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Western Morning News from Plymouth, Devon, England • 2

Location:
Plymouth, Devon, England
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

zztznJ: j'riii' ot Uiis Paper at 3t, CiaosoK stbMT, BALI'S BY Do. Household Pnrotture, and tlier EflecU. at 0, Ir. i Mr 1 1 itQ Hauutou Farm, PiUaton, bj Mr. KEPOKT SIhoJ si I 1 ns 'ji-s'm BI S.s iS p.m.

aipngg W.B.W. I- IF PREPAID, nroiiP chaRGK FOB ADVBBTI3EMENTB or or Borrowed, Property to be lUatM. oruoooaw be Bought or Sold, will be as STlmoa. 6 Times. ad a.

a. a. s. 0 0 0 0 8 SJ si to so i 0 i oio 1 to ioo 88 88 Payment be sent with idvertlMmenU, as not Juwof or book-keeping. B.xpenoeeslra InaorUon will not prepaid.

The Via ecunted as part of the Advertlsaraent. 1 an-1 Aorerttsements of Public Companies and Orders sboold be made payable to Elivi ovnct-si. OEOHOB arBEET. PLYMOUTH. Clerical.

on ASSISTANT OUHATB lor St. particulars apply to the View of 81. Krwlyn. roeil, Cornwall. CiLKUICAL.

-A Clergyman Is required for August to C. J. 8., Marazion, Cornwall. 1 vUTY for three Sundays after August I boiirhoMl Dartmouth Cranford a Library, Dartmouth. (y clergyman can undertake SUNDAY 17, Western Morning Hews Otce.

IDcrsons WANTED, Certificated SCHOOLMISTRESS for infant school, or EX PUPIL Rev. G. T. Kingdom HJ. NICHOLSON, Newton Abbot, wants an experienced SECOND COUNTERMAN.

onetcoiAtomed to me retail trade, MILLINERS. WanUd, a thoreaghl: I pcrienccd Milliner for a rockl clara trade, with ak no Co pea take and VJE ANTED.a thoroughly experienced MILLINER, Vf Who has a knowledge of kvvc at the drapery counter. Abo a FEMALE APPRENTICE. T. E.

Burnard. OVERNESS, to instruct three little gtrle in tliorou 'li English. French, music, and singing. One who had experh-nco in tuition required, age and Address Pnsl-oJlce. Tavistock.

1 OVKKN ESS PUWI. required, under Principal. Weateni Morning News Office, Newton Abbot. krANTBD, smart IluY. about 14 yeura old.

to make himself generally useful 16, Clarendonplace, North-road. WANTED, a thorough good and steady Apply to Willoughby Central Foundry, Plymouth, or at Redruth. ONE FITTERS. Two or more RIVETrBRR can hare employment at Central Foundry, PlyroouUh WANTED, immediately, at the areepectable Youth as BILLIARD MAEKEB and PAGE. ENERAL SERVANT, good plum cook; wagee £ll.

Abo a HOUSEMAID, who baa partly to at lend to Hill Iren. £lO. Post-office, Palgutou. AN wife requires a NUHBB for two hoys mit arm-. Mast be a care of Mrs.

Hoarder. hewton Abbol. (1 OOD Plain COOK wanted in a family. above Good ciiaracter Mrs. care of Abbot.

stt aNTEI), an experienced HOUBB and PARf.OI'R AID, from scrvb e. Bituallon Airs. Bt. Marlins. LUkeard.

WAHTKI), good Stoke. ANTKU a good C()OKand Vf a family lo 8., Directory Office. Strauil. Torquay. WANTED, HOUSE ami PAKLoUIt MAID (pxiK-rb-nccd).

cot und.tr 38. BmMi famUy. good needk woman resj Hext, WANTED, immediately, a respectable young woman as Apply to Mrs. Harvey, Uoyol Hotel, Loetwithlel. 7 ANTED, in a bachelor establishment of three VV persons a General SERVANT, to act HooaeWper.

be a iboronpb good A. Port-oOce, Torquay, stating age. former situations, and wagea. Ae. ANTED, in a respectable Farmhouse, a Young person fond of children to assist the mUtms.

Two servants 8.. Post office. Ermlngton, Ivybrldge, Dt-voti. wwrANTED, a General to J. Andrew, Surveyor, Bldgway.

i KNKUAL liu, AtkeiranTijT Urrat-e, WANTED, a good General SERVANT. Mr. Pcnroie, 8, Dndtfratrcet. Plymouth. lAONDKYMAID wanted fora family.

Atldrew Mrs. Buparlor 34, Coortonay-street. Plymooth. lIHOROUGH General SERVANT, who can cook WC AJezasdni-terrace. Lower Durnford stlrset, BUma- Wanted, Sronsediately.

a thoroughly re- I woman ok. Must have a very good and well andewland her Age between 80 and i. kitdieomald kept H. L. Bmllh and Bona i-ibrary, Torquay.

MEDH'AL APPOINTMENT-The Incorporation of Guardians of the Poor of the town of Plymouth at tbelr weekly meeting to be held on of July, 1971, proceed to appointment of a Medical Officer for the northern district of the town of fur and the duties of the office arc stated In the Poor Law Board a Holes applicable to Plymooth, but the QnardUua will at their own exiieuso provide, for the use of live poor, cod Uvw all ulnine, and (m cases of cancer) All other medlclnee are Ire supplied by the medical otticrr at hU own The salajy be £tW per annum, and the officer will be required to realde Aropy of Law Boards Buies toPlymonth can heaeen. and Information as to the extant of the dlrtricft oh talnel, at the office In Fraokfort-street, or at the Parochial Office In the Workhouse. Annllcailons under seal, accompanied by test! mon tats, ana cnfeirsed Medical AppolnUnent." must be delivered to the Clerk before Tuesday, the 25tn day of July Instant. Tbacandidites are requested to be preaent on the day of election, at Twelve By Order of the Board, J. W.

MATTHEWS, Clerfc. Dated uly 12lh. 1871. litnations i well qualified young lady, in her IX twcoiy-stcood year, a Bbe haa a jnfpuual. grommatlcal knowledge of iWli a anperiov efficient teacher ot the nUnofwte, aad cm gjva ln drawing (heads), ringing, and and laundry X.

office, Budlelgb Balterton. Devon. A Young Lady desires a re-engagement as INOGOV'ERNEBB. thoroQfh Engllih, Music, Binging, and Damford street, Btoochoose. mjrr ANTED, by young ft re-engftgement aa BESIDENT OOVBBITEfIB Id fc ftmUy, Teubar lo a ectiool.

AcqulremenU BoglUhDiJd A. Post-office, Hayle. Cornwall. "ANTED, by young man, situation as HIND. Eicht full partiesUn aad 8..

Lamertoa. Wanted, light pouter or Lodge Gatekeeper, or some place ol Joaepb ITumpliwwo, Hotd. Pevonport. WANTED, a situation COACHMAN, by ko axDerienoed who thoroofhly undewtod and eao be well recommeaded; mo lIOTELKKEPEKB, HKSBMER, ind Othfr, I By jouog mn. Cook.

Soo4 ntumim -Adto H. 8., 57, 8 UPPER NDH3E in family, 25. Good Btaltoc. IVLAIN COOK or situmtloo os above, by a person of fifteen yean experience. Post-office.

Palgnlou. WANTED, a situation as LADY'S MAID. Good dressmaker and milliner. Seven good character. B-, 10, Bank street.

Tdgpmouth. Liitiy recoromends her NDBSBMAIDy tl roughly honest and Ylctoila-piaee, Btoke. ifitsctUmtesns Manta, SLLE BOARD', Apply to the Beeretsry "anted, BACA. hand, state bottom profen. tbc CoppertumM Instituta, Hsyle.

CKANE, to Uft soluble for BUiiog price. W. Brentos, folhelUic, Bt. Oermani. i vvT uFF WEABINO APPARKL.

Navml and I i MUKwy uniform, of eU tfemriptlon. PDBCHABBD. Ofl et tlirir by kr. or Kn. FoiSttwt, opposite I Sun I bun I High Water at JULY.

Rljea. Beta. Devon port Dockyard. I 4.S BJI S.M a.m. I B.ld p.rnl thirty-four penosslwve died within a few days, in another the deaths have exceeded ten daily.

The malady ia alxo appear! nff in different parta of IpdiA. Delaib of the taking of Herat have been received. According to one account Yakoob Khan triad with success a stratagem which the vigilance the governor foiled at Candahar of making a violent false attack on one gate while traitors from within quietly opened another. According to another and later account Yahoob found no necessity for resorting to stratagem; but made a sudden attack on a gate, and drove off the defenders after a mock resistance. Futteh Mabommed, the governor, coming up to retrieve the disaster, was struck by a camion shot, and so was his son.

He died that evening, mid his son ten days afterwards. The ninety-fifth anniversary of the declaration of Independence was celebrated with the usual enthusiasm throughout the United States. The day was fortunately fine, and nothing occurred to mar the blowing away of the amazing quantity of gunpowder consumed on this day, or to stint the usual harvest of fatal accidents. The New York press is satisfied with this Fourth. In the House of Lords last night the debate on the Array Bill resulted in the Duke of amendment being carried by a majority of 25.

The Government secured 130 votes. In the House of Commons the Attorney-General announced that in order to remove all doubt on the subject a clause would be introduced into a roll to repeal Colonel Disqualification Act of the fourteenth century; Mr. Bruce recapitulated the report of the Royal Commission on the C.D. Acta; Mr. Gladstone announced the intention of the Government to the Ballot Bill, hut letting drop several other bills, including those for the Regulation of Coal and Metalliferous Mines; and the Ballot Bill was farther diecussed in committee.

Consols (both for money and the account) and New and Reduced rose £, and closed at to The stock markets closed with a firm tone, especially railways. The Daily Neva learns that it is Mr. P. A. intention to bring before the House of Commons the question of kidnapping in the South Seas, A hatch of documents constituting the defence of the Government of Queensland has been recently received by the Colonial Office, and will doubtless be laid before Parliament.

The traffic in natives is being prosecuted with great activity, and many outrages are reported by the missionaries and others. Rioting took yesterday at Greenwich over the acquittal of Pook in the Eltham case. The crowd in the neighbourhood of his residence set the police for a time at defiance, and paraded effijnes representing a man murdering a woman with a hatchet. Head cbnataUe Talbot, who was shot in Dublin, died in delirium, and a inquiry was opened yesterday. The Irish papers write in the worst spirit about the holding lalbot up to execration as a spy Signor Mario (Marquis of Candia), the veteran tenor of 63, is to take his farewell of the Itahan Opera in England on Wednesday evening.

He has hid no formal adieu to Paris, St. Petersburg, Madrid, or New York; and in any of these musical cities he may probably be heard of again but to London, it is announced, his farewell to-morrow must be one which will bold good for ever. Some creditors of Messrs. H. E.

Simencourt and of the Lanesfield Ironworks, near Bilston, adopted a new expedient to obtain their own. As as the insolvency of the firm was announced the other day, some five or six creditors despatched workmen to bring away whatever property they could find. Atone time, according to the Birmingham Pott, 150 operatives are believed to have been there, all scrambling for pig-iron, finished iron, tools, These, for some four hours, they were carrying to boats and to vehicles, and removing to the premises of the creditors concerned. It is estimated that property worth, perhaps, £2,000 was removed in this way from the Lanesfield Works. Some of it belongs to the landlord of the works, and notices have been served upon the creditors warning them of the illegality of their proceedings.

At an influential meeting at Truro yesterday, a system of lay agency in the Chnrch of England was inaugurated. TOPICS OF THE DAY. WIMBLEDON NOTABILITIES. One of sixty men whose names are known is destined this week to attain to fame as world-wide and as lasting as the winner of a Derby or of the Uni- Tersitjf boat race. These sixty haye each, in the preliminary competition, scored 45 with ten shots.

The acalo is upward, and one Private Mayfield, let Notts, made 51 points, thus certainly winning £6O one hoe scored 50, and three 40. These sixty marksmen are truly a representative set, Middlesex owns eleven of them Staffordshire, seven; Somerset and four other counties each claim five and Cornwall, with twelve other counties, is represented by one competitor; nine of the sixty hail from Scotland. No Devonshire man came up to the minimum, although more than one was very close upon it. The Cornish man is Corporal Wren, of the Trelownrren corps, in the far west of the county, and he has the cordial good wishes of West countrymen. He baa not hitherto made even a county reputation as a marksman, hut if he succeeds in bringing the prize into Cornwall his praises will be celebrated from Scilly to the Tamar.

CANDIDATES FOR MARTYRDOM. Since the three eminent Quakers journeyed to St. Petersburg, in the vain hope of averting the Crimean war, no more philanthropic or singular mission baa been despatched to Russia than the Evangelical Alliance deputies, who have just sought to interview the Czar. From almost every country in Europe, and from America, the delegates came; and it must have been somewhat trying to tbeir patience that after an average journey of probably two thousand miles each they were not allowed to approach the Pope of the Russian Church in person, out had to make their representations to the Foreign Minister of the empire, and that not at the capital, hut at a small provincial town. The interview is declared in a special telegram to the Daily News to have passed off satisfactorily, Prince Oortchakoff returning an answer which promised happy results to the cause of religious There is ample room for the extension of freedom without giving rise to the suspicion that the Czar favours schism.

The Inouisition exists in fact, if not in name, in Russia, and the persecutions to which Lutherans are exposed in many parts of the land have no parallel in Europe during the present half-century. This is proved by a thousand testimonies, by none more impartially than by a Russian statesman who was deputed by. the Emperor to make an investigation seven years ago. He reported that everywhere the peasants implored with tears that I would present to your Majesty their request that they, or at least their children, might be permitted to confess the Lutheran andhe declared that out of 140,000 persons who had been driven into the Greek Church by official fraud and by violence exercised against not one in ten had the slightest faith in the rites to which they were forced outwardly to conform. There is reason to believe that the Czar is personally in favour of toleration, and as to confess that he is not strong enough to adopt such a policy would be humiliatiogj it is not surprising that he referred the deputation to his Foreign Minister.

Notwithstanding recent legislation, the task of rescuing our neglected city Arabs seems a very hard one. Lady Herbert, of Lea, applied to a metropolitan magistrate for assistance in getting an intelligent little girl into an industrial school. Her mother was dead, and her father a bedridden pauper. Her aunt bad taken her out of the workhouse and maintained her for some time, but becoming unable to do so, she sent her to her grandfather in Jersey. The house was burnt down, and the child thrown again on the world.

A charitable lady brought her to London, where the Sisters of Charity gare her shelter, and Lady Herbert inquired into her cnee. However, nothing could he done, though the School Board, when applied to, said it just one of the cases contemplated by the Act The magistrate said that the child was not on orphan while she had a parent living, unless that parent were in penal servitude she was not found destitute, as the Sisters had charge of her. Her father was the proper person to support her; and if he could not by reason of his poverty, the authorities would not prosecute. So the end of all our discussion and consideration is that the very cases contemplated by the Act are practically excluded. lie Solb or TO be SOLD or LET, Farnished? PENLEEYILLAB, to R.

WooUsud. Auctioneer and Honse Agent, 0, Com wall-street, Plymouth. Jobgittgs to AOVEBTISBIfENTS of LODGINGB stmllap to the aubjolned are inserted ala times in the Westers Mom News and once in the Western Weekly Jlowa for Is. 3d. Prepayment must be made direct to tbo Office, or to any of the Agents of the Westers News.

Bed Bitting Per When Booms Booms 'Week vacant PLYMOUTH. Mrs. lane's, SB, Portland square I 1 moderate, now. 3, Headland-park IDOWAY. Mrs.

Blckard. Bara Colt BOBO'BOUeH DOWN. Mrt. Hlelten, Clearbrook 3 I Mrs. Parnell, 1.

Nelson-place 3 Basking, Noland 2 1 Mra. Browning, Elm-villa 3 3 FIRST-CLASS LODGINGS, 14, The Crescent, Plymouth. First-class Furnished apartments. WlDdaor-terrace, The Hoe, Plymouth. Vacaat the I7lh.

and LODGINGS 1 at Cllften Bon.e, near King Arthur's Cattle. Private families, tourists, accommodated with Frj-, Prwpnetor, Joot. osk, on Monday, between Hotel and the I A Hoe, GOLD WATCH, with enamelled back, set with stmea. Whoever brings same BnpeTintendcat of Felice, or Mr. Bascb, WMmple-streat, will be handsomely rewarded.

iHontc. 178TABLI8 HED ADVANCED to rj any amocnC on plate, watahea, jewellery, personal or other nourity, by MAMCM Lxty, Pawnbroker and BUrenmltb, 140, dnlow atrwit. Ftvmooth I SEASON 1871 JOSEPH MAY GROSE, BHJRT TAILOR, 3 ft, BTBEET, PLYMOUTH, OUABAHTEBB MATERIAL, WORK, A FIT. tbs rentitioo fif such tt outrage.as took vkmm on Saturday. The announcement at Greenwich at the result of the trial was the signal for an of a disorderly crowd in the main street The verdict was not known there until seven minutee to nine to the evening, and before ton it was being hawked the town, which was paraded by a disrenutable mob of men and boys carrying flags, which included one entirely black, and several with the inscription Blood, emblsmatie of a sort of Cohtineutal finish to the education erf the Greenwich rough.

The crowd stopped before the residence of the parents of the ex-prtmoer, and relieved themselves of a volley of yells; and they also mobbed the solicitor who had defended him. It is reported that although numbers of the police were in sight they took no notice of the riotona and disgraceful proceedings, and that when a constable jpaa requested by a gentleman to take one of the ringleaders into custody he recommended a summons. In this connection wa note a letter from Mr. Pook, to the London papers on Monday, in which he states that his solicitor, his son (the late accused), Ms family, his friends, and himself, have bean hooted and yelled at In the public streets in a moat frightful and disgraceful manner; and for the past twelve Weeks an agony and suspense have beror endured by himself and his family that rarely fall to the lot of mortals. THE WESTERN MORNING NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1871.

TUESDAY, JULY IS. 1871. SUMMARY OF NEWS. FOREIGN. By the explosion at Vincennes, which appears to have been purely accidental, only three persons were IriPsd and the same number seriously wounded, according to the French official journal.

The building which blew up was a kind of depot, where all the projectiles requisitioned in Paris during the siege and the Command were stored. About 1,000 cartloads of these projectiles were in the building at the time of the bombs, and cartridges of various descriptions. The funeral of Auber, the great composer, took place in Fails on Sunday. The oeremony has been delayed because at the time of Aubert death the Commune would not permit the observance of religious rites. The funeral was performed in the church of La Sainte Trinity, where the body had been temporarily placed.

Some of Auberis own compositions were introduced into the musical service, performed with effect by members of the Musical Conservatory. The body was subsequently interred in tbs cemetery of Montmartre, where orations were delivered. The Czar has conferred (by telegraph) the honour of field-manhal of the Russian army upon the Grown Prince of Saxeny. army, aays the Czar, has had tbd honour of counting you as one of its own for the last nineteen years, and is proud of that fact, especially since the last war, in which, at the of the army placed under your orders, you covered vourielf with glory." Religious liberty to the Lutheran subjects of the Osar in the Baltic provinces was the object of a deputation which waited upon the Russian Chancellor on Saturday. The deputation was sent by the Evangelical Alliance, and represented various nationalities in Europe and America.

They were MOB LAW at Greenwich. well satisfied with the interview, which is said to As the police have apparently shewn so much promise happy results to the cause of religious liberty anxiety to find Pook guilty ef the Eltham murder, in Russia. it is not to be expected, perhaps, that they should Cholera has appeared in a most virulent form in interfere with the lynch law of the mob. But the the PrumUa ot Poland, Ip ona small town public generally is deeply interested preventing A. Married Gcntleniuii.

age 28, just returned from abroad, wishes to purchase the whole or part of any BUSIHEbS not requiring spedsl knoalrdae. Price not to exceed We-tern Morning Plymouth. WANTED to Keut, with optiuu of purchase, a modern RKBIOBNCB, with setne ftound Apply to Edward Coates, Guernsey. Furnished HOUSE, with lawn, or other with two sittingrooms, four bedrooms, and oseof kitchen. terms to Bank of Enylaad-pMoe, Plymonth.

JET ANTED, four-oared SKIFF, feet long. Apply by letter, stating price, to B. Tresldder, Customs, I mouth. Jor Salt. PEN be SOLD by Private Contract, the PBEEHOLD MANSION of ROBEHILL, with the gardens, pleasure lawn, and estate, comprlilng about W) acres of land, situate about a mile from Peuzonce, and overlooking to Mess.

a. ernes Taylor, Mason, nna Taylor, Kuroivars Inn, London; or to Messrs. Kortd and Cornish, 8o licit Pen ranee. Dated 17th July, 1871. FP.EE WINK and SPIRIT VAULTS BOTTLING BUSINESS.

Incoming Including splendid linings, flxlnres, trade utensils, boll ling apparatus, furniture, and delightful situation. Trade alnvst unllmitfd uurtcr proper msnageoimt. Rent £4O nn long Large cjov-nleul honse, garden. Downing, High-street, Bristol. be DISPOSED OP.

a Hratclass BUSINESS of a Grocer end Ship Chandler, which has ben tnccesrfully carried an for the last IS years by the present proprietor Is retiring. The premises are well situated, can be held under a particulars apply toG. H. Jarvis, Telgn-ateeet, Mounts bay pilchard fishery. -For BALE, Four and a hall SEINES, with all their boats, luck oets, and other gear, either singly or together, now at Mui Hod.

Gunwalloe, and For particulars apply to O. Downing, Newlyn, Penzance, or T. Leak, Surveyor, Htooehoase, Plymouth. TO be DISPOSED OP, immediately (rirorriotor deceased), the best REFRESHMENT and BOARDING ESTABLISHMENT in Mr. Wyatt, Auctioneer, 86, Union-street, Plymouth.

YERY cheap, hundreds of tons of OAK MOATS or Stomps, and dozens of good FAGOT WOOD, teady for shipment, at lopblll Quay, hy to Word and Cliowen, Sorreyora, Milton Abbot, Tavistock. elegant PHAETON (onder weight), for cob or pony, been little used, coat A-57. Price IS guineas. Also Set of Pony Harness, £2 Woodlands, Higher Brixhain. FOR SALE, Black MARE, 16 hands.

7 off, suitable for van, or would exdiange for one 72, George-street, Devcnport. TTIOE SALE, price £475, HOUSE. Clardendon- terrace. North-road, Plymouth, 14 ou the premises. TTIbR SALK, light PONT OA KHIAOK, been little used.

Price £lB. Con be seen at Mr. PlnnegeFs Livery Stablw, Plymouth. TJOINTEB PUPPIES. thorough bred, and MT vary handsome.

Dog, female, W. E. P. Foaboffi.ie, Bt. Oolumb Minor.

TTWCHSIAS, six of the best varieties for ss. Fuchsia Loam as. per bus P. Kappey, 4, George-lane, Plymonth. OIL GAKE, best American linseed cake lit barrels, now discharging at Great Western Docks tain plea and prtcei, apply 8.8.

Body and 6, East-street, Plvmonth. TTIOB SALE, a large CLARENCE, built by Idturie and to Rov. A. C. Bassett.

Watermouth, Ilfracombe. HANDSOME Bty MARE for SALE, 5 old. 14 1 high, qnlet. good in double or single be seen at E. Cab Proprietor.

TavUtock-rtiruet, Stoke. HORSE for SALE; hack, showy stepper, bay, 1 ec 10 gutneaa. Redroth, IMOR BALE, No. 6, BT. JAMES'S TEHHACE, 0 to Mewa.

Skardon and Bona. DOO 14, Old Flvnaonlh. A PARALLEL TO THE ELTEAM MURDER. The trial just concluded at the Central Criminal Court is strangely similar, in some at its features, to a case tried ten years ago at the Croydon Assizes. Kings wood Rectory had been entered by two men tor the purpose of plunder, and the only inmate, Mrs.

Halliday, the wife of the parish clerk, was murdered. She was bound hand and foot, and a stocking was torost into her mouth to prevent her. screaming. Being left in that condition she died from suffocation. A foreigner, named Johann Carl Frans, was arrested as one of the murderers, and very badly did the case go against him at first.

A packet of papers written in German, and referring to the career, appearance, and movements of a man named Johann Carl Franz, was found in the room where Mrs. Halliday died; it was, in fact, one of the service books eo much in use on the Continent. It was clearly proven that the prisoner, wss the man to whom the service book referred. The cord which bad been used to bind Mrs. Halliday was of a peculiar make, and had bean bought in Beinate (near Kiogswood) on the afternoon of the murder; and various witnesses strove to prove that Franz was the man who purchased it A piece of precisely similar pattern was found in his lodgings.

The defence be at first offered appeared exceedingly weak. He said that the bundle of papers, with several others not found in the room of death, had been stolen from him by a poor countryman with whom he had been travelling; that hshadpidred up the twine found in his lodgings at a Jdoor near his place of abode; that when ho heard he was 41 wanted by the police he changed his napie. On the face of it, no one could bo expected to believe this story. Yet it was afterwards proven that the peculiar kind of cord was manufactured within a few of th. place where Franz said he had found a piece.

A paper belonging to a person named Krphn was found in the bundle, and it was suggested that this might be an alias of the prisoner; but convincing evidence shewed that Krohn was altogether a different individual. Lastly, in proof (rf the assertion that he had lest the bundle of papers, several documents which he described, and which were not in the bundle, were found in different parts of England. The jury declared him and so the Kingswood murder remains unravelled to this day. CAT CULTURE. All of national education moat regard the cat show at the Crystal Palace as a step, although perhaps a short one, in the right direction.

Our present generation of cats is morally in a very depraved condition; their ideas with regard to property are of the vaguest description, and rarely or never do they exercise the commonest virtues ol civilizatioa. Here and there a cat of advanced principles may be found, but undeniably the race is lawless. Such of us, then, as have suffered from the freebooting habits or nocturnal recreations of the cat who has rejoice at the establishment of this means of elevating the physical and moral condition of the species, and in course of time, perhaps, imbuing them with a due sense of the sanctity of the cupboard, and the impropriety of assembling by night and engaging in a concert upon the tiles. In these circumstances, it is satisfactory to learn that the cat show has been so successful as to encourage its promoters to get up another next year. Instead of a scanty attendance, as was feared, Londoners turned out in their thousands to witness the exhibition.

Cats are very common, and so much curiosity to see them ou the part of the public was therefore somewhat inexplicable, until Mr. Frank Buckland came forward to explain the phenomenon in Land and IVater. The philosophy of it after all is very simple. Everybody has a cat, and they know about cats, and eo they come because it interests them to compare our with the prize THB DISEASED MEAT TRADE. Notwithstanding the well-meant efforts of the authorities at its suppression, the traffic in diseased meat is still carried on to a very great extent out the country.

The continuance of the rile practice Is no doubt largely owing to a disposition on tin part of the magistrates to punish offenders by fine. Thus the contraband traffic is reduced to a mere question of profit and loss like any other branch of commerce, and it is easy to see that it is a speculation on which one may embark with very considerable chances of success. Take the case of a Birmingham butcher, who was before the local bench the other day on a charge at exposing for sale the diseased carcase of a pig. The pig, which was shewn to have been suffering from measles and inflammation, had been sent to the shop of a dealer to be made the best but so fool was the carcase that even the dealer shrank from catting it up. Under these circumstances, the only question for the Bench was whether they should send the defendant to prison or let him off with a fine.

They decided eventually in favour of the fine in consideration chiefly of its being a first conviction, and the offender got off cheaply his attempt to poison the pork-eating public by a payment of £lO and costs. Read in the light of the defendant's statea the inadequacy of the fine as a measure of ment at onco appears. He admitted that he id only 4s. fora carcase which, if sound, would him nearly eight tunes that sum. Now, taking the inspectors estimate of 30s.

as the wholesale value of a healthy carcase of that it will be seen that over and above the legitimate profit on meat retailing, the balance in favour of unwholesome pork is just twenty-six shillings per pig. Truly, a premium upon a most pernicious form of dishonest trading! The public health will not be sufficiently protected until in all such cases fines are supplanted by imprisonment, or even, if Decenary, fay that form of punishment which has been found so efficacious with lash. Thk rejection of the Army Regulation MB by the House of Lords does not appear to have bees expected either by the Government or by the country. For its own sake the fate of the maasare will be bat little regretted by either. The abolition of purchase of commianons, which alone the bill proposed, must be a material feature in any scheme of army reform, but standing alone it would effect no practical good, while it involved a vastand indefinite expenditure.

That this hill should be rejected by the House of Peers by so decisive a majority as 26 will not excite the dissatisfaction which would bare resulted from the overthrow of any favourite or popular measure. But the consequences of last division may bQ very serious. Such a defeat shews that Government cannot, even for the chief measure of the session command a majority of the House of Lords. It shews that unless some means can be devised for controGog that House, Government is powerlses to effect the legislation on which the elected representatives of the nation have agreed, The voting of last night, Judging from moat of the speeches, was less the result of disapproval of the bill than of opposition to the Ministry. How the revolted House will be brought under control is not yet apparent.

Probably the Government will give them the opportunity of atening for this vote, by pressing on the Ballot BUI. If that be the failure at the Army BUI may ba Wittor Hgntted oor resented. Bat if that, too, to rejected, a Ministerial criais must ensue. Mfi. CowJrh-Tesiplk kas given notice of kia intention to move on August let for leave to introduce a bill to enable incumbents of parishes, with the consent of their diocesan, to allow persons not in holy to preach in the pulpits of the English Church.

The date at which the member for South Hants will make his motion indicates that he has no expectation of seeing his bill become law during the present! Marion. It will be a tentative motion and taunted to, will enable him to get his measure printed, and thus elicit the opinions of Churchmen, both cleric and lay. For our own parts, we do not require to see Mr. hill in order to be able to pass an opinion upon it. The proposal seems to us eminently wise.

The only doubt we have it as to whether it would not prove wholly inoperative. There is a certain amount of class jealoisy and professional caste feeling which would prevent many clergymen from availing themselves of the help of laymen. The rawest deacon, fresh frorp a university, where he has been plqughed and plucked ad would be the most keen in reeenting the intrusion of unordained persons into the office and work of the ministry. The more incompetent he felt himself to teach, the more competent he believed such persons to teach, the more neceasary he would think it to maintain that professional distimMian by which alone he has any status as a teacher. However dull and stupid, he would have sufficient wit to see that if he once permitted a really clever, eloquent layman into his pulpit, his parishioners would be very loth to see anyone else there.

Ouce allow the layman to compete, and all would over. The parishioners would learn that a man who was scbolard, and who had never been to college," was aide to give them very much better sermons without being paid for them than his reverence who theoretically has been devoting four years to the study of the Bible and the Fathers, but really to the fives court and the liver. Incapablea of this description are ever most ready to fall back upon the Korah, Dathan, and Abiram theory. Beaten all to nothing as to learning, i eloquence, and unction, by the local preacher at or they find it necessary to retrieve their position by daimiog an authority which was asserted by the Hebrew lawgiver. It I does not strike them that the claim is rather absurd in face of the fact that the earth does not open her mouth and swallow up the and his hearers.

They think that they have done enough when they have suggested a parallel, though the parallel fails in the most essential points. Such men as these are not likely to avail themselves of Mr. bill. There is another class of clergy who would be equally unwilling to do so. There is the incumbent who, to quote bis own watches over his flock with a godly jealousy, and thinks that harm will come to them if they are fed by any other shepherd than himselfeven though.that other be a duly qualified shepherd.

1 keep my pulpit as chaste as my wife," was the answer made by one of these egotistical teachers in reply to the friendly offer of assistance from a brother clergyman. In the opinion of such a man there is, or may be, poieon in every dish which is offered to his spiritual guests. He must taste each one; nay, he must prepare it; nay, he must chewit, before he will allow them to partake. More than that, the dish must be always the same. Sunday after Sunday he repeats the same phrases, introduces propos de rien the same favourite doctrines, thinks that he has not preached the whole gospel he goes through the whole scheme of his divinity, and will not trust a single one of all bis twenty thousand duly ordained brethren to enter his pulpit, lest his people should suffer by error of commissioo or omission.

They, poor souls, whose spiritual appetites have been palled by this repetition of the same everlasting fare, would gladly listen to tho vulgareat ranter or the stick for once in a way. Bat if their pastor will not allow them to be tended by other duly licensed shepherds, is it likely that he will allow them to follow one who has no such licence Yet though we hold that the proposed measure would be wholly inoperative where it is moat we see no reason why it should not be of service in less urgent cases. There is many a clergyman who, while be has a sufficiently exalted notion about his official status and bis personal attainments, understands the value of variety. He knows that the farmer does not always sow the same seed on his land, but varies the crop from year to year, even though one crop is inferior in value to all the rest. He knows that no preacher who overlived, not even Paul himself, grasped the whole of truth with equal firmness and precision.

Much less can he, who is no Paul, but an ordinary nineteenth century parson, hope to do so. He knows that truth is manysided, and that while one side commends itself most to one mind, another side will commend itself to another mind, and that his people will profit most by having masy rides presented te them. He will welcome other teachers, even though they be far inferior to him in culture and eloquence and learning, because he knows that every man, even the most many-sided man, has a tendency to repeat himself, and to narrow down to a few doctrines the all-embracing message of the gospel. How much more gladly should the hard-working parish priest, who is painfully conscious of his deficiencies as a preacher, welcome this outside help His heart is in his work. No one better than he knows that, while be is without an equal in visiting his people, In administering the local charities, in teaching at the school, he utterly fails in the pulpit It is one of the grand and most hurtful mistakes of our parochial system that we expect a clergyman to combine in himself functions widely diverse, and, to a certain extent, antago, nistic.

The incumbent whose heart is in his parochial ministrations, who delights in being amongst his people from Monday morning to Saturday night, finds his study no haven of rest, but a 1 prison cell, and bis sermon no welcome recreation, but ford labour. Why should he be compelled to do that which is a weariness to him and to those who hear him? They manage these things better in Rome. The preaching friar is not a parish priest Beth friar and priest do their duty better, because neither attempts that which is not his duty. If we must have our two sermons a week, force the man who has been visiting the sick and teaching in the schools all the week to produce them. This would be just as fair as to insist upon his composing the prayers and aU the hymns.

Let him moke use of aU the resources which he has at his disposal. Let him read openly, and without pretence at concealment on the one hand, or imputation of sloth on the other, the great thoughts of great men; or if he be so fortunate as to number among his parishioners a layman or a dissenting minister who is endowed with the gift of preaching, and on whose discretion he can rely, let him, with the assent of his bishop, make use of such good fortune, Thereby he will accomplish many ends at once. He will relieve himself of a burden too heavy for him to bear, he will win to the Church many a man who felt hostile to it simply because it gave him no opportunity of stirring up the gift that is in and be will give to his people good wholesome savoury food, instead of the dry and tasteless chaff which was all that ha bad in bis own storehouse. If the clergy are wise, they will for their own sakes, for the sake of tiie Church at luge, and for the sake of their people in particular, heartily support the measure of which Mr. Cowper-Teraple has given notice.

Public opinion is far from unanimous in reference to the trial and sentence of Mm. Flora Davey. That she killed Mr. Moon is clear enough. He could not have killed himself; at least, the possibility of bis doing so is so small as not to be worth considering.

It was not likely that the wound was a mere accident ef a struggle between the two. The ouly theory at all supported by the facts is that which the jury accepted. In the heat of passion Mrs. Davey seised a knife, and so became the author of a crime which she had undoubtedly no deliberate intention of committing. A sentence of eight penal servitude is an unusually severe one for the offence of manslaughter, when the wound is inflicted in the heat of passion during a mutual struggle.

The crime could only be manslaughter, yet the sentence looks like a kind of compromise between this offence and the greater one of murder. Doubtless the world will low nothing by a lengthened withdrawal of Davey from active participation' in its affairs. But one point to he considered in dealing oat these heavy punishments is their effect opon public morality, and it does not appear that the slightest benefit will be gained by visiting this miserable woman more severely than any otner person. There is no need to enlarge upon the vicious lives led by the guilty pair at Bayswater. It is eutticient to point out that Mrs.

crime could not under any circumstances have proved otherwise than an injury to herself. Her sentence, therefore, cannot be a warning to any other evil doer, and thus the main purpose of punishment is lost. Women in her condition are seldom tempted to kill the geese that lay their golden eggs. A life mcb as that led by this woman commonly leads to the development of an exceptional ingenuity for fleecing their victims, and a desire to prolong that course of plunder as much as possiblp. Mrs.

Davey 'would not go unpunished if she were now set at liberty. The sentence is far heavier upon one nursed in the lap of luxury and unused to bard living than it would bo upon one whoee life had been a constant struggle for a livelihood, and whose punishment would he mitigated by the thought that at length anxiety as to the food is at an end. Perhaps, however, the fascination which enchanted the son will suffice to secure in time an amelioration of the hardest inflictions of prison life. WEST OF ENGLAND NEWS. The Rct.

M. G. Southcomb, senior canto at Newton Abbot, where be has laboured for the lait rix years, was on Saturday presented with a puree of sore reigns the parishioners. Mr. Southcomb has been presented with a living near Tetnes.

The two Weaver and Alfred were brought before the Plyiaouth magistrates on Thursday, charged with stealing a 19-fathom hawser from the steamship Tamar, were again brought up at tike petty sessions yesterday, and farther remanded until Thursday next. Paignton regatta is fixed to take place on the August Upwards of £OO will be offered as prizes for competition among yachts, sailing rowing boats, and for aquatic sports. The prizes being so goad. It is expected that a large number of entries will be made in each class, and a successful holiday be the result The boatswain of the Italian barque Angelic Antonio woe on Saturday brought before Messrs. Webber and Selley, Falmouth borough magistrates, and fined £lOO, or six imprisonment, for concealing lbs, of tobacco and lbs.

of cigars. The Bench stated that they would recommend the Board of Commisslontrs of Customs to mitigate the sentence. Mrs. Peggy Glanville, of East Stonebouse, executrix of the will of Wm. Glanville, sued George Glaaville, labourer, of Lenin, at the Liskeard County Court yesterday, to recover £29 4a Gd.

dne from him to the estate of her late husband. Mr. R. G. Edmonds, of Plymouth, appeared for plaintiff, and Mr.

P. J. Wallis, of Bodmin, for defendant, who claimed a set off of £59 Gd. for five years'looking after testator's sheep and cotUe and other thioga. The set-off was objected to as being mode up after the husband hod died, mid attention was directed to an Item in defendant's account charging plaintiff for laying out bis (defendant's) father after death.

The judge said he could give no credit to the set-off, and gave judgment for the plaintiff, payment in full. At the eecond grade examination in drawing In connection with the Science and Art Department, South Kensington, held at St. Austell in May last, the following pupils of the llev. Sampson, Weston House School, were successful Free Glaason, Arthur Hern, Hedley Frank Hockaday, John H. Petherick, William Petherick, Charles Handle, Joseph Tredinnick, Arthur Trascott, Walter Willoox, Edwin J.

Williams (teacher). M. Coon, E. J. Williams.

M. Coon, E. J. Williams. Model-Frank Hockaday, Lynn Thiscott, Arthur Tiuscott, £.

J. Williams. In addition to the the following were marked excellent- and therefore obtain a prize. Free Petherick, box of colours. Truscott, Wonmm's Analysis and Botany.

E. J. Williams, excellent in free hand, geometry, and model; prize, Burchett's Geometry and Perspective. Mr. Williams having thus passed in each of the four branches of the examination, obtained bis certificate as a teacher of drawing.

Although not at present la made, prize-fighting cannot falriy be said to be a thing of the at least amongst the inhabitants of Bunt and John Gillsrd, trawlers, two powerful-looking men, were yesterday brought before the Plymouth magistrates to shew cause why they should not be bound over to keep the peace, information having been given that they intended to engage In a prize-fight -inspector Edwards stated that he apprehended Gillard at Castle Itm. and on taking him into custody prisoner said that he and Bunt intended to have fought, but hearing that a warrant hod been issued against them they hod determined not to do A. P. Bs Ik will stated that on Friday last he received information that there was going to be a prizefight between two fishermen. He made Inquiries, and finding that the fight was to come off on Tuesday at Mount Balten he took measures to have the fight stopped.

prisoners stated that they had never intended to fight, but the Bench bound them over in their own recognizances in the sum of £2O to keep the peace towards each other for six months. At the Liakeard Oounty Court.yesterday, before the Judge, Mr. Matthew Forteecue, John Bumble brought an actiun against Phillippa Keara, adminigtratrix of Richard Keam, farmer, Trcthawl, Llskeaid. Mr. Edmonds for the plaintiff, and Mr.

Raby for the defendant. tiff, a labourer, residing at iiickleigh, and working for Mr. Brew, was brother-in-law of tne deceased, and in 1858, and at times subsequently, be lent Mm money amounting to £25, for which pronuraoiy notes were given. The interest was regularly paid on Old Christmas but no part of the principal had been refunded. The estate of deceased was worth between £2OO and £3OO.

Tbs defence was that defendant had paid all the debts of her husband an far as she knew he was involved, but she was not aware of the existence of a debt between deceased and plaintiff. If the amount claimed could be realized oat o( the estate, it should be paid. Mr. Edmonds was not satisfied with this, and on examining defendant from her that she had received more than £BO herself, and that the who sold her property had more raeney to pay over to her. His Honour gave a verdict for the plaintiff, the money to bo paid forthwith.

A meeting of the sufaecriben to the building fond of St. Paul's School, Stenehoose, was held in the schoolroom last Rev. W. H. Bordeaux, the incumbent, in the the purpose of appointing trustees in whom the school should be vested, and for the election of a committee of Bulteel, ponded by CoL Cooke, moved that it was desirable to vest the proposed schoolrooms in seven trustees, to consist of the incumbent, CoL Cooke, and Messrs.

Hext Roger, Churchward, Bulteel. Hubbard, and Chairman stated, answer to Mr. Bodd, that they wen not wont of funds to enable them to establish a day wrbool, they only wanted a mistress. The schoolroom was a large one. and would accommodate a good number of children.

He was tore than would be a good attendance, as many persona did not like to send their children to the barrack schools. He proposed that a statement of tin terms on wMch the Bight Hem. the Earl of Mount'Edgcumbe bad granted theep the lease, which had been drawn up by Mr. Hext Boger, should be B. Bodd seconded the proposition, which on bang pat to the meeting was carried Chairman, seconded by Mr.

R. Bodd. proposed that a committee of management should be tonned, and should be oomposedoltbe following subscribers to the building fund, via Col Grey, CoL Cooke, Oapt, Wheeler, Mr. feulteel, Mr! Moore, Mr. Hubbard, Mr.

Gormully, ai the Rev. Mr. W. H. Bordeaux.

AND SHIPPING NEWa TqeHambnrg-American Packet vill from tomorrow mame their calling at Ham on their paaum from Uambnrg to Hew York. The ej. Holeatla. that learn Hcmbnrs to morrow, will call at Ham, and leave there on the Sttiid Ibm with mails, and cargo, for Hew York. The ship Light Brigade.

Captain Wilkins, from Brisbane Aoril with and general colonial cargo, for Loodjn paseed op Channel off Plymouth yesterday, and landed nine of her passengers at that port by a pilot boat. Plymouth, Joly a.s., Bsara. from Loudon, with general caago, for Yokohama; Stella. Dnteh 111 edema, from Amsterdam, with general cargo, for Mt in to ooeJ, Lady Dublin Countess of Dublin. Dunn, from Dahlia, for London; Eddystooe, s.s., EoMneon, from Glasgow, for iMs port: Hydia.

Akyah. with rice: A lex forgml, FATAL GUN ACCIDENT AT EXMINSTER I A fatal accident, caused by the incautious handlin'' of firearms, occurred at the Devon and Exeter Ind trial School, at Exntinster, on Sunday. The victim was a servant girl, named Angelina Were, employed at the itusti tution. It that on Saturday evening the master, Mr. F.

T. Dickson, who bad been shooting binls in an orchard attached to the institution, placed bia gun waa loaded and the entrance ball behind a glared double door. Being at the moment called to attend some vfdtois, the fact that he had placed the ghn there escaped bis memory until the following when he noticed that the weapon was not in its usual place in his study. He then ordered one of the inmates of the school a lad named George Ash. about 1G yean of fetch the gun and bring it to him.

Scarcely Lad the boy left the room than a report was ham), and directly afterwards Ash ran in with the smoking gun in his hand, looking fearfully pale, and exclaiming in broken accents that the gun had gone off and burted os the deceased was known in the Mr. and Mm. Dickson, and several other persons, at once went to her assistance, and found her lying on the with a frightful wound in the head, from which blood flowing fast. Dr. Kingdon, of Exminster, was called, aud he ordered her removal to a bedroom, where she lingered for an hour and a half and died.

The wound was a large one; the scalp was driven in, the base of the skull was fractured, ana a portion of the brain had been blown out. An im uest was held on the by Mr. Coroner yesterday afternoon. The evidence adduced shewed that the occurrence was a pure accident. The boy Ash stated that when he took up the gnu, he lifted the hammer to see whether or not there was a cap on the nipple.

At the moment the deceased, who was on the steps oplaide ball door, spoke to him; he looked up suddenly, the hammer slipped through his fingers, and tbs gun went off. Id the course of the inquiry it came oat that the deceased and Ash had frequently had trivial quarrels, but they had always become friends again very shortly afterwards, and on the very morning of her death the unfortunate girl had given him some of the dripping which she received as a peruuisite from the kitchen, to spread upon his fact shewing that the two were then on the most friendly as the boys generally have to eat dry bread with their porridee at Coroner observed that the conduct of the master in leaving a loaded pun in such a place, ami scuding a boy alter it instead of fetching it Uumclf, was very iurv returned a verdict of death." Mr. J. Trobano, solicitor to the institution, appeared to watch the case tm the managers. EDUCATION MATTERS AT PLYMPTOX, MEETING OF NONCONFORMISTS.

A meeting of the Nonconformists of Piympton Mary and the neighbourhood was held last evening in the Wesleyan -hapel, Ridgway, to consider what coarse should be adopted to provide the additional school art datum in the parish required by the Elementary Education Act, The Mayor of Plymouth (Mr. B. C. Serpell) and in his opening speech claimed a right to be present, If not as a resident in the pariah, or a ratepayer, as one mho took a deep interest in education, not only in this particular parish, bat throughout the land. If elementary schools worn to be a blessing to the country they must be established upon unsectarian principles, upon such a basis that persona of any religion could send their children to school without any fear of their being taught doctrines opposed to theim As Nonconformists they desired nothing for themselves, bat wished to establish schools for the benefit of the entire community.

The first' resolution, this meeting having regard to the education requirements of this parish, deeply regrets that the Nonconformists are prevented from acting in harmony with the present managers of the National Schools already in existence and in was moved by Mr. U. if. Daw. The Government told them, he said, to proride sufficient accommodation for every child between the ages of five and thirteen.

In that parish it was found that additional education accommodation would be required fur about 80 nr 100 children. The question then how should this additional accommodation be provided. It had been proposed by Mr. Soltau Symons, who had acted towards the Nonconformists iu this matter with a large I amount ol liberality, although himself a Churchman, that a committee should be formed of thirteen to enter into negotiations for the handing over of the present eatab lished schools to the parish generally. Eleven of the thirteen Mr.

Symons proposed should be sppointed by mi been hers to the school; one other to be Morley, who gave the site for the present National School; and the thirteenth to be the owner of Beecbwood, who was largely interested in giving Sparkwell School to the parish. It was suggested that a deputation should wait upon the trustees or managers df the National School to ask if they would hand the school over to a committee to be appointed. By reference to the trust it was found they could not do so, but they consented, in order to meet the wishes of the Nonconformists and subscribers, to a committee of being appointed to act with them in the management uf the school It was suggested that some, if not all, of this committee should be Nonconformists, inorder that the management of the Board should consist of a fair representation of the whole parish. But the question was asked whether if Nonconformists were elected on this committee the Church catechism would be taught, an answer la the affirmative was returned and every one of them refused to act. Mr.

Hunt, in whose hands the religious and moral teaching of the school was placed, was asked if he would kindly withdraw the catechbm for one-half of the week he positively refused, and said, to deprive the children of it was nothing lets than tyranny, to which he would not submit. He (Mr. Daw) admitted that Churchmen had largely subscribed towards the building and maintenance of schools, but they were not entirely supported by them. (Hear, hear.) The capitation grants which were made to the schools were raised Out ol the taxes of the whole kingdom, Nonconformists as well as Churchmen paid them, and what the Nonconformists objected to was. that the Churchmen should take their money to pay for the Church catechism being taught.

(Hear, hear.) Mr. Rickard, who seconded the motion, forcibly pointed out the disadvantages against which Noaeon lonnity had to contend, especially drawing attention to what he termed the absurdity of the Church catechism, and urging for a free representation. The greater part his speech was directed agaim-t the Churchmen of the pariah for the part they had taken in the education question. The Revr. J.

Baotih aupporWl the mulion, the rue of the cjaclion from the lailhrt down to the present time. Especially severe was he upon the Church catechism, which he held up as a mere mockery and the essence of foolishness, and therefore uUrely nugatory in the advance and cause of education. Ihe Rev. F. Anthonv moved, this meeting believes the establishment of one or more nnsectarian schools in this parish to be of the utmost Importance, and pledges itself to me every effort to carry out this object.

His speech was mainly directed against the Church catechum, and was au elaborate argum. nt in favour of freedom of Nonconformity from State If it were necessary to educate the children of members of the State Church in the Church catechism he contended, that thtchildren of every denomination should have their own MtMhim Uoght them. it but tyn.my b. educate children in subjects which their parents regarded aa so much nonsense What was a national school but a for the children erf all denominations Under present conditions it was a sectarian school, and Was not a national school, twist the name whatsoever wav thev they laith.Chnrehc.t.chinn 1 Wedeynn or my other denominetionrj ctechlem be end studied for the other half of the week; let there be fairness. Mr.

Sowros seconded the motion, hopbg that harmony would exist between the Churchmen and the IWoif fonmsts the parish, as a moat important question was Both resolutions were carried unanimously. THE HAVOC ROUND PARIS, Notwithstanding the boats of workmen employed in repairing the damage wrought, the environs of Paris have iL. ntd thei i oppeuvice. The dent of the Tubm considers th.t the deetructioo take vem of tod to Whole diitricta of the Mihuilx Antaoil ttatun Md the Point du Jour eone of the mait frightful ond i.ictureenue rum, ore to be by the hie, Count J.nheit shoul.l hove hedydoy the Porudane ttaoe forth by thouoondo to gore ot thoee of 8t ClouiL the unfortunate inhabitants of SOO of -dd to be Urtn bort thefiy, the tto fonnet hointotitata-ought to tLI very mch impertinent curiority. Aftrt St cKnd, tae iS of i of the plocStoot waA suflered, and It seems scarcely safe to drive biftonne fropnento of woil which otill tiwir fortom it howd thot Unlottunotely, there teems little re- At the Point du Jour the jj diaastrous, is more genend, twho a Guord 1 11ra ll in reorof whence Ducotal mode bio li-oolt to Yonder," he said.

Shfet ddortdotad wmehmire, the red wollt of they hod been pointed with the lea of need to tail hot dog ot fronc 110 Dkcay of Aukrican Neir Prtn bewails the decay ahipbtukUna in New England. The great abipyarda oi Bnatou are deserted, and where once Donald built canted the American flag around the worldina popetoal nice with the cUnpera oil Aberdeen and the Clyde there la only a waste of rotten shim. Bat five aWpyanfa are now in use in Boston and ita nelgubourhood, and the whole number of vessels now on the consists of one ship, three scboonere, and amaUpilot boat Boston may well bewail the ruin of her shipbuilders, but she should remember that this rum bera wrought by the party which Boston steadily sup porta. The protectionist delusion which boa abolished tie American merchant marine finds ita strongest aupnortere realising the truth thither slupbudduipmdogtry haa been kSp by and to emancipate herself from 88ante. CIHAHGK OB the month of Motlamn ld would itt'aladito ibiaud in bra dag within Tho liome may r.e had imiepeodn-nUy or exthaadMt Torquay -Weak, mvhrry nnjrtintf, oud cagatta oooie off In Whitworth, Lucloiib street, Torquay..

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