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THE FRENCH BANK-NOTE FORGERIES.…

CAROLINE GRAVIERE.

A LEECH BAROMETER.

[No title]

rHE CONVICT OUTBREAK AT IS…

THE THIRLMERE WATER SCHEME.

A RIVAL TO POET CLOSE.

[No title]

THE FENIAN PRISONERS.

THE SWITZERS AND SPRING.

CHEAPSIDE IN THE OLDEN TIME.

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CHEAPSIDE IN THE OLDEN TIME. Wondrously different (says the City Press) was the Westchepenof the eleventh century when the Norman Conqueror granted his brief and pithy charter to the citizens of London, from that of the nineteenth, with its stately edifices, its aspbalted pavement, and its rush and roar of riever-ceasing traffic. It was then somewhat like an ill-tended country rpad, in the summer rough and uneven and full of deep holes, and in winter a quagmire of mud and filth knee deep, with better beaten causeways at the sides for pedes- trian traffic. It is recorded by Stow that in 1091 a ter- rible hurricane passed over London, when 600 houses were blown down, and the roof of the church of St. Mary-le-bow, erected a few years previously, was lifted off, carried some distance, and dashed into the street with such violence that four of the rafters, 25 feet in length, were driven into the earth, the ground being of a moorish nature," leaving only four feet exposed, which were fain to be cut even with the ground, because they could not be plucked out." The houses stood apart from each other like cottages in a village, and were thatched with -straw, which was the cause of many fires, one occurring two years after the great storm, in which nearly the whole of the remaining houses were con- sumed and so did the citizens continue to rebuild their habitations after each successive fire, until 1245, when it was ordained that for the future they should be covered with tiles or slates, instead of straw, in the chief streets, "especially those close together, which were but few in number, for in Cheap- side was a void place called Crown field, from the Crown Inn, which stood at the end of it." This field was at the end of Soper's-lane, by Bucklersbury, and upon it were erected stages for spectators of pageants. It was sold, 2 Ed. IV., to Sir Richard Cholmley, but does not appear to have been utilized immediately for building purposes, as we hear it spoken of in the time of Henry VII.

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THE PROPOSED AGRICULTURAL…

EMBALMING.

THE YANKEE PRIVATEER.

[No title]

RUNNING THE BLOCKADE AT CRETE.

[No title]

THE COST OF WAR. -

CHANGES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN…

[No title]

CANADA.

PENNY BANKS.

[No title]