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fenced to sem years' penal servitude . Her motive for taking the ohild does not appear . Fraud ., on the East AsnttWssr Iniha Dock Company . — Robert Walter Sbanley , a youth of eighteen , lately clerk in a shipping broker ' s office in the City , is under sesoand at the Thames polace-offiee , charged with forging an order for the delivery of goods by ^ -wbich he obtained five cases , containing 1 property of the value of 5002 ., belonging to Captain Lloyd , an officer in the army , who sailed a few days ago for Rangoon .
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GATHERINGS FROM THE LAW AND POLICE COURTS . Mb . Reed applied last Saturday to Mr . Commissioner Murphy in tbe Insolvent Debtors' Court on the part of Mr . Richard M . Sayer , for the assistance of the court under peculiar circumstances . The insolvent is secretary to Major Ouseley , the agent of the King of Oude . He petitioned under the Protection Act , but did not appear before the court , on the ground of ill health . Subsequently be was arrested , and is now in prison . The counsel applied to the court to grant a new order for hearing under the pending proceedings , or for the court to allaw an application to be made under the 28 th
section of the Act for a ' protecting order . ' The insolvent states that Ms misfortune is owing to the mutiny in India , the imprisonment of the King of Oude , and the consequent stoppage of the usual supplies to Major Onseley . Mr . Commissioner Murphy granted leave to file a petition under the Prison Act , including all debts , on which the former petition would be dismissed . Mr . Samuel Warren , the Recorder of Hull , made some -observations , at the opening of the Christmas Quarter Sessions of the Peace for the borough , on the spread of commercial immorality , which he attributed to that ' making haste to be rich' which is denounced in the Bible .
The accommodation bills question was again brought before the Insolvent Debtors' Court on Monday , in connexion with the insolvency of Edward Tucker , an agent for the discount of bills of exchange , who on that day applied to be discharged . He was opposed on the ground of a general objection to his mode of conducting his business . He had been bankrupt in the year 1825 , and since then had petitioned this court on three several occasions , having been relieved from debts amounting on the whole to nearly 12 , 000 / . Upon this , his fifth , insolvency he owed 851 / . Many of these debta were liabilities upon bills of exchange which the
insolvent had endorsed , receiving no consideration beyond a commission for obtaining discount . Mr . Commissioner Phillips said that " the system of accommodation bills ia becoming frightful . He had endeavoured to eheek it as much as lay in his power , but more stringent measures are required . A very excellent suggestion had been made in the City article of the Times , to the effect that accommodation bills should be regarded in a criminal light ; and , unless something of that kind were done , the evil would remain unchecked . The insolvent would be discharged in six months from the date of the vesting order . "
An examination of the balance-sheets of the banking firm of Harrison , Watson , and Co ., who failed last September , took place in the Hull Bankruptcy Court on Wednesday , The liabilities are about 660 , 000 / ., the assets about 180 , 000 / . ; and the private estates of the two gentlemen will bring in together about 64 , 000 / . Some questions wore asked with respect to the advances of 90 , 000 / . to Taylor and Bright , the latter of whom was convicted at Tork , two or three weeks ago , for forgery ; of 140 , 000 / . to Mr . Hassall ; and of 94 , 000 / . to a carapbrne company , consisting of Hassall and two other persons . The answers exhibited a singular amount of carelessness and mismanagement . Another meeting will be held on the 18 th .
A charge was brought on Tuesday , at the Southwark police-office , against a Mr . Charles Burtwell , a master plumber , of having applied the proceeds of a promissory note for 1007 . to his own use , though the note belonged to others . The proceedings were taken under the recently passed Fraudulent Trustees Act . The bill bad been deposited in the hands of Mr . Burtwell as security tov the awn of 100 £ j but it was denied that he had any authority to use it . His counsel , however , affirmed that he "hat ! done nothing wrong , and stigmatized the
proceedings as oppressive . The prosecutor had been sued by MEr . Burtwell on the note , and it was to stop that course that the holder was given into custody . The charge was ultimately abandoned * and Mr . J&urtwell was discharged , the magistrate observing that there was mot Khe slightest pretence for apprehending him . Jffr . Pownall Ppllcw Cotter , a master in the Royal r 1 &avy 7 "fi « 8 ~ 0 «^ leaving her chargeable to the parish . Ho paid 601 . into court ( part of which went towards remunerating the parish ) , and was discharged .
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NAVAL AND- Ml&ITAHY . MDorb MsiirxAKY ( RiOTJUfG .- —Some men belonging to tho IDublin , Militia , now quartered at Burnley , Lancashire , got intoxicated on New Yew's Eve , and , sallying forth , struck Mrithfbeir beJte all who opposed them . A picket ,
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OBITUARY . General Havelook . — We have noticed elsewhere the death of this noble soldier ; but it will be expected that we hero briefly sketch the chief incidents of his life . He was a native of Biahopswearmouth , near Sunderland , whepe he was born on the 5 th of April , 1795 . His father '* family had been settled in Lincolnshire ever since the thne of the Saxons , and it was said to be derived from Guthrwn , the Dane . The hero ' s immediate ancestors were largely engaged in trade and commerce . Honry Havelock himself was educated at tho Charter
House School , London , where the gravity of his de-• meanour-earnod-for-hitn-the title of- ' Old-PUlo 8 ., ' ~ a-contraction of * Philosopher . ' He studied for a short time under Mr . Chitcy for tho law , and thus funned an intimate acquaintance with the late Judge Talfowd ; but he soon gave » p this eraployancnt , and was goaetted to a second lieutenancy in tbe Kino Brigade a few weeks after the battle of Waterloo , He obtained this favour through tbe influence of Into brother William , who was already in tho . army , and hnd dMingatehod himself in the great contest whiah opnshed . the fortunes of Napoteon . This < ft > rrth « jr m killed in 'action with ! the Sikhs Hi
Ranvnngger on the 22 nd of November , 1848 . In the year 1824 , Henry Haveloek , having by that time exchan ged into the 13 th Light Infantry , served in the Burmese campaign ; and , at the conclusion of the war , he and two others went on a mission to the Court of Ava , and had an audience of the monarch , by whom the Treaty of Yandaboo was signed . In 1827 , Havelock published a short account of the war , remarkable for the freedo m of its comments . In 1838 , he was promoted to a company , and attended Sir Willoughby Cotton as one of his staff in the invasion of Affghanistan . Through the whole of the campaign he served with great distinction , anil was present at the storming of Ghuznee in 1839 . He published a memoir of this as well as of the Burmese
war . He afterwards served as Persian interpreter ia the Punjab , and in Cabul , and was present at the forcing of the Khoord Cabul Pass , the action of Tezeen , and the other engagements which occurred during the passage of the troops to Jellalabad . With some others he shared the chief direction of the memorable defence of that place , and wrote all the despatches relating it . These were highly praised by the late Sir George Murray . The services of Havelock were rewarded by granting him his brevet majority , and by his promotion to a Companionship of the Bath . Some few years later , be accompanied the English army to Gwalior , and was present at the battle of Maharajpore ; and , having obtained the brevet rank of Lieutenant-Colonel , he proceeded , in 1845 , with Hardinge and Gough to the Sutlej , where he was actively engaged i : i the battles of Moodkee , Ferozeshah , and Sobraon . Strange to say , though he had many narrow escapes , he was not once wounded .
At the conclusion of the war , he was appointed Deputy-Adjutant-General of the Royal troops at Bombay , and afterwards Adjutant ^ General of the Quee n ' s Forces in India , which post he held till the breaking out of the war with Persia towards the close of 1856 . He then commanded the land forces at Mohammerah , but hnd no opportunity of distinguishing himself , as the Persians ran away . Peace having been concluded , he returned to India " , and was wrecked off Ceylon last April in the Erin . Almost directly afterwards , he was drawn into the vortex of that tremendous rebellion which hiis proved his death . The details of his heroic exploits against the mutineers are burnt too deeply into the national mind to need recapitulation here . Havelock was a man of an enthusiastic and religious habit of . mind , and was a Baptist . He was married in 1827 , and has left a family of three daughters and three sons . The eldest son holds a captain ' s commission in the 18 th lioyal Irish , and served under his father in the present bloody struggle .
Fielj > -Marshal Rai > ktzky . —One of the most prominent and remarkable figures in the entire history of the present century , and even of a portion of the last , has at length disappeared from the stage which he had occupied so long as to seem almost like one of the elements of the European system . Field-Marshal Radetzky died at Milan on Tuesday morning at eight o ' clock . His illness , which appears to have been paralysis of the chest , lasted only about a week ; in fact , it may be said that ho died of extreme old age . He was in his ninety-third year , and his demise was probably hastened by an accident which recently befel him . The Countess Wallmoden had culled on him , and , when about to leave , the old General rose to escort her out . She insisted that he should not do so , and left somewhat hurriedly to prevent him from stirring . She was still in tlut ante-room when she beard a full - Hastening back , she found that
Radetzky had fallen and broken hie thigh . He hnd probably risen again witii the intention of paying the lost courtesies to the countess , and had stumbled in his haste . The broken limb was not set , on account of the General ' s great age , and thenceforward he was confined to his couch . Previously to this , however , he had been unable to mount bia home , and was compelled , much to his vexation , to witness from a carriage a review given in Austriuu Italy during the late visit of the Emperor and Empress . On that occasion , the Empress paid tlio old Field-Marshal the utmost attention . The incidents of Radetzky ' s public life , spreading over more thun seventy yearn , cdn only be briefly glanced nt in these columns . He entered the Austrian army as a cornet us fur buck as 1784 , and first distinguished himself in tho wnr with Turkey in 1788-9 . Afterwards , during tho struggle with Revolutionary and Imperiul France , behavud on several occasions with conspicuous gallantry
and skill , and was present at many of the most iinnortunt and sanguinary buttles of ( hosu stirring times . To the success of some he contributed in no small degree After the peace of 1815 , he occupied posts of mingled military and administrative responsibility in the Lombardo-Venetian territory and in Hungary , and in 1831 he was appointed Oommander-in-Chiof in Austrian ltiay . ^ Ina « 06 nhe ^ w < w-nmd « -. ^ ield = MttrshaL ^ J ^ . ! l ! lr ins _ tho revolutionary movements of 18-18-9 , Radetzky occupiud the Held in opposition to the armies of Oliarlotf Albert , King of Sardinia ; and , though at first dofrutoil , ho ultimately triumphed , and crushed the hopes of tho Liberal party in Italy . On the 4 th of August , tho Sardiuiuns were compullod to capituluto to Rudots&Uy llC Milan ; but tho war was shortly afterward ** renewed , only to be utterly extinguished , on the 23 rd of March , 1840 , at the disastrous battle of Jtfovura . The campaign liau only lasted a , week . Honours of all kinds , fruin
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aided by the police , got some to the barracks , and afterwards visited several parrs of the town . The picket then became seized with the riotous spirit , and began smashing windows right and left Several persons were chased about the streets at the point of the bayonet , and a good many were seriously stabbed . Some took refuge in houses , and the militiamen then thrust thenbay onets into the doors in their bafBed rage . At other persons bayonets were flung when they got out of reach of the plain thrust . After satisfying themselves with these savage amusements , the Irishmen returned to their barracks . A detachment of the same regiment has committed similar outrages at Ashton-under-Lyne ; several of the men are in custody , and have been committed for trial . The whole regiment has been removed to Aldershot . _
Shipwkeck . —The barque Sibella , Captain Pizzey with a valuable cargo , has been wrecked , while on her return voyage to London , off the rocks nearly opposite the lighthouse at Colombo , during a heavy gale . All the crew but four were saved by the exertions of the Governor and others . The loss exceeds 40 , 000 / . in value . —The Catherine Adamsen , Captain G . Stuart , was wrecked inside the North Head , Sydney , on the 24 th of October . Twenty-five passengers are said to have been drowned . —The French ship France et Bresil , 645 tons , Captaia Honasse , from Liverpool for Rio Janeiro , was wrecked on Monday night at nine o ' clock off Kingstown , Ireland . Some of the crew were saved , but others perished .
The Leviathax . —A further attempt to launch this unfortunate ship , which was expected to take place on Mondav , was postponed on account of the preparations not being sufficiently forward . In the course of the day , a barque coming up the river ran into the steam barge containing a large portion of the windlasses and gear used in operating on the giant ship , and sank it—another chapter in the long story of accidents . The launching operations were resumed on Wednesday and continued without interruption till night , when the signal board showed a further progress of ten feet aft and about nine feet six inches forward . Upwards of sixty huge fires were kept burning in the yard , to prevent the pumps and feed-pipes from freezing . Since then , the ship has made further progress , and there seems now to be a chance of getting her soon afloat . Weeklv Steam Communication with India . —
The Times understands that , consequent on the new postal arrangements for a weekly mail to and from India , which commence this month , the directors of the Peninsular and Oriental Company intend to despatch four steamers per month from Southampton to Alexandria , instead of two , as at present . The additional service is , it is said , to commence in February , the vessels leaving on the 4 th and 20 th of each month taking passengers and cargo for Madras and Calcutta , and those on the 11 th and 26 th , for Bombay , taking letters and papers only to Calcutta and Madras . Four or five additional steamers will be added to the' Company ' s fleet during the next few months .
Recruits fok India . — Upwards of 1600 recruits enlisted during the previous week for regiments serving in India . This number does not include the volunteers for the Royal Artillery or the East India Company ' s European troops—nearly four hundred for the last-named service having been enrolled during the same period . The Lash . —At eight o ' clock on Monday morning , the men of the 9 th Battalion Royal Artillery assembled in the Biding-house Establishment to witness the carrying out of a sentence of court-martial upon James Stirridge , a gunner , who had been condemned to receive fifty lashes and one hundred and twelve days' imprisonment at Fort Clarence , and subsequently to be discharged from the Tegiment with ignominy . His offences were desertion and theft .- — John Williams , a private in the 6 th Company of the Royal Marine Light Infantry , received fifty lashes at Chatham on Thursday for absence from barracks and selling his kit . He is a notoriously incorrigible person .
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T H E Ii E A D EE . [ Jjjo . ^ h 3 ^ A *^\ * ^
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 9, 1858, page 30, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2225/page/6/
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