On this page
-
Text (5)
-
Kb. 275, June 30, 1855.] T H E 1/ E A B ...
-
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM MEETING AT DRURY-L...
-
A WORKING PRINTERS' ASSOCIATION. The Lon...
-
OUR CIVILISATION. A Clerical Beggar.—Joh...
-
CONTINENTAL NOTES. Fkom Spain wo lenrn t...
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Mvali, Misckllanea. Pbtkopaulovhiu. — A<...
of joining a French force in a second attack on Petropaulovski . A Mysterious Prince at Genitchi . —A correspondent of the Times , describing the attack on Genitchi , says : — " A boat was sent in with a flag of truce , demanding that all shipping , Government stores , & c , should be surrendered without resistance , and promising that private property should be respected . The Governor of the place came down , but said he had no authority to surrender ; that there was a Prince there , who was his superior , and he would send to him . On being asked who the Prince was , he would not say , and seemed sorry that he had named him at all . The Prince soon came
down , and appeared to have been ill or wounded . On the previous demand being repeated , he said that he had no means of opposing us by sea , but that by land he should offer all the resistance in his power , and that he should not surrender the town . The German Legion in Heligoland . —A Hamburg letter says it would appear that the English Government intend to form in the island of Heligoland a general depot of warlike stores for the fleet in the Baltic . Huts , bedding , provisions , equipments , & c , continue to arrive . The Smaller States of Germany , according to a letter from Berlin , are quietly disarming , and giving every symptom that the Confederation does not look forward to any participation in the present war .
French Reinfokcements . — Orders have been received at Marseilles to prepare to embark an additional corps d'armee of 50 , 000 men . Rumour also speaks of a determination on the part of the French Emperor to carry the war farther into the enemy ' s territory . The Austrian Army . —The reduction of the Austrian army will , it is now stated , amount to 145 , 000 men , with 130 , 000 horses ; and , as the gaps which have been made in the army by sickness are not to be filled up , the diminution will in fact be to the extent of 170 , 000
men . The Fleet in the Baltic . — Our magnificent fleet in the northern seas continues as idle as it was last year . The capture or destruction of a few vessels , and the frightening of women and children , or occasionally of a body of armed men , from the shores into the interior forests , appears to be the utmost of an active nature ¦ which it affects . On the 9 th of June , the Magicienne came suddenly on an encampment of 3000 of the enemy , with six field pieces , on whom she opened fire , and , after killing several , forced the rest to retreat , with but small damage to herself . The same vessel subsequently destro 3 'ed some vessels laden with hewn granite for the defences at Cronstadt . Advices from Abo state that the English fleet is dispersed , and cruising along the coast of Finland .
Cron . stadt , according to a correspondent of the Times , is now twice as strong as it was last year . A land attack , which the writer considers was possible , in 1854 , is now , he asserts , quite hopeless . The place was then quite unprepared to resist the combined fleet and 30 , 000 troops ; but the opportunity was lost by us , and turned to account by the Russians . " Something , however , " adds the writer , " may yet be done ; but , should it be deferred until next year , it will be impossible . " An infernal machine , off Cronstadt , recently exploded under one of our small reconnoitring steamers , bulging some of her timbers , and ripping off a good deal of copper , but not inflicting any serious damage . Estcourt
Death of Adjutant-General . — On Tuesday evening , Lord Panmure received intelligence , by telegraph , of the death of J . Bucknall Estcourt , Adjutant-General of the Forces in the Crimea , of cholera . He was fifty-three years of age . Albania has refused to furnish the contingent demanded by the Porte , under pretence of disorders existing on the frontier of Montenegro . The Outrages at Kertch . —A letter from Sir Charles Wood to Mr . George Sumner has been published , showing that the Government , in consequence of certain representations made by'tho latter gentleman , telegraphed to Lord Kaglan to give orders for the protection of the Museum and other works of art at Kertch . _ . _
Lieutenant-Genkral Count Troth lias left Genoa for the Crimea , to talco the command of the second division of the Sardinian contingent , vacant through the death of Generul Alessandro Delia Marmora . —Daily Telegraph and Court * : !' . The Crimean Terror ami . —The Mouitcur of Sunday says : " The electric telegraph has boon broken in aoveral places since June 18 , and has not yet been completely restored to -working order . Tho cable which crosses the Danube at Giurgevo ia broken , and the communication between Bucharest and Prosliurg in interrupted . Along this Hcction , therefore , the despatches must needs bo transmitted by ' post . "
Kb. 275, June 30, 1855.] T H E 1/ E A B ...
Kb . 275 , June 30 , 1855 . ] T H E 1 / E A B E R ,. r 6 * 7
Administrative Reform Meeting At Drury-L...
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM MEETING AT DRURY-LANE . The second meeting of the Administrative Reform Association took pluco at Drury-lano Theatre on Wednesday evening , oil which occasion tho uluei speaker was Mr . Dickons , who , in a speech sparkling with wit and humour , throw some freshness upon the
arguments usually advanced in favour of the new movement . After an introductory speech by Mr Morley , the chairman , Mr . Dickens , who was received with great warmth , rose and said he would compress his remarks into the smallest possible compass . He commenced by referring to Lord Palmerston ' s taunt about the " private theatricals" at Drury-lane , and retorted by a humorous account of the play they were getting up—a play called The School of Reform , which they hoped would supplant The Comedy of Errors , for they had seen this played so dismally like a tragedy that they could no longer bear it . "I will not say , " remarked Mr . Dickens , " that , if I wanted to form a company of her Majesty ' s servants , I think I should know where to lay my hands on the comic old gentleman . '" This disclaimer was received with roars of laughter . Passing to a serious consideration of the subject , he observed : — " When the Times newspaper proved its then almost incredible case hi reference to the ghastly absurdity of that vast labyrinth of misplaced men and misdirected things , which had made England unable to find on the face of the earth an enemy one-twentieth part so potent to effect the misery and ruin of her noble defenders as she has been herself , I believe that the gloomy silence into which the country fell was by far the darkest aspect in which a great people had been exhibited for many years . ( Cheers . ) With shame and indignation lowering among all classes of society , and this newelement of discord piled on the heaving basis of ignorance , poverty , and crime—which is always below uswith little adequate expression of the general mind , or apparent understanding of the general mind , in Parliament , with the machinery of the Government and the Legislature going round and round , and the people falling from it and standing aloof , as if they left it to its last remaining function—of destroying itself , —when it had achieved that , the destruction of so much that was dear to them , I did and do believe that the only wholesome turn affairs so menacing could possibly take was the awaking of the people , the outspeaking of the people , the uniting of the people in all patriotism and loyalty to effect a great peaceful constitutional change in the administration of their own affairs . " ( Cheers . ' ) Having answered the usual objections brought against the Administrative Reform movement , and shown that , so far from " setting class against class , " it would have the effect of uniting all classes , Mr . Dickens mentioned , as an extraordinary instance of official routine , the employment until the year 1 S 26 of wooden tallies as a means of keeping Government accounts . The burning of " these preposterous sticks" in a stove of the House of Lords set fire to the two Houses of Parliament ; and , in the same manner , " all obstinate adherence to rubbish which the time has long outlived is certain to have in the soul of it more or less that is pernicious and destructive . " Alluding to Lord Palmerston ' s curt intimation to Mr . Layard that he must find a day for himself , on which to bring forward his motion , Mr . Dickens thus concluded : — " I would take the liberty of reversing that cool and lofty sentiment , and I would say , ' First Lord , your duty it is to see that no man is left to find a day for himself . ( Cheers . ) See you , who take the responsibility of government , who aspire to it , live for it , intrigue for it , scramble for it , who hold to it tooth and nail when you can get it , see you that no man is left to find a day for himself . ( Loud cheers . ) In this old country , with its seething , hard-worked millions , its heavy taxes , its swarms of ignorant , its crowds of poor , and its crowds of wicked , woe the day when the dangerous man shall find a day for himself , because the head of tho Government failed in his duty in not anticipating it by a brighter and a better . ( Here the whole House rose , and cheered loudly for several minutes . ) Name you the day , First Lord ; make a day , work for a day beyond your little time , Lord Pahnerston , and History in return may then—not otherwise—find a day for you ; a day equally ns . sociated with tho contentment of tho loyal , patient , willing-hearted English people , and with tho happiness of your Royal Mistress and her fair lino of children . ' " ( Loud and protracted cheering . ) Mr . T . M'Cullagli and Mr . F . Bennoch having addressed the meeting on tho general question of the corrupt mode of distributing offices by Government , Mr . Layard made some remarks , in the course of which he warned the public not to be led away by littlo successes in the present war , which would be a war of long duration , and pointed out , as one success already produced by the Administrative Reform movement , tho recognition of non-commissioned ofllccrs in Lord Rii £ ? lan ' s despatches .
A Working Printers' Association. The Lon...
A WORKING PRINTERS' ASSOCIATION . The London Society of Compositors has just established a very excellent institution in Raquot-court , Fleet-street . It may . bo doscribed as uniting tho benefits of a club , an educational body , a house of call , whero tho members of tho trado can moot and consult upon questions relating to their general
in-. terests , and a provident society , from which , during the quarter terminating at Midsummer , one hundred and eighty-five persons have received an allowance of ten shillings a week . A library and news-rooms are attached to the building ; but the former is at present only in the course of development . When completed , it will doubtless be of great , service in cultivating the minds of the members , who , after spending the greater part of their day in the mechanical creation of books , will in the evening be enabled to take the best volumes to their own firesides , and enlarge their intellects with the immortal essence—the spiritual souls—of libraries . The hardworked slaves of the composing-room will thus in time know something more of literature than what they now derive from bad copy and foul proofs . The London Society of Compositors has likewise , at its house in Raquet-court , a lavatory , and cooking and smoking-rooms . The institution , indeed , seems to be worthy of all praise ; and we are always glad to extend a knowledge of these efforts on the part of working-men to lif t themselves above the position of mere drudges , and to secure the priceless benefits of co-operation . Club-combination is a luxury among the rich : it may be a source of positive improvement to the poor .
Our Civilisation. A Clerical Beggar.—Joh...
OUR CIVILISATION . A Clerical Beggar . —John Elliot Hadlow , calling himself a clergyman of the Church of England , and boasting a great many aliases , has been recently charged at the Southwark police-court with obtaining money under false pretences . His uncle , a gentleman of independent property , described the prisoner as a worthless character ; but , as there was no evidence to prove that he was an impostor , he was discharged . Robbery of Shares . —A man named Sumner Phillips was on Monday committed for trial on a charge of stealing a box containing fifty shares in the Port Philip Mining Company , and other securities of great value , the property of Mr . Freeman Clark John Eoper , his master . —On Tuesday , Phillips was committed at the same court for stealing a watch . Assault on a Father and Brother . —Two young men were charged at the Worship-street police-court on Monday with a very violent assault on their father , their elder brother , and the police . They were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment . Daniel Mitchell Davidson and Cosmo Wiixjam Gordon were on Tuesday again remanded for another week , in order that evidence with respect to the frauds not connected with the bankruptcy might be prepared . In the meanwhile , Sir Peter Laurie has directed the City Solicitor to prosecute the case at the Old Bailey . Wife-Beating and Child-Starving . —Alexander Andrews , a house-painter , was charged at Worshipstreet with a violent assault on his wife . The -woman said she had four children , but that " they could scarcely be called live children , they were so nearly starved . " The story was the old one over again ; and the magistrate sentenced the fellow to three months of hard labour in the House of Correction—observing that the punishment would have been more severe but for the wife ' s admission that , after being ill-used for some time , she struck her husband in the face with a key . A Stran ge Case . —A fashionably-dressed woman , giving the name of Mary Louisa Sawyer St . Vincent , stating her address to be Tunbridge-street , New-road , and claiming relationship with several high families , was charged at Clerkenwell police-court with obtaining by false pretences goods and money from Mr . Sutton , a linendrapcr . It appeared that , upon the faith of the prisoner ' s statement that she was coming into a fortune , Mr . Sutton intrusted her , after about a fortnight ' s knowledge , with goods to tho value of 171 ., and money to the amount of 351 . In the course of examination , it came out that the prisoner ' s property was mortgaged , and that at the police-ollice she had given a false name and address . She herself stated that she had been entrapped into a marriage with a married man , and that she had assumed tho false name because she did not wish her family to bo disgraced . She was remanded , and bail was taken . _ IIknky 1-Iitmiil . kh , a Bucking hamshire shepherd , is m custody on a charge of killing "in wife , by kicking her several times in tho stomach under tho provocation of her abusive language . . Gkokok Whkati , ani > , tiik Eldkr , captain of a merchant Hliii > , and Goorgo Wheatland , tho younger , mate , were on Wednesday committed for trial at tho 1 names police offioo on four charges—tho captain for oinlicsssEleinont , fraud , and uttering forged instruments , and tho matt ; for forging tho bills with intent to defraud Mr . Edward Anthony , nhipowncr .
Continental Notes. Fkom Spain Wo Lenrn T...
CONTINENTAL NOTES . Fkom Spain wo lenrn that three of tho four men who nillairod tho mails near Madridejos have been arrested . The ( ioviTiunont lmvo decided Unit tho soldiers who took imrt in tho Into intmrroction ahull not bo decimated , but shall bo uont to tho coloniea for ten years . Various
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), June 30, 1855, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_30061855/page/5/
-