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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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Cooper , George Carter , John Callaghan , John Crouch , Thomas Card , John Connor , Jesse Daw , Denis Daley , George Day , Thomas Delaney , James Downey , Jeremiah Donoghue , Matthew Flynn , James Fielding , Robert Farthing , James Golden , Thomas Goulding , Patrick Hayes , James Hale , John Hazeldine , John Harrison , Joseph Harrison , Martin Harrison , John Hill , Denis Herlaha , Thomas Healy , Arthur Holmes , John Jones , John Jacques , William Jones , Thomas Jones , Ephraim Karley , Francis Keeling , John Lamb , Daniel Leary , Jeremiah Lordon , Benjamin Levey , James M'Shean , Edward Mason , John . J . Monger , Patrick Murphy , James M'Gillicuddy , Thomas Madden , James M'Ardle ,
KobertM'Court , John M'CastlLn , James M'Kernar , Thomas Norris , William Donnell , James Osborne , Charles Philp , Benjamin Pearce , George Pollard , Thomas Prate , James Eipley , Joel Rose , Charles Rose , Samuel Bawlins , James Jteardon , Samuel Bisby , John Russell , Thomas Rangden , James Taylor , Henry Seckington , Nicholas Smitb , James Scott , John Seaborn , Frederick Shaw , John Smitb , Frederick Hollybrass , Eugene Sullivan , James Stewart , William Shepperson , Darby Shea , William Trainor , John Turner , John Tunnicliffe , John Savin , Robert Ward , Robert Woodwar d , Patrick Ward , John O'Keefe , Joseph Murphy , Sydney C . Montague , James Irwin . MISSING . Corporal . —William Groomsell . Privates . —William Clements , Walter Wright .
RIFLE BRIGADE —( 1 st Battalion ) . WOUNDED . . j Prjuate .- ^ Richard Rose . RIFLE BRIGADE —( 2 nd Battalion ) . KILLED . Sergeants . — -W . Simpson , James Swallow . Corpora / . —Jobn Robinson . Privates . — Henry Caltpn , William Kennedy , Thomas Pine , Michael M * Bride , Edward Hester , Corn . Finnucane , Georgo Robinson , Charles Rason .
WOUJfDED . Sergeant . —Lucas Lucas . Buglers . —Isaac Dyre , George Ebetherte , John Davis . i ? rowaifes .- ^ -Thomas Alien , Henry Cooper , — Griffiths , John Sands , Alexander Stewart , John Owen , Samuel . Woolf ^ James Bennett , Jesse Burchillj Augustus Beeton , Janies Gray , " William Fartar , David Jones , William Mills , William Mulligan , Thomas Kally , Morris Nailori , Richard Hawkins , Richard Summers ; Richard Marton , Elijah . Coston , William Long , Henry Price , William Ilhnah , Rioliard Lloyd , George Combes , Charles Rhodes , Joseph Hicks , George Warren , John Cooley , Charles Howell , Patrick HowleY , William Taylor , Thomas Ford .
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MAP OP THE BATTLE OF ALMA . Mb . " WTn , r > has published a map and plan of the Battle of Alma , which is not only very admirably executed , but gives one a better notion of the position of the troops engaged on both sides than anything -which , has yet appeared . Mr . TVyld Is usually an authority in his particular line , and , no doubt this map is as deserving of credit as his publications generally are .
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OUR CIVILISATION . Eliza Webb is a boot and shoe-binder , and her business compels her sometimes to pass late at night through the Park-road , Old Kent-road . One evening Robert Kendall , a journeyman painter , met her , and made improper overtures to her , in disgusting language , which she rejected . Whereupon ho threw her down and indecently assaulted her , tearing heT clothes and . bonnet . She "was rescued by the police . Her assailant endeavoured to damage her character aa a means of defence . He "was remanded for further inquiries , and attempted to hang himself in his cell , but -was prevented .
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At Manchester lived , James Sunmor , a man ^ of sixty , wlio separated from hia wife . She went to live with her daughter . The husband wont into the daughter ' s house , and seeing liis wife sitting at tea , throw hia arms xound her neck , and saying , " Now I have got you , " draw a knife three , or four times across her throat . Sho did . not dio on the spot , but is in danger .
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At No . 220 , Rogont-atreot , Is thonhop of Mr . Bauingart , an cxtcnttive jowcllor and watchmaker . It is Bopnrato from tho other parts of ttio house , « m < l ia secured nt night , but no one loft in charge of it . About a fortnight ago three woll-drosscd persona hired tho upper part of tho liouao . One morning last week , when the uliop was « ponc < l , It was in tho utmost disorder ; wntchoa , ringa ,
and jewellery being strewed about in all directions . The floor and ceiling of the first-floor had been cut away , and a space large enough for a man to pass made , through which a descent was effected by a rope , and valuables to the amount of 1500 ? . taken away . Swellmobsmen had taken Mr . Baumgart ' s apartments . Did they gi ve references ?
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Mr . John Lipscombe is a middle-aged person , of gentlemanlike appearance , but he committed an aggravated assault on Mrs . Atton , who lived next door to him . There was a squabble about the children of the respective families , one of whom Li pscombe threatened with a stick . Mrs . Atton remonstrated , he abused her in coarse Language , and spoke in such offensive terms of her daughter , aged 14 , stigmatising her as a prostitute , that the lady could not help slapping his face . In return he struck her a severe blow on the head , which , partially stunned her , and broke the stick to pieces . He pleaded the " slap" in palliation , but the Worship-street magistrate thought it no more than he deserved for what he said of the lady ' s daughter , and fined him 10 ? .
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An aged gentleman , Mr . Witham Cope , was accosted in the King's-road , Chelsea , by Ellen Ryan , who , with much apparent modesty of demeanor , made him the confidant of a series of misfortunes which had befallen her ; she was a teacher of the pianoforte , -with one pup il only at that time , and that one pupil was unhappily not in a condition to . pay her , and as a consequence the teacher , sharing in the pecuniary difficulties of the pup il , was much distressed . This and other portions of her history occupied a quarter of an hour , during Avhich time she walked by his side . Sympathising / with , her distresses , he gave her some silver from his pocket , recommending her immediately to go towards Islington , where
she resided , and hope for some better change of fortune . At this moment she pressed , as he now remembered , very close to his person , when a man suddenly made his appearance , and inquired , in a bullying tone of the prosecutor , " What are you doing with that woman ? " To ¦ which he replied , " Nothing , " when the prisoners , both taking different directions , walked sway , and in the next two or three minutes prosecutor discovered that his purse , with its valuable contents , which he had felt safe in his trousers' pocket while conversing with the woman , was gone . Both parties were arrested , but the man was not identified , and so discharged- The woman was remanded .
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A " delicate-looking woman , " with a eontused and swollen face , complained of her husband , Thomas Locker , a journeyman cabinetmaker—an excellent "workman , with liberal wages—firstly , of starving her and her children , while he indulged in habits of drunkenness ; and secondly , of having brutally beaten her one night because she had not provided him with a hot supper . The woman stated that she had not tasted animal food for a month ; her children were half-starved and halfnaked , with nothing to cover them at night but an old piece of quilt . The husband ' s defence was , that ho was provoked by his wife's following him to the public-house and disgracing him before his shopmates . Six months ' imprisonment was the sentence on him .
Mr . John Kemp is described as a " gentleman , " living at 21 , Camden-cottages , Camden-town . lie was in the house of a friend of his alono with Mary Taylor , the sorvant , a girl of sixteen . Ho made overtures to her , saying that if she refused ho would murder her . She ran away till a late honr , when aho barricaded herself in a room , into which , however , ho forced his way and violated her . Ho was committed for trial .
Mary Thompson , a girl of fourteen , was placed in the service of Robert Thorman ( a married man ) , a plumber and glazier , of Palace-house , Bromley , by tho guardians of tho West Ham Union . It is tho practice of the guardians to visit all houses where parish girls under sixteen are put out to service ; and one of thoso visits elicited that Thorman had endeavoured to debauch his young servant , treating her most indecently ; nnd that during the confinement of his wife . Tho parish authorities prosecuted him . Ilia defenco -wns , flrat , that the accusation was falso ; and secondly , that there was no rape—nothing but " dalliance . " Of course the prisoner received an excellent moral character , and was fined 6 ? .
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TENANT RIGHT IN IRELAND . It ia stated in the Nation that , " Kilkenny has already commenced the now atrugglo for Tenant Right , with her habitual energy and enthusiasm . She has determined upon carrying out all tho resolutions of the recent Conference with heart and soul—and , aa tho first practical stop , sho has arranged tho preliminaries of a groat county meeting , to bo held in Callan , on tho 29 th instant ( Sunday fortnight ) . It will bo recollected that this 5 h tho first of a scries of county nnd parochial meetings projected by tho Conference , for eliciting public opinion upou tho Land Question during tlia i-occhh ; and tho prompt , practical spirit in which It has been orgftniHod ia « oheoring augury of tho succosa of tho entiro movement .
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THE CHURCH MILITANT . St . Paul ' s Church , Knightsbridge , is often more before the public eye than St . Paul ' s Cathedral . Not very long ago there was a furious contest about the appointment of a churchwarden who was orthodox , in the Low Church sense of the term , and who was re-established ia his office with renewed zeal for putting an end to the Popish practices which the Rev . Mr . Liddell left to the decision of his congregation , and about which the Bishop of London could not interfere . The battle has been renewed on the vexed question of " Intoning . " Mr . Liddell yielded , like a constitutional Englishman , to a majority desiring its discontinuance . Two of his curates , who place priests far above citizens , resigned . The laity
of the church took the matter into their own , bands . It seems that for three months St . Paul ' s has been beset by a number of persons , principally youths and girls from the purlieus of St . Barnabas , and members of that and other tractarian congregations , who , under the leadership of a youth named Fitzroy ( said to be . a member of the Collegiate School at Durham ) , have persisted in chanting or intoning the Litany , in defiance of the expressed wish of the incumbent , the order s and advice of the bishop , and the rubrics and practices of the Church of England . Their mode of action is as follows : —They assemble before the church , doors are open and rush into the church , occupy the inpst prominent places
of the free seats , which , from their proximity to the choir , afford them the best chances of most effectually impeding the latter in the discharge of their duty . When the curate commences reading the Litany , which he does in a monotone , and the choir attempts to respond , these Self-styled choralists burst in by chanting , and thus overwhelm the choir , causing confusion , dismay , and disorder . To prevent this , Mr . Liddell ordered the choir , when so interrupted , to discontinue' the responses , and thus the perpetrators of these discreditable acts have had it all their own way . Not content with this , the following advertisements have appeared in various ne ^ rs ^ - papers : —
" St . Paul's , Knightsbridge . —Fcll CAthedrai . Service on Sundays , at 11 . —On Wednesday ( Feast of St . Luke ) the Litany will be chanted by the choir * Churchmen , assist those struggling for their rights by your presence . ' I have said that the priests read the Litany , and a miserable eiiect the reading has , contrasted with the full body of sound arising from so many voices chanting the responses in unison . The great majority of the people from the first took lip tho chanted response —long may they continue to do so , in spite of the deplorable timidity of the Bishop of London , and the opposition of the purifying committee of Protestant , champions *'"
Mr . Liddell does not interfere ; the churchwardens become active . When the curate commenced reading the Litany , the choir responded , when the choralists again interrupted in such a manner as to produce such confusion and discord as to induce a number of persons in the congregation to leave their places , and retire in disgust from the church . The churchwarden now felt ho was bound to interfere . He accordingly left his pew , and went up to Mr . Fitssroy ' s , the " Hon . Sec . " of these disturbers , and stated that unless lie discontinued this
disgraceful interruption he would have him removed . This produced no effect , and Mr . Westerton called upon the beadle to remove him . Having fetched his constable ' s staff ho proceeded to do so , but Mr . Fitzroy having left his place , retreated higher up the pew , nnd placed tiro- of his friends between himself and the officer ; ho wns allowed to remain , having promised Mr . Westerton not to interfere again . The service , which had been continned during this disgraceful interruption , was then carried on to its close without any further interference by tho choralists .
Great indignation , of course , among all parties in the congregation ; and matters aro not lot to rest . Shortly after tho conclusion of tho service Mr . Fitzroy and two of his youthful companions waited on Mr . Westerton , nnd having no cards , wroto their names and addrosBOH , which were as follow : —Kichard Bullock , Ksq ., 50 , Wilton-croflcent ; Edward Jackson , tho same address , and Ernest Fitzroy , Esq ., 5 , Katan-plnco South . Tho latter stated his object in calling was to know ¦ whether Mr . Wcstorton was going to pronccuto for brawling in tho church ; and on tho latter stating such ¦ was his intention , Mr . Pitzroy asked whether lie was going to proceed against Mr . Uullock ? Mr . Wcfitcrtcm said he had no intention of doing so , wbton Mr . Fitzroy replied that , as that was tho case , Mr . Bullock would take out a warrant against tho churchwarden for aa ft 8 fcl < Ullt ,.
Accordingly Mr . Fitzroy applied to the magistrate at Westminster police-court for a summons agftlnst Mr . Weatorton for assault , The magistrate argued very learnedly thnt it was n matter for the Ecclesiastical Court , which alono had cognizance of nil " brawling" in churches ; but on being much pressed by tho outraged avpplicanl , granted tho summons , which stands for next week .
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A man and his wife , named Game , lived in the village of Littlo Waldingaeld , near Sudbury . Tho wife rotumed from nursing a sick person who had died , and was putting some clothes together , when her husband , a man of fifty , seized and stabbed her in several places with a knife , and sho died instantly . The man then cut hia own throat , and although ho severed tho windpipe , ho did not die immediately , although ho could not survive long .
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William Tripp , an engineer , wont with his wife to n p-ublic-houso , in Bnnkaido , to pay his club-money . One Thomas Gough , a moulder , uBcd disgusting language in tlio hearing of the woman . Tho husband remonstrated , and tho wifo abused , and " made a claw" at Gough , who stabbed Tripp with « largo Spanish knlfo in tho side . Hia lifo is in imminent , danger .
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992 THE LEADER . . [ Saturday ,
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Leader (1850-1860), Oct. 21, 1854, page 992, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2061/page/8/
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