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No. 383,-Jura, ,25, - 1857.]- ' THE LEAD...
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suance of the provisions of an Admiralty...
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MISCELLANEOU S. The Court.—The Queen is ...
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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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Gatherings From The Law And Police Court...
formed , and money paid , in connexion -with the defendant ' s unsuccessful endeavours to become a legislator . Mr . Edwardes appears to have introduced himself to Mr . Smith on hearing that the latter was desirous of a seat in Parliament . He was engaged to manage matters ; and he persuaded Mr . Smith that he had a better chance at Bedford than at Bridport , for -which he originally stood . Mr . Smith therefore presented himself to the electors of that town , and Mr . Edwardes went down there as his agent . He wrote several placards , which were read in ooiirt , and which were written in a somewhat bombastic . style . In the course of his evidence , Mr . Edwardes said : — " One of iny objects at Bedford was to ascertain what prospect there was of effecting a coalition with the Tories . Accordingly , I waited upon Mr . Eagles , the agent for the Conservative party , and afterwards informed Mr . Smith what arrangements I had made with that gentleman . Mr . Eagles observed very properly , that he did not agree with the coalition , as being inconsistent with his character and position . I saw him almost every day after that .. We had no coalition , but we received very considerable support from the Tories . There was nothing binding upon the Tories as a party , but about one hundred and fifty voted for the defendant in consequence of my interview with the Tory agent . " .
Captain Stuart , the Conservative candidate , refused to have anything to do with the coalition ; but several Tories voted for Mi \ Smith because they were determined to defeat the . Whig candidates . When Mr . Smith presented himself at Bedford , the bells were ringing , and the inhabitants appeared to take great interest in the . arrival . " He came down in his own carriage , " said Mr . Edwardes in his evidence . " Did the people , " asked Lord Campbell , who tried the case , " take the horses out of his carriage , and drag him into the town ? " Mr . Edwardes replied , amidst some laughter , "They did not degrade themselves to that extent , although it is often done at elections . " In cross-examination , Mr . Edwardes said : — " I remarked during the election that . I thought the defendant was very distant , and appeared to think I was of no use to him , and that I would pack up my things and im hill : TVfV SlnnifH -Krnnlr ? nn ¥ . allstur rnt > Aftt > r * t . liA % ¦ # ¦ i / AUAkU VI b &«
f ^ V . ^^ ** ^ " ** o » ^ ^^ A &^^ U l * AA *^ If & Jt «^« ^ ^* v ^*& w & 4 t ^ Bedford election , I wrote to the defendant requesting an interview of ten minutes . I wanted him to give me a handsome letter to Lord Chelsea ' s committee , stating also that I wanted some money to enable me to make a proper appearance . I never received any reply to the half-dozen letters I sent . " Mr . Edwardes also undertook some business with respect to the Bodmin election ; but Mr . Smith did not stand after all . The case for the defence was that Mr . Edwardes , though a person inexperienced in such matters , and iu fact * a mere adventurer , ' had induced Mr . Smith to desert Bridport for Bedford , Mr . Edwardes asserting that he could get him in there , though it appeared by his own confession that he was a stranger in Bedford at the time . It was denied that , as asserted by the plaintiff , a retainer fee was paid , the money advanced being only for the necessary expenses . Mr . Smith , however , had since paid 40 / . to the plaintiff , and discharged his hotel bill ; and it was contended that this was quite sufficient remuneration , as Mr . Edwardes had done little el 3 e than smoke , drink lonionade , and read novels . This was confirmed by a good many witnesses ; and even one of the plaintiff ' s witnesses spoke to the same effect . Mr . Shelton , a Bedtoelector to London tne electioin
rn , came up . during n , company with Mr . Edwardes , went to Drury Lano Theatre , and seems to have ' made a night of it . ' He stated on the trial :- — " We had some champagne , saw the performances , and looked at the dancers , behind the curtains . After the champagne , w « -went to Evans ' s and heard some capital singing there . I was not introduced as a Bedford vocalist , nor did I propose the health © f the Queen of Oude ; but we had some capital fun . " The jury gave a general verdict for the plaintiff , which waa eventually entered for the sum of 60 / . and a fraction . Another Royal British Bank case has appeared in the law courts . The point to be decided came before Vloo-Chancellor Kindersley last Saturday , and was to this effect—whether the name of Mr . Brockwell could
legally be placed on the list of contributors upon the reference under the Winding-up Acts . Mr . Brockwell had purchased three 1 Q 0 J . shares in the bank in March , L 665 , and was registered and returned as proprietor , and in June he paid 50 / . deposit on each share . In the December following , ho received ono half-yearly dividond ; in Juno he rccoived another . Tho bank stormed
but an action which she intended to bring was also settled by compromise , with damages to the extent of 25 01 . The other company similarly amerced is the Manchester , Sheffield , and Lincolnshire line . Mr . Parkinson , a manufacturer at Barnsley , received a concussion of the brain from , an accident near Penistone . He therefore brought an action ; the company paid 150 / . into court , and the jury awarded 750 / . over and above that sum . All these actions came on at the York Assizes on Thursday week . A singular specimen of our diseased love of associations with great crinnihals came out in an action tried at the same Assizes . Mrs . Davis , a widow , was induced to take the Griffin Inn at Halifax on the representation of one Prest , tho owner , that the regular receipts of the house -were 24 / . a week , and that the establishment had a good connexion . She gave 80 / . for the goodwill ; but the average receipts per week proved to be only 11 . She therefore brought an action against Prest : and it was proved that , some time before the house was transferred to her , its business had been falling off , and that Prest , in order to get custom among a certain class , had hired as a waiter a man from Eugeley who had , it was said , acted as the executioner of Palmer , the murderer . This was made widely known , and
special trains crowded with passengers came from Rochdale to see this man , and receive their beer at his hands at the Griffin Inn . The ' chawbacon , ' as he was described , waited on the customers in a smockfrock ; but so far from restoring the custom of the house , the proceedings , after the first novelty was over , appeared to disgust and drive away the " regular customers . The case occupied portions of two days , and concluded with a ( verdict for the plaintiff ; damages , 80 / . A rather remarkable action for libel was tried at the ( same city last Saturday . A person , named John Ellis , 1 living at Goole , had published and posted up a placard containing a covert allusion to a Mr . Alfred Small , { printer and publisher of the Goole and Marshland Ga- i zette , in . which it was said that that person ( designated ] in the placard as Mr . Alfred Little ) would receive sub- c o * - ** " ! ntirkTia ¦ IVm * o i */\ t \ o f */\ Vionnr r \ na I ^ ilT"lrA 51 rp f . Il'infT Q 11— ?
perintendent of poli-ce . Mr . Small being annoyed at this , published in his paper the following advertisement : —" John Ellis , plumber , glazier , and bill-sticker , Ouse-street , Goole . Dirty jobs done at all hours of the night . " Ellis ' s brother , an attorney , at Leeds , then wrote a letter to Mr . Small , demanding an apology in the newspaper . To this Mr . Small replied by a letter , justifying the libel , asserting the strict accuracy of the statements , and adding that John Ellis was an open professor of infidelity ; that his commonest speech was a ' damn ; ' that he was ready at any time to say that all religion is ' a damned humbug ; ' and that he was generally known as ' Blackguard Ellis . ' Hereupon Ellis brought his action . Witnesses were called by him , who stated they did not know him to be irreligious , though he did use the word ' damn' sometimes , but only ' like other people . ' One witness , moreover , had heard him called ' Blackguard Ellis . ' The plaintiff himself admitted that he never went to church at Goole , but said that was because he did not like tho clergyman . Baron Watson , in summing up , condemned the foolish conduct of both parties , but added that Mr . Small ' s letter was clearly actionable . The jury , gave a verdict for count ot
the plaintiff ; damages , one shilling on each the declaration . The Judge granted a certificate to carry costs . Phillip Solomons , a trimming-seller in Bishopsgatestreet , waa charged at Worship-street on Tuesday with a cruel assault on a boy . Some fragments were being swept out of the shop into the street , and the lad picked a few of them up . He was told several times to go away , but , being rather deaf , ho did not hear , and therefore remained . On this , Solomons seized the broom , and struck tho boy so violently over the head that ho bled profusely , and it was found necessary to take him to a surgeon ' s . His mother was just confined , and , on hearing of the circumstance , she was so excited that she I was thrown into a dangerous state . Solomons , on being
brought before the magistrate , expressed his sorrow , and the caso was settled by tho father accepting a pecuniary compensation . Mr . Gordon Gumming , the Lion-hunter of South Africa , has appeared at tho borough police-ollico , Liverpool , on a charge of assaulting two persons in the Grand . Tmintinn ITotnl . TJnn » . Rt . rnr > t . T-Tn is n . t . nrosnnt crlvinir f v ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦
v w ^ ^ ^^ tw ' ^* * " ^ v ^ yr ^ " ^^ ** * t ^~^ — ^^ " ^* " ^^ ^^ ™ — *^ 'v ™* pw * ^ ^* . ^ ^^ ¦^ ^— ' ~ ™~ ^^» —~ * ~~ ~ ^^ J his entertainment in tho groat northern city , and , on tho 14 tli iust ., was supping at tbo hotel , when , according to his version , two gontlamen got into conversation with him and two of lib friends about tho American frigate Niagara . Ono of tho strangers made sonio insulting observations on tho English flag , and challenged Mr , Camming nnd his friends to light , saying ho would ' take tho bounce out of nil three of them- ' Mr . CuinminK accepted tho challenge , and gave tho man a sound thrashing ; for , as ho explained to tlio inugiatratos , ho novor does things of that kind by halves . On tho pthor hnnd , tho complaiuunta aaUl they wore attacked without provocation . Tho magistrates , however , disboliovod thorn , and dismissed tho summons .
payment last September . Mr . Brockwoll ' s case was , . that , when ho discovered tho real nature of tho dealings of tho bank , ho claimed to bo entitled to repayment of his subscription , into tho payment of which he had boon led by fraudulont roprosontations , and especially by tho reports ieauod from time to time by tho directors . After much argument , tho case was postponed till a subao-U « ent day , jOwUota with heavy damages liavo boon given , or taken by consent , in the case of two railway companies on account of aooidontB on thoir linos . Tho Midland BftHway Company has had to pay 1000 A to tho oxooutrix of Thomas Bnteaon ( a surgeon at Lancaster ) on bahalfof hia children , Mr . Batoaon having boon killed « y an accident on Uio lino laat February . Tho verdict ¦ waa agreed to aftor consultation between tho respective lawyers . A Mra . Halatead , who accompanied him on what occasion , was alao severely injured , sho and Mr . mtapon boing run over by a train at tUo SpMIq option j
No. 383,-Jura, ,25, - 1857.]- ' The Lead...
No . 383 ,-Jura , , 25 , - 1857 . ] - ' THE LEADER . 705
Suance Of The Provisions Of An Admiralty...
suance of the provisions of an Admiralty circular dated the 23 rd of last February . The Illustrious , 72 , Captain Robert Harris , is being fitted with accommodation by the dockyard artificers at Portsmouth for the first instalment of naval cadets who received nominations on the 1 st of May to pass on the 5 th of August . The Illustrious is , we believe , to be stationed off Block-house , near the Gosport shore , which affords room alike for nautical observations and aquatic exercises . The appointment of the Rev . R . M . Inskip , chaplain and naval instructor on board her Majesty ' s ship Victory , to be chaplain and first naval instructor to the cadets has been made . The cadets are to remain in the Illustrious different periods , proportioned to their ages , those of thirteen remaining twelve months , and those verging upon fifteen only six months . Their course of study comprises Euclid , algebra , nautical astronomy , French , and drawing , and their practical course ( which Ls the primary object of the placing them in a training ship before sending them on sea service ) will consist of instruction in rigging ships , managing boats , and the general principles of manoeuvring ships at sea , thus furnishing the ground work on which their future professional knowledge is to be based . —Times . The Sardinian Medals . —Colonel IJloonifield ,
aidede-camp to the Queen , and commandant of the Woolwich garrison , distributed the Sardinian medals , last Saturday , to the Royal Artillery regiment . . The Queen at Aldershot . —Her Majesty and the Court paid another visit to Aldershot last Saturday , when various military evolutions were performed . Rapid Voyage from New York . - ^ -The Persia fRoval mail steamer ) has reached Liverpool from New STork in nine days , one hour , and fifteen minutes , being jne hour and twenty-five minutes shorter than the . celebrated trip las . t August , which was then unparalleled . The Bengal Army .- —Some correspondence has jassed between Sir William Gomm and Lord Mel-• ille with respect to the observations , derogatory to the Bengal Native Army , made by the latter in the House > f Lords on the 13 th inst . Sir William Gomm asserts Tiat- wlion lio loft f-. Tie command of that armv . in
January , 1856 , it fully deserved the encomiums he passed on it ; and he quotes the opinions of the Duke of Wellington , Lords Hardinge and Gougb , and Sir Charles Napier , as confirming his own views . The Santal insurrection , he observes , was suppressed by the Bengal army , " without the assistance of a corporal's guard of 13 ritish troops , or any other auxiliaries . " Lord Melville replies by supporting his statements by various facts , and by the assertion that the opinions of Lord Hardinge and Sir Charles Napier were on his side of the question . He also remarks that Sir Edward Paget , thirty years ago , formed a correct estimate of the morale of the Bengal army ; and that the late General Anson , ever since he had the command , represented the necessity of an increase of tbe European force ., Nevertheless , Lord Melville does not think Sir William Gomm in any way to blame for the bad discipline of the army . Troops for India- —Large bodies of troops continue to depart for India . Chatham Dockyahd . —The Lords of the Admiralty paid their annual official visit of inspection to Chatham Dockyard on Wednesday .
NAVAL AND MIL 1 TAUY . Naval Education . —A now ayfltom of training naval oadots la About to oonao into oporatlom nflont , in pur-
Miscellaneou S. The Court.—The Queen Is ...
MISCELLANEOU S . The Court . —The Queen is at present staying at Oabome . The Globe believes there is no foundation for the statement that her Majesty will visit France in ths autumn . The Representation of Woodstock . —Tho death of the Duke of Marlborough , and tho consequent elevation to the House of Poors of tho Marquis of Blnndford , creates a vacancy in tho representation . Lord Alfred S . Churchill , a brother of tho present duke , who was M . P . for Woodstock from December , 184 . 5 , to July , 18-17 , has therefore issued nu address to tho electors . It . is exceedingly vngue iu its proinisos , but sooms to india . i ^ a rt / Y > n « si ** n 1 nt \ \\ sivstvm rk ah \ - \ t \ nn ft- f \ F ll I a T , r \ r / 1 » ll \ In # T »
moderate Conservatism . The Land Transport Corps . —The report of tho Soloct Committee of the House of Commons on tho Land Transport Corps has been handed in and published . Tho committee declare that tho discharge of tho corps immediately on its return from tho Crimea wna not in
violation of tho terms of its enlistment ; but they think , on tha other hand , that tho mode of dinclinrging tho men was , with few exceptions , not in accordance with tho usual rules and regulations of tho service . They regrot that tho service regulations woro not more strictly observed , and advert to tho impolicy , to say nothingworso , of alienating tho goodwill of our artieann , whoso sorvloo-i may bo again needed for the support and "furtherance or tho moBt important Interests of tho country , by nny act of injustice or « ny display of nn ungenerous spirit towards thorn . They rocoimnend that tho unsettled claims of tho Land Transport Oon >* should bo carofwUy examlnod by tho department which employed thorn , « nd that all those justly made should bo frankly aokuowlodffoU and gouorou « ly discharged . 'Ihoy oono udo by calling attention to tho want of unity and combination which characterized tho rolatlon ., of tho Secretary for War with tho Conimmi < lor-in . Chief with roforonco to tho formation of tho Laud Transport Corps .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), July 25, 1857, page 9, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_25071857/page/9/
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