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AUSTRALIAN NEWS.

OUR INDIAN ARMY.

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THE CASE OF THE REV. MR. DODWELL…

THE NEPTUNE.

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DOTHEGIRLS' HALL:

CAVALRY ORGANISATION.

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CAVALRY ORGANISATION. A lecture hao been delivered before the Royal United Service Institution by Major Boulderson on Cavalry Organisation. The chief points treated of in the paper were—the proper place for mounted in- fantry in the military system, the best armament for British cavalry, the respective values of lance and sword, and the best means for obtaining cavalry re- serves. Fo.- rapidly increasing our cavalry force, the lecturer would preferably take drilled men, able to ride,from the line, militia, and volunteers, to be trained as divisional cavalry, the duties of which could be learned in from four to six months, as had actually been done by the Peshawur Light Horse during the Indian Mutiny. The divisional cavalry, or mounted infantry, as it would be called, could not, in the lecturer's opinion, be employed for outpost duties or to make charges, which only cavalry proper could effectively perform, and history proved that to arm cavalry with an infantry fire-arm deteriorated them for the purpose of a charge in the field. In the discussion which followed the reading of the paper, General Beauchamp Walker, General Sir William Codrington, Lieut.-Colonel Lord Elcho, and Mr. Graves, 20th Hussars, took part. Lord Elcho thought that to arm the front rank with lance and sword and only the rear rank with fire arms was a re- trograde step, and he strongly protested against the idea that cavalry armed with the Martini Henry carbine, a weapon eleven inches shorter than the in- fantry rifle, would not be at a greater disadvantage if encountered by a similar force carrying the long rifle. The question was merely one of con- venience of carrying the rifle and Colonel Bower, who had introduced a system he found successfully used by the Kaffirs many years ago, had demon- strated that by the use of the Namaqua bucket, the long rifle could be easily carried without interfering with the use of the sword. General Steele said he had quite made up his mind that every cavalry man for general service should have a long range flre-arm if it could be properly car- ried. He did not approve of the proposal to arm the front rank differently from the rear rank, and he agreed with General Walker that the weight and force of the men were the deciding conditions in a cavalry charge, whether the lance or the sword was the weapon employed. A cordial vote of thanks was awarded to Major Boulderson for his paper.

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THE CLEOPATRA VERDICT.

SALE OF THE NOVAR COLLECTION.

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MADAME TEIAL AND

ah fv, a FL°or)S IN LONDON.

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OUR MILITARY POSITION. ■

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CIGAR ENDS.

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