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Sept. 15, 1860] The Saturday Analyst and...
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The CoNSEBVATrvrE Land Society.—-This So...
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SERIALS. CasselVs Illustrated Family Pap...
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RECORD OF THE WEEK. HOME AND COLONIAL. F...
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Sunday brought an addition to the record...
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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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Sept. 15, 1860] The Saturday Analyst And...
Sept . 15 , 1860 ] The Saturday Analyst and Leader . 805
The Consebvatrvre Land Society.—-This So...
The CoNSEBVATrvrE Land Society . — -This Society has now entered on the ninth year of its operations . The receipts during that period have amounted to about £ 477 , 000 i and it has purchased 45 estates in 15 counties ,. to the amount of £ 245 , 000 , all laid out in building plots ; : every attention ' having been paid to road-making and the sanitary considerations of drainage , at a cost of upwards of £ 82 , 000 , and frequently with worts greatly to the improvement and ornament of the localities . The amount of land sold to the members of the society exceeds £ 251 , 167 . Many villas and houses , in squares * crescents , and streets , have been erected , and site ? , in many cases , been set apart for churches , of which several are completed and in progress . The society has , besides , been instrumental in . conferring the electoral franchise on thousands of persons who did not previously possess votes n counties . ¦ . Railway Passengebs Assurance Company . —The half-yearly meetwas held at their new offices , 64 , Cornhill , EiC . It was stated in the directors' report , ' which was unanimously adopted , that the operations of this company have now acquired an extension which says much for the growth of habits of providence amongst the people . In the recent accident from the bursting of a gun at Dover , which excited such general sympathy , none of the sufferers were insured , although several of those present , who fortunately escaped uninjured , were policy holders in this company . The report observes : — "A certain degree of risk must necessai'ily attend the handling of fire-arms as well ss heavy pieces of ordnance , and as . your directors . have agreed to cover this extra risk of accident to-volunteers without additional charge , it can scarcely be doubted that the fact only requires to bs known to induce maiiy of that numerous body to avail themselves of the protection afforded by the company ' s policies of insurance against all accidents . "
Serials. Casselvs Illustrated Family Pap...
SERIALS . CasselVs Illustrated Family Paper . Part 33 new series . September . London and New York : Cassell and Co . —This is one ^ the best cheap weekly periodicals of the day . In its pages will be found a vast mass of really useful information , as well as a diversified melange of light reading for the leisure hour . CasselZsIllustrated Family Bible . Part 16 . September . Cassell and Co . —This part concludes the first Book of Kings , and contains the first portion of the second Book as far as chapter 10 . The illustrations are numerous and excellent . . . CasselVff Illustrated History of England . Part 8 , new series . Cassell and Co . —This is another of Messrs . Cassell ' s illustrated publications . The text is by Mr . W . Howitt , whose liberal tendencies and literary ability are well known . Thisr promises to be one of the best works of tho kind ever issued . . CassclVs Popular Natural History . Part 18 . Cassell and Co . —The in-esentpart concludes a section of the carnaria , and commences the department of the pachydermes , giving some most interesting facts recarding the elephant . The illustrations in this , as in Messrs . Cassell ' s other illustrated publications , deserve the highest commenda . tion . The Ladies' Treasury . iSTo . 43 . September . Cassel and Co . —This work may bo regarded as a sort of repertory , containing every kind of information conducive to real feminine accomplishments , and should bo upon every drawing-room table . Routledge ' s Illustrated Natural History . Part 19 . September . London and New York : Koutledge and Co . —Tho part before us , of this excellent work treats of the " fledged biped " portion of animated nature . The predacious family of the feathered tribe occupies tho opening sections of the prosent part , in which its history is brought to a close ! and to the " goatsuckers" ( about which a foolish superstition prevails among the ignorant ) , and the ewallows 19 dovoted the remainder . ¦ ¦ ¦ PoweWs Domestic Magazine . No . 1 . September . London : Mnrlborough and Co . Brighton : Embling and JBeal .-Tlm w the first number of a new serial which purports « to consist of domestic literary sketches , tales , poems , biographic , historic , and scientific pape ™ , together with reviews of and extracts from valuable works ; " and as far as the present specimen goes , acts up to its professions . Memoirs , Journal , and Correspondence > qf Thomas Moore . -Peoples edition , * ith portraits , to ; Part 0 . London : Longman ai > d Co .- JJhfc present is the last part but one of this work , which is to ^ bo 'OOinploted in ten parts . It has from time to time received appropriate notice from us as the various portions have appeared . " Jonuni ' s Strategy" extracted from the Precis do Part do la Guerre , on nouveau tableau : « nali / lique , and translated by Ensign Prod . Adam , of tho 2 gnd Regiment . Bombay Native Infantry , pnee -k . Cd ., has just been published by Messrs . Saunders , Otley , and Co . Although Jomnu is aclmowlodged to be tlie standard military writer of tho ago , it is nltraordinarv that no einglo work of his has been yet translated . EnS Adam '*> translation is a faithful and valuable reproduction of the eeneo and spirit of the original .
Record Of The Week. Home And Colonial. F...
RECORD OF THE WEEK . HOME AND COLONIAL . First in importance at tho prosent eeaeon , and under the peculiar circumstances originating in tho ^ unprocodonted bad weather throughout tho Sg and Binnmer , tUo harvest is the subject which among " homo newepoTaoseoe the gmtoet interest , and must bo regarded ae of the h ^ XSpSto"" - Wo nro hWta report that 1 ^ 8 wogk aloeed with faVoiruble intoUJgenoo . from the agricultura dlBtnptfl . The West ( Soro was scarcely room for a doubt loft ) will bo At least equal to tho average , and aa the- prosont week advanced , and tho weather hold SirirjSpwt aaaumocf a more and . more cheering aspect Ae recards the potato crop , > vo Jearn that in some looaUtic 8 , ' « e m East EotSai , Scotland , the yield prowiaee to bo good , both in quantity and quail !™ ' I ?? thoBo pal , indeed , there eccme to have been no exeoBB of wot at > nil ,
Sunday Brought An Addition To The Record...
Sunday brought an addition to the record of crimiial proceedings which knows no day of rest . George Mullins , plasterer , Barhsleystreet , Bethnal-green ( who had been in the occasional employ of Mrs . Mary Emsley , so mysteriously murdered at Stepney ) , gave information to the police that led them to-take both him ( Mullins ) and WilUam Thomas Emms into custody , on suspicion of having perpetrated the crime . The man Gallagher , who while drunk murdered liis wife , was hung at Liverpool on Saturday . . . _ ¦¦¦ ,. ,. , The progress of events in Italy , and the probable complications they may give rise to , depressed the price of stocks on the opening of the week / Gold , to the amount of . £ 64 * , was deposited in the Bank cellars on Monday . . . . Another item in the list of those dubious occurrences which one does not know whether to rank as accidents or not , is furnished by the result of the inquest upon the body of Mr . Fawcett , late of the Admiralty , who either threw himself , or fell , under a train on the ( Jreat Western Railway . One of the witnesses deposed that Mr . IWcett deliberately placed himself in the way of the train ; another witness heard him just before complain of being in . great trouble respecting his mother-in-law , and observed that he was labouring under great depression of spirits . The verdict was that the . deceased died from the injuries he had received in being run over by a train , but there was not sufficient evidence to show what was the state of his mind . The gold in the Bank of England was . on the increase when the week opened . Consols had been at 93 . } . The French Rentes were ¦¦ " looking up . " _ . ¦ . ¦ _ . ¦ : '¦ . A somewhat unusual application was made at the VVestminster Police Court on Saturday—which , in default of unseasonable gooseberries as big as cocoa-nuts , abnormal pigs bringing forth litters of kittens , gigantic turnips containing sniall rabbit ¦ . ¦ warrens , and mares' nests with half-a-dozen eggs in them , so essential to . the manufacture of hews at this dull period of the year—we take the trouble to record . The Rev . ; Francis Garden produced to Mr . Paynter a board , having pasted upon it some slips cut from Reynold ' s Neiospaper , and which' he had taken from the door of " James Gowan , proprietor of a medical establishin ' ent Q . ) in Grey-coat-place , called ' tlncle Tom ' s Cabin . '" The extracts objected to consisted of a . criticism of the past session , and perorated in this fashion .: — " Its opening ( i . e . the session ' s ) was signalised by a speech from the throne , in which , amongst other cheering intelligence , the long-looked for and earnestly required boon ot Parliamentai-y and legal reforms were solemnly promised ; but thanks to the imbecilitv of the Government , treachery of Liberal members , and tbo cunning manoeuvres of malignant Tories , tho Royal lips—not for the first time—were made to utter a long list of miserable falsehoods ; the * Queen of England , being the gilded pxtppet of a hberty-hating aristocracy , has b een made to break faith with , the toiling ^ millions on whose enslaved industry she and her famUy are sustained in profusion and luxury . The liberty which she . has solemnly pToinised to the _ workers and wealth-producers pf the land is withheld , and instead of the franchise which the Queen said they were to havo they have been bespattered with the foulest filth which honourables and favorites had fished out of the polluted depths of their own depravity . Mr . Cowan said he considered himself justified in exhibiting the remarks in question , and Mr . Paynter told tho Rev . Mr . Garden ( v ; ho is Bub-dean and chaplain of St . James ' s Palace ) that if he thought it worth whilehe might acquaint the Home Office with the circumstance , and so tho matter dropped . . '„ , , / -i -i Fresh particulars of the Prince of Wales' progress in Canada amvo by every post . " JcnMnsism » ' is in a flourishing state ot exuberance , and all that the Prince docs and doesn't—what he snys and what ho leaves unsaid , and a great deal more , is given in all tlio redundant arid multiform variety of a score of different versions . He seoms-as how can royalty fail in doing ?—to be winning goldon Opinions from all B The re su lF of tho examination which t ook p lace before tho magistrate Mr Selfe at the Thames Police Conrt on Monday wae , that Jirams was admitted to bail , and Mullens was remanded , for further examination . At Queenstown , the Prince of Wales had been reviewing the volunteers and regular troops belonging to the place and t 9 Montreal , at tho Cl Iro ? and lJof ^ ted Opneral Mae Mahon with a sword as a , " tribute of nfTection , " so tho address that accompanied it states , to the genius am biwery of tho gallant warrior who has onco more identified tho he iditnry ch ? valry of Krin , with tho glory of Imperial Franco . " Tn the three oitv nrisons of Whitccross-etreet ( dobtors ) , Nowgato , and Moway ^ thc ^ e arcCspectively 202 , 80 , and 33 , making a total of 315 A vXntoer belonging to the Royal Arsenal corps has been summoned « t the Woolwich police court , and convicted in double tho amount ot nrroara duo for subscription . Not having sent m his notice ot reaigna-Son ho was hold still to belong to the corps 5 otherwise the remedy last week wore 9 C 8 , tho number of tho previous week being 1 , 018 , Tho avorLoof the las ton years being 1 , 148 ,, there is a iailing oft m tho morta lUy of London to the extent of 174 . on the theoretical mean ! mmber , and an actual diminution of 50 as compared with , the preceding W £ tiiv Tnmefl Wilson , formorly proprietor of tho Economist newspaper , » n ? tato MintoiS ¦ ofWSSoo in \ he Oounoil of India , dkd of chofora at Oa aiiTwitam toirSi new in «~ . T . ^^« ss ! ft ; Thp Intent news from Shnngiu ( whoro tro « Jo . m ijb " «» . ^ ot ^ sur ^ rpsr- « « pn *»* , thih
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Sept. 15, 1860, page 13, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_15091860/page/13/
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