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teen opened , and stands adjourned , on the body of John Starkios , the Hertfordshire policeman , who was murdered last -week by a thief whom he was endeavouring to arrest . A young man named Carpenter is in custody ; and a good deal of circumstantial evidence tends to connect him with the crime . Robbery bt jV Merchant ' s Clkrk . — Information lias been given to , the police , that "William Jackson Wright , formerl y clerk to Mr . Thomas Purton Chassereau , merchant , of Finsbury-place , has absconded , taking with him 15 , 000 / . Wright speaks several languages , and is very gentlemanly in his appearance . A handsome reward is offered for his apprehension .
Voluntary Sta . kvatioit of a Murderer .- —Baker , the man who about twelve days previously murdered his sweetheart , Helen Hatfield , at Beverley , died about six o ' clock on the morning of Wednesday week , after having endured great pain . He had determined not to take anything to eat , and this resolution , he kept , and was literally starved to death . On the following afternoon an inquest was held at Beverley over his body , when the jury returned a verdict of Insanity . —Leeds
Mercury . Chajrgk of Procuring Abortion . —Andrew Halliday Carmichael , a surgeon recently practising at Mexborough , near Doricaster , has been committed for trial on a charge of procuring abortion on the person of a young woman who had been in his service as housekeeper . The proceedings having been privately conducted , no particulars have transpired . The accused is Said to be in a very dejected state of spirits , and the young woman is greatly debilitated .
A Gentleman Convicted of Fobgeey — Mr . Percy Robinson , a person of good family and education , has been convicted at Dublin of forging a cheque for 20 ? . on . the Northern Banking Company , in the name of Mr . Aubrey de Vere Beauclerk , of Ardglass Castle , County Down , whom he had represented to be his cousin , and "who was in fact a distant connexion of his . A verdict of Guilty having been returned , the Chief Baron sentenced him to three years' penal servitude , taking into consideration the fact of his having been convicted by Mr . Baron Martin , in 1855 , of obtaining goods by false pretences to the amount of 17 / .
Suspectkd Mukdee of a Fabmer .- —John Hampson , a farmer at Storehouse , near Tyldesley , Lancashire , whiie intoxicated last Sunday , got on board a barge on the Bridgewater Canal , arid was seen there by a iuan who wished to induce the bargemen to let him come ashore . This they refused to do , and one of them used threatening language to the person interposing . Shortly afterwards , Hampson was found in the water , from which the bargemen dragged him out ; but he was insensible , and shortly afterwards died . He had gold about him wlien he set out ; hut no money was found in the pockets of the clothes after his death . An Inquest has beer held , terminating in an open verdict .
Mysterious Disappearanck . •—A Mr . Edward Clegg , traveller for Messrs . James Thompson and Son , cornmillers , Bradley , Marsden , has been missing since the 80 th ult . He had a considerable sum of money with him when last seen ; and what has become of him is at present a mystery . Our Domestic ' Civilization . '—Mrs . Cherry , a lady whose misfortunes attracted attention rather more than a year ago , appeared personally and by counsel in the Court of Queen ' s Bench on Thursday , to ask for leave to exhibit articles of the peace against her husband . She seems to have been treated with great brutality ever since her marriage in 1853 . She left her husband last year , but was forcibly brought back , and kept in cusbody until she escaped . Lord Campbell directed that an attachment should issue .
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GATHERINGS FROM THE LAW AND POLICE COURTS . The case of Swinfon v . Swinfen , which occupied so much attention last term , owing to Mrs . Swinfen , the de > ffludant , refusing to be bound by an arrangement come td by her counsel , Sir Frederick Thesiger , in March , 1856 , ia again before the Master of the Rolls . It was decided by two out of the three judges before whom the matter was brought tliat tho arrangement was a binding agreement ; but , as tho three were not unanimous , tho case was still left in an unsettled state . In this state of things , tho plaintiff again reverted to the Court of Chancery , and pray < sd , among other things , that a receiver of the rents of tho estates might bo appointed pending tho disputes
between the parties ; that the defendant might be restrained by information from receiving the rents , or carrying on any actions of ejectment against the tenants ; that tho defendant might bo decreed to oxocuto tho conveyance of the cstatC 3 to tho plaint iff , agreeably to tho compromise of March , 1856 ; or that , in caso tho Court of Chancery was of opinion that tho defendant ought not to execute such conveyance , then that n now issue devi-9 avie vel non , or a new trial of the former issue , might bo directed . Tho Master of the KoIIh gave judgment on Tuesday . The bill for specific performance will bo diamisBcd without costs . A . new trial will bo directed nt law , and the usual decree will bo made for administration .
hearing . The suits have for their object the carrying into effect the trust of a certain deed dated in 1834 , and the rights of the Earl and Countess of Mornington , and of Viscount Wellesley , ia the property affected by that deed , are involved . These estates are of very great value , and a sura of 462 , 0002 . was directed to be raised to pay off incumbranees , &c , when several questions arose as to the construction of the trust instrument . One was ¦ whether that sum bore interest . Vice-Chancellor Kindersley was of opinion that it did not . Another question was , whether the rents should pay the interest of encumbrances from the date of the deed ; upon this point there was some controversy as to what was decided . The Court also decided that the Countess of Mornington , although she had abandoned prosecuting her own suit , was not now thereby precluded , and certain accounts were directed . After this decision was made , but before
the minutes could be settled , the sudden death of the Earl of Mornington took place . During the vacation attempts had been made to arrange the decree , but without effect , and the minutes were discussed in court last Saturday . The Vice-Chancellor said , with Tegard to the question of the rents beating interest , what he decided wa 3 that they shculd exonerate the 462 , 000 ? . from . the date of the deed up to the death of the earl . What he intended to do on the former occasion was to express an opinion on the various questions , but not then to make a decree , which could not be considered as made until the minutes were settled . If that were so , which , strictly speaking , was the fact , the late earl must be represented , and was entitled to be heard if he thought fit . The remainder of the minutes were then gone through in detail , arid the suit will be revived against the representative , of the late earl .
An organ-grinder was charged at Bow-street last Saturday with playing his instrument in University-street after being desired to moved on . The complainant was a Mr . Rawlings , a gentleman who had been in India , and who now conducts military classes . Having at one time suffered from brain fever , he is nowunusually sensitive to loud noises ; and the playing of the organ-man interrupted him in the discbarge of his business . On the previous morning , he had requested theman to desist , but be refused ; and , on Mr . Rawlings going to look for a policeman , some loose women , living in a
house at the back , who always encouraged the wandering minstrel , invited him into the passage of their dwelling , where he continued playing for a long time . He was _ released on promising not to go to University-street again . The women in question attended at the office ; asserted their right to have the man in the passage ; and said that such men as Mr . Rawlings would deprive them of all music if the } - could . —Another organ-man has been sent to prison by the Marylebone magistrate for continuing to play after he had been ordered to desist .
Mr . Commissioner Fonblanque gave judgment in the Court of Bankruptcy last Saturday in the case of Kemp and . Clay , billbrokers in Nicholas-lane . Both bankrupts had failed before—Kemp in . 18-49 on his own petition , when he owed 14 , 000 / ., arid there were liabilities to the further amount of 700 ? . There was no trace of any dividend under that bankruptcy . A certificate of the second class was allowed by Mr . Commissioner Holroyd , after three months' suspension . Clay was bankrupt in 1847 , owing , as he now stated , 20 , 000 /* , but more fortunate than Kemp , paying a dividend of 8 s . Sd .
m the pound . There being no classification of certificates at that time , Mr . Commissioner Fonblanque had no clue as to what was the other Commissioner ' s opinion of his conduct . The bankrupts were exonerated of any suspicion of fraud in connexion with the present bankruptcy ; but , considering the improvidence of the trading and tho large expenditure , Mr . Commissioner Fonblanque could only award the bankrupts third-class certificates , with a suspension as to Kemp of six months , and , as to Clay , of three months from the last examination . Protection will be granted .
An order absolute has been made for winding-up Groux ' s Improved Soap Company ( Limited ) ; Some proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas have exhibited in a strong light the despotic nature of the laws of Jersey . Mr . Ballam moved on affidavits for n habeas coiymx , directed to the Sheriff of Jersey , to bring up the body of William Otto Patch , now confined in the gaol at Jersey for a debt of 19 ? . 2 s . Patch is a British subject , who went to reside in Jersey in 1843 , nnd , having got into debt , was arrested on tho 29 th of October , 1846 , under an-order called an ordra jyrovisoire , issued from tho Cour Royale , directing the amount of
tho dobt to be raised on the goods of tho debtor , and in default the person of the debtor was to be taken into custody . Patch was arrested , and has been kept in prison until now . During his imprisonment ho has lost his health and become blind , and his wife has been obliged constantly to attend xipon him . The order had therefore amounted to an imprisonment of both for twelve years for a debt of 19 / . 2 s . There appears also to bo some doubt as to whethor the arrest was not against tho laws of Jersey , owing to same alleged informality . Tho Court of Common Plcnn , however , cannot interfere at present , for want of sufficient information . Mr . Bellow , tho well-known preacher , has again appeared before tho Canterbury County Court as an insolvent debtor . The case of tho Queen v . Goodwin came before the
Court of Queen ' s Bench on Monday . The Court had granted a rule calling upoa James Goodwin , the master of a small grammar schoolat Sefton , near Liverpool , to show cause why a criminal information should not be filed against him for the publication of certain libels imputing to one James Bird , a guardian of the West Derby Union , that , while a guardian , lie had entered into certain contracts to supply the poor with flour and potatoes , and that he had supplied the same of an inferior quality , whereby he had defrauded the poor of the union Sir Frederick Thesiger now- showed cause against the rule and urged that Mr . Goodwin had not baen actuated by malice , but had simply desired to have an inquiry made into the facts . The Court adopted this view , and the rule was discharged with costs .
Charles Pitcher , who described himself as part proprietor of the Berkeley Club , St . James ' s , and of the Betting-rooms , Doncaster , also occasionally betting on the turf , petitioned in tlie Insolvent Debtors Court , on Monday , under the Protection Act , that being his third application to the Court . The debts were entered in the schedule as amounting to 2000 ? ., and the assets consisted of a bad debt of 125 ? . There was no opposition ; and the Court named the 7 th of-December for the final order . Mr . Commissioner Phillips said he was very doubtful whether the Px-otection Act was ever intended for such persons as the insolvent , whose only means of living appeared to be bv-gambling . The usual number of charges of robbery at the Lord Mayor ' s show occupied the attention of the civic magistrates on Tuesday . Some of the accused were remanded ; others summarily punished .
An application was on "Wednesday made at chambers before Mr . Justice Crompton , by counsel , on behalf of several of the defendants in the Royal British Bank case , for particulars of the charges to be preferred on the several counts of the indictment , which consists of general as well as of specific counts . The Judge was of opinion that so important a case ought to be taken to the full court . His impression was against granting the order , inasmuch as the counts , in his opinion , did not contain specific charges , but only varied in this , that some stated overt acts as y / ell as specific act 3 , while others contained specific charges only . It -was then pointed out to his Lordship that the last count in each
information was too general , as it did not contain any specific charge ; and he made an order for particulars as to that count alone . —L . 6 rd Campbell , yesterday , granted a rule calling on the Attorney-General to show cause why he should not deliver up the particulars sought for . An action was brought in the Court of Exchequer on Wednesday , by one Cross , a kennel huntsman , against Colonel Shirley , commander of the cavalry division of the Turkish contingent during the late Russian war . The sum sought to be recovered was 156 ? . Cross went out to Turkey with the Colonel ; and it was for his services there that he now claimed . The jury gave a verdict for 13 B ? . 7 s . 6 d . ,
The Earl of Cardigan is always in Lot water . On Wednesday , the counsel of Major Laurie , formerly agent of his Lordship , but between whom there had been an action at law , in which the Major obtained 300 ? , damages for abrupt dismissal , applied , before Vice-Chancellor Wood , in the Equity Court , for leave to dissolve an injunctiou which was obtained ex parU against Major Laurie . The Earl accused the Major of an intention of publishing certain letters of his Lordship to him , containing allusions to private matters , which it would not be convenient to have put forth . The injunction had , therefore , been granted ; but Major Laurie now denied that he had any intention of publishing the letters , and consequently sought to have the injunction removed , as detrimental to his character . The Vice-Chancellor ordered that it should be dissolved with cost 9 .
H > e certificate meeting in the bankruptcy of Syers , Walker , and Syers took place before Mr . Commissioner Goulburn on Wednesday . The accounts show reckless trading . An adjournment was ordered .
Shortly before the rising of the Vico Chancellor's Court for the long vacation , Iho causes Wcllosloy t \ Mornington , and Mornington r . Wt- 'llcaloy , came to a
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NAVAL AND MILITARY . The Mimtia . —Twenty-one privates oF the South Cork Militia have been committed to prison for periods ranging from six weeks to two months , for having enlisted into the North Cork Militia , nnd obtained the bounty . The men affirmed , when brought before tho magistrate , that they had gone into the North Cork because they had hoard it was destined for foreign sevvico , which was not the case with the Soutli Cork , and that they were anxious to servo their Queen and country instead of reiii / iiniii ^ idle at home . —A similar case , with a similar excuse on the part of the men , has been brought before the notice of the Southwnrk magistrate . John Baker , a
youth of eighteen , having previously enlisted in the East India Company ' s aorvice , joined tho 8 rd Surrey Militia . On being brought to tho Southwark police-court to bo sworn in , Sergeant Quintan , of the Hast India Coinpnny ' rt army , with whom linker had enlisted , ' happened to be present ; whereupon , Baker rushed out , but was pur . sucd , and brought back , On hia being brought up fur examination , Sergeant Coyne , of tho Militia , told tho * ingi . 4 tnite that latterly it hud bitcomu a common , practice for young men to cnli . it in the Lino or tho East India Company ' s service , and , After receiving the shilling , to enrol themselves in tho Militia , when they reccivo 10 » . bounty . As soon as that i « » pont , they got attested , and join the
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AT VJ . O « 7 « 7 , A * C » V-CBUDJErfiS . J-tSj J-Ot / # J . J . JJL JEI JU £ i A J / JCI XW Tf > 89
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 14, 1857, page 1089, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2217/page/9/
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