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November 8,1856. J T H E X E A T> E R. 1...
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LORD PALMERSTON AT MANCHESTER 1 AND SAL1...
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SANITARY MATTERS. THE UEGISXEK-GENEBAl'S...
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OUR CIVILIZATION. ——?—THE CRYSTAL PALACE...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Continental Notes.. ¦ ¦' ¦ ' . '/ .. ' ....
tirea , and a new ministry , with Redschid Pacha at its head , has come into power . ¦ _ The Commission on the navigation of the Danube is about to reassemble at Vienna . The Porte will be represented at it . The Boundary Commission has still two months' -work before it . SWITZERLAND . The English minister , in the name of his Government , has communicated to the superior executive Federal authority a proposition for the settlement of the question of Neufchatel . " The Federal examining magistrate charged with the affair of the 3 rd and 4 th of September , " saj' 8 a letter from Neufch & tel of the 29 th ult ., " has terminated his mission . Several royalist notabilities of the important town of Locle , in this canton , have just signed an address to . their fellow-citizens , in which they declare that the best means of putting an end to civil discords , and restoring the confidence necessary for the development of public prosperity , consists ,, in their opinion , in the definitive ratification of the independence of Neufchatel as a republican state and Swiss canton . " - ¦ ¦ . ' ¦ ' " v GERMANV . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ The German Diet , at its sitting on the 30 th ult ., was occupied with the question of ZNTeufchatel , brought forward by Prussia . The question was referred to a committee formed of the Plenipotentiaries of Austria , Prussia , Bavaria , Wurtemberg , Saxony , Baden , and Darmstadt , which , on the 1 st inst ., declared itself , with certain modifications , in favour of the Prussian propositions . SWEDEN . Some Roman Catholics have established themselves near the Alten Copper Mines in Finmark ( which are managed by an English company ) , and have set to work vigorously in spreading ; their tenets among the population .
November 8,1856. J T H E X E A T> E R. 1...
November 8 , 1856 . J T H E X E A T > E R . 1061
Lord Palmerston At Manchester 1 And Sal1...
LORD PALMERSTON AT MANCHESTER AND SAL 1 ORD . Lobd and Lad y Palmerston arrived at Manchester on Tuesday evening , having left London at ten o ' clock in the morning , by the day mail . They were met at the London-road station by Sir Benjamin Heywood , at . ¦ <* rhose residence , at Claremont , they made their tempo-* Tary sojourn . An address was presented to the Premier on Thursday by the Salford Corporation , in reply to which his Lordship made some remarks on the excellence of local self-government , and complimented the corporation on the efforts it had made to spread education among the lower classes . Alluding to his alleged warlike tendencies , he said : — "My hon . friend the member for Salford has remarked upon the imputations which on former occasions were cast upon me personally of a disposition to r isk , without necessity , the peace of the country , and to go , if not into the thick , at least to the verge , of wars with other countries . Those accusations , allow me to say , were founded on a misconception of the nature of things ( cheers and laughter ); for , depend upon it , a country like this , with great in ^ terests at stake and a great reputation to maintain , does well to guard against tlie approach of insult and the very appearance of wrong , and that it is easier to stop the beginning of such affairs than to find a remedy when the evil has risen to a great magnitude . " After avowing that his government is a government of progress , and paying a high compliment to Mr . Brotherton , M . P ., who had previously spoken , Lord Palmerston concluded by warmly thanking the corporation for the honour they had done him . He then departed for Manchester , in " the Town Hall of which he received the address of the Town Council , the Chamber of Commerce , and the Commercial Association , and then replied at great length . He spoke in favour of the principle of Free Trade , the adoption of which had largely increased the wealth and happiness of the country , and which he trusted -would soon be spread among all continental countries , though they had bitterly opposed it upon grounds the most incongruous and self-contTadictory . The apparent difficulties of the government upon first assuming office were overcome by the indomitable energy and zeal of his coadjutors , by the confidence in them and in himself of the Sovereign , and by the manly spirit of the nation . Referring to the war , and paying the usual compliments to the valour of our soldiers and sailors and the faithful co-operation of our allies , his Lordship said : — " We are now at peace , and I hope that that peace may be lasting . Its duration must depend upon the honour and fidelity with which its conditions are fulfilled ( cheers ) . I trust that that Power which brought upon itself the hostility , either active or moral , of all Europe , by a forgctfulness of international rights and duties—I trust that that Power , having concluded a treaty , will observe that treaty and fulfil it with faithfulness , and then , no doubt , peace will bo of long duration . " The Premier after-^ j ?^ alluded to foreign politics in general , observing : — The difficulties that may arise in regard to the protection of individuals from wrong , are difficulties which generall y arise in weak and small States . Lurger Powers are above these things . With those Powers—either of Europe or the United States—wo have little difficulty
1 ' j [ in protecting subjects , because there we find a sense of b right and wrong that , when appealed to , is sure to ob- tl tain justice and redress , ( . Hear , hear . ) It is among ai the smaller States , where , from various circumstances 3 which I don ' t wish now to go into , the principles of E right and wrong are not quite so steadily kept in view— 01 ( laughter )—it is there that we are most frequently called T upon to interfere . And then , when we do interfere , b people say- — 'Ah ! you attack the weak . ' Why , those T countries abuse their weakness ; they make their weak- nc ness the pretence for doing evil , trusting that you "will ft overlook their delinquencies merely because you are able o to obtain redress for yourselves . " After glancing at one -a or two topics connected with the extension of our foreign and colonial trade and with education , the Premier tl brought his remarks to a conclusion ; after which , to- n gether with Lady Palmerston , he visited the Exchange 1 and other parts of the city . 0 At eight o'clock in the evening , his Lordship ad- i > dressed the members of the Manchester Mechanics' In- t stitution , who met in the Free Trade Hall , which was d densely crowded . Here his remarks were of a more S literary character . Quoting Pope ' s well-known couplet , I " A little knowledge is a dangerous thing ; Drink deep , or taste not the Pierian spring , " ° lie added : —¦ " I hold that that is a mistake , and much error has it produced . A little knowledge is better , than r no knowledge at all . ( Cheers . ) The more knowledge ^ a man has , the better ; but , if his time and the means at his disposal do not permit of his ac- ] quiring deep and accurate knowledge , let him have , as much as he can , and , depend upon it , he will be all the better for it . ( Continued applause . ) We , may be told that we shall make him a mere smat- j terer in knowledge , to which I reply , that it is better ] for a man to be a smatterer than to be ignorant and , uninstTucted . There are many lines of information which it is most essential for a working man to pursue , but from which , were it not for institutions such as this , he would be hopelessly excluded . In the first place , there are certain laws of nature of which some regulate the trade in which he is employed , some govern and control his industry , and on others depend the well-being of his existence ; and yet those laws are not to be known by the simple-minded man . " His Lordship added that he would not only have the working man study matters of science , but would have liiiii icficsli LI 3 riimu by occasionally reading worics of imagination and fancy , such as poems and romances , which " are useful by giving buoyancy to the intellect , and inspiring the mind with noble sentiments . " At the conclusion of this speech , Professor Scott and Dr . Vaughan addressed the meeting at some length , and the proceedings terminated at ten o'clock . Lord Palmerston gave a promise on Thursday to visit Liverpool on the following day . b t T of ( of .
Sanitary Matters. The Uegisxek-Genebal's...
SANITARY MATTERS . THE UEGISXEK-GENEBAl ' S WEEKLY BETUBN . The returns of the London districts are still of a very favourable character . In the week that ended on Saturday , the number of deaths registered was 969 . In the corresponding weeks of the last ten years ( 1846-55 ) , the average number was 1009 ; and the same rate of mortality would produce in the increased population of the present time 1110 deaths . The improved state of health now existing has therefore reduced the number of last week's return by 141 ; and similar results have been obtained during the month now terminated . Diseases of the zymotic class were fatal to 175 persons ; affections of the respiratory organs , exclusive of phthisis and hooping-cough , to 190 . Under the average rate of mortality from zymotic diseases in former years , the deaths last week would have been 295 . Scarlatina is at present the most prominent in this class , and numbers 40 ; and St . John , Marylebone , where five children died of it , returns a greater number of deaths from this disease than any other sub-district- The registrar of Hampstead records the death of a girl at 19 , Boundary-road , St . John ' s Wood , being the second from scarlatina maligna within a few days in the same Louse ; and he reports the statement of the medical attendant , that the complaint has prevailed particularly at this spot ( which ought to be healthy ) , and is in his opinion fostered by the accumulation and decomposition of organic mattor in that part of the Bridge-road which lies in the parish of Hampstead , and where , it appears , there is a want of drainage . It is satisfactory to find that small-pox has lately been more rare , and last week the deaths from it were only four ; viz ., two in St . John , Westminster , and two in the Small-pox Hospital , Islington . The deaths from typhus declined to 32 . Threo fatal , cases of carbuncle are recorded ; and two of mortification in children from the application of blister . Two women and a man died at the age of 91 years ; a man and a woman at 92 ; and a woman in the Belgravo subdistrict at the age of 95 years . —Last week , the births of 777 boys and 792 girls , in all 1569 children , were registered in London . In the ten corresponding weeks of the years 184 < 5-65 , the average number was 14-15 . THE QUARTERLY RETURN . This return comprises the births and deaths registered ' .
| . \ ¦ y 2196 registrars in all the districts of England during he summer quarter that ended on September 30 , 1856 ; and the marriages in 12 , 194 churches or chapels , about 3783 registered places of-worship unconnected with the Established Church , and 628 superintendant-registrars ' offices , in the quarter that ended on June 30 , 1856 . he marriages are still below the average number , the births are above , and the deaths are below the average . Thus , although the high price of provisions keeps the marriage rate below the high rate which has prevailed for sometime , the increase by birth and the public health the ; English population present in the returns a favourable aspect . Marriages . —77 , 434 persons were married in the three months of April , May , and June ; and the marriage rate of the quarter was-817 per cen t . per annum . The average rate of the quarter is " 855 . The marriages 38 , 717 ) exceed by 263 the marriages in the corresponding quarter of the year 1855 , but are fewer by 1801 than the marriages in the spring quarter of 1854 . The decrease of marriages is most obvious in London , in Sussex , in Bucks , in Somerset , in Gloucester , in Leicester , in Nottingham , and in North Wales . In Berks , Northampton , Suffolk , Devon , the Iforth Riding Yorkshire , Cumberland , Westmoreland , and South Wales the marriages increased . - Births . —157 , 633 children , who were born alive , were registered in the quarter ending on the last of September . The birth-rate of the quarter is 3 ' 278 percent , per annum , while the average rate is 3 / 209 . The number of births exceeds by 2799 the births in the corresponding quarter of 1855 , and is the greatest that has ever ^ been registered before in England in the corresponding quarter of the year . An increase in the births is observable in every division , except tie North Midland division , the North-Western division , and Yorkshire . '¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ " , ¦¦ . - , ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ . ¦ : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦¦ . .: . ' Deaths . — 91 , 330 deaths were registered in the three months of July , August , and September , and the deathrate was 1-899 per cent , per annum , the average rate being 2-199 ; so that it was during the last season-300 Tinder the average of the preceding ten summer quarters . Out of the same population , there were six instead of the average tale of seven deaths . Cholera-was epidemic in 1854 , and the summer death-rate , then so high ( 2-423 ) , fell to 1-854 and to 1-899 in the subsequent summer quarters . ; : ' . "¦ ¦ ¦ ; ^ . '¦ . ; . ;¦ ¦ ¦ : . ' . ' . ¦ .., ' . ¦ . ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦' . ' ¦' ¦ . ¦'¦ ¦ ' ¦• ' ¦' , ¦ ¦ ' ¦ : ¦¦ ¦ . ' . [[ Appended , to thesd statistics are some admirable observations by the Registrar on the necessity of keeping our houses cleanly , of removing all decaying animal and vegetable matter , of draining the land about dwellings , and of choosing healthy , i . e : elevated , sites , instead of the damp hollows now , frequentlybuilt on . He alludes more especially to farmhouses , which are often surrounded by large heaps of offensive substances generated in the farmyard , and which are also too frequently stifled by trees and ricks . He adds : —] In the dairy , a little dirt spoils the milk , butter , Or cheese ; unless the vessels of the brewery are clean , the ale is injured ; and farmers have hence learnt by experience the importance of cleanliness in the interior of their houses . From them , the taste for household cleanliness has been diffused through the surrounding population . They have only to render the ah ? which they breathe about their houses pure , to become , with those around them , the halest people in the world . To place any of the new farmhouses and cottages to be built on certain elevations is the first point ; to carry out and to cover with earth all the refuse of the house and yards daily , would prevent the escape of the ammonia , the most precious part of the manure , and at the same time rid the atmosphere of the fatal malaria that surrounds the farmhouses- and cottages of the country . About 642 G English farmers die in a year , and of them many are young . 2605 are under sixtyfive yeaTS of age .
Our Civilization. ——?—The Crystal Palace...
OUR CIVILIZATION . ——?—THE CRYSTAL PALACE FORdERIES . William James Robson , lately a clerk at the Crystal Palace , was tried last Saturday at the Central Criminal Court for the frauds and forgeries committed on the company , and which amount , according to the statement of Mr . Ballantine , counsel for the prosecution , to rather more than 10 , 000 / . The accused , who is about thirty-five years of age , appeared to have recovered entirely from tlie depression which he exhibited when before the Lambeth police magistrate , and now conducted himself in a very confident manner . He pleaded Guilty to three of the indictments charging him with larceny as a servant , and Not Guilty to the charge of forgery . Upon this issue , therefore , he was tried . The facts brought out in evidence wero thus stated b y the Judge ( Mr . Justice Erie ) in summing ; up : — "William James Eobson was indicted for tuo forgery of an instrument called ' a transfer of shares , ' and , in another count of the indictment , witlx having forged 4 a deed of Henry Johnson . ' The deed purported that , on the consideration of 156 / ., Henr 3 ' Johnson transferred to Joseph Lowe fifty shares in the Crystal Palace Company , numbered from 145 , 052 to 145 , 101 . The signature to that deed , where the name of the transferror ehould be , was Henry John-
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 8, 1856, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_08111856/page/5/
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