15 APRIL 1871, page 3

" C. E. T." (which Signifies, We Suppose, Sir Charles

"Trevelyan) writes to Monday's Times to propose a virtual re- -enactment of 19th Henry VII., c. 12, the statute which punished " vagabonds and those who relieve them." He points......

Dr. Fraser, The Bishop Of Manchester, Spoke On Tuesday Even-

ing at the annual meeting of the members of the St. Paul's Literary Society, touching among other things on the question of the Episcopal right to a seat in the House of......

" A Borough Magistrate " Writes To The Times To

advocate Mr. Bruce's suggestion that municipalities might take the liquor trade into their own hands. They should close all existing houses, ap- point their own managers, allow......

Mr. Tarpey Has Been Arrested. His Wife Was Carefully...

and of course he came back to his wife, and to London, as a fly comes back to honey ; he was seized in the Marylebone Road with some of the diamonds taken from Mr. Ryder on him,......

The English Catholics, Who Contributed Something Handsome...

necessities, have received from him a very grateful answer, in which he recalls that he is the successor of that Pope Gregory the Great who first sent a mission to England, and......

The Story Of Mary Folkard, The Policeman's Wife Who Tried

to commit suicide because she had no home, has been exploded. The City Police are certainly compelled to reside in the City, but the Corporation has provided for the difficulty......

Consols Were On Thursday 93/ To 93/.

......

The Archbishop Of Canterbury Has Replied To The...

asked him to enjoin the Bishops not to act upon the judgment delivered by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in the Purchas case, rather happily. He first administers a......

There Is A Curious Interest In Observing How Events And

the criticisms on events repeat themselves at very considerable intervals of time. Alfred de Musset addressed a poem to M. Thiers on " The Law of the Press " in August, 1835,......

A Correspondent Of The Times Complains Bitterly Of The Price

of coals. He says the coal sold by the owners at 7s. a ton costs 5s. 10d. for railway carriage, and is then sold to Londoners at 20s. a ton, leav- ing a profit of 50 per cent.......