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IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT.

VOTE OF CENSURE.

A FATAL FIGHT.

[No title]

THE RESULT OF PASSION.

ENTHRONEMENT OF THE BISHOP…

I EGYPT AND THE SOUDAN.

LEICESTER WOOL FAIR.

SUDDEN DEATH AT A RAILWAY…

EPITOME OF NEWS.

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EPITOME OF NEWS. BRITISH AND FOREIGN. The body of the Prince of Orange has been embalmed? dressed in uniform, and placed on a bed of State. On Wednesday there was successfully launched from the yard of John Elder and Company, Govan, Glasgow, the Cunard liner Umbria, 550 feet long, 37 broad, 40 deep, and tonnage 8000. The indicated horse-power is 12,500. This is the largest steam-power of any vessel afloat. There was a large number of spectators on both banks of the Clyde. A serious fire broke out in the extensive stables of Messrs. Robert Armstrong and Sons, omnibus and carriage proprietors, Belfast, at an early hour on Wed- nesday morning. The buildings were destroyed, and the flames spread to neighbouring dwelling-houses, completely gutting them, the inmates being rescued with difficulty. Out of forty-five horses which were in the stables at the time of the outbreak, it was only possible to save six. Mr. Bright went to the House of Commons on Wed- nesday in order to vote for the Cemeteries Bill, this being his first appearance after a long absence. He seemed in excellent health. The Duke of Cambridge presided on Wednesday at the annual inspection of the boys of the training -b-Ir;p Warspite. After the inspection the prizes gained by the boys were distributed by the Duchess of Leeds. The Earl of Shaftesbury presided in Willis's Rooms, London, on Wednesday, at the 40th annual meeting of the Society for Improving the Condition of the Labour- ing Classes. It appeared that the property of the society was now estimated at £ 37,883, and that the buildings were well tenanted, and the small mortality among the residents testified to the excellent sanitary condition of the dwellings. At the Central Criminal Court, on Wednesday, in the case of the prisoner Albert Norris, who was charged with the wilful murder of his two children at South- wark, Mr. Montagu Williams said that the prisoner had been removed to a criminal lunatic asylum under a Secretary of State's warrant, and he, therefore, applied that the recognisances of the witnesses for the prose- cution should be enlarged sine die," and in the event of the prisoner recovering sufficient to take his trial, they would receive fresh notice to attend. Mr. Justice Hawkins made the order. At the Greenwich Police-court on Wednesday Patrick Tooney, 35, general dealer, was sentenced to six months' imprisonment with hard labour for assaulting his wife. He came home drunk, threw a paraffin lamp at her, and then beat her about the head and body with a broom- handle, which he broke, and a pair of tongs. Mr. Balguy gave the wife a separation order, with an allowance of 5s. per week. Dr. Thomas, the coroner, received information on Wednesday that several parts of human bodies had been found early in the morning in Castle-road, Kentish Town, London. The remains consist of the left foot and body of a child between 14 and 15 years of age, and the right hand of an adult. The police are making inquiries in the neighbourhood previous to the holding of an inquest. Captain Clayton, an English officer, is at Odessa pur- chasing horses for Egypt and the Soudan. Fifteen hundred are to be bought, and they will be shipped direct to Alexandria. The sale of the materials of the unfinished Grand National Opera House on the Thames Embankment in London, which commenced on Tuesday, was brought to a conclusion on Wednesday, the total proceeds of the two days' sale amounting to £2,180, although the building, so far as it had been erected, is estimated to have cost £ 80,000. Dr. Vartan, a naturalised British subject, has been brutally assaulted at Nazareth. The British Consul not having been able to obtain satisfaction from the local authorities. Lord Dufferin has made representation to t _e Porte on the subject. The Bradford Home Lessons case was finally disposed of on Wednesday, when the borough magistrates fined the Board schoolmaster, Mr. Johnston, the nominal penalty of one shilling, with eight shillings cost, in accordance with the decision of the Queen's Bench that an assault had been committed by detaining the lad Hunter after school hours for not doing home lessons. The Bench refused to grant costs on the higher scale. On Wednesday afternoon a pleasure boat, containing eight persons, left Penarth for a sail. A tugboat passing an attempt was made by the boatmen to become at- tached, and in doing so the pleasure boat capsized three adults and one child being drowned. The names'of the former are Harriet Baker, married, Annie Burton mar- ried, of Newcastle, and John Boyle, of Penarth. The twelfth annual concert of the London Sunday School Choir took place on Wednesday at the Crystal Palace, about 5000 members-representing a selection from among 8000—taking part. Her Majesty has been pleased to confer the Provost- ship of Eton College, vacant by the death of the Rev. Charles Old Goodtord, D.D., upon the Rev. James J. Hornby, D.D. On Tuesday the portrait of the late Mr. Samuel Bowly, presented to him as a national testimonial by the Temperance League, of which he was president, was handed over to the Corporation of Gloucester for the citizens. A few days ago, writes a Naples correspondent, at a town called Sansevero, the syndic gave orders that all dogs found in the streets unmuzzled should be killed on the spot. The police made a raid on the poor animals, either poisoning or shooting all they found. Continuing the chase until evening, they had made an end of 102 dogs. The elections in Hungary have resulted in the re- turn of 235 Liberals against 174 Government candi- dates. The Cunard steamship Pavonia was entering the Langton Dock at Liverpool on Tuesday afternoon when the cylinder casing of the engine burst. The chief engineer, who was standing close by, was severely scalded by the escaping steam, but no further damage was done. Tuesday night's London Gazette contains a notice that the Prince of Wales will, by command of the Queen, hold leeves at St. James's Palace, on behalf of her Majesty, on Monday, the 7th, and on Monday, the 14th of July next, at two o'clock. On Tuesday morning a destructive fire occurred at the Britannia Cotton Mill, Heywood, belonging to Cobden, Rill, and Co., doing damage to the extent of £10,000, and destroying 13,000 spindles. A man named Townley, who had got on to a low ledge to witness the fire was killed by the fall of a coping stone from the burning building. On Tuesday Mr. Alderman Whitehead and Mr. G. Faudel Phillips (youngest son of Alderman Sir Benjamin Phillips) were elected as the new sheriffs of London and Middlesex. At Newry on Tuesday Thomas Mulholland, a Nationalist, was committed for trial at Downpatrick Assizes, but admitted to bail, charged with having fired a loaded revolver with intent to kill on the occasion of the recent rioting at Newry. The Queen, who takes a great interest in the Royal Tapestry Works at Windsor, has just purchased three panels, the work of the English apprentices, represent- ing Osborne, Windsor, and Buckingham Palace. These designs are treated with foliage, and are intended to illustrate the seasons. Balmoral, which represents winter, is already in the possession of her Majesty. j Windsor, Buckingham Palace, and Osborne will repre- sent spring, summer, and autumn respectively. Mr. F. W. Hetherington, who introduced cricket into Holland three seasons ago, has arranged another series of matches to take place in Holland and Belgium shortly. The Council of the Society of Arts have awarded the Society's silver medal to the Marquis of Lome, for his paper on Canada and its Products." Similar medals have been given to the readers of other papers during the recent session. At the Central Criminal Court on Monday, James H. Thornton, guard to a post parcel van, pleaded guilty to stealing a post parcel, and was sentenced to five years' penal servitude. The Rev. A. A. Campbell, minister of Crathie parish, conducted divine worship in Balmoral Castle on Sunday forenoon, in the presence of the Queen and the members of the Royal Household. On Monday night Mr. Villiers Stuart, M.P., exhibited in the lobby of the House of Commons a courbash, such as is used for compelling the payment of taxes in Egypt. The instrument consists of a thick thong, made of the hide of a rhinoceros, aLd it was examined with interest by a number of members. A New York telegram states that Mr. Joseph Burn- ham, of the firm of Hotchkiss, Burnham, and Co., has committed suicide by shooting himself. The firm sus- pended payment on the 14th of May, Mr. Burnham's personal loss amounting to half a million dollars. At the Derby Police-court on Tuesday, no fewer than 14 men, eight of whom were found in one compartment were charged with attempting to defraud the Midland Railway Company by travelling without tickets, on the occasion of Derby races. They were each fined 20s. and costs, with the option of a month's imprisonment. The annual meeting of the South AVales and Mon- mouthshire Miners' Provident Society was held at Cardiff on Monday. The report showed that the num- ber of members had increased from 14.303 in 1882 to 22,541 in 1883. The available balance at the close of the year was £ 12,558 as against £ 6,956 in 1882. In London last week 2615 births and 1371 deaths were registered, the former having been 22, and the latter 80, below the average numbers in the corresponding weeks of the last ten years. The deaths included 41 from small-pox, 81 from measles, 24 irom scarlet fever, 11 from diphtheria, 68 from whooping-cough, 21 from dysentery, and 1 from simple cholera. From April 1 to the 2lst inst. the Exchequer receipts amounted to £18,312,610, as compared with £19,224,582 in the corresponding period of last year. The expendi- ture has been £ 14,374,767. On Saturday last the balance in the Bank of England was 27,325,190, and in the Bank of Ireland 21,278,174. On Tuesday evening a passenger train from Consett to Darlington, on arriving at Crook, ran past the points and came into collision with some waggons standing on the line. All the passengers were considerably shaken, but were able to proceed on their journey. An Odessa telegram states that Captain Gidshen, ad- jutant of Gendarmerie, has been found dead at his resi- dence with one temple shot through and a dagger wound in the breast. The deceased officer is supposed to have committed suicide. The Albert M., schooner, of Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, was passed derelict on June 10, in lat. 41 N., long. 64 W., by the steamer Greece, of New York. The vessel was lyin £ right in the t ack of steamers going both ways. Both her masts were gone, only about ten feet of her mainmast standing, and the decks were awash with the water. A Berlin correspondent announces the death at Dresden of Professor Dr. Ludwig Richter, the celebrated painter, in his 82nd year. He enjoyed an annual pen- sion of 3000 marks from the Emperor, and a statue is to be erected to him at Loschwitz, near Dresden, in September. At the Central Criminal Court on Tuesday, James Frederick Manning, 22, pleaded guilty to a charge of bigamy. The prisoner married first his wife in 1880, when he was only 18 years old. He deserted her after living with her about six months, and this year he married another young girl, to whom it was stated he behaved very unkindly. He was sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment with hard labour. In reference to the recent experiments in thought- reading in the House of Commons, Mr. Gladstone writes to Mr. Cumberland that being ignorant of scientific subjects he feels a difficulty in appearing to pronounce any judgment on what was certainly a very interesting and perfectly genuine exhibition." On Wednesday a horrible murder was committed at a house in Howe-street, Bootle, near Liverpool. The upper room of the house was occupied by a labourer named Peter Cassidy and his wife. During a quarrel, a struggle took place between them, and it is stated that Cassidy picked up a hatchet and stmck his wife several blows on the head with it-splitting his skull and causing the brains to protrude. Medical aid was at once summoned, but when the doctors arrived the wofnan was dead. Cassidy was taken intacustody. At the Leeds Police-court on Tuesday, Arthur Yates, a lad 16 years of age, was" demanded on a charge of stabbing another boy named Frederick Marshall. The previous evening the two lads had a quarrel, and Yates, taking a penknife out of his pocket, stabbed Marshall in the left side. Marshall is in a cntSical condition, and his depositions have been taken. At Dudley on Tuesday the South Staffordshire coroner held an inquiry respecting the death of a little girl named Kate Crump. Deceased, who attended a Board School, complained on Saturday last of head- ache caused by her lessons. She became alarmingly ill next day, and died before a doctor could be sent for. The jury returned a verdict of Death from natural causes, accelerated by overwork at a Board School." At Exeter, on Tuesday, an inquest was held on the body of one of the Town Council employes found in the canal. The deceased, an elderly man named Soper, had been for many years engaged in the towing of vessels, and on Saturday morning left his house in good spiiits. He was not seen alive again, but his hat was found on the canal banks, and his horse was standing near. A search led to the recovery of the body. An open ver- dict was returned. The Australian cricketers defeated a local team at Liverpool on Tuesday by one wicket; at Lord's the M.C.C. and Ground beat Cambridge University by an innings and twenty-nine runs; at the Oval the Dark Blues were successful by ninety runs over Surrey; and the Philadelphians won their match at Leicester against the gentlemen of that county, by an innings and 108 runs. At Sunderland on Tuesday, a fatal tramcar accident occurred, by which a child named George Haver, 15 months old, was killed while crossing over a street. The driver of the ear did not observe the child until it was too late, and when he pulled up the front wheel of the car had passed over its abdomen. The child only lived about five minutes afterwards. On Monday Thomas Crampton, 57, blacksmith, of 8, Livingstone-street, Roundhay road, had his left arm amputated at the Leeds Infirmary. Crampton was riding a tricycle along Meanwood-road, when one of the wheels got locked in the tram lines, and before he could release it he was thrown and run over by a cart. His left arm was severely fractured, and there was also a fracture of the thigh. The official declaration of the result of th polling in Mid-Surrey was made on Saturday. For Sir John Whittaker Ellis, the Conservative candidate, 7645 votes were recorded; and for Mr. Sydney Stern, Liberal, 4949, thus showing a Conservative majority 0: 2696. There is some reason to believe that if the Load Line Committee recently appointed by the Board of Trade reports in time, its recommendations will b 3 embodied in a short bill to be introduced into Parliament in August. Pearl fishing on the Tay upper reaches is now being prosecuted by several parties. At Caputh one day last week seven pearls were got during half an hour's fish- ing. Six of the pearls are valued at £3 each. James Walters, a sailor, aged 24, was drowned at Honiton on Saturday morning while bathing. He sank almost immediately he entered the water. It is supposed that he was attacked with cramp. The body was found shortly afterwards." A female lunatic named Clearly died in a train on Monday on the South-Eastern Railway, whilst being conveyed from Sydenham to Barming Heath Asylum. At Wisbeach on Monday, whilst Mr. William Griggs, pyrotechnic artist, was mixing chemicals used in the manufacture of fireworks, an explosion took place which set fire to and destroyed the laboratory in which the work was going on. Mr. Griggs, who was working alone, whilst endeavouring to subdue the flames, was much burnt about the face and hands. A considerable number of rockets were destroyed. The dead body of a middle-aged man was taken out of a canal lock at G oldsworth, near Woking station, on Sunday, with the throat cut almost from ear to ear. A gold watch, chain, and pin were found upon the body; but nothing that would lead to identification except a handkerchief with initials which are supposed to be T. S." At the Central Criminal Court on Monday, William Mugford, who had pleaded guilty at the last assizes of embezzling various sums of money, the property of the Fine Arts Society, was sentenced to five years' penal servitude. He had been two years in the service of the society, and had embezzled, it was stated, £ 2500. On Monday the master plumbers of New York, as a result of a dispute, locked out 1200 journeymen, thus enforcing idleness in all the large plumbers' shops. This course has been taken in order to force the plumbers' trade union to recognise the right of the employers to control the journeymen. On Monday afternoon the new gun-vessel Mariner was launched at Devonport dockyard in the presence of about 8000 spectators. The Mariner is a sister ship to the Acorn and Reindeer, differing only from them in that she carries eight instead of only six 5-inch breech- loading guns on Vavasseur mountings. A tremendous explosion occurred on Saturday night at the powder mills of Pontremoli, in Tuscany. Thirty persons were killed and seventeen badly wounded. A New York telegram states that the visible supply of wheat on June 20 was 15,800,000 bushels, as against 16,600,000 bushels the previous week. Visible supply of Indian corn, 8,500,000 bushels, as against 8,000,000 bushels the previous week. The export clearances of wheat for Europe during last week amounted to 900,000 bushels; the export clearances of Indian corn for Europe during the week amounted to 700,000 bushels. Paris advices state that the condition of the French wheat market has remained almost unchanged, although perhaps holders have experienced rather more difficulty in effecting sales. Quotations for wheat have not shown any variation in the French ports. In the cricket match between Surrey and Cambridge University, the county won by 148 runs. Middlesex beat Kent by 242 runs. Sussex won the match over Gloucestershire by 49 runs, while the Philadelphians defeated Cheshire by an innings and 292 rnns. The steamer Indus sailed from Gravesend on the 20th inst. for Queensland ports with 187 single men, 52 single women, and married people and children equal to 181 adults; total 485 souls, or equal to 420 statute adults. The number of visitors to the International Health Exhibition last week was 143,122, the total since the opening being 712,081. The third annual meet of tricyclists on Hayes-common took place on Saturday, and the fine weather drew together upwards of 240 riders of both sexes. Although a very large number of steamers which usually convey live stock and fresh meat to Liverpool from the United States and Canada arrived at the former port last week, the arrivals were not above the average of recent weeks. As was expected, the imports of live stock show, in comparison with previous weeks, an increase, and of fresh meat a decrease. The total for the week amounted to 3408 cattle, 4832 quarters of beef, and 345 carcases of mutton. Colonel Colville, of the Grenadier Guards, acting under instructions from Lord Wolseley, has left Eng- land for the Soudan. The gallant officer started at four hours' notice, the business in hand being urgent. A Russian Ukase calls out 224,000 men, as the usual contingent of army conscripts for 1884. A Chinese line of telegraph has been constructed, and is now working between Canton and Lungchou (ninety miles south of Nanning), on the Tonquinese frontier. The Irish Sunday Closing Bill is regarded as lost for this session; and the existing Act will be renewed in the Expiring Laws Continuance Bill. From a Return which has been laid before Parlia- ment it appears that the Commission of National Education in Ireland consists of ten Roman Catholics, five members of the late Established Church, three Presbyterians, and one Unitarian. A fire broke out on Sunday morning at Mr. Watson's flour mills at Stockton-on-Tees, the wheat-cleaning department and warehouses being entirely gutted, while the building over the engine-room was also damaged. 0 wing to the iron doors the flames were prevented from spreading to the milling department. The loss is great, as besides the machinery, about 1500 sacks of wheat were destroyed. A severe frost prevailed in the Cleveland district last Saturday morning, and crops of potatoes near Goathland and Fylingdale were quite blackened by its intensity. The Dundee whaler Chieftain arrived in the Tay on Monday from the Greenland whale fishery. She had only one boat's crew on board, so that the other two boats and their crews of fifteen men, who lost sight of the vessel while out after whales, had been given up as lost. Those in charge of the Chieftain state that nothing was seen of the boats after the fog set in, and that after a long and fruitless search they bore up for home. The Roman Catholic chapel attached to The Hall, Wellingore, Lincolnshire, the seat of Mr. Ralph C. Neville, was on Sunday afternoon discovered to be on fire, and by six p.m. it was entirely destroyed, the damage being estimated at £ 10,000. His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales was seated in the Peers' Gallery in the House of Commons on Monday during Mr. Gladstone's statement in reference to the Anglo-French agreement. M. Waddington and several members of theOorps Diplomatique were seated in the tribune reserved for distinguished strangers. The joiners at Bradford struck work on Monday morning. The men seek to fix the rate of wages paid to men of average skill at 7|d. per hour. Several hundred 2 men are out. A panic occurred on Sunday night during a revival service at a Methodist Calvanistic Chapel at Bryn- siency, Anglesey. The building was crowded, and sud- denly the galleries began to creak, causing great alarm. Scores of people leaped from the windows to the ground, others rushing to the doors, where many were knocked down and trampled on. Severe injuries were sustained by many, but no deaths are reported. A remarkable capture of trout was made by Mr. John Ij&ssell, of Pollockshields, while fishing in private water, a S'holt distance from Glasgow. Mr. Russell had the good fortune to capture four magnificent Lochleven trout We%Mng in the gross 13|lb. The respective weights were 3|lb, 31b, 41b, and 3Jlb X'd wreck's imports into the United States amounted to 6J 000 dels., of which 1,546,000 dols. were dry goc •> Last week's receipts of cotton at all United States ports were 5000bales; since 1st September, 4,774,000 bales. Week's exports to Great Britain, 40,000 bales; ditto to Continent, 16.000. Total since 1st September, 3,639,000 bales; stock at all portsy 364,000 bales; ditto interior ports, 38,000 bales. It is said that the Government have returned an un- favourable answer to the request of the Lower Division clerks that the higher branches- of the- Civil Service should be opened to them. The French Government has conferred on Mr. Bailey Denton, of Stevenage, the special distinction of the cross of Merite Agricole as an acknowledgment of his devotion to agriculture. A Reuter's telegram from St. Petersburg, June 21, says: The Duchess of Edinburgh will reroean some time longer with the Imperial family at Peterhef." Arrangements are being made in Washington for an international single scull race, to be open to aN oars- men in the world, for 5000 dols. in cash prizes and the world's championship. As at present determined, the race will be five miles with one turn, and will take place in September next. Oil marks on papered walls may be removed by making a paste of cold water and pipeclay, or fuller's earth, and laying it on the surface without rubbing it on, else the pattern of the paper will perhaps be in- jured. Leave the paste on all night. In the morning it can be brushed off, and the spot will have dis- appeared. A renewal of the operation may be neces- sary. At the seventy-fourth annual meeting of the Sweden- borg Society, it was reported that 2387 volumes of the works of Swedenborg had been sold during the past year, and 1287 given away. A considerable proportion of the circulation was in the Transvaal, New Zealand, Canada, and Sweden; and much interest in the subject was reported from Bengal. This year quite a flight of the very rare Greenland falcon appear to have landed on the western coast of Ireland, and during the past few weeks no less than four very fine specimens have been obtained from there. There is in contemplation the holding of a show of pug dogs at the Crystal Palace towards the end of next month. Upwards of eighteen classes will be provided, and hopes are entertained that the exhibition will be under the patronage of H.R H. the Princess of Wales. Mr. Richard Howse, of Devizes, has taken a trout from the Hampshire Avon of 22in. long and 14in. girth, while spinning for jack. The fish was in splendid condition, and took a 5oz. dace, getting a large triangle well in its jaws. Mr. Howse had likewise fourteen take- able jack. The Irish Lord Chancellor has given permission to a minor to proceed with a suit contesting the will of his father. Testator left his money to the Anti-vivisection Society, and directed that his body should be cut open for surgical examination. His eccentricity took the form of picking up all the old bits of iron he came across, and preserving all the hair cut from his head by the barbers. While riding into Richmond Barracks, Dublin, the other day, an officer's servant, named Frederick Brown, was killed by his horse shying and dashing him against a wall. The officers of the Cameronians are about to erect at Aldershot a handsome memorial brass, mounted on black marble, to the memory of the late Lieutenant Landor W. de M. Thuillier. Surrounded by a border thistles are the regimental crests, badge, and honours. In addition to presenting to the Aberdeen Infirmary copies of her book and The Life and Letters of the Princess Alice," the Queen has sent two volumes for the use of the patients in the Aberdeen Sick Children's Hospital. Her Majesty's autograph is affixed to each of the volumes. The fashionable colours for ladies' dresses in Paris this season are moonstone (a pale blue), Narbonne honey," musk colour," "lavender blue," raspberries and cream," vervein" (a faint lilac), "chimney-sweep," and arbour green." The trade of the Tyne is still in a most depressed state, and every week large numbers of men are being added to the idle surplus. The number of laid up steamers in Northumberland Dock and in the river continues to be very considerable, and on all sides the evidences of extreme slackness are apparent. The subscriptions for a monument to Mozart, started in Vienna lately, have reached the sum of 125,000f. The committee has opened a competition for the design of the monument, three prizes being offered, viz., one of 7500f., one of 5000f.,aad one of 7500f. The total cost of the monument is not to exceed 250,000f., the artist be'ng left to choose the material. Foreign artists are admitted to compete. One notable sign of the bad condition of trade in Paris is the falling off in the receipts at this year's Salon, as compared with 1883. The decline has chiefly occurred in the entries on the fashionable day. More- over, many visitors who in former years paid for admis- sion have now passed through the galleries on the free day, the total entries on the seven Sundays having risen from 120,000 in 1883 to 238,000 in 1884. The reports of the Madras Educational Department show that remarkable development is taking place in the collegiate education in that presidency. The number of pupils studying for the B.A. course has in three years risen from 399 to 454, and of those study- ing for the F.A. examination from 1295 to 1606, or by 14 and 23 per cent. respectively. The King of Cambodia has sent a number of gifts to the Buddhist Pali College in Colombo, including a brush made of his own hair, to be used for sweeping in the room where the image of Buddha is kept! According to a Parliamentary return just issued, 544 human corpses were found in the river Thames, within the precincts of the City of London and metropolitan districts, during the years 1882 and 1883, 284 in the former and 260 in the latter year. The result of the coroners' inquests held upon the bodies was that 242 verdicts of accidental death were returned, two of wilful murder, and fifty-nine of felo-de-se or suicide. In 277 cases an open verdict was found. A Simla telegram states that it is estimated 40,000 workmen will be employed in the completion of the railway to Quetta. A Moscow paper publishes intelligence from Andshar, dated 8th inst., stating that the waters of the Amu- Daria have burst through the dyke between that river and the Andshar Canal, and destroyed the large mili- tary camp situated near the canal, as well as several adjacent fertile tracts of land. Several persons perished. Quartermaster-Sergeant Grier, 3rd Renfrew Volun- teers, was declared the winner of the Caledonian Chal- lenge Shield, with a score of 74, at the City of Edinburgh and Mid-Lothian rifle gathering. Since the division in the House of Commons on Mr. Woodall's amendment, the funds of the Women's Suffrage Association have received considerable addi- tions. Many members of the House of Commons favourable to the clause, but unable to vote for it, have sent peace offerings in the shape of money dona- tions. An American paper states that the unfinished Wash- ington Monument, which has been unfinished so long that it has passed out of the memory of many that it was ever begun, is to be completed. It is an obelisk of white marble, and had been carried up 150ft. and then left, when in 1880 Colonel Casey was appointed engi- neer in charge to complete the work. It has now reached the height of 414ft., and is intended ultimately to be 555ft. in height. According to an Ottawa correspondent, the first "girl graduate" in arts in Ontario took her degree at the recent convocation at Queen's college, Kingston. She was the gold medallist of her class, and Principal Grant announced that he would" back her against any classical scholar in Canada." A 'bus conductor named Shelley, died in St. Thomas's Hospital, London, on Saturday morning from the result of a shocking accident. On Thursday morning in last week he was in charge of an omnibus going to the Hamp- ton Races. He was standing on the step of the vehicle which was ready to start, when a donkey-barrow came along at a furious pace and collided with the omnibus. The shaft of the barrow struck Shelley, penetrating the abdomen. The additions to the Zoological Society's Gardens,. Regent's-park, London, during last week included a Vervet monkey from South Africa, presented by Mr. J. Bulteel; a bonnet monkey, a Macaque monkey from India, presented by the committee of the Latimer-road Mission; two black-eared marmosets from south-east Brazil, presented by Mr. J. H. Bentley; two Vulpine phalangars from Australia, presented respectively by Mr. McClellan and Mr. Jay; a marsh ichneumon from South Africa, presented by Mrs. Frank; two Angolan vultures, a white-necked stork, an African tantalus from West Africa, presented by Mr. Thomas J. Alldridge; a spur-winged goose from West Africa,, presented by Mr. J. B. Elliott; two mute swans, Euro- pean, presented by Mr. H. Welch Thornton; two angu- lated tortoises from North Damara Land, presented by Mr. F. R. Hemming; a slow-worm; a common viper (British), presented by Mr. T. E. Gunn; a bonnet monkey, from India; four Muscovy ducks and fiVE royal pythons, from West Africa, deposited; an echidna and a brush turkey, from New South Wales; two red- cheeked colys, from South Africa; four bronze-winged pigeons, from Australia; a great-billed parakeet, from Ceram; a mealy Amazon, from South America; four white storks (European): a kingfisher (British), pur- chased; a collared fruit-bat; a Japanese deer; six Chiloe wigeons; sjtid fotir Chinese blue magpies, brod 4x the Gardens,