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Late Australian Items.

FROM YARH'H"S SOURCES. \. « 1 f 1\ <t 1 1 V 1 to pIV ft tf ' | n l !' '■'•i nt c 1 i r in riMil (1 tiirosv_- ! if^- s- t.-.ikr-i] ot iu the Now bouth i 1 I'i 1 I 'i < h n 1 ti i o m u kn > n ih'u hi • t n f id n 1 i i t> un i i _j h 1 on f K 1 i i - \ tin \ Iml _ ii > i>j i L d 1 I h i- b n b irn 1 to I i ii ' *i it irli r>< u H n-1> i thu h l > h 11 tl n fir.'. [ ''lt \ a Mu k> ' t ( i * i t'l ♦ lie *tv nit t l l! r 1 <>t tU \ K II I'l ! i t U ti (1> 1 d jilf w h t >t U 1 (< ll U - A vrt'iiiL' man namt-d Thomas (> Nc:ll •n i k<" 1 nti " I it 1 in 1 I - no k Rni 1 I i \ H 1 i i ui bin a,'i 'i f i i 11 o'i {» Ih W r V i n < s i<n r h-■ ) t > Ith i j, » iti a i t _ii n h 1 f i n r < i tl t jh \ i ot ti ti V 1 t 1 i nil u \ t t i •: ,• I 1 r. ■ a ui - gUtlrll A' t lltl ll l (It 111 I\ shoe the C eternal when pursued, i oarteen peuets have becu extracted irom tlv w i in Is. Th* [I >1 ' \ 11 II i'i tkil IP« uy .mi 1 i if -t [ i k i 1 v t FdilMH'i .!» I '1 1 t' a ( >l< 1\ —tin t x hin r < v i i_r 1 \ <) iudun nit | ir it ' \\ h * I a-k, aiv fathris tinging .hunt to allow th> ii snn» to ] i turn 1 into no lies? hewing, ri t 1 If nitre is so much tun* 1 to spare and money to waste tKteb the"a 1 o >i\-keeping. shorthand or manners—something to be useful and make men of them, not unsex them, there is enough of that now without the Education Department helping." The Melbourne A reus declares that it It," the surviving passenger of th Dmminond Castle wreck, is Herr Marquahardt, the distinguished violinist who visited New Zealand last year with his wife, Madame Alexandria Marquahardt, a talanted harpist. They had just been married, and were on their honeymoon tour. Herr and Madame Marquahardt gave concerts in Auckland. A cowardly scandal - monger got a well-deserved th ton the other day. He circulated lies concerning a wse>r>n"s honor, and her father and husband meeting him soon after gave him a hiding that he'll probably never forget, cutting his face in a terrible manner. They were summoned for assault, when the jury, although the Judge said they must find them guilty on a minor count, acquitted both defendants, amid loud applause. •Judicial notice was taken in the Melbourne Divorce Court by the Chief Justice last week of the " easy moraiitv of the stage." His Honor rtf i la divorce to the husband in JRic v. Richardson on the ground that he had contributed to his own wrong by letting Ins wife go on tour with a dramatic company. He is by occupation a saddler. His wife went touring in lHb-j, w .eh the husband's consent. Thus spoke the Chief Justice :—The respondent had to travel about and constantly associate by night, as well as by day, with a class of men often attractive and not tin frequently lax in their views of sexual morality. Of course there were very many actors and actresses of the highest principles and circumspection, hut notoriously in almost every theatrical association and its "hangers-on" there were many who were otherwise. The petitioner for two years left his wife roaming anywhere or with anyone for aught he knew, and though he wrote to her, with knowledge of disquieting rumours as to her conduct, he accepted her flimsy excuses, and took no steps to bring her home. She was young, and her photograph showed her to have K-hU attractiso. and in the company in which -she was, and away from her ha>l> it was not difficult to see that her risk of falling was quite beyond the ordinary. In the recent railway accident near Goulburn (N.S.W.) the ti reman, Morris, hail a miraculous escape. He was found buried in soft earth underneath a heap of trucks, his head only being visible. It took an hour and "a half to dig him out. His injuries, as well as those of the driver, consisted of bruises and scalds only. It is supposed that the wheels of a track prevented Morris from being crushed to ifeath. Twelve cases _of human bones were sent on jane 17 from Sydney to China frg*4be steamer Chingta, being the mortal moaina o£ between forty and

J intc-rro'l h«-re. Th':.' r-'niuv."* v.-i;h in I s*.cc:.»rl:uic» 4 v;hh til'* en v.-y.a of t'r 1 ! (.'hi*-o r>''<v,'V wli" '{'.■• 1 'T'.;*;l. br* !in Chi: •• ••• .-/il. Thi > pr.»cticft v;as pr..h;!.i> «l i.v !;i\v in California, j .it.'i ■ .'-..-I=l it -ki'k-'niis w\:r': suiuiryM t av.vy ;i , c';i'i,:>s. Tit;- nt is the ! t:r-t - i't for many years from New Smith Wah--.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAST18960706.2.21

Bibliographic details

Hastings Standard, Issue 60, 6 July 1896, Page 4

Word Count
885

Late Australian Items. Hastings Standard, Issue 60, 6 July 1896, Page 4

Late Australian Items. Hastings Standard, Issue 60, 6 July 1896, Page 4

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