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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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iovT ? ANp . MttNE ' r . ii-In the Rolls Court on Monday the ^ aae of Ford-t > . the Earl of Chesterfield was heard ; the caste being realty one in which the fiatfl Of'Chesterfield soiignt . the payment , by MrrTfaonrasPuncombe , ' of the Sam of 69 yOOO ( . A deed produced recited that a marriage contract hsdjibsea eptered . ioto between . Mr * . Pancombe and Mrs . . "SlmKijby ,, and that the . , l £ arl ; of , CjiepJ , erfield , in consideration of Mrs . Slingsby covenanting to pay . the , interest on the ^ 38 , 000 ? ., and . also , " in consioleratloa of 420 £ paid down , agteed to extend the period "for payment of the 38 , 000 ? . Htrrtil tiiia 5 th of Jane , ls 4 l , ' and that if payment of that sunSWere- then made he ' would forego the whole of the-debt . The-8 » , 000 / . was not paid-sit the time , nor was any interest paid , and , in consegutmce , the Earl of Chesterfield sned Mrs . SIhagsty for the interest , and she , has since paid 10 , 500 J . on
tftat accoontj but the marriage -which was then contemplated bpfeYeien , her and Mr . t ) uQcpmbe , t > as . not . taken place . The cjase , wffs j \ ow . brought ? before Jhe Court on suipnions from cbawb-pra , WS qu ' estjon ' submitfe ' d bein £ r whether the Earl < jf Chesterfield was ' erititTed to . th ^ yiiole of the 69 , < jOQt or only to , the 38 , 000 / . and whether ; Mrs ; . " Slingsbv was entitled to be second enchmbifattcef ' , after payment ' or the 38 . 0 OOL or the'B ^ Ofifl / . ' It 'Was rulea lhat the EarVtfas entitled to the whale-amount ; Mrfe SKHgdby becoming second encumbrancer . i € &yksv . Aij ff AxmoB ©© afcFwasjv—li&e half-yearly meeting of this company , -was , held , oil Thursday , land-, the report was ttdppfced with general expressions of confidence . 300 , 0007 . is to , ^ b p rnowed i . jn > Ho | dit « invto : the ^ OGOyOOOf . capital raised ; and ^ jtoia , the ( directors- , expect . -will ; complete the "whole O H Q It * A VI OVnonf nfli ^ Vt T # FrtC nfnA dr % ir . J % ± k . ii 4 . V . K « , n ^ l «•»«^
. _ _ or the Gilding ajnu'the interest on loans will be covered by the receipts from' seabn ' tieKetsVrefreshfnents , and , exhibition fen t ^ , ' aiid that the moneyfir 6 m . daily visitors wiD all be appHbabfle to dividends . ' Witih respect td tie teonterriplated proposal ^ for -adialttihg shareholders 6 » Sundays ,-it "was ! &tt nounced that a legal opinion-- has : bean -gi ? en '< $ f the possibility S&Hs / in ^ lid ^ in ^ iUaLe ^ liajtejv andithe point / was , therefore , fi > r , ; the ^ rcsentiTeitMmwn « t , The , teetotaller * , headed by Mr . Gilpra , attempted to carry their point , against tbe ' sale of ^ niriJnous ! ' matters ;; . but they . were in a miserable , though $ P . &J ^ minority- .. The . ichainpa ' n patronjsingty said of the oraerli ^ ss' ^ f the pedple , even when feeding : " . That fact "vitoiiir ' rips sufficient totsatisfy any reasonable person of the necessity of ' refresKnjents and , nonliability of the working
classes to drunkenness when the eyes of respectable people were ' upon th ' em ^ aad whe n they bid' ¦ extraor dinary writs of art and nature to arrest their attention and-induce inquiry . " . : " Gpjipocatiori ! ' niet ,. in . dne . course ,- an Thursday . The 4 ? f ti ' sr News says : T- " One of those ephemeral sittings which seem to delight its partisans as affording symptoms that it realjy has a dennite existence . It was born in the morning , iiTBii ^ jed before evening . The propositions of its members partook of that sort of , daring which is known to fill the mincKof people inth'dlast Stage of . despair . " The Bishop of"Lpitdon ph&ented' a report from fa committee ] appointed to'Consider and report to the tipper house of Convocation , witll a view to address her Majesty tlierebn , whether any , and if so , what reforms in the constitution of Convocation < ajte expedient to enable it to treat with the full confidence of ot such her be
, tae . (^ iiurch matters as Majesty may pleased to , submit to its deliberations . _ The Lower House attacked tne , question of church-rates ,: but . without much effect . The paper in which Dr .. 'Wordsworth directed the attention of th « 'ho ; u 5 e to the ' subject ' was ordered to be laid on the table . - Archdeacbh'A . Heni made a boia flight . He thought it was tlie duty of the TState to deal with the temporalities of the Ohin-ch ; leaving the Ghrirch to deal-with the spiritualities : < Headers will retnetnber the recent cnise of the two convicts wlu > , . sliut up . with a . policeman in a ; railway-carriage , slrattorci tlieir handcuff : ) , fell upon-tho officer j one escaping , by leaping , . from ; Uie truxp . ;( ftfterwar « la . eaught ) , and the other » W } n& »»• deadly stau £ g ! e ., with j , l ) 0 brave ppliceman , happily intcrjruj ) bed by thp arrival 9 ? l ^ e ^ rain ' . up a station . They DayOee *) triad at York assizes this week for that and their
preliminary offence , for ' yyhjch 'thoy , w # re in custody , and sentence ¦ of deatlv hila been recorded against the more ferocto'hs rnlUan . ' Tile policeman will suffer during his lifetime froni the' injuries he received . ' - A . etoam-boiler , at a- calico-mill , Rochdale , exploded on Saturday morning last , and , by its cffects . kiHed , wotmdod , or scalded , a great number of the workpeople . The magistrates are finding that the Butting Housed Act is a dead failure ;— -the evil , under aortic other form , oxiata , and is "bediming td fbrco ' itself on ' attention . At aiartbot-ough-Btreot ^ a > - •?• literary sporting gentleman , " ivppenrsto bo' •? ' Joe Muggins's Dog , " has summoned , and cui 6 eifc to bo fitted 60 / . ; a fellow keeping a coffeo-ahop in I ^ Mon . streot-, llayinuiket , and ciirryihg on the betting business ( fraudUlontly ) 'in rtn up-atiiira room . : ¦ Ire Ireland jurymen do ; not often hold railway shaica—. and fiklhvay U-aveHIng i » , therefore , eafer : —At tlio WexfoW A « $ izes , on 'Monday , the 6 n \ u \ n children of Mr . Und MtB . 'jWacswceney got-6 , 000 ? . drtimigos against tlio Great
bonttiem nnd Western Knilway Coin puny , on nccovmt of the less of theii * futlier-and mother , Mlfo wore killed by the iviilvvfay accident ht Strrtffun last autumn . ' Thb Royal Agrfoiiltunil Socioty Is liulding its useful annual fnatirHl at Lincoln : —?' Hero the cause or ' agricultural imnrovemont is surrounded by troops of frionda , some helping In / 'ono Avay , somo in another , but nil earnest , active , and cnpafclc . . 1 ' uke , for example , tlio landlord ^ and where olso jo England will bo found better exiirnploa of tlio powerful inttuoncowhiuh Unit class can < Mccrci « o tl »«» in this very county , tho huutlis and wolds , of which "havo been converted from UirroiineBS to fertility mainly by the Ubornlity of tlio Y « r-Oomngh family imd of such men nit Ur . Chnplin . Vatrbtism ia pre-vulont in London . Opwards of 800 young jneir enllBtod nnd p « sued during the past month , iu tho Londoh district nlon ^ " A woinnn , » nd a Kirl only fonrtcon years of « go , Imvo boun Bonb Ibr trml from tlio ThnmoH l'olioo Court for Wvmulio ^?^ ? ftn i ? . Mn ? < rf « h » Wnn , whom they met In tho neighbourhood of tlio docks . iJftSt " ^!^" ! , lylaf \ l » M « nolwator , under orders forTurkoy , k <* Wm \ ordere «\> out tl . rco d « y « ago to « Umcontirnw the urn , « f tlw razor > nnd nro 0 Jlti ^ n tholr
Roman Catholic Poor . Schools in London . — 'Lord Edward Howard has appealed to the Roman Catholic community of England and Ireland to make educational provisibn' for the poor children who will be withdrawn from tlie Middlesex Industrial Schools , in consequence of the bill recently passed by the House of Commons . The Dvblirt Telegraph says : —" A more infamous law never stained the record of the English statutes , crowded as it is witli penal enactments against the Catholics ; because none ever more unblushingly declared the determination of its promoters to
kidnap the children of the Catholic poor , and to doom them to everlasting perdition . " Ejection of a Reporter from a Countt Court . — Mr . Marshall , the . Judge of the Wakefield County Court , has quarrelled with the local paper , the Express ^ and the other day turned the reporter of that journal out of his court . — "This day ( Saturday last ) another court was held at Walcefield , also attended by the offending reporter , on which occasion the judge , after demanding the authorship of the previous report , wmeb . the reporter declined giving , a second time ordered the latter to be turne'd tii et armis froth
the table , declaring he would not permit any one to sit there to make injurious reports on his judicial conduct . The reporter accordingly was dragged from his seat by the officers of tbe court . A few minutes afterwards another reporter from the same paper entered , but had no sooner taken bis place at the- table than the judge ordered him also away . "—Lord Palmerstou will , no doubt , have his attention called to the "~ matter j and Mr . Marshall must take care to avoid the fate of Mr . Rainshay , of Liverpool . ' Mr . If AtmiCB Lbynb . —» This gentleman , one of the most snecessful of Irish journalists ; and who had recentl y started a paper with our title—the Ti p perary Leader- —died suddenly ; some weeks ago , In the prime of his manhood , and lis old colleagues ^ in the Nation , have written an affectionate eulogium : —" Peace be with him ! H « rests in noble soil . Words cannot describe the lavish sympathy and honour which tie good people of Tipperary bestowed upon him and his . The . Archbishoptrf Gashel , with forty of his priests , comprising the principal dignitaries of'his diocese , * . paid to his remains the snorifcaneous and almost nnt > recedented
honour of joining in a solemn office for : tbe dead ; They marched before his coffin to the grave , and were followed by the whole population of the town and country for miles round . God bless them for their great kindness to him who was carriecl a fettered rebel into their town a few years sincewhom they lately sought with one voice to bear the banner of freedom , and truth in their glorious county—whom they buried on the very day that his and their Leader was to have appeared . Sudden and awful as this blow has fallen upon all his friends , there is one great alienation at least , when we think of the generous and noble hearts among whom he breathed his last . " Mr . Leyne ' was one of the many intellectual and ardent men whom Mr . Gavan Dufly had collected round his Nation ; and he had one quality peculiar to himself and in a high degree— -humour , which , contrary to the general notion , is a rare quality among Irishmen . As a journalist he is a loss to journalism ; and the incident stated above indicates how the loss to the popular cause is regarded by the clergy and the people . He was a nephew of O'Connell ; but had , nevertheless , deserted his family for the Young Ireland party .
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Satu » i > ay , July 22 . SPAIN . —( V 5 y Klkctmc Tiu . lcuiiA . rii . ) FiauTiNU going 011 in uvery stroct at Mudrid . PulncQ of tho Quooh tit Sulaumnca hua been pil-Irtgod , and it ia thought tlmt Ksnurfcero Mill bo placed ut tho head of tho New Junta .
" BtXSSrAK POLES . ' In the House of l ^ ords , the Earlof HAOBiNtfroir ; pursuant tfr notice ,- asked the Govern'ftienfe i w ! i eth ^ they had instructed- the Earl of Westmoreland to state at the court of Vienna that iPolish : aubjeetBof Russia would' not be allowed to follow 1 the standard of the allied ; army ? , . r The Earl of Aberdeen could take upon himgelf to say that no such instructions- had been given to Lord TTestnaoreland-aa the noble lord imagined . < ¦ The Earl of Habringtoit said that he had been led to believe that an attempt to forin a Polieli legion in Russian Poland had been frustrated by her Majesty ' s Government . ; MESSAGE FROM THE CROWNS . The Earl of Aberdeen brought in the following message from the Crown , -which > was read by < the Lord Chancellor : — , j" Victoria Ee-gina . —Her Majesty deeming it ' expedie ' ht to provide for any additional expense whioh ^ rnay arise iff cansequence of the war in which her Majesty is engaged agairist the Emperor of Russia , relies on the affection of the Souse of Lords for theii ? concurrence- in such measures as may-be necessary for making , provision accordingly . " ¦ -j . i The Earl of Aberdeen . —I beg to move that "tier Majesty ' s gracious message be taken Into consideration on Monday next . —Agreed to . ' The Hoo . se adpourhedathalf-past six .
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The House of Commons , notwithstanding tfietr having adjourned at three o ' clock on Friday njoriiing , met again at one o ' clock in the afternoon ; , bu $ ohly sat a quarter of an hour , atid passed serejal bills a stage . THE CREDIT FOB THE WAB . The sitting- was resumed at six o ' clock ^ "when- ¦ :. •• The CHAjJCEiiLOK of tneExcHEQcxk appeared at the bar , and announced a message from , her Majesty . The Message having been , brought up , -was read at the table as follows : — " Victoria Begina—Her Majesty deeming it expedient to provide for any additional expenses that may'arise -in consequence of the war in / which her Majesty is engaged with the Emperor of Russia , a * nd relying on the R oyalty ,. zea ) r and affection of her faithfuV Contiirnons , thinks that they -will make provision accordingly . "
The Ch . \ . hceli , or of the Excheqcer ^—^ Sir , I beg to move that her Majesty ' s most gracious Message be referred to a Committee of Supply . The-Committee of Supply stands for to-night , but I apprehend it is generally understood that it will not come on before Monday , and that her Majesty ' s Message will then be considered . Mr . Disraeli—Iain sure I may say that the houu member may confidently rely that .. the House , of , Commons have every disposition to furnish whatever aid her Majesty may reqirire , for the purpose of carrying on the war with efficiency and vigour ; but a trust that on Monday her Majesty ' s Ministers will be able to assure the House that in the present state " Of affairs there will be an autumnal sitting , and that her Majesty will be recommended graciously to call Parliament together before the end of the year .
MMBKR . Y BIIX . There were no questions of importance addressed to Ministers , and the first order of the day * " The consideration of the Amendments on tho Bribery Bill , " was called on , and « . clause proposed to be added was moved ; when a discussion : ensued as to the advisability of recommitting the ljillj which was so stron gly pressed on all sides of the House that Lord John Russell consented , and the bill was recommitted . Severn ! new clauses wore added . —tjic discussion through the night being of that nature which it is not worth space to report .
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Jrt « ra 2 $ 'iS 64 . ] l # 4 trJS ! 'L ^ A LVM 5 rT & § V
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The Rei / Igiotts Wa . r in Pirh-ico . —The agitation to force Mr . Liddell out of St . Barnabas seems to have commenced in earnest . A meeting was held on Tuesday to adopt measures " for tho arrest of Romish practices iu the Church of England , " about 800 persons being present , Admiral Harcourt in the chair—* ' Upon the arrival of the speakers on the platform a scene of great uproar immediatel y took place in the body of the meeting , nnd a general melee ensued between tho representatives of the High Church and tho Low Church , which ended
in the latter party turning scveial of their opponents out of the meeting by force . Order having been procured , ' the chairman requested tlio Reverend John Kelly to open tho business with prayer , which the reverend gentleman did amid much confusion , and before the prayers were concluded , nu unparalleled scene of riot nnd uproar again intervened , in vrhich a regular fight ensued ,. in the body of tho meeting . A largo number of police-constables at length arrived , nnd with their assistance the meeting was cleared of several of tho Hieh Church party , who were roughly handled in tho affray . '
Order having again been restored , the expected speeches wore got through . Mr . Nicholay ( vestryman of MarylebonO abused the Bishop of London , everybody else abused the Popo . Tho resolutions were to tho effect that there should bo a general demonstration in different parts of the . country in suppprt of tho movement , and a , committee . was appointed to collect subscriptions for the carrying out of such ain object , Should redress not bo gained from the Bishop of London , it waa proposed to bring tho flubjoot before the Legislature . Tho meeting broko up in uproar ; nnd if ttcoiioa such as these arc to be stopped tho iUuhop of London will have to give way ; and tho next Bishop of London will have to decide—what is tint Church of England ?
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TO COltR . ESFONJDENTB . "M . S " does not comply wit hour rulesfor correspondents ; nnd his letter , for othor ron-sonn , is nob of the oharactoi requiring insertion . If ho will apply hiu general , and not original , views to a spcollio « iiso properly boforo tho public , wo shall bo happy to hoar from him , " X . "— "What is tho wholo truth without dispulso P TVTentioi it , and it » hall have our kwRyat capital loiters . Which it tho nrki niul which aro tho beasts wo nro tooloarouC ol tho urkf " }^ , " must not bo unreasonable , "S . 8 . "—" Tlio Stranger" has not coiw& to contribute ; he contributes in si \\ a \ r form . Parliament hns oonfloatobo lntorcBtinK 1 nn <» , boaiuea , " Tho StrniiKcr" thlnko hn hew ( ionohis vvorh—in HUHBOufcinK n now poli » t of vlow or 0110 or two or our ludierou ^ inatiUitiouM , " A SunscinuKit . "—Wo nroiwuuliobliKjid to " A Subsorlbor ;" otir attoittlnn bad boon or » ll « i < l to tlio matter . Tho silly blundur , will , wo truat , nil » loiMl 110 one ;• " «»(> olmnKibor of our pajior tJooH not dtmoiid on tho philosophic e » Urnato arrived at by tho oon »| ill « tra of " Adv « rtisora Ouldos . "
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U If * impoNsiblo tonoknowl ( MlKo tho mass of letters vir © rooolvo . Thuir limortlon iw t > ft « n delayed , owlnp to n pri ? se of innttor 1 and wliou omitted It in ft'otiMontljr frotn ton-Honw unite independent < if th khtUh of th < 5 COmmunlOil tlon .
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Leader (1850-1860), July 22, 1854, page 681, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2048/page/9/
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