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^ c October 3 °3 ^ THE _ gTAR _ 0! fIEED...
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Alleged Death rao* Homeopathic Treatmen ...
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MISCELLANEOUS,
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MILAN IN" 1852. - There is an air of des...
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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Mansion Housed One Who Could Not Believe...
^ ^ ^^^ THAMES . g , lET ier Imposture , —T . Thompson , alias Spaw , alias 51 3 F . GGI' ^ var ious other aliases , who has imposed on the nobility R w B 9 * la J ' severa j y ears by means of begging-letters , was brought findijfl dgeniJJ ^ j ^ charged with endeavouring to obtain money by Ijcfoncfore w- from the Duke of Northumberland , the Earl of Zetfalse false P Earl of Ellesmere , Lord Roxburgh , and other noblemen , laiidjaiid , ^ a wejl-dressed man , about forty-six years of age , and TbeTbeP ^ rg in ches in height , has been one of the most successful 5 fe 5 - ff letter impostors that ever preyed upon the public . It beg ! be 2 g « d from the evidence of Horsford , jun ., and Webb , officers app a ppeaT iTlea dirity Society , that letters had been lately forwarded to 01 hove noblemen , containing fictitious tales of distress , and soliifce the ao , gonie 0 f them were signed " Margaret Scott" and
, ^^ V" Joseph Wailes . " A letter , of which the following is a ° , and in the handwriting of the prisoner , was lately received by c ° l c 0 % '] 0 f Zetland . It was addressed in the first instance " to the 7 7 r ) of Zetland , Kane-house , near Linlithgow , Korth Britain , " and rked , s private , " and , in consequence of his lordship ' s absence U fom Scotland , was forwarded to him at Aske , Kichmond , Yorksh : " shire . — "Ratcliffe-cross , London , Oct . 19 .
tf"tty IiOrd , —Under the most afflicting circumstances that possibly ild befell a family ,, do I beg leave most humbly to solicit your Lord-C ° Mn ' s kind c onsideration to enable me to perform the last duties of a S U to an aifectionate and industrious husband , who , melanchol y to * ™ Ue died yesterday at noon , in consequence of injuries he received by I T ' - ' fr from " a third-storey window to save his life , when a fire was raging I ^ fearful below as to precl ude the possibility of ingress or egress there' for this
f { Li I sincerely crave your Lordships pardon libertj ' , and crave i Yonr Lordship ' s indulgence in perusing the following statement . I beg \ to inform vour Lordship that my poor husband was a native of Ayrshire , in < Sc otland , having served his time as an ironmonger in Kilmarnock . Your 1 Lordship's humble servant belongs to Darlington , county of Durham . 3 Ur husband ' relatives being substantial farmers under the Duke of Port-: land in Ayrshire , from whom I beg to enclose a letter in proof of my assertion , ' they , together with money he and me had faved , having myself beea twenty years in the service of the late Bishop of Durham , was enabled to commence business on his own account , he selecting Rotherhithe
as most eligible , -where , since 1840 , we have carried on a thriving bnsiuess as ironmongers and shipchandlers until a month past , Sunday ni '' ht , when , from some cause shrouded in mystery , the shop , dwellinghouse , together with upwards of £ 400-worth of stock , were totally consumed bv fire ; and this , although most ruinous , as not one farthing was insured , Vas not the worst calamity , for my daughter , aged 18 years , to gether with a niece from Sheffield stopping , with us , were burnt to death . Fortunately I , together with three children , were stopping at Gravesend , otherwise our lives might have been sacrificed ; and left , as we art destitute , perhaps it might have been as well , for God only knows what we will have to meet with , situate as we are now . Under these unfortunate circumstances , I venture to appeal to your Lordship , of whose benevolent name I have known from childhood , and , should it meet your
Lordship ' s pleasure to render me assistance under such painful circumstances , " I shall be for ever grateful . —1 am your Lordship ' s obedient servant , " Margaret Scott . " The noble earl , on the receipt of the letter , wisely transmitted it , with the enclosure to which it refers , to the Mendicity Society , and lhe matter was put into the hands of Horsford , jun ., and Webb , who were not long in ascertaining that the letter emanated from a begging-letter impostor . Captain Wood , the manager of the society , caused a registered letter , directed to Mrs . Margaret Scott , PostoihVe , Ratcliff-cross , to be posted , and it arrived there yesterday morning . Horsford and Webb were placed in ambush near the
post-office directly it opened , and remained in their hiding-place until three o ' clock in the afternoon , when the prisoner , after looking cautiously about , entered the post-office , and inquired if there was anyletter directed to Mrs . Margaret Scott . The postmaster handed him Captain Wood s registered letter , and the prisoner was in the act of signing a receipt for it , when the officers entered and took him iiito custodv . At the same time the letter was seized . Two other letters , addressed to " Mrs . Margaret Scott , ; ' were also found in the post-office ; and another letter , similarly directed , was found upon the prisoner at the station-house . The Earl of Ellesmere had received a letter , sinned " Joseph Wailes , of Stoke Newington-road-,
London , " and dated , " Oct . 8 , l 852 /» soliciting relief , and detailing , in pathetic terms , the loss of seventeen milch cows within eight mouths , and the consequent destitution of the writer . Both letters were in the same handwriting , and that addressed to the Jb-arl ot Ellesmere was also referred to the Mendicity Society . Captain Wood posted a registered letter , directed to " Mr . Bossy , chymist , Stoke Newington-road , London- / ' to which the writer ' of the pathetic appeal requested his Lordship to forward an answer . The prisoner called for the Earl of Ellesmere ' s answer before the registered letter reached the post-office ( Mr . ^ Bossy's ) at Stoke Newmgton , and has not been there since . The prisoner and his wife werecpnvicted at
^ the Marlborough-street Police-court in 1849 for attempting to impose upon Her Majesty and Prince Albert , and sentenced to three months imprisonment and hard labour . They were subsequently ^ convicted and sentenced to fourteen days' imprisonment and hard laboui , ior unlawfully pledging goods from their read y-furnished lodgings , l he prisoner 4 s lastly convicted nine months since ior attempting to impose on Mr . Ord , M . P ., of 27 , Berkeley-squa re to whom . he ^ represented that he had met with an accident , and that his leg was amputated . The prisoner , hvdefeiice , said that he kncwnothmg office in 8
about the other letters found \ t the post- ^^ f ' ^ ^ knew a letter had been written to the Earl 0 f etland but he did not Avrite it . He called for the answer to the letter , and , as hehad pleaded guilty , he hoped his sentence would be mitigated . P # W £ said the Earl of Zetland was not at present in town and wrested aremand . He believed his Lordship would attend an ( T give ^ evidence against the prisoner if he were remanded . ™ Prisoner wkhed the case to be disposed of at once . Mr . YardlV ™*™ should remand the case for the attendance of the Earl of Zetland and also to enable the officers of the Mendicity Society to ^ scerUm whether there had heen such a calamity in Rotherhithe as the one mentioned in the letter .
^ C October 3 °3 ^ The _ Gtar _ 0! Fieed...
^ c October ° 3 ^ THE gTAR 0 ! fIEED 0 M . iss .
Alleged Death Rao* Homeopathic Treatmen ...
Alleged Death rao * Homeopathic Treatmen t -On Tuesday Mr . Wakley held , at the Hope and Anchor ®?«^ g ^ Bedford New Town , an inquest of five hours' duration on ^ e Mrs . Margaret Sedgwick , aged sixty , whose death was a"nbuted to homoeopathic treatment . The jury having viewed the body , Mr . Wakley , previous to calling witnesses , address 11 g Ae jury , said that he held the inquest at the expressed wish 0 d ^ d s relatives and friends , and in consequence of the medical certifacate ted
of aeath ; which ran thus :- " Margaret Sedgwick feg inflammation of the lungs , peritoneum and the tar ; . « £ ** death resulted from , I believe , the neglect of the homo 3 opa h ^ attendant and general nullity of treatment . Alexander Co m | M'Clowelle / ' Mr . Wakley , in contunuition . ^ said . Aat ^«^ S circumstances he was compelled to hold the inquest but ^ exp essed a hone that the iury would be solely guided m their verdict by the ^ Sa ^ durtvJnld be adduced .-Me ,: hearing the eviden of the nurse , housemaid , and husband of the deceased and also that of the practitioner who attended her after the ^ mffiopathists were dismissed , the jury retired for half an hour , and then returne d the following verdict , which the foreman read : " Deceased dmd from inflammation of the lungs , but we ( the jury ) are not competent enough to judge of the medical treatment .
Alleged Death Rao* Homeopathic Treatmen ...
pap ^ ToTe fnTo , 10 T ^ -Lm 0 Q * the itemf * » late parliamentary Januarylasf " 3 S lodg , ng m 0 ney t 0 jud 8 es > ' in the J «« ended the 5 th New Market , ToRQUAY .-The foundation-stone of a new market was laid on . Friday last , with great ceremony , by H . Murell Phillips , Esq ., in this rising flourishing , and most fashionable town . g ' The Republic of Liberia . —Mr . Roberts , the coloured president of Liberia Who has been on a visit to this country , is about to return to his government He will embark in a few days in her Majesty ' s steam-vessel Dee , and will proceed to Monrovia , on the coast of Africa .
Proposed . New Docks . —We understand that application will be made in the ensuing session of parliament for power to construct docks to be called the Albert Docks , and the proposed site of which is on the Greenwich Marshes , immediately opposite Biackwall , having entrances at Bugsby Hole , or Reach , on the east , and Greenwich Reach on the west . Jersey Garrison . —The military and artillery force at the garrison is to be considerably augmented . The militia force at Jersey is now 20 , 000 strong . The daughter of General Rosas , ex-dictator of Buenos Ayres , was married to a Spanish gentleman at the Roman Catholic chapel , in Southampton on Saturday last . The Envoy from Pitcah'n ' s Island , now in this country , married Sarah Christian , granddaughter of Fletcher Christian , the lieutenant of the Bounty , who planned and carried into effect the memorable mutiny in the South Sea .
Telegraphic communication is now complete between Florence , Leghorn , Lucca , Pisa , and Sienna , and between these places and England by means of the submarine telegraph . The telegraph for a distance of 105 leagues is now completed in Switzerland , uniting Geneva , Zurich , Berne , and other towns . Expense ov Prosecuting a Murderer . —In the annual accounts of the treasurer of the county of Oxford , just published , it appears that the conviction and execution of Kalabergo for the murder of his uncle near Banbury , cost the county no less a sum than £ 359 3 s . 8 d . Expedition to Kamsohatka . —An Hamburgh paper states that the expedition of the Russian Geographical Society to Kamsdiatka , for which MM . Golutkow liave given 30 , 000 roubles , and Count Heitten 27 , 000 , is about to be carried into execution . The expedition is to be composed of 13 persons , divided into two sections , the first part of which will leave at the end of the year , and is to last six
years . DiMiNUTiOiir op CRisrE in Leicestershire . —At the quarter sessions held at the Castle in Leicester last week , the chairman , Mr . Paclce , M . P ., alluded to the gratifying circumstance that crime had conaWevaWy decreased in the county , for which he had every reason to believe they were mainly indebted to the excellent reorganization of the police . Attorneys to be Admitted . t-As many as 183 persons have given notice of their intention to apply to be admitted attorneys of the Court of Queen ' s Bench in the ensuing Michaelmas Term , commencing on Tuesday nest . Extensive Frauds in Law Offices . —The Lord Chancellor has directed an inquiry into a series of frauds of an extensive nature , upon the " fee fund" of the suitors of the Court of Chancery which are alleged to have been perpetrated
Very large Policies of Insurance are , we hear , being effected in the City on the life of the President of the French Republic . Whether a clause is inserted providing for an increase in the premiums on revival of the Empire is not stated ; but the proposals for these insurances , even at a liberal rate , have been refused in more than one quarter , Loughborough Agricultural Association . —The annual meeting toek place at Loughborough yesterday week . The' show , which was held in a field adjoining the town , was an exceedingly good one , but was considered slightly inferior to that of last year . The dinner at the Bull's Head , which was attended by about a hundred and fifty gentlemen , was presided over by Mr . Packe , M , P ., who was supported by the Marquis of Granby , Mr . E . B . Farnham , M . P ., & c .
Port op Bristol . —It is now pretty well understood that Bristol will be the port of arrival and departure for the immense ocean steamers which a recently formed and wealthy metropolitan company are about to construct for the purpose of plying between this country , Australia , and it is believed , the "United States of America . The South Devon Militia , Tinder the command of Colonel Sir John Yarde Buller , Bart ., M . P . ( says a correspondent ) , have assembled at Plymouth for 21 days' exercise and ^ training . The men , who are all volunteers ,- are of . various heights , have had ' their uniform served out . They make a very efficient and valiant troop , but they are not likely to fascinate by their good , smart , or soldierlike appearance . We should think as to appearance one might go a long way to see a more " awkward squad . " There being no barrack accommodation , the men are billetted at various public houses , a course neither likely to increase the popularity of the corps nor improve the character of the men .
Convocation . —The clergy of Birmingham have agreed , by a large majority , to an address to the Crown against the revival of convocational action . The meeting was numerously attended . Leominster Agricultural Society . —The annual meeting of this society has been held as usual at the quiet town of Leominster , situate in the midst of the agricultural county of Hereford . After the exhibition of Hereford stock the farmers and landlords dined together under the presidency of the mayor of the town . Two of the three county members ( Mr . Hanbury and Mr . Kin *) were present , but neither of the borough members attended .
Journalism in Prussia . —The Kreuz Ztitung the organ of the cavalier party , publishes in its impression of the 23 rd a notice , stating that as all its printers and writers will be engaged in performing their duty as electors on that dav , subscribers must not be disappointed at not receiving a paper next morning . The Boot 4 nd Shoemakers' Strike . —Several of the workmen connected wit this dispute have again commenced work , some of the employers having yielded to the terms demanded by the workmen . The Case op the Madiais . — Letters of the 20 th , received from Genoa , report the arrival in that city en route to Florence of the Earls of Roden and Cavan and Captain Trotter as a deputation from the Protestant Alliance , to intercede with the Grand Duke of Tuscany for the release of Francisco and Rosa Madiai , who have been condemned to a lengthened period of imprisonment , with hard labour for alleged " impiety" in holding and teaching protestant doctrines in
their own house . One of the passengers boundfor Port Philip , who wont out in the Sydney mail naekefc which left Plymouth for Australia on the 4 th of August last , returned to En gland in the Bosphorus . He refused to proceed any farther than the Isle of Ascension , on account of the bad accommodation for passengers on board the Srdnev steamer . * ,, ,. „ , The French at Tunis Two ships detached from ouv Mediterranean fleet h ve been sent to reinforce the Tu nis ' statibn . This measure is owing , it is said , to the uncertain state of the Bey ' s health , and to the apprehension of complications which might arise should his illness terminate fatally . It is certain that in this latter hypothesis the Ottoman Porte would not fail to repeat one of those
demonstrations which succeeded at Tripoli , but which we have hitherto known I to neutralise at Tunis . It is besides asserted that the family of the Bey is f ^ rom sharing his ideas of progress , and taste for European institutions , bo that Tanae in the person of the sovereign would lead to a radical change of system . It is known that an almost analogous danger exists in Morocco , and that the Emneror Abd-er-Rahman , who , however , seems to us little enough progressive , for presumptive heirs fanatics who propose to withdraw the few conaS vfhich that sovereign has been able to mnke to times and circumcesS 1 Tjiese ai . e two contingencies which must not be lost sight of , for they mSVise at a most unexpected moment .
A Desert £ R prom the Militia . —A man named John Pa : cloe has been hended at Tewkesbury , charged with having deserted from the South GlouaP ter Battalion of Militia . It appears that he had volunteered to serve in the iTttalion at Gloucester , and after he had received his 10 s . he went direct to Worcester , and volunteered to serve in the Worcester militia , and after he had reived his 10 s . ' there , absconded . He has been ordered to be detained in custody until a court martial can be held upon him . Metropolitan Free Libraries . —On Monday a preliminary meeting of ntiemen connected with the great borough of Marylebone , was held at the h use of Mr . Oliveira , M . P ., at the requisition of that gentleman , the object being « ° establishment of a free library in the borough for the benefit of the working 1 s on a plan similar to those which have already been so successfully opened Manchester and Liverpool . Resolutions in favour of the objects of the meeting were adopted .
Alleged Death Rao* Homeopathic Treatmen ...
The Arctic Expedition . —Letters have been received of more than two months earlier date than those brought by the Prince Albert from the squadron of Sir Edward Belcher , up to the 8 th of June , from Disco Island . They express the most sanguine hopes , from the appearance even then , of an open season . Heavy weather had been experienced in the Atlantic , and the passage to Disco had been longer than usual . All were in high spirits , and seem to have anticipated somewhat of the good fortune which awaited them in afterwards finding Wellington Channel open and their onward progress unimpeded . From Captain Inglefleld , commanding the screw steamer Isabel , the accounts are not less satisfactory . His last date is from Godhaaven , a Danish settlement on the east side of Davis ' s Strait , and he intended to push at once for Smith ' s Sound , which the prospects of an unusually open season warranted him in expecting to reach . Captain Inglefleld speaks highly of his crew and vessel ; and , from the well-known talent of their commander , there is great hope that his efforts will materially aid tho search by ths exploration of the region to which he was proceeding
The Will of the Late Mr . tan—The will of this gentleman , whjch has excited so much interest and curiosity , is now in Doctors' Commons It is written by the deceased himself , in a clear bold round hand , and only occupies the front of a sheet of foolscap . The will begins by saying , that he , James Camden Neild , of Lincoln ' s-inn , and Chelsea , in the county of Middlesex , wished his body to be interred in Battersea Church , and in a vault as near as may be to his beloved father , James JVeild . He bequeathed to his executers £ 100 each , and directed them to pay all his just debts ( which vfere very trifling ) , and hereafter he gave and bequeathed all " real anO personal property to which I may be entitled at law or in equity unto Her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria , for her own private use and advantage , and her heirs , executors , and assigns . " And he expresses a hope that Her Majesty will be pleased to accept of the ° same . Benevolent Society of Blues . —The annual meeting of this institution was held on Wednesday evening at the London Tavern ; W . S . Gvey , Esq ., one of the vice-presidents , occupied the chair .
Patent Law Amendment Association . —A dinner of the council of this association and their friends took place on Wednesday evening , ai the Belvidere Tavern , Pentonville ; Mr . Shepherd in the chair : the object bein ° - to celebrate the passing of the Patent Law Amendment Act in the last session . Sailing of the Channel Squadron . —On Monday morning the channel squadron , under the command of Rear-Admiral Corry , left Cork harbour on a voyage to Devonport , where they will fill up five months' provisions , and await orders .
A YeteRAN TRUMPETER . —William Keightley , the present trumpet-major of the Eoyal Horse Guards , has been attached to that rigiment upwards of 46 years , having been attested to the same in 1806 . He is the oldest Serving soldier in the army . He was at the battle of Tittoria in the year 1813 , and was appointed trumpet-major to the corps in 1816 . He moreover , was acting state trumpeter at the funeral of King George III ., at Windsor , in January , 1820 , as also at the proclamations , coronations , and funerals of the two successive monarchy George IV ., and William IV ., respectively , and performed a similar office at the proclamation of Queen Victoria .
The New York Crystal Palace . —The building now in course of construction in Reservoir-square , is being carried forward with dispatch and steadiness , Its architectural form will be that of a Greek cross , each diameter 365 feet , width of arms 149 feet , surmounted at the intersection of the arms by a central dome 100 feet in diameter , each entrance 47 feet wide . The height from the floor to the spring of the arch , 68 feet ; to the crown , 118 feet . The arches will be of the northern or se ' mi-eircular style . Eauly Closing Movement . —An important step in this matter has been taken by the Great Northern , London and North Western , Midland , Lancashire , Yorkshire , and Leeds Northern , Railway Companies . They have resolved to cease collecting or receiving goods for the goods' trains , at 7 o ' clock every evening , at Leeds , Bradford , Wakefield , Dewsbury , Huddersfield , and Halifax , so as to " curtail within reasonable limits the hours of attendance of those employed in the merchandise department on railways ; " at the same time it will ensure a punctual dispatch of the trains .
Launch of the Bengal . — -This leviathan iron steam-ship—the largest ever built at Glasgow—was launched from the building-yard of Messrs . Tod and M'Gregor , at the confluence of the Kelvin with the Clyde , on the 28 th inst . The Bengal belongs to the Peninsular-and Oriental Company , The New Rules and Orders in Bankruptcy , which have been just printed , constitute an extremely voluminous document . They comprise 163 sections , which , if printed in extenso , would occupy about 80 of our columns .
Miscellaneous,
MISCELLANEOUS ,
Milan In" 1852. - There Is An Air Of Des...
MILAN IN" 1852 . - There is an air of desolation in this fine city which presses on the heart like a nightmare . True , the shops are gay and well lighted ; handsome carriages move up and down the streets—groups of officers swagger ahout in their elegant uniforms , —but still an impalpable something , —a heavy atmosphere , as it were , —with all this lightness , and in the full glare of this hot sunshine , weighs you down . There are priests and soldiers , employes , and loungers , and bourgeois
enough in the main streets ; but where are the people ? Scowling and ragged , and ill-conditioned in mind and body , they are to be seen stretched out in the heat on the cathedral pavement , or propping themselves up against crazy houses in the dark courts and alleys . Is it not strange that all the respectable people have shaven chins , and that all the commonalty seem to delight in the greatest length of beard they can cultivate ? Inquire into the cause of this , and you will learn that the people wear beards because they are disaffected . Yes , in Austria , where men are muzzled with the
leaden hand of her armed force , hats and beards , and coats and colours , speak , and are made the emblems of principles . " The other day an imperial ordinance was issued to the effeet that no servant of the crown should wear any hair on his chin , but that he might cultivate moustaches , tuft , and whiskers , as he listed . It was darkly hinted that this ordinance was aimed at the young Kin ? of Sardinia , who is celebrated for an enormous peaked beard ; " but that is too funny to be credited . Rowbeit , all the Austrians , and the friends of Austria , shave their chins incontinentl y , while beards became suddenly popular among all the Italians . * * *
La bcala is shut , because the Italians would not listen to music in company with . the Austrians , and the Canobiana is nearly deserted —the parterre presenting an array of two white coats for every black one . There are Austrian cafes and Italian cafe ' s , as distinct from each other in the nationality of their guests as if they were placed in different continents . Enter the Cafe Mazza , facing the cathedral , , and you see every man in the well-known livery of the Emperor , and I with the orthodox beard ; a splendid military band is playing in tho i Place outside . The respectable people pass on—a few poor idlers 8 and some boys remain , . and seem to listen with a sort of ferocious s pleasure they would conceal if they could to its delicious strains and d
then , when the music ceases at the close of some exquisite morceau 1 you hear a growl from the mob , and a hiss or two through the silence ' e ' and then in fear and trembling they cringe up to each other , and are re motionless . It is painful to see , too , their frightened alacrity in * et- 1-ting out of the way of officers and men on the footpaths . Still under er martial law , with upwards of 10 , 000 men within its walls , there is is but little , however , of brute opposition to meet the eye . The Aus- istrian does his spiriting quietly enough ; but juststep into the streets ts towards midnight-m a few seconds you will hear a measured tramp * ipi and-there go the patrol—two men in front , and a corporal ' s guard ird behind . Their march is just lost in the nightwhen again the same me
, is heard , and the muffled figures , in great-coat and shako , ko . advance from the opposite street . Stay five minutes more and youfou will see what a sleepless eye is required to watch the gripe of this this iron hand . This meets the eye , but there is , in addition , the invisibleible 1 police—the spies and detectives . * * * One Englishlish-i paper creeps in here—the panegyrist of the deed of December 2 d ; 2 d ;; aureste , you have a few wretched Austrian pages filled with details . ails , of the Emperor ' s progress , and the Official Gazette of Venice , the the * leader of which is generally a lively resume of the works of the per-permanent court-martial , and of the sentences passed on the ; disaffected ttedtt They have , by the by , just invented an excellent new crime . It islt iss
called " Opposition to the Emperor , " and is very convenient , as . itts . itfc may be made to suit every case in every class . One old man ofh off seventy has just been sentenced to some months' imprisonment withwithi hard'labour for it ' . — ' Correspondent oj ths Times *
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 30, 1852, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_30101852/page/7/
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