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482 ^ f 3Lea«t [Saturn,
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E T 8 O M 11 A C K S. The races commence...
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WORKHOUSE SCHOOLS IN COVENTRY. (From the...
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CHURCH DISCIPLINE AND CATHOLIC CLAIMS. O...
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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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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Mktropolitan Fi Rms. Lie Fore The Excite...
the door found hot smoke pouring up the staircase ; in great fright she ran to the back window , threw up the sash , and leaped out , without waiting a moment . She fell upon the glass skylight over the kitchen of the White Hart Tavern , in Botolph-lane , and remained there , the flames gradually approaching her , until extricated by Joel King and Thomas Howard . She was taken at once to Guy ' s Hospital , dreadfully injured . , The persons living on either side of the premises
assert that they heard loud and fearful screams in the ¦ building , that a man appeared at the third floor "window and begged of some one to go and procure a ladder , and immediately afterwards disappeared . A man named Hart , living at Mrs . Blundell ' s , next door , then went on to the roof , and having opened the trapdoor called loudly to the persons within to make for that part of the building , but not receiving an answer lie imagined that probably they had made their escape from one of the lower windows .
Ultimately the fire was in some measure extinquished , and its progress stayed . Mr . Braidwood gave directions for several lengths of scaling ladders to be attached , and some of the firemen to search the ¦ upper rooms . Upon their so doing they beheld a most frightful scene . The lifeless bodies of four human beings were discovered , three in the attics and one on the second floor . They were all shockingly burnt and disfigured . At present it is not known how the fire originated .
Besides the fire in Love-lane , a house and all the property contained therein were burnt , and two others injured , on Tuesday morning , at Stoke Newington . The flames commenced in one of the bed-rooms , owing to a young woman approaching too near the bed curtains with a lighted candle in her hand . The drapery suspended to the bedstead immediately ignited , when the poor creature made a vigorous attempt to subdue the flames , by tearing the blazing material down . In so doing she caused her dress to
take fire , and before the flames could be subdued she ¦ was fearfully burned over both hands . Being obliged to rush out of the room , the flames , unrestrained , extended with unusual swiftness , and it was with great difficulty that the other inmates were enabled to effect a safe retreat —as it was they were nearly suffocated . The engines were quickly on the spot , and the extension of the fire was stayed . "U nfortunately neither the house nor the property of the principal sufferer , Mr . Donoghue , were not insured .
Pontifex is a name known in every town in England . On Wednesday night , Mr . Lamplough , chemist , of No . 88 , Snow-hill , whilst looking out of one of his bedroom windows , perceived an unusual glare of light in the premises of Messrs . Pontifex , in Shoelane , accompanied by a dense volume of smoke rolling towards the roof of the market . He immediately proceeded to the spot , calling , as he went along , the engines in Farringdon-street . Forthwith the various engines of the Brigade , West of England Company , and the parish were despatched to the scene of danger .
The firemen then found that the conflagration was raging in the premises used as the lead casting shop , and the brass casting departments . A plentiful supply of water having been procured from the New River mains , the engines were called into operation , and powerful streams of water were scattered over the blazing pile , but it was nearly midnight before the flames could be conquered , and not until the lead and brass casting shops were nearly burned out , and the contents destroyed . The oriyin of the fire is unknown .
482 ^ F 3lea«T [Saturn,
482 ^ f 3 Lea « t [ Saturn ,
E T 8 O M 11 A C K S. The Races Commence...
E T 8 O M 11 A C K S . The races commenced on Tuesday under very favourable auspices , the weather being cli arm ing , and the attendance unusually large . There were five ; races ran on the first day ; tlie Woodcote Stakes being the sporting feature , cleverly won by Mr . Clark ' s Elcot , own brother to Marlborough Buck , one of the Derby favourites . The result of this race improved the feeling in favour of
the "Duck" for the grout event . A . good days sport was brought to a eloHe shortly after five o ' clock . In point of weather the seventy- second anniversary of the Derby—the ; Exposition Derby—wan remarkably fortunate ; a shower of rain fell early in the morning , enough to lay the dust , but neither heavy enough nor long enough to have any effect on the course , which was anything but favourable for horses with doubtful feet .
We may as well state at once that in point of racin ( r , thin Derby was inferior to many of its predecessors . Not particularising the lesser races , the groat pri / c ; was carried off with comparative ; ease ?; the ; impression <; ve ; ry when ; prevailing that tho bent horse ; won the ; rneu ; . Thirty-three ; horses started , a greati r number than nny previems year can show . We annex the ; oflicial account of tho race : — The Derby StukoH of M ) hovh . each , h . fl ; ., for tlireoyear olds ; colls , Hst . 71 h . ; fillie-H , « st . 2 ll > . ; the «<; ee > nel l . e > receive 100 hovh ., and the winner to pay 100 sovs . towards the ; polices regulations e > f the course , and />(> sovs . te > the ; judge ; . One mile and n-lialf e > n llio new courie . 102 subH .
Sir J . Hawley ' s Teddington ( J . Marson ) Mr . C . Clark ' s Marlborough Buck ( G . Whitehouse ) 2 Mr . Wilkinson ' s Neasham ( J . Holmes ) 3 Lord Enfield ' s Hernandez ( S . Mann ) 4 Betting—3 to 1 agst Teddington , 7 to 2 agst Marlborough Buck , 7 to 1 agst Hernandez , 7 to 1 agst Prime Minister , 15 to 1 agst Constellation , 15 to 1 agst Theseus , 15 to 1 agst Neasham , 22 to 1 agst Black Doctor , 30 to 1 agst Lamartine , 30 to 1 agst Hippolitus , 40 to 1 agst Bonnie Dundee , 50 to 1 agst Ariosto , and 1000 to 15 agst any other . with
Buckhound took the lead from the post , and the Enterprise colt in his wake , the latter , waited on by Teddington , Constellation , Neasham , and Ariosto , led the way nearly to the top of the hill , the running being then taken from him by the Enterprise colt , Teddington following Buckhound , in company with Neasham and Ariosto , next to the latter lying Constellation , Heartbreaker , the Marlborough Buck , and Lord Eglinton ' s two . This order lasted only to the mile post . Teddington then quitting his horses and going on with a decided lead , the Enterprise colt and Buckhound giving way to Hernandez , the Marlborough Buck , Neasham , and Ariostoto which lot the race , afier making the
, turn , was confined . Marlborough Buck took the second place at the road , and held it to the distance , where Neasham went up , and by sufferance got within a neck and shoulder of the favourite , by whom , however , he was very speedily disposed of . The Marlborough Buck and Hernandez were thus left within half a length of the favourite , who , having had the race in hand from the time he took up the running , left them without an effort , and won in a canter by two lengths , the Marlborough Buck beating Neasham by a length—Hernandez , who would have been third but for a disappointment opposite the Stand , finishing a neck from the latter . Prime Minister was fifth , and Theseus , Ariosto , and
Lamartine well up . Run in 2 min . and 51 sec . Being Exposition year , everything has been attended by a happy fortune . The weather on Wednesday was warm without being sultry , the atmosphere harmonizing with the sport of the day . The assemblage was unusually brilliant , and in numbers passed all computation . We have , however , to state , by way of drawback , that numbers of " fast men" on the road and the course , engaged in the
gentlemanly occupation of throwing a newly-invented missile , consisting of balls filled with powdered chalk , at the company , materially damaged the costumes of her Majesty ' s lieges , and destroyed a deal of comfort . On Thursday the sport was moderately good . But after the " gathering of all nations" on the Derby day the downs yesterday presented the appearance of a desert , the muster outside the stand being quite as scanty as it was within . The racing was over at half-past four o ' clock .
Workhouse Schools In Coventry. (From The...
WORKHOUSE SCHOOLS IN COVENTRY . ( From the Coventry Herald . ) We are glad to find that the directors of the poor of this city are about carrying out school arrangements of a superior kind for the education of the pauper children in the workhouse . To many who look at the ejuestion thoughtlessly , the proposal to educate pauper children well—better , in fact , than the children of the independent poor man—may seem wrong . Such persons overlook , or are unaware of the fact , that pauperism springs from weakness of physical and mental constitution , and that the best t elucation that can be given to the offspring joi paupers is the only way to strengthen and prevent them f ' remi falling into the condition of their parents . Tho case was stre > ngly put many years ago by the proprietor of this journal , who , when serving among the " most eliscreet , " in a letter on the subject of improved schools in the workhouse , e > bserveel : —
" Pauper children ought not to be regareleu as in any way responsible for the e'rrors e > r misfortunes of their parents . Whatever may have been the faults of the latter , the e ; hildren , at least , hud no share in them ; and most of them being eleprived of their natural guardians , being orphans , or deserted , or illegitimate , or the children of cripples or felems , the board of directors is to them in loco pare . ntis . Such children are ordinarily born with the seeds of pauperism deeply implanted in their countitutions ; the ; ir bodies weak and sickly , their mineln feeble and ill organized ; sei that a much greater educational care than ordinary is required to put . the'm upon a level with the children of independent parents , to eradicate ; such Heeds , ami to pit-vent , their producing a plentiful crop of both ndult . s and children elependent through life
upon the ; parish funds . It . is the ; duty which the directors owe , therefore ; , both to the- children and the ratepayers , to give ; as good an education to the ; former as circumstanced will permit . It is their duty to the children as their legal guardians , and to the rate-piiycrw , beejaiiHC it in the best and moat elire ; ct means e > f keeping down the rates . That thin is not at oneei acknowledged by all , is owing to contracted views respecting the ; objects of education , the term being ; but tern frequently confined to u measure of mere reading , writing , and arithmetic ; ' , ami facility in saying catechisms . Hut eelucation consists , in fact , of physical , moral and religious , and intellectual , each all l > ut (( Helens without tho others . Physical , that may give strength to tho boely nnel a healthy tone to each vital function ; morul and religioun , that may implant
habits ( not maxims ) of honesty , industry , temperance , frugality , and piety ; and intellectual , that shall not merely teach reading and writing , but give that knowledge that shall best fit them to discharge the duties of their station , and enable them in after life to earn an honest and independent livelihood by skilful labour . To carry out education in this sense , the children must not be immured in cellars , but have plenty of light and air and exercise , be well fed and clothed , and those with any kind of contagious disease must be kept apart from the healthy . They must be separated from the adult paupers
( excepting their parents occasionally ) , as such , frequently , are persons of loose and dissolute and confirmed pauper habits , association with whom would render any system of moral training impracticable . This separation is desirable also on other grounds ; for the dependent condition of pauper children being the consequence of the improvidence , want of industry , crimes , or misfortunes of their parents , and not , in any sense , of their own conduct , they ought not to be taught to regard themselves as paupers , but a spirit of independence should be carefully implanted that shall act as the most powerful of all stimulants to keep them from the parish in after life . "
More than ten years , we believe , have elapsed since these observations were penned , and but little has been done in the interim to carry out the views of the writer , but now , we understand , it is seriously intended to attempt to put these ideas into practice . Nearly six hundred pounds are to be laid out in a spacious and well-ventilated new school , with convenient dormitories overhead , having every arrangement for promoting the health of the children . An active and competent master is to be engaged , to give the boys a good plain education , and , as far as possible , train them in industrial habits . This was then thought to be merely one of the proprietor ' s " crotchets . " He was also a warm advocate of a Sanitary Bill of Baths and
Wash houses ; but worst of all ,, of a complete plan of the town , which was to cost £ 300—a sum then thought monstrous , as applied to such purposes . These things are now , we are glad to see , all taking a practical shape . So that the " crotchets " must now almost all be used up . By the way , does a ' crotchet" mean anything more than a principle or theory which peop le as yet do not understand—practical in itself , and impracticable only to the minds of those who have not given themselves the trouble to understand the subject ? Thus it-is , that important reforms and improvements are so frequently denounced as absurdities when first proposed , but in course of time being examined and better understood becomes practically adopted .
Church Discipline And Catholic Claims. O...
CHURCH DISCIPLINE AND CATHOLIC CLAIMS . One archdeacon , nine rural deans , and 243 of the clergy of the archdeaconry of Craven , in the diocese of Ripon , have signed an address in reply to the celebrated address of the bishops to the clergy in March last . The chief points in this response are , that the signers sympathise with the bishops in their anxiety " to allay the troubles consequent on the introduction within the last few years of ritual observances exceeding those in common use among them ; that they fully assent to a reference ' for the solution of all doubts ' in rubrics of uncertain interpretation to the bishop as to their true construction ; that in regard to the remaining question to which their attention was invited , the license , namely , claimed by some to adopt at their discretion any form or usage existing in the church before the Information , and not distinctly forbidden , they feel themselves concludeel against every such principle by the Thirtyfourth Article ; and that with every feeling of unwavering fidelity to the Church of England , they would record their deliberate and solemn cemvietiou
that nothing would more tend to heal our unhappy divisiems , to conciliate the respect of the laity , to reestablish mutual confidence , and to strengthen and enlarge their power for good in the great spiritual work before them at home and abroad , than a general and willing acquiescence in the seasonable and parental address of the bishops ; neither disparaging the ritual by neglect of its requirements , ne > r bringing it under suspicion and reproach by exaggerating its relative importance . "
A similar reply has also beon published from Dr . Hook , and nearly the whole clergy and rural deane ; ry of Leeds . They declare that they are more than ever attached to the Church of England , and the ; y regard the eliffcrences between her and the Church of Home as matters of momentous importance , affecting the vital truth of Christianity . They bless God that they posBess orthodox and primitive truth embodied in the ; liturgy and articles of their Church ; and therefore ; earnestly eleprecate all attempts to tamper with tlienc : formuluricM .
The ! " large proportion of the Roman Catholic laity" who have signed tho declaration , aprope > s of the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill , mentioned in our post-Bcvipt e > f hist week , thereby declare—That the Bishop of Jlomc ! is the chief pastor und ruler of the Church , aiiel the supremo earthly henel thereof ; that tho State never did ttt any time ; , or in uny country , poMHMBM the ) right to interfere with thes appointment , jurisdiction , see , e ) r title of a bishop , as bishe > p of tho Church , or on account e > f his spiritual and ecclesiustiaal character anel office ; but solely on account of tho temporal privileges und
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), May 24, 1851, page 6, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_24051851/page/6/
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