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TELEGRAMS.

: ENGLISH AND FQREIGN.

Lomdoh, Sept. 28. I Slavin and MoAdliffa - were .bound over,:in sureties ofi£looo oaob', toappear When called upon, Jt is probable however that the fight will be brought off within a week.

Sepfc.24s,f I Mr Patrick O’Brien, lhaen arrested on a charge of i Mr D. Healey. M,P,; speaking at Dublin, demanded autonomy for; lreland similar to that granted to lhauiropbrtant fcolony of Wt stern ■ Australia. rHe besertad that ‘England .'wbotd ioniy bubtain the landlords against famine, and the league would have to provide for the tenants.

Sept. 25; : By. an explosion atißiswicfc;work*’;on board: the ' Australian cruiser Pandora, twelva men were’fearfully’scalded. \ The New Zealand Shipping Gdmpany will pay a dividend of 6 per jo the sanction of the Court of the reduction of the, capital recently assented to by tbesbareholders.

I Mr Parnell intends to convene a 1 conference of the Irish party at Dublin. Mr O’Brien has brought forward a motion in Parliament for an investigation into the charges against Daly, who is now undergoing a sentence ofimprisonment for conspiracy. Sir Saul Samuel, on behalf of’New South Wales, has purchased Captain Cook’s log-book. ! Nearly ail the chemical firms haye joined the union. The prospectus has been issued, fixing the capital at £8.500,000. I Mr Dillon and Mr O’Brien haya been making defient speeches at x-Tipperary. I Lord Spencer, speaking at Wakefield, condemned the recent arrests of Irish members, which, be contended, proved that Mr Bafour’s methods bad besn a failure.

Paris, Sept. 25.

The Comte de Paris admits that be intrigued with General Boulanger for the restoration of the monarchy. Herstates that he is not ashamed of the part he played, and that ho sought to utilise General Boulanger to divide the Republic. Lisbok, Sept. 25.

Opposition to the Anglo-Potuguese Convention is gaining ground in Portu--8 New York, Sept. 25.

News has been received from Central America that the town of Colon, on the Isthmus of Panama, hasi been t almost totally destroyed by fire. Washinotott, Sept, 24.

A motion has been tabled in the Senate calling for the better treatment of American political prisoners in England.

Agnes Robertson, Dion Boucicanlt’s first wife,, will opqose the granting of letters of administration to. Mrs Bondcault (Miss rhorndykf),

Suakik, Sept 24

Natives are being expelled fromiiSuakim, and grain is not allowed to go into the interior, The cause is the fear of a raid by Osman Digna, (Note— -It was Ooman Pasha, defender of Plevna, and not Osman Digna who was reported to have been drowned.)

AUSTRALIAN CABLE.

Stbitit, Sept. 24,

Mr W. McFarlane has given notice in the Legislative Assembly to move for the imposition of import duties on wheat, maize, oats, barley and rye, of fid pert bushel: on beans and peas 4d per bushel; on hay, chaff and potatoes 10s per I ton, and on flour and meal £1 per ton. Sept. 25. Sailed-—-Wairarapa for, Auckland, A deputation, representing the Australian New Hebrides, Company, waited on Sir Henry Parkes to-day with requests similar to those recently preferred to Mr Giilios, Premier of Victoria. Sir Henry Parkes asked the deputation to send a memorial to the Government, enumerating the grievances of British subjects, which he promised to forward to the Imperial Government. MELBOURNE, Sept, 24.

Two hundred resident of Pootscrajj a suburb four miles west of Melbourne, are suffering from poison, ascribed to impure milk caused by cows eating poisonous herbs. Ooe death is recorded, The chief officer of the Union Company’s new steamer Tavinui has arrived at Wilson’s Promontory ia a boat and reported that the vessel bad broken her shaft some distance to the east of the point. Shortly after the Peniusulu and Oriental Company’s steamer Carthage was sigbM with the laying intow. Tbp latter sailed on her maiden trip in these waters to Suva on Saturday, Adelaide, Sept, 25.

Dr Saumarez Smith, D.D., has arrived here, en route for Sydney, He was accorded a hearty welcome.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18900927.2.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Temuka Leader, Issue 2104, 27 September 1890, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
653

TELEGRAMS. Temuka Leader, Issue 2104, 27 September 1890, Page 1

TELEGRAMS. Temuka Leader, Issue 2104, 27 September 1890, Page 1

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