In consequence of the great success attending the sale of Mr. Gladstone's "Chips," the Grand Old Chief is in future to be known as "the Last of the Ochipaways!" But he refuses to bury the hatchet. New Version.O'Brien the thin his own breeches would wear, And have nothing to do with the Government pair. "If my patriot legs they those pants would thrust in, They must do it themselves," said O'Brien the thin. On the 22nd, the Œdipus Tyrannus is to be produced at Cambridge. One of the members of the A. D. C. wanted to bring out an old burlesque on Œdipus at the Club Theatre on the same night, but Mr. J. W. Clarke of Trinity, General Manager and University Entrepreneur, immediately objected that it would be irreverent to turn the awful story of Œdipus and Jocasta into a jest, "For," said he, "you certainly cannot 'joke as ta' that." The Master of Trinity has summoned the Fellows to consider what ought to be done to the other Fellow. A New Life.—Mr. Joseph Hatton, author of Clytie, and quite recently of The Gay World, a novel which has created a considerable sensation, is coming out as the biographer of "Friend Toole." Author and Actor have been about together a great deal lately; in fact so much so, as to give rise to the report that Mr. J. L. Toole was dreadfully afraid of catching cold, as he was never seen anywhere without his Hat on. The British Mission in Abyssinia seems to have got into difficulties. The Negus won't listen to the Queen's English as contained in Her Majesty's letter. This Negus evidently is not so sweet as usual: a little punch-in' his head would do him some good. At all events this Negus must be stirred up and taken down pretty sharply. |