THE LATE GALES.
The reports show that the snow-storm has done considerable damage in all parts of the country. On the coast the lifeboats have had ample employment. As a proof of the widely-spread ravages of the storm, and the districts blocked up or in some way impeded by its effects, it may be stated that the Post-Office Comptroller’s list of places from which letters and newspapers had not been received in due course embraces mails from the undermentioned towns in the United Kingdom namely: Axminster, Chard, Warminster, Crewkeme, Monmouth, Coleford, Shepton Mallet, Frome, Wells (Somersetshire), Calne, Malmesbury, Melksham, Devizes, Tetbury, Hungerford, Marlborough, Moreton-in-the-Marsh, Enstone, Woodstock, Newbury, Chipping Norton, Honiton, Launceston, Uxbridge, the Channel Islands (Guernsey and Jersey), Petworth, Midhurst, Bridport, Lyme, Liphook, Petersfield, Baldock, Biggleswade, Buntingford, Hatfield, Hitchin, Hoddesdon, Hertford, Roysdon, Stevenage, Ware, and Welwyn.
London was visited another snow-storm on Friday, causing much inconvenience, but our telegram last evening said the snow had gone and that the wind was S. W. The thermometer on Friday night in the metropolis was three degrees below freezing.