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e government there has agreed to arbitrate the Cheek Teakwood claim, in the endeavor to settle which our Vice-Consul, Mr. Kellett, was wounded, as we told you in Numbers 16 and 17 of THE GREAT ROUND WORLD. The Siamese government has also agreed to look into the matter of the assault on Mr. Kellett, and punish the guilty persons. As you will see in Number 17, Mr. Olney hinted that Consul-General Barrett had been over-hasty, and that the Siamese were not to blame. He made similar remarks about General Lee in Cuba. He does not seem to want our Consuls to protect our citizens in foreign countries, and it is perhaps a good thing for the nation that he has no longer the power to hinder them in the performance of their duties. Consul-General Barrett's claim proves to have been just and right, by the action of the Siamese government. * * * * * Blondin, the celebrated tight-rope walker, has just died in London, at the age of seventy-three. The performance which made him famous was the crossing of Niagara Falls on the tight-rope. Blondin was a Frenchman, his father having been one of Napoleon's soldiers. A story is told of him that when he was five years old he saw an acrobat performing on a tight-rope. He was so pleased with what he saw, that when he got home he stretched a rope between two posts, and, as soon as his mother was out of the way, took his father's fishing-rod, and, using it as a balancing pole, made his first appearance as a tight-rope walker. He was trained for an acrobat and tight-rope walking, and came to this country with a troup of pantomimists. While here he visited Niagara Falls, and the idea at once struck him that, if he dared to cross those terrible waters on a rope, his fortune would be made. He made up his mind to try it, and stayed in the village of Niagara for weeks, until he had learned just how it would be possible for him to perform the feat. Then he set about getting the scheme well advertised, and securing plenty of money for himself if he succeeded in accomplishing it. On August 17th, 1859, he made the trip across the Falls in the presence of 50,000 spectators. His rope was 175 feet above the waters. He was not satisfied with merely walking across; he crossed again blindfolded, and then carrying a man on his back, and once again wheeling a barrow before him. In the summer of 1860 he crossed once more in the presence of the P
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