On this page
- Departments (4)
-
Text (17)
-
Ba2 THE E^EADEB. [No. 285/Siariraix^Y,
-
^tAYfY+tr. i******* $MI&XXX%1. ' *
-
Leader Office, Saturday, September 8. TH...
-
St. Petersburg, Sept. 5. An imperial uka...
-
A letter from Berlin in the Dussddorff G...
-
Wreck of the Ship Amanda.—North Uist, Au...
-
TERMS OF .SUBSCRIPTION TO
-
« W&t &««&«• * -
-
Fora Half-Tear —^.....wUBO 0 To be remit...
-
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. " Paperwork."...
-
No notice can be taken of anonymous comm...
-
• # * Ftvepence is now the price for an ...
- Untitled
-
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1855
-
, ^f^ 1t U I ti* ^1 "flTlt ti* Cff J^UUIlt JllUUllZI*. I .
-
There is nothing bo revolutionary, nothi...
-
THE " NEW SORT OF DESPOTISM." "We are en...
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.
Miscellaneous. The Queen's Visit To Scot...
ss sttaast" jt ^ ssvms Srire , and has Succeeded . Resolutions approving of the plan , and invititing co-operation for carrying it out , were "" S ' cSs ^ An ' other change in the weather , from warm and dry to cold and rainy , has had a deteriorating influence upon the crops ; but a large part of the harvest has been already got in , and , though the yield will not be equal to that of last year , there seems to be no probability of the wheat crops being under the average . The blight has unquestionably made its appearance among the potatoes in Ireland ; but it has not as yet spread to alarming extent .
any ,.. „ Health of London . —The returns of the metropolitan registrars continue to exhibit a rate of mortality which is not high for London at this period of the year . In the week that ended on Saturday , the deaths from all causes registered were 1031 , of which 559 , or considerably more than a half , occurred under 20 years of age , 19 at 80 years or above that age ; and the remainder occurred , in nearly equal numbers , in the three intermediate vicennial periods of life . Diarrhoea appears in the last two weeks to have suffered a check . It was fatal in 134
cases last week , of which 111 occurred to infants less than two years old . Eighteen deaths are returned variously as caused by cholera , English cholera , choleraic diarrhoea , infantine cholera . In one case , the disease is described as " Asiatic , " and is stated to have occurred without premonitory symptoms to a man who lived in Drummond-crescent , Somers-Ipwn , and died after twelve hours' illness . The house which he inhabited is reported to be in bad sanitary condition . In 8 of the 18 cases enumerated the sufferers were adults , 20 years of age
and upwards . Two children in a family in Upper Johnstreet , Tottenham-court-road , died on the same day of small-pox . The death of a man , aged 51 years , was caused by haemorrhage from the gums during five or six days . A boy aged , aged three years , died from " convulsions caused by fright on seeing a dog by which he had been bitten a fortnight before . Last week , the births of 840 boys and 831 girls , in all 1671 children , were registered in London . In the ten corresponding weeks of the years 1845-54 , the average number was 1393 . —From the Registrar- General ' s Weekly Return . The Filthy Condition of Belleisle . —Mr . William
May , superintendent registrar of Islington , has addressed a letter to the registrar-general , complaining of the pestiferous condition of the district called Belleisle , Islington , with reference to which it will be recollected that a public meeting was recently held . The noxious manufactories complained of cover , according to Mr . May , a space little short of eight acres of ground . It is often impossible , he adds , to open the windows in the west district of Islington when the wind blows from the infected quarter . The poisonous establishments consist of places employed for horse-slaughtering , bone-boiling , fat-melting , and grease-manufacturing , together with houses for producing a kind of artificial manure , by baking night-soil , blood , putrid fish , meat , and vegetables , and all the garbage that can be collected from the dunghills of the metropolis . The Captain of a KIvkb Steamboat fell overboard a few days ago , and was drowned .
Railway Accident . —A man name Harrison was recently killed during the night between the buffers of some waggons on the Manchester and Sheffield Railway . He was found dead on the lines in the morning . The Shdtpino Returns of the Board of Trade for the month ending the 81 st of July exhibit an increase of employment , especially for British vessels , and confirm the other indications of a recent extension of trade . —The Excise statements for the first half of this year have also been published . A decline appears in each article as compared with the corresponding period of last year , more especially in paper . Of this article , the quantity charged with duty from January to July , 1854 , was 91 , 485 , 985 pounds ; in the same period this year , the number of pounds was 80 , 226 , 607 . This decline is rather singular , considering the sudden impulse given to newspapers by the repeal of the stamps .
New English College at Rome . —The Pope is about to establish a new English college at Rome for the education of Roman Catholic priests . It is to be called after his own name . Rise in the Price of Bread and Flour . —On Wednesday , throughout the metropolis , a rise in the price of bread took place of one halfpenny on tho four pound loaf , and a corresponding increase in tho price of flour . The Lord Mayor bktwken Loyalty and £ a . d .
¦—At tho Exhibition of Amateur Art at Burlington House this season , in aid of the Patriotic Fund , there was a groat rush to eco the drawings of tho " youthful members of tho Royal Family . " A drawing by the Princess Royal , on "which that august young lady at the modest price of 5 , 1 ., but for which 200 £ was offered by an enthusiastically loyal Groat Britain , was selected for engraving , and tho subscribers wore very numerous . The print has lately boon sent round to tho , subscribers , with tho bill . Conspicuous in tho list was tho liight Hon . tho Lord Mavor : to him in duo course comes tho
print , with the bill . Sir Francis G . Moon , Bart ., presents his compliments to the Committee and begs to say that he considers himself entitled to receive the print at trade price . OI Francis Moon , Bart . ! This is really too bad after the Baronetcy . A Fatal Boat Accident occurred in Plymouth Sound on Monday ' evening , Mr . Douglas Dent , Storekeeper of Her Majesty ' s dockyard in Devonport , having been drowned hy the upsetting of a boat . His two sons , who were with him , were with difficulty recovered .
Our Clerical Civilisation .: —On Tuesday afternoon , Mr . Alderman Farebrother attended atGarraway ' s coffeehouse , for the purpose of disposing , by public auction , of the advowson and right of presentation to the rectory of Lytchett Maltravers , in the county of Dorset . The incumbent was thirty-three years of age , and some representations had been made as to the state of his health . He ( the alderman ) would not say what those representations were , but intending purchasers might easily satisfy themselves on that point . A formal proposition was then made that some one should say 3500 Z . for the advowson , but no one ventured . It fell step by step to 2000 ? ., when some one made a bid . The competition was by no means brisk . Offers were made slowly , until the amount reached 2450 ? . ; and for that sum the r ectory of Ly tchett-Maltravers was knocked down . —What do our Mahometan allies think of this ?
What will all men think of it a thousand years hence ? The Irish Flax Crop this year is 37 | per cent , deficient . The New Act with Respect to Parishes . —The Metropolis Local Management Act , which is to come into force on the first of next January , directs that all parishes with more than two thousand rated householders shall be divided into wards containing not less than five hundred rated-householders , the number of wards not exceeding eight . The proportion of
vestrymen to each ward is to be determined by the number of persons rated to the relief of the poor in each ward , and to the aggregate amount of the sums at which all such persons are rated ; and the number of vestrymen appointed to each ward is to be a number divisible by three . —The four assessors nominated for carrying out the foregoing sections of the act commenced their work on Thursday , and proceeded to divide the several parishes into wards , and to apportion the number of vestrymen to be elected .
Sir James Graham on " the Sod . "—The ceremony of cutting the first sod of the Silloth Railway was performed on Friday week by Sir James Graham . The new line is to join the Port Carlisle Railway at Drumburgh , and to run to a point on the coast of the Solway Frith called Silloth Bay , a distance of about nine miles and a half . The act for its construction , with a floating dock at the Silloth terminus , was obtained during the last session of Parliament after a protracted and expensive contest with the Maryport and Carlisle Railway , and a double defeat . The third time the company were
successful . Sir James made two speeches ; one before the sod-cutting , and another after a repast which was given in a tent . His present anti-war feeling was exhibited in the remark that he had to perform his work in the midst of " the prodigal and fruitless expenditure of millions of the public money ; " but he afterwards congratulated the nation on its victories , and hoped we should have more . Alluding to Sir Robert Peel , he declined to discuss what that statesman ' s policy would have been under the present circumstances ; but he remarked that he was an advocate of competition in railways as in all other matters .
Ba2 The E^Eadeb. [No. 285/Siariraix^Y,
Ba 2 THE E ^ EADEB . [ No . 285 / Siariraix ^ Y ,
^Tayfy+Tr. I******* $Mi&Xxx%1. ' *
^ njsteripi
Leader Office, Saturday, September 8. Th...
Leader Office , Saturday , September 8 . THE BALTIC Dantzic , Thursday , Sept . 6 , 8 p . m . The Vulture has arrived . She is not so seriously injured as was at first supposed . There ia no news of importance . The weather is very bad . The fleets are healthy .
St. Petersburg, Sept. 5. An Imperial Uka...
St . Petersburg , Sept . 5 . An imperial ukase has been issued , abolishing , on the proposal of Prince Paskiewitoh , the Field Commissariat of the army on active service ; Commissary General Annenkoff resuming his former charge .
A Letter From Berlin In The Dussddorff G...
A letter from Berlin in the Dussddorff Gazette states that Austria is intent upon negotiating a new loan of from 250 to 300 millions of florins ( the florin is about 2 fr . 50 c . ) Councillor de Hock is to proceed to Paris for that purpose ; but many doubt the possibility of Austria raising such an amount of money in Franco .
Wreck Of The Ship Amanda.—North Uist, Au...
Wreck of the Ship Amanda . —North Uist , August 28 . —Tho Amanda , of and for Belfast , from Prussia , with wheat , was wrecked on tho 2 f > th of August , on the Point of Airdmile , wost side of ( South Uist : crow and some of the materials saved .
Terms Of .Subscription To
TERMS OF . SUBSCRIPTION TO
« W&T &««&«• * -
"® fie aUafcet . " 18
Fora Half-Tear —^.....Wubo 0 To Be Remit...
Fora Half-Tear —^ ..... wUBO 0 To be remitted *» advance . eg" Money Orders should be drawn upon the Steakd Branch Office , and be maaje payable to Mr . Axbked E . GAMiOWi-Y , at No . 154 , Strand .
Notices To Correspondents. " Paperwork."...
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS . " Paperwork . "—The mistake is on the side of our correspondent . It was not to " Paperwork , " but to " One who has examined at Oxford , " that we alluded in our article .
No Notice Can Be Taken Of Anonymous Comm...
No notice can be taken of anonymous communications Whateveris intendedforinsortionmust be authenticated by the name and address of the writer ; not necessarily for publication , but as a guarante e of his good faith . Communications should always be legibly written , and on oneside of thepaperonly . If long , it increases the difficulty of finding space for them . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications .
• # * Ftvepence Is Now The Price For An ...
• * Ftvepence is now the price for an Unstamped copy of the Leader , and Sixpence if Stamped . A Stamped copy of this Journal can be transmitted through the Post-office to any part of Great Britain as frequently as may be required , during fifteen days from its date , free of charge ; but it is necessary that the paper should be -folded in such a manner that the stamp be clearly visible on the outside . The Leader has been " registered" at the General Postoffice , according to the provisions of the New Act relating to Newspapers , and an Unstamped copy has , therefore , the pr ivilege of transmission through the post beyond the United Kingdom on payment of the proper rate of postage .
Ar01004
Saturday, September 8, 1855
SATURDAY , SEPTEMBER 8 , 1855
, ^F^ 1t U I Ti* ^1 "Fltlt Ti* Cff J^Uuilt Jlluullzi*. I .
V ) ubiu Manx .
There Is Nothing Bo Revolutionary, Nothi...
There is nothing bo revolutionary , nothing so unnatural and convulsive , as the strain to Keep things fixed when all the world is by the verylaw of its creation in eternal progress . —Dr . Arnoi / d
The " New Sort Of Despotism." "We Are En...
THE " NEW SORT OF DESPOTISM . " "We are engaged in a crusade abroad . But the first and best of all crusades for nations , as for men , is to be true to honour at home . Can Englishmen say that they are true to honour when they worship the author of the Cotvp d ' etat ? After making all allowances for good motives and natural illusions , we are obliged to own that we feel grief and shame for our country . We feel grief and shame for her want of sense , if not for her want of morality .
The motives of Louis INapoi / Eon's career are patent . Twice in a time of profound peace and of constitutional government he raised the standard of civil war in France for his own selfish ends . Is this what one calls promoting the cause of peace and order ? Will G-banieb de Oassagnao himself dnro to say that these facts are consistent with the disinterested patriotism and philanthropy of his hero ?
What was the conduct of the President oi the Republic P Did he loyally and dutifully endeavour , by reconciling factions , calming fears , initiating good measures , to carry the Commonwealth safe through a period of revolution , and to consolidate its liberties on a basis of order ? Or did he , with repeated oaths and protestations of loyalty , set himself to aggravate disorder , to debauch the army , and to gather round him the accomplices of his preconcerted treachery ? Shout , gentlemen , but your shouts will not drown history ; and history will not be written by the Timesor by Dr . Veron .
, If Louis Napoleon was the friend of order , why was it necessary for him to gag and exile the " party of order P" It is casior to see why with selfish designs he should dccirrmto the honour and ability of his country , as one tyrant of antiquity advised another to cut off the heads of the tallest poppies .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Sept. 8, 1855, page 10, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_08091855/page/10/
-