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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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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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ah fv, a FL°or)S IN LONDON. AU the Southern districts of London, and also TOSrftlth00d' North of the Thames, were f0^8' C°1?8e<luent upon the heavy rain, nearly three inches being the registered fall at Green- wich. A great amount of water bad been lying in *™bfi0ad',a-d 8b0ut 8ix °'clock there was a "P»-aTaI 1DJmany Parte- The highway SX mer; and. every branching and do, chning lane a torrent. Soon every cellar in the neighbourhood was flooded. The water covered the footboards of the tramway cars, and even reached the insides of these vehicles. It is ^at trafflc waa greatly impeded where £ thwlfi nn been 8t°PPed- Matters continued in this state till noon, when the flood fell, and it began to be possible to ascertain its results, and in some mea- sure to remedy them. The damage done was found to be exceedingly great. The neighbourhood of the White Horse, in the Brixton-road, has suffered most. It is there the waterspouts were thickest. This arose from the fact that a stream called the Effra, whose course followed the line of the present road when the most of the district was meadow land, is now covered over, and tbe crown of the brickwork TH "T' • a below the surface of the street, jsy tne immense pressure of this watercourse the brickwork was burst in many places, and the gravel and pavement above displaced. Several old drains i -j' though amply sufficient when they were ^or ^e requirements of the vicinity, are now wholly inadequate during heavy rain, gave way in this road, and added to the inundation. Many persons imagined that the great main sewer which was constructed here some half-dozen years ago had opened, but though it was fully choked with the flood, being well built and deeply laid, it held together. Throughout the whole day the occupants of the houses and shops were engaged in pumping and banng out their premises. The greatest sufferers were of course those whose goods were, like groceries ana other edibles, of a very perishable nature. The well-known establishment called the Bon Marche, near .Brixton Station, may be taken as a sample of what occurred. The foundations of this large store are laid deep, and much business is done on the basement flat. The water there rose to a height of nearly art. rushing through the traps in the cellars, and soon the goods on the lowest floor were swimming about in a vast tank. Wearing apparel of all kinds was half spoiled in one department. Hogsheads of sugar and cases of coffee and tea were wholly ruined. A great number of the poor people who inhabit the rather mean streets which at some points connect I .Mixion.road with Clapham-road must be counted amongst the sufferers. Many of them had not much to lQle, it is true, but that little has been greatly damaged. The flood even reached to Olap- kftI1?"r9ad. There is much talk in the district as to the cause of the accident; and it is admitted, even by fbe district surveyors, that the sewers are not of sufficient capacity to carry Off a maxi- mum rainfall. The rain was no doubt excessive, seeing v *wo inches fell within twenty-four hours. •fti u the flood subsided very suddenly and swiitly about noon is held by many persons to point J^missness at Deptford, where the sewage of this district is pumped, so as to give it a fall into the fl^r" Was a meeting of the Lambeth Vestry, ana, many of the vestrymen having been losers by the events of the morning, they were full of the subject, and made their complaints loudly heard. A search- rng no doubt be made by the Metropolitan Board of Works. 1

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OUR MILITARY POSITION. ■

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CIGAR ENDS.

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