horrified to find that the man was dying. He ran to get restoratives, but they had no effect, and after the man had groaned thrice, he died. An empty befeUe, withotit iafeel, itwe feussl in the cab.
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