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" PEDESTRIAN COMPETITION.j

,TRADE OUTRAGE TRIAL.

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THE FOUR 100-TON GUNS PURCHASE.…

COLLIERY ACCIDENT CASE. j

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GflAZI OSMAN'S KNTRY INTO…

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DASHING EXPLOITS.

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NATIVE RACES IN CHINà. í

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NATIVE RACES IN CHINà. í Nature says. Mr. E. 0. JBab^r's long»deferred report on the journey of the Groavenor Mission through Western Yunnan, from T»li-fu toT4ag-yiieh, contains much matter which is of interest from more than one point of view. The most important of his surveys is that of the reute from Tali-fu to Tdng-yteh, as it connects Garnier's explorations with the work of Bladen's expedition, and thus puts Bhamo in topo- graphical communication with Shanghai and Saigon. The surrey next, but not much inferior, in im- portance is the route from Tiinnan-fu to Tali- fu, in which the track followed was dif- ferent from Garnier s. Mr. Baber has also pre- pared a running survey of his route across China from Hankow to T4ng-yiieh. His remarks on the native races are interesting, especially in regard to her Kutung people. What or where Xutung is he was unable to ascertain he describes the men as of a dark reddish complexien, with rather prominent features, above the average height, and well proportioned, dressed in close-litting woollen garments, which in some cases were neatly cut and handsomely em- broidered. The women seen would have been considered handsome anywhere; paler in colour than the men, their oval, intelligent faces reminded the observer of the so-called Cau- casian type, and in every step and movement there was a decision and exactness very different from the motion of a Chinese. One of the women, too, was particularly remarkable for a peculiarity of her long hair, which was naturally wavy, a feature never met with among the Chinese. Mr. Bober was fortunate in seeing the quarterly fair at Tali-fu, at which some 5000 people were present, many of them being Lolos, Shans, Thibetans, &c. At t hie stage of his journey he propounds a not improbable explanation of the term "golden teeth" as applied to the inhabitants viz., that it arose from the discoloration of the teeth produced by chewing betel with lime. Mr. Baber's observations on the extent of the poppy cultivation will hardly be found encouraging by those who desire to see the con- sumption of opium put an end to, for he says that his party walked some hundred of miles through poppies; and a similar remark appliea to his account of the trade route Yunnan from Burmah. The valleys Ol rather abysses, he says, of the Salwen and Mekong must long remain insuperable difficulties, not to mention other obstacles between Yunnan-fu and Ta„g.jueh. The members of Colonel Sladen's ex- pedition appeared to have assumed that when the latter place is reached the obstacles to a high- way iotf, °ave been surmounted, whereas the fact is the difficulties begin at that place. Loth as moat Englishmen are to admit it, Mr. Baber adds, the simple and evident approach to Eastern Yunnan is from the Gulf of Tonquin but it by no means follows that the same holds true of the western part of the proviic?. In conclusion we may mention than an interesting feature in Mr. Baber's report is his com- parison of Marco Polo s narrative with his own ex- periences, and his venfication in many respects of the Venetian s information respecting a country almost entirely unknown to Europeans,

A HERO OF THE COMMUNE.

THE BATTLE OF MONASTERO. f

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THE DEAF AND DUMn AT BOARD…

THE DREADFUL FAMINE IN CHINA.

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