On this page
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
Untitled Article
the R ossington station , when an axletree of one of the trucks broke , and threw the truck across the down line . The express came up at the instant , punctually to its time and dashed into the broken train at full speed . The engwe-driver ^ toker , , and three passengers were seriously iniured , neither fatally . . Another illustration of the carelessness of railway officials has occurred on the Bristol and Birmingham line . About a mile from j ; he Cheltenham station there is a coal depdfc . A coal train was shunted across the rails at the moment a passenger train from . Cheltenham was due ; fog prevailing at the time ! A collision of course ensued , and several passengers-were bruised .
Untitled Article
MISCELLANEOUS . The Queen holds her Court still at Windsor , and continues the theatrical performances begun lasiweek . The second dramatic performance took place on Thursday evening . Tlie pieces selected upon this occasion were a Oomedy , in three acts , by Mr . Slfagsby Ija-vyrence , entitled the Game of Speculation , and a Comic Drama , in one act , by Mr . Charles Matthews , entitled Little Toddlefcvns .
Untitled Article
A Special Court of the Corporation of the Trinity-house was held on Wednesday , for the purpose of swearing in the Earl of Aberdeen as an elder brother . Prince Albert , Master of the Corporation , presided on the occasion , and was supported by Sir J . Crraham , , Tirat Lord of the Admuraity , Captain Shepherd , Deputy-Master , and the other elder brethren . ... . The Duke and Duchess cf f Brabant have been on a visit to Plymouth and' Torquay , this week ; there inspecting the wonders of our arsenal , shipping , and the breakwater . Lord Fullerton , one of the Scotch judges , has resigned
his " post , in consequence of ill-health . Salford has now a aiew building for its Mechanics' Institution . It was opened on Monday , and , at the evening gathering , Mr . Brotherton , Mr . Hindley , Mr . Bayley , and other local gentlemep of note attended . _ A meeting of British residents in Paris has been held at Meurice ' Hotel , to honour the memory of Lieutenant Bellot ; and it has been , resolved to erect a tablet , in an appropriate place , with a suitable inscription . Lord Seafield is the new representative peer for Scotland , in the room of the late Lord
Salterinu-The Count Walewski , the French Ambassador at this Court , has been summoned to France , to attend his Imperial master , but will reiurn in a few days . —Times . It is reported at Sunderland that on the meeting of Parliament Mr . Hudson will apply for the stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds . The Conservatives speak of Mr . Duncan Dunbar as his successor . — -Tory Paper . Before he was recalled , Canedo , the Captain General of Cuba , prohibited the entry of the Daily News into the island . The reason for this was that tho British journal has consured the authorities for conniving at the slavo trade . Canedo says it is " calumny . " Lord Minto is at Florence , his hotel watched by tho spies of the police ! , . , .
Untitled Article
The Tynomouth Bribery Commission opened its sittings on " Wednesday . Tho contest , at Salisbury , ended abruptly , on Wednesday by the resignation of the " independent" candidate , Captain Julius Itoberts . At two o ' clock tho Captain had Only obtained 88 votes , while his opponont , General Buckley , Xiberal-Conservativo , had polled 255 . The mob pelted tho General , and would not hear him . On Monday evening last tho working men of Hull prosontod silver tankards to their lato riiembers , Lord Godorich and Mr . Clay , who wpro unseated lost session . Tho ox-Mayor , Mr . Blundell , presided on the occasion . The mooting was largo , and Mr . Clay and Lord Godorich made amplo speeches . ¦
TT * fc ^ — - mm . m . ^ . mm -m * M m * . * fe I ** Birmingham has again bestirred itself on behalf of tho repeal of taxes on knowledge . A public meeting was hold this-week at the Public Office , Birmingham , Mr . Boodlo , of tho Birmin gham Journal , in the chair ; the purpose being to tako into consideration the best moans of aiding tho removal of tho two remaining taxes upon the uso of paper and on a free press . After a Btatomont had boon made by Mr . Dod » on Collet in reforonco to the general 'MiflincK . s of tho mooting , it wan resolved , on the motion of ¦ M r . Cleorgo Moir , that a further effort bo made in
Birmingham to assist tho oxertions of tho Central Association ; and Mr . Scholettold , M . I * ., and tho Mayor , wero respectively appointed president , and trensuror of tho association . Ayloabury lias refused Church Kate . At a vestry meotm on Friday weok , a proposed rato of Id . in tho pound "nil with ho limch opposition that it was withdrawn . Tho «« m required lor ro-povving tlio ehinuli is proposed to ho mined us follows : —\ m ) l . by allotting 400 of tho new Beats •¦<> s ubserUiers , 320 L by donation from tho Incorporated J . 'hurcli Building Society , and 370 / , by voluntary
contribu-An important preliminary committeo mooting was hold ° . u Niilur day lanl ; , nt Birmingham , under the presidency of " >« Ripht JIom . Sir J . H . I ' ukinglon , Bnrt ., attondodby Mr . y - < Adderlo y , M . P ., Mr . 0 . It . . » rncnbri ( lgti , Sir F . E . Keott , * % Jlov . Sydnoy Turnnr , tlio town olork , and other gentlemen ; avIk ,,, j ;] 1 ( , | () rxu o j- ftI 1 | nvijatiou t , o the Conference ou ¦ uvtmiln Delinquency proposed to bo hold at Dee ' s Hotel , ^ "ning ljam , on Tuesday , December 20 , was adopted , and 'j'tttigoriHintH made for -ensuring that , it should bo gohrtiuiy circulated , with aviow to a largo attendance It was . nnounced that several noblemen and gonUoitaon of tho ; ° of Commons , in addition to tho ' Mayor of Binning-, i I ¦ ' . K ° ntl « inon throughout iho country who kv « . HUri ffuiHh <)( l thoinnolvoa for their interest ; In tlio question , f , " 7 , ° ' iltmil y indicated their- intention to attend tho Con-Sii '' t ' i ' ftomo o ' whom it will bo convened , including ...,:, tI () i l ^ ikington and Mr . Addorloy , who , it . will bo nuhi < Orm 1 ' lirou ff' » t into Parliamont tl ^ o M ' » U on tho ) c « t ; tho Mayor an < 5 tlio' Kocordor of Birmingham
the Bishop of Worcester ; Lord Denbigh , Lord Calthorpe , and Lord . Lyttelton ; to whom we have also to add the Lord Mayor of Londqn ; and other distinguished individuals . , A vestry meeting of the parish of Sit . MaW i Lambeth , was held ' on Tnursday , ^ in the new vesfcr ^ iall , Kennington-green . Wit ]( i reference to the Gomrnissiohers of Sewers , resoluwons were ^ adopted in favour of appointing a deputation to impress on Lord Palmerston tie necessity of' protecting the interests of the ratepayers by introducing a representative system , and inviting the rector and churchwardens to take into their serious consideration the present state of the dwelling's of the poor , and to confer with
the parocMal officers , wjth the members for the borough , and with owners of property in the parish , as to the best means of remedying the evil . Mr . Williams and Mr . Wilkinson , the members for the borough , were present . Sir Eobert Kane distributed the prizes at the Queen ' s College , Cork , on Saturday . Mr : Fagan . and Mr . Beamish , the city , members , were present . After the distribution of the prizes , the President delivered an address , in which , after bearing testimony to the uniform excellent conduct of the students since the opening of the College , he said , — "We have had , pursuing their studies together in this college , in each ' -year ,- some 150 yoUng men , of various social conditions , of various degrees of intellectual capacity , and of various forms ; of belief , and there has not
occurred among ' . those masses of students a smglc instance of controversy or collision ; not in a single case has it been necessary to apply those rules of discipline wisely provided by our statutes for the repression of serious irregularity of conduct ; and in the higher responsibilities of morality and religion , I believe I may appeal to the reverend gentlemen , who being officially connected with this college have favoured me with the expression of their views , and who consider the conduct of the students in those regards to merit their full approval . " Mdlle . Sophie Cruyelli , on Saturday last , signed an
engagement with the Opera for two years , at a salary of 4000 ? . sterling a-year . She is to choose her own parts , to play only twice a week , and to have four months' vacation in each year . In case she is called upon to sing three times a week , the ' extramgnt-is to be paid 60 ? . A separate engagement is entered into for two months of her ' edfl ^ , during the Universal Exhibition of 1855 , at the rate of 1000 Z . per month , so , that the salary for the second year will , in fact , be 6000 Z .: —O-alignani . On reading the quotation which' closes the manifesto just issued by the Emperor of Prussia , the Sultan relieved his mind in Turkish verse , of which the following is a literal
translation : — . ? ' Setting off on your wars , you sing a Te Detim , As if you'd already made tnwm of meum ; Just now you prefer the accusative case , But the nominative soon will appear in its place : For ( not to . observe that this terrible fuss "Will certainly provo in the end Te-dious ) , Those who chant out Te Deum at matins must , later , At vespers sinar small Dcus miserahor . "
— Morning Chronicle . It appears that there is a Dutch fleet in tho Mediterranean . Tho Frins Van Orange , frigate , bearing tho flag of Admiral Bouriciers , was at Smyrna on tho 29 fch of October , on -which day the Halembang , frigate , was despatched to Malta , arrived thero on the 5 tli of Novombor , and was to sail on the 8 th for the Texel . Tho Zeebond , brig of war , was also at Smyrna , about to proceed to Nauplia . Tho Makassar , schooner of war , was on the 7 th of November hourly looked for at Malta from tho Texel .
A significant fact was mentioned at Portsmouth , on Tuesday , in reference to tho rolations existing at presont between this country and ltussia . A gentleman , formerly in the dockyard thero , who had accepted n situation in tho Russian dockyard at Cronstadt with a vory handsome salary , had returned thoro that day , reporting that all tho English artisans in tho norvice of Russia have boon disohargcrl . Their number was vory considerable . Ton o-unnors and drivers have boon added to each of tho field batteries of tho Royal Artillery , making tho present strength of gunners and drivers in each battery 128 men . Tho strength of tho batteries during tho lost war was 120 gunners to each battery ; but at , that time ther « was a corps of drivers exclusively attached to tho horses and not included in tho 120 for serving and working tho guns . The men and horses of tho batterios are at present in excellent condition , and have on every occasion , whon tho weather is favourable , plenty of exorcise .
The Russian Church aflbcts toleration . Of tlio vast population of fully (> O , OOO , 0 ( X ) , only about 4 . fi , < KK ) , ( KX ) are membern of tho regular Church ; 350 , 000 aro dissenters or heretics to that , Church itself ; 3 , 500 , 000 Roman Catholics aro found throughout the wide domains of tlio Czar ; and fully 260 , 001 ) Armenians . Tho Protestants of tho Augsburg Confession of . Faith amount to 2 , 000 , 000 ; thoso of tho Reformed Church to 54 , ( KX ) . Thoro aro IOjOOO Morarians , while no leem than 2 , 500 , 000 belong to tho
Mahometan creed . The . lews are 600 , 000 in number , and tho followers of that mysterious potentate , the Grand Lama of Thibet amount to no lens than half that amount . But thero aro miodfl fitill more extraordinary throughout tho onorinouH traol ; of territory which conatituttu ) tho Russian empire ; 170 , 000 are open idolators , and no less than ( HX ) , O () o ' iire addicted to the disgiiHtingpraetiooof Fotichimn , worflhipp ing hats , cows , and every uncouth specimen of bruto , tw repreHontativeof tho divinity of honvon . ' —barker ' s national Miscdhtw / .
Untitled Article
Wo omit ; our usual criminal record under that title , boeauso the easefl this week bavo been of (( into an ordinary character . Thoro lias boon one- case of bigamy , ono of denm'ting a wife and family , two of assaults ou tho police , nnd the ordinary run of potty thefts and frauds . TonoB , a priionw , ehargod wiWi flto ' aling a wnt ; eh , at Iho Mif ^ lhiHiud BeHiiioiis , told an ( extraordinary flt » ry . Iri extenuation of hid offence , ho said that in . Tnmiftry hint ho left tho WoHtininnlor Bridowoll , whore ho had boon for 12 rnontlis , \ yitih tho best , of , olianuitiu'fl mid a euit of olothes and half-a-crcrwn . Ho then got work at a , houao in tho
course of erection near the prison , and remained there , giving great satisfaction , until a boy who had known him in prison , and happened to be assisting the workmen , told them that he ( Jones ) was a convicted thief . The workmen told the foreman , and he was in consequence discharged . He then obtained work at the Queen's Palace , which was being repaired . It was there found out again that he had been in prison , and was turned away . He afterwards got some work in Old-street , and a policeman came and told his master the old story that he was a convicted thief , and he was for the third time turned away . He had wished to have gained an honest living , but he found this was impossible , as , wherever he worked , as soon as it was found out , by people informing against him , that he had been in prison , he was at once turned away . A policeman threw great discredit on the story , and the judge ordered dn inquiry .
Sarah Clarke , walking along Oxford-street , fancied Emma Jones insulted her , and thereupon , saying , " What do you look at '' me for ? " thrust her umbrella in the eye of Miss Jones . She was very properly fined 51 . or six weeks in gaol . James ffanna , a policeman , had a butter-tub and lost it . He met an old woman , named Webb , carrying it along the street . Hanna declared the tub was Ins , and hurried the woman to the station-house , having previously boat and kicked her . He was fined 40 s ., or a month ' s imprisonment .
Mr . Boddy , a surgeon , lost his daughter . She was missing a fortnight . He suspected , at length , what was the fact—she had become a Catholic . Applying to the Lambeth magistrate for aid to recover her from the Clapham nunnery , where he believed she was , Mr . Elliott advised him to apply to Dr . Grant , " Bishop of Southwark , " Dr . Grant gftve Mr . Boddy a note to the lady at the convent , arid she referred them , to the Servants' Home . Here Mrs . Boddy found her daughter . The ' girl cried very much , said she was perfectly at liberty there , and expressed her fear that she would hot be allowed to attend the church
of her adoption . She was taken home . The horrid murder of the little girl at Dunster , Somersetshire , seems to have been brought home to the stone-cutter , Bailey . When he was arrested , a knife was found upon him ; his trouaers were bloodstainedj and in the barn where the body of the poor little victim was found , there ^ as a buckle-strap identified as belonging to Bailey . The Court of Common Pleas has decided an important
case bearing on freehold land societies . It came before tho Court on an appeal from the decision of tho revising-barrister of HSTorth Lancashire . The appellants wero the owners of undivided shares in freehold property in Preston . A portion of this property was let under agreement that the tenant should pay 40 s . a-vear for it to the landlords , on tho terms that they should jmy the poor-raxos , waterrate , and local hoard of Health-rate . The revising-barrister held that the annual value did not amount to 40 s . a-year , but that the real annual value was 40 s . mimis tho rates .
On this decision a number of votes now depended , and tho joint owners appealed from it . The Court wero of opinion , that tho tenant's rates , being paid by the landlord , must be deducted . All the landlord got was 40 s . for tho land and for an agreement to pay the rates , which was tho same thing as though he had agreed to pay for the tenant ' s beer . Ho did not recoive 40 . 9 . a-year for his land . The revising-barrister had no very diflicult task in deciding on this question ; and tliat moderately difficult task ho had performed very well , and bad como to a right- conclusion . Andrews , a tailor in Cork-street , Bond-street , sued Mr .
Douglas Jorrold in the Sheriffs Court for a debt of 191 . ( is ., " for clothes delivered at his request to Mr . Henry Mayhew . " This was a ease of contradictory testimony . Androws contended that Mr . Jorrold had told him t < i " make tho clothe * ordered , and no more . " Mr . Jorrold , on the contrary , said ho had told Andrews that Mr . May hew " good for 10 £ . " In . answer to a question , Mr . Jerrold said Mr . Mayhew vrns eight years younger than ho was . Mr . tliider-Shcriff Burchcll facetiously remarked that that answer was rather avoiding the question , which was as to Mr . Muyhew's ago . Mr . Jorrold . —I am fifty .
Mr . tlndcr-Sheriir Burchell . —I hope thai , is not considered " elderly . " ( Laughter . ) Mr . Hawkins . —Ho is no chicken , then . Mr . Jorrold . ~ Oh , no , he is no chicken . ( Laughter . ) Tho ^ jviry believed tho evidonco of Mr . Jerrohl , and gave a verdict for him . A singular cane of breach of promise of marriugo came before tho Bail Court on Thursday . Hard , a retired Serjeant , courted a young widow and jeweller b y ( . ratio . Hard urged his suit with such warmth uj ) on Chalfont , tho father , that ho consented i <> tho match . Horn is hifl dramatic account of the conclusion of the bnrgnin : — " Some days after this tho defendant and my daughter came to my house together . . Ifo was vory uneasy for marriage , and wished to be married . I said , ' May j understand Mr . ll ' ai'd winhos to many you P Do you think you can love Mr . Hard , and inako him a good wife ? ' Hlio 1 out
said , ' I can , father . ' Ho sprang forward , andput , bin right hand , and my daughter rimu up and putu her hand tmiftok into his- I presses ' em together like that ., an hard an I could wquoozo thoiu both towtlior . I said , ' 1 boo you are now both happy and pleased , anil I hope you will remain no , and , vnrtunlly ypeaking , I consider you aro now roally married . ' I Haw there wiis a little move made , and a hoMIo produced , and Homo wine and water wnH made . X took a little drop neat . Ho urged very much I ' or Monday , thin being Friday . I was tho only person who overruled it ., i'or lie was ho very obstinate . Ho told mo ho Lad liought . a license , atid it would 1 )« carried out on Monday . I told him thoro was not time to draw the deed up—tho marriage covenant . Tho Thiirmlny following woh thon fixed foe tho marriage . They romAinod about , two hours , u . ud went away together . " Hard bought a ring , nnd pjava it to " May , but ho aftorwttrdH altered Inn mind , and wont and marriod somebody olso . " Damagou 60 / .
Untitled Article
NQVjSMgEB 19 , 1853 . ] ' THE LEADER . 1113
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 19, 1853, page 1113, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2013/page/9/
-