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Feb. 1, .1861.] &»r Itrafrgt, ^_ *
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THE FIUEB OF THE WEEK. The n ew H ouses ...
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A MA11VELLOU8 K SCAPE. A workman named l...
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A. N UNNATDEAL SON. At the Marylebone Po...
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nesses. nesses. MISCELLANEOUS. Lord John...
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jraiace. The Address in the House of Lor...
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Travellers in France say that the French...
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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Transcript
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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Apprehension Of Mrs. Sloane. The Active ...
She was supported by the officers to a cab that was ¦ waiting to receive her , and was taken with all the necessary precaution to Newgate . She was dressed rather shabbily , and altogether , with her apparent prostration of strength and intellect , she presented a most wretched appearance . The proceedings consequent upon the apprehension were conducted with the greatest secrecy and despatch , in order to avoid creating any unnecessary public excitement .
Feb. 1, .1861.] &»R Itrafrgt, ^_ *
Feb . 1 , . 1861 . ] &» r Itrafrgt , ^_ *
The Fiueb Of The Week. The N Ew H Ouses ...
THE FIUEB OF THE WEEK . The n ew H ouses of P arliament were threatened with destruction on Monday afternoon at half-past two o ' clock , by a fire which broke out in a storyof the Clock Tower , on the 8 ' facing Westminster-bridge . This tower mil consist , when comp leted , m part of a shaft for supplying cold air to the rest of the building , and in part of rooms adioinir . e the residence of the Sergeant-at-Arms , to be used if required , for * the confinement of refractory members . Owing to the presence of a quantity of timber materials in this tower , the flames rose with a vigour rarelv observed in the conflagrations of buildings where stone bears so large a proportion to wood as in the New Houses From a quarter to three o ' clock until half-past , the tower was more or less concealed in a cloud of dense Bmoke By ten minutes past three o ' clock the engine of the establishment , directed by Mr . Wing , chief fireman of the house , with others of the London brigade , were brought to act on the burning materials , and in about half an hour the flames were extinguished . During the interval between the outburs t and suppression of the fire , Westminster-bridge was crowded with spectators , and every point commanding a view of the structure was occupied . In Westminster Hall the excitement attending the transient prospect of a burning-out , gave a temporary fillip to the lagging oratory of one or two learned gentlemen , but beyond this , left the progress of business unaffected . It is hoped the damage done will not exceed a hundred pounds in the cost of repairing ; but , from the want of water , the risk of destruction to the entire building was for some time fearfully imminent .
A fire broke out in the range of premises belonging to Messrs . J . R . Bousfield and Co ., wholesale clothiers and exporters , Houndsditcb , on Monday morning . The building in which the fire commenced was of the most substantial construction , and nearly 200 feet long , the lower floor being used as the manufactured goods depdt , while that above contained made-up goods for exportation . In one compartment alone there were several thousand p ieces of cloth , worth a large sum , and in another were a great assortment of articles for the spring season , the whole of which have either been destroyed or seriously injured by fire . Fortunately the front house has escaped , and some thousand pounds ' worth of goods have received but trifling injury at the
extremity of the premises . The total loss , however , will amount to many thousand pounds . We regret to say that Hoffmeyer , one of the London IJrigade , received such serious injuries whilst assisting at the conflagration as , in all probability , will cost the poor fellow his life . He was standing on the sill of one of the windows , directing the water from the branch of an engine into the first floor , when the rooms above fell in , and the timber flooring projecting through the opening knocked the unfortunate man from his standing-place , and he fell in a horizontal position upon the top of some iron spikes round an area window . The height he fell ' was so great , that the iron railings were forced into his side , and he remained impaled until another fireman rushed forward
and lilted him oft ' . He was taken without delay to the London Hospital , and it was found that two of the spikes had perforated the left bladebone ; one of his ribs was fractured , and it was feared that the bone had entered his lungs . For the third time within nine years the unfortunate New Cross station has been partially destroyed by fire . On Tuesday night , about ten minutes before eleven o ' clock , a strong light was observed by one of the signalmen on duty within the storehouse for carriages . On hia giving the alarm it was discovered that a fire was raging within the shed , and that several carriages were in flames . So rapidly did the fire spread , that before even
the local engines had arrived on the spot the flumes had penetrated the roof , and obtained firm hold of a large portion of the building . The place in which the fire broke out ia upwards of 300 feet long and about 25 feet wide . It has a double line of rails throughout , and affords accommodation for about sixty carriages . About onethird of the building is razed to the ground , and the carriages contained in that portion are of course wholly diHtroyed . The origin of the fire is altogether unknown . A fire broke out in the white zinc works at Islington , belonging to Mr . Langston Scott , on Saturday evening . The flumes were got under in about an hour after discovery . The damage sustained is about £ 300 .
A Ma11vellou8 K Scape. A Workman Named L...
A MA 11 VELLOU 8 K SCAPE . A workman named ltobert Johnson , employed at Mi-HHrH . W . and II . Turners , fire iron manufacturers , linilge-Btreet , miraculously escaped a frightful death on ' uetwlay morning . He was employed us a grinder , and had '*> oil th « machinery . About twenty minutes after seven •> clock he wan standing upon a bench oiling a raised horizontal shaft , when the machinery caught his shirt *> l < ' «; v 0 > mu \ j lc wn 8 jjjBtantly dragged round the Hhaft . 1 wice he revolved with the rapid machinery , striking his iH-ad against a beam , and then ho was thrown over the < lanh-troii Kh of a grinding wheel , a distance of eight feet , completel y stripped of all his clothing , with the exception <> t niH neckerchief and stockings ! He lay on the ground niHtnailiK ) for a few moments , and then cried out , in a i » nr « t of joy , " The Lord have mercy on me ! " The men clustered around him perfectly amazed that ho was alive , ana their astonishment was enoreased when he walked out of the room into the warehouse almost uninjured .
The poor fellow stood before the fire weeping for joy , and ejaculating thanks to God for his miraculous escape . He says he recollects going round with the shaft twice and giving himself up for . lost , the remembrance of similar accidents rushing through his mind like a whirlwind . Considering the frightful position in which he was placed , his injuries are trifling . His head was bruised , but not severely , and the skin was grazed off the right side . He was conveyed to his home in Allen-street , and , we understand , is progressively recovering his strength . The only way in which his escape can be accounted for is this : —His shirt-sleeve , it is believed , was caught by the head of the key of the coupling-box , which projects about half an inch . The key is sharp at the edges and would force itself into his clothing , and , Being a heavy man , his weight caused the fabric to tear , and he was thus peeled , as it were , like an orange from his clothes .
A. N Unnatdeal Son. At The Marylebone Po...
A . N UNNATDEAL SON . At the Marylebone Police Court , on Tuesday , John William Hamilton , aged 26 , was brought up charged with committing damage to the amount of £ 300 , in the house of Mr . Daniel Milbank , Cumber land-street , Newroad , by the explosion of a quantity of gunpowder . It appears that the prisoner ' mother lodges in the house of Mr . Milbank , and that the prisoner ' conduct towards her has been very bad . She is a woman of independent property , and , according to Mr . Milbank ' s statement , the conduct of the prisoner was killing his mother by inches . " I have told him so , " said he , " and that he wished for tier death on account of her property . He only laughed
and danced off . " On Monday night an explosion of gunpowder took place in one of the rooms occupied by his mother , immediately under the bed upon which she was lying . She had been seriously injured by the shock , and the damage to the property was estimated at £ 300 . Hamilton had been seen in the house about a quarter of an hour before the explosion took place . The prisoner made a long statement about having been engaged in the making of fireworks , and that on the night in question the box containing the powder was , contrary to his usual custom , left under his mother ' s bed . As the case seemed altogether very suspicious , the prisoner was remanded till Tuesday next to permit the attendance of other witnesses . nesses .
Nesses. Nesses. Miscellaneous. Lord John...
MISCELLANEOUS . Lord John Russell and Lord Seymour joined the royal dinner at Windsor Castle on Monday evening . Arrangements have been made for the departure of her Majesty from Windsor Castle on Monday , immediately after luncheon , for Buckingham Palace , to preside at the Privy Council to be held on that day , when the speech from the throne on the opening of Parliament will be finally determined upon . Her Majesty will be accompanied by Prince Albert , and , it is expected , by the Prince of Wales and the Princess Royal . As the court will return to Windsor on the following day , immediately after the conclusion of the ceremony in the House of Lords , the remaining portion of
the Royal Family , according to present arrangements , will remain . at the Castle . It is expected that her Majesty will proceed to town for the season on Tuesday , the 11 th of February , orders having been forwarded to Buckingham Palace'for the necessary preparations to be completed by that period for the reception of the Court . It is contemplated that the Court will spend the Easter holidays at the Castle , arriving on Thursday , the 17 th of April , and remaining for about ten days or a fortnight . The Duchess of Kent will leave Frogmore for Clarence House , St . James ' s , the week after next , probably on the same day the Court proceeds to Buckingham Palace ! jraiace .
Jraiace. The Address In The House Of Lor...
The Address in the House of Lords , in reply to her Majesty ' s Speech , will be moved by Lord Effingham , and seconded by Lord Overstone . It is said that Lord Langdale will retire from the Rolls almost immediately , and will bo succeeded by Sir John Romilly . Lord Ebrington is about to retire from the sccretarynhip of the Poor Law Board , and will be succeeded by Mr . R . W . Grey as Parliamentary Secretary . Mr . Nicholls also retires on account of ill health , and will be succeeded as permanent secretary by Lord Courtenay , who has already acted as a Poor Law Inspector for
several years . —Globe . Mr . Sergeant Sedgwick , formerly Chairman of the Board of Stamps , aged seventy-six , died very suddenly on Sunday night . He had dined with Lord Chief Baron Pollock that day , and left Queen-square for home in his usual health and spirits at nine o'clock . About fifteen minutes later he was found lying on hia back , insensible , close to the kerbstone , Queen-square . A surgeon was instantly sent for , but he died before one came . Dr . Richmond , of Queen-square , dipped a towel in cold water and bathed his face and temples , thinking he had only fainted , but life was extinct . Death was supposed to have resulted from disease of the heart .
Mr . William Holmes , so well known for many years an the Tory " whipper-in , " died on Sunday , and is honoured with a lengthened obituary in the Times . He sat successively for Grampound , Tregony , Bishop ' s Castle , Uazelmere , and Berwick-on-Twted . For Ipswich he was a candidate in 183 /> , and previously for Qucrnborough , but by neither of those places wan he returned ; while he proved equally unauccessf . il at Stafford , in 1811 . He filled the office of Treasurer of the Ordnance in the ministries of Lord Liverpool and the Duke of Wellington . In the high and palmy days of Toryism the peculiar talents of Mr . Holmes were in great request , for in the trivate management of the members of an unreformed louee of Commons he was without a rival . Of the confidence reposed in him by Mr . Perceval , antl pf the close friendship subsisting between them , it would bo impossible to speak in terms too strong . Mr . Holmes wan by
the side of Mr . Perceval when he sank under the hand of an assassin , and he also happened to be within a few yards of Mr . Huskisson when that well-known statesman came by a violent though accidental death . Noplace was found for him in the ministries of Sir Robert Peel , but he , nevertheless , faithfully discharged his duties as whipperin to the great conservative party . He reached the advanced age of three-score years and ten . The Morning Herald of Tuesday contained a paragraph stating that , the Reverend J . Burnet had been seized with paralysis , and was in a very precarious condition . This is contradicted by the Nonconformist , which states , " that though Mr . Burnet met with a fall on Monday week , his public engagements have not been at wonted
all interrupted , but have been fulfilled with his punctuality and efficiency . " Madame Laity , the wife of Captain Laity , one of the aides-de-camp of the President of the Republic , died last week . She was the daughter of the Marquis de Beauharnais , and consequently a cousin of Louis Napoleon . The reception at the Elysee on Thursday was postponed in consequence of her death . Mr . George Thompson , according to the Anti-Slavery Standard , is abundantly compensated by the towns oi New England for his reception in its capital : — "He is greeted everywhere by immense and most enthusiastie audiences . The Boston riot has given an anti-slavery direction to his visit , which it otherwise would not have had "
Travellers In France Say That The French...
Travellers in France say that the French police are more inquisitive and strict as to the examination of passports , and making themselves acquainted with all the movements of travellers , than they have been at any time since the time of Napoleon . A letter from Rome states that a picture dealer of that city , named Campani , has lately become the possessor of a picture of Michael Angelo . He bought an old picture at a sale in London , and having cleaned it , discovered that it was the portrait of Victoria Colonna , wife of the Marquis de Pescara , general of Charles V ., a lady celebrated by the great painter in one of his poems , and whose likeness he declares he had taken . M . Campani , conceiving that this might be the picture alluded to , submitted it to the Pontifical Academy of the Fine Arts at Rome , which has unanimously declared it to have been painted by Michael Angelo . It has been exhibited to the public , and the connoisseurs value it at 165 , 000 f .
The Official Gazette of Copenhagen contains a decree , dated the 16 th , ordering that the inhabitants of Schleswig , who may have returned to their homes after having borne arms against the King of Denmark , shall not be disquieted ; but this is not to extend to officers who were in his service before March 24 , 1848 . The Senate of Hamburg issued notice on the 25 th ultimo , that Austrian troops will be quartered on the town , " because the geographical position of the city renders such a measure , from strategical motives , absolutely necessary for the Federal force advancing to effectuate the peace concluded on the 2 nd of July between Prussia and Denmark . " It was expected that from three to four thousand men , Tyrolese riflemen and German-Bohemian infantry , would enter Hamburg by the 28 th instant at latest .
Frankfort on the Maine is to receive a permanent Federal garrison of Prussian and Austrian troops , for which barracks are to be built . The Cologne Gazette , under date of Dresden , 23 rd , says : — " In a few days Germany will find herself sheltered from the storms which are jireparing in France and in Switzerland , at least so far as considerable masses of troops can do so . The new Central Provisional Government will be invested with all the powers necessary to meet any events . All the forces which it may want will be placed at its disposal . Prussia will place at the command of the Central Government the 30 , 000 men cantoned near Coblentz . "
The Berlin papers state that there has been a miscreant prowling about the doors of girls' schools in that city , and attempting to cut ofF the long tresses of hair which German children wear . He even had the audacity to enter the passage of one establishment , seize a child " , who came out for a drink of water , put a plaster on her mouth , and commence his robbery , which , however , could not be completed before the alarm given by the child ' s struggles obliged him to decamp . The Chamber of Commerce of Frankfort has just unanimously chosen M . Philippe Elisnon , a member of the Jewish religion , to a vacant seat . This is the first time a Jew has been elected as a member of that body .
A fatal accident occurred at Gutersloch , on the Berlin and Cologne Railway , on the 21 st instant . The train in descending an incline went off the rails and plunged over an embankment . The engine , the luggage wagon , and five passenger carriages followed it , but the chain breaking , the greater portion of the train remained on the line . The only passenger killed wa « Mr . Arden , the attache" of the American Embassy at Berlin , who was on his way to Paris with despatches . Immediately
intelligence of the accident was received , Mr . Fay , the secretary , proceeded to Gutersloch to take charge of the despatches . The driver and Ktoker of the engine wero also killed on the' spot ; four other attendants wore wounded slightly , and Homo of the passengers , but none dangerously . Mr . Arden was in the fourth carriage . Prince Frederic William of I ' ruHHia was in the eoup 6 of the fifth carriage with Colonel Fischer and Lieutenant von Hoinz ; a aixth carriage fell over on the opposite nido of the embankment . The Prince wa « the first to get out , and , having <> Hcaped with u slight contusion of the head , wuu nblo to help his companions and the other passengers in the same carriage . In consequence of encreuHiiifr . acts of robbery und murder in the military district of Posth , murtiul law hafl been proclaimed there . A petition for the substitution of arbitration for war , sent up to Congrens by the American Peace Society , has been presented by Mr . Winthrop , treated very reHpect-
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Feb. 1, 1851, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_01021851/page/7/
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