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the rebellion having been executed, or otherwise dealt with, the Government were at a loss what to do with the great mass of untried prisoners, and that the latter were being hurried off out of the country in batches; that they (my suppliants) had been taken from their confinement at Cherbourg, driven through Paris without being permitted to communicate with any of their friends, conveyed to Calais, and sent across the channel to Dover, where they landed on Saturday without a sou in the world; that they had walked thus far on their way to London, were sinking from fatigue and starvation, and wanted some shelter, no matter how lowly, in which they could coucher pendant la nuit. We found it impossible to accommodate them in that way in such a quiet out-of-the-way place at such an hour, and, collecting several shillings for them, giving them a couple of loaves, and providing them with some instructions, written in French and English, as to how they had better proceed on arriving at Woolwich, five miles distant, we set them off, fervently expressing their mercis beaucoup between their groans from pain and their protests against the heartlessness of the Government of their country.

21. A MEETING OF AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS, at which about 1000 were present, was held at Yaxley, a village in Huntingdonshire, and ended in a serious riot between the labourers and the farmers. A chairman, being appointed from the men present, proceeded to address the assembly, when a number of farmers, their sons, and friends, marched on to the green, having in each hand bird-clappers, and drowned the voice of the speaker. The disturbance was patiently borne until the labourers had taken the measure of the farmers present, when a message was sent to them that they had better leave the men alone, or it would fare badly with them. The answer to this was a renewal of the clapper din. As soon as speech could be heard a stalwart labourer shouted, "Nolls, we can stand this no longer," and with one action the "Nolls" made a furious charge on the farmers. The young farmers stood the fight bravely, many of the labourers not desiring to hurt their masters; but the strangers from the other farms were not so mercifully disposed, and the bird-clappers were most unsparingly used on the heads, backs, and legs of the young and old squires. The women who were engaged in the affray gave their husbands some trouble to quiet them and prevent a further attack on the farmers in their homesteads.

27. IRISH MURDER.-The sense of security which the public generally were beginning to feel received a rude shock by the report of a savage murder perpetrated in one of the most populous suburban districts of Dublin. There can be no doubt that it is agrarian, and it therefore excites the more alarm. Mrs. Harriett Neile, the lady who was murdered, resided with her husband and two sons at Sydenham-terrace, Brighton-road, Bathgar. It is a rather retired part of a populous locality. She is reported to have possessed some landed property in the King's County which she was desirous tc

sell, and before disposing of it she wished to clear it of some tenants. For this purpose she lately served with her own hand the necessary notices to quit, and she was to have attended to day at the Quarter Sessions of Tullamore to prove the service. Last evening, about nine o'clock, two men, dressed in frieze coats, apparently of the peasant class, were observed loitering about the place, but no particular notice was taken of them. Mrs. Neile and her husband were seated at a window, when one of them entered the little garden in front and walked up to the hall-door. The servant happened to be out, and Mrs. Neile went to the door to open it. The man was observed to hold up a paper to her, and while her attention was directed towards it he pulled out a pistol and shot her through the heart. She uttered a cry and fell dead immediately. Her husband rushed out, and some of the neighbours were alarmed, but the two men walked off, crossed a wooden palisade into a field, and went off in the direction of a district known as "the Quarries," lying at the south of Rathgar.

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28. MUTINY AT THE NAVAL BARRACKS, SHEERNESS.-During the last six months the service has apparently grown distasteful to a large number of the men, and the desertions during that period have been without parallel since the formation of the Sheerness Steam Reserve. The number of men who are at present under stoppages is something considerable. It appears that on Sunday two seamen were made prisoners, and as the cells were, as usual, all filled with occupants, they were placed in the dead-house adjacent to the jetty. The last body placed therein was that of a black sailor who died from fever. The building in which the sailors were placed, in the language of the sailors, "reeks with all kinds of disease. It is in the immediate neighbourhood of the closets, which emit a most offensive effluvia, and is infested with rats. The idea of placing two men in such a place was obnoxious to the majority of the seamen, but on Sunday discipline appeared to prevail over feelings, which were stifled till Monday afternoon, when, after frequent consultations, some of the messmates of the prisoners were appointed to wait upon the officer of the watch, and respectfully request the transfer of the men to more suitable quarters. This they did. The answer was that, it being by the order of the commander that the men were placed there, nothing could be done in the matter until that officer came on duty. A regular mutiny followed, but was soon suppressed.

A DREADFUL CASE OF WIFE MURDER, the details of which were not discovered till several days after its perpetration, has just been committed at Dapen, near Llanelly, Carmarthenshire. The prisoner, Henry Brice, was "on the spree," and his wife having gone to look for him, a man who lodged in the house went to bed. About eleven o'clock he heard a terrible row down-stairs, and on dressing and going down he saw Mrs. Brice crouched down on the floor, seeking refuge behind a chair, her hair all hanging down, her clothes torn, and Brice himself was kicking her with a "span new

pair of draining boots," and hammering her with a poker. The lodger seized Brice and tried to stop the attack, but Brice told him with an oath to leave the house, as nobody should stay there that night but himself. He threatened the lodger with the poker, and then turning to his wife again dragged her by the hair and kicked her till she was in another corner. The lodger was then turned out, and when outside he heard the victim "screeching" for mercy. Nevertheless he went and quietly slept under a haystack all night, without giving any alarm. Two poachers also passed, and heard the woman begging her husband for God's sake not to murder her, but they did not interfere. The next night Brice would not sleep alone he got the lodger to go to his old bed, and the men slept together. Two days after the murder Brice was seen, at four o'clock in the afternoon, carrying his wife's body, with one leg under each arm and her head thrown over his shoulder. He tried

to throw her down an old coal-pit, but it was arched in. He then hid her under some bushes, and was beginning to dig a grave, when he was discovered and arrested. The body was fearfully bruised.

29. THE DERBY STAKES of 50 sovs. each, three-year-olds; colts 8 st. 10 lbs., and fillies 8 st. 5 lbs. ; about a mile and a half, starting at the new high-level starting-post. 191 subs.

Mr. H. Savile's b. c. Cremorne, by Parmesan (Maid-
ment).

Mr. J. Astley's br. c. Brother to Flurry (Chaloner)
Lord Falmouth's br. c. Queen's Messenger (T. French)

123

Betting:-5 to 2 agst. Prince Charlie, 3 to 1 agst. Cremorne, 6 to 1 agst. Queen's Messenger, 8 to 1 agst. Wenlock, 25 to 1 each agst. Drummond and Marshal Bazaine, 33 to 1 agst. Almoner, 40 to 1 each agst. The Druid and Laburnum, 50 to 1 agst. the Makeshift colt, 66 to 1 agst. Helmet, 100 to 1 each agst. Vanderdecken, Statesman, and Condor.

The issue hung in the balance to the last stride, the verdict of the judge being recorded in favour of the popular favourite by a head. The time by Dent's chronometer was 2 min. 45 sec.

On the return home, about seven o'clock, the occupants of a fourhorse drag, who had been amusing themselves on the return journey. by pelting the pedestrians with bags of flour, peas, and other missiles, pulled up in the Clapham-road for refreshments, leaving three of their number in charge of their vehicle. These, left to themselves, recommenced the flour-throwing game, and one of the bags happened to strike the wife of a railway porter, whose husband (unfortunately for the trio) was standing by her side. He thereupon called upon the crowd for assistance, which was readily given; the drag was stormed, and after a short resistance carried, the offenders dragged from their seats and carried to a horse-trough, which was conveniently handy, where they were soundly ducked. They were then rolled in the mud, and afterwards the contents of some twenty

bags of flour, which had been discovered in the drag, were liberally sprinkled over them. The whole affair did not occupy more than four minutes, and on the return of their friends the whole party drove rapidly away, evidently glad to escape further attentions from

the mob.

31. THE OAKS STAKES of 50 sovs. each, for three-year-old fillies, 8 st. 10 lb. each; the owner of the second filly to receive 300 sovs., and the third 150 sovs. out of the stakes. About a mile and a half. 170 subs.

M. Lefevre's Reine, by Monarque-Fille de l'Air
(Fordham).

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Mr. Cartwright's Louise Victoria (Custance) Sir R. Bulkeley's Guadaloupe (J. Snowdon) Betting:-5 to 2 agst. Reine (t.), 3 to 1 agst. Louise Victoria (t.), 6 to 1 agst. Catherine (t.), 9 to 1 agst. Georgie (t.), 11 to 1 agst. Chance (t.), 20 to 1 agst. Violetta (t.), 25 to 1 agst. Beehive (t.), 25 to 1 agst. Landlady (t.), 30 to 1 against Merry and Wise (t.), 33 to 1 agst. Milliner (t.), 35 to 1 agst. Guadaloupe (t.), 40 to 1 agst. Madge Wildfire (t.), 50 to 1 agst. Arethusa (t.), 100 to 1 agst. Smoke (t.).

Reine won easily by half a length. chronograph, 2 min. and 52 sec.

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Time, as taken by Benson's

Two PICTURE SALES.-At very nearly the same time there died, in England and America, two men who left to be disposed of at their deaths two of the largest private collections of pictures ever sold at public auction. Mr. Le Grand Lockwood and Mr. Joseph Gillott were both architects of their own fortunes, and each achieved the means of stocking his picture-gallery with many of the bestknown works of the foremost modern masters. In Mr. Lockwood's collection such names as Verbeckhoeven, Kraus, Schenbach, Van Schendel, Schrader, with the best of the American artists, were well represented. In Mr. Gillott's the bewildered connoisseur had to choose between masterpieces of Turner, Etty, Muller, Webster, and David Cox by the score. But the fates of the two collections were curiously unequal. While Mr. Lockwood's collection-of the two, perhaps, originally the more expensive-brought under the hammer prices in the aggregate far below the original cost, Mr. Gillott's was sold at an enormous advance, amounting, it is said, in many cases to ten or twenty times the sums he paid. Bierstadt's "Domes of the Yosemite," the pride of the Lockwood gallery, bought for $25,000, was bid off for the comparatively paltry sum of $5100to the minds of some harsh critics a much closer approximation to its true value. On the other hand, Webster's "Roast Pig," a picture painted on commission for the great penmaker for 700 guineas, was sold for 3550 guineas-more than five times its original cost, or nearly $20,000. Mr. Lockwood's pictures were said to have cost originally some $300,000; they brought a trifle over $70,000. Two days' sale of the Gillott collection brought more than as many

pounds, or nearly $365,000. On the first day, for eighty-nine pictures, 30,000l. was bid, an average of over $1600 a picture. Nor was the Webster spoken of exceptional in its price. A little watercolour by David Cox fetched close on 40007., nearly as much as Mr. Lockwood paid for the acre or so of painted canvass in the "Domes of the Yosemite."

JUNE.

1. THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS OF WALES have returned to London from a Continental tour of some length undertaken for the re-establishment of the Prince's health. In the afternoon the Prince and Princess drove out into Hyde-park, where their appearance was welcomed by one of the largest assemblages ever remembered. The Prince, who was everywhere received by respectful demonstrations of loyalty, looked the picture of health, his continental tour having apparently thoroughly reinvigorated his Royal Highness. The Princess of Wales exhibited equally gratifying indications of health; and their Royal Highnesses returned the hearty salutations of the spectators with genial frankness.

Their Royal Highnesses were present at the Royal Italian Opera in the evening, and met with a reception every whit as cordial as that which had greeted them in the park. On their entrance the entire house, band and all, rose, and cheered most enthusiastically.

4. THE DUBLIN EXHIBITION.-The Duke of Edinburgh arrived in Dublin to open the Exhibition of Arts, Industries, and Manufactures. As far as the people were concerned, his reception may be described as respectful rather than warm. The Exhibition itself is an unquestionable and unique success. Such a gathering of interesting objects has seldom or never been seen in one building.

-THE BURMESE EMBASSY, sixteen in number, arrived off Dover this evening, in the King of Burmah's steam-yacht, "Tyeska Yeen Byan." The yacht is a shapely, though not remarkably handsome craft, of about 400 tons burden, and she is to take half a dozen guns on board in London before she leaves England. She carries at her main the Burmese flag-a crimson peacock on a white groundand a British ensign at the stern. She is commanded by an Englishman (Captain Brown), and her officers are English, but the crew, numbering about eighty, are Hindoos and Burmese.

On being introduced to the Queen at Windsor, the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary delivered to the Queen a letter from the King of Burmah, which was translated as follows:

"From his Great, Glorious, and Most Excellent Majesty King of the Rising Sun, who reigns over Burmah, to her Most Glorious

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