THE SALON JOUR DE VERNISSAGE
... THE SALON JOUR DE VERNISSA GEE APRIL the 3oth is the most interesting day in all the year to a good number of the inhabitants of Paris. It is the day on which the excitement that has been simmering ...
... THE SALON JOUR DE VERNISSA GEE APRIL the 3oth is the most interesting day in all the year to a good number of the inhabitants of Paris. It is the day on which the excitement that has been simmering ...
... Studying the convenience of the public the Great Western Railway company have made arrangements for the issue of excursion and ordinary tickets at their offices next week, viz.: -193 and 407, Oxford-street; 23, New Oxford- street; H{olborn-eirous; 29, Charinsg-croes; 28, Regent-street; 5, Arthur-street East. London- bridge; 82, Queen Victoria-street; 43 and 41, Crutchedfriars; 67, Giesham ...
... APP~tLLJNG DISASTER IN THE | ENGLISH CHANNEL. 1 -- - -401 N OSTEND MAIL B3OAT BLOWN UP. iday night great anxiety prevailed at Dover the whereabouts of the Ostend mail and passen- 'the ComtOse do Flaudre, which left 10 on Friday morning, and usltendai Dover at 2.30 p.m. So great was the ery fels t for the steamer's safety that signal guns asity Yr intervals were fired through the night. ...
... NEAY,;S OF S IVANLEY. THiE MEETINLG' WVITH EMItIN BEY ?? letters despatched by Wr. Stanley in Aug7ust and at the beginning of September lasz;, frou the Arulaimi, hive at length ar- riv edin Englaeud, and we sullbjoin some of thc more interesting passages. Though not carrying the tidings of MJr. Stanley's p.icesdings further back then the note to Tippoo Tib, which was printed on Jan. 16, therse ...
... .One of the blttcrestsights In tbo world to a lever of equnl deaing, is the seleish and ioceitotel arrogance with which the rich desifnld virtues On the side of the poot, whioh they do net _eseciie theiselvess. The rich mnarn lies through his h. l-thirough his dopesifditft-throligh his footlmalln; lies wdsau he mikeo civbI spcsches-lies A-hen he subsoribel lrticdes-lei wben ho goes to be ...
... TIEM VOLUNTEMUS. At Portsmouth, on Monday, the brigades, after being inspected by General Sir George Willis, performnod some hard work in the form of drill. Many visitors were disappointed on finding that there was no field day. All the regiments that have been engaged in the East- boomne manoctivrea took part in a sham fight and re- view. At Shorneliffo the Artists' Corps, supported by the ...
... Gus IIL OF Th POOR. i England, said Theodore Parker, is the aradise of the rich, the purgatory of the wise, pxd the hell of the poor, and it would be im. possible to describe our condition more suc- Finctly or accurately. We have in our midst ,b lt no nation ever had before-, thousand ,en who are literally millionaires. After reelling in the most wasteful profusion, the rich of this country ...
... GENERAL I EWS. Sea-rle, the Australian sculler, hlin seat telegrams to. Teenaer and O'Connor, challeeriag them to ofiv him. Should the offers not be accepted, Searle will remain in Australia. The steamer Wisconsin returned to Liverpool the other day owing to an accident to one of her boilers. The necessary repairs were speedily effected, and the steaer sailed again. Messrs. Bruce and Co., ...
... THE DEMOCR ATIC WO.RLD.. 'The aptointed limit of Life for all mankind is Death; but to Snlers ition not even death is the limit-she leaps over the boundaries of Life into the other side, making Fear longer lived than life, and taoking on to Death the imagina- tiou of never-ending woes. Deep below are opened the gates of Bell, rivers of isae, and fountains of Styx are at once die- closed. Thus, ...
... a PRESENTATION TO 3MIR. OSMOND TEARLE. A gratifying expression of the esteem in which Mr Osmond Tearle is held, not only in Sunderland, but in the North generally, and a fitting testimony to the well-known generosity of character which distinguishes him, was afforded by a gathering at the Empress Hotel on the 5th inst., when the talented actor was the recipient of three presentations. Mr John ...
... OWADE DVW PSIM Na TO-day 44M av ft* QoamdaINAm of ala yeararyda th ree, S eupt, ?? i witenpl aM tht* horem of thre amm tenant poas~ ebodtv. A. trench Was aisd sal.oaind the holpe, asxz weks -r thu welds. w The batog- mm VWanpa in posfitio Oppaits 84Pa ii daine, which VWe hzmke bn. This howamer San, enimceto-onlya - oomzai!ad tshe iallewallbared ourther progres Thi IMergency am alimbed up ...
... METw'l'O140GlOATIj IEPORlT. 14 DjL? SsEJ 0F'lOX. flEA1DlIJGS THIS MOR=G BY NEGRETTI AND ZAMBRA'S BAROMETER. _IvrD, 10, ] TE . VRL 1s= 2. P.AT. 13. 2 L S.SX SAV. N.E. .4 ?? _- 0 30 a- 3- 0-l -le| Corn'e& to aea>-lteel and diuced to 32 deg. P. Thz ?? Ioca ?? the height Of tt1e 8bn r4oi I o'clock On this sndthree prevtoau tosrnines. Theo dettd ines id9iate the he intial letters ehoi Dthe ...