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THREE WORDS OF STRENGTH.
THREE WORDS OF STRENGTH. There are three lessons I would write— Three words as with a burning pen, In tracing of eternal light, Upon the hearts of men. Have Hope Though clouds environ round And gladness hides her face in scorn, Put thou the shadow from thy brow— Xo night but hath its morn. Have Faith! Where'er thy bark is driven— The calm's disport, the tempest's mirth— Know this God rules the hosts of Heaven, The inhabitants of earth. Have Love Not love alone for one, But man as man thy brother call, And scatter, like the circling sun, Thy charities on all. Thus grave these lessons on thy soul— Hope, Faith, and Love—and thou shalt find Strength, when life's surges rudest roll, Light, when thou else wert blind. -Schiller.
ISABEL. I
ISABEL. Soft waves of warm brown hair, With gold lights shining through, Shading a lace as sweetly fair As ever fancy framed in air, As ever painter drew. Sweet spirit frank and true, With love, with kindness rife What tender heart but to the drew! What kindly eye but in thee knew The sunshine of our life Sweet Spring, bright Summer past, And Autumn come again; The west wind's spoils are falling fast, What is our change brought with that blast ? Why fall our tears like rain ? Onlv a new-turned heap, One little grave, new made Bare is the earth o'er which we weep; Never a flower to pluck and keep, Never a grassy blade. Silence, where late was mirth, One mother's heart half-riven One vacant seat beside a hearth One loving spirit less on earth; One angel more in heaven
[No title]
Husbands are always thinking about money. W ives never ask fur it at all. They are quite content with a cheque. Old maids arc described as embers from which the sparks have fled. Fund Mother—'And what would Johnny do if Mamma were to die ?' Eat up all the sugar.' False friends, like our shadows, keep close to us in the sunshine, and vanish in shade. A young lady in Philadelphia advertizes that she will give 30,000 dollars to any respectable young man who will marry her. A rural poet, describing his lady lover, says, ( She is as beautiful as a water lily, while her breath is like an armful of clover.' Carefully treasure up with your pen for future use every weighty thought and apt expression that occurs to you. Some ungenerous biped has a patent medicine to make a fellow rise early in the morning. A six months' old baby can beat it wholly. Tell me with whom thou art found, & I will tell thee who thou art: let me know thy chosen em- ployment, and what to expect from thee I know. ■—Goethe. Marriage is the best thing for a man in gen- eral and every man is a worse man in proportion as he is unfit for the married state. Do you think,' asked Mrs Pepper, that a little temper is a bad thing in a woman ?' Cer- tainly not, ma'am,' replied a gallant philosopher, 'it is a good thing, and she ought never to lose it.' One of the Boston preachers says—' I have great hopes of a wicked man; slender hopes of a mean one. A wicked man may be converted and become a pre-eminent saint. A mean man ought to be converted six or seven times, one right after the other, to give him a fair start and put him on an equality with a bold wicked man.' A Dog's Bed.—The best bed that can be made for a dog consists of dry, newly-made deal sha- vings a sackful of these may be had for a shill- ing at almost any carpenter's shop. The dog is delighted in tumbling in them until he has made a bed to suit himself. Clean wood shavings will clean a dog as well as water, and fleas will never infest dogs that sleep upon fresh deal shavings. The turpentine and resin in new pine soon drive them away. A Truthful Character.—A gentleman in May- ence gave his servant maid the following character the other day :—' The bearer has been in my house a year, minus eleven months. During that time she has shown herself diligent at the house door; frugal, in work mindful, of herself; prompt, in excuses; friendly, towards men faithful, to her lovers and honest, when everything had vanished.' We have no doubt the services of this attractive creature have been in immense request wherever she has exhibited her certificate. Very Intimate.—The following conversation lately took place at a coroner's inquest on the body of a man found drowned Coroner: Did you know the defunct? Witness: Who is lie? Coroner: Why the dead man. Witness: Yes. Coroner: Intimately? Witness: Werry. Coro- ner How often hav^,you been in company with him ? Witness Only once. Coroner: Do you I call that intimate ? Witness: Yes for he was drunk, and I was very drunk; and that made us like two brothers. Mamma,' said a little girl one evening when there was company in the house, mamma, how fast your teeth have grown.' Hush, child, hold your tongue,' said the darling's mamma, her face glowing like a red cabbage. Well, so they have. You hadn't got one yesterday, and now you have got ever such a lot.' Mamma kept her mouth shut for the rest of the evening. Mrs Jenkins has a cat which not only drinks and wears her mistress's clothes in that lady's absence, but she has been known to convey can- dles, lard, and other trifles to the marine stores. She even gave a party once while the family was at the seaside, and is in the habit of smoking, driiiking, and supping off the cold meat in the kitchen late at night. In a public school in Albany, New York, it is customary to request from the parents of trouble- some children permission in writing to inflict corporal correction. The following reply was sent to one such request: Yoor flogging cirklar is dully received. I hope as to my John, you will flog Lim just as often as you kin. Heas a bad boy—is John. Hitho I've been in the habit of teaching him miself, it seems to be he never will larn anything—his spelling is outragiously defishent. Wallop him well, ser, and you will receive my thanks.' A Pennsylvania bachelor thus gets after a lovely woman :—' I impeach her in the name of the great whale of the ocean, whose bones are torn asunder to enable her to keep straight. I impeach her in the name of the peacock, whose strut, without his permission, she has stealthily assumed. I impeach her in the name of the horse, whose tail she has perverted from its use to the making of wavy tresses to decorate the back of the head and neck. 1 impeach her in the name of the kangaroo, whose beautiful figure she, in taking upon herself the Grecian bend, has brought into ill-favour and disrepute.' An American paper gives the following reply to a supposed correspondent: There is no stated rule for writing love letters. You should write on foolscap paper, and bear on as soft as you can, using words of such burning love that they will sizzle on the point of the pen. If is also advisa- ble to sling in a hunk of pathos occasionally, such as, Ci Dearest Augustus, I love you with a love larger than an elephant's I think of you every day, and by and by, when the days grow longer, I shall think of you twice a day." It is also well to put an ink blot in the corner, with the observation, Darling, I kissed this spot;" or I hcvea sigh in this vicinity, Indolence in Housekeeping. My dear Ju- liana,' said Alphonso, the tim day of th°;r hon-e- keeping, very tenderly, as he rose to go out and do his marketing. '¡"+ shall we have for our dinner <' Belaid much distress on the 'our.' I think, ny love,' replied she, that our appe- tites are not very great, a quarter of beef will fce sufficient.' Alphonso stood aghast. 'A qr.ar.ter of beef!' shacked he 'A quarter of a ^'A!:1. j. n-ant ioy lov^, "fti'i, Ici-s^ng fciia on his nose: and Alphonso Ike a -lL.llb tc the ilaugbter-beuse.
DEATH OF MR. CHARLES DICKENS.
DEATH OF MR. CHARLES DICKENS. We deeply regret to announce the death of Mr Charles Dickens, which took place at his residence at Gadshill in the course of Friday evening. His death was awfully sudden. He was seized with a stroke of paralysis on Wednes- day night, and after lying in a state of uncon- sciousness throughout Thursday, he breathed his last about six o'clock on Friday evening, His health, we understand, had been in a delicate state for some time past, and there had even been premonitory symptoms of paralysis on one or two occasions, but these had passed away, and no one about him anticipated that his death would be so soon or so sudden. Mr Dickens was born at Portsmouth in the year 1812, and was consequently in his 58th year at the time of his death. His father, Mi- John Dickens, held a position at one time in the Navy Pay Department, but at the reduction of officers on the close of the great war he retired on a pension, and coming to London he obtained an engagement as a reporter on the parliamentary staff of one of the morning newspapers. His son was at first placed as a clerk in an attorney's office, but the literary faculty becoming strongly developed in him he left the study of the law and obtained a reporter's engagement on the staff of the now defunct Morning Chronicle, which was then under the editorial management of Mr John Black. Here Mr Dickens soon dis- tinguised himself for the accuracy of his reports and the rapidity with which he transcribed his notes. Instances of his celerity in this respect still live in the traditions of the gallery, and which have rarely if ever been surpassed by any members of that profession. How thoroughly Mr Dickens identmed himself with this work may be inferred from a speech of his own de- livered at the Press Fund Dinner, where he told his audience that the habits of his early life, as a reporter, so clung to him that he seldom listened to a clever speech without his fingers mechanically and unconsciously going through the process of reporting it. In this situation, of course, he had ample opportunities of watching the play of personal and even sordid motives, under the mask of high patriotic inspirations, and doubtless was witness of may a scene on the floor of the House, where quarrels were kindled and appeased again "in a Pickwickian sense." The profession of a reporter led then, more than it does now to attendance at public meetings held in the provinces, and his experience in this way was, doubtless, the first introduction of Mr Dickens to many of those country inns and hos- telries which he has delineated in his works with such inimitable quaintness and delicate humour. Mr Dickens is his own best biographer. There are many delicious bits of his early experience either owned as such or but half concealed scat- tered through his writings. In the preface to one of his early works he tells us how, as a boy, he used to revel in the novels of Fielding and Smollett, intensely enjoying the adventures, dimly appreciating the fun, and wholly innocent in his child life of the coarseness and indecency which disfigure them. He tells us how the first book he ever bought was one of those tales at the shop of Messrs Chapman and Hall, the pub- lishers, and how he took it for an omen of good luck that when he began to emerge into fame he was waited upon and asked to write a novel himself by the very gentleman from whose hands he received that novel which constituted his first literary investment. Even the reason for his choosing that strange literary designation, Boz," is fully laid before us, and surely never was the history of a nickname more amusingly told or the name itself more circuitously arrived at. His first original composition appeared in the Evening Chronicle, a paper which was, in fact, an evening edition of the Morning Chronicle, and issued from the same office. In this journal Mr Dickens inserted from time to time sketches of scenes and characters which he had met with in his reporting experience, or encountered in his wanderings about the slums and unfrequented streets of the great city. The sketches attracted attention, but it was not till after Pickwick had made him famous that they were collected together and published under the title of Sketches by Boz." They proved, however, as already mentioned, the means of introducing him to Messrs Chapman and Hall, the publishers, and of their engaging him in further literary work. The task they proposed to him was humble enough. They had a series of humorous etchings by them, the work of a now nearly forgotten artist, named Seymour, which they were anxious to make use of in a serial form, and it occurred to them that this would be best accomplished by Mr Dickens writing a short sketch or tale to illustrate each of Seymour's plates. Mr Dickens readily undertook the task, modestly observing that it was just the kind of work that would suit him, as he did not think his powers were equal to the production of a regular novel, with the orthodox style of plot, and the inexorable three volumes. Such was the origin of the "Pickwick Papers." Once embarked in the story, however, his genius found means to deveiop itself; the illustrations, from being the primary consideration, soon fell to a very secondary place indeed, and the monthly appearance of the" Pick wick Papers" was waited for with something of the eagerness and impatience with which men wait for the news of a great battle. From that time Mr Dickens took the place whence time is not likely to dis- lodge him, as one of the first novelists of our age. It is not our intention, nor would it at all be necessary, to follow Mr Dickens through the whole of his literary career. Of course his posi- tion as an author was now fixed, and publishers competed for the honour and profit of employing his pen. Mr Bentley engaged him as editor of Bentley's Miscellany, and there, in the monthly numbers, his next story of "Oliver Twist" appeared. In Old Humphrey's Clock there seemed a design to carry on a number of tales simultaneously under that common title but if any such intention actually existed it was quickly abandoned. The author's genius took kindly to the Old Curiosity Shop," and the others gra- dually disappeared. Soon after the publication of this work Mr 'Dickens visited the United States for the first time, and was anything but favourably impressed by his tour. He severely criticised men and things in that country in a book of travels, which he called "American Notes for General Circulation," and quizzed them still more unmercifully in his Martin Chuzzle- wit." It is right to add, however, that on a revisit to that country a few years ago he was generously received by those who had been the subjects of his satire, while he, on his part, did not recant, indeed, but he openly declared that all the causes of offence which so stirred his bile on his first visit had wholly passed away—that America had cast her slough, and now appeared in the attitude and with the bearing of a freat a free, and a generous nation. In addition to his own works, of which we have scarcely enumerated a tittle, and we have wholly omitted his delightful Christmas books, Mi;/Dickens was intimately connected with the staking of several journals. First of these in time and in importance was the Daily News, the suggestion of which is said to be due to him. The paper was started with an immense staff of political and literary celebrities, and Mr Dickens was appointed one of the principal editors. But his genius was not one of the class that works in harness, nor, in spite of his gallery training, had he ever much taste for politics. He Cllll- tributed to the journal a series of papers which were atterwards published under the title of "Pictures of Italy;" aod soon afterwards he ceased his connection with it altog.-tln-r Li i '(p r n J~j '>■ uterary journal linger tn»: title ol house/loin >1 or-Is, 01 which Messrs Bran- aim E\aas \\tre toe piibiisners, i.his serial ."vVltl* ext.-aordiuary puccoss, ami was RLII I,.i t: iji'ight of rpt'i/ jity \v];Lu, if. 1; s,.ddeuly put an eua to i he oceaoioa of this tonus a paiiMu episode in bio hie, to v.-hidi wo would not willingly rear, but that he himself insisted on all the woiid knowing ir, and quar- relied with Lis lost friends who would not aid linn in that design. Mr Dickens bad married ia early life Bliss Hopatli, daughter oi a gentle- man well known in the musical world. The marriage was an unhappy one, arising from in- compatibility of temper, and at last a separation took place. Mr Dickens published a lengthy explanation, in which he contrived to throw much of the blame on the lady. He applied to his friends to have this letter inserted in Punch, of which they were publishers, as well as of Household Words, and when they declined, on the ground that his letter was wholly unsuited to the character of that journal, he broke off his connection with them, stopped Household Words, in which they had a joint interest, and started All the Year Round on his own account. The new venture was equally successful with the old the name of Dickens was an unfailing magnet to attract readers, and some of his later novels, especially Our Mutual Friend," were first given to the world in its pages. Not content with his fame as an author Mr Dickens opened up a new source of literary interest, and resolved to appear before the world in what was then— though it has often been imitated since—the novel position of a reader of his own works. He was already well known as a capital amateur actor, and had carried off many laurels in pri- vate theatricals he resolved to turn this talent to account in giving the world his own version of his principal characters by the dramatic colour and tone he imparted to them in the readings. This attempt also was singularly successful. His audiences both here and in America were bounded only by the capabilities of the halls in which they were given, and proved to him a new and rich vein both of fame and profit. It is said, however, as we have already hinted, that it was while giving a series of these readings that he received the first warning of the disease which has now proved fatal. This is not the place to attempt any elaborate criticism of Mr Dickens's writings, or to estimate the permanent position he will occupy in the gallery of British worthies. It is said that his pathos was aften unreal, that his sentiment often became maudlin, his humour was sometimes forced and always grotesque. All this may have been. But, on the other hand, he has created a gallery of portraits, made us acquainted with a greater number of living flesh and blood characters than any author of our own or other times, with the exception of Shakespeare and Scott. Pickwick, and Weller, and Pecksniff, and Mark Tapley, and Dick Swiveller, and Little Nell, and the Marchioness, and a host of others, have become to us household words, and have entered as it were into the very marrow of our language. It is his praise—the niceness of modern society perhaps restrained him, but yet he deserves it—that with all his wild humour he never allowed it to be employed against virtue or religion. He had often to deal with hypo- crites and pretenders to religion, but even in delineating the Chadbands of the pulpit he chosed to let them talk drivel rather than bring sacred names into association with ridicule. He has died in harness. He was engaged on a new novel, Edwin Drood," of which, as only three numbers have appeared, it would be unfair to form an estimate. It is a somewhat remarkable coincidence that his great contemporary, Thack- eray, was cut down with almost equal suddenness, and just as he too had published the first few numbers of a new novel.
HOUSE OF COMMONS.—THURSDAY.
HOUSE OF COMMONS.—THURSDAY. CUSTOMS AND INLAND REVENUE BILL. Mr G. Gregory moved a new clause exempt- ing horses and mules which might be occasional employed by farmers in drawing materials for the repair of roads fvom having to pay licence duty under the bill. He explained that it was very hard that farmers who kept horses solely for the pr poses of husbandly, and who received no hire for carting a few stones to help to repair a highway, should be compelled to take out a licence merely because their horses might occasionally be employed in that way. The commissioners of Inland Revenue had themselves, under the act of last session, practically made the exemption which he was now urging. He thought what he asked could easily be granted, as the amount of revenue which would be derived from the source he was speaking of would be very inconsiderable. Mr D. Nichol hoped the proposed clause would be adopted. Mr Welby expressed a similar hope, and insisted strongly upon the fact that the farmers made no profit whatever out of the employment of their horses in carting materials for the repair of roads. The Chancellor of the Exchequer was willing to compromise the matter by agreeing to issue instructions to the inland revenue officers to exempt such horses as they were persuaded were used to cart materials without receiving any hire. He was averse, however, to accept the clause and insert it in the bill. He thought what the hon. member for East Sussex wished to effect would be effected quite as well by regu- lations as by inserting a clause, and he would be willing to instruct the revenue officers accord- ingly, if the hon. gentleman would assent. (Mr Gregory.—No, no.) He would go that length in the way of concession, but no farther. They must have some principle on which to proceed in the matter. Why should horses engaged in work for which their owners were paid be exempt from duty? He felt bound to decline to accept the proposition of the hon. gentleman. Mr Disraeli said that he wished to point out to the Chancellor of the Exchequer what would be the effect of not acceding to the clause. The Chancellor of the Exchequer said that he had no clause. Mr Disraeli referred to the clause as proposed. This was not a farmers' question, but it was a ratepayers' question (hear, hear). The roads could not be maintained without the use of horses and the farmers would not lend their horses if they knew "that they (the farmers) were to be subjected to this tax, and the result would be that more would have to be paid for the hauling of the stones, and the rates would consequently be increased. This was, in truth, a ratepayers' question. It seemed to him that if horses were hired for parochial purposes they should be exempted from this duty. The result was that the rate of the parish must be raised (hear, hear). The Speaker (who addressed the house from the front of the Treasury bench) said he wished to say a few words on this question on the part of his constituents. He would go one step further than the right honourable gentleman who preceded him. He would say that horses employed in agriculture were exempt from tax, but the keeping the roads in order was one of the first purposes in agriculture (hear, hear). Otherwise how could agricultural produce be carried to the market ? Therefore the keeping the roads in repair was one of the main operations in agriculture. This might seem to be a simple question, but it was one which would derange the affairs of every parish in England (hear, hear). He thought that this was a subject which well deserved the consideration of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He was not sure that he understood the point taken by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who said that if no money passed there would be no necessity for taking out the licence for horses. He would ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether, supposing farmers in a parish possessing horses agreed to haul the materials necessary for the roads of a parish, then in such case did the Chancellor of the Exchequer mean that it would not be necessary to take uut a licence for their horses ? (hear, hear). The Chancellor of the Exchequer said he agreed L that. The Speaker remarked that there would be iv exemption in the way of rates, because, Hi:or ,1 tiu- materials were now haulr-u witik.ut exneiiS' ami the amount of rates \fL,s j„,t enarg-abie o-i the parish (hear, lieaij. snouid be ieady to assouc to an ana y which it was understood that the fci,t: all L S who nuueitouk to draw the materials iu £ tLe repair utthe roadboi tho parish should he cutilivd !<J A ILeiiCv. The Chancellor of the Lxchequer quite agreed tuaf il larmors united together in a parish to repair the roads and did not receive payment for the employment of their men and horses, it should not be necessary to take out a licence. Col. Wilson-Patten said that would not meet the questior The matter had resolved itse'f hto one of rights. If a farmer only received a shilling more than the amount of his proper remuneration he would become ^able to the duty. On the question that the cHuse be adopted, the committee divided, and the numbers were— Ayes 49 Noes 45 Majority.4 The renouncement of the numbers was re- ceived with cheers and some laughter. Mr Gladstone said that the clause was in extension of the present exemption. There was no proposition on the part of the government to restrict the exemption. He did not wish to prolong the discussion then, but the govern- ment would consider the question of what was their duty with regard to this clause (cheers and derisive laughter). COUNTY GOVERNMENT. Mr Campbell in directing attention to the sub- ject of county government, and moving a reso- lution which declared that the representative principle ought to be applied to the government and financial administrations of counties, dwelt at some length upon the defects of the existing system, his points of attack being chiefly the office of lord lieutenants and the county magis- tracy. He also criticised the Ministerial bill of last session which he treated as utterly inadequate to effect the required reform, inasmuch as it introduced the representative element to the ex- tent of one-sixth only of the magistrates. The Home Secretary expressed the desire of Ministers to fulfil the pledge given in the Queen's Speech of last year to legislate on the question but he hinted that they were not prepared to adopt such sweeping changes as the mover of the resolution seemed to glance at. No Govern- ment measure had been brought in this session because the whole subject of local taxation, its incidence, and the manner in which it should be levied was then under the consideration of a select committee. Colonel Wilson Patten concurred in the object tions of the Home Secretary to the motion of Mr Campbell, thinking it inopportune to enter- tain the question whilst the committee was engaged in conducting its inquiries. He should vote, therefore, for going into committee of supply, and not to negative the .principle of a proposition for which he avowed his preference. Alluding to the bill of the Government, Sir W. Galloway stated that the general opinion respecting it out of doors was that it was a mere sham. At the same time the motion was unseasonable. The hon. baronet also called upon the Home Secretary to pledge himself to bring in a measure for the settlement of the question early in the next session: but could extract no response of that nature, and the House went to a division which resulted in the rejection of the motion by 61 to 39.
THE BRISTOL ELECTION.
THE BRISTOL ELECTION. The points reserved for consideration on the hearing of the Bristol election petition were argued on Thursday in the Court of Common Pleas, and before the day was over Mr E. S. Robinson had ceased to be a member of the House of Commons. The result is satisfactory, but not surprising. The wonder is rather that any one should have had the courage to maintain a proposition so untenable as that to which the defenders of the seat stood committed. On their own showing they had paid money to voters while a contest was impending, or rather while hostilities were actually going on. They had made these disbursements with a view to the result of the struggle for the seat, in the interest of a particular candidate, and that candidate the man for whom his party polled its united strength. His very title to the support on which he had correctly counted was his success at the test ballot, and though there were some excep- tions, the majority of those whose ballot papers had been bought showed that they felt voting for Mr Robinson on the polling day was part of their bargain. The thirsty souls who were brought up to a proper pitch of patriotism by libations for which they did not pay stand in the same category, and the question the Court had to consider was the validity of the honourable member's return. It was admitted that if the test ballot were itself to be tested in the same way as the poll the respondent's case could not be defended for a moment. But an endeavour was made to distinguish between the two by a process which minds untrained in political casuistry cannot comprehend. Put into plain English, the contention was something like this. Bribery is a malpractice, corrupt, debasing, and illegal. But bribery is not bribery unless it has some direct relation to the poll by which the claims of contending candidates are finally determined. Remove the bribe one step from the vote it is meant to buy, or from the success it is meant to win, and there is nothing iu the world to be said against it. Pay a single° elector to hold his hand at the nomination, or to record his name at the poll, and it will serve you quite right if you are harried by special commissioners, sent for trial before common jurors, and sen- tenced to a long period of imprisoament by her Majesty's judges. Do the same thing to one or a hundred of the free and independent at a test ballot, the object of which is to select the purest and best of a leash of competing candidates, and you may make broad your phylactery, and tell the sinners of Lancaster and Bridgwater to stand by, for you are holier than they. One word about test ballots generally. We should think that henceforth we shall hear very little about these new inventions, or perhaps we should rather say these recent revivals. Some- how or other they never seem to accomplish their purpose. Some independent candidate refuses to be bound by them, or some injured candidate complains of them, or some wealthy candidate corrupts them. If we remember rightly, they date from the 1847 election for Marylebone, when the pretensions of Mr Daniel Whittle Harvey, Lord Dudley Stuart, and Mr tSerjeant Shee were tried by an ordeal of this kind. But no good came of it. Mr Harvey declined the greatness that was sought to be thrust upon him, the-other candidates forthwith repudiated the result so far as it affected them, and the election was eventually determined in a free fight of the liveliest character. And so with more recent adaptations of the same tactics. Mr Odger's experience induced him to forswear a test ballot altogether when he stood for South- wark, and though in a moment of weakness, he consented to act differently at Bristol, we fancy that he must throughout have apprehended what has now been proved. Certainly his objections are not likely to be lessened by what has hap- pened, nor will those who believe in his mission as an artisan M.P. again consent to the amal- gamation of his claims in deference to results attained under cover of an agency which those who most favour its employment think may be lawfully employed to cover all kinds of corrupt practices,—Standard. THE JEWEL ROBBERY.—Franklin and Wilson, the men charged with being concerned in the great jewel robbery at Mr Beaumont's, M.P. were brought up again on Friday at Marlborough, street. The police were unable to strengthen the case against the prisoners and they were dis- charged. MURDEROUS ASSAULT.—A dissipated woman named Clarke, about 50 years of age, was brought up at the Thames Police-court on Friday charged with attempting to murder her husband and son. The prisoner who was in the habit of »lrirkn)jT to excess, was in a Urupken state cu Thu\>by o.t vl i:f Her in s:, o ,• .,v;. •• el v; v i'ij-vujg iho r v-isCii --•. io^vw.o h:„ aud staooed him force, -he kuito going through two coats aa t two shizt^ and penetrating the lung sevexa! iu-.h.o. coa, who wt.s it;" Led, came to assist his father, and received a stab i: Lie, tbigi:. The old ma;; is not expected to survive and the sort is in a dangerous state:. The wretched woman was remanded. The John Bull hears on good authority that there is every probability of the Marquis of Bute returning to the Angelican Church. When his secession to Rome was first announced in these columns, six months before it was avowed, the statement was received with an in- dignant denial, and doubtless the same will be the result now. Our ir formation in both cases is from the same quarter. THE QUEEN AND THE LATE MR DICKENS.— Her Majesty, on being informed by telegraph of the death of Charles Dickens, returned, through the same medium, a reply expressive of her deepest regret at the sad news. This feeling message was at once transmitted to the fam:iy of the deceased author, at Gad's-hill. THE CATTLE PLAGUE.—We have the official report, in the shape of a huge volume of 500 pages, of the cattle plague, extending over the years 1865-6-7 and 1868 the most gratifying statement of which is that the pest is now entirely extinct. Its cost to the country was enormous—we might say incalculable. To say nothing of the many millions sterling sacrificed by the destruction of capital and paid in the shape of compensation rates, the expenses of the Privy Council were £127,673, of which sum £28,504 went to veterinary surgeons, £54,O!)4 to cattle inspectors, advertisements jE19 675 compensation £35,000, and law £400. THE JERSEY MILITIA.—A petition to the Home Secretary has been signed by several thousand inhabitants of the island of Jersey, praying that the Royal Jersey Militia be dis- banded, during the Queen's pleasure in time of peace, as its compulsory service is unjust and contrary to the spirit of the age." The peti- tioners state that "by the law of 1771 every British subject is liable to be enrolled in the Militia, from the age of 16 to 65 years; had this law been enforced, the number of men serving in the town battalion would have reached to at least 2,000, whereas it is only composed of about 600 men belonging to the humble classes of society, who can bear this no longer, and who consequently appeal with confidence to her Majesty's Government to be released from those oppressive services during peace." SABBATARIANISM.—At the Hammersmith Police-court, Samuel Spencer, a news-agent, was summoned for exercising his worldly calling upon the Lord'sDay—namely, that of selling newspapers. He complained that proceedings were not taken against the publishers of news- papers, and said he would not sell them if none were published. He called attention to sum- monses which had been heard at the Marylebone Police-court, where Mr Mansfield imposed fines of Id only. Mr Dayman said Mr Mansfield had his own views, but he could not take upon himself to say that he would not enforce an Act of Parliament which, so far from being obsolete, had been brought very often under the notice of the Legislature, who had not repealed it. The defendant was find Is and 2s costs, on promising to close his shop on Sundays. BRISTOL ELECTION.—The point reserved by the learned judge who tried the election petition at Bristol—namely, whether bribery at the test ballot would vitiate the election, was argued on Thursday in the Court of Common Pleas. Their lordships decided that what had taken place came within the intention and scope of the Anti-bribery Act of 1854 that the seat of Mr Robinson was thereby vitiated; and that his election was therefore void. It will be remem- bered that there were three Liberal candidates, Mr Robinson, Mr Odger, and Mr Hodgson. Fearing that if all went to the poll a Conserva- tive might be returned, a preliminary ballot was taken as to which of the three should retire, and Mr Robinson had the largest number of votes. CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT.—The murders and scandals set down for trial this week at the Central Criminal Court, and which bid fair to make this session remarkable in the judicial annals of Newgate, have all gone off. The men-women' case is postponed until July, on the ground that the introduction of others be- sides Boulton and Park into the indictments at the last moment rendered more time necessary to prepare the defence. The trial of Miller for the double murder of the Rev. E. Heulin and his housekeeper, at Chelsea, is also postponed, Mr Collins, who is retained for the prisoner, not having had time to prepare an answer to the charge. On similar grounds the trial of Red- head, for the murder of his stepmother, is also put off. ROMANIZING AT OXFORD.—Some very sad details on this subject are given in a recent number of the Oxford Chronicle. St Barnabas is specially mentioned as claiming a bad pre- eminence. We have not," says the writer, heard of prayers to dead men, and the efficacy of dry bones being preached elsewhere as yet, although in all the said churches the priestly power is exalted by the priest above every other power, the object being evicently to bring the poor mistaught flock under the influence of a species of moral and intellectual serfdom. The confessional, with all its vile, unclean, and pru- rient suggestions, is taught and inculcated by advanced Tractarians and Ritualists in other hot- beds and training schools besides St Barnabas, but scarcely with such unblushing front. In that unfortunate and priest ridden district we have heard of young children being urged to confes- sion, and having questions put to them by the so-called priest that would have no other effect than to degrade and contaminate. Young per- sons of both'sexes, subjected to such examination, have ideas breathed into their minds that must in the very nature of things, defile and corrupt: and bring a blush into the face of the innocent and unsophisticated." THE SHRIEKING SISTERHOOD.—Under the heading of "the Shrieking Sisterhood," and a good many others besides, the New York Tri- bune lately described a rather peculiar meeting held in New York. It was delivered to ladies alone," and the placard further announced "men not admitted. Several gentlemon tried to gain admittance, but were refused; as the reporter for the Tribune got in, however, and took full notes of all that passed, we are driven to assume he went in drag. The meeting was virtually one to condole with Mrs MacFarland, the adultress, on the wrongs she had sustained by the death of her paramour, Richardson, at the hands of her husband. The Ward-Beecher of this occasion was Mrs Stanton, who said she was very much embarrassed in doing so." Mrs Stanton then came forward to say that, though she had been accused of entertaining the free love doctrine," she had only lived with one man for many years, and expected to do so to the end of her life." This satisfactory announcement was received with great applause and knocking of parasols and stamping of little bootsand then Mrs Stanton had it all her own way, and a very illogical way it was. She had read the touching story of Mrs MacFarland, and believed it to be true; she sat alone one night and read it." "When Mr' MacFarland left Mr Mac- Farland (to live with Mr Richardson) she took the first step towards virtue and self-respect," though, Mrs Stanton adds, she should have been more patient and first asked for a divorce in New York." At least we can agree with her in this, though we cannot admire the declamatory language in which she insisted on the inalienable right of a wife to a divorce when and how she pleased, or that every woman should utter her protest daily against the laws as at present con- ducted of matrimony." Mrs Stanton at this point lost the thread of her argument, and pro- ceeded to point out how easily divorce could be obtained; for she stated, on the authority of ex- Governor Jewell, of Connecticut, that there was one divorce for every for marriages, and last year in the model State of Massachusetts alone, 16.000 divorces had been granted. Passing by a not ie.tr ittihaupy transition of feeling, Mrs SIANTAI.'I tunica iu a fierce digression on the women who, she said, married only for money and position." and then relapsing, pointed out the sole remedy Muscle should be cultivated among women and morals among men." The power of the purse, however, was the great thing, and when women were pecuniarily equal to their husbands there would be better wives and nobler husbands, and physical uuions would cea$e."—Pall Mull Gazette. FOUR CHILDREN AT A BIRTH.—OnMondayr evening the wife of William Miller, the keepe of the Volunteer Drill Hall, Dundee, gave birth to four children—a boy and three girls. The boy was still born, but the girls are alive' The mother is doing well.—Glasgow Herald. THREE AT A BIRTH.—The wife of a polisher named Salter, living at New Hincksey, Oxon, on Thursday last gave birth to three daughters, and mother and children are doing well. It is proposed to make application to the Queen for the bounty of three guineas customarily made and provided in such exceptional cases. THE GREAT FIRE AT PERA.—Constanti- nople, Friday.—The statements of the number of the dead and wounded found up to yesterday are very conflicting, ranging from 104 to 1,300; the number actually interred is 122 and of these 22 were Protestants; no Jews or Mahometansare included. It is impossible to ascertain the exact number. The Turkish authorities are displaying great forethought and humanity to all parties, religious difference being entirely laid aside. ALLEGED BIGAMY BY A BLINDMAN.—Thos. Green, a blind man, was charged at the Liver- pool Police court, on Friday, with bigamy. It was stated that in 1864 he was married to his first wife, who still living in Wales. A short time ago he became an inmate of the Blind Asylum at Liverpool, and there married his second wife. These facts having come to the ears of the superintendent of the asylum, he was given into custody. He was remanded for further evidence. TIIE IRISH LAND BILL.—The attitude of the Conservative party in the House of Lords with regard to the Irish Land Bill may be inferred from a statement made by Lord Derby at a banquet given in Merchant Taylor's Hall, on Saturday. His lordship said that the upper chamber would in a few days have the Irish Land Dill before them, and it would then be their lordship's duty to accept what they could, and to resist only what they must. They would endeavour .to the best of their ability to deal with the problem of the Irish discontent. Sir John Pakington on the same occasion expressed a hope that the Government Education Bill would become Law during the present session. A HINT FROM A PRINCE.—The Prince of Wales has struck a well-delivered blow at the system of public dinners. His presence was engaged at the anniversary dinner of the Sick Children's Hospital. He promised with his usual kindness, that he would attend, but ex- pressed a desire that he may be allowed to edit the bill of fare. His Royal Highness then cut down the catalogue of entrees, entre- mets, releves., rotis, fyc., and the consequence was that within sixty two minutes from the time of serving the soup, the royal chairman was on his legs making the speech for which his presence had been besought. In this way about an hour and a-half were saved, to say nothing of the benefit as regarded stomach and expense. REVOLTING CRUELTY TO A CHILD. — At Wolverhampton, on Friday, a sweep, named John Smith, and his wife were committed for trial, upon the coroner's warrant, charged with the manslaughter of a child named Sarah King, aged three years and nine months, the daughter of the female prisoner. The evidence of the neighbours proved that the prisoner had beaten and starveck^he child, and one witness stated that when the child was dying the female prisoner was seen shaking it to keep it alive.' The body of the child was found to be shockingly emaciated, weighing only 181bs. During the inquest the people living near the prisoners became greatly excited against them, and en- deavoured to lynch them. The windows of their house were all smashed, and but for the arrival of the police, the building would have been pulled down. A CHILD SHOT BY HIS BROTHER.—A dis- tressing accident occurred at Macclesfield on Tuesday afternoon. A child named Watkin, two years old was playing with his brother George, aged 10 years, and a another lad, named Worthington, in their own yard in Derby-street. During the absence of their parents, who had gone to the cemetery to inter another child, the elder Watkin went up-stairs and took from a box in the bedroom an old horse pistol, and, after playing with it for some time, not knowing it to be loaded, Watkin got a lucifer match and put it to the nipple of the weapon, which immediately exploded. The poor child who happened to be standing in front of the muzzle, was killed instantly. The elder brother had his fingers cut, and was somewhat stunned by the accident. The other lad escaped unhurt. The sad occurrence caused great excitement in the neighbourhood. It appears that the pistol had been borrowed for a pigeon match, but, after loading it, the borrower found it useless, and returned it to the child's parents. FATAL BOAT ACCIDENT AT RYDE.—Ryde, June 10.- Quite a gloom has been cast over the town this evening. About three o'clock this afternoon, Mr. rrhurlow, jun., son of Mr. Alderman Thurlow, one of our most respected, inhabitants, accompanied by two other young: men named Clark and Tilley, both well known • in the town, embarked from the pier in a small sailing boat. They had not got more than a I mile from land when the boat was seen suddenly to capsize. A waterman named Henry j Southcott and two of his assistants put off to I their assistance, and one of the steam packets j belonging to the Port of Portsmouth and Ryde s Royal Mail Steam Packet Company made for the scene of the disaster, and cruised about for some time. All efforts to find them were how- j ever fruitless. Their caps, with their initials in them, were discovered and brought to shore, 2 but their bodies have not been recovered. 2 CURIOUS BREACH OE PROMISE CASE.—The s Dundee Advertiser reports another. of those & many actions brought by young women of very humble positions in life for breach of r promise of marriage. In this case the plain- i tiff was Catherine Bisland, and the defendant was Alexander Gowrie, a farm servant, and she asked for£ 12, which is a favourite amount ( of sola/urn in Scotland. The plaintiff produced I a number of illspelled love letters which he had received from the defendant between Midsummer and Christmas, in one of which he ( said. 'I was glad when I opened the latter and saw that you had made up your mind and I hope you will not draw back now at this time and the Shipeard was asking when I was to take you and I said that I dount now Soud have not got away for myself yet he sais the sonurthe better for my salf.' In another one he thus alluded to their marriage :—Dear Lover the time iss faist a proaching when we muist be together my Dear it will pe a naifa day when the heven and the earth shall pass away and thear shall be no more seas. The plaintiff's mother proved that owing to the match being broken off the girl became affected. The advocate. asked," In what way was she affected? The mother replied, I didna see her heart to ken that." The Sheriff awarded the girl the money she claimed. BREAKFAST. — Eprs's COCOA. — GRATEFUL AND COMFORTING—The very agreable character of this preparation has rendered it a general favourite. The Civil Service Gazette remarks:—The singular suc- cess which Mr Epps attained by his homoeopathic preparation of cocoa has never been surpassed by any experimentalist. Bv a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected cocoa, Mr Epps has pro- vided our breakfast tabl's with a delicately fluvomed beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' [ Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in j lb., 1. \1, and 1 lb. tin-lined packcta, labelled — JAM I:3 Errs and Co., Homoeopathic Chemists, London. DUNVTJ.LF. & Co., Belfast, are the largest holders of whiskey in the world. Their Old Irish Whiskey is recommended by the medical profession in preference to French brandy. Supplied in casks and cases for homo uso or exportation, Quotations on application to MESSRS. DUNVILLE & Co., UtlYAL IRISH DIS- MLEIUBS, lii.Ll'Ai'1'j IMPROVING THE OCCASION.—The Wester* Morning News states that on Sunday at Sai"' Veep (Cornwall) parish church, the Rev. Geottf Hext was reading the Epistle, when an BIRO was given that an adjacent farm was bum11# The rector promptly stopped the service, 3°"' heading the congregation, they repaired en tnao to the scene of the disaster, where the efforts of the parson and the people extinguish^ the fire. They then returned to church, the service, and in place of the previously pared sermon an appropriate extemporaneotf address was given to improve the occasion.' INTERESTING TO LADIES,-At thin season of year the important process of bleaching and dretfW laaes and linens for spring and summer wear CO^" raencos. We would therefore particularly c«H atteution of our fair readers to the Glenfieid i It ia now oxclusirely used in the Royal Laundry, her Majesty's laundress pronounccs it to be the starch she ever used. When you ash for the GUnJ^ tee that you get it. The Bristol Packet Tea is distinct from any oth*J contains no scented, but possesses fine natural flf'j great strength, and is thoroughly genuine; qualities are vouched for hy the late Dr. Herapatb, 'JJ "Grocer," the public precs, and thousands who daily lined it for years past. Sold by appointod in most towns ai d villages. Each package bear* • rude mark, signature, and address of the proper' J. BKYANT, 137, itedolilf-street, llristol. d2" INTERESTING EXPERIMENT.—Place on the "PPJF grate with the heads projecting about one inch in* Nome ordinary iucifers—in a few moments they 'Kn'^ Then, in the same position, place a few of the Matches of Bryant, and May (which ignite on/y n" ("J f>o.r), and it will be found that tliey will rema'n hours—in fact, until the wood becomes literally red—without taking fire. We look on this as a larly interesting confirmation o( the safety ol tbo match. Cure muRt be takeu in both cases to **<'1: actual contact with (laino. IMPORTANT MEDICAT, EVIDENCE AND RECODIM TION OF A COIIONKR'S JUIIY—At an inquest in LondftJ: on the bodies ot Elizabeth and Louisa Stapler (" children and sisters), whose premature and iiielaucholl death was caused by sucking some common luci'^J the medical efidence went to show lhat whilst one gf% of phosphorus as used in their manufacture fatal, Bryant and May's Patent Safety Matohei quite harmless. Thojury r equejtod that tho would communicalo with the Secretary of State on,p subject. HOLT-OWAY'S PILLS.——The Great |Xeed.—Tho bWj is the life, and on its purity depends our healtbf not our existence. These Pills thoroughly this vital fluid from all contaminations, and by power strengthen and invigorate the whole healthily stimulate sluggish organs, repress °vY exoitetf action, and establish order of circulation J!* secretion throughout every part of the body. balsamic naturo of Holloway'e Pills oommenda tb* to the favour of debilitated and nervous oonstituti#V which they aoon resuscitate. They dislodgo all structions, both in the bowels and elsewhere, on that account, much sought after for pronio'^i regularity of action in young females and 1°*% persons, who are naturally weak, or who from cause have become so. J ADYICE TO MOTHERS.—Are you broken of your by a sick ehild, suffering with the pain of cutting go at once to a chemist and get a bottle of Mrs slow's Soothing Syrup. It will relieve'the poor immediately; it is perfectly harmless; it jj| natural quiet sleep by relieving the ohild and the little cherub awakes as bright as a It has been long in use in America, and is highly i* mended by medical men. It is very pleasant to it soothes the ohild; it softens the gums, alltys relieves wind, regulates the bowels, and is th« y known remedy for dysentery and diarrhoe*, arising from teething or other causes. Be sure «D" jj for Mrs Window's Soothing Syrup. No mother *b# J be without it.—8old by all Medioine Dealers ^'il1 per bottle. London Depot, 295, High Holborn. LUXUKIANT AND BBAUTIFOX HAIR.—Mrs. Allen's World's Hair Hestorer or Drossing" fails to quickly restore Or ay or Faded Hair w't, youthful colour and beauty, and with the first cation a beautiful gloss and delightful frag given to the Hair. It stops Hair from tailing It prevents baldness. It promotes luxuriant It contains neither oil nor dye. In large bottt^ Price Sis Shillings. Sold by all Chemists turners. For Children's Hair, Mrs. Allen's balsamum far exceeds any pomade or hair oil, an,J a delightful Hair Dressing; it is distinct and preparation from the Restorer, and its use n"' quired without it. Depot, 266, Hisrh Holbf London. ° 1 Ml RESULTS OF TIIF, FRENCH TRFATV.—That the wine has undergone importan changes and considerable de't. ment during the last ten years cannot be better shown hy instancing the fact, that while the consumption of 'J |)l in 18G0 (the first }ear of the French Treaty) was if gallons, it had increased in 18G9 to ll,S40,m pal'°n^ double the quantity. According to the Government rct«ej) the houses which paid duty on the Urgest quantity of "Ljjf the I'ort;of London during" the year lb'iO were the follo^'jjt Appended also is a list of the houses which paid duty 011 largest quantity of foreign spirits during the yeai 18ü!); WINES (FOUEION) SPIRITS (FoHKiof\.J- Gallons. W. & A. Gilbey 717,211 \V. & A. Gilbey r.w. Cogens 110,808 Twiss& Brownings GaudctFreres 127,440 Nicholson & Co.Till Boyes and Beckwith 125,227 D. Taylor & Sons. It. Hooper & Sons 121,0 58 Trowcr & Lawson Dingwall & Co 121,278 Dingwall & Co MriiI: Cuneliffe & Co 59,1'0 It. Hooper & Sons i Simon & Lightly 85,7.rO Bond, Forbes, & Co. jWI Dent, Unviek, & [Co. 84,859 Bishop & Sons J. Allnutt, jun, & Co. 81,092 Seager & Evans D. Taylor & Sons 70,073 R. Burnett & Co. As Light Wines are acknowledged by medical men to pi most desirable beverage, and a large portion of the crease comes under that head, the importance of these MJJjtjl should be borne in mind in any revision of the French *r J
SOLJTif WALES RAILIVAY TINIE…
SOLJTif WALES RAILIVAY TINIE TABFJ 4, « WEKK lUTa.-irr TRAINS. I Stations. Mxp. A,2, A,jA ■ class, class. 1 Sc 2 class. 1 Mil. Starting from [«.,». a. m. a.m. a,m. P 0 New Milford 2 0 8 35 11 0 5 0 Johnston 8 50 111 15 5 I* Ap 9| Haverfordwest. 21 9 0 111 25 5 24 gfi 14^ Clarbesvou Road 9 II 11 38 — <§ 21 Narberth Road 9 26 11 54 — fS 2'ig Whitland 2 55 9 47 U 9 S 0 jff 32 St. Clears 3 7 9 59 12 24 ..• 7 40^ Carmarthen Jnc. 3 21 8 50 110 17 12 41 6 60 Llanelly 3 55 9 40 10 67 1 36 1 6 j 72 Swansea 4 30 10 0 11 10 2 15 7 77 Neath (dep.), 4 33 10 37 11 39 2 30 7 f J 111 Cardiff 5 43 12 31 12 47 4 5 9 0 J 126} Newport 6 5 1 30 1 13 4 30 9 2* V 143} CJ¡cpstow I 6 35 2 35 .11 41 I 5 15 9 b1 ..( 171} Gloucester (dep.) 7 33 4 0 2 35 1&2 12*0 J- 178 Cheltenham(arr) 8 30 5 5 2 55 6 20 11 J- 208 Swindon (dep.). 9 17 5 55 4 0 8 5 2 285 I'addincton 11 15 9 40 5 45 10 15 4 35 » i WKKK H».-l)OWS TRAIN 8. S g L 2,3, 1, 2,3, I, &2,. Exp. ,1, 2, 3,1 jrl ->* class, class.| class.,1 ft il Mil. Starting from a.m. a.m. p.m. {a.m. a- tyt 0 Paddington 6 0 4 50 9 15 1I3. 77 Swindon (dep.) 8 45 6 50 11 >5 .••• Jffe 121 CluUenham (uep 6 10 10 15 7 45 12 10 ■••• ij! 114 Gloucester (dep.) 6 35 11 10 8 15 12 30 .••» Ij- Hl-i Chepstow 7 44 12 16 8 55 1 17 1584 Newport 8 30 12 55 9 25 1 52 fjP 170j Cardiff 8 55 1 25 9 50 2 20 f!l 208 [Neath (dep.) 10 24 3 13 11 3 3 32 .»• «; 216 (Swansea 10 48 3 45 11 30 4 5 7 4; <J' 225 Llaneu, 11 15 45 n 46 4 is 8 2» )f 244? Carmarthen Jnc. 12 4 4 52 12 17 5 3 9 A. 253 St. Clears 12 27 5 23 12 31 5 23 8 258 £ Whitlana 12 43 5 36 12 45 5 36 9 254 Narber'h Goad. 12 57 5 48 5 48 9 5; <| 270J Clarbestou Road 1 11 6 2 6 2 10 »J| 275} Haverfordwest. 1 22 6 13 1 20 6 13 V! (51 280.Milford Road 1 36 6 23 6 21 10 33 (.1 285 New Milford 1 50 6 42 I 40 6 42 SUNDAY 8.— U F TRAINS. SUNDAYS.—B U W | IISIm From a.m. p.m. p.m. From a.m. a.m. <•• ,/i N. 5 £ il.!ll 0 5 0 Pad 10 M MilRoad 11 13 5 14 Swin..e (p.*•• «§ H.West. 11 23 5 25 Cliel. de 1 tit Clar. ltd 11 36 — Glon.de 3 Jjf Nar.Rdt ll 49 5 50 Chep 4 3# »g| Whit.jl2 1 0 0 New 5 f5l StClears 12 15 Cardiff 5 Tr« Car.,Inc. 12 37 6 25 Neathdcl 7 ii Llanelly 1 23 7 6 Swan.del » <S Swan.de 1 45 7 20 Llanelly 8 \s J/ Neath. 2 22 7 51 Car.Jnc. 9 Tt Cardiff. 3 56 9 2 StClears 9 3» »r New. 4 28 9 24 Whit 9 H Chep. 5 6 9 51 Nar.Rdt 10 il Glou. & 6 25 12 40 Clar. Rd 10 Chal. ar 1 2 H.West 110 3* »fc Swin.ie 8 20 2 20 MilRoad Pud. i: 15 i 3S N. Mil.
MILFORD BRANCH LINE OF J I
MILFORD BRANCH LINE OF J I From Johnston (late Milford Road) to s01 ur TRAINS •W15KK DATS. a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. #,1I,f>|. !> Milford. dep 8 35 10 55 1 15 4 56 6 10 I'.nlM Johnston arr 8 45 11 10 1 30 5 9 6 25 d°WN TRAINS WEKK DAYS. lS a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. p. m, a- I < M Johnston dep )1 20 1 40 5 20 6 38 ll Milford.arr 11 35 1 55 5 35 6 53 lL2!^ S ..— i
PEMBROKE AND TENBY RAILVVA**…
PEMBROKE AND TENBY RAILVVA** 2 DOWK TBAINS—WEEK DATS. 112, gov., 1 2. gov. 1,2. gov. FROM. {p* f a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m* Whitland 6 15 9 50 12 50 6 0 § Narbcrtli 6 30 10 5 1 5 6 I Kilgetty 6 46 10 21 1 21 S 8 f Saundtrsfoot 6 !>1 10 26 1 26 6 32 I Tenby dep 7 20 10 35 1 35 6 I Penally 7 23 10 38 1 38 6 4» | Manorbcer 7 32 10 52 1 47 6 ^7 Lamphey 7 40 110 1 56 7 » } Pembroke 7 45 11 5 2 0 7 S Pembroke Docli arr 7 53 11 15 2 10 7 20^^ UP TRAINS—WEEK DATS. 1,2,gov. l,2.gov. 1, 2.^ov. l,2,g°v" FROM fr a.m. a.m. p.n PembrokeDock dep 8 5 10 30 4 1.' t> 9 I'embroke .dep 8 13 10 S8 4 2; 6 J Lamphey 8 17 10 42 4 21 SfuHCibcer 8 27 10 f,2 4 3< 6 W renuLy 8 35 II ) j 4? 6 >\ T- ;»y 8 45 II 10 4 52 « 4" f S:.1 imderpfoot 8 51 II 20 « i ki'ijfiUv it 59 1121 5 3 G M I NarUrth 9 15 11 42 5 21 7 j W bitland 9 30 II 57 5 31 21 -r-1" J Printed by the Proprietor, THOMAS LFCWLS residing at Hill Street, in the Town and cou t)1 Haverfordwest, and published by him Offices in Bridge Street, in the same TOO" County Friday, June 17, 1870.: