The NORTH DERBY of 10 Rove each, p.p., with 100 added; for three•yaar-old colts, Set 71b ; fillies, Bet 21b ; the winner of auy stake before starting value 500 soya to carry 6lb extra ; the second to receive 60 soya out of the stakes, and the winner to pay 10 gs to the judge. On
(a) This move is prematurely made. White now obtains a alight advantage. (4) The beat play. By this move Black is obliged to sustain the disadvantage of a doubled Pawn. (c) White btu now much the better position. We believe, with correct play, the victory should be Ids. r.l) Bla
" The writers In these pagtS - present to the reader an analysis of the book, give its character, and, by copious extracts, when the volume under consideration merits it. allow the reader to form his own judgment, so that each part contains a volume, in fact, of extracts from th
MR SPONGE'S SPORTING TOUR. B 7 the Author of "Handley Cross," "Jorrocks s Jaunts," &c. Illustrated with Coloured Engravings and Woodcuts, by Jottx Lamm. Complete in 1 Volume Bvo, handsomely bound in cloth, price 145., or with gilt edges, price 15s. THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF OLI
The indictment against Mr. Z. Wallace, the proprietor of the Anglo Celt newspaper, for a libel alleged to have been published in that journal against the 31st Regiment, in connection with the Sixmile Bridge affair, has resulted in a verdict adverse to Mr. Wallace. The jury found
ACCIDENT ON THE BRISTOL. AND EXETER RAILWAY. —On Thursday afternoon a train left Clevedon at the usual time, and proceeded down the branch for the purpose of going ou by the up train from Exeter to Bristol, when the accident occurred. The policeman whose duty it was to attend to
THE great progress which music, has made of late years, and the important part that it is destined to fill in every well-educated family circle, as a refined and intellectual amusement, renders it necessary that the " divine art" should be divested of the "pedantry of schools,"
LORD FRANKFORT IN THR HOUSE OF CORRECTION.-Bince the committal of Lord Frankfort to the House of Correction, Coldbath• fields, in pursuance of the sentence of the Court of Queen's Bench, he has conformed himself very willingly to the rules of the prison, and appears quite reconc