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THE LAKE COUNTRY FISHERIES.…

VISIT OF LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY…

THE REPORTED DISCOVERY OF…

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THE MILITARY FORCE OF ENGLAND

FAILURE OF AN EX-M.P.

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THE TURKISH FLEET. \

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THE NEW EDUCATION CODE. ;

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OUR EXPEDITIONARY FORCE.

ARMED ATTACK UPON SOCIALISTS…

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LORD NAPIER AND SIR GARNET…

THE TELEPHONE AND THE EXISTING…

EXTRAORDINARY CASE OF SWINDLING.

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EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE'OF LEVYING…

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EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE'OF LEVYING BLACK MAIL. Au extraordinary charge of J¡-vying black-mail in a military prison came berore a court rnar.ial at Paris. The accused were Commandant Sabkni, Director- General of the Military Prisons in the Drtpartnit-ist of the Seine, a native of Corsica, and his Deputy, I'latge, and the case mainly rests on a diary alleged to have heen kept by a prisoner namfld Daneu.;p, which acci- dentally fell into the hands of a Captaiu Lag- laine, another prison official, who, after keeping it more than a year, communicated its con tents to the authorities. Daneuse deserted from the army during the war, squandered money left him by his father, and, after leading an adventurous life, was sentenced, in 1873, to ten months' imnrihon ment for theft, followed by two years' imprisonment for desertion. It was while undergoing this letter punishment that he is alleged to have kept the diary- According to this document, after passing ten days in the Maison de Justice at the Rue du ChercheMidi Prison, he was removed, nt the chaplain's intercession, to the Maison d'Arre". n deoartratnt nominallv re- served for sentences not exceeding six months, but this diatinction vraa not strictly observed. He thus secured greater indulgence, and, on expressing his gratitude to Sabiaiti, was invited, by the prospect of further favours, to contribute to tha purchasf of instruments tor a brass baud. lie accordingly devoted 350f. to this purooao. Sabiani, after this, invited him to dinner and offered to be his banker that he might procure indulgences without exciting jealousy. Ooe thousand seven hundred francs of the 1900f. deposited with the clerk on entering the prison were accordingly withdrawn, Sabiana giving 365f. to Blatge to serve as an allowance of one franc a day to the prisoner; 76f. at Sabiani's suggestion were offered to the chaplain for twenty-four chairs for the prison chapel; while 150f. went for a watch-chain for Mdlle. Sabiani, and 300f. for an ornamental poignard, whereby Sabiani promised to obtain for Daneuse exemption from being sent to the Algerian &rmy, ae usual with released deserters. Complaining cf the franc a day grudgingly given him, Daneuso dis- played four oOOf. notes secreted on his person, which, he said, he had intended to give Sa-biani on his dis- charge. He was also induced to send for 1400f. due to him from his father's estate, and to order a piano for Mdlle. Sabiani, the result being his removal to the infirmary and a supper with the governor, who is said to have made a handsome profit out of the extra dishes ordered by the prisoner. The latter reopened corre- spondence with his relatives to obtain money from them; but though he informed them in cipher how it, was expended, they held the governor incapable of taking it. By-and-by a new arrival named Jourdan supplanted Danease in Sabiani's good graces; but Daneuse, on being ordered back to his cell, threatened a disclosure, the result being a compromise" Shortly before his sentence expired, he was charged with stealing a portfolio containing 2000f., evidently the money he had secreted and this led to his re- moval to another prison, of which Laglaine was the governor, and where he lost all his indulgencelo Here he ended his diary with a declaration of its veracity, adding that he did not regret spending the money inasmuch as he had profited bf it. This expenditure amounted to 7000f. In Marcb» 1876, the rest of the sentence was remitted, and he "II sent to Algeria, where he speedily incurred a sentence of penal servitude for life for passing counterfeIt coiB' He is now in New Caledonia. As for Laglaine, III committed suicide last month on learning that Sabian' and Blatge were to be court-martialled. He is said to have had a spite against the former, a circumstance foreshadowing an attempt to represent the diary II concocted under his dictation. The prisoners were examined and Blatge appeared very dejected. They both denied their guilt. h

CAUSES OF THE AFRICAN OUTBREAK

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GALLIPOLI AND ITS HISTORY.…