Papurau Newydd Cymru
Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru
41 erthygl ar y dudalen hon
BEQUE818 TO THE IMViUl-BlTY…
BEQUE818 TO THE IMViUl- BlTY COLLEGE OF WALES. The iiiobn of Taenday night utatea thut the ht" Mr. I*. Jolli. Kytoii, M.P., hall left by his will JkXCtX> to fouid a soholarthip for a North Wtlea boy, tenable at the University College of Walea. Air. Henry }'amal1, "i lluili J¡,r..t. 11>011 left fur the Reuoral porpovea of tho college.
MR. MACOOWALD, 1.P., ONI THE…
MR. MACOOWALD, 1.P., ON I THE OOMPKNBATION FOR AODI. DKNT8 HILL. At the Trade* Union Conference, in Bristol, on 1 ne.d. vot.e of tb.k. v.d to ulr. A^xnnder Uaouooala, M.IV. for the uiAuner in "h Lo had advoOAt4)d the claims of the I < ti | > paation Bill. I" reply, III". S(*iM>ONAr,i> ..10 it afforded bim 1" to Ind that hi* lubours iu oo'iut<uu<ju j v., h cumii^usation for aooideuts had met with tlam approval. The matter wad one in whioh he itid tcit a very deep intorodt for m«uy "or", Sium 1857 ho had never hesitated by iiglit or by day iu atrmug to got an q,¡,rtllnlty to work upon the public for IUl aitcratiouof the vxieting Uw. His reasoas were iliit he tirroly behevod that it wot the duty of who got tU« profits of labour to a*amU:u tho that were uau»«d in the operations through winch they derived a bouetit. In the uext pUo ), l.c *ab of opiLion, and hsd ever boon, that in I "'1"lioll to the laxity or law tot O¡)dI 1' n.ti i, m I'" (portion was there a laxity in regard to Ibo "IIre tor human life and bi lolt oonvincel that wero there ft strong law providing tor cjoi* P- u^iion for rnk'umtuU and deat uiaki .4 t'-e owM ra rNpo""ibw where tlioy ought to bo TT^|K>TIHIV>1O one-half, nuy, ho might veuturo to !la1 one-third of the disasters occurring in mines, bd,Qr. "ork.bop., and -,I-.y. would "vt ° "u, (Ai^.laUHo ) Ho held that this law of 01'.1'.?,???,t?, n tho I." of Scotland up to 16:?7, and thin had beeti ai-crted by men of omineium, «u< u UH Mr, l<owe and Mr. Brett; and it had *i<o it* ei vat-crted that it had been the Isiv of l iugl tnd :tf< wtll ikv I tiint the who!o change that had utkun vutivwh* judge made law, and ho tt.t1irmed tuat the, was no form 01 law half 110 dangerous as tbt, law mud.) by judgee of the land. Their cluty w:i» to got the law altered to what it wan, [.ookii g lOt the va*t network of 1IIu:hiIJrI"Y, tLlEt ^a«t network of uiiut-d, the vast to obtaiu the productioua whioh m vio i ur country fauit tij, the time lud i-omy whou a t alututy check nhonld be put on the C4rolou4uu4a t Blasters. (ApplaunoJ They had been met MI.h a v«*ry formidable (¡jIp.itivu, 110" the 'h, day th it at a uieetiug of tho ShotrioM ?".ibr of CnmmNCI'. wi.ore t'le (JU^LKU •' ,1', with, Mr. Muudella, M P., haid ho ,<1 with these who thought that if thoy wore 1- carry Mr. theory Oll far as t,) t-.Ao the ouiployor r""oll.ibl. for every idcut that took pluoo tlivy oovld m«t carry on tho bu^inene of the country, .\1- Mnuddla had not ooriplaiued of boing iu«'or. r<.xtiy teporiod, and, thciotore, he auyp >sod that I! import was corrccf But Mr. Mundolla .1,111 have rfu.embored that tho businotin of N %am carried OUt and that c ountry was .ode groat while the IAW was ilt Tho iitrnunv and Belgium wore .ry nearly ¡ ;lr'I.I: .I\:o;bati:J wanted. For tho last two or th*oo )e&rA they had boon told tliut tlit- wild and inconsistent demands of tho forking t li^hoa would drive 1111' trade from the country, and tk at ospitalints would take their capital tc (.iormany W.U. the low 01 (idrtnauy y, -y m uuh what they wauled in I Kiigland. If lUt*y took their e.|)ital to lU'iKtuut tlio luw ".S muoh the aame, anil if they took It to tho law wa. as we d^Mired it. He wondered that one BO intelligent generally, eo well vcrncd a. bin hon. frieud the u?u,n?)or for t-hetiell .holl:<1 have ventured on a statement t kn that when France aud Gornanj were doin^ name thiug ail the time. (Appiauae.) But I y never oontd have tune to .1I."or all the 'uwl. that had be«u i Tho principle that ROTarnod him thrvu^h hfn w&a S, -t,.fy hi.. ,??i that hi. priticiplowaa n^ht, and, irredpeotive 1 Klaiulor or reproaeh, keop eteadily marching tw.rd; the :ol-uder «ouid fall behii?d, the »c| tofci h wonld (-It in the ditoh, and they would aovvoipluh their corpoee. (Applame.) Hjieakingot t:.o t" tk,. y the "y ""v..td the bou. iiieuibxr .aid ho tlniuglit they bad tn^u mi^fuided. ?i?,-ke i..11 h. aud fajtldulueaa. They < erlauily proeented their b,?,, &. he no. i hey we.% into the Hotuu of l>jra<i fr a Ilùl ftheir own rvi luuvaly. Aft.r b*ving been <>ut*uic uf Parliament for over Jj yeara, aud in. • iilc of rarliiun.ut fvr four ye*r» Iryio),- to get meaenrea \>('0,1. he would lay to the. there ahould l-o 1:0 divi„ion iu the rallk. of labour. (Applause ) '1> railway ser.auta would fritttr away thru ei at UI.telloo. Hud if they agitated lrmu LOW to io end of the proaent oeutury f-ir & Hailway Servant! Kill they would never lce4 II, I" had not the »treii({th nn4 the I.k?,, ,f the I:t Wdy of the working 1&4- "I"'(.r had ud.d them to lk. uu th," "08ihoD he coulj nú "y, but bo would advia. tlieui to t4t%t,,luu it, Let their aeti ). I iheu voioo be orn, .cd there wai very little diiR. • iilty about the Ui.tU'r, If they were to have a l1i.H\luth\u. lhø)" ivuld extract promieet from ndiciatm to •up^rt a Hill "hi"b would meet want* of the wiTkiv.g claeso. of the ountty. I., hOI..d Iba& in the ,t .U of tho next L,,iatutnt thoy woui.l a?l be f juud ti<htiu* ► I ouldrr to ahoulder aud h,tiitt to baud, demanding > > the law ahould lv altero 1 in acoordanoe with > I rin.'iplM of hi! Kill. The Atiorn«y.iiener.d t ■•v-invl the tioTcrnment to bring in a Hill, and J-»i I'lettge had ,?t been rod.d. Ho did uot I. the Attorney vteneral Ho uot at { 'n*rty t,? -y ,ht tie Attorney.! >ner,il h.1 ."¡d 1" aim mort. than one*, but b" woul?i ?y that the »»niiij willini p eee lay el»ewh»rv. aud not I!, him. 11- b.1 t 6 Ad,.ft,,t u: de two, or throe BilU. Nearly I tKtO i»>-v 11'1' preMnted laat year in favour t«< I,a«ur»—let tb". have I\I_ thu '1 I ilet the. haw i'.i.i i r", lwti, ?, t" "1 wp,l"h"i'. froai every r?4il?ir?y {. yto., ..d (¡om eery factory. I.et tll". t. -hem from agricultural liabourore, for Ih', T'r'" "11<> d..& 1.9 thwa have on. »i .■ Jo"u t. to the rem.t parte 'f u •ii .» d, emanding th.t the workman ahould e .on, r..JIt"I the employer, l^t them ¡III I rr" .11" h" b<,lw"<1 that, tb,mgh lb. m«Jm,o w^lo1,'w",1 •ion ? chimerical and friviv luu» i>< '0'" (h,. '1. f th. "orkiu'I>e-JI'¡ Weniil worafug ,»ople Mr Hvn vV V 11 to be.  .1"11,. ""I"1l 1, f he hd b-. oor"I, b ¡ ,t,r-,i lir.Ath,, OIOtluU. ut kltC'C' tl'ID.- d.I,'n"¡'rll\ wu w,thdrallt'1l..
??'?? CHARGE OF ??IM?b.Ls…
??'?? CHARGE OF ??IM?b.Ls hUBBKRjR? A" H"? 'AiITišT Ac..T";l> t'F I I K KlNl, PiH'K VM'd   .1 ie' b<- M Mt?t of ,o? r?S .?  ? ?"? ?' '?< '-?? :'j 'Wt .t; ijt. M??w.??'?'?'?'??n? --vrr ??.?'?".?' "?d. r 'M" It" waN 1.lwit. 01 U. '?L. ?'h..??. ''?? ??* ? ?"*< vn*4.»tt«r l* uri -ertaken. the '<? ?'mat? bM ComoMT b* w? .<. ?''?""? "-?t?T? cnarw 1 v htv custody on ?. lev?i'^L?TUlW na 'U-, r i r^>' «> ti". W-t t. h.. -PnKn* k i»!k• proMeoutm's P^k«t ?? "?\???' -??? "d t!lt'  P?-?"'t;. m.-n.t? by 'l■e'w.TUtdool n i VT .1p /•»««"» «>l>*>y Mr >»• •or.k.p £ .+ 'e a.'ublil.¡t1 ,f.: Lr. !,t:. 'aib, f1l'j I,  'v; 'h'1 ?"?'' had IHVU ly .'):r" V? )"'t.nt t?ktt, ujtM'M the tiAi.tr !tt?' ?. u U.?,???? jrfwed.
(tte<;tKt.t)Tt:L)!<.ttAMa.)…
(tte<;tKt.t)Tt:L)!<.ttAMa.) I THE YLLLOW ftVLli El'IDEMlC I liN AMEK1UA. New P¡:J.EM;5, H¡;¡'T. 10.—There were ^7 li'ntii# tr'iin >»-ll'W ievtr iu thi» c.ty JfJlj. tortisy, ami 11- tt Ale:nj>bir«. A»lii>io: l-Kl'T., In.—Tho 8«crot«iry for War )'. mid II) haTo d^-lnrn<i that ttia iinani in II:IJ di'ipwul oi ttit) (loVMrnmunt for rtillHilJjf the <Jihtr«es in ti,o tioutb are nor aiiinnt Ilit: UMTKLI K'I'ATES ELfcUTIONS. I o jfi.TI.iiio mid tfce ptiucipal .jlltto urtioes in lüilJe wili jirni'alily be twcitro l hy the Re. jiub:ii'Hli thiidula'cvt. Tlio Di'iiricratie party I" ¡""illl( hpavily, while a ,.()rrt"l"'Dd,ug 1('" n it! \Jf'I".ntod by tIJ" U:I,'k 1.¡Ollr I'IOI'\Y. 'I'Ith "Ium", althongh at prHMut iul-oniploo, iudiraio tbo of three Uupublivtas, oi.u IVmrjrrtttie Or«*nb(iek cHBdidato, and OLD GroeuljRi k Labour caii'iidito as repre- ftltatives of the titat-i in C,)iigraim. THE I)I,T('H EA,il' INDIAN I i'« ibfSI3bSlL»Nrt. iris 1IAC.IK, SKrT. f.Tne (Joloainl MiumtiT tu-iln) pr»i.<>uTod Llio Kaet ladiaa liudgat for bjV. litel eiiuwa it doficioney of Ift ii,il"i,pit (-au,;e(i by tlio oxpoaaoi of ft.,) war in A "I ei-ii aud tho oxpenditure for the of new railways. The Minister proposed to cover the doiifit tempo. rarily by advaijc" ironi ttio Treasury to the Itdmu tiuanro d-pirtment, and ultimately by R loan. Tho t'X|x>nBo attending the occupa- tion of Acbet-n i.-i estimatod at nine milliou lloriuB. Tho Milliliter oetimatee the coffee crop at 82 \)I,of) jni ula, at the price of 48 cents. 1101' haa k-iloKrauiiue. JAPAN. I YOKOHAMA, AVUU.1T It) (ria SAN FSAN. CItKO) Vn-e-Adniiral TaJkeaki (Juouioto, lutborto Japanese M'uistor at the Court of bt. l'utorsburx, is now uu hie return from that "ity to take office in Japan. Tne Tosa troubled hayo been settled. There has been otcio viotibg at TakaaUima among the colliers 011 the question ot wages, but thediaturbancee wore not of a serious kind. The proceeds of tho internal loan are being expended on rail. wityw, nnni<n, and harbours, including a new wharf for this city. It is ccnaidmd probable that a new foreign gold liui will be issued. The draft of a new law for the regulation and control of the opium t"We bu boon publ6hod, Meordinff to which opium may Duly be bought from and sold liy licensed druggists. A system of de- tailed halt-yearly reports by the native chamber of commerce has been Instituted at Takitt. So'iie damage has been done by flood, and locusts. The crop prospects, however, are generally fair. Foruigu importa are duU, L'i t t here iki a tair butdneus iu tea and silk 1 lie prices for foreign exchange are low and still falling. Government paper is at a dis- count of 8 per cent. NARROW ESCAPE FROM DROWN. ING IN THE WYE, NKAB MONMOUTH. On oaturday evening Mr. Bright, one of the proprietors of the Deau Forost (JuarUta* new*, paper, had a narrow IIMoape from drowning while ei gagod ith party of frieuds in a tishing outilir. It appears that Mr. Bright's Li tie became luWLgltd in a bush, aud, on endeavouring to re* lease it, the unfortunate gentleman overbalanced hiuisel', and fell or slippod into the river, from which bit escaped only by groat exertion, and in an exluoU8WK1 oonoition.
TIIE FATAL FIKE IN BIR-I illKUHAM,
TIIE FATAL FIKE IN BIR- I illKUHAM, 1UE OCCUPIER OF THE PREMISES CUAUUEU WITH MUHUEK. SURRENDER OK THE ACCUSED. Joseph Deumson, for whose apprehension a warrant »»« lacued "1.r,,iuK him .11 tho munler of bis wife and child, hi. wile's eister, and a scrvant, by wilfully setting fire to his premisea in Ueigbett, Birmingham, on the 26th ult., BUT. rendered on Tuesday morning to the polioe. Tho iu-juest wiU be hold to-day tNTedneWay).
THE NIHILIST MOVEMENTI IN…
THE NIHILIST MOVEMENT I IN RUSSIA. A writer ic^MayJaxr saysI find im oertaia quarters a disposition to ridicule the Nihilists, una to fpeak Hiigh iugly of their power and Dum. btrs. &uoh critics know very little of linssiau life. How can thoy overlook the fact that darir.g the laut five years more than 1,5i) NihilistA have betn publicly exilcd to Siberia, besides innumer. aM e others whose transportation has been kept d* crot by the pu;ico: 1 personally happen to ow that at uu perio(I of 1. I" uw that at no period of KuBtdun history have ticrtt aocioticH possobHod 0° great a powor and so tirm a deU rmination t. UBO it t the present ,et<'L\;aoek U.oi: ft i: f::j:; Politicians at Monoow ?.d. tho r??.,k at a dii.Ltr that" the Czar was sitting on a volcano with his hand upon tho safety valvo; and he grtat4r feared that unless tho pressure from ttboye was removed Nature would have her course. >\hiohbe added, nguillcantly. "would not so much .ffoot the volcano au thu man sitting oa the top cf it 1" A t?.l?gram to the M-.ig Patf MyB that a hundred fctudents tuepecUHiof Nihilism have been attested and expelled from tbo uniroraiticg of St. 1'etermburg and K)fff. On the same authority we ure told that mounted COHück., acting as a ninforceuient to the police, are ujw patrolling tho atreets of St. Peteraburg.
-THE EMPREKS OF RUSSIA.
THE EMPREKS OF RUSSIA. According to JI(II¡fair, aiaco (ieneral Mezenteoff wan assassinated the Empress of Kusaia has become more asoetio than ever. For years she has been a sort of Imperial recluse, withdrawing herself from the wilu exoossea at the Winter 1'aUco, IWd spending her time k..Ii.g before the ascrod images in her private ch.pol, or dei.i.g measures with h.r friends for extending the Wworof the Hunian Church. Always at 'nrj. ance with ber husband, who ia bored by her rml for a religion which he oarm very little for eioept as a prop to his power, the Empress still retaina enough of Iwr old love to (oul anxious for his safety, and if candles, ponanoe, fasts, and prayers could inasre a man's life from the dagger, the Emperor's person would be invulnerable.
FACTION FIGHTS IN LIVERPOOL,
FACTION FIGHTS IN LIVERPOOL, Three more 1""8" who took part in the reoent I,i.h f?tion Hghta in Linrpool were severely dealt with by the tipendi,ry magistrate on Tues- d.y. One of the ringle*dera was "at to caol for nine months, another for tin month8, and a third for four uioaths.
MR. GEORGII LEEMAN, MP,
MR. GEORGII LEEMAN, MP, The" Pross Association" is authorised to state that thsre is not the slightest foundation for the report that Mr. George Leeman, M. P. for ^ork, has become bankrupt. The baseless nature of the statement will appear in the oourse of judicial proceedings already commenced,
.- -_,- _-_- -.. -THE NATIONAL…
THE NATIONAL INCOME AND EXPENDITURE. 1 M r.xonequer .tam. from Ap,¡l 1 to Septem- br 7 .huw r<ceipt< to h?e bw 441 4,16 o't' ?huttthtt'?pondtture amounted t el6,tI ?h«b<?????)ce?)aro?:.?77,t)?t. 1. the 0OPrespood. I ft \:C:i17 :¡pnwr: :1:t and Mi«iiditure4y."i,01>7l2 the blc?? beiug I .t1:7,
! SIR STAFFORD NOKTHCOTK.…
SIR STAFFORD NOKTHCOTK. I Stafford Northeote, Chanoellor of the EI. che*iuor, will next month visit the Midland Counties under the auspioes of various looal ConAervatiro utf.)CJiatiuu.. Fur a Conservative gatuering to bp held III Birmingham on the Itith and on the 21st ol that mouth, he will arrive in that district on the ISth when h will be the guest of Lord Norton, at Hams U. will attend similar mmtings at Wolverhampton on the iJnd, and at L'udlov "11 ¡he ol that uloll\h. l'uri!!« that tiico ho will be the gutst of the Karl ol Dartmouth, at Pauhall
SUDDEN DEATH UK A WJiSIiEYANI…
SUDDEN DEATH UK A WJiSIiEYAN I MIMbTKB AT VUNTYPRIOl). (In Monday night the Rev Joeeph Ambrose llfmswortb, the reoentl".ppoiuted euperintea* dent tf the Wesleyan district or which Pontypridd ie the centre, diod at W.ùeJ House, ch". >tract, with ."reù suddenness, thNUjfh the bant.. inl 01 a blood vessel in the lungs. The rev. ticrtlemsji had >uflervd In1!D whooping-cough which resulted in a feven" attack of brooobiue. lie WM in intense pain all day on ldonday, and lir. Leckie, who 10811 called 111, administered three gnuna of iaDha ae an emetic, and it was wkul. this was taking effect that the blood resse. hortt. Mr. Hemsworth died instantly, io the presence ot the ID8CÜO&1U11U1 The d, wbo was years ol age. was a native of Morley, naar Leeds He oame to Foaiypri*id from rentre, KhoiKkla YaU. when be had been rvaident I minister during the last 1J mouths.
! KICKING A WOMAN TO DEATH…
KICKING A WOMAN TO DEATH AT I LKKltS At It poiioe-oour; on Tuesday John B>we, a labourer, was temanded on a charge of kuliag Koee "'&O<I"iDeu b,lnckUlC her when he called t I ?, h, f?, m
Advertising
j Z Sw*tuvti's Bair LMiIII- IX' m ce'l«<rU0r. of hoes ilaU. Mwsrt I )'_w. 88d è",ia..I.n-o>; i 4 rlwu, CuK CacSpatpwi. c«7«nd ?wtt?iKo ?, ?.?, wif for .i-r I i i.,oJ.I1>' Cc*- ?"?.Pfti?. Lco?o?.-tt thtke-ttMt?  ?*?' s R??'h——t is fitted wi ?y ??. ? ??'' ? K't-<?Nn<. sUuoob, 'tv.U it ~u- IWlt T,??'?"? "?'-Jotm U«h'. MW I 1.d.v& I'('I. 1\ '1. t.r 61- J..It.. HMÙ1" I K-l1I V.Wr.a &Ik1 bua. aam. PH' OQ ¡ t <RS? '??'?S?y<tS?S? 1
THE EArrE RN I QUESTION.
THE EArrE RN I QUESTION. THE OCCUPATION OK BJ8NIA AND HEUZkGOVINA. I REPULSE OF (iEN LLIAL ZACII. I FOUIi HLNDKElJ AUsTitlANS I WO UNO Eli. I b. Daily TeUyraph correspondent at Vienna, wnlwg OL jkiomUy night, .Y' (irave iiiwili. genoe r.cht>(1 VltlD. Co d) Iro81 tbo arm1 of occupation. General Z^cii WM defeated ye«U»r- 0&' .t bih- and furcwi ."t,- ou /aval^e, .ft.r sustaining ",r, heavy i- Th. "r w 1.11 kw-k tl ..Iy ai U.r.eo'e?.?tn the afternoon, "bû" Wilro twelve as %say a* 4M wounded had boen brought ia, Ta" tist oom- prices several othoers ot nigti rank aud a large number of captains am; ILeULo-II.Otoi. )"1'" Pappenhetm t^le^raphn fr"1JI !La" toat shortly alter Irebinje hao been oouupied by tne Austrian troops half a ba'.taliou belonging to the 71th >oet, which had been left belaud tj irnard the irebinjeioa Bridge, was aitaofcod by tiie enemy. Coiouel L< Ilk, ol the nrulU-ry, wi.ioh had just airivfHJ, openeii tire agaiu^t the .11. ants. Ihe tight Laalea an boa., a-I ended 111 the repulse of tne ill.u,"ulo. Oinural oaineiz "I" pears to havo ob au r«i a ¡"ial IU.t Ktjuo on kridy 1-t. i.g t, lutturgeuta W rebr«a( behind Uw ruer ban a. Ncveriheltsi, b" faiiji "> capture the lortrtss or o"i.. which oommand-* the fetrovatt-road, and was thus RIUCoOI" w orenpy the tnitsa valle>. I h. othoial report-says that tbe trooV8 were thoroughly eiuausted by th day euoountar that b.turdy bd t9 im cevoted to rest. Another skirmish iS anuounoel b th 't' t Z,?., l?.g tk?. pl&o, b[t,,?u li? Pgulog ?d Livao. Tue t&== are said to have !oreed. moantain datue on the roao without serions loss. The oommander of the 36th Austrian division ainounoes from BaLja.uka, on tho l'th mm., that on the previous day the enemy's right flank at Kline was antroubded, aud that, nawith.taa&ug then Ituboom resilience, the insurgents *are compelled to ret?t at Jl points. b. A..ti.. !:ir: ridge, auimounted by a oit&dul, ..Mob tb"lnur. gents w,? re eump, Ued to surrender. The oitadel was therelota ocoupied by the Austrians, the insurgents retrbating pretupitatcly in all direc- tions. The neighbourhoodot Klineisnowentirely cleared of the insurgents. The Austrian losses in this affair were tiO men killed and wounded. A skirmish occurred on the 8th inst at Ljeskorio, between a Jagor outpott and about tiOO insur- gents, the latter bring forced to retreat. In the afternoon of the same day there was a skirmish between the insurgents and a Hungarian lAnd. wehr detachment at Prositenikamen. It is an. nounced, from Doboi, that in an engagement on the 5th inst., the in.urgeul.8 lost over tiOO men. C,0C0 insurgents areeneampec* between Han Karen- ovacandQraeanios, in the neighbourhood of tianja- lukil The disarmament of the inhabitants oon- tinuss. The Austrians have oooupied domskemost without opposition. The Turkish garrison of Trebinje has embitkod at Oravosa, and thatot Gacko will take ship at Metkovich. THE ASSASSINATION OF MEHEMET ALI. Later particulars received at Constutinopls on Tuesday, correcting the first acoonnts, state that the members of Mebemet Ali Pasha's suite were not assassinated with him. A part of the troops defended Mehemet AU Pasba, and in the fight which ooourred between them and the insurgents, 400 were killed on both sides. On the evening preceding hi. death Mehomet Ali P"ha wie. graphed to Constantinople that he samandod asd oonld not escape. The 'limn correspondent at Vienna, writing on Sept. 0, saysThe murder of Mehemet Ali in Albania tends to increue the inquietude of men's mind@, and olls fr severe polioe measures. V:: motive* aru:¡:d r., th, tion of Mehemet Ali, one oonnecting it with a private grudge dating from the time he com- maDded in Albania another attribti- it to the fact of his not having oppooed the oou c a wi.h reference to the Austrian occupation. MONTENEGRO. the Daily ielegraph correspondent at Paris, under date Sept. II, says :—Aooording to a oor- recpondeLoe addressed to the Kussian joaruai the New iime, and bearing tho date August 2U, the Austrian military agent is inciting the Monte. negrins to recommence military operations with the object ot taking forcible possession of the territory given to the Principality by the Treaty of ilerlin, and which the Mussulman populations are unwilling to give up, This course has beon adopted to create a diversion favourable to Austrian action in Bosnia by occupying a rart of the (OIoee 01 the Albanian League. SERVIA AND THE PORT E. A Ttwus talmmm of September 9 announces that tMther dMtMtMmoM "ve omurred between th.SeniaD8 and Mahomedan &rnauto in the neigh- bourhood of Kurahumla, but witba?t any serious r«nit. 2'-ki-h to?ve OOD\ÍDU to arnnfro8 Halonioa, oonoentrating at Mitrovitsa and ifovi Baaar, where 60,000 regulars and insurgents are encamped. The oonsoription for the Servian militia in the the newly annexed province is concluded, and 00 men of all classes hare now been added to tho Servian rmy. ITALIAN RELATIONS WITH AUSTRIA. ine i irne* correspondent at come, under date September V, write4 News h&G been reeeived from the Koiuagna, whtre some excesses on behalf of the Itaita irredenta movement were ex- pected, that Garibaldi has aavised his friends to suspend until next spring all further agitation on the subjeot. CRETE AND THE PORTE. Ahmea aiukhtar rrftoha, on his amval in Crete, invited the Cretan National Assembly to send representatives to Constantinople to enter into preliminary negotiations with the Porte. The Assembly aooepted this proposal. The President of the Creek Council of titate returned to Athens on the 7th inst.
IFATAL BOAT ACCIDENT IN I…
FATAL BOAT ACCIDENT IN THE NORTH SEA. LOSS OF FOUR LIVES. InteUillDee reached Bull on -1??%ii;y that on the previoos night oobl. had 0&p81zed near H es, and that four li,.s hd been ,o. Un Monday ldr. Suddaby. iL oorn merohant at Hull, with some friends, engaged the ooble to take them to Bridlington Hay. On their return they met with a Hull yaoht, and wh,lst they were en. gaged in taking 10m. tobacoo from theyMht the coble 6&paize(? and its nine ooouptmn were ü:ew:.thean:.t n;:ur7 them drowned, the others being rescued by the ywht. The body of Mrs. Suddaby ? w"W ashore, but none of the others have been recovered.
SHAMEFUL CABE OF CRUELTY TO…
SHAMEFUL CABE OF CRUELTY TO A H(JHSE NEAR TREDBG? JUNCTION. A shocking case of cruelty to a brown man was discovered on Saturday near Tredegar Junction. A man employed by a Monmouthshire horse- slaughterer purchased two old hones from a jobber at Caerphilly, and proceeded to walk them to Pont- ypool. One of the animals, a brown mare, had her fetlock out of jomt before starting from 0. philly. On reaching Tredegar Juration it was noticed that one of the oWn boned waa broken, the beast at the tiuo being in a fearfally exhausted condition. Police-sergeant Hale's attention waa called to the eircumstanoo, and on prooeeding to the *i>ot he at onoe had the mare killed.
SHOCKINU ACCIDENT AT NEW-CAbTLE-ON-TINK.
SHOCKINU ACCIDENT AT NEW- CAbTLE-ON-TINK. THEEE CHILDBEN BUBIED ALIVE. On Tuesday afternoon, while three girls, named Kose Ann Eee, Ann White, and Alioe Hind, b. tween threo and five years of age, were playing near some ooke oveus at gootswood-on- Tyne, about which some excavations had been qoing on, a portion of the brickwork gave way, and the ahUdren wan buned beneath it. liefors they ,ould be got out, tho little ones ;are dead, althnugh immediate assistance was rendered.
GRAYS 8CANDAL AT EXETER.
GRAYS 8CANDAL AT EXETER. k toter Within the p"t few da,l, h" bMII ex. ceedingly scamdalised by a rumour, freely and =.Ii'h' 'r'i.f, moat serious character possible the moral reputation of a gentleman of high standing iu the legal profes- aiun. SMing that the person aooased filled one of the highest offices in L-on-ubire, that he enjoyed the penonal friendship and profeesienal confl. denee of many nablemsn. aad above all he .&a very prominent Churchman, it need soaroely be stated that the reimrt startled all whom it reached. A warrant has been issued okarging the individual with the commission of a otime too heinous to mention, but whioh the law diati/iguiehec by the term do. t"t.bl., .d -.y W rea?gnied by all..i.a :I d B..Itn .d?:ta: ThM has been endorsed by a city justioe at the instancs of Captain Best, the chief oonstable, with further a cessation, or rather weasatiow of nffwinna of tbe same nikture alleged to have bean perpetrated witiiiD the city bounds. Neither warrant had, up to the time of writing, been put io exeoutiou for the simple reason that the ao- ruMd -t be found. OLptin But be1inø him to be *Wl i- the city La _t, pd but a very ?'? '?Xn*?** ?' '?' *?' prebaaaioB is tgw Ths utmmt oldt4amt trevatla in F-I for; in fut. owdm has tUre been nown -bigh hM maM ko?Wy ondd all .-Iu of the __uit,. Tbe .atnme Bihllli8t1 Mt do?pty )f?*d. M th< ttnt?mtn in questim was dO-LO 0o7 f Zt"-Z 't d,.t.C Md W b. Mp?ttOty a?Ued upn to pnw. at t?tM ao~Phm-th if?.r?.
I WELSH AMERICAN INTSLLIOBNCE.
I WELSH AMERICAN INTSLLIOBNCE. Walsh Amsatoau aawapapate. jaat 110 kaad. ooo tain the felloo (amaagat other) items ofrntel- li^tti'o —At Saint Louia aad the adiaoamt districts a Cambrian aocdety has bean started.— IlMr baa btea raduoad to S casta, per giaaaat Cmcianati; \he prioe of -kisk 18 ow about to be vd??.&-As bmtk CMoLtt ad" oSeen made a raid upon the i- of all iDoopl ?'Ut! the 08' abt at the n<Eeert. 'bMd m)1I" \bnt. 0". ,f tMu .,? .1., fired back, and killed bJID. The oflieara have all been taken into roavxJy 03 tiie charse of wilful murder-Twenty-five i'a¡»8ta were killed last month by hurricane at Wallingfodi, Wca. ¡ 150,000 doU. worth of property waa destroyed.
THE I HAIlEs DISASTER, i
THE I HAIlEs DISASTER, i LATEST PARTIC tRs. I OFFICIAL INQUIRY OUDCRED. I A RELATIVE OF SIR GEORGE NARES, H.N.. AMONG THE DROWNED. LETTER TO THE PRINCE OF I WALES. ) Up to six o'clock on Tuesday the telegrams received respecting the terrible collision on the Thames between the Hy well Cuetie aid the Pricceas Alice saloon steamer contained little thitt ocan be added to what isslrmdy known. The after part of the wrecked steamer was beaohed at two o'clock on Tuesday morning, and thoae engaged in FIBBING FOR Tn. DIAD I rcr>overea three bodira from the after cabin. A I corpse, that of a woman. was also picked up. n.ile above the soene of the disaster; and. it ap. pears thatsmcng t(ie human jetsam and lotsam brought aehore at Woolwich recently were the reuiaina cf M r. Sophia Narea, a relative of Captain Sir George Narea, B.N. (of Aretio exploration fume), betide* several richly dressed ladies 11 ia also stated that the officer in medical charge of Woolwich Dockyard has made urgent repre. mentations that, for the sake of the health of those employed at the yard, the 86 unidentified bodie" thould be buried without delay. THR OFFICIAL INQUIST. I The rreat Aaaooiatioa •' is requested by the Board of Trade to publish the following :-The 1 ffioial wreck inquiry, under the provisions of the Merobant Shipping Act, ill the case of the collinon between the Frinoaaa Alioe and the ByweU Castle, will be held at the Board of Trade Court, at Poplar, before Mr. Balguy, the atipendiary magistrate, and two nautical assessors, on Tueeday, the 14th inst at 12 o'olock. Mr. Balguy, who has had preet e-iperienoe in these investigations, wiU take the inquiry, ia the abeenoe ot the Wreak Com. miasioner, Mr. Buthery, whose racial dttiea have, for the laat few months, been vary onerous, and who it taking a short vaoation on the Con. tinent. It has been impossible to fix an earlier date for the inquiry, owing to the mais jf evi. deuce to be collected in order to seoure a thorough and complete isveetigation. I A BAD INCIDENT, The latest estimate of the total loss of life ia CCO. A empotitor, named Alfred B-- 23 Md his unmamed mter, were, on TaMdty? passengers by the London Steamboat Oomiutny's steamer Cupid, on their way to identify their mother and two sisters, reported to have been drowned in the Prinoese Alioe, when Alfred Barnes fell into the engine, and was Instantly killed, NAVIGATION or Taa THAKIS. Lord Sandon has written to the Lord Mayor expressing his intention to at onoa appoiat an official committee to take into consideration the rules now in force with respect to navigation on the Thames, and to report whether any, and, if any, what further regulations are necessary with a view to prevent collisions, aad for regulating the traffio. The committee will not assemble before the conclusion of the Board of Trade inquiry. TH* INQTJMT. xne inquest waa resumed on Tuesday morning, at the Town-hall, before Mr. Cart tar. The Coco. net. before taking evidenoe, withed to say that they were anxicua to arrive, aa far as possible, at the actual number of peraona who were eurvivors. If everyone who was saved would come forward and drop their sham delioaoy it would greatly facilitate matters. Further evidenoe of identification was then given. Beuben Hawkes, Rhodes Wharf, Woolwich, identified the wearing apparel aad jewellery taken from a body which was buried on Monday. The body was that of Eugenie Hawkes, wife of Mr. John Hawkes, a lioenaed viotualler. Jaaua Arthur Codling, 4, Margaret-terraoe. Brook green, Hammersmith, identified his brother, William Alfred Codling, aged 19. Witness identified the body when it was about being taken to the Woolwioh Cemetery aa DII. identified. Edward Leaver, 20, High-stroet, Lambeth, mast maker, identified hit daughter, Knth Elizabeth, aged 18. Witness lost two sons &ad a daughter, all of whom have now been identified. Jane Ellen Williams, wife of James Williams, 18, Weet-road, Westham, identified Margaret Belton, aged 30, her husband, James Keid Belton, and Beatrice Belton, aged three. Thomas Thomas, East Dulwioh, surgeon, identi. fied the wearing apparel of Sophie Narea, ot East Dulwich, who was buried on Mohda, II not known. The husband of deoeased, who was on board, was aaved. George Prosser Rows, Orosveuor-road, Kings- land, identified hid sister, Keneiah Amelia, aged JII, the daughter of Goorle fiowe, of the aame address. The mother was missing. William Bird, 1W, Huntley-street, Tottenham, oonrt-road, tinplate-worker, identified his wife, Elisabeth, aged 40. Witaeaa waa aaved. George Hunt, 2S, SL Mark,s.vill"@ Kingnland, offioe fitter, identified Elixa Annie Hunt, aged 13 ysara, his daughter. He had two other daughters missing, one aged ten and the otber five years. Henry Pleeted, 9, Ada-road, Camberwtll, plxiner identified his sister, Alice Waliis, aged 40, a widow' She went down with two friends, both of whom were drowned. Henry Douglas, piermaster at Wentminster, identified Robert Frost, aged 48, an extra pier- man in the employ of the Thames Conservancy. Henry James King, ohairmakor, 13, Thoydoa. road, Victoria-park, identified his daughter, Rosins Bebecoa, aged one year. His wife waa drowned, and witness, who was on board, waa saved. Oliver Charles Somman, 7, Morningtou-road, New-oroaa, sea. going engineer, identified Plorenoe Annie Sommera, his daughter, aged five yeara. Another ohild, twel-0 months old, was missing. Fin wore lost out of a party otaii, Hia brother- D,laW waa aaved. Hugh Millharn, Clyde Wharf, Viotoria Dock, BUR" baker. identified his daugher, Margaret, aged 17. Witneea loat his two daughters, both of whom had now been found. Wm. Collins, 32, Veiuhur-street, Gray's.inn. road, identified his mother-in-law, Klixabeth Sewell, of the same addresi. Deceased was one of Miaa Law's party. Boee Feuillade, bII, AMerman-etraet, Pancras- road. identified her mother, Emma Ball, aged áIl, wife of Alfred Frederick Willarn Ball, oarpenter, 18. Brighton-street, Kiag's-cross. Deoeased was on board alone, it being her practioe to remain oa the vessel and return with it without landing. JohnHili, 88. Manor-road, New-aross, banker's olerk, identified Charles Jardine, 6:1, Manor-road, New-croas, commission agent. Witness was on board with deoeased, and was saved. The Eev. Adam Clarke Bowley, Southerton Vicarage, Lincolnshire, identified his nephew, Walter Whitlocke Bowley, aged 12, eon of the Bev. Walter Bowley, 7, Ebenexw-temoe, Plum- stead-oommon, vioar designate of St. John' Flumstead. Deoeased was on board with his father and tiiter. The father only was savsd, and his daughter had bosn recovered. Walter Campbell, 72, Richmond-road, Dalatoa. warehouseman, identified hi8 sister, Emma Camp- bell, -end 211, 52, Speaeer-roed, South Horasey. He aim Identified the clothes of his mother, Hannah Lonnalds, aged 63, who was buried oa Monday aa unknown. He wished to express his thanks to the polioe authorities for the facilities they had offered him. Henry Knill Avail, Kington Villa, Bye-hill, Peckham, identified Joseph Greenwood, aged 30, builder's elark t Walter Greenwood, at Hull, a brother of deoeaeed, was 011 beard and was saved, but his brother, wile. and child were laat. I TUEbDAY NIGHT'S NEWri. Telegraphing boa Woohriclaat 10.45 last night, a correspondent mya:-The bodiea ot In ad and two babiea have beon brought up from the wreck this evening, whioh is so coated inside with mud t1 at the persons who have bees ia the lower saloon have not yet been able to make a thorough examination of tha cabina. A coot ding to the la teat retnrna of the CIOrQ88". officer, this makse a total of b04 bodiea whieh have been brought aabcte. The body 01 Mr. Tewaa'a aai aaiit has been jdeatifiod at Barking faMky. Up tUt two p.m. then remained Pt bodies is the dockyard, 33 of whioh were unidwitiflsd, An imperative order haa been issued for the burial ot all bodies not taken away by their friends to-morrow, The surveyor of the board ot hsaith has inst ordered another ton of diainfectanta for the dockyard, making altogether three ton. tued aicce the dead were nrst brought in. About £30. day hae also been epent for the payment of labourers engaged in conveying bodies from tha river aahors, aad in he performance of tho necessary offioss over the dead. Luring the e>. ning the whole of the town has again been in a great etate of excitement. Ihe Woolwich Local Bosrl of Health, at their meeting to-night, voted e3A) for the present eipenaea of interring the bodies found in the Pru cesi Al ee. THE MANSION UOUSK FCXD. I Pending the ultimate distribution of tho abovo I fund, which Ii". amoULts too",r £6,(;1, Mr. I ""lIlob,. the secretary, yeeterday authorised the Hon. ctd Hev. Adel;,<-rt Anson, the Kmtor of Woolwich, IIIr Tailor, the chairman of the Local hoard of li, alth, and the Bev. A. Styleman Her. ring, to disburse, on the put of the Mansion House Con mittee, ."7 «uma wl.i-h rai^ht bo needed to nioet c-, of temporary and imm,,01¡a.te want and (Ji.trHl., 8(¡ that actual ini.ery might be spwdily ^.revenUd. 11m tianaion Houm- autboritie. have ii-tcfa a form of application eliciting information from claimants as to tbe circam- afanoe. ia which they are l.ft. and in till. a satisfactory disiril-ution of thti fund, aooordiog to tbe psrticuiar exigcnciei) of toIoCU CAM, will 0" arrived at DONATION t BOM TUB <jrEKN. I Ti e frllo»i»B l«f r was received OD Tuesday I morning at the Mansion Honse — ({111m PaJ-. S»ptember In, 137, General Sir T. Biddulph is oommautiad to forward to the treasurer tbe enclosed oheque for It'O g1ifleu. aa a oor,:ri0uv.ou 1rorn hfr M ,j""J the Quern to the fund for ibe sufferers by the loas of the Princess Alioe." AmoLg t1H) other o.i.tributiona roctivi-d on Tu?-d?v ""r_fr<>m Sir Ri?h.rd WaUace, A:Joo the IN. v. IR. t!loo th,, 1),, ,f I.c, do, and from tho nffi?rr oni mn of tba I ot Bstslion of the Rifle lirigade, stationed at WcdwJoh, wtCO. TUB rrNKKAI. Oy TU. UNTDZNTIFIVII. I A correspondent, writes to the Daily Ntirt The scene wljuh took plaoe at Woolwica on Mon- day is happily without a precedent in the annals of London. For a parallel it in ncceaeutry to go down irto the miDingdibtricte, whore occtwi rnally a hundred bodies are interred at one solemn funeral. As far aa numbers go. the number buried on Monday was but small in proportion w thoae which are interred upon the occasion of colliery aooidests; bnt the 13 committed to the grave were but the yiBST 0 LEAN IN US Or THI RASTERT, I ard it is probable thai 'he 50 gravea already dag :iJ1 c';d taqt;¡:i::¡:n::&hd to be depoeited th?ro. The Mtrtordimry f*oM, the circnmstances which so moved the Ipoot4ton who witnereed the scene were that the bodies were those of persons ooncemiog whose identity no clue could be obtained. There were, moreover, no one doubta, men who are working now with heavy heutl, but too el?groseed in the toll of pro. viding food ior those who romma behind to spend day after day in the weary work of looking for d bL' il that ."y never appear, women and chU- dren who sit weeping for the abildre :ad ohil. mothers who will never more come home. But none of them were there. No loving eyes had been able to identify in the distorted features and the foul sodden garments the faoea and dress of those who bad left home in health and spirits to mjoy their holiday. PROVIDENTIAL MCAPKS. I Mr George Alan", 18, iiiehard street, La.nboth, •ays :—" I was one of the passengers on board the U! fated PnccfM Alioe to Shor?e?s, in pany with a friend and nephe? to the steward of he boat. I bad been down many times to Shear. J]:I by \heI :=eua:,obtmh:l "a:r to :c a better company. F.verjone an board aeemed to thoroughly enjoy thunaelvee, which made the jóomey down one of pleasurable reoreatioa and bl3 -If ..d friend G..id,d u getting cut at bb"rn(?se, and to it ourselves of a salt water bath. We did so, and whilq dreaaing heard the ten micntt whistle blow; we hurried on part of cur clothes, and on ft-tehie? the pier the Prin- oeaa Alioe bad started. We at the time felt much disappointed, and returned by the London, Chatham, and Dover Hallway. There were five young ladies came back with us to London, having also tailed to reach the boat in time, so that iu all (even perrons were left behind at Sheernoas, aud not four, which has beea atated by mime other journals." Mr. Walter P&6h, !0, Ininggmvo, Stockwell, writes Aa every effort is being made to ascer- tain tbe exact number of persons lost through the late mel&nohcly aeddent an the Tbames, I have :v=:rû':id::ut:: 'f:)i return hLW tickets not used upon that day, and onay by tIMtt fprtumte ndetthe. thrttt' :n::7Ij went togheernmlaxt Tu"y. and falty it?euJed m1lrnm, by the same boat (the PhcoeM Afioe), but happily missed it, and oaly by a few minutes, arrhmr at the pier encUy at the aame time aa another gentleman (also Moompuied by a lady) t* whom I had attted'd?St?edMtbttth? b.at did not strt until 4 30 p in Being under that impTm?i.m, and 81 eing Lk.t I had caused him to miss it, I advised that we .honld take the train I for Orne.end to catch the boat there; but luckily no train wall available for us to do to, and we returned to town by train. Thua four livai have probably been saved." I CUBICXJB LILOPUNCY. I A correspondent aenda the Times a copy of a letter of remonstrance and warning, addressed by bim to the Home Seoretary and Chief Commis- sioner of Police, with reference to excessive pas- fengtr fright. en the Thames. rho letter :¿=.reihJ \fo' Socretu7," sun the cor. respondent, "contains a prophecy (uttered 10 years ainoe) now moat appallingly fulailed. I do not wish my name to appear, but ahould the authorities seek to learn the authorship, as may possibly be the case, the letter having baen w,itten .cme yeM* 4?*ne you are.at li ty to divulge it." Ik. Ittr to Hom. SeoMw', is as fo "Jane 28.1?9. Sir ,-A Ihor time &(nos. referring to a 00111. .ion between two tt?merw on the hver Th?met, 1 tddrMMd t tetter to the t:rr:Ci Police, calling his attention to a praotice prevail- illgwith the river steamboat oompauies of carrying dargeronsly excessive passer ger freigats, and snggeetirg the adoption of remedial muaiures. M7 attention is again oalled to tho matter by a tettet in the Timu of Saturday last adverting to similar pntctic?t in ooBnectioa with lake ttttmen, tbd 1 beUeye the ptMtioe to beqaita general thn,ughout the rivers and bket of the tu?m whe?ever a..M?i?ncy-of etoortton trttEu may enable temboat proprietors to turn the matter to aooount. "III addreuiDg yon on this subject, I do DOv. do 10 without the warrant of an expericnoe of many years in the praotioal conduct of a very large amount of passenger steamboat traffio. "As ofcief executive offioer of one of these companies, I persistently discouraged, while oocunyicg this position, the praotioe of overload- ing the steamers, and at that time communicated to that DepL"ment of State, M 1 ooaoeiTod. chiefly oonoerned—vii., the B3%zd of Trade—my !n :r:.c' the dtngeM iMnrred, and hoping that remedial meMMee <u<ht be adopted by the GovemowaL ? hat the praotioe in question must culminate if not dwaked. in the w.. of such a number of humtnhttt M *h<dl startle the oiviUMd world, I do not hesitate, with a knowledge and experience of 18 yeara in the working of a large portioa of tha steamboat azoorait>n traffio of the Thames, to propbeay. "It mMt be borne in mind that theae exourvion offtwore carry on the river Thmes alone about 20,000,000 of passengers "nn&4. n&Wy during th<tn<??crjM.?dy,?n,t.'tnd titptonbS* and it will be e" that bOat r-. yacht _tohM, Md /tic of every dtMnptien ?o wbiab øaitlment tenM ? chat=, r"149 Md eonnetm? for tt?o :r opposiu?n stosume, &&I navigating the innumerable pasmgw pkrx and wtwwm of a tottooM strmm wowded with wdt 81 every absoTiDUOB, afford a snfficienoy of d?<KUHe< to teat the nnMtt ntfT« of those www in the tn.. and to warrant an aasumption of danger scarcely, I believe, appreciated by the pnbtie. That inavartable amwents are of ooMttmt occurrence ia of course patent to all engaged in wo?m?thittttiEo; that omoitnt mtMnr« any be adopted bthe Government for the prevention of overmw ,Lgandooomquent additional incur- Mzoe of danger M, I should imt?me, a ?HMtion l,udly to 1* dI'' std I lbav r. ho?- to be, Sir, Your obedient aervant, To the Secretary of State for the Home Department, Whitehall." I AID TO THE HVyrtHIRX. Mr C. J. t reake has placed presentations for the admission C" two orphan cirls above aix years of age into the National Orphan Home at Ham. oommon at the disposal of the committee, and IU.gNU that others might take this practical of iz, aiding the orphan sufferers. Mi. Pugb, of St. btephsn's-square, offers to take entire charge of an orphan girl between six and ten years, ana thsre are many similar proposals of aid. The Minnehaha Minstrels propose to give an entertainment towards the fund, and a oonoert I baa been arranged to be held at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool, which were opened lav the Lord Mayor six weeks sinoe. A donor makes the suggeation that the bottm of the Hospital Saturday > aad and its staff of ool, lectors should be made available for a IimiIar oollwdou in tbe metroLoU next Saturday The CMdon Theatre wUl have a p?et?rmtMe on Friday BMt In aid of the fund. I Mr. g, P. Taylor, a leading member of the Common Council, has given notice 01 his intention to mo?e that the oonxtn?on of London should eonthbnte ?10 t2" the Lord M&vm-?a Fnnd. A subscription list in oonnectim wiAt?. Man- sion MoMe v"d for the reW ct the ta?ertn by the Woolwich c"tm"ba hM been opened at Maidat.ne, and the -,Gr 11M imaw an ounat appeal for contributions. The f:mu" writee from AenU Vicarage, Ware .—" May I be all-wd to aMe known in the Times that I shall be happy to give Mnt.fMe for life my lodg* (which ia  no? u? ooeupiedl to any poor widow who" beebwad haa been Wai 'n umt &&W ?d *U., ..d. <m the hTer Tha? ? I may add that the lodge I- -wo -b-intly mit-W. but is not -P8ble of _oda ahu6m. I rnAvsna run THE DBAD. I At tbe Ritualistic Church of 8t. Mary Msgdaien Bta&ord, on Monday, inuavow w? 0«- i .'üa.BituJieôcCluuolaol.Si.Jbq1 I of &boee wllo h8d perieIIe4 ill ,\lie Lrrru Toni FBIHCI or WALSS. I The followiac Setter has bees t?nmt to the Pti?.?W?. by Mt J.On?tL?.? the t«d<m St8uabaM Company .— May H plaaee yoar Boyal mrtseee. beinc I h??y? 80Jù T. i???MR?M??MhSF?tS saCsrere, I '?t-?-* —r*]- to to you R?rti. .'IÚ1C«ea As tbe eatira w1«k a the steasacr Prineeea .w be vicible on Monday "d, I T, to I lace tb« woe.teamn Victoria Ai the .riM d ji cr bojal Hitlimu, altotJd you i ^iiro to | n;t u", l. ta of the aerii nt. A ptrsocal inspectios of the wreek itaeif wiU j show your Boyal Highaase that the deceased I eaptaia of the Pnaoeas Alios waa eatiraiy fne from blame. Sbe is foind tj have It>n strnek I on the a'arbcwrd aide, which prove* the captain to have been in his own wt>r and, though his 1:;lIth :a cow closed for sver, hia ship has spoken for h r r ith an oloqucree wli irh *iil carry more weight u: nn i,!Eeial iD4t:iry than any powers of p<rt)]<mf?.—t have the bOD our to W yjjr &:ru Hish?.m'. mmt obodi.,t fervent, J. I-xt. Litvxu." Ilis Boyal Bi¡'DM baa uccUnei tho offc.
DESPERATE AFFRAY AT CARDIFF.
DESPERATE AFFRAY AT CARDIFF. TWO WOMEN SHOT BY A RUSSIAN SAILOR. Intense excitement was caused in the neighbour, I bcod of Ct!et()"ho"p,.tt shortly after two o'clock this (Wedcesdsy) morning by the reporta of firearm*, hcccmpauieit by ^creatua and cries of "Murder," which proceeded from a hoaae of ill. fame in tbe above-named street. It appeared that an altercation bid .rifen between a Russian sai!,)r and two women, aud la consequenoe of threats made by the sailor, one of the women demanded to know whether he had a piatol concealed about bim, ud insisted np.. u hm immediately leaving the bouse. This so annoyed him that be instantly drew from his pocket a fix cbamberod revolver, and fired at one of the women, the bullet entering her aim. An alarm was raiocd. and the sailor attempted to escape, but being followed to tbe stairs hy the otber woman, he fired three fhota at her through the baluitrade. cach of which entered her groin. After firing two more shots, he tmaabed the window ot the aeoond storey, and endeavoured to lower (lioself to the ground by means of a rain-water pipe, but fell, lie, bowevor, escaped unhurt aud decampel. Several police-con-ttble»k attracted by the out. cries, proceodea In search of him, and he was dis. covered by,Sergeant Telford and Polioe-oonxtakle Kylanda feigning sleep by the gas works in But.. terraoe. He was immediately searched, and the pietol taken from him. Upon being oonveyed to the polioe-station, prisoner refused to give his name. VII. tior(i) umn and lingers were early in attendance, and the injured women were, by their instructions, removed to the infirmary. The woman who was shot in the arm is the keeper of the honse, and her wound, though extremely painful, is not considered dangerous. The woman, however, who was shot in the groin was io an unconscious state when removed to the infirmary, and her rl-oovery is oonsidered extremely doubtful.
-POLICE INTELLIGENCE.I
POLICE INTELLIGENCE. I STRIKING A LANDLADY.—At Cardiff nohoe-oourt oa 'J uesday (before the Mayor, Dr. Edwards, and Mr. D. Jouee), Maria Briokley waa charged with aasaulting the landlady of the Boyal Oak, Oanton. Jane Winstooe, landlady, said that on Monday evening; defendant was in her houae. She waa quarrelling with all there, and when witaeaa aeked tb8 prisoner to leave the house she etruok her a severe blow on the head. Pri-not also made aM of cry bad Iaøcuce. I.- spector Glass said that be saw tbe priaoner strike tfo Imdlady he waa very b?iv* and violet. 0, drod to pay 10s. and C08te, or labour. DEBIBTINO PBOM Tn. PoirAL MARflfEe. -At Cardiff polioe-court, on Tuesday, George Robinson was charged with deserting from the Boyal Marines. Detective Jainea said that pri. aoner W" a reonut tM?eUtng from Neath to :"Wit::apà m at Cardil G?t Western Ro?iAway Station. Prisoner b.. previously deserted from the army. Uaiaanded till Monday next for further evidenoe. KEEPING A DISOUDEKLY HOUSE.—At Cardiff polioe-court, on Monday, Su-n Thomas waa chtfmd with tteepm? a dtMfdeWy home <tt 24, ChM?otte-otreet. ln<pector TMnNyn t?d that on Sunday night I"t Cfo:n? Tamblyn said ûtate8 ad men th.re, S.,g-at Johns and Ser. put ØawlUul .ue corroborative evidenoe. Superintendent Hemingway said the prisoner waa a moat notorious oharacter, and had been previously oonvioted for the same offenoe. She waa the woman who brought about the rain of the young girl from Weston. Ordered to be sent to gaol for aix months, with hard labour. OBSTBUOTIMO THE FOOTWAY.—At the Cardiff poUoe-ooMt. on Taeednr, MM?ret Itiakems <tM chM?ed with being drunk Md b? struoting the footway in Bute-street. Polioe- Gonstable W. King said that he saw prisoner it Itnte-street on Monday night. She was drnnk, and was standing on the pavement. When he asked her to move on she refused. Fined 10s, aad coata, or seven days' hard labour. AT ABBBDABK POLICE-COURT, on Taos. (before Mr. B. do Rutun, Mr. H H. Bhy< .í Mr. J. Lew? Oau.i kow, i.1ja: W'I need Is., Od. damage, and colte. for wilful d- e to a waU, tbe property of Mr. R. H. Hbys (This gentleman did not, or course adjqdloste on the c"e) —W. Jones, Harrow pnMte-hon<e, Ab<r. &man, was charged with knowingly permitting d-=e.h&æ..=.r.si:¡:' Pnnoe of Wales Stereo, WM Oaed Jt3 and OOlte for a like offeDco.Step on Thomas, Mountain Aah wm .enteDood to a month's hard I.bour for lwauinIlUø., the property of John Webber. AT BCILTU ?OUCE.COURT, on Monday (berre Measrs. R. Woranam and J. Vaugbau), Walter Tudor, collector at tolls at Erwood, sum- moned William Pritehard with illegally evading toll on tho 19th of August. Mr. l), tt. Lewis, Merthyr, appeared for defendant. The oase was diBn.mMd.—John Davies, charged with being drunk and disorderly at IJuilth on thth3() August, WM fined ?. M. and WIt.. Is.—Margaret I'ugb v. Mary J;B: Stanton v. Mary Jcnea, Mary Ann Stanton v. Charlotte Price, Mary JoLes v. M. A. St?ton Mary Jonea r? fn Stanton, :d 1;,û:nia; C?Mtotte Daviea. These were oaaes of assault, and were .ettlbd by payment of 008\8 and auretiea being given to keep the peaw.-Thoum Jorden and 1Bi .??.-tte Daviea were chawl b,8er¡ean\ i1?e with a bre"h of the peace at Badth on tbe :J6tb of August. Case mved b Mr. George Bennett, .he kf::= L.. to the peace for three months; oosts 13s. tid.
THE FATAL RAILWAY ACCIDENT…
THE FATAL RAILWAY ACCI- DENT IN IRELAND. major. General Jautcmnson naa ictt London for Cork, having been appointed by the Board of Trade to inquire into the oircumslaaoes attending the recent fatal railway aocident near that town.
THE NEW GOFERNOR-GENEBAL -…
THE NEW GOFERNOR-GENEBAL OF CANADA. me Marquess or L?orne and the pnn_. L9uir8 arrived at Ber?oral on Tuesday. It is believed the visit to the (&on in r:={ one before their departue for CaDada.
MB. PLIMSOLL ON THB PREROGATIVE…
MB. PLIMSOLL ON THB PREROGA- TIVE OF THE CHOWN. Mr. PUmmoD, M.P pMtioiM at a moeung of th:'U:' O:nJ=, on = day, ::? that thi8 OOUlltq WU largely debt-4 to the Independents for be eivu ed re1l«i0Q bberty wh'oh it now enjoyed. Events, however, had reently ooourred w ich we must '.h.?ed that we m-t keep a watchful eye on our constitutional liberties if we won not to have them ourt&Uad or tampered with. When the civil liberty WM m daDalr, ha held it to be, in oonaequenoe of reoent eventa. re- M<MM liberty .dd not be very 88f" In Iú, judgment very porwatous uia;ms b" boom put forward in Lbe name of the prerogative of the Crown whicu every true man 10M bonDd to rewst 80 far as his power went. He contended that our civil libertiea and eonetitutional rights ahould no more be invaded, under any 8peciou pretence of prerogative than that England ahould become the tod ;i?d of the am ire,
IL.VITAL STATISTICS..
L. VITAL STATISTICS. ne xiegistrar-uenem reports, during tile week ending last Saturday, 5,737 births, and t ')mi deaths in £ ) large towna in the United Kingdom. The averaite rate of mortality in these towns w" flh::D1'ÛO th'o::nt 'nw t:: in wI:ndu-: WM Ik Edinburgh, 17: Glasgow, IV; Dublin, ?t:Bri<to). ?.Piymooth, iJ; aheMeM, 1?, Oldham, :W; N.tUgb-, 21; N.?c?wtio ud %Iverh.mpw., Leeds, Portsmouth, and 8?.d.ilaud, Z3; M-.ht, Bndtœd, leientr, and Brighton, 21 Norwich, 25 UÍ1"ham, 2G; &iford, Uverpml, and Hnn, M.  &Arist (enr waa fat&Uy preva*t in Birmingham, Uverpool, "3=P1=l:ø nrr:é,e= an UCC!88 in Portsmouth and $Word. Sma;l.poi caused three deaths in Loudon, but none in the provincial towna.
CURIOUS INCIDENT AT A TEMPER-j…
CURIOUS INCIDENT AT A TEMPER- ANCE MEETING. A DOUBTFUL COMPLIMENT. At a pabüe t4mpwanm meeting held in Nacu wich in connection with the anniversary 'f tbe T.ta ::i1'¡o(lc:í ministan stuad the hymn Hold tbe Fort," in ordes to beguile the time until the committee and deputation arrived. The in verse was sung by the aadieooe, wbeathe speakers and the- friends, with the Mayor of Chester at their bead, emerged froaa the ante-room. Their appearanoe was L&Uod wi. CMttMtttMt applum, .Dd M t, -W th* pkara, the "Iody -&? t*?n up ?"UiMtxwedtMttryMthepomt.i«th<mi<hty h-t advan.,bw, bat" lead on. (X ooum *othi*t pareoaal Of oou, of u. -.pt, -A =to arm. a little amnaing.
BANKRUPTS, LIQUIDATIONS, Ac.…
BANKRUPTS, LIQUIDATIONS, Ac. I (From Tuesday's Goatte.) I LIQUIDATIONS. I Lewis Jonas, Ðf Bedlinog, in the parish at 1 Goilyg, Glaaaorgansbire, grocer. George Copse, of Swansea, plumber and gaa. itt.w Edwa/d Daviea. of King.rtreet, Blasnavon, .20M.
Advertising
A aiagular earenmatanne haa joat eoearred at St. Siu>oa's Chamb, Soathaas. A lad. the son of t ——?—— sitting m a fne ia me ot the gallerie*, opowd bma beat wheh "'lJirc on Stboek-botfd. whm a nwtae?? p?o? foU out. Cm evamlaiig it he fowas that it eonsistad of 6 £ 5 Bank -( E-gh-d DOW& The Id, on k.v?.g Ihe ehnreh, rye the DOW to hi. f.tbw, aud the latter eosuaucioated with the vioar. I IDAwixi, Owzw Awl) a A B C KAILWIT T' T- Ttecialf 1ùóI_ iMo&Lå w!K<. MM(?tf<tM. M'Tbn-ttMf.OtttSt.
ELECTION IN SOL'THI WAlES…
ELECTION IN SOL'TH I WAlES AD MONMOUTHSHIuB. iHTOra M'Ki IAL COKBESrORBKNT ) I rotne ttiree or 1, tr wcek< "1 lAjn ton paper d small pi litical tandi,,¥, All" of au political 18. fiuince, ortent:vt:oucly announced tbat it waa atitboriied to atale <h»t (Government had resolved rot U» dif-oli« l*arliAuient until the autuma of 1". At tbe Liberal banquet held at Lancaeter iaat Wecceeduy, pretidod over by the Marqaeaa cf HartingtiT it was announoed with equal Ioaitivity and aaauramv of kuowlmlge that the G,,v".a,.Lt had OOIU" to the reeolve to diaaolve Parliament witlJn the next three weeks. Botb ai.uoui.oeiuet.U *ro "f.nidn\J1 incredible. It i. certain that the tlv vcrnuient h., iMine to ne d,fi.it,? r.lv,' t., \up t?.e and tu w of dis?.luticm, and -hat,,er may be the into%tions of the C"binet thy &" me-urely to?-kea up fM the prut.Lt in the but of the Prime Minister .urd of .oni* two or tbrne of his principal ciJlrarues. Thia Govern- uitnt dous "not »,ar IU heart upon iui *!»< ve fcr daws tç peek at," and it has more .elf- refpKt than to aniouiue Jt8 recoive t) tho CoUi.Wy Vbiotigb the medium of a London pajh-r of LO comm&ndiijg or political influence, 0' hy means 01 a telegram to the promoter, 01 Liberal U.I quet at l-ancaiatcr. Still, it muat not be (ut8uUb that maty things may happen which would make a lii..olutioD politic or even neces- sary, aDd. the unexpected always occurs, it is no less the part of wisdom than of prudence for Conservatives to be prepared in time for unfore- seen eventualities. To render them some servioe in preparing for the inevitable—for sjoner or later a dissolution uu»t come, and it is probable sooner rather than !&r-\Wld to attempt to fore- cast tbs results oí tbst diaso.utiou, as it will affect "-outb Wales aad Monmouthabire, 18 the object of the present papers. MONMOUTRBHIRI:. I The aouthern portion of the Principality, with Mcnmouthahire included, returns 21 moaibars that t., one member to every üi.:a64i of the popu- lation-VIUst the four English western eonntiea of Someraet, Wilte, Devoa, aad Cornwall, with a population not much in excees of Monmouthshire and South Wales, return 54 members, or one to every 30,076 of the population. The mysteries of political adjustment are wonderful, but the moat ardent stickler for old world usages muat acknow- ledge that there i3 something exceedingly inequit- able ia auoh an artaagement aa this, which makes an ¡.;ngof the western counties of more political value than two Welshmen of South Wales. Of the 21 representatives of £ outh Wales and Monmouthshire, nine are political Conservatives and a are Liberals; but on most of the questtona which aharply divide politioal party, Mr. Talbot, tha atnior member for Ola. morgan county, votes more frequently with the Conservative than with the liberals, under whose banner he is nominally reckoned. It is remarkable that the two contiguous counties of Monmouth and Glamorgan, inhabited for the most part by those who are kindred in race and blood, pursuing similar industrial and commercial occupations, and posaeeaing altnoet identically the same social status, ahould, nsvertheleaa, throw the whole weight of their Parliamentary voting power into the opposite political scale. Monmouthshire ia represented wholly by Conservatives andGlamor- ganahire wholll b, Liberals. Tbe Monwoutikeounty is unmistakably Coz.rv.tí vo; there it not a shadow of doubt about that. Tha Monmouthshire Liberals readily concede the fact, and not- withstanding the upper districts of the county north and north-weat poeeeaa a large, a very large, Diaaenting element, no effort is likely to be made to diiturb the Con aetvative repraeentatkm. The Beaufort and Tredegar influenoe i8 all powerful, and its supremacy oannot be ahaken by the most strenuous exertiona of the Liberals or by any possible combination. The ptesentmembens" Lord Henry Somerset, second son of the Duke of Beaufort, and the Hon. Frederick Coortenay Morgan, brother of the present Lord Trodsor; and theae gentlemen intend, as we hoar, to offer themaelves for re-election at the next diaaolution. There ia not the faintest possibility of their being opposed, oi if any ambitious Liberal should be go Quixotically darinc.. to venture a tilt against the Conservative power in Monmouth, shire he will be as hopeleaely worsted as Colonel Clifford was in 1808. Whan the rule of the Lord Marchers was abolished itl the reign of Henry Till., and Monmouthshire waa empowered to aend op two members of Par- liament, and Monmouth borough one member, a Morfran of Tredegar, and a Herbert of Col. brook, were the first members for tbe oonuty, and another Morgan, of the Tredegar faaiily, waa elected member for Monmouth borough. A Somerset married the heiress of Lord Herbert of Baglan and Chepstiw, and after thia a Morgan and a Someraet continued almost without any breik to represent the county till 1K31, and a Morgan and then a Someraet represented without intwmla" tie bo sough. Mr. Williams, of Llasgibby, a Liberal, secured one of the oonnty seats in 1831, and held it for 10 years, when he retired, and a Morgan was again elected and two Conservatives have represented it from that time till now, and will oontinue too represent it f eapite any and every effort of the Liberals to oust them from their aeata. The borough of Monmouth in 1831 proved dis- loyal to its old pobtioal traditions, and Mr. Hall, subsequently Sir Benjamin Hall, and afterwards Lord Llwwvor, wrested the borough from a Somerset—the Marquesa of Woroeatar, the father of the preeent Duke of Beaufort. By the Reform Bill of 1832 Newport and Uù war* added to Mon- mouth as contributory boroughs. Despite two gallant efforts too unseat him-i- 1832 by the Marquesaof Worcester, and in 1835 by Mr Joaepb Bailey, sou of the Sir Joseph Hailey of that day —Mr. Hall retained the aast till 1837, when h6 re. aigned, and waa elected member for Marylebone. At the election of 1837 Mr. Joseph Bailey again oonteated the borough on Coaaervative priaoiples, but was opposed and defeated by Mr. Beginald J- ¡;1e1ltt. ,who resigned in;lh; Liberalium bad been largely discounted in the Monmouth borougba since Monmouth first swerved from its Conservative allegiance in 1831, and notwithatanding the preponderating electoral influenoe of Newport in the representation, and its alleged advanoed Liberalism, the Liberals teired to contest the aeat on the retirement of Mr. Blew.tt. Mr t/iw shay Bailey, the brother of Sir Joeepb issued an addraaa to the electors baaed on Conservative and Protectionist principles and was returned uu- opposed. He retained the aeat for aixteen years, and retired in 1868, in consequence of a:!e and enfeebled health. In that yoar a wave of political agitation paaaed over the country In oonaequenoe of Mr. Gladstone's iri,.4 "harch policy; and the Monmouth boroughs— Newport especially—caught the political excitement. The Liberal Kir John liamaden, defeated the Conservative, Mr. 6. Homfray, and for a sccond time there was a break in the continuity of < onservative r,.pre- acnteticn but this time the break was of much shorter duration than before, 18 Kt the boroughs had become heartily tired of Sir John s reprccentatiou: and It waa w.asly and 0011. fideofy slimed that at ths next election tbe Monmouth boroughs wouM r,arn with slacrity and enthusiasm W their old Conservative allegiauce. This prediction was triumphantly fulfilled 111 the election (A 1,574. Mr. Tboiuae o,-ordes, who waa high sheriff of Mos. montbshire in leil, and who is one of the most popular and oonsiderate employers of labour in the district, announced La intention to contest the united boroughs on pure Conservative prin- ciplea, and Sir John liamaden slunk away from the political conflict, as ke had done on many occasions from many constituencies before. be discretion ahowu by Sir John Kamsden, snd which is as frequently the better [art of po itical as of military valour, was not eihibite by-others, ul the Libeial wire-pullers ¡l8Tuaded-prob.bl, there was not much rellalwn f80¡1W'8d-)(r. H. D. Fochin to oppose )1r, Cordee. The result was never doebtful from the first. Conaervative reaction had act in with a full Sow aver, in New- port itsslf, which was .ppe.<88d to be iatenaaly liberal, and Mr. Pocoiu was bsatea at the poll by the decisive majority of 0;14. The defeat waa so overwhelming that the moat sanguine of New ort Liberals were oonstrained to acknowledge that ÙI8 botougfaa were clean gone from the-. and although the lapae of four years has worn off the tret ksaa and bitter feel, legs of dismay, the mors far-seeing and judicimm of the Liberals are still coevtsoed that the return of Liberalism to power w the Kocmowth boroughs is very far distant indeed. The more P1OII8 I of the Newport Liberals, some of the wire-puliere aad the Liberal agents, whose interest it ia to I provoke a contest, affirm that they mean fighting at the cut election. If the more sasaeioas J the party casnot pmn this (-Wn hope froaa going to th4 "U,- -?l time austain a A=t h"iÜ&r. defeat than ?t suffered in 1974. Monmouth &ad ¡ .& -re Uwfc-ugbly Couenat.in, uW _n ntamd W "r 9W &Uolibum with t 'arneet ardour aad renewed coorktioe, wbilsf Newport is becrmiag own Coaaervative daily. I Msch 01 the growing Conservatism 01 Newport ii to be aeeribed to the genial "4 ..¡..loar,iDI!oNl. j of Lord Tredegar, aad to the benefits he and h family have conferred apos the towa, and also ;0 tie ii fiumcx* of Mr. Cordee and bi. high iharr.<'r, integrity, attd oocsideratios as a large employer of labour. TII Nnr¡IOrt 1..& we, more- over, in aa deplorable a dilemma at the ljboftlo of the Cardiff boroughs; ihey are bo|*J««aly destitute ot a suitable candidate "ho can command .n5i"Dt influent* t.> .u:1 firaily together the shattered links of Li. prty. The Liberal wtre-polWrs wjl not have it all their 0-8 --y with the party iu Newport aay more ttau in Cudiff at the next elecltor. and the knell of liberalism and its reverberation* will echo for many a long year to come in the boroughs. h RADNORSHIRE Ksdnocanire, although geographically Mt 't?otottOtUybet<?tm?toWtJM.MtntM:fntt'e h&b.t., a-oo" <f thought aad pmb.lly y.. P&tLy. th-rouhly "Uab It 18 pm.min,,utly I aa agricultural oouuty. and i:. agricaltaral and bu Mites associations are upeciaily w.th tile: English oounuee whioh b.und it on tho ea., and I aorth—Herefordshire and Skropahire—and root I with the Welsh oountlee which lie op^a ,ta --th- aad weeteni borders, I'ot.noa.ly Badnorshire has never shown vary strong prl" dilections it possesses, however, very real, if not vtry j renounced Conservative tendencies, and even its liberalism ia tinged with a Conservative flavour. It* P.uUamentery influence—repteeected as it is by such members aa the Marques* of Hartington and the Honour, able Arthur %-I-h-- tn inverse ratio to 1>8 1-iii.0 -c-se.9 L). "Ii'o_. 1, ;s, wi .h UMteK-fptMeof RnUMid. lb. ?wnt m po?a? U6-2 14 ?U \b. ?ud W, I&L oouctx, hMi<? <?y M ..laAt omaus &.t9)< mhabitanta, wMttt twmtv ?ft.r<-n 1H.M—it bad. pupo6bm of M?S7. IM* abeeD of ?ro)? Poljt-ml f'f"1I ?.,a. o< <?«)? Pc4itlc-l uoit_t 9-g -1 the -Lrw -b" been oharaoteriaUe of hadaorshire from I almost immemorial time, and it ia difficult, there- lore, to forecast whakt will be the result of poliuoal oon teats either ia the county or the Kadnor borougba, because it aeema to depend more upon the personal Lubnon" "d the personal oharacter of the candidates than upon impelhng politioal oonviction, or enD opon poliuoal sympathy. Kor eevetal generatioua the Harleys (Lord {1.fûN, represented the oounty. and subeeqaoatly tbe lewises—of whom Sir 080. Coruewall Lewis, the former member for the Badaor boroughs, ) was the greatest repreeeuted both county and boroughs. They were Liberals. On the retiremeat of hit Thomaa Krenklaad Lewis from the oounty representation m 1.17, a ooatest euud, The Liberal candidate was Mr. Walter Wiikins. vi the Brecon Hank sabas '| quently Mt. De Winton, and the t oneervativa candidate was Bir John llean Waiah (the present I Lord Ormathwaite), one of thelargeet landownera I it Badnorsbire. bir. Wilkiss won by the small j majority of 25. Cn his death In ltHU, Sir Joha Walsh was returned without opposition. 0.. his elevation to the peerage ia 1*J8, aia aoa, the Hou. Arthur Walsh, was returned also wtbhut oppxd. tion. At tb. olwtion of :?7t. Mf Walsh WM oppcted by the L'heral Sir Richard Green Prioe, the nephew and heir of Colonel Richard Prioe, of Norton Manor, who for upwards of fifty years repreeented the Radnor boroughs. The contest was a keen and llenre one, aad it is impossible to may if tha ooateet had beea a aiagle-haudee fight what the issue would have been. But a Mr. Haigh, a London merchant, who eome yeara baton had aettlsd in the oounty, and wbo [ was formerly a Conservative, oama out on eitresie Radical principlea,and managed to aecure j() vow. In thia triangular politioal duel, the Hen. Arthur Walsh aueoeeded in obtaining a majority of 47 over his Liberal opponent, Sir Hiohtrd Green Price. Had Mr. Haigh bean out of the field, rumour affirma that it the real decision had Lot been reveraed the majority of Mr. Walsh would have been oonaiderably reduoed. I'oaaibly so, for, as we have already said, Radnor .hire decides its elections mainly by personal pre- I-ON, aDd!Wt ?) u..iat&kai?ly fro. poliut.1 .0a"cLi.na. Hence the dmoulty of 1_lJaac the probabilities of the next eleotioo, at which, we understand, Sir Richard droen Prioe will again be the Liberal candidate, and that veiy dif- ficulty ought to make tbe Conaervativae doubly alert in preparing to aecure the t-riumphant return cf Mr. Walsh. As for the Radnor boroughs, tbsae are for the the preeent, 100 proeame, given over to liberalism but to Liberalism of a Whiggiab type. After the retirement of Colonel Richard Prioe, of Norton Manor, in 1M7, who represented the borougba for upwarda of W years), he waaeuooeeded by the Right Hon. bir Thomaa Jorulnd Lewis—the father of the celobrated Sir Jeor¡ee Coruewall Lewis—and on his death, in 1K>;>, sir 'George Cornewall Lewis succccded him. "n his preaua- ture ud lamented death k,, suooeeded by the present bit liiohard Green I'rioe, an advanoed Liberal. 6ir Richard Prioe reaigned at the general election in lbt* to make room fur tbe pre- sent member—the Msrqueaa ol HartingLon — who bsd lost his seat in Lanoaahire during that elec- tion. At tbe eIeC(" 1K74 tia" Ma."u. waa opposed by Capti"i Cockburn, but be beat hie Couseivative opponent by nearly four to one. This Iud. ustothe conclusion that, for tb pre. sent at least, the Radnor boroughs are wholly given over w Liberaliam. ( To tie r'/nlut f/
FEiillVAL OF i'HE THREE CHOIRS…
FEiillVAL OF i'HE THREE CHOIRS AT WORCWTEK. This festival opened at Worcester on TuM tty. There was an inaugnral brmkfaat given hy tue walor to the stewards and tbe oor|K>rati <ns of Woroester, Iford. and Gloucester. Tho -the. dral was filled too overflowing at the opening servioe, w h ic h vsi given with grand efl," t, tlie chief feature being Handel's Dettinfran "Te Deiim" and Bach'u ati,? ..th orchestral accompani- ments. A se-?h waa rwhad hy tbe Biabiip (A ;:r, -:W;°':f=Jr;aJH1;, io tb" arrangeirients of these festivals aud ei pressed a hul. thaI tbe baD/C88 ma4e.' Woroester would be lollowcd by tho authorities cf ''tber cathedrals.
,fclKGULAB CIIALUIZ OF AoSAULT…
fclKGULAB CIIALUIZ OF AoSAULT AI.AINKT A DEAK EuKJ-Bl CKOWN I At the Coleford polirs-ceurt, on Tuesday (before Mr. Palmer aad Dr. Batten), John Gandera, of WOf' rear Colefoi J, wao oharged witb assaulting Frederi' k L!ojd, a young nuner, residing at the l A.* End. I t appeared that d.(- d&n t, I too p.ha?l b6n to clnll and w" "tumiD, home on hor whack, e..rr71DfÍ b?o gun. On reaching tbe 1,Ace he 10" iub:meJ that (ou.e boya ha<l tten pelting hia olurna, Ili be rg& after them One b,y t,, a,?d (;ri "1D"rder," when OOIT.It, who w. short dis- tacct away, ran *o see wljit waa th. matter. Lluyd remonstrated with defendant, who appsarc* from his statement to be worrying the litt'.e boy, when 'lenders threatened to serve him in a similar man" He tien rode at him. I.I.ydipi,kW p a stor e, .:r.r¡'ttd'. J:¡: I oocked hia grin at him, and then administered open W hood »evere blow wa. it fcliing h,m to .h:ro,i:Ú. t.:I I a medical man. Witresai « were called, wbo cor- r- borated th" complainar.t. It w.tf»>1 a: I that defendant poked tbe first boy w tbe :ibi i .?!h biag.. as ns ?ov ruosiug b,. down. 1,. fendant was 8ned 10a. sr d'/j~ta. the i • n. sidsrwg he bad reoeived eome puvoca'.io -T the losa of his fruit.
-,-.I A SWINDLER AT NEWNHAM.…
A SWINDLER AT NEWNHAM. FBI") WITH CA HE." t Becestiy a respectably-attired individual xpi*- I rutl, a <x:i.Dwrciai trateller, I'fONt4" 111'.4!f at the '? tDr. Hot* Newnham-on-Severn, where kw Kintbt quarters f- tbe night, t&k care w inform tbe -.hl. be f,?* a I wr%4 w,tb t-?, 'adlIlC *,rde-u -f U.e *"?-, Aftbr mlf of tb. ".o:.eli."t ben of the hotel, 'ne ua'nJ., .od ,.t. Tkr. ?- nothii.g reanarkabie i.,i the fact ol the visitor rising early next morning to view theharming .en8r7 the I oe:ghbosrtood. But when he f8Jled to return to breakfast inquiries were oommenoed. a trar. I spired that tat bad been sent w tb "lIde;,0-" "f one of ti.e trloOMIUII lJIe">lI, laoellwl Fruit, with ?&m But 'he :Ady ?f tb6 bo us* -o I¡t.t¡:;r. I eventually p-.d d-v-r-d m ^mteuU w | consist ,f ()(p¡:' f-:t' and I p.rt- of cucaa.l>er. Th. vieitor lia. u:\ *a at. ceard vi III Lwan 1""1.
Advertising
The death ia announced ( M, I">u l>sval, oae j of th. mot aa"t ad.,or.a 01 the pAr. *r. M. !Jun, is ..11 II_a in oonnecbon with can. of o,,Oju"i 9&MUO-. -.Ud hA hum?,uz ia oourt was proverbial. Tha L,)c4" and ImkfoH ,w?h ia the road, and the teams are to brf eoid. 'I he' iford I coach wJl make :ts last onraty of this saaaon to-day iWedneedayj, and the horeee which have worked the eoacn are to be tmmgat to tbe 1P.1', A Vl«IT«Al-S losic, AM .L8 Po s »«-ir-if Ulm <|ua.a. BIIUSK ceetaiai, < .vmc Aa seu>. as»r^ M>e< Mnseari t a, SaaM^a. Maafcia.nwwtiienfi. r J ta.BHMUU rtesimr^a te iaae«* Ml pailKV IMOM. Thsas but*. aeosi daewtts. inmaii len'tiels KrMtthca Iks Mnttisd sues, uaftfr eh.1_ tM .Mr Mm g»v< ,b') t MtM & .3m.0- tM?tttt*. Xt? jt?tctit? -s-Ti »e setaoa. "*«»« fnam inanSia al «nu, -w enlia in. ml una a bat o&L To t-w UM* -t-' R.UWU t.Ki-, tvra :rju, .¡¡,¡ r:a. eveiv.t-n ht » t. W..en M. M !■<»>* US ia iw~ '? ? '?"K'-O '<-f?Mj.t?!t? I FVirt M *^a s'Ai 1tUU» t* fe'" «n<(titn t« ? oHMMt. _118 W t?n
-OA&DlfT.----
OA&DlfT. k I'Anian t AMIT ty'to rws- motion anth the above feaUval. a parochial tea unhung oonoert (wl,u b were large,y .tumdodl *?.. L.:ù 0. M?"<My tT?n? '? i't<:rt« '<.n?<ohooi. fi;arw"- ta"- lad," the M< ?t to ea)q tb-- ?T?IuM?t?y. *ft?t<.?<—CMt?d*u? isu-mmt icivea m U" ?y 'o??'L ??"?*t k,j := b..g 9!0 Sb:' and -p, d.,t* ? fFf c?t-Nt?e??? M?.r< <\?B.<m. torrNl ?.?-ott. Md N M. •ire. Hammond, and ÙHI"- 1", f»w, Ssa«r, Wrtchrrt. Atkiasoa, end either*. The vioar ga»r an e^rv. m hllb he 1-k h-ty tr.f? of affairs ooaiaeeeed with St, Mary's 'or ths year. The Rev. A. Q, Stauard. f,cm.,Iy curate of this parish, apoke of the uiarVed impiovement io the <v:igr«*etion &-a 1M ""N. h'r uf the 1-,i: b?, 1.!t th.' pariah, ar.rt i«rfimlarly rotkid the great imprevemm' i* tb. tw "d ti: hftrtADO" of t" ,.S. C. M Htto?«t then VAO tLh .8.6 em?*?* ?.a bia rtmarka wore well relived hy the audien,^e. We have ael.'om .,t with a more b--ty eet M people, wbo aeomed thoroughly united, and deter, mined to be happy and make eafth otarr happy. J h. harvest tiiackagiviag aerrice will be heid this Wednesda) svenitg. wb«i there will be fuU e<horal service end the sermoa "I)) be tuliveres by the Rev J. Loais Speaoer, of Wera, Shrtna- aatre. Wssi.kr CHAI gl., t.'HARI Bs-Sl BKBT.— The collections at this ohajiel on !«utday 1. at their "ION, amounted W A i4 2s. 8d. W* ?? RW to le tht the president o< ? ooa fen nee, ho to Lt. poob". bt pro j iMed by ill-health, fr r.rd & to .tr: )'i1r":ù 'Taa; afternoon. TBITTR OLAMCV ANWHIBg RiPle Vi Ll KlUKa —I he annual ahoouac i ooipeUtass of the Tenth Glaniorganabire RiSa Voiuaaeeea is annoencrd to take p at < a the flast Moore, te- day (Wednesday). A firat-rate aaeetiag aaav be anticipated All UH"th hsvs woe the cbampios county pr,.? b two yean i. a1ao ban ded tb«nM*)?t tJuhtMthnt f:i;Ú,'f.X=. be f.vta away in Tar'-& bel?s. 1 he waym 'Aft two apnw prisee. veins A lo Mr. Jamas Wars gives a vats- al "7:6, r and L.. ere aeveral othc pri- fl. 1" gentlemen intere»t#d th- ,n*. WO.K.8'!I OlTiMi.—On SMardy t?t ths cmpWvce of Msaani. W. V Pile and Co., ahaa buildets, to tbe OU-b., ,( A-. ba their annual outing to abr". A muat oajoyable ti" was apent, aII4 the party returned to Cardll1 about Iv IHe, ANOTHEK FlBK IN BrTB-RTBBET—At MIl put three ecioott on Tuesday BMrmsg IØrœll16!.1QU ."1»01'8184 to the central poaoe- etatior. that a fire bad broken 0..1 0>" the premiaea of Mr. Alexander del (.nerve, 1*15, Bute,sliest, nlskin manufacturer Upon the fire engine being taken to the snot, It waa found that ths jlnte reel had already 1-oea coa veyed there and utilised, and in lees ihen aa hour the d- extinguished, it h"YII,. bees confined to the abop. 8th. contents ot which were destroyed We understand that llir etook aad furniture wire insured in the Manobeeter Fire office (agenta, Messrs. Hera, Warklag street). The premieee are aaid to belong to ÛI8 Lev. Mr. Howse, Ba) titt miniater FUKTUCOMIKO OoBiBBT. We have pttMCK tn (ittwu? attention \0 ?b* .oW t. )K )t)?M by tL. t-AM Cho? .4 ?tft?tttt) Society, at Woodmtreet Chapel, on October t. It lk=.Z 'W? I- Htydtt CttttMtt" *t? scale "t b- Dot ban atw. .m Lkw om. e«? of tbt t?f "bilbarlDOlU< W. ..t.- Uoat id- M-?" WL!1.8". wk. -a tw tKMtM a Mput?tot ia i«c<<?. M t??t*? r. w:tL Mr. Byw?t?. t?o, tt ?!u 6. _lIIbtnod, au"D6d 80 emomtly Uw nnnn?ti tenor eol08 in the |ierforwaaoe of the adaaiah at the I)Iill-Wi iu Mr. Thurby Baals will take the baas anlus. With thaae wA be coetbineu th-Chly U-i-A -b-i-, numbering ??' voict" und4Dr t? aWe 106aw. ship .1 Mr. C. Davis. W. dI8N, fore, 8=64muF tM<ot <? m«mat) ttt?. The band, humberin K) rformn, 14 A, d. d:O.r:: ?* '=. tn connection with the Moadu p^ni'sr oeaaoerto is B?. n? **<'?<?h<MWm bt?Sttf <«ttT< suhseriptioaa, aabeoribare haing eetitlad ha ,ir'ful¡:tIOk U1.AMOBGAMM1IBB AMD MUNMOVTL- .miss IxnuniKT — Beport (M" .dL.8 S? 7"* 1!17M :-s. by I"t w?t. <? =.A alnoe, 7 dwahwl-ed. 6 ) died, I m m*tBtnE in the bmse: M. H. Rsdwsod J. :'}j,. -=:. Mr. H'o?r't.u, .ltoo, 4th t?ttt?. ?t?- wnt of 91(??s for the wmde trm the Iai88 Mm, "o?-d, lamds and g- hsatiag ¡LIf: for t::la::i:. ,= := Trolter and 8oB.B)t«!)ock*. W»^rsa» lloiii, Butieeroad, QarAig — Aa (lrtl:t>U7 liaiir al I SO; prioe 2a. X'-4^Sd a H. 11. 1W<u"8. 1).l Harveea, wpaaU I., 'm.. Cartl# 0 I_U> fr.ee t. 3d tCu, Mr, Wum tMsruasn. Denial btu^eoe..oraea sf Charlea-etreet, <Ja»U-g Tei>th trum la. «<• Ms. each. Un i [181 A .t.ÑI of 1,000 up will tai e pU< a U>- uifhl, at 0.. Philhartuoeic k-^etaaraae. betweea TluTul'ury aiel L A. Bo"eil, 14, c ay So oem- ■ euceattiav. "II
INEWPORT.
NEWPORT. INVIItWAitY AND DI;I;S,\u.-Hnm- of P&t?ent. .Deled .t U)« dup?Mtry daring 00 I' 8IId'blr tMlllt, 7, .4¡ .1. of ,i.. P"d t- pati-t. .t I.Mn own b- n?[ ti. week. number of ptiet. f? the InllrlU'7 during ihe ?mk,17 S -t t^e ,k, 1*. :Å:¡..r.ï:'fb .n ?. ?t.—ttoeUMm Mtthct Number of ptMnt* 'rÍ=k codog SI.L 7, 91 oI"1I:n: 9iaite paid to paUeots during tbe wwk, 4s -R. C-k- M.R.C .r. F. 'ng., LS.A. !?nd n<tM< n .u..a dietriot. > » UH..I- a IfUrt*' 'h Jill" "id t tb. li-d H.,l t" )*?" ?ttt. d_ a.Lnf'11t&L) loitovuig u.. cu. t'( Ui .8l. ''1' Xh. «* jL. *'701
I-SWANPEA.
SWANPEA. ¡ Hiu ruHOiiTiii" f." Htiperb > iinwUw, sia tor 1. at l. I A I be tJeat. i>«t. j-, Ao., or 1.10, dtt., M, I0OI.- xlie. Mmi 1..81 1\ utioo, b.
I UEKEBAL UMTBfCT NEWS.
UEKEBAL UMTBfCT NEWS. AI'KKATBON Ciuiut M it to hava a aew w-wer ana apire, and t bt, f.(",tract. for the work has been given to Measre Roderick W..w. Son, A beryt?itb. bt-"?A?I'A?)":fCm't!CM, which by undergone a -.Pitt- 10-t, -ti.- and "'0< ?nB)tth. pMtT«M,t<tb<hMM)H?M?*T<XM< 1= ('ï: t:a ?.wt?t?tttt t?tUf impm, tp;?fMM. The — M??m?trnt •arv.cea will take place shortly. A7 LLAMLLT Mi Tuetd?y. a mditMr fMtnt) took pt<M?. M" David 1 h?m? a utm? of the lianelly Volunteers, who died >o Ssturday 1. t. was iLt-Od with I.Ittary at the I tk" Cemetery. AT III.AINA, a fair Was hal.1 on Mosdir, A great number 01 oattle, sheep, pigs, Ac., wars off ea ed, -4 met with a ready eale. Not oas Mi?t< of d,.Sk- M 4 ?.bt?Tto? 1 came under the uotioe of tbe VAsee dui8c day. AT Ft.tL'K-t?.I.fh tha arijm. tftpwty oornecrta*! with Mount Zior, I V .miu.e ai/. ( hspel was held on Monday i.tarf,jo*i, arhas very large number aat down. M Vt« 'shUawars under the nperiatendenoe ot M ». IÙJ. Mra* James, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Smith, tin, W, Chntta' Mn, C. (UtI. A' ;n the ('rnig the Rev: J I*. Bellinghu.ni ? ""? ''?" '? N.. earned out the KCMICSI -.gsowmto, embd nka Naab presided at thsharmctiium. LLAKBLLr I'AKIMI C'HL'ltt'M CHOI. W their Mtnti oct?K on ttMd?y m tha ttOM?t << t:iót;f¡X::iJ<>D.ti:Da ,,cc st mne they proceeded in bt??to d".t¡ua\wn Luncheon -dteawwoprowwa. Md a very pleasant day ?M tpMt. Th?S?A* f;ntten, as usual, u?d evsrything ia his POW. )):un)f'<-Uif ?)tMn?'-? the choristers. A? Liiltov FfcKKV the Waaisyaa B-?,- S?lh., MhtttttMy mrm(4m %an pw?hw <8 htndsy, to large oonfrn g."o,, by %he Brr d ,'t ::rtAO: t-T,j &the.$ and bym- -we sung by the ( h '?r. under the leadership of ä.O:C Aureliua .b excellent effect. A peM? meetiw waa held on Monday evening, wbm eevatM addreerca were delivered A I f I- OU MOD'Ia,enj, a COB. f,pt ? wMtt?-B at 1 i e f for the i<-n»flt Master WalUr 1 t?. wm«r « at !be Ctn?r?.n ???.t<??? t.l8od ?. )? '„?' 18 t.rt?M for the t?rp ?,<LHM. at the to??. ?mi? b,r:<.Lh<?d "l.eddlod, t??t selectioua -?r? pity? .? the Wphy Master BM?r MM.? them beinr '.be 'ompetilvc s^actioos f- tttTX. ?.:dfod r? ?.<?..??.?,t?!tM?.?  I?'.TY??? ? ?J? U?.? ''i iiJ ii mm -'?MM. dmmmer m toe Lud ?i \M i.??b? ?t?.af?. R:fl. <.?u.t?,. wh<,w?Ti)S on t? ?e '.?t i?).? ?t? '———-T?.M. 'tM:y -e; r?d, ?? p??. A t?t aumber of M'?ic. m?r? of wi.om wore t,??. ked the Pcn?rMMh??y ThttEt??? tmUi? one ac<> n pan if i by the b?d ? the (jy (".Pt.!?'V=.'Ltdyi-itot.to"at H. IJ. Urov* t4.g in command T?- interment to* U' l b»r«»1 ground att&Qbod to ?:?'? ?. b:IrD' cf.Q*Uc< <? the ootMMe. AnM? the Xt<?t,I ??..t.M the ?-. woman to w!?S '?cetM-d -M ?ut ? M ?,m?ied. H? t? act .t?yb.?d. ??.i.?, Pcmtyprbdd t- t?e H. ?y M w^i > he ?? hmd? w? ,t the oc.w ?..Ti?. 14 paT utTI bMe.. ?.?r h? t'o. :?hdd w.tc<Med t?o!! so*#-on putiu: funeral than "t 0( T- Bt."t?., Rtt,H:bf?D wL? ?S'?'MMt da*f' MrV ???. OljrDoorrwg, bnng L10 Um "M, tdjod?tnor, ..? ? M:L: "d f lu. the nftt--O W" ably duot,ou by M, I ?,sm" EvL", EkaDWy, ifirwmn. 1" II"" fvr iL* Lwt (a th* inrif i iL ..p"nuoh"¡ -.isum awmad W Dul&w, IM?tog. Two of the priz4m f jr P'Jt\ — T T othem were gataed b» Mr ?,. U. Low, I$Ibckwood. U,,n. ?C -ir.4 -.a- pout- (m boa. MAV Tbe. ,?d about the M" "d I)r P" Keoniem *2erw I'Nú tha WM «ood' ^Tn^es i ???" ??" '?.'M.?? Three ?bJ?'?t*? ? ? pn.s for k  f*ad<nt? <? "t?Mt the Ld," t-?d? t. tM <?fMh?h The titaut4re ;z *=:"h '= ""j? no ''?*?r,?.,t. MdtS.<?M .a?4 01 tin coBuatition in f?dtM auk M ,tt? ??t Kotw.ST.X??.?t? Me -04 'Ant -1 <?th .?.??t<.T. aad ?t<?.. In the evaains n .?..?.iaM? 1.1d? -be p.?'.?' r.,f'*T' ''?< ''<* htriw, Mr. W. Ki-faants, sTd the sucoeeeful. ely^T.
Advertising
?'.?.? ? ?W<? ?. h W'-w.tTebie Wv, Ie-. 'J; ,t:k'  ????- "'?? 'A, 1 "r 1\14.. (k- <.I.8LJ.oL, <i-I 1kA. t'Io.< I" [ ViiSZiTc* 'msbarv Omaa. go.
I LONDON COUHESI'ONDlN; J
t?t.k.. ho-cv-r, ?.t.r.?..? .?th.?.t n,o.u?.?:?.t' .'Y?' t? *>«> w?tdMT.r Oottti.t.tif"?"'?'?'?"'?'?''?' thtM?'rMM'o'f 1" d b., a"M'< .mould ioa..deriattie U-.yof B'se.y, ,tIll t;t.;1 \t: lh..t it W'i; cürne If, ùd .ru, il the very act ot L,, i. g "t.. ,d "10, it should re. dji.il for the r, it years. I may m!<T.tic,n tbt, "»i%' \'1 \11..10.. ontr*iUi which C, rtd the Greek Guveraoiuiit, theHelitnic troops* wi.i all supplied ,,¡f)1 t.19 (;lrDl:arry d»['. oI.1r Mue, no band rmnd it, bu.. 1,\1;" bright b.MO on 11.0 aido. A Greek .(,H¡l)r wiil BOW look ..r1 like a little u411, rid, ».an—except when 441 marches— when the Pates f ,r:-t.'l that ever a 1;:f II Lngligh riii >m»D should j" iikt hi. A very curium inqiiry in just now being made y German eflioisl. 1 Ijr p-out i t'.r purpose (Jf furiii.hiug rlat* to thi'ir Givcrn. ..011\. It spi«nie hot the HtibjecU of worit-n/ men's dwtllings in London, and .(¡'ll1; uu-u <t building and l«ud » ■■ in tae couutry, U*;e attracted the a'\A!LtllJl. of t".nlhC)r¡ti. who ure seeking some UMUU O[ oruoiuetiuK 3OJ1 ilimi, :>ucl that in conssquere. they hsve ditoi uiiiel to ascertain whether h would be p-wirili to otiijrtK the systems which havo *oi«il wc;l in J "'tffcud on German inetitutiorja. A kind of trial has already been made *t l*f-r^ UrtHOell with, I am told, rouio But the ijernvaa Government wi-h D"" tn 0"1 oit fie English method, un.l lo adopt, th feasible, 1118 greet auM ol Socialism In I" (<Ja""Y U, na ol i ii» ■' d wi'i ju otter ftb«enoe of »uk■■> or 1.1 the couutry. 'lhe1 have, if¡ I."t. "r1I',I"" t,> K",i.. n:i notbiiitf to lu." by revoiutiou. li-uoi ùÎJ. llappcuiDg to bo at KflDnaUgrrea Cemetery yed- t'!rO.7, j nW tb* ftiuvrtti of ore of the "r. iwt in thu ilritioess Ahoe, Ahd 1 could not holp Doin;f struck with tho IlmulCo it ytoluc-jd. The wm th. duuKhUr of u De 'up"pe. I'rol.rtvr in the Wc.it of L jn.loti, »ni really it jHCBied though » 8d¡"1\ "I the papal ition d Kerihiugton and :tlU1",tÜll IlItut h..e jk'totiawi. Iii« clukpel ..a. fuU. aud tuo Ii 'x' 18 could not beolontHt, 1M p4Iople were ,ùiag i-i tho entrance and out.idll on the etep<«. A d'uio ( r<-wd burnjaiided the Kr*T«i Iol)d tbo lJ',fliu "'1'1 t:iickiy covered with wreaths and fi"r., miuy ltulo children strugirling throa^U the mass of { nitlo to thro if in a iloral offorinj to th PQor pirl'u gran, I noticed, too, what I have aoldorn oM« rved io i-lugUnd boforo, that nearly wry rLt*i. in the atreeta removed his hat an l Ht-»U Lvirthoadid in the ItrUllt while thu tui.ural prUOl)" 10U pajutd by.