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LONDON CORRESPONDENCE.

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THE EASTERN QUESTION., 1

WILLS AND BEQUESTS.

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FAILURE OF CITY BANKERS.1

O'DONOVAN ROSSA AGAIN.

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PARLIAMENTARY INTELLIGENCE.

ARRIVALS OF SPRING BIRDS.

HUMAN FLESH SAUSAGES.I

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THE ASSASSINATIONS IN IRELAND.…

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THE ASSASSINATIONS IN IRELAND. FUNERAL OF LORD MITMM. The remains of the late Lord Leitrim were com- muted to the tomb in St. Michan's Ohurch, Dublin, amid demonstrations of brutal feeling on the part ot the populace, which made the closing scene of a shock- ing tragedy more disgraceful still to the country. Although the church is situate in the elums of the city and the memory of the murdered earl had been traduced and held up to popular execration, it was not expected that the vindictive passions which have been appealed to by the apologists of the crime would find vent in so scandalous a manner. It is humilia- ting to have to record the details of such en exhibi- tion in the heart of a community professing to be civilised, aud on the part of a people who are usually represented as imbued with deep religious fet-ling. The remains of the earl W,'re convoyed from Donegal to bis late residence, Killacloon, near Ot-lbridge, about eight, miles fron Dubiin, whence they were removed for interment in the vaults of St. Michan's Church, in the city, the family burial-place. Un- fortunately, the arrangements for the funeral hid been announced beforehand, and for several hours before the curtiga was expected to arrive the street, in which the cburch stands was blocked by a mob of the lowest type. There were frequent most dis- respectful allusions to the lute earl, who was de- nounce d as bn old rufliaa and a heretic.' This st^'e of affairs having been communicated to the police, a force of about twenty constables was despatched to the loc,.rlity to prestrve order. The gates of the churchyard were kept locked, and me-tsures were taken to prevent access being had, but a number of the roughs scaled the walls, while every time the gates were open to admit persons having authority to enter, a rush was made, and new contingents from the mob lorced their way in. The funeral pro- cession reached the bottom (. f the street, and it appearance there was the occasion for an outbreak ol cheers and hisses. A rush waa made to reach it, and the chief mourners, to- gether with a number of the nobility and gentry who followed the hearse, were charged and literally hurled back from its vicinity. In a few moments the hearse was surrounded by the most prominent of the mobs- men, many of whom were much under the influence of drink, who shouted, cheered, hissed, and threatened as the mood seized them. Attempts were even made to open the door of the hearse and get at the remains. The orce of police present was utterly inadequate to cope with the mob. The Earl of Leitrim, Lard James Butler, the Earl of Kingston, and others, appealed to the constable:) to deal with the rioters, but they were helpless. This con- tinued for over twenty minutes, when twenty-five additional policemen arrived, foreinir their way through the crowd with the greatest cifficulty. They sur- rounded the hearae three deep, and made room for the undertakers men to remove the coffin. Two or three times the mob got the better of the constables, expressing their intention, amid execrations, to Haul him out,' referring to the body of the deceased. When the coffin was removed within the cemetery some of the chief mourners battled with the mob to gain admission, and only some of them succeeded before the gates had to be again closed, while those who succeeded had their hats smashed. The Solici- tor-General for Ireland, the law adviser to the Castle, and Colonel Oftulfaeld, Controller of ho Viceregal Household, were among those who received rough treatment in their endeavours to enter the churchyard. The cheering, yelling, and hissing of the mob con- tinued while the burial service was being read in the church and when the remains were being consigned to the tomb. At the close the chief mourners and others wiihin the church were escorted out by a back gate which is but seldom used.

THE DOG QUESTION IN THE COMMONS.

CLAIM FOR DAMAGES.

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PROPOSED POST ADVERTISING…

INCITING TO FIGHT A DUEL.

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THE KAFFIR WAR.

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