On this page
-
Text (8)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
Untitled Article
Sra Bobbbt G * aht , the Governor of Bombay , Is dead . . TATio » , xas Stamp Office Clxkx , of Ball , kU been sentenced to seven years transportation . SRViKAL Eoman relics have been found in the soil of the Seine , near an old Roman road . A Cox ? . A . HT has been formed which is about to establish imbscription » ljaths in Bristol . ME . StaNFLELD has offidalW denied that he intends to vacate his seat for HudaergfiekL Experiments abb makino at Vincennes towards the formation of troops that will serve alternately as horse and foot soldiers . - A MONUMENTAL TABLET id about to be erected to the memory of Dr . WaAcott ( Pttei Pindar ) by his townsmen of Dartbrcok , in Devonshire . ' S »_ Eobbbx GuAMT / the Governor of Bombay ,
Distinguished Strangers . —Joseph Buonaparte and two giraffes landed on our wharfs simultaneously . —Nw > York Morning Herald . It IS STATED BT THE literary OaxeiU that the Earl of Burlington will succeed the Duke of Sussex in the vacated scientific chair . A Cossbxtatiy * Festitai was holden at Liverpool yesterday week . The report occup es five columns of the Tune * . The Two Eomau Catholic Primates of Ireland , Archbishops Murray and McHile , are " at loggerheads abouithe "National Educatio * " bools aT ^ . . Sxtbstitutjok or the Prussian for th » British uniform in the HanoTerian army will not be com pletely effected Oil the month of May next .
The Printing or the Schedules under the New Irish Tithe Act has cost four thousand pounds . Prince Ltjcien Buonaparte has had it -denied that his aster , Mrs . Buonaparte "W yse , -is to zcsde with him at the mansion hired by him at Luxemburg , as be does Dot see her . A Mr . O ^ Briek has avowed himself the author of , and ready to substantiate , the charge against Perrin , "Wealfe , and Dr . Stock , of bribing the < 2 ashel constituency . THE Liverpool Steam-ship made an experimental trip from Lirerp 6 ol to Dublin , on Saturday week . The distance ( 120 miles ) was run against strong hard winds in twelve hours .
Mr . Stephenson , the railroad engineer has beea engaged by the Florence and Leghorn Railroad Company to make the Burveys and plans for that Una . Earl Fitzttilliah has given thf sum of £ 500 towards furnishing a maseum to the Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Biding of Yorkshire . Owin g to the great drought in America this summer , the tobacco plants have been so much injured that the supplies next year will be very small .
A Cow , which had strayed on the BrusseVs railroad , between YVlvorde and Mechlin , a few days back , was run over by the locomotive-engine of one of the trains , _ and crushed to death . Wbleabs from Messraa , that Mount Etna still eoutinutsto emit kva , which flows from the highest part of xhe crater through the snows on the East side , directl y towards the Casa Inglese . The NevDcastlt Journal states that on Monday , at Hexham , the btd of Mr . Hedley , butcher , was sold in the market-place , by auction , for church rates . The Saxaby attached to 3 > r . Lushington ' s new appointment ( Judge of the Admiralty Court ) is £ 2 , 500 per annum : the inauguration took place on Thursday .
JOH 2 J I ^ ARXJEE , and thirteen of his associates , have been committed to gaol for the riot at Stanfield Hall ; the others , upwards of fifty in number , were admitted to bail . From the 1 st to the 20 th September , 367 foreign vessels entered Hull , being the largest number that ever entered -mat port in the same length of rime . A man NAMED . Hammond , whilst driving a cart , near Chelmsford , one night last week , lost his life by the vehicle upsetting , and burying him under it , in a deep ditch . Laurence H . Henry , Esq ., of Castle Clonmaiill , county IFestmeath , has been reinstated in the commission of the peace by the Lord Chancellor .
Sbtbrai , new ultra-Eadical journals are about to be started in' Ireland j the metropolis and some of the southern cities are to be the scenes of the first experiment . —Globe . The Price of Bread , we are sorry to find , has again risen , and is fixed for the remainder ot the month at fifteen sous for the four pound loaf . — Part * paper . _ . ¦ ' . Between 400 and 500 Students were assembled yesterday at the Hotel Dieu as candidates for appointments as dressers or assistants at tbe several hospitals of the capital . The Ea rl of Eldon has given £ 50 to the Coliingwood monument , a larger stun than his grandfather ever gave to all the charities of his native town .
According to the report of the Church Building Association , the present increase of population in England and Wales has been ascertained to be 19 , 000 monthly i Gormandising . —A man at Pavilly , in "the Seine Inferieure , ate two . dozen and a half of eggs tbe other night for a wager , after having made a hearty supper . A Hussian SQUiDBOK ¦ was croLdng off the island of Gothland , in the Baltic , on the 28 th nit . A brig belonging to the squadron had anchored at Seito a few days previously . The act por the abolition of imprisonment for debt provides that a sum from the profits and interests of unclaimed dividends may be appropriated to the relief of debtors cpufined for small aums .
A union or the master boot and shoe makers exists in the city of London , for the purpose ot screwing down the journeymen's wages ; many of the journeymen are , however , in union , for the pnrpose of resisting this oppression . The Dueb or Detonshire has relinquished his claim upon the fund of arrears of tithes in favour of the parochial elergy , and has desired by his memorials that his portion of it may be applied to ther relief . The late gales did considerate damage in several parts of Scotland . Cbimnies were blown down in Edinburgh , and the suspension bridge , near Montrose , so damaged as to be rendered completely impassable .
Last week one of the bears in the Meagerie at Liverpool broke from confinement , and was at large for some time before it wai missed ; opon pursuit , it was * found harmlessly browsing in a gras ? field in the rear of some houses . It is satd to be in contemplation to erect in the dock-yard * in all the naval ports of France , steamengines , with the requisite machinery , for making bread and biscuit for the navy , instead of manual labour , as at present is the custom . During the first sue months in the present year there were not more than eight and a-half inches of rain , including melted snow , which was a very email proportion to the annual average of 23 inches of rain in the neighbourhood of London .
_ Thb- Autumnal Equinoctial Gales have been severely felt at Havre . On Saturday , tbe roof * of the booses aad the street * were covered with large haiUUones , and oir Sunday there was a violent hurricane ? * -- ' : A MoTTXlBD ^ PiTBTRroGB . "—ITr . K . "Williams , of Brecon , lately kill * d ft partridge which had a perfect ring of white feathers on the edge of the wing * , a white taS , ~ and the legs yellow , — Western Luminary . 7 Tas New Hacknbt Coach Act provides that ill the tickets and licenses to drivers shall be dated on the 7 th of October . This happened on Sunday , awl Mr . D . ft , Harvey attended accordingly tbe wholt Sunday long , to deliver out tickets , licenses . &c .
Ah old homan has just been before the authorities in Paris for vagabondizing . When a * ked bow she made her living , she answered , "hy frightening little children ; " which tamed out to be actually the case , ebe being paid b y the parents for performing this singular duty . Thk Queen has presented to the Bishop of Bath and Wells the cushion on which his Lordijjip fcneH at the Coronation of her Majesty . It is eon ,, posed of cloth of gold , richly embossed with telvet * Wer « , and decorated by gold tassels . It measure twe feet and a half square .
Two Children were recently Poisoned /** ? oix from eating grapes which had been pur-Pp ^ ly sprinkled with poison , on the border , of a ^ Myard by tbe road aide—a horrible custom , which * " aid to exist in several iocaiiy ' es . f rmck "per .
Untitled Article
Steam Fuel . —Experiments have been tried in nixing pitch with coal far steam navigation , and it » said to have answered most effectualij . —Literary GaxcHt . The Oxford Journal bats— " In 1792 , there were not in the whole of Great Britain thirty Roman Catholic chapels—there are now 519 , and 43 building t . In that year there was not a single Roman Catholic college—there are now 10 , and 60 eemina r ie * of education , besides chapel schools . Stb ax Fuel . —Experiments b » ve b ^ n tri ^ ;„
A grbat number of workmen have latel y been employed in laying down Claridge s asphalte around the carriage-way in front of the Ordnance-office , Pall Mall . Most of them are Frenchman , upon which it has been humonronsly remarked , that this il not the first time th « ^ French have taught us to mend our ways . The Cultivation op the Beetroot , and the manufacture of sugar from it , are making rapid progress in Bohemia . Although the population KCarctilv amounts to 3 , 300 , 000 souls , there are 8 ? tnanuiactnries in full work , and many more ready to commence . "
Suicide . —On Monday , Mr . Charles Taylor , a farmer , of Market-Rasen , committed suicide by taking a large qnantity of arsenic mixed with brandy . Mr . Taylor had met with several severe pecuniary disappointments , which appear to have preyed upon his mind , and to have produced the determination of taking away his own life . —Boston Herald . Thirteen Houses were Destroyed at Lembergh , in Galicia , by fire , on the 24 th ult They were situated in a part of the town chiefly inhabited by the Jews . Sexen individuals lost their lives , and thirty were so severely injured as to make their removal to tbe hospital necessary .
An -antique tomb has been recently discovered in piercing a railroad tunnel at Hive de Gier , near St . Etienne . ^ It was cut in the rock , and lined with oak several inches thick , and covered with Roman tiles . The whole was in perfect preservation , and from its size , was evidently intended for two persons . It is not stated -whether any remains were found in it . Suicide . —A workingwbeelwright resided in the neighbourhood of Grenoble , whose offer of marriage bad been rejected by a young girl of St . Martin d"Here , made an attempt upon the life of his mistress , a few days ' ago , by firing a pistol at her , and having failed in his design , blew out his own brains with a second pistol a few minutes afterwards .
A Robber Chief . —The Courrier de Lyons announces the recent capture of a robber chief on the S * is 3 frontier , who was the head of three formidable hand * , one in France , one in Italy , and tbe third in Switzerland . He had been brought to Lyons , were he had formerly lived under his own name , but , at the same time carried on his nefarious practices with the aid of his French associates . He is an Italian by birth , and the prime of life . When taken he bad a passport under a false name , signed by the Duke de Montebello .
Excise Informations . -Entrapping Beer Sellers . —Mr , Read , a retail beer-seller , who has a license to sell beer not to he drunk on the premises , was snmmoned before the county magistrates at Wondbridge , to show cause why he should not be ordered to pay a fine of £ 20 and costs for suffering beer to be drunk upon the premises . Mr . Jameg Deyereux , the excise officer , went into Mr . Read ' s hDu * e , and , asking his wife for a pint of beer , began to drink it in the place , when Mrs . Readwho served
, him , told him that she could not permit him to do so ; he , however , persisted , and another officer coming in , he ordered another pint of beer , which Mrs . Read served him with ; but she said they must take them both a * gifts , she being determined not to take any money from them . Devereux threw down a sixpence and left the house- The magistrates qua > htd the information . The excise officers tendered , notice of appeal against their decision . —Suffolk Chronicle .
Seten Lives Lost . — With deep regret we have to announce that intelligence arrived at Liverpool on "Wednesday , of a most awful calamity , which has involved many poor and industrious families in the greatest affliction . Od Tuesday last the foundation * of one of the saltmines at Norwich , belonging to Mr . Ashton , snddenly gave way , during the time the people were at work , and the whole of the upper part disappeared , carrying with it into the abyss below the engine-honse and all its materials , and burjiDg beneath the ruins the numerous
unfortunate creatures pursning their respective oceupations . in fancied security . At the time onr information left itwa < impossible to form a correct estimate of the loss of human life ; seven persoos were known to" have fallen victims , besides several horses . A few women and two children , we are happy to state , effected their escape , but it is greatly feared many will yet be found who were not so forturate . We have not yet been able to learn the cause assigned for thi * dreadful visitation , the intelligence being ieat off in haste . —Liverpool Mail .
The Dead Alive . —A man nampd Penson , a tailor , about eighteen months since deserted his wife and child , leaving them chargeable to the pariah , and about a month after his departure his wife received an account of bis death , the melancholy event being announced by a letter . The pour woman put on widow ' s weeds , and mourned for the dead tailor . A few days ago , greatly to her astonishment , her poor dear "William arrived at home , an ' l ^ on inquiry , it turned out that hi ? " death" was annoinieed in order to prevent the parish from pursuing Jiim . — Western Luminary .
Narrow Escape froh Drowning . —On Satnrday morning , at an early hour , the lightermen , and other persona of Paradise-row , Chelsea , were alarmed by hearing cries of " Help , help , we are sinking ! " proceeding apparently from the middle of the river . The wind was at the time b'owing very hard , and the river was exceedingly rough ; nevertheless Henry Gaylard and Thomas Cole , two lightermen , put off in a boat , and after having gone two-thirds of the width of the river , they found four men in the water , clinging to some loose planks . They were immediately picked up ( two of them
apparently lifeless ) and conveyed with all haste back to the wharf , where they were put to bed ^ and the utmost attention paid to them . In the course of a few hours they recovered , and stated that they were coming up the river in one of tbe corporation barges laden with iron ore , and bad arrived opposite Chelsea , when the barge suddenly shipped a quantity of water , and went down , and but for some planti on board they must all have perished . As it was , they were full twenty minutes in the water before assistance was afforded them . The barge still remains under water .
Supfosed Suicide . —Yesterday morning , between eight and nine o ' clock , as a labonring man , natned Hatkins , was proceeding to his work along the towing-path of the Paddington canal , near to the Harrow Bridge , he observed a maa ' s hat floating on the water , and at some distance further on he discovered the body of a man lying face downwards in a shallow part of the canal . He directly procured the assistance of a policeman on duty , and the body was speedily got out . It appeared to have been
in the water only a few minutes . The usual means to restore resuscitation were applied , but without effect . The body was subsequently owned , and : . proved to be that of Mr . Robert Phillips , a respectable tradesman , residing in Richmond-street , Edgeware Road , who had left his house but about three quarters of an hour before he was discovered a corpse . He bad been in a very dejected state of mind for some time past , which was occasioned by the death of his wife , to whom he was most ardently attached .
False Alarm . —A moBt unpleasant circumstance occurred at St . Mary ' s Church , on Sunday evening last , which produced a good deal of confusion and alarm , but providentially , was not attended with any fatal consequence . In about ten minutes after the Rev . G . Couora had taken his text , a shriek was heard in the space immediately under the south gajfery , made by some children , and some one shouted that the roof of the church was falling in . Part-of the congregation near the place immediately rose from their seats to ascertain what was th ' e matter . The cry being repeated ^ a rush to the door ensued from all parts of the church , and was persisted in , although the Venerable Archdeacon \ i \\ - kins ( who was in the reading-desk ) u » ed every effort to keep the people in their seats . The utmost
confusion prevailed , and several persons were thrown down and trodden upon , and in some instancex very severely bruised , but happily had no bones broken . Bonnets , shawls , veils , and books , were scattered in every direction , and the clothes of many persons were extensively torn . Every report was set afloat by the nervous and timorous , and crowds afterward . '' went to the church , expecting to find that a gn-at portion of the sacred edifice had fallen , and that " numbers were killed . It appeared , however , npon invertigation , that nothing more had happened than ¦ two pieces of cement , twice tbe size of a person's hand , had fallen from , the upper part of the south window , and alighting opon the heads o ! two or three rhiidren , had cached them to give a false alarm . - Hottingham Journat .
Untitled Article
ANCIENT RELIC .-About a jear ago we noticed ¦ LmJSL v ^ * ' been the ^ idence of Mary of ™ % , V&"ons specimens of curiously carved work , m the shape of oak panels , were then taken \ Z 7 U J "' " **> ^ - "" fctaB wme repai rs upon aW W iOlmUg > aPPrently Anting part of the ti ^' Yf " ^ wts discovered , between the panels of which two black letter MSS were found wh . ch hear all the appearance , in the tW ' $ date " ' ° bel 0 n 8 in ^ the period when these residences were ori ginally occupied . The curious in these matters may see them at our office for ^ few days . —Scotsman . . . - '
n L w ! f AoT ° * Sblf-Destruction -On Wednesday night week , Mrs . Eastmck , a highly respectable widow lady , of Dorset-plaV Dorset-square , RegentVpark , committed suicide wnijgt in a state of mental aberration , by precipitating herself from one of the attic windows of her own . house , which is six stories high , into her garden oeneath , and expired in a few moments after her aescent . She has left a large family te mourn her ™ " ^^^ O" * ~ t ~ T 11 I IT fcW U 1 UU 1 U AACr * ¦ ¦
loss . Shocking Accident .- A few days back , as a loulouse diligence was approaching St . Jory , ^ tbe axletree of the hind wheels broke at the moment when a passenger in the rottnde was with his head out of the window , on the sidt towards which the coaeh fell , and , as the wheel remained vertical by the impetus of the motion , his head was caught between its edge and the top of the window , and he was killed instantaneously .
Singular Discovert . —Wednesday morning , one of the watermen plying from the Barbican picked np a coffin floating off the roeks under the citadel , which he took on shore , and on being opened it was v ^ fj r < i _ ^ ontain the body of a newl y-born male Child . Under the shoulders a piece of hearthstone was placed , with * view to sink the coffin . Ah inquisition was summoned by Mr . R . J . Squire , borough coroner , to inquire into the cause of the death of the child , and when assembled to view the body , one of the jurymen , a carpenter , identified theeoffinas bein g made at his shop on the 19 th of August . This led to an inquiry , and the apprentice who made it was called . He also identified the
article . The person who ordered the coffin , contrary to custom , would have it made in the proper form , instead of as a chest , as is usual for still-born infants , or those which die in tbe birth . In addition to this fact , there were marks on it which left no doubt on the minds of the master and his apprentice as to the identity of the coffin . The parent of the child for which it was made was sent for , and he also identified it , and stated that his infant waa buried in it at Charles church on the 2 l 3 t of August last . The child found was not the infant which had
been buried in the coffin—the one buried was a female . This statement was borne out by Mr . Rattenbury , surgeon , who was present at it » . blrtM A post mortem examination of the body was taken before Drs . Cookworthy and Derry , both of whom declared that the child had not been dead absye" 48 hours ; that it was their opinion it was born alive , but bad died from the pressure of the back part of the headin birth . The jury returned a verdict accordingly , and the grave at Charles church was directed to be opened to ascertain the fact of the coffin having been stolen . — Devenport Telegraph .
Kensington Petty Sessions . —The New Poor Law . —Several poor persons residing within the parish of Kensington , were summoned before Mr . Barlow , the sitting magistrate , under the New Poor l . aw , to show cause why they neglected and refused to repay certain sums advanced to them , by way of loan , by the Guardians of Kensington Union . The first case entered into was that of a poor labouring man , narosd George Eady , who was summoned for the sum of 103 . 8 d ., being the amount for a coffin and the expenses of the funeral of one of his children . Mr . Sasse ( overseer , and one of the Board of Guardians ) , who attended as " tallyman" on the occasion , said the defendant , when he applied to the
authorities for assistance , signed a paper promising to repay it at Is . per week , which he had , however , failed in doing . The defendant pleaded his poverty , saying he had for some time been in work only three days in the week . Mr . Barlow then told the defendant , that if the case was pressed agdnst him by the parish officers , he was liable to be sent to the House of Correction for three months . The parish had acted very kindl y to him . If he would pay 2 * that night , and continue to do so every week , he woald be at liberty ; but on the first fkilure he would be again summoned , when the process would be very
short . The defendant having promised to do so , he was discharged . —John Collins was summoned for 10 s . 8 s . under similar circumstances . The defendant Raid he considered he had no right to repay the money , the parish not having <{ turfed" the grave , and he appealed to the worthy magistrate as his authority for so saying . Mr . Barlow said he might at the first moment , when the defendant came to him and complained that sexton would not allow the grave of his child to be turffd , have said that the parish would probably not ask him to repay the amount , but he had since ascertained thev had
no power to do so , inasmuch , as , if it was turfed , they could not bury any other person in the grave . The defendant could not expect a freehold in the churchyard for 10 s . 8 d . The defendant was then ordered to pay lg . per week until the whole amount was repaid ; as was a person named Nagle , uuder simila .- circumstances : after which Sasse applied for other summonses against persons who had not attended , and against other defaulters . Incendiarism . —On Friday evening , at about half-past six o ' clock , a small volume of smoke and flame was observed to issue from the rick-yard of Mr . Riseley , GreatBarford , and before any effectual means could be resorted to the whole of " the
farmbuildings , together with the produce of upwards of 200 acres of land , consisting of corn , oats , barley , beans , and hay , were involved in a general conflagration . For upwards of thirty minutes the dames burnt fiercely , and while the eyes of the majority were intently fixed upon the scene , the apathy of the multitude was suddenly disturbed by information that the destructive element had been communicated to the dwelling-house contiguous . Messengers had > in the mean time , been dispatched to the neighbouring town for assistance , and providentially the Blunham engine arrived at the crisis . A copious stream of wa ^ er was immediately directed against the house , and owing to the judicious efforts of the firemen , it was rescued from destruction , but yet
sustained considerable injury . Immediately on discovering the accident , the labourers on the estate and the inhabitants of tbe village applied themselves to the preservation of the numerous carts and other stock , while the daughter of Mr . Riseley directed the liberation of the cattle , horses , &c . Fortunately , the latter were generally saved , though a few swine were severely scorched , and several fowls were literally broiled alive . The damage has been variously estimated , but £ 1 ^ 000 appears a fair and moderate calculation , while die amount insured is stated at one half . At the moment when the
flame was first observed , ayoungman , named Makin , a resident in the parish , and generally regarded non compos mentis , was seen to issue from the premises with a light j and , in consequence of his having been recently suspected of a similar offence , though on a minor scale , he was immediately taken into custody , and has since been remanded for further examination . Owing to the . darkness of the night , and the peculiar elevation of the premises , the flames were perceptible at the distance of twenty miles , and among tbe thousand , or from that to fifteen hundred , persons present , there were numbers from the dis tance of a dozen or sixteenSmiles .
Flood . —The waters of the Scheldt rose with such violence , a few nights ago , at Valenciennes , that they made a breach in the bank near the Pontdu Moritoun Noir , by the Lille Gate , and in a few minutes completely inundated the whole of the low grounds of that quarter , reaching up to the first floore of the houses . Great terror and confusion ensued , but , happily , no lives were lost . On investigation by the authorities , it has been found : that the inundation was caused by the neglect of some
miller * , who had kept their flood-gates higher than the regulations prescribed , and they are to be prosecuted accordingly . By the next night the waters had completely subsided . It is mentioned as a enrions instance of canine instinct that a bitch which had pupped only a few days before , finding the outhouse in which ahe was lying invaded by the torrent , contrived to carry all her whelpsup to the roof of the building , which happened to remain abo » e the level of the water , and was discovered there in the morning fostering her blind offupring .
^ Suspension Bridge . —The new suspension bridge over the Danube , between Buda and Pest , which will be begun the next spring , w a colossal undertaking . Two piera of granite and the red marble of Neudorf , 35 feet thick , and 150 feet above the level of tbe foundation , will support tbe whole structure . There will consequently be three openings for the water to pa * s through , the middle passage being 640 feet in width , and each of those at the sides 270 feet , making in all 1 , 180 feet . The entire length of tbe bridge will be . 1 , 600 feet , Cagt iron beams will support the platform , which is to be 37 feet wide—viz ., 25 feet for the carriage way and ? ix leet for each footpath . The whole will be suspended by twelve chains , weighing together upwards of 2 , 000 tons .--French Paper .
Untitled Article
* t" * j ow EscAPB >» pM DBiOWNINO IN A wiix . | S ^^^^ - ^ s ^ aSmt ^ httv T # ecipUat ! d int 0 iL The well £ g ° * Jj W feet deep , and there was about eleven feet of water m it at the time . In thi . awful nre-£ « , «** contrived to snpporc her&S aV- ¦ _ 1 . 1 t- . v" : ' e-pMym wi ucau clDOVc
hands and although she remained in this state ^ for her X » ^ v ? ° * heard h ? r cries - At kngth wp « f > ' tw ^ g sbe had been a long time out , after wtr ° fthe ™^ ° ™ ' housefto inquire SK 5 T - n * Wejtold her there was . & per ? on pryingind . stress about the back of the premises , upon which she hastened itato the garden , ^ J ^ PP ^ discovered the dreadful si tuation ita which her aunt was placed . On WrWtK .. JEJ
a ^ nuuijer of people rashed out , arid speedily rele ^ ed he oU woman from her periloua station , almoS " ! t « fj " ^ PP ^ g warmth to her body , she recovered ; : but what is most surprising , although she hadfallen so great a diitance down * narrow welh withprojecbng Htones on all sides of it , » he iTnot T pfl ^ hb Police-Oq Monday , Mr . U £ h , a gentlemaa ^ of high connexions , an office iu the 1 st Dragoon Guards , now in Coventry barasSted ^ ^ e bar > barged withLving oTthe r dot P ^ - ^ ^ whibt in the execution « JSw % ' The' coastal > * 8 « d that Mr . Leigh andottierofficerswere ^ makinga disturbance , aS were going towardg the barracks . •!** - » ,, w . « £
mree mtoe mornmg , and on his ^ questingthem to t ^! k ' ^ 8 aid ' " * ^ e arethe £ * LJliftw continued their riotous contt ^ tu M u ' Lei S > a 8 *« e most boisterous ^ custody , when he struck him severel y oh the took him to the station-house . Mr . Leigh denied that any noise was made ; they were speaking in their usual voice , and that the expression about the pohoe , wt » ch he foolishl y made use of , was the reason why the policemen assailed him . The Hon Mr . Cotton , the son of Viscount Cotnbermere . and ottier
othcersofthe regiment , confirmed Mr . Leigh's statement , anddeclared the police to be most wanton aggressors . The magistrate said be should believe the policeman , and fined Mr . Leigh 20 s . ^ Coventry Herald , An Ingenious SMuoaLER . -At a case of smuggling recently heard before the Lord Mayor in London , some remarks were made on the ingenuity with which the custom , are evaded A gentleman said he had reason to know a good deal about the tricks used by smugglers , mentioned a laughable incident which had occurred in a town on tbe coast of Scotland . A celebrated actor of that nation determinedto run some very fiae French brandy , and adopted the foliowinR plan : —He
nrocured a prodigiously long bladder , and caused it to be painted in the exact likeness of a boa constriator , and being in possession of the stuffed head of a formidable snake of the boa species , fastened it to the bladder , which he nearl y filled with brandy . He then tied thetail of the boa to one of his leg * , and twisted the body round his bod y , holding th ? head in which were two tremendous glass eyes , in his breast . When he reached the place which he onsidered to
be most dangerous , on accouat of the inquisitiveness of the revenue officers , he took out the head of the boa , in which , by an ingenious contrivance , he made the eyes and j a W 8 to move with great rapidity , and , in an instant , every body scampered off , leaving a clear passage to the snake and its master . The fraud was practised several times , but was detected by the curiosity of the actor's landlady , who was found one night blind drunk on the floor , with the empty bladder in her
arras . Egyptian Goldmines . -We understand that the gold mines recently discovered in Upper Egypt have been exceedingly productive , and it is expected that others will shortly be discovered . The commercial bouse of P . Jussuff , at Trieste , has forwarded 80 quintals of the quicksilver of Ida to Alexandria to purify the ore . The quicksilver was sold for 255 florins the quintal .
Untitled Article
THE : LT 1 NG WHIGS , LORD JOHN RUSSELL , AND THE REvVF ^ H MABERLTf . TO THE EDITORS OF THE NOUtHEUN 8 TAK . ^ GEWTLEMEjr ,--Having read a paragraph in your IZT £ lv *\ l - ia ** - > h < iaded tord John RussVlI andPQbUc Meeting ^ I s hUl be obliged to yOu " o have the goodness to insert the following as early as possible ^ nyour yalnabl e mlscellany .-llni , GeiSbmeH , yours obediently , .
., F . H . MABERLY . Bourn , near Caxton , Cambridgeshire , 19 th . October , J 838 . j 2 ^ r ^ ty $ *\™* ) ying migs . of which Lord . John Russell w the chi « f . How caQ they reconcile the recorded sentimenfaof Lord John Russell - S 'JT * ' ** - ¥ ™? * itH the conduct setVrth inthe following ? Therone belies the other , and £ , as do a thousand other instances , the gross nypocrisy . and lying character of these Whigs . _ Under the paragrap haforenarned , you make Lord John to say , m allusion to the pablic meetings which arenow in the coarse of being held in various ^^ L ^?^^ n ^ ^?^ Perhaps ¦ fui
•— - -y— - uuwu suuu uieetings , Das suca was notbisopinioH , nor that of the Government with which he acted ; he thought the people had a right Swto * f ^ fifT I * T . free d"ca * . ioa whk elicited truth ; they had a right to me ^ t . If they nad no grievances , common sense wonld speedily come tothe rescue , and put an end to these meetings . ^ It was aot from tree discussion ; it was bo * from the unchecked declaration of public opinion , that Government had any thing to fear . There was lear , when men were driven by force to secret combinaUons-there wm the fear—there was the daneer —and not frptn free discussion , " Sachis the recorded language orLordJohn . Now , look at his conduct t ^ k 11 ftT ^ coadjutors , pourtrayed in what I shall relate below , and beholcf how it beliea the above . "
The people have a right to meet ; they have a right to free discussion ; Lord John and hi * colleagues would not put down public meetings ; they have no fearof them ; if the people had uogriev ! incel CO'Timon sense would speedily come to the rescue , anaputan end to those meetings !" -.-it is well , ye lying Whig hypocrites , to holdtiis language , when the people have become too strong for you , and you cannot put them down , or stop their meeting But are you not afraid of these meetings ? You are ! Why else did you , Lord John , write tome two letters , of a threatening nature , by your secretary , Mr . Phillipps , to deter me from holding meetings against the Poor Law . 1
stood almost alone then ; you did not expect they would meet there in their counties * thousands No no . Biitthe meetings are all right , you have no tear . Why , then , did you write so anxiously and pressingly to the bishops of Ely and Norwich th * t they might put me down . And why did you send down twenty-five policemen from London , to take mevat Royston Heath meeting , if you could have made occasion to do it ? And why else have your Whig mayors threatened me ? And why did the Whi g mayor of Bury , Mr . Eagle , write to you so anxiously about me ? And why did he meet me , as I drove into Bury St . Edmunds in a four-wheeled chaise with my daughter , so little did I , or mine , fear any thing trom these meeting ? , the mayor
himselj trembling like a leaf , and as pale as death , and tell me he had got the soldiers ready prepared with their muskets loaded with ball cartidges , and that thev should fire upon ns , if there was the least disturbance ? I went as a stranger into Bnry , unaccompanied by any one but my daughter , trusting only to the cause . Why else all this , my Lord , it you have no fear of these meetings ? The conduct of yourself , and your Whig associates belies your professions . Why else again have three Whig bishops , the late , and the present one , of Norwich , and that of Elys exerted themselves against meat your dictum ; the buhop of Ely , in an nnderhaud manner , through the late rector , Mr . Brooke , depriving me of the curacy of Kingston * in this county ;
and the bishops of Norwich depriving me , to a great extent , of the benefit of my small living ; the present bishop ^ of Norwich libelling me in the House of Lords , stating I had not paid my curate ; and , therefore , I was a pretty person to agitate against the Poor Law , withholding , at the same time , the reason why I had not paid such , curate , and vrhijh he , the bishop , knew , and which was that that curate took the curacy at £ 60 per year , and demanded £ 100 , being backed , if not urged , by both tashops of Norwich to such proceeding ? And why did the present bishop of Norwich write to this curate to answer th « letter I had inserted in the Times in justih ' cat . on of my / selfV and get him to
state l naa wiuinela tne stipend in the same way from the former curate , without at the same time stating the reason ? and thus prejudicing me by withholding the whole truth , which wan , that this curate also demanded of me £ 100 , when he likewise had agreed to . talcs the curacy at ' , £ 60 , he being backed in this dishonest course b y the late bishop of Norwich , while at the same time it might have been stated that I myself was serving a curacy for £ 50 oer year T and that for the curacy of Hardwioke , in this cpiinty , which I held sortie years back . I 'give a friend of mine , the Rev . Mr . Glarkson , now rector of- — — , £ 50 a-year for doipg the duty only or a Sunday , when I received only £ 30 per year tor the
curacy , and preached there once a-week on the week day , and did all the occasional duty ; and not only so , but administered medicine to the people gratuitously , and had held iii this county curacies , one after the other , for twenty years nearly together , none of them exceeding £ 30 or guineas per year , — foregoiBg a fortune thus for the good of the people , as I might have had curacies of same six times , the value of these , if I would have given up these to be served by by any one , while I sacrificed another fortune for the relief of the people , and have acted throughout in such a disinterested manner , that I defy any minister or man in England , or elsewhere to prove that they have exceeded
roe in this respect . I am now , l find , running from my subject , and justifying myself , rather than showing the hypocrisy and lying of LorJJohn and his Whig associates ; aud , therefore , I say , why all this writing to me , and threatening me , and abusing me , and libelling me , and robbing me , having taken from rae as much as £ 300 by the means alluded to , that I should otherwise have had , and in consequence of former difficulties , thus occasioning me a loss of £ 600 ; I nay why all this , if not afraid of ail these meetings , — if Lord John and his colleain < € s delight in free discussion , —if the people have a right to meet ., if common sense would speedily come to the rescue , and put an end to these meetings , if the people had no grievances .
My friends , my _ northern friends , whom I address through the editors , I appeal to you . Do these sentiments and the conduct of Lord John and his party agree ? Is not here the grossest lying and hypocrisy ? And does not Lord John prove himself little Lord John in all this ? I would have done , had I been ia his sitiiati . tn , as I have dont to himtaken no notice of such proceedings , instead of expressing the greatest alarm about them ; but behold b , is letters , < fec , npon the issuing of my hand bills , calling a meeting at Roystoii Heath , thus his Lordship addresses me by his secretary : — Whitehafl , 7 th Jnne , 1836 .
Sir . —It having been represented to Lord John Russell that p rinted handbills , a copy of which is enclosed bearing your signature , have been extensively circulated lor the purpose of calling a public meeting on Roy ^ ton Heath , on Wednesday next , the 22 nd instant , at which meeting you intend to be present , I am directed by Lord John Russell to inform y « su , that if any breach of the peace , or other unlawful proceeding , should take place ^ at sne :: meeting , he will consider it his duty to give directions for instituting a prosecution against you . I am , Sir , your obedient servant ,
S . M . PHILLIPPS . Rev . F . ft . Maberly , Bown , near Caxton , Gambridgeshire . ¦ ' ' P . S . —Lord John Russell has made a communication to the Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire on the subject of the intended meeting , and . has transmitted to him a copy of the handbill to which your signature is attached . Row could bis Lordship pioaecnte me -with , ins present a wowed sentiments ? We have aright to meet he !« ays ; Bomebody must call the meeting ; he don ' t fear such meetings ; there is nothing to be dreaded from them . Whence , my Lordj all this hypocrisy ? the Northern Yorkshiremen have
shown you , you cannot put down their meetings , or prevent them ; hence this Whig cant . I took no notice of bis Lordship ' s letter , but attended the Roystoh meeting in . defiance of it and of his -twenty-five policemen , all ready to nab me , but they were disappointed . I called another meeting at Huntingdon , when down came another letter of a similar character to the above . I heeded this as little as the first , but read , the letters at the meetings , exposed them , and treated them with contempt . His Lordship then writes to the Bishops of Ely and Norwich , aiid forthwith came thefollowing to me : — In the interval it seems the affrighted Whig Mayor of Bury , had written to his Lordship . ( Copy of the Buhop of El y ' s letter to me . ) ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' El
:. . ; y , Oct . 4 th , 1836 . Rev . Sir , —1 have this morning received a letter from the Secretary of Slate forthe Home Department , laying before me a complaint from \ the > Mayor of Bury St . Edmonds , against you for exciting feelings among labourers and others against the present Poor Laws , and for calling public meetings dangerous to the peace of the country in varions populous places . Leaving it to the Secretary :-pf State and the Police of the country to maintain the existing laws of the country , and ' to prevent all violation of them * it becomes my duty- ^ 0 call your attenUon to the solemu charge you have undertaken as . tne Curate of ^ e parishes of Bou rn and Kingston , ^ and to express my opinion , that , consistently with , your pbiigations to those parishes ^ you cannot gae up your time to such pursuits as yon have lately been engaiedLn without neglectiflg tiiose cureii . Eawr-
Untitled Article
tamiag , therefore , this opinion , I am called upon to wara you , thai , if you coatinue to Hpendr so md « k of your time Out of the parishes committed to your care , I shall be under the ftecessity of revolting your license , and 1 shall write to Mr . Holworthy to this effect by this pest . . :: I remain , Rev . Sir , - Yonr faithful servant ^ J . ELY .
Untitled Article
- ^^ ... - . A ? Tv ? £ S a r ° J ? c . HE RADICALS OF ASHTONUNDER-LYNE TO THEIR BROTHER RADICALS OF THE UNITED KINGDO vl BUT PARTICULARLYTHOSE YORKSHIRE AND LANCASHIRE LADS THAT MET ON KERSAL MOOR AND PEEP GREEN . Brother Radicals , —ft was with the greatest delight we learned that you had a glorious meetin g at Peep Green , on Monday , the 15 th of October , but although you had auch n wbnderous assemblage of principle , guided by auch an unparalled galaxy of talent , wemostaincerelyhope that the brave / Radicals " of Yorkshire and Lancashire wiil not sit down congratulating themselves under the pleasing supposition that they hava done their duty , as we can assure
them that we * the Radicals of Ashton , feel more than ever convinced that the work of national rfgenerationhas scarcely begun , and that all that we as a sBction have doue h ' as benn nothing more than an iutroductioh to the glorious struggle we are about to undertake for the recovery of our rights . When we consider what a powerful host of wealth and intelligence there is arrayed against us in the shape of aristocrats , landholders , moneymongers , capitalists , and middlemen of all sortx , with the army , the navy , and all the squadrons of churchmen , pimps , parasites , harlots , and slaves that form the establishments our oppressors , we cannot but be convinced that nothing but union can effect our deliverance , and that union must be of the strongest and best
organized description . We know "He that is not for us is against us , " therefore let us have no neutmHty , let every man be up and doing suffer not yourselves to be led astray by the emissarie 8 of the base , bloody , and brutal Whigs , by tho agents of the traitorons and villainous Tories , nor yet by the smooth-tongued hypocritical thieve , the sham-Radicals , who are decidedly greater foes to the weal of the operatives than the other two parties put together . What has any of the thTee b . ord »> s of thieves ever given you but tax , tax , tax , with prisons , poverty , and persecution . Oh , but they have given you liberty ! yes , liberty to labour for their joint benefit as long as you are able ; liberty to die in the flower of your age , with liberty to be buried by a penny sick dub , or else send your
bodies to the anatomical theatre . . Englishmen , Britons , ye real Kentlemeu , ye rightful owners of the soil , how long will ye bear such treatment ? Hjh the spirit of your fathers' forsaken ye ? Will ye be ever-willing slaves ? Have the Poor Law Commissi oners annihilated every particle of manhood ye once posst-s . sed , or has every spark ofpatriotism been extinguished in your breasts by the deadly draughts of -killy p -ison that has been administered in the new bastiles ? If this is the case , you had better hide the light of that glorious luminary of the press , the " Northern Star , " and say you are . satisfied to liiig t he chains that bind ye , and lick the dust from the feet of your oppressors , but if ye are the descendants of the heroes of Cressy and Agiiacourt , if Ye are the
sons of the men that crowned Britain with laurels , and were the terror of Europe for the last three centuries , if you really wish to deserve the title of freemen that you have so long borne in name only , up then , up with the green flag of liberty , and let your war cry be Universal Suffrage or death ; then , and then ouly will you be deserving of the freedom you se » : m so ardently to admire . And now brother Radicals , be not led astray by any pretended supporters as leaders that would direct ^ your attention to any other question either in the . nhape of a repeal of the Corn Law , the New Poor Law , Free Trade , the Malt Tax , theChurch Question , the Pension List , the National Debt , the Factory Question , the Canadasy Russia , France , or any other clap-trap that may be held out
to distract your councils and divide yoUr efforts in the accomplishment of your object , as the Suffrage is the grand levee that will lift this darnnable 1 iucubusi from off your shoulders , and without it you are slaves in reality , for every one that has a vote is infactyour master . Butto accomplishthisdesirablebbjectmoney will be wanted , and when We . see thnt Irish apostat * Dan , the * 'Pray Curse Her , " drawing such impiense sums from the hands . of the atarying Irishi ( we would have said pockets but they need npne ) . when we see that , allte ' r he Was the cauie of disfranchising the forty shilling freeholders * we feel you will not let our efforts be a failure , " but support your delegates ib such a manner while sitting iu the convention , that the tyrants themselves ^ will acknowledge that it would be better to be paid by the people . Arid we also acquaint oar nei g hbours of the Ashton district and the surrounding divisions and townships that so
nooiy cams torwaru and . untnrled their banners on Kiersal Moor , Aat their aid will be required in sending their representative ( Mr . Stephens ) to Londoni to protect their interests and forward and support their demands in the coming session , and we tell them too to prepare for the "worst , for every hair of his head that may be injured , most assuredly a tyrant shall fnlL and an oppressor of the poor shall bite the dust . Organize then , brother Radicals , organize , and should thi& hour of trial arrive sooner than we expect , be -you j ready to meet the strnggley and may God forgive the party that drive honest men to sucn extremities . Remeniberj then , that England expects every non-elector to do his duty , and may the curse of the widew and the orphan alight upon the coward heads that will not or dare not do all that in him lies in defence of his own rights and , that of the nation atlarge . "Who ^ ould pity a willing slave . '' We are in good faith and hopev THE RADICALS OF ASHTON UNDER-LYNE . Radical Rooms , Ashton .
Untitled Article
Inthe interval of these letters come 3 one to m » from the Whig dissenting Mayor of Saffron Waldenwho was so pleased with coming into possession of the mace , that , report says , he took it up to be with him . , ""¦¦ ¦ Saffron Walden , July 16 , 1835 . Sir , —It is a duty incumbent upon me to appriza you that if the meeting which you haver been th » means of calling , and which it appears is this dayto be held within the boundary of this ) borough should occasion any breach of the peace , the civil authorities will hold vou accountable for the co& . » sequences . f am , Sir , v ' Your most obedient Servant ,
JOHN PLAYER , Mayor . Another Mayor , I think , addressed-me in the > same way , but I cannot lay my hand on his letter , while the Whig Mayor of Cambridge , M r . Humphries , has thought good to libel me ,, giving ; a lyingf account of what I said at Gambridge Y at iny meeting ? there . ¦ ¦' .. ' - ' ... . ' Now , I have observed elsewhere , upon all tluV have Ministers and their satellites ever written thus to O'Connell ; or dared they do so ? If so well , but they have done nothing of the kind . -No v no , O'Cpnriell is their master , and they are bis puppets *
as they have mnde majesty theirs and they wbnll lo-e their places , if they said a word to O : 'Connell 5 and , therefore , to him they are mum , and they may send twenty-five policemen to escort himtband fro m his meetings , but forsooth potto touch a hairof his head . Now follows the libelling in the House of Lords or elsewhere ^ the taking front me the Curacy of Kingston—the depriving me of the value of my living , the stipend of which is Only ; £ 120 per year And when I had called a sixth , meeting at Cambridge at which Earl Stanhope promised to attend , and which I stated in my handbills , and in the expectation of which I had called this meeting , a
AVhig with otners got round him-rthe Whig tellings him , that he knew some Whigs had threatened to come and cause a disturbance , that a handle * might be had for taking up his Lordship . What think you of this ? Thns , his Lordship was _ pe ? - suaded 'to urge me to put off this meeting , which / I did with , the greatest reluctance . Otherwise , w » should have had one of your Yorkshire meetinga of fifty thousand instead of five and ten thousand , or » few more , - of which my meetings have consisted * Surely , all this manifests fear on the part . Of tho Whiffs , and thev do fear your meetings , notwith *
standing all their cant and hypdency . Go on thelt my j ^ drthern * brethern . Meet , meet .: Demand , demand / and determine . Yon will have the repeal of the abominable and accursed Poor Law , and the redress of all you grievances . We . are agreed as to the principle . Freedom , liberality . No man shackled more than absolutely necessary , the poor ahaW live , though we may not be quite agreed ^ as to the meani ^ here , however , I hope we are open to cOnnctibn , and that we are all ready to accomplish , not only the best objects , but in the best way , aud that so > we may all come to one mind , as to the manner , as well as the objects , to be effected ; and for tha present , . :
I remain , my . friends and the editors , Your most obedient Servant , F . H . MABERLtV ; P , S . In regard to my neglect of the duty of th » duty of the parishes . I beHeve the very ; week , I received his Lordship ' s first letter , complaining of tbJsVl took some blood from four persons in tb © parish that were ill with inflammation , and from on » of them three times in the week , while since I hav * been turned out of the Curacy for ayear and a half , therehas scarce been any clergyman in the pariah , save of a Sunday , to perform one service and away . I had always two duties in addition to . attending upon the people . It is only within this last hal £ vear . or thereabouts , that there has been a" resident
clergyman at Kingston . # . ' ' > v . In regard to the horse being injured at Methwold , in consequeace of my agitating . 'Of the prObabilftyi of this * 1 leave every one to judge , when I stato MetHwold is above twenty-five miles from Bury , th $ nearest place to Methwpld , at * hich I have held m . meeting , lam truly gladtofinil , boweve i > thatmy agitation has such extensive influence . , . . RelaHve to absence from the pariahesf I nave ^ not been absent more than twenty day * to attend all the meetings I have called , and only on one or two , occasions for more than » day at a . time ^ Tto tenor ot one and all the . { e ttem of these , Wb ^ express ; eHL % O they are Inghtened out ol their wi ' though they would appear aa brave as no « fc j
Untitled Article
( The Bishop of Norwich ' s letter by his Secretary . ) n _ e * ¦ "¦¦ ' . Norwich , Oct . 12 , 1836 . MiM lFi ^^^^ SWBW ^^^ sfeS i ^ p ^^ & ^ r . ^ course , and he relies upon your AtiistinZ fay * fit'in diST-M nrf ^^'^ JSS ^ T ^ S , diate attention to I 115 requisition for taking udoqyou the duties of > ydur owi church inSiS andx a ^ to request that you will inform me when jo * will be prepared to do sa . JW lam , Rev . Sir , ^ Yoar obedt . humble Sent ., . _ . TvIUTSON .
Untitled Article
Here is a second letter of my Vicar to me upon s second of-the Bishop of Ely to him , aad this upoa a second of I . ord J ohn ' s to the Bishop ; * " Noaiixiety 9 no fear in all this . 0 ino ! LordJohn and theWhigi perfectly calm , the people hape a right to met , nothing like free discussion , common . sense will bring cut rizht . Certainly common sense weald nave let m « alone , and his Lordsnip would not be laughed at by and all he is
me , by as ; a pretty fejlow for a miniater of the Crown ! aUalartn at the . meetings call «» 4 by a poor Curate , and then turning ' round , andl lying , and saying he has no fear of . the grea % Northern Demonstrations . O , Lord John , ' you hat * got the character of truth letting Lord Jonu , and ia faith you deserve it . O , how conteniptiple ; : anl base all this ! do you think that yoa , and your colleague * can thus befopl the people ? Go t 0 school againi but don ' t let k be a Wbigticiiool , you . have had enough of hypocrisy ) .: ; ' 1
Mr . Holworthy ' s letter alluded to— : Brarapton , Oct . 17 th , 183 & > My Dear . Sir , —1 received on Satnrday another letter from the Bisaop , of which the following is a copy . ' ¦ :. - ¦ ¦ -: ' " - : :- ' -: i ; ¦ ¦ '' : ¦ ' ' Ely , 15 th Oct . 1836 % RevvSir , —I have to acknowledge the receipt of your letter- of the 11 st itist ., ; and to thank you for it r I am sorry agaia to write to y 6 u upon the sanie subject , bat 1 this . mornin g ^^ received another Utter front ihe Secretary of State , upoa the subject of ; Ltheagita » tion , which Mr . Maberly is causing in'the country y stating to me that a wilful injury waff 4 one to ft
liorse , the property of Mr , C . Yotfng t of-Methiwoldj , in the county of Norfolk , immediately'after the Rer » Mi * . Maberl ^ y ., had deliyere d a leoture in that neighbourhood , on the effects of the Poor Law Act . ] tf Mr . Maberly continues hU present course , of agitation , the coasequences of which , must be a total neglect of the parishes of which he is Curate , it will become necessary that you should go and reside a * Bourne , and take upon yourself the duties of yoar pariah ' ., By this means the dioceae will no longet incur the diggrace of having so dangerous an agitator among . its clergy . v . ' I remain , Rev . Sir , Your faithful Servant , / " : '' " : -&EU £ * I trust , < fcc , < fcc .- —— -I remain , my dear Sifj Yours , ' faithfully , ¦ ¦;" . .: CHS . H 0 LWQ 11 THY ;
Untitled Article
Then comes a letter to me from my respected Vicar of Bourn , enclosing to me the Bishop of Ely ' * letter to him , regarding my agitation , and to stir ut » my Vicar ^ against me . ' * m n c r v Brampton , Oct ^ lltk , 1838 . rti tt- P e s ^ -I tQw ay received a letter from the Bishop of Ely , a copy of which I think right to > send you : ? -- . > ° ¦¦ ¦ r « , V- tv o Ely , Oct . 9 fe 1836 . Rev . Sir , —The Secretary of State havine writtea r ,, > f ^ fr \ i Z > f ^ Wi ^ twn which you r wrirt £ ? t ^ M f ^ Y' P ?« Si Ihave this day written to him to mtorm him , that I think that h » cannot his
pursue present plans : without neglecting the cures he has undertaken ; and that ifMpersS veresin such conduct , I shall be obliged to revoka ^ L ^ TT ^ Z t ? V * ^ allyo « attention t otha state of the Parish of Bourn , trusting that you will co-operate with me in preventiug all ilich mi * - conduc ^ as Mr . Maberl ey appears 1 to ^ Have been guilty of , I remain , Rev . Sir , , " Your faithfal ServariK j . ELY . Now my dear Sir , I have , « fec , &c ., wMn Holwprthy and myself never had a difference , thbujrlr I have been his Curate off and ou for thirty yearfc and as I know not whether he would like me to publish his letters , I do not , therefore , give copies of them , but merel y add his signature . I remain , my Dear Sir , : Yonrs most truly , : chs . holworthy ;
Untitled Article
octobm 27 , 1838 . . ^ :..,. ; . - ,,- / - ^ ^ T ^^ M ^^ Pi y- " ^ ¦¦¦ ' '; )¦ ..: : ¦ ' ' ' ytW $ i . ^^—^ fc—^—^^^^_ . ¦ ¦ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ..-. ¦ . . - ¦ ¦ . ¦ . ¦ # ^» ¦ ¦ ¦ tm . ' LV *¦ ¦ ¦ --.... - ¦ ¦ " ¦ " ¦ ¦ . ' .- ' . " ¦ ¦ ¦ -: ^^^^^^^^^ - ^^ M Mia ^^ " ^^ -- ^ -- " . ' .. " ' y ¦ " ¦ ' <\ -r '¦ ' "' . '¦¦ .. ' . , 3
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 27, 1838, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1029/page/3/
-