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-bUR LONDON CORRESPONDENCE|…

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bUR LONDON CORRESPONDENCE | V LONDON", FRIDAY EVENING. ;1:1J¡¡; GOOD OFFICES OF RUSSIA.—THE EGYPTIAN LOAN-COLONEL jiuee AND mr bright—the EE?oniIEO CHUKCH OF ENGLAND-A RELIGI0E3 CONFERENCE—BISHOP YAUGHAN'S GIFT TO 1101IE-BAIL foii THE bank director?,—the NEW LORD MAYOR —THE 01INIBCS TICKET SYSTEM. I do not believe one letter of that strange an- nouncement made from Berlin to-day, that the Russians have tendered their good oSiccs between England and Afghanistan. I do not believe it, Realise, were it true, it would shew that M de (Hers was capable of a most unpardonable piece V(ivcheri~. He knows very well that tne Rus- lIian visit to Cabul is the approximate cause .of the war upon which we are about to enter. He oulJ not help understanding that if we ac- cepted Russian mediation we should ren- der ourselves ridiculous. A refusal of his kind offer would be a snub to him, and, of COEre, if it has been made, it has been declined with thanks. A. man does not permit a favoured rival to plead his cause with a contemptuous mistress. Information both from Paris and the City, about the Egyptian loan, leads to the impression that it is going off without the slightest difficulty. Indeed, I have ju t been informed by a gentleman fresh from Throgmorton- street, that every penny of the eiqlit and a half millions has been taken up. This serves 'a'ell to indicate the public confidence in the suc- cess of that strange experiment which is being bJade by the consent of the Khedive—a govcrn- ment conducted by two other governments, not officially, but by a pleasant arrangement which dIVests both of responsibility, while it gives each ffsat power, and both together full control. Ihe financial public is not startled by novelty. Colonel Muie has got himself into a far from pleasant pickle by representing that Mr Bright has been thanking God in his conversations that he Tories were in power during the recent doubles. We could not have helped going to ar "Colonel Mure declares that Mr Bright said. What Mr Bright thinks he said was that Mr Gladstone must have gone either to war or out of office. He believes that he would have gone out )f office, and in that case war would probably ^"Ve been proclaimed by his successor. I wonder Whether the origin of Colonel Mure 3 story, Mid of Mr Bright's amendation of it, .Is a conversation held last May, Mr Gladstone was then earnestly entreating the Lib- eral party to adopt the policy of coercing the fnrks. Nearly all his colleagues were opposed to \irtJ, and they succeeded, it will be remembered, in cutting down his resolutions to two. None of was more active in those days than the Hon. John Bright. What he said was, Air Gladstone would get us into two wars. J!irst, we should fight the Turks with the help of Russia, and when we have conquered them we .illl have to fight Russia on behalf of the Turks." fAir Bright did not speak of what Mr Gladstone \Jionld have done had he been in office; for in that lie would have been controlled by his Cabinet he attempted to make war on Turkey, and by his conscience if he were called upon to uphold tho *°fte. Such speculations do no good. Yet I cannot refrain from saying that I believe that Mr John. Bright is in this case wholly wrong. The Gladstone Cabinet would have adopted the Policy for which Lord Derby fought in vain, Imvo upheld the European corc-ert and crought such pressure to bear upon Abdul Aziz Jhat he would havo been bound to give us some temdof satisfaction, and BO war would have been •Voided. This was the policy Lord Derby wished t Pursue. It is not unreasonable, therefore, to Assume that a Liberal Cabinet would have pursued it. It is another question whether in that case the subject races of the East would have been bearer liberation than they are now. "vhen all the English bishops of the world together at Lambeth they professed ^ensselvcs to be exceedingly frightened at the fteiormed Episcopal Church, and at Bishop Greg, founder. They suspected then that ho had rue ppiscopal orders. Since then, however, p Claughton has begun to breathe freely 8.1. He finds that Bishop Greg waa ordained b, a suspended bishop. To-da.y the whole Kight Reverend Jeilch may rejoice with joy ineffable, ft ia officially announced that the new Reformed fescopal Church and Bishop Greg, from whom it takes its ordez'3, have ^>ar'-ed company. Bishop Greg's mission \\7!1.3 to save the Church of England from Popery. n Pursuance of that high mission, it is said that « sought to turn himself into a Pops. He gave Jf ^ie "itle Priaiate, though his Protest- calleagues wished him to be only a presiding He tried to exercise the full authority his office. In fact, his little finger was found to be thicker than the loins of the Archbishop of panterbury. His Synod would not acknowledge f^nselessnessness, and ho lias, therefore, gone forth to form a church, in which not only his suspicion trrunation will be accepted, but his authority jeered. The new Reformed Church now depends Or its orders upon a clergyman, who, though be ealls himself bishop, and claims Apostolic succes- lion, is yet uneasy in his own mind because he Itaa never a deacon" or a priest, but assumed to ftse the lawn sleeves at one jump. Ritualists have suggested to the Low Church- a conference upon fundamental distinctions, iae Hock to-day, fulfilling its function as the rat comic paper, draws a sketch of such a meet- ng. Its result, according to the Mock, would be free fight between all parties, the intervention cf the police at the call of the frightened bishop, and the hasty flight of all the white ties from tho of the constable's truncheon. This is a Pleasant confession even for a religious news- Paper to make. If the same spirit prevailed in enral politics, constitutional government would e impossible. Bishop Vaughan has sent B200 to Rome as the fssidt of his appeal in the Tablet for money to save •be Holy See from bankruptcy. In return he and fellow director have been especially blessed J the Pope, That is one for the Jesuits who declared that the secular clergy had no right to irect newspapers as the education of the f^ple, in which journalism takes a part, a Jesuit monopoly. Such evidently ^ot the opinion of Leo XIII. As £ 2^*10^ ^7;iu2han has already in hand another with which Leo's treasury will be refilled th Ca kecome3 empty, it m&y happen that before great enterprise of saving the Papacy from JrOinentsry destitution is concluded, Bishop Yauohan will be thanked for liia efforts to bring he schools of his diocese under proper episcopal }Upervision. The Dublin Jesuits must get up a hunter subscription in their organ, the Month. c ^"hilo- the question was still undecided nobody 1 to say a word against the liberation on bail the directors of the City and Glasgow Bank. tit universal satisfaction is expressed at the de- J^-l0n that they are not to be set free. One of the eu concerned in the frauds has already ab- Oecl. In London, we remember the obe case and the scandals caused y that" evasion" are sufficient to make most oPle chary of granting an opportunity of escape who have caused so much suffering by o ?lr misconduct. Sympathy is a very beautiful j lll"« but all that can be spared .at present is Ue to the widows and orphans who are thrown • n tùe world, and plunged into poverty because he Glasgow directors thought it right to lend UliOllS of money to personal friends, fiilu then not having tho courage to tell the truth, jfat themselves and the shareholders into deeper lre by way of supporting a lie. It is sad that men should be in prison; but they r*°uld have considered their case when they ought on behalf of tho company shares they «iiew to be almost worthless. < The lleW Lord flavor is pursuing his road. He (,Ias qufu-iX'lled with his aldermen. He made it &cOu.fortablc for the press at the Guildhall ^nqM,e{;_ Nov.' ho is coming down upon the ofi'.cials, who have their headquarters at Hanr.i;m House. His first victim is the of the Hospital Fund, who has hitherto ^Pt his books in a little room of the Lortl Mayor's otlicial residence. This functionary has r«ceived notice to quit. I do not know the Merits of the quarrel, but civil feeling is strongly Gainst Sir Charles Whetham. If he is not very Ca.refu], Sir Charles will jeopardise the position of the Lord Mayor as the charitable centre of Lng- laud. It is, poss ble that some day the London general Omnibus Company will adopt the ^arision mode of correspondence. iThey ^ve already introduced the ticket system, he system is already in use on the tramways. Its •lecess depends npon the passengers. Each pas- is given a ticket, r.nd he ia expected to yestroy it. Then the conductor is responsible for t. But how many do destroy it ? The company, Nevertheless, has so much benefitted by the plan, ?o far as it has been tried, that it i3 henceforth to universally used. One thing more is necessary, *^e should be able to buy tickets enabling \is to ke omnibuses crossing from one side of London to the other at something less than a double fare. 1 Hail Sir Frederick Leighton, P.R.A. It is true that Mr Leighton is not yet a knight, and technically he is not yet president of the JloyaJ. Academy of Arte. But that Her Majesty approve the choice of the academicians, and it by giving the new chief of the art world ,handlc to his name, is a matter of course. No Sooner was the death of Sir Francis Grant known with a wonderful unanimity Mr Leighton aø everywhere named as his successor, and he is ,n. every account worthy to fill the chair which tenius has rendered illustrious. Mr Leigh- 13 ^^th president elected since, the patronage of Gcorg< 11^ 1,1,6, yeara ago, an English School of Art was established. The first president was Sir Joslma Reynolds; then came Benjamin West; then JameaWyatt; then Benjamin West again then Sir Thomas Lawrence, Sir Martin Shee, Sir Charles Eastbike, and Sir Francis Grant. Mr Leighton is the youngest president the Academy ,,c has had since famed Sir Joshua, He was 45 when called to form a great society. Mr Leighton when asked to preside over the historic body is 48. His predecessor was G3, Wyatt was 59, Eastlake was 5t, Lawrence 51, and Shea 50. The honour is all the more strik- ing, therefore, for being so early bestowed. Of Mr Leighton's art, however, one can speak only in terms of entusiasm. The man who cannot ad- mire it has no eye for beauty. As my memory goes back to picture after picture exhibited by him in Trafalgar-square, and at Burlington House, I seem to be living in the midst of almost perfect forms. Mr Leigh- ton was, essentially, an artist with an eye for forms, for beauty of pose, and grace of bearing, for the most exquisite of faces, and the most delightful figures. They troop past one a procession of the beauty divinely fair, and most divinely tall, like the figures in his procession in honour of Apollo, exhibited, if I remember rightly, last year. As a colourist, though he is fine, yet he is not pre-eminent. His own con- sciousness of his eye for form may be gathered from the fact that lie essayed sculpture, and with magnificent success. Hisman and Python is the finest piece of sculpture produced in England in our day. His election does honour to the Royal Academy no less than to himself.

A GANG OF FORGERS.

A GUION STEAMER ON FIRE.

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RAILWAY ACCIDENT IN NEW BRUNSWICK.

MARRIED ONE DAY AND PARTED…

---------LOCAL LIQUIDATIONS.

---THE GLASGOW BANK.

THE WRECK COMMISSION-,

[No title]

0: THE PROPOSED DEPUTATION…

WARLIKE ATTITUDE OF THE AMESR.

._----BAILWATcOLLisiON.

----GALE 0X THE NORTHERN COAST..…

CONTINUOUS" BREAKS-ON RAIL-I,…

ITHE UNIVERSraE^MISSION TO…

IA WILD MAN. ^

[No title]

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BRIDGlSND LABOURERS' FRIEND1…

----_------A QUESTION OF COUNTY-COURT…

----_------------BREAKDOWN…

AN OUTWARD BOUND EMIGRANT…

[No title]

----------NEWPORT.

_._---ST. FAGAN-.

FOC'HRIW.

ISFERTHVR.

PONTLOTTYN.

EBBW VALE.

IJvANTWIT MAJOR. t

BURRY PORT.

HAVERFORDWEST.

MTLFORD HAVEN.

( SWANSEA. f

DOWLAIS.

------,"",",::: CADOXTON-JUXTA-BARRY.

BAPGOED.

HENGOED.

PORTH.^

FLEDRDRLIS.

BLACKWOOD.

----------------GVN ACCIDENT…

THE FIRE ON CAMP,RIDGE.

THE MARQUIS OF LORNE ON IllS…

THE ELECTRIC LIGHT.

THE LATE REV. DR. A. B. EVANS.

-------THE DEPRESSION IN TRADE.

IA SCIENTIFIC FRONTIER.

THE LIBERATION SOCIETY IN…

---THE VACANT IRISH JUDGESHIP.

RELIGIOuS LIBERTY FOR HEnZE-GOVINA.

THE ANGLO-AMERICAN DISPUTE.

CATHOLICISM IN THE SOUTH AMERICAN…

FLOODS AT ROME.

THE NEW GOVERNOR-GENERAL OF…

-----SOME RELKSWTHE PAST.

CLERICAL ASSUMPTION.

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THE MINERS' PERMANENT RELIEF…

THE LIABILITY OF SHIP'S T…

THE FEVER AT BARGOED.

-----------_-----.----CARRIAGE…

A CARMARTHENSHIRE LAW CASE.

THE NAVIGATION OF THE THAMES.

. CARDIFF.

MAESTEG. #

-----DEnT.

CW2\ITWW:,¡L

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