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AUSPICIOUS DEA.TH OF TWO GIRLS.…

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MONSTER IRONCLADS AND MONSTER…

\ 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.

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AN IMPOSTOR IN A BATH CHAIR. ?»iajor Q-erersl C H. Blunt, Honorary Secretary o? tn*- be Ai&cylebona fy Committee, has giv n the following account t)t a clt-v^r ltiipos-sure A decent lodging house keefer called at our office on Saturday in much trouble. A tidily dr<.sstd, sickly- loobinsf wom,n came to her house about ten d tja "go in a Bath chair, and elgpged au apartment. Tne landlady incautiously waived the usual reference, in- fluenced by the apparent respectability of the appli- cant, but more so by her statement that she came recommended by a lady living in a terrace which seemed to guarantee the social status of the voucher, whose name and address she gave. After a. while there appeared symp- toms of impecuniositv; a little loan was asked for, and granted. Small current bills were not settled, and finally the woman was brought home in a cAb by a policeman, either drunk or in a fit; and having been admitted, she took to her bed, and defied the landlady to get rid of her if she could. Under these circum- stances the landlady thought it prudent to make a call on the lady in the terrace, and there learned the following particulars: The woman, till then a stranger, was seen at the garden ga!>>, apparently in great pain, was taken into tho hoi»s?, given tea, &2., and despatched, with some shillings in her pocket, in the B&th chair (as was supposed) to her lodgings. At the suggestion of t?<is lady, the landlady then came to our office for advice, liecognising, as we did (so far as recognition was possible wnbont a personal interview) an old acquaintance not only of cur own committee but of several other couimittces of the Charity Organisation Society, metropolitan and pro vinciai, we could not offhand cut the knot uniting lar.dlord and tenant; but we recolllmencltd the land- lady to place herself in the hands of n respectable solicitor. Being anxious to complete the identifica- tion, we sent next morning to inquire how things were going on, and learned that while the landlady was at our office the servant had occasion to go into th", lodger's room, and mentioned that her mis- tress had gone to the office of the Charity Organi- sation Society to ask advico. The effect of this an- nouncement was miraculous; the lodger, who had been reclining apparently in much pain on her bed, jumped up, and cuclarirg a a change of vir" to Begent's-park eeBentiai, sent for a cab and made a speedy exit. The landlady has got rid of her unsatis- factory tenant. We should, however, like to warn all whom it may concern against a thin, quiet, and respectable-looking woman neatly dressed, who has lost nearly all her front teeth; she is known to us by the names of Fraser, Randall, and Marsh; sbe usually faints and states she is suffering from cancer.

THE ENCLOSURE COMMISSION.

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