On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Jan. 25, 1851.] ^ gft* 3L$aH$t. 79
-
The inaugural banquet of the Lord Mayor ...
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.
The Inhabitants Of St. Imier, In The Can...
recently been committed on the Chagres river , where bodies of murdered men are frequently seen . The Papal power , in its aggressive character , has entered California . A bishop has been sent to that El Dorado who , addition to his spiritual duties , " is to examine and exhibit the titles of the old Jesuit property in California , and who will , it is thought , lay" claim to 150 , 000 , 000 dollars' worth of land , as the property of the early Jesuit missionaries in that country . *' The Valparaiso papers , received on Thursday by the Pacific mail , bring accounts of a political outbreak which had taken place at Aconcagua and other provinces in Chili The insurgents at first proved successful in their town
operations , and held possession of the before-named for a day or two , liberating all persons confined in the prison there . Troops were soon ordered out by the authorities the appearance of whom soon infused terror into the minds of the rioters , who instantly fled , or concealed themselves . When these accounts left , tranquillity was almost restored ; but so many secret clubs were at work to overthrow the Government that it was thought , unless the Ministry were prompt and determined , the disturbances would soon be renewed . Lima continues to be at the mercy of thieves , who are said to have plundered all the convents . There is not a night without four or five alarms . The Government , without means of repression , is unable to protect the citizens against these robbers—three hundred in number perfectly well armed and organized .
A general meeting of delegates from the several branch Reform Associations in the borough of the Tower Hamlets , took place on Tuesday evening , at the Temperance-hall , Mile-end-road , for the purpose of deliberating on the steps to be taken to secure an efficient representation of the borough in the next Parliament . A resolution was unanimously adopted , recognizing the importance of efforts tending to secure the election of Liberal members for London and Middlesex , and calling on the Liberal voters resident in the Tower Hamlets not to support any candidate for those places who did not come forward on the principles of the National Reform Association .
A public meeting of the inhabitants of Marylebone was held in the large yard attached to the workhouse in the New-read , on Monday , to petition for the total repeal of the window tax . The meeting was attended by deputations from Islington , St . Anne ' s ^ and others of the metropolitan parishes ; that for Islington came in procession , many of the members wearing blue scarfs , on which were inscribed in large white letters , " unconditional repeal , " " no surrender ; " the carriages which conveyed these gentlemen to the scene of action were placardfd with bills bearing similar mottoes . There were about 800 persons present , and amongst the gentlemen on the platform were Sir J . Duke , M . P ., Mr . C . Lushington , M . P ., Mr . W . Williams , M . P ., Mr . W . Mowatt , M . P ., and Sir De Lacy EvansyM . P . The chief speakers were Mr . W . Williams , Sir De Lacy Evans , Lord Dudley Stuart , and Mr . C . Lushington . Resolutions pledging the meeting to agitate for the total abolition of the window-tax wore carried with great enthusiasm .
The annual soiree of the members and friends of the Whiuington Club took place at the club-house , Arundelstreet , Strand , on Tuesday evening , under the presidency of Mr . Charles Lushington , M . P . The handsome suite of rooms , which have recently undergone the process of renovation , were thrown open to the visitors , and the large ball-room was decorated in a most elegant and attractive style . The walls of the various apartments Avcre adorned with pictures , many of them the choice productions of the old musters . There was also an
interesting collection of models and works of art , including ( specimens of electrotyping , and various articles of vertu . All these objects served to occupy the attention of the company during the early part of the evening , and , shortly before the hour at which dancing was announced to commence , Mr . Lushington delivered a brief congratulatory address , in which he stated that the period of hia presidentship had expired , and he thanked the members of the institution for the compliment they had paid to him and Mrs . Lushington , in according to them the privileges of life members . At ten o ' clock dancing commenced , and the amusements were kept up with cncreaMing spirit until a late hour . The attendance was
very numerous , and amongst the company were General t > ir De L . Evans , Mr . Douglas Jerrold , and Mr . C . Knight . It appeared from u printed statement circulated on the occasion that the financial and general condition of the institution for the quarter ending December 2 / 3 , I 860 , lias been more ( satisfactory than at any previous period . The number of members now on the hooks in l ( i , ' { 7 , including 112 life members , nnd the number of subscriptions duo at ChriHtmas was 738 , of which , up to the- present date , . ' 508 had been renewed . On the retirement of Mr . Lushington , Mr . Monckton Milneo ha « undertaken the oliice of president , whilst many diatinguished names have been added to tho list of vicepresidents . We : perceive that a public meeting ia to be held at tho Hull oi
of Commerce T ) irnnfhif > f >< ll <> -fitroi > t rm ThurHilav mm Commerce-, Threadneedle-street , on Thursday iH-xt , to < : o 6 perato with the Chancery Reform Association m ha efforts to obtain an entire revision of the equity practice of the Court of Chancery . The chair ill be taken by the Right Honourable Lord Einkine , uid the meeting will be addressed by other noblemen » 'id members of Parliament . At the time of high water , about five o ' clock on Tuesuay afternoon , the tide rose till the river overflowed tho "finks in several places , and covered part of tho Teinplc-KnrueiiK to the depth of several inches
. n ! i ? ' - " <; « " <>» ohed Liverpool , on Thursday evening , w * , " it (!< 1 ytftt «» Mail steam-ship Atlantic ., Captain N V i ° h l 0 ft tUut hurbour ou tho ' 2 mi ultimo , for ; Yolk . broke both her engine-shafts at aca , when Ki r . out » un ( 1 was compelled to retrace her passugo . ™> e did not arrive at Cork till hut Wednesday . All the passenge rs and crew are safe .
A numerous and highly respectable meeting of the working classes was held in the Waterloo-rooms , Edinburgh , on Tuesday evening , to consider the subject of National Education . The chair was occupied by Professor Gregory , who made a few remarks on the desirableness of a national system of education . He was followed , in a speech of great length , by Mr . George Combe , who proposed a resolution to the effect that " the meeting approve of the basis of the Association for National Public School Education in England and Wales , expressed in the following words : —* The National Public
Schools Association is formed to promote the establishment , by law , in England and Wales , of a system of Free Schools ; which , supported by local rates , and managed by local committees , specially elected for that purpose by the ratepayers , shall impart secular instruction only ; leaving to parents , guardians , and religious teachers the inculcation of doctrinal religion , to afford opportunities for which the schools shall be closed at stated times in each week . ' " This motion was seconded by Mr . James Simpson , advocate , and enthusiastically agreed to .
It is proposed to establish in Birmingham a scholastic institution for the sons of ministers , no establishment of the kind existing in the midland counties . The thoroughly unsectarian nature of the proposal is guaranteed by the fact that among its supporters are the Reverends Angell James and Brewin Grant , and Mr . George Dawson . A " full meeting of the soap trade in Scotland" has been held in Glasgow to memorialize the Lords of the Treasury for the abolition of this tax on health , comfort , and commerce . Messrs . Marshall , the large spinners , at Leeds , state that flax grown in the East Riding of Yorkshire has been found fully equal to that produced in Belgium .
The seamen of Shields , Sunderland , and other ports in that district , have struck work for an advance of wages , and in opposition to the " Mercantile Marine Bill , " the provisions of which they say are " degrading to the character and feelings of seamen generally , highly unnecessary in the northern ports , are a tax on our labour , and will ultimately entail slavery and misery on us as a class . " Some owners in Sunderland have paid the wages demanded , and sent their vessels to sea ; others have sent their vessels out in spite of the men , with crews at less wages . With the exception of a disturbance with a police boat , everything has been peaceable and quiet .
A new invention for filtering water has recently been patented . The idea is very simple . A hollow sphere of silicious stone , enclosed in a ball of iron , supplied with two taps , constitutes the apparatus , entitled " Foster ' s Patent Filter , " which exceeds in simplicity and efficiency anything before devised . Like Etzler , who turned the natural power of the waves to mechanical purposes , Mr . Foster attaches this filter to the service pipe , and makes the power which propels the water through the main to force it through a fire stone and porous sphere , by which it is filtered more rapidly and completely than by the imperfect percolation of the common filter . Water companies might fix these filters in every house , and secure , at a small expense , perfectly pure water in every dwelling . Housewives will value a filter which fills itself , and by the operation of a common pipe also cleanses itself .
A lady who lately resided at Blackheath some years ago made a will in which she provided that £ 50 should be paid to her medical attendant on condition of his cutting off her head at her death , to prevent her being interred alive . It is stated that the proceedings against Mr . Sloane will be removed by certiorari from the Old Bailey to the Queen ' s Bench . Mrs . Sloane is not yet apprehended , but there is reason to believe that she will be in custody before the trial comes on .
A fire of a very destructive character Lroke out in Little Britain , on Wednesday , morning , in the spacious premises belonging to Mr . Robert Whitaker , playingcard and pasteboard manufacturer . The total loss by this disastrous event must , at a moderate calculation , reach several thousand pounds . Fortunately , the principal part of the valuable designs , which have taken tome years to accumulate , have been saved ; but for a time the whole of the workpeople—numbering upwards of forty—will be thrown out of employ .
A fire broke out on the premises of Mr . Todman , chandler , in High-street , Stoke Newington , on Sunday night , and , although every effort was made by the firemen , the adjoining buildings caught fire , and were not extinguished till several houses were entirely consumed . It is not known how the lire originated . On the same evening a fire broke out on the premises of Messrs . Purssell , biscuit bakers and confectioners , Cornhill . The lire was eventually extinguished , but not till considerable damage had been inflicted . In the immediate vicinity of tho Albert-Rate , Hydefor tho Chinese
park , a building of considerable extent , new exhibition , is now in course of construction . About the hour for the men employed at the premises leaving off on Saturday a number of the hands approached one end of the scaffolding on which they were at work ; the instant they did so their weight lifted a largo portion of the brickwork , as well an tho stone cornicing , which caused the scaffolding and a great part of the wall to fall . Five or six of the bricklayers and labourers were precipitated to the ground , amidst the hric : kn , stone work , and scaffolding . They were all more or less injured , two of them seriously and one dangerously .
During tho performance of the marriage ceremony at St . Giles's , Camberwell , on Wednesday week , between a lady , the heiress of some property , and a clergyman , a most extraordinary scene took place . While the parties were at the communion-table a man , who had been in the body of tho church , rushed towards them , and commenced tearing tho dresses of nil he could get near . The alarm was so great that erica were made for tho police , nor w « b it without
difficulty that he was ejected . As soon as the madman got into the churchyard , and was released , he ran away at a tremendous pace . He is said to be related to a respectable tradesman in Southampton-street , and has for some time been very eccentric in his manner . At West Houghton , near B olton , demands have been made upon an aged widow and three other householders ( two of them in very humble circumstances ) , amounting altogether to the pitiful sum of 4 s . 8 | d ., for church-rate * . For this paltry claim four chests of drawers were seized , valued at £ 17 , and sold by auction ; and this notwithstanding goods equal in value to the demand might easily have been taken from the shops of the parties . About the same time , a Quaker in Preston had three pigs seized , worth at least two guineas , for a claim of 2 s . 2 d . for tithe .
A gentleman in Kirkaldy , Scotland , has trained a couple of mice , and invented machinery enabling them to spin cotton yarn . The work is so constructed that the common house mouse is enabled to twist twine and reel from 100 to 126 threads per day . To complete this , the little pedestrians have to run 10 £ miles . A halfpennyworth of oatmeal , at Is . 3 d . per peck , serves one of these treadwheel culprits for the long period of five weeks . In that time it makes 110 threads per day . At this rate a mouse earns 7 s . 6 d . per annum . Take off 5 d . for the board , and Is . for machinery , there will arise 6 s . clear for every mouse annually . The mouse employer was going to make an application for the lease of an old empty house , which would hold 10 , 000 mouse mills , sufficient room being left for keepers and some hundreds of spectators . —Eastern Counties Herald .
Jan. 25, 1851.] ^ Gft* 3l$Ah$T. 79
Jan . 25 , 1851 . ] ^ gft * 3 L $ aH $ t . 79
The Inaugural Banquet Of The Lord Mayor ...
The inaugural banquet of the Lord Mayor of Dublin took place in the Mansion-house on Tuesday night . His lordship awaited his guests in the reception-room , and gave each a cordial welcome . The Lord Lieutenant , attended by his aides-de-camp , arrived about half-past seven o ' clock , and was escorted to the room where the company had assembled by the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and the aldermen and town councillors , who were attired in their robes . The whole of the speeches made in the course of the evening were of the most flattering and complimentary description . The Lord Lieutenant described the corporation as representing " the wealththe intelligence , the respectability , the
, opinions , and the interests of the second cit / in the empire , and which may well challenge comparison with any municipal body that ever was , or is ever likely to be called into existence . " No allusion was made to political questions , or to the abolition of the Lord Lieutenancy . The project for founding a Catholic University in Ireland makes very slow progress . At the monthly meeting of the committee , held last week , subscriptions were handed in to the extent of £ 1600 , and it was arranged that simultaneous collections should be made on the 17 th of March to place the project on a more solid basis . It is evident that the Catholic laity do not participate in the enthusiasm which the Catholic clergy display .
An Irish paper states that , at the inauguration dinner of the Mayor of Kilkenny , Alderman Smithwick , in the course of his speech , said that , as regarded himself , he was not so ambitious about his country as others . All that he wanted for Ireland was an Irish King and Queen , and an Irish House of Lords and Commons . The lead mine recently discovered near the town of Galway has n 6 w a number of hands employed on it at full work , and the results promise to be highly profitable . The nephew of Dr . Hi ^ g ins , the Roman Catholic Bishop of Ardagh , has heen appointed muster of the Longford workhouse , with a salary of £ 50 per annum , and rations .
As Mr . James Hagerty was returning from Killucan to his residence at Knockshobawn , one night last week , he was attacked by an armed party of eight men . He instantly drew a large clasp knife from hia pocket with which he cut and hacked avyay at his opponents so vigorously that they were compelled to retreat . The struggle was a desperate one , and it is supposed the majority of the ruffians were severely wounded . Mr . Hagerty had upwards of £ 200 on his person at the time , and there can be no doubt but robbery was the object of hia assailants .
A very unfortunate occurrence took place at Cahirciveen on Saturday evening last , which , it is feared , must terminate fatally . Mr . Maurice O'Connell , M . P ., a Mr . Twiss , and some other gentlemen dined together at Fitzgerald ' s hotel . Some discussion arose after dinner between Mr . Twiss and another of the party . The person with whom Mr . Twiss had the discussion left the room . When he hud gone , the latter observed that he had never seen a duel , whereupon Mr . O'Connell said ho would show him tho way , and got a pair of pistols that
had been for seven months in Dublin . Ihey took one each , presented at each other , and pulled the triggers , when unfortunately the pistol Mr . O'Connell had , happening to be loaded , the ball passed through the riglit shoulder of Mr . Twiss , and lodged in the other , causing the most frightful suffering , and inflicting , it in greatly feared , a mortal wound . Dr . (" rump was called in at once , and the wounded young man made a declaration that the transaction was purely accidental , stating that he would not die in peace if he did not make a declaration to that effeiit .
For several yearn back one of the most miserably poor of the poor of ISkibbereen was James Kant ; . He contrived to eke out existence l > y disposing of a fuw boiuB and old rngs , and , now and then , a handful of grass plucked from the roadside ; but at last his precurious means of livelihood utterly failed him , and he was driven to the shelter of the workhouse . This poor man , according to a Cork paper , is now on hia way to London , in company with an eminent solicitor , to receive a legacy of £ 10 , 000 , and property to the amount of £ 600 a-year . It appears that an uncles of his made this large fortune in business in London , und that James is his next of kin und heir .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 25, 1851, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_25011851/page/7/
-