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RED-COATED VOLUNTEERS. j

THE FUTURE RELATIONS OF RUSSIA…

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THE SUBMISSION OF THE JOWAKIS.…

REMARKABLE CASE. : " t

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THE CATTLE BILL.

THE PARIS EXHIBITION.

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A SINGULAR ROBBERY. ;--;

DEATH OF THE OLD HIPPOPOTAMUS.I

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! PROPOSED AGRICIJLTTJR^L…

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PROPOSED AGRICIJLTTJR^L EXSLBI- TION IN LONDON. A large and influential public meeting was held at the Mansion House, London, under the presidency of the Lord Mayor, to take preliminary steps fo promote the holding of a great Agricultural Exhibition in London next year, under the auspices of the Royal Agricultural Society of England. The Lord Mayor, in opening the proceedings, expressed great interest in the proposal to hold the next annual show of the Agri- cultural Society in London, and promised to assist the project in every way he could. Alderman Sir Thomas Dakin moved that, in the opinion of the meeting, it was desirable to promote the holding of the proposed exhibition, and in doing so observed that he thought so important a movement appropriately emanated from the Mansion House. For over forty years the Agricultural Society had rendered most valuable aid not only to the farmers cf the country, but to the kingdom at large, for nothing could be more impor- tant than the matters with which the society dealt. In 1862 their exhibition was held in London, but owing to the rival attractions of the International Ex- hibition at Kensington and the inaccessibility of the site chosen, it was not so successful as could have been wished. He trusted, however, that next year, if the project could be carried out, a better site would be selected, and he had then no fear of the result. Mr. John Holms, M.P., seconded the resolution, and urged that the exhibition should not only comprise agricultural stock and implements, but samples of food, observing that of 375 millions of imports in 1876 180 millions were denoted as food for machinery, 165 millions as food for man, and forty millions as manufactured articles. The importation ef food was, therefore, a very vast matter, and it was, to his mind, all important that it should be represented at the proposed exhibition. The Duke of Richmond and Gordon said that he had for many years been a mem- ber of the Council of the Royal Agricultural Society, and he thought he might venture to claim for the society that they had done a very great deal to pro- mote agriculture in this country. By their various shows in all parts of the kingdom their desire had been to prove to all classes of their countrymen what could be aone oj energy and enterprise towards pro- moting the agricultural interests of the land. In these matters the late Prince Consort, he reminded them, ever took an active interest. It was thought right and proper to hold the meeting of the Royal Agricultural Society in the metropolis in 1862, and it was held in Battersea-park. From the influential character of the meeting that day and the remarks that had been made he ventured to predict that during next year an exhibition would be held in London under the auspices of the society which would have a far greater importance than had the former show in 1862. He quite agreed with Mr. Holms as to the great im- portant of the dead-meat trade, but he would not follow him into the various speculations he had offered on the subject. He should have other opportunities and a fuller scope of expressing his view on that matter, and he therefore would not protract the meeting by going into it that day. He had always considered that they must not neglect the interests of all classes of the community, and their great object was, as it should be, to provide the consuming classes with the greatest amount and the best quality of food that could be produced. The society, he knew, held that view, and carried it out to the best of their ability and if they were to compare now the stock of the country with what it was forty years ago, they would And that it had improved in a most rapid and re- markable degree. He would not detain them with a lecture on agriculture, but would only express his conviction that by the exhibition next year the Vnited Kingdom would prove that, in regard to agri- culture, it was behind no other country in the world. Alderman Sir Charles Whetham.who will be the Lord Mayor next year, also supported the resolution, and it was earned unanimousfy. The Duke of Bedford moved and Mr. Gilbey seconded the next proposition, which was that a committee be formed to carry out the scheme, to collect subscriptions, and to co-operate with the Council of the Royal Agricultural Society. The following committee was then appointed—namely, the Lord Mayor, the Dukes of Richmond and Gordon, Bedford, Westminster, and Buccleuch, Iiords Cathcart, Skelmersdale, Winmarleigh, and Moreton, Colonel Kingscote, Sir Thomas White, Sir Thomas Dakin, Sir Charles Whetham, and others. On the motion of Sir J. Heron Maxwell, seconded by Mr. T. U. Scott, it was resolved that, in the opinion of this meeting, it was desirable that the exhibition should, if possible, be held in Hyde-park, and that the necessary steps be taken te obtain the sanction of the Ranger and the First Commissioner of Works. Colonel Kingscote, M.P., President of the Royal Agricultural Society, in moving a vote of thanks to the Lord Mayor, observed that the scheme was one of a most promising character, and if they could only get the support of the citizens of London, they were assured of success. The meeting then adjourned.

THE WRECK OF THE MAIL STEAMER…

VICTOR HUGO AND PRINCE NAPOLEON.I

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AMUSING THEATRICAL CASJI.

LUIGI PATOCCHI.

LETTER FASTENINGS. ,

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