For Sale /

IMPORTANT INTIMATION.

NOW

READY.

[PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY.)

THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY AND HONG LIST FOR THE FAR FAST, A DIRECTORY AND WORK OF REFERENCE ON ALL IMPORTANT LOCAL SUBJECTS FOR CHINA, JAPAN, THE STRAITS SETTLEMENTS, STAM, INDO-CHINA, NORTH BORNEO, THR PHILIPPINES, AND COREA, FOR THE YEAR

1889.

PRICE THREE DOLLARS. "THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY" bas ngan been enlarged and is THE CHEAPEST, MOST COMPLETI,.' AND' ONLY RELIABLE WORK OF THE KIND

PUBLISHED IN

THE

FAR EAST.

THE

HE above named work, published at the Office of "THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH," contains a Directory for the Porta in the large portion of Asia comprised between Penang, in the Straits Settlements, and the Northern Chinese Por including Windiwostock, Formosa, the Treaty Ports of China and Japan, Cochin-China, the Philippine Islands, Corea, British North Borneo, the British Colony of Hongkong and the Portuguese Colony of Macao. It also contains the Principal Treaties between Burpean countries and the United States and the countries East of the Straits, including the Treaties and Conventions between China and Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, the United States of America, Brazil, Japan, Peru, Spain, and Portugal; together with conditions of Trade, and the Port, Customs, Consular, and Harbour Regulations for the Ports of China and Japan; also descriptions of the various Poits, with the latest Trade Statistics taken from the Reports of the Imperial Maritime Customs and other reliable sources.

The various Governments and Municipal Cor- porations, and all Public Bodies and Companies, Bankers, Merchants, Consuls, Professional men, and other Residents, havė supplied the necessary matter, upon forms specially seat for that pur- pose so as to ensure accuracy. The Naval and Military portions have been taken from the latest published official lists and revised at Head-quarters in fact, no pains have been spared to make "THE HONGKONG DIREC- TORY AND HONG LIST FOR THE FAR EAST" a handy and perfectly reliable book of reference for all classes,

In addition tothe information enumerated above "THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY · AND HONG LIST FOR THE FAR EAST "¡for 1889 contains a carefully revised

INDEX TO THE ORDINANCES OF....'

HONGKONG ;"

A SPECIAL LIST OF FOREIGNERS

employed in Steamers making short voyages

from Hongkong :

THE PRIVATE RESIDENCES

of the Principal Government Officials, the lead. ing Merchants, the Foreign Consuls,

Professional Men, Justices of

the Peace, &c..

A LADIES DIRECTORY.FOR HONGKONG; The latest and only reliable PLAN OF THE CITY OF VICTORIA,

AND

subjects, culled from the most trustworthy

I

sources.

A SPECIAL FEATURE. IN THIS PUBLICATION WILL BE A CHAPTER ON SPORT,

(amended and corrected to date). dealing with almost every branch of the subject including RACING, CRICKET, ATHLETICS, 'AQUATICS, &C. &C., &c.

sportsmen.

THE

Intimations.

DAKIN

HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1889-

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force of the watchword, that before many years are over will ring from Cape York to St. George's Sound-, “Australia for the. Australians. We are not in a position to say what Mr. WANT's views may be on the vexed Chinese question, and it is Just possible that, like most Australian politicians with whom we have discussed the question—such as Mr. J. LANGDON PARSONS, Government Resident of the Northern Territory of South Australia, and Sir THOMAS MILWRAITH-he may bave formed his opinions on information and statistics that were misleading and unreliable, and on an altogether mistaken estimate of the

true character of the Chinese people. Nobody who has visited the Chinese rookeries, dens of Infamy and filth, in Sydney or Melbourne, could blame the Governments of New South Wales and Victoria for clearing them out of the country wholesale; but these pariahs are in no sense of the word representative Chloess-they are in appearance, as in manners and habits, as different as possibly could be from the enterprising, peaceful and industrious merchants, traders, and

LYDIA Thompson has been a burlesque actress MR. Herbert A. Giles, formerly Consul at for close upon 40 years. A thing of beauty and Tamaui, has been transfened to Ningpo. A girl forever.

IT is staled that the Imperial University of Tokio, which is now under the control of the Educational Department, will shortly be made an independent institution. THUS a Kansas contemporary-"Is marriage a failure? Not in Kansas city. Eight hundred blooming mottled infants at the baby show yes terday testified to the fact that marriage in this section is a bowling success.

THE United States spends yearly for education as much as Germany, England, France, Austria and Russia combined.

THE steamer Poochi arrived in Shanghai the

other day with a broken shift, and is having a

new one put in at Boyd's new dock, MANILA papers announce the death of Seuor Pastor y Magan, Civil Governor of the province of Manila, and the temporary appointment of Col. Serrano y Ruiz to that post

OUR Shanghai moraing contemporary says that | In the late Mr. Bright's opinion a dog is superior in collision at Taku, both vessels being at the is driven to the utmost he gives up, but a dog the steamers Kungpai and Wuchang have been | to a human being, "inasmuch as when a man time unmanageable owing to their being on the coils up and makes both ends meet." John was bar. The Kungpai's damage is not extensive.

always a bit of a humourist, Hom papers state that Mr. Joseph Dodds, whe formerly sat as the member for Stockton, and who is now seriously ill with heart disease, has heen struck off the roll, of solicitors by Baron Huddleston and Justice Manisty for embezzling 13,800 worth of property belonging to an aged lady named Mrs. Meynell.

.

ABOUT six months ago the Legislative Council voted an increase of pay to the Fire Brigade, we are informed that none of the extra salary has yet been paid to at least one portion of the Brigade the engine-drivers, nor any reason given for the delay. Someone apparently needs the red-hot poker of censure poking under his official coat-tails.

| artisans of Hongkong and Singapore. The Shanghai Mercury of the 27th ulto. says: When the question of Chinese emigration-We hear that a very serious railway accident to Australia comes to be finally settled on has happened on the Tientsin-Taku Railway, a practical basis this is an important near Taku, and that some lives have been lost, It is said that the circumstance has created a element which should not be lost sight of. very unfavourable impression in high quarters It was on the motion, of Mr. WANT that, and we fear that it will still further tend to check a few short weeks ago, the Legislative the long looked for extension of railways through.

out the Empire. Assembly of New South Wales turned out

THE U.S.

corvette Marion'left Shanghai on the 22nd ulto, for Nagasaki. The U. S. S corvette Omaha is expected back at Shanghai shortly. H. M. S. Firebrand was at Hankow on the zoti vite. The Alacrity was at anchor above Nanking, on the roth ulto, and the Porpoiss was

at Chinkiang on the 20th.

JAMES W. Brown, of Detroit (U.S.), married 13. women between the years 1883 and 1898; and 15 of them rolled up in one infuriated hitch to tell him what they thought of him in en . the other day. It was a very lively time for Brown, but there is something even wors ahead, for he was remanded till the other 18 wives could be hunted up.

THEY were playing the burlesque of Faust" Mephistopheles was fat and scant of breath-all too huge lo get through the trap that led him to To be brief, be stack, the infernal regions. Friends below tugged at his legs; friends above pounded at his shoulders. All in vain. And then from the gallery came a voice, "Here's comfort, boys; hell's full)"

THE news of the sale of Herm to a German bank has aroused no inconsiderable alarm in France.

Several papers actually urged M. Goblet, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, to raise a diplomatic incident with England. This is probably the first time a Frenchman was ever desions of Great Britain retaining a possession. One journal says:-"There is every reason to believe These islands are inhabited by Germans; ergo that Germany will say one day to England:

The following kinds are those in most general the Ministry of Sir HENRY PARKIS, and we have seen it stated that the Premiership was within the reach of the popular barrister (Unscented). had he cared to grasp it. When the appeal to the country was made, the member for Gundegal was absent in Japan, but being nominated for the important district of The new ship of the same name will be built of they belong to us. England will make a wry..

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The Hongkong Telegraph

HONGKONG, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1889.

A CORRESPONDENT at St. Petersburg writes: By Imperial order, the new ironclad, which was recently commenced at Nicolaieff, will be called the Twelve Apostles, and that just laid down at the new Admiralty Works here will be the Hangut. The last Twelve Apostles was a wooden line-of-ballo ship, and was sunk in Sebastopol harbour during the Crimean war steel, eight thousand and seventy-six tons Paddington he was elected by an over-burthen, armoured with a belt of fourteen inches, whelming majority-a victory that speaks Her engines, will be of eight thousand five hundred horse-power. The Hangul will be of volumes for his personal influence with the six thousand five hundred and ninety tons, and Our eminent visitor, who is as will have a partial belt and an armoured well known as a keen sportsman as he is casemate,

before him. in law and politics, has a brilliant future

masses.

TELEGRAMS.

(Reuter.)

DISASTROUS HURRICANE AT SAMOA,

LONDON, March 30th. Adestructive hurricane has passed over Samos The German war vessels Adler, Olga, Vandade, and Eber, and the United States men-of-war Trenton and Nipsic have been totally wrecked. Nine German officers and eighty-seven men, and four American officers and forty-six men have | been drowned.

FURTHER DETAILS OF THE DISASTER

sca.

AT SAMOA.

LOCAL AND GENERAL.

THE Maoris don't believe in-Sheol, How, they ask, can there be eternal darkness and eternal fire?"

THE case of the young man Warne alias Russell, who was arrested last summer when acting as clerk to the Hongkong Hotel Co: for embezzling about 5000 rupees belonging to the Singer's Sewing Machine Company in Calcutta, will be fresh in the memories of many of our readers., Warner was conveyed back to Calcutta and sentenced to four years' rigorous imprisonment We now learn from the Rangoon Times that he has escaped from gaol in company with s notorious burglar named Helier. On the 11th ulto, Mr. Patell, the agent for the Singer Co. at Rangoon, applied to the Deputy Commissioner in reference to Warner's escape. After conviction Warner had told numbers of people that when he got out of prison he would avenge himself by murder, so that Mr. Patell thought it, his duty to apprise the police authorities at Rangoon of the fact.

WE read in a home paper that the new dynamite shell invented by our old acquaintance Lieut. "March 31st.

Graydon, of the U. S. Navy, once well known both in this colony.and at Canton, seems to The only vessel which escaped during the fulfil the expectations formed of it. His inven. burricane was H.M.S. Calliope, which put to tion neutralises the initial shock to the abell, sad permits the use of a charge sufficient to give the shell full penetrating power at its full range, and thus to vastly augment the violence of the explosion. The explosive inside the Graydon shell is protected from the heat and THE Portuguese gunboat 7js, Capt. Caminha, shock of the shooting by a lining of asbestos left yesterday for Macao.

cloth, which prevents the heat imparted to the metal of the projectile from igniting the dynamite. A non-conducting wad performs a similar part between the powder charge and the shell. The dynamite is divided into small packets, each enclosed in a varnished envelope. There is AFTER sentencing Dowson, to six months' imthus no fear of the nitro-glycerine becoming prisonment yesterday for embezzlement, Mr. volatised and parting from the infusorial earth Pollock suddenly found that he hadgo jurisdiction or other substance with which it may be asso in the matter, and had the case again before ciated. The slow-acting fuse is in the nature of him, finally remanding the prisoner untils spring, which is not compressed upon the to-morrow.

detonating mixture until the head of the shell fired. Of course, this fuse is not always used, has penetrated the armour against which it is the nature of the work to be done deciding how the shell shall be used. It is necessary to add, also, that the American experiments have shown conclusively that the destructive power of the dynamite is not reduced by the sub-division of the explosive.

before

We regret to read that a large number of solicitors are being admitted to practice in New South Wales-apparently to counterbalance the drain on the ranks of the profession caused by the number of rogues now being struck off the roll. Thus does the devil take care of his own. MLLL SCHULTZE, the young lady who has set Paris discussing the question of the equality and we note in the Inspector, of Schools' Report for rights of women by her masterly thesis on "The the past year that there are three Portuguese Female Doctor in the Nineteenth Century," read Schools flourishing in the colony, attended by Jury of French medical men, is a scholars of Portuguese parentage who Russian. She is described as exceedingly clever, receive there a European education exclusively and is only twenty-one.

In the local variation of the Portuguasa lan SAYS the N.C. Daily News-Mr. Yuan, the We presume Dr. Eftel knows what the local guage, leaming belther English nor Chinese." Chinese Resident at Seoul, is, we hear, to be variation of the Portuguese language means. red, eedto be succeeded by Mr. Ma, brother We cannot find words to adequately express our of the director of the China Merchants'Company, astonishment that the Government should not and Mr. Lo, secretary to the Viceroy of Chibli only tolerate but subsidise educational establish The situation must be considered serious in ments in which the Macao pateit is the prede Contoret such important officials are to be minant language, and from which both Engllab

the language of the Colony, and Chinese the language of the ancient settlers from whom are excluded, it is difficult to understand

face, but will yield, and the Germans will be free to erect batteries a few miles off the coast of France."

THIS morning one of the dealers in "Tiquiddamna tion" in Queen's Road Weat-Carl Bercovitz, a Polish Jew who keeps the Rose, Shamrock, and Thistle ium-mill-had the audacity to request the Licensing Justices, through Mr. Caldwell, for permission to transfer his degraded business to premises midway, between the Victoria Hotel and Stag Hotel, Queen's Road Central. Even the Chinese, with all their indifference to dis comfort and noise, petitioned against it, and as the Police opposed it the learned advocate's arguments about the convenience of a central grog-shop to sailors were unsuccessful, and the application refused,

A MILITARY correspondent complains of what he says is the abominably shameful way in which the men of 7/1 Battery of the Royal Artillery are treated." They are used, he says, more like dage than men and soldiers, and he gives as an instance that the men of the Battery were recently sent to Ly-ec-moon on fatigne duty, carrying shot and dressed like a lot of convicts, and that they had nothing to eat or drink for about six hours. Our correspondent thinks such things should be put a stop to but we must confess our inability to see where any serious grievance exists. To work without food for six hours may be a hardship in Hongkong, but if so, surely it is a hardship which trained. soldiers ought to be able to bear occasionally without any very great inconvenience 1

THE meanest man in the world has come to the surface at het; his name is McSweeney, nad he distances all competitors with easy grace. One day recently Mac was strolling pensively by the pellucid Yarra, communing with Nature, and inhaling the strong ozone, when his attention was attracted by a passing body floating gaily down stream. Mr. M'Sweeney, being a bit of a sportsman; hastily procured a crooked stick and bobbed for the found-drowned. By artistic manipulation of the rod soon succeeded in landing his price, and was extremely surprised to discover that he had hooked his own brother. The body was formally handed over to the coa- or two was duly inquested, the deceased's stituted authorities, and in the course of a day; brother appearing as witness-in-chief. When a verdict in accordance with things in general was returned, the bereaved relative up-rose in place, and, tearfully addressing the cotoner requested the ten shillings that was due to him as the discoverer of a stray corpse. He did got get the cash, but has secured the reputation of being the meanest "cu" that has appeared in print up to date.

his

1

|

COLLISION BETWEEN THE STEAMERS « VISAYAS" AND.

MINDANAO.“.

We extract from nur Manila -exchanges, received bythe Nanning, the following particulars of the collision which occurred on the 24th ulta between the steamers Pimyas and Mindange off the Philippine Const, telegraphic news of Vinyas entered the harbour of Manila on the which was published 'the other day :-The morning of the 26th ulte. with her stem totally destroyed. She brought a few of the victims of the collision, who reported that on leaving the iver. Pasig on the afternoon of the 14th the Mindanao proceeded towards Batangas. When at about 11 p.m. a tremendous shock was felt on opposite the Islands of Verde and Maricaban

the starboard quarter, causing the abip to heel over on her port side. A second shock accurred immediately afterwards, after which, in less than two minutes, the Mindanao, sank. The greatest confusion prevailed on board when the first shock was experienced; there was no time to lower the boats. Most of the passengers and crew.either fell, or jumped overboard, "but the Captain and a few passengers succeeded in getting on board the Visayas, the colliding steamer, Of the crew of the former vessel who in their fright also jumped overboard, two were drowned, "On board the Mindanao every one did his best to save himself, but many of the passengers were entirely powerless. It was heart. rending to see so many ladies and children disap- pear in a watery grave, without the slightest assistance being given them. The colliding steamer, immediately after the disaster, with her stem stove in, reversed engines, backed for

The steamer Marques del Dura, with the Governor-General on board, happened to pass at the moment, stopped and rendered assistance to the Visayas. By that time the Mindanao had ntirely disappeared, One of the survivors says: -"Holding Señor Almech by the hand, we both 4.1 into the sea, but were soòn separated by the revolving waters, and I never saw my friend again. Señores Bosch, Marcos, the married couple with two children, the husband. supercargo Uribe, the chief engineer's wife, a of another lady, with two children, nine Jews, and several others, perished in like manner. Civil Engineer Guillelmi, who was sleeping at the moment of the collision, jumped overboard and managed to keep himself adnat till he was rescued. D. Rames Latorre, Judge of Antique, who was travelling with his wife and two children became a victim of his determination not to abandon his family, His wife on appearing on deck and seeing the state of affairs, lost her senses; ber husband and children remained by her, till all were submerged. Señor Montes succeeded in saving his wife, by swimming round her, till both were rescued. Í held to a piece of timber which was floating, and in a minute fourteen other shipwrecks joined me; we would have sunk, had not a boat from the Visayas appeared on the scene in the sick of time. As she could not take' us all in, a rope was made fast to the timber, and sitting patride on it, we were towed to the shore. It was now four o'clock in the moming; a resplendent moon lit up the sad scene. We landed in such a helpless condition that wo had to be carried. A few good swimmers from the Mindanao, headed by the chief mate and four or five grooms, managed to reach the shore by their own exenions. At in the morning the Marques del Duere have in night, and proceeded straight to the Visayas which was flying the flag of distress. At 3 p.m. the Romulus passed, took the Visayar in tow, and had all the surviving passagere and crew of the Afin danno,-about 80,-transferred on board. We arrived at Manila the next morning." The above report was given by D. uis Sales who is one of the survivors of the wreck of the Remus. An inquiry into the circumstances attending the collision will shortly take place at the Manila Harbour Office. The following list of deaths is given by the Comercio: 27 adult passengers,

me distance, and anchored in shallow water.

four ladies and five children. There were saved: 25 adult passengers, and one lady. The casual *- ties among the crew of the ill-fated vessel were not known. Judging by the condition of the stem of the Visayas, the shock must have been very heavy. Several passengers of the Mindanao succeeded in climbing up the stem of the colliding vessel while she remained fast in the former's side. One of the survivors who witnessed the shock saysthat the stem of the Visayar penetrated as far as the cabin of the super-carga of the Mindanao, who must have perished from the shock.. Before the Mindanao sank the cries that came from the victims who were clustered on deck were hearts rending. The Judge of Autique with a few ladies. were seen standing forward on deck, and in «. moment they all foundered with the ship..

AMERICAN TELEGRAMS,

The following telegrams from San Francisco exchanges were crowded out" of our last night's issue :—

LONDON, March 1st,

.... The Star (T.P. O'Connor's paper), in a wavere attack on the Governmeat to-day, accuses Right Hon. W. H. Smith with sharing Pigott's guilt, and demands his impeachment. The paper brands Attorney-General Webster as an impudeat and shameless liar, and advocates, criminal prosecu- tion of Houston,

UNTIL quite recently, Hongkong and China have been, so far as practical knowledge was concerned, a sealed book to Austra- lasian politicians and statesmen.. They judged of China and the Chinese by the off-scourings of humanity, the filthy rabble from the provinces of Kwangtung and Kwang-si to be found" fossicking " in Queensland gold-fields, carrying on disreputable businesses in the purlleus of Sydney and Melbourne, or soaking in vice in the oplam dens of every important city in the Colonies. Under such circum-

• showing the proposed Reclamations and all stances it is no great marvel that Chinese

recent additions, and improvements,

immigration to Australia has never been A Mass of interesting information on various either understood or appreciated by the colonists, and that a dead-lock has been created which may yet possibly lead to serious trouble. But of late we have had several leading Australians in Hongkong. studying the Chinese problem for them selves, It is only a few days since Sir THOMAS MILWRAITH, ex-Premier of Queensland, left our shores after some- what lengthy and we trust a profitable The WINNERS of all IMPORTANT RACES sojourn, and now we have in our midat at HONGKONG, SHANGHAI, FOOCHOW, another leading politician who has made and AMOY, with times, and other interesting name and fame under the Southern Cross particulars, carefully compiled from the most reliable sources, make THE HONGKONG Mr. J. H. WANT, M.L.A. of New South DIRECTORY AND HONG LIST FOR THE FAR Wales, who was Ailorney-General of EAST," a vede mecum for all classes of that colony in the first administration of Mr. G. H. Dinas. Mr. WANT, who has "THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY AND HONG LIST FOR THE FAR EAST" for 1889 been on a short visit to Japan, is one of is Printed on a superior quality of Paper, the most prominent men not only in New. and is the beat printed and most handsomely South Wales but throughout Australla, and bound volume published East of the Suez Canal is certain to take a leading part in that "THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY AND great scheme of Colonial (not Imperial) HONG LIST FOR THE FAR EAST," in Federation, now looming in the near OWING to the unfavorable weather last night to many of the Masso Portuguese are descended to say the finest dresser of a woman's head of hair. W. H. Smith denied that the Government had

distance, which will establish a great and independent nation in the Southern Seas, If we mistake not he is a native-born Australian, and it is likely enough that in a country so essentially patriotic as we know New South Wales to be, that this fact has increased and cemented the extraordinary popularity he has achieved both in his professional career and as the stanch advocate of Young Australia in the world of polities. Mr. WANT is a barrister- at-law and has few equals and still.fower, if any, superiors in Australia, ether as regards forensic knowledge, legal acumen, or that peculiar kind of eloquence which has such a wonderful impression on the Intelligent juror. As a politician this gentleman has been always distinguished for the breadth and liberality of his views; nominally an adherent of Free Trade principles, he is in really, an advocate of reciprocity or fair trade although loyal to the Government under which he lives, like all sensible and | thinking men he recognises the truth and ] pläimenteja

order that it may circulate extensively outside this Colony, is published at a POPULAR PRICE, and can be ordered at This Office, or through any of our Agents at the various Ports, for

اسلام

THREE DOLLARS, There is not space in the compass of an Ordinary Advertisement to detail all the informa tion introduced into the work, but it may be fairly asserted that no such Directory has ever been published, either in Hongkong or any other part of the East, at such a low price.

"THE HONGKONG DIRECTORY AND HONG LIST YOR THE FAR EAST" offers Special Advantages as an Advertising Medium It has an extensive circulation in all Ports between Singapore and Newchwang, in the Australasian Colonies, the United States, and the United Kingdoms, and the scale of charges has been fixed at an exceptionally low rate. Terms can be learned on application.

Suggestions for the improvement of this work are respectfully solicited."

Orders for COPIES, and for ADVERTISE. MENTS may be sent to the Agents at the various Ports, or to Office of

"THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH

'PRODER'S HILL, HONGKONG, "Hongkong, 7th January, 1889

sent to replace Mr. Yuan.

IN the Century for February Laurence Hutton In the House of Commons this afternoon has the following regarding the personal Home Secretary Matthews admitted that Con- appearance of MATY, Queen of Scots-That stablo Preston had twice visked a prisoner. there is every reason to believe. Elizabeth is Mary wore false hair, and efmany different colors, named Tracy at the lostance of Loomis, solicitor

for the Times. This opened up a long discuss! known to have had a collection of eighty wigu¦ slon. Matthews and Balfour maintained the and her dear cousin, with the usual advantages vidit were all right, Sir Willan Vernon Har of many seasons in Paris, is not likely to have court asked : “Are friends' vinils construed to been far behind her. Among the statements of the mess visits from an Irish constable acting under accountsofher personal expenditure aranumerous orders from the Timeam (Opposition cheers.]

Dr. Tanner, for whom the police have been item of perruques de cheveux, and Sir Francis Knollis, writing to Burleigh of the ever faithful | searching, succeeded in entering the Commons "Mistress Mary Seton, the finest busker," that is and was greeted with cheers.

the attendance at the Theatre Royal, City Hall,

that is to be seen in any country, says: And placed Irish. constables at the the is the pretty devices she did sei zuch feed disposal of the

Gladstone then resumed the debate on the

much smaller than had hitherto been the case, to these establishments. To conduct school curled heit upon the Queen, that was said to be Brunner (Liberal) asked Smith whether the The entertainment, however, was in every way in the Macae dialect la apparently a sufficient perewyke that shewed very delicately, And tibellous publication entitled "Farnellism and a great success. On Thursday "The Daughter qualification for drawing on the Public Funds every other day she hath a new device of head Crime" was not still exposed for sale on his of the Regiment" will be repeated under the The Inspector of Schools must be decidedly dressing, without any cost, and yet setting (Sull's) stalls followed by a great uproar, special pannage of our new Commander-in-enamoured of the local variation of the forth a woman gaylie well." This valety and This question

Portuguese language" to give it a locus standi eccentricity of coiffure, naturally adds to the When order had been restored Smith said!-✨ Chief, Major-General Edwarda.

and to recognise it as a sufficient qualifica confusion, and makes greater the difficulty in "I appeal to you, Mr. Speaker, I appeal to the Tux French sailor Julian, charged with cutting tion for the Grant-le-aid. It is possible that identifying positively any of the portraits or members, whatever their difference of oplaton, up rough on the barque Chateau Lirills on the Dr. Eltel does not know the dissolvent power of descriptions of her. Historians say that her whether such questions ought to be addressed high seas, was brought up on semand to-day, that extraordinary tongue, or else he would have mother was tall and beautiful, that her father was to me. [Cheers, po k Dr. Margues, who had been keeping his eye on blushed to publicly report on it. The Macao dignifie having a fair complexion and light him in the Interval, expressed the opinion that patais is derived from peculiarly shameful hair; and other and contemporaneous historians address in reply to the Queen's speech. He the man knew perfectly well what he was doing circumstances. It is known to have been the say that she inherited most of the characteristics held that there were three main issues raised in when he lugged out his knife and threatened to prostibulous language of the ancient colony, of her parents, being about the ordinary size the amendment under discussion. The House take pieces of his messmates, sd Mr. Pollock when it became gradually inhabited by a with fair complexion and Grecian features, and was called upon entrely to disclaim the present fised the licerator $50 or two months,

lawless Portuguese population living in a state a nose somewhat longer than a printer would administration of the Irish Government. It was. of polygamy and promiscuity of sexes, with care to perpetuate; her face wasoval, her forehead asserted that to this system was due the aversion A MADRID telegram to Manila announces the the fair descendants of Chinese pirates. That high and fine. Fraude, inlater days, pictures her of the people to Great Britain; and, finally, the appointment of Rev. B. Noxaleds, a Dominican language, the equivalent of which may ne graceful alike in person and in intellect, and as House was asked to adopt measures of concilia. friar to the Archbishopric of Manila. The be found among the half-caste demi-mondaines possessing that peculiar beauty in which the form tion: They owed an apology to the people of nominee was born in Caenya, In the province of of Hongkong and Canton, should find room is lost in the expression, and which every painter Ireland for, allowing the great question of the Oviedo, Spain, on the 26th May 1844 made ble for commendation in the Government Inspec has represented differently; and Brantome one domestic government of their country to remain profession in 1861 in the Dominican College of tor's Report on Education, that Schools where of the ancient chronicless, summing it all up in unintroduced in the present Parliament. Chame for Eve or six years. In 1873 he went to Manila iubjects taught by its medium, should receives to the Dauphin as being more beauteous and government for Ireland must not be indefinitely Ocafia, where he subsequently taught Philosophy such a language is freely taught, or other one fine sentence, describes her at her marriage, borlain told them that a measure of local where he taught Natural History and graduated Government subsidy, is to us so unsolvable charming than a celestialgoddess." Abangel postpound That meant that is some futurs Domingo Convent la Manil from 1876 to 1878, education exclusively in the local variation of was very pretty aperch for Shakespeare's selves Liberal Ualonists might incline to look in Philosophy. He was superior of the Santo mystery. We are sorry for the European is like you, Kate ƒ and you are like an angel," Parlament possibly the gentlemen calling thems Vice-Rector of the University for four years, and the Portuguese language which it imparted to Henty V. to make to the French King's daughter up Irish Governmenta in 1886 wu appointed President of Letran. He the 211 scholars referred to by Dr. Eitel in his is said to be a distinguished orator and Report. The sooner the Governor sweeps these man gifted with various other personal accom-schools and their teachers out of the Colony, the

better for the rising population,

but it gives us of to-day no better notion of It was said that the present government of Katherine's beauty than do all the composite Ireland would have been remarkably successful portraits by painters and historians of the but for the difficulties pisced in the way in cou wondrous loveliness of the Chdown of Santa pa tion with the land question.. Who placed birm

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