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AUSPICIOUS DEA.TH OF TWO GIRLS.…

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MONSTER IRONCLADS AND MONSTER…

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MONSTER IRONCLADS AND MONSTER GUNS. While the praises of the Inflexible are being sung ) intheH iuseof Commons and elsewnere, it may be < well to now, says the Daily News, what other nations i are doing to be even with us in the constructi )n of monster ironclads. The two types of armoured vessels in favour nowadays are the turret, -r citadel ships, with decks but a few feet above the water- line, and the broadside masted ironclad, like the Alexandra and the Sultan; in which we put our I trust as ocean-going craft. Of the former class, the Inflexible, which is to be armed some day with four 80-ton guns, represents th J most powerful man-of-war in the British navy; it has, as the First Lord of tae Admiralty told us, iron walls twenty-four inches in thickness, and its speed is at least equal to most other ironclads. The,Intlexible has, however, two rivals in the lorm of the Dandolo and Duilio, Italian turret-vessels. The armour of these, it is true, is two inches less thick than that of the Inflexible, but this disadvantage is more then com- pensated for by the fact that the foreign men-of- war will be armed with 100 ton guns instead of 80- ton weapons. Indeed, it was only a few days since that he announced the arrival at Spezzia, from Sir William Armstrong's works at Elswick, of two of those monster cannon, of which there is no equal among British ordnance. But it is not solely in the matter of turret vessels that foreign nations appear to be going ahead of us they are in advance of us also with broadside ironclads. The heaviest cannon carried by our biggest masted battle-ships weigh no more than twenty-five tons, and metal of this calibre is borne only by first class ocean-going ships such as the Alexandra and Temeraire. But the French announce their intention of fitting their last ship of this type with 46-ton guns, and the Devasta- tion, now fast apDroacbing completion at Toulon, wiIJ carry four of these weapons in her broadsides. The centre of the ship, it appears, is an oblong battery, the angles of which project, and four guns placed at these angles are capable of firing broadsides as well as ahead and astern. Thus the Devastation will take rank berore any broadside ship in the British navy, and if her sea-going qualities are only as good as her armament, we may have in her a more for- midable rival than any than has yet been brought i against us. t I

\ MR. EDISON'S PHONOGRAPH.

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HEADS OF HAIR. j

THE CASE OF THE EARL OF DUN-DONALB.

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NEWS FROM INDIA.1

PRINCE BISMARCK AND LORD ODO…

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THE FATAL FOOTBALL CASE. ]

THE AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITION.

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DAHOMEY IN DEFAULT. ;

BREACH OF PROMISE OF MARRIAGE.

THE BURIALS QUESTION.

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AN IMPOSTOR IN A BATH CHAIR.

THE ENCLOSURE COMMISSION.

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