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i ' ' ^ mmmmmmm ^^^^^ ' ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^ ' -- ' iil . nh call ed forth the above prayer of * , " ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ conld not join in the singing * gan had it all to themselves . . nFiCATioK . -We hare heard it stated the Rev . W . J . Alban , vicar orMeva-¦ in prosecuting the fisherman Thomas r his hat in the churchyard , have ^ Pl yr ^ k Journal . - ;; oto ^^ nun ! ber of gentlemen Qf Liverbscribed a considerable sum for the purpose icture of the present Qnancellor of the painted by an eminent a ^^^ The ^ commission has been given to a townsman , Mr . Philip Westcott ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ i
. . ... . „ . _ . Sermons in ( Macadamised ) Stones . —A Cambridge man writing . ' to the Cambridge Independent from Melbourne says : —" Twisden Hodges , trho was M . P . for Bye two or three Parliaments , is keeping a public-house here ; a nephew of Dr . WTiewelL master- of Trinity College , was walking the streets last week without a shoe to his foot , or a ' shilling in his pocket ; and lean ennr merate many instances of the kind . Gentlemen having left the University come to Melbourne to ' make a fortune , and in a-few weeks are found on a heap of stones , studying stone-cracking . " Maine is called
Nick-names for American States . — - the Star in the East ; New Hampshire , the Granite State ; Vermont , the Green Mountain State ; Massachusetts , the Bay State ; Connecticut , the Land of Steady Habits ; New York , the Empire State ; Pennsylvania , the Keystone State ; Virginia , the Ancient Dominion ; North Carolina , the Turpentine State ; South Carolina , the Palmetto State ; and Ohio , the Buckeye State ( from the buckeye tree , common in it ) . The Vermonters are called Green Mountain Boys ; the people of Ohio , Buckeyes ; those of Kentucky , porn-crackers ; those of Indiana , Hoosiers ; those of Michigan , Wolverines ; those of Illinois , Suckers ; and those of Missouri , Pukes . ' New York is the Empire City ^ Philadelphia the ' Quaker City ; Baltimore the Monumental City ; New Orleans the Crescent City ; and Washington the City of Magnificent Distances . —Notes and Queries .
New Mode of RdBBERY . T— -The street robbers have discovered a new method of dealing with their victims . On Tuesday evening andderly man , namedHSimmsi Was walking up Livery-street , when h ^ observed a man lying on the-gibundjnear the railway wall , apparently intoxicated . Simms raised " the man , and , at his own jrequest , led him . towards the railway station . Off their way the fellow accused his charitable eonductbrof" having stolen his watch , jrad twl > pother men suddenly coming up insisted on taking him to the police-station . SimmsJbe-¦ came alarmed , and , to convince the accusers of his innocence , allowed them to search his pockets , an opportunity of which they readily availed themselves , and having secured about 14 s . j the scoundrels , knocked him down and decamped . Simms , who was considerably injured , was removed to the Queen ' s Hospital , where he still remains . — -Birmingham Gazette .
Military Flogging at Newcastle . —A private in the 26 th Cameronians has been punished with forty lashes for using threatening language to his serjeant , and for two cases of theft . He is further to be imprisoned ~ for-104 rdays : —It seems-thathewas very much harassed by the excessive drill . ¦ Railway Association . — The North Western and Great Western Railway Companies have entered into an agreement to make similar arrangements and charges on all lines on which they have formerly been competitors for public support . Each Company is bound very strongly not to make the least deviations from the stipulated practice without proper notice being given . The new arrangements come into force with the new year . Death from Starvation . —A miserable case has
occurred at Petworth , in Sussex , which is the more miserable because it displays most disgraceful apathy and want of thought , A boy , named William Elcombe , eight years of age , who was employed to tend birds , saw a man in a field called Nine Acres , about half-past 7 o ' clock in the morning ; he had a stick , and appeared to bo poking at a rabbit-hole ; he remained there all day , and the lad left him there in the evening without having spoken to him . When the lad went to the field the next morning he saw the man sitting in the same place as he left him the previous evening . He continued in the field all this day , and the lad again left him there at
night . The next day , when ho went to the field , the man was sitting about ten yards from where he was the night before , and he moved about a little during the day , but did not get up to walk about . The lad again left him there at night without having spoken to him . However , he told his parents , and after a delay of two or three days they found the man ' s hat . Subsequently his body was discovered in a ditch—quite dead . A post mortem examination was made , and an inquest held , when the jury returned a verdict , that " the deceased djled from inflammation of the lungs and pleura t aggravated by want of food and great exposure to cold and wet . "
( A Church Living for Sat . u . ' •— The Rectory of ElmaweU , near Stowinarket , in the diocese " of Ely , containing a population of 800 , is offered for sale . It is represented as being worth 492 / . a year , exclusive of the glebe , lands , with a good parsonage house , surrounded by ornamental grounds . As an inducement to speculators ,
it is stated tfiat the present incumbent is upwards of 80 yearsofage . r , > The Bbulah Spa Assault . —The two Newtons , who , it will be remembered , were convicted at the Central Criminal Court for an assault oh Mr . Kerr , and adjudged to an . imprisonment in Newgate—one to nine and the other to three months—have since beenv . remoy . ed to Horsemonger-lane Gaol , as the offence was committed in Surrey . They have been lodged in the department allotted to first-class misdemeanants , in which place many privileges are allowed to prisoners . _ Crystal Palace . —The return of admissions for six days ending 5 th of January 1855 , is 12 , 243 visitors .
, The Storm on 1 ! Jbw Year's Eve- —The provincial papers instance various results indicative of the violence of the hurricane on Sunday evening . On the line of the Edinburgh andGlasgow Railway every signal lamp was blown out , and it was found utterly impossible to keep them alight . At Manchester a squall forced inwards one of the large illuminated glass dials of the Infirmary clock . The glass is nearly half an inch in thickness , and the portion destroyed was of a diamond shape , extending across the
entire diameter of the clock , the breadth being about eight feet . The glass was blown into the works , and stopped the dock . Several cottage chimneys were also blown dowi . At Bury ( Lancashire ) , the top portion of the mill chimney belonging to Mr . Astin , of Holcombe Brook , was blown off . A house at Freetown was partially blown down , and the damage which was sustained was about 707 . A portion of the roof of the theatre at Bury was blown off , and a considerable number of slates Were blown from the roofs of houses in the town and
neighbourhood . _ _ Taxes Repealed and Taxes Imposed . —Yesterday a return to the House of Commons was issued , showing the taxes repealed or reduced and the taxes imposed since 1844 . In Great Britain the nett balance of taxes repealed or reduced was 11 , 980 , 375 ? ., and in Ireland 551 , 100 ? . The taxes imposed in Great Britain were 254 , 270 ? ., and in Ireland 730 , 000 / : It is estimated that the succession duties imposed in 1853 will produce , when in full operation , 2 , 000 , 000 ? . per annum .
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' . ¦ - ¦ - ¦ " Leader OFFiCE ^ Satorday , January 6 . The _ Vienna Conference ; - —The true story of the " Conference " of the 28 th ult . at Vienna appears ta be as follows ,, according to the correspondent of the Times , writing on the 29 th ult . Yesterday afternoon Count Bubl and M . de Bourqueney met the Earl of Westmoreland in the apartments of the latter , and after the three Ministers had agreed as to the exact interpretation to be given to the four points , a kind of protocol , or rather minute of the resolutions , was drawn up and signed . The Austrian Minister for Foreign Affairs then went up to the second floor of the palace ( the property of the Duke August of Coburg ) , which is inhabited by Count
O'Sullivan , the Belgian Minister , where Prince Gortschakoff was waiting with Count Arnim and Colonel Manteuffel- —In-the presence of-the-two-Prussian-diplomatists , Count Buol communicated to the representative of Russia the propositions of the Allied Powers , and requested him to state whether he was prepared to accept them without either modification or reserve . To this Prince Gortschakoff replied , that his powers did not extend so far , he had only received orders to negotiate " about" the four points , but would send off a courier to St . Petersburg , and as he should also telegraph
immediately to his Government , he hoped to have positive instructions within forty-eight hours . " A protocol was signed by Count de Buol , Baron de Bourqueney , and Lord Westmoreland , containing the interpretation , agreed to by the three Powers represented , of the four points included in the indentic note of the 8 th of August . This protocol was not communicated to Prince Gortschakoff , but Count Buol conveyed to him " tho sense of the interpretation . " The Duke and Duchess of Brabant are at Vienna . Colonel Manteuffel has returned Jto Berlin . The Earl of Westmoreland is convalescent .
The following is a summary of the confused and mystifying note , forwarded on the 19 th ult . by the Prussian Cabinet to its ministers in Paris and London , relative to the Treaty of December the 2 nd : — " It begins by expressing the wish of Prussia to be in accord with the three Powers . Though it did not take part in tho identic notes of August 8 , it gave to them at least ' a moral support , ' and it engaged itself to defend Austria ' in certain cases' against any attack by Russia . There exists , therefore , an analogy between tho position of Prussia and that of tho three Powers . Further ,
Prussia is ready to prepare , in common with the other Powers , new stipulations , * the pacificatory weight of which should be calculated to exercise a salutary and decisive influence , ' and to come to an agreement on tho bases of peace . With regard to the treaty of Dec . 2 , it is observed that it has the form Cporte Vempreinte ) of an arrangement with Austria ; ' but Prussia approves of the general objects of that treaty , and is ready to conclude an analagous treaty ( un arrangement analogue ) . With that view , and ' in order to fix with certainty eventual decisions , ' it will be necessary to have some confidential explanations as to the interpretation of the four
guarantees which Russia has accepted . without reserve , and in their original terms ( leur redaction primitive ) . „ That interpretation will be thefirst step in ulterior diplomatic ^ t was said in Vienna that Prince Esterhazy , Austrian Ambassador to the Czar , has made preparations to leave St . Petersburg on the 3 rd of January .: .. . .. At the request o | Prince Gortschakoff , who declared that his powers were > not ~ suflicient to enable him to accept the four conditions as interpreted by the Allies , the representatives of the other Powers have consented to wait fourteen days from the end . of December for the definitive reply of Russia . The Opinione of Turin quotes letters from the canton of Grisons , from which it appears that the idea of taking service under England meets with great favour in that and the adjoining cantons . . in obedi
Spain . —In pursuance of their pledges , and - ence to the pressing necessities of the period , the Ministrv are endeavouring to effect economy in every department of the -State . In the foreign department the legations of Denmark , Parma , Tuscany , Switzerland , and Saxony , are to be suppressed , and those of Mexico , Turkey , Piedmont , and Naples , are to be of the second class . In the other departments there is to be a general reduction of the number of functionaries , and of the salaries of those who are to be retained . It appears also to be decided that there shall be a large reduction in the budget of the clergy . A portion of the royal patrimony is to be sold , and the civil list is to be reduced one-half . People who have the means of knowing say that so great is the disorder that exists in the administration of the Crown property , that not onejipr two private companies have offered to pay one thousand sterling per annum for domains that now bring in about
half that sum . Manifesto of the Czar . —An extraordinary supplement of the Jowfnal de St . Petersbourgof'the 16 th ( 28 th ) December brings us the following document : — "By the Grace of God , We , Nicholas the First , Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias , &c , &c , &c ., make known : —The causes of the war , that still lasts , are well understood by our beloved Russia . The country knows that neither ambitious views , nor the desire of obtaining new advantages to which we had no right , were the motives for those ; acts and circumstances that have unexpectedly resulted in the existing strugglcrWeiad solely in view the safeguard of the solemnly recognised immunities of the Orthodox Church , and of our co-religionists
in " the East . But certain governments , attributing touns interested arid " secretTintentions that were ~ far from our thoughts , . have complicated the solution of the question , and have finished . by forming a hostile alliance against Russia . After having proclaimed as - their object the safety of the Ottoman empire , they have waged -open war against us—not in Turkey , but within the limits of our own realm , directing their blows on such points as were more or less accessible to them— -in the Baltic , the White Sea , the Black Sea , in the Crimea , and-even on the far distant coasts of the Pacific Ocean . Thanks to the Most High , both in our troops and in all classes of our subjects they everywhere meet with intrepid opponents , animated by their love for us and for their country ;
and , toour-consolation in these troublous circumstances , amidst the calamities inseparable from war , we are constantly witnessing brilliant examples and proofs of this feeling , as well as of the courage that it inspires . Such are the defeats more than once inflicted on the enemy ' s troops on the other side of the Caucasus , notwithstanding a great disparity of force . Such was the unequal conflict sustained with success by the defenders of the coasts of Finland , of the convent of Solovetsky , and of the port of Petropaulowsky in Kamschatka . Such , above all , is the heroic defence of Sebastopol , signalised by so many exploits of invincible courage , and of indefatigable activity , as to be admired and done justice to by our enemies themselves . Beholding , with humble
gratitude towards God , the toils , the bravery , the selfdenial of our forces both by land and sea , and also the general outburst of devotion that animates all ranks of the empire , we venture to recognise therein the pledge and augury of a happier future . Penetrated with our duty as a Christian , we cannot desire a prolonged effusion of blood , and certainly we shall not repulse any offers and conditions of peace that are compatible with the dignity of our empire and the interests of our wellbeloved subjects . But another and not less sacred duty commands us , in this obstinate struggle , to keep ourselves prepared for efforts and sacrifices proportioned to the means of action directed against us . Russians ! my faithful children ! you are accustomed to spare nothing
when called by Providence to a great and holy workneither your wealth , the fruit of long years of toil , nor your lives—not your own blood , nor tho blood of your children . The noble ardour that has inflamed your hearts from the first hour of the war will not be extinguished , happen what may ; and your feelings are those also of your Sovereign . We all , Monarch and subjects , if it be necessary—echoing the words of the Emperor Alexander , in a year of like trial , the $ u > ord in our hands and the Cross in ow hearts' —know how to face tho ranks of our' enemies , for the defence of the most precious gifts of this world , tho security and , the honour of'our'country . Given at Gatchina , the fourteenth day of tho month of December , in the year of gnice 1854 , and tho thirtieth of our reign . ( Signed ) Nicholas . "
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 6, 1855, page 12, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2072/page/12/
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