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THIRTY-TWO PAGES FOB, OKE MOT milB LONDON EXTEUTAIMISC. iUCr&Z^R- w 1 LIBRARY OP ROMANCE , published w-iilv ' cm!
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PriutedbyDOUGAL M'GOWAW, of 17, <. r.'iii'iiniBstreet, Haymarket, in . the City of W-. ¦ . '^tor, ;: . : •)¦* d¥l\fin \r\ +l»/% nAn\A Ol..i,,i _„ .1 T\ .. *ii_i i'l'A*
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Mm intcnigence. 8 THiC NORTHERN:.. " S.IAR: .. „ VM ^ -,^
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imperial 9aiiiament»
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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taming a novel , a romance , and a tale , with g-vs-viclvs nn . j gaieties unexampled in interest and juice . Notwithstanding tlie multiplied efforts \ o . Muiy i ! i > public taste for amusement and pastime , ilie paiilWiev « i the London Entertaining Macazixk po : wi . ' , n L- > hhit upon a happy combination of subject , fi / . w , % Uiu . -v-. v whii'h will veinody a defect that lias hiiheno wktt-o t mi at tlie same time merit tho patronage 0 ' all ,-1 ,-isec-Tlie number now puUisliing contains . \ i > : ! i . iu , 0- ' 1 , Mcmoivs of a Young Woman , 1 Et (? i : ss .-ft : ; c : ; e ,. f t ! i .-best novels that ever was written . Tlie London Extehtai . mxo Magaz : nf . is ^ iWislit . 1 regularly in weekl y numbar .-:, price Om- i ' cativ , aiuViu parts , price Sixpence , by li . ]) . Cousins . K .. ke-s ' . « t , i . iiu eolii ' s-iiin-sields , London , and may be had oS" . ill ' . Wiis .-iim in toivn or country . I ' akt VI . js now keadv , price Si . spejsie . T ! : ^ is i : ie cheapest and best book cvit oflbveil at su low ji pr ' ute . It is a thick octavo volume , and contains Oae ^ . '• •• :- ; r ,-ii and Sixty Packs . No . . 32 15 this day piiW ^ k-i ' . "In the back numbevs may be had . Tsic work in .: ! vvi :.: \ i > ov ! aud will uever be out of print . " " Vol . I ., containing nearly 600 » : iges , cli-: ; . in . ! j iov . iii ' ., is now reudv , price 8 s .
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¦ ' ' « . ' ' * ,, I , ; ' ? I ¦ ¦ i ! j ' | ' \ ' - . t . - , - of "' , ' i ' ! ' * | j , ' ' j to ! in >\ the St THE TRULY-WONDEUFVL CURES ()<¦ ' AciriU AND CONSUMPTION , COUGHS , CoUs , , ;¦ " ' Which are everywhere performed bv PR . LOCOCK'S PUO 10 NIC WAFF . ? . ? , MA VJ 3 long established Uieni as thtMv . nst i-awaiu . w . v . fuut , iiiid speedy remedy in existeiice ib .- s ' j . j ' u ,-devs of ihe hs-eaili and lungs . It is nut possible in the limits of this notice ' . 0 | ,-ive a : / , great number of the immense . mass ot ' tcstimD - . miii v . Li .-i , are cnnstaiitly received by thepropristors . ' . i'Ju : l"yMua will , Iwvftvtv , be read willi interest : — OUKBS IK L 1 VERVOOL . l ' rom Mr . P . Roberts , Chemist , Rar . elaj 5 h-5 t . - v . t , i . i-. -p vpool . " . famifivy : !!; . ! , l . n : < . " GcntlcnWR , —I semi you two cases -I" stii s vrtiiii ; 1 have received since my last , ami 1 think it -.-on ; . - h ; - , ; oii . i . good to advertise the "Wafers in Livei-poi . l , o- 'l : ( v ^ i- . i : very j ; reat satisfaction to a !! v ,- . ; o tnlre tliem . Tti « y » r « - ( piitu the leading article for coughs find colds i ' lis wi ' ntci-. "i ' oui-E . tc . i \ . Boeekts . " ; RAPID CCRE OF COUOIl AN D DII"PlCirf , tV c , y j UHKATniXC . | " Hale , near Liverpool , T ) rc . 10-h , ISl-l , ! " Sir , —I v . Titu to iufonn you of the great b- 'iuRt I Imt received iVom talcing Locock ' s Wafere , v .-nich j u \ i yctcwj mended t > i me . I was so mucli oppressed at mv eliesi , j that , when I lay down , a coughing fit came un v . i ' lh sm-li i violence that I liave often thonglit ! should no' Yiv ~ to p v ; the jnorniiis ;; b-. ; t now I can sleep a whole nybt » vUV / -. ' ¦ coitghinjj , after taking only two hosts of the V- ';<< c : " . ( % ; -. ed ) "J . !!/ ,--:-:. " 7 : > Va : V . Huberts , llxiiel : \ gu-stvset . " ASOTIiBU CUUI 3 OV COUGU AXJ > JfOAUi ; : ;! . ^ ' Pavliainent-sireet , Livtrpool , . Isin . ' . a , Id . "Sir , —It is wills inuch pieasuro I bc : r .- Uv ' r . x :-. ; . u j tUt oxlViiovi i ' miny power of Lowell's ? uli : ; i > i ! : i ; V . ' ..: W . 1 ; had lieau t :-oubleil with a cougii mui hoavs . bb .. . ' . ' . -. ltuv ' . y i two years , without relief , wiiwi I was \ n : U \ . .: i-j : rj j Locock's Y . ' auvs , the O .. \ : i-. B of which v . civ .- i- . islj : ? , ( for one lnvsri : bftx CJs . Od . ) has i | iiite uui-d i ; , . . ; :.....: j since ro ( .-yii » i ! eiidi ) d t ! iem to several of mv , u-.,.... . ; .... ! i they liave ; . iso experiaiici-d the greatest ;< . i ; . j lit , . _ : ; : u ,.. j " J remain yours , ever rto .. t . u . j "ir . n . \\ ~ ii , i :. \; .-. . i " To Mr . T . llobortf , UaiiLlu . ^ -icreei . " •| ASOTHBIi SUIU'RTSfNO CUHH OK ,- I'liMA . \ The Jleclavutinn of V > . Wrigid , timrl' . ma : ! t , i A . fv > o-. r . i-. ' wood , V . v \ ., UocUley , : \< r \ v OuvV . ini ' , : -. y , % \ j " . limit :-. !; !!<»!> . !> :: " .. . ; "My wife laboured under : m astlnv ' - . i :. . n ! ^ ... i ' , ' fniir year . ' ! . Rh « liad the best aiivii-e t > ntvj , l . ' . tl i without vi ' . iiving the least IjeiieiU : bur , . ¦ ,-.: iri » iir : i ! -v , j s ! : c Miitiniwd to get wors ? . II . i- ssi ,,. ; r ; , ,,, „ ,, ' .,-j bi-oal ' iii !; . ; tsmj i-.. i ; gli was ( iiwu !;" ii ' .: ;; : ! i I -.-i- [ 'Xji .-cicl > j- she couhl possibly recover . Tiie tirs-t » iv \ -. oui ! . ! -.-: i . wl ! ! takir . p Lmwck's Wafers , she s ' onni ] more r . i .. t" l !; : in frmii - ! an . v !! -: iiijc she ) i : « l ever tried before ; and s ! n : •; - i )\ v , | nm ; happy to s ;> y , in the midst of winter , as ti-.-r f mi cougii o . : tiih :: c " . ! f . :. i ; ever she wa" ! in hi- ; liiV ; ii-i : ' : m- ? 1 ¦¦ - js >< -r . t j f . 'Ktly fiuvd . : "I sl ! a ! l be happy to rt-p-y ; ,, a \ , v \ wr \\ , o . r , *• i » - 3 jccl . - ' -I 'J'hcp' -r'k ^ . iirs of ; v , ni-jliui ^ r . y ' . . vto : „ . '; . ir .- -i ' ¦ .- ¦' \ Cferii aricni . . ' /• ronj / iou ? (« .. ¦ ttnjtlw . omX on lh . :: t > n-\ ' ! }) a .. l , ac . ) CK " s Waj-crs yivf instant r .-i- ¦(• a r . i ( i > l ! l i cure of : iMiinii ! S , cor . sanipt : ; ii > , coughs , ( . : >;>•• :: !¦ .:: % ¦ '* I ordws of ' . ' mo Weath anil hn ;; -s . ' 1 ToSlSGEI :: ; . 1 ll ( lL C 8 t . lOi ' i'F . lSKIlSf . l : n ¦ ' .: v . ^^ il'V . a as in a - " ew iii / nrs they reniov .- a'i hoars : ' . ; - ; i ; i-o "' ; - " - ' ' ¦> | the po ' . vn- an-. l rlexibiiily of lisa voi ; -e . ' 11 ...-.-.. : ; : " ..- ^ n j pli'r . s : \ nt > : kU : 'j ! l'rieft Is . lid ., 2 s . W ., imd l ! f . per hi :-r . i * - j J j J . » : i Silvii and Co ., 1 , Jivide-lane . i'leet-stn- . do :: , •''• old ' ; j by one o : more agents in ewi y town tlinn : , j ; Cm I .: * :-" j dom . ! i j CArTION ' . —ToprottTttViiiWicfn , ! : "icii * irs ^ s-0 lior .: ; , \ -. i \ - Majasty ' s Hoi : oi : r : il . ic Cim .- > "cv- ii- n causc < l so be printed on the * tamp , < mi < u-h bo . v . ti ' e ' . V words , " !) r . Locock ' s V ! , & . •!• :. , ' j , i , ] , ; , , .- ... •? o : ; a r t-1 ' jjj' ground , without which none ave frciiuhi" . "' Sold by all Medicine Vende ; -
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UASSIOS DOUSE . S ^ tcbdat —Htticws isd Dbcxkexsess . —Kcbecca Locorktras brought Wore the Lord Major in custody of Smith , of College ^ , ivfco deposed that the day before resterfaj he found the prisoner drank and incapable ot performing *« " dnt J " **««*» wlien he ordercd her to led . Yesterday lie found licr again drunk , lie then seat forapoKceman and gave her in custody ; her boxes were searched and a bottle of gin and a bottle of sherry were found . Prexions to being taken te the station-house she askedpennisswntogotothe water-closet . He heard a { jingling noise , and on examination discovered that she
had destroyed a botfleel mm . He believed the prisoner , who had been tut a short time in his service , was a stranger in London ; his object in bringing htr here was not to punish , but to reclaim her . He believed she had respectable friends in the country , and he had received a good character with her . The reason assigned by her late employer for parting with her , was her piety ; she would go to church , and could not be kept from it , which lie , as a clergyman , thought a good trait in her character —The woman , who appeared to be about thirty years of ago , and who was most respectably attired in deep raourning , declined saying anything , and his lordship , in compliance -with the reverend geutleuiau's wish , remanded her until this dav week .
Beggisg . —A miserable , dirty , ragged , shirtssan led shoeless Iwy , was oronglit up in custody of an officer of the Mendicity Society , charged withbsggJig . —The officer deposed to taking him in the fact . —The poor boy said he could get no work to do , that he liad come up f > om Bristol , where lie had been employed on the Bath-Toad at farming work . Seme of the officers attached to the court identified hie . as having been previously convicted , and sentenced to fourteen . days' imprisonment , for a like offence . —The Lord Mayor committed him to Bridewell for one month . Huxcee and Theft . —William Brown , an old man , was charged by Joseph Hill , who deposed that the
prisoner came into his shop m London-wall yesterday , and begged of the young woman in care of the shop , who told him she had nothing to give away , when he immediately snatched up a cake and left the shop . The young woman called to him ( the witness ) , and he went in pursuit and caught the prisoner with the cake in his possession , partially consumed ; he identified the cake as his property . Brown said he came from Liverpool , and had no work to do . He was recognised by the officers as having been tirice convicted , and sentenced to short periods of coufinement . The Lord Mayor remanded the prisoner until Jlouday , in order that the young woman might attend and identify him .
BOW STREET . Satdbday —A Bow is a Coffee-hocse . —A tall young man , rather smartly dressed , who gave his name as Frederick Tjmliiison , was this morning charged before Mr . Twyford with breaking a quantity of earthenware in a coffee-house is lovent-garden , and otherwise creating a disturbance . The defendant , according to the evidence adduced , had been drmlung during the night at the Garrick ' s Head public-house , opposite Coventgardtn theatre ; aad , upon leaving there late in the morning , he adjourned to a coffee-house in the neighbourhood , ¦ which is generally open all night ; there he had some refrcshmenrs . YThi-c partakiug of the viands , some cab
meu , who were in the next bos , began to jibe him about his mustachios—a smart pair of which he sported—when he got up very irritated , and offered to fight any one ol them for £ 5 , providing they had the pluck to " set-to . " He then made at one of tiicin , but missing his blow he staggered , aad fell against an adjoining table , which lit ' overturned , destroying a quantity of crockery and damaging some eatables that were placed upon it He was immediately set upria by the coffee-house keeper for payment of the damage , when he swore "he would go to the d—1 before he psid . " In consequence , he was given in charge . This morning he expressed great contrition , and the matter was compromised by his payiug the damage aud expenses .
WOBSHIP STREET . JIosd&i . —Assault os ths Police . —Yesterday a sturdy beggar , of determiued aspect , named Daniel DavcHhs , was placed althebarbefoveMr . ISvoughton , charged whh havmg committed a murderous assault upon several police constables of the II division , one of whom is so seriously injured as to leave lrat faint hupes of his recover } -. It appeared from the evidence that .-tbiut sevtn o ' clock on the preceding eveniu ^ the prisoner entered the White Hart public ho se , in '• Ventworth-street , Whitecliape ] , and shortly after got iuiu altercation witii a man named Crawley , whom he challenged to fight him , and was about to attack , when one of the bystanders cautioned Crawley to avoid his antagonist , as tlie latter had a knife concealed in the sleeve of his coat . Observing the ' jointed end of a knife protruding from the prisoner ' s eufif , Crawley immediately called a policeman , and gave the prisoner Into
custody ; but DaveHin declared he would uot be Liken , and offered the most determined resistance , in the course of which ths kiiife dropped on the ground , and was carried off by a woman . A large mob of the worst characters in riiat law district speedily collected and assailed tlse officer , rrhu mas placed iu sksIs jeajuinl . v that the landlord of the public-house , who easije to his aid , had the greatest difficulty in keeping them tiff wiih a bayonet until the arrival of farther assistance . Two other constables then came uj « , and by their nmtvd exertions they succeeded in getting the jirisoaer so : iw distance on towards the police-station ; h * it he then suddenly tnraed round , expressed his determination to go no liirthcr , and successively dealt eai-Uof the oScers such iorriSc ldete on the lower part cf their persons , that one < jf them ( Miller , II 112 ) was instantly stretched upon the pavement in a state of total insensibility , and was afienraviis carried home upon a stretcher
The prisoner continued fighting in a . most furious manner , dealing blows aad kicks about him in all directions , aud after inflicting numerous injuries of a similar description upon other onstulilc-s that trame up , was at length over powered and lodged hi t ' ai jwliro-station . A certificate ftora jIt . 3 deavs , t 5 ' . e Aivisi'in surgeon , describing the dangerous condition of two of the vlSeers , Miller and Lloyd was produced by Inspector Hank , who statedtii . it be had seen the saen that morning , anii that one of then ? was so seriously injured as to leavs hat eiM * £ opesof his re-\* overy , twe the other wss in a condition which would , it was feared , render him n cripple for the rest of his life . Iu answer to tlie charge t ' se prisoner , with the characteristic whine of a i ^ ggar , esUibite J a bandage round one of Ins arras , asd stated t'uat- fee police had treated him wiih sueli brulality thai iris v . rlst had been fractured by oue m their Wows , and thru one of the witnesses against him ( a man named Conuui ) was a convicted thief , and that v . u . credeuee , therefore , shuuld bs siren to his testimony . In aiis-. T--T to tliis , laspNtur Harris £ aid that tlie prisoner had complained at ; lw Nation about his arm , and that in
consequence it had been esamiaed by the surgeon , who pronounced it t-j be ptvfuctiy sound in ' every respect ; a : id with regard t . j the mtmss Conner , although itwascertainl . v true that he liad been connected with a gang of housebreakers , Us liad npwi this occasion rendered" the most important assistance to the pjlicc , and deserved the highest commendation f « r his courage . —Mr . Bronghton said tfie evidence clearly proved that two of the constables wore in the greatest danger from the injuries thev had recched-fn : m the prisoner , an& he should therefore order 3 « ni to be brought np again nest week , by which time something positive as to their condition might 1 > e ascer-^ aiiied . —WUiiam Cliatkvick , another beggar , was tllCll dn ? ir « l with attempting t ,. rescue the first prisoner from custody , and threatening the life of one of the Tritnesses . "Write Davdliu was being takon to the stnSou , tlie prisoner naile several violent attempts to rescue him . and at that lime escaped , but afterwards waylaid a witness named Crawley , aad drawing a knife threatened to stab him , upon which herns given into custody . The prisoner in general terns tk-uieu the charge , and was also ordercd to be brought up again next week .
Tcesdat . — Impost-alt to Housbkeepebs . — Sarah Parker , a vreH-dres . -dl v ; : do ' . v , attended before Mr . B : ngham , -upon an atijusracd information preferred by Mr . Thos . SjwnctT , a surgeon of StoUe-Xewington , uuder tlie ActlltU George II ., cap . 19 , which charged lwv with having fcaudnlanilvand clandestinely vcnoveiland secreted a quantity of householu funiuure to evade its seizure for rent , wlierery the had ineun-od a penalty cf double the raise . < f the ^ oids fo remove . ! , or six lnunths'iinyvisoament in the ilyusfc of Cor . -cction . Ths goods had been seized , but the mv . « in po ^ cssion was induced to leave , anil ilicpjei ' s v . vre iv-uovi-i at <; no o'clock hi the uion :-isig . Jir . lSiugliau ! sail l . o should avail himself of the puwor of comnmtauj-. i wstrf in him by the 35 tu sufiion of the Police Ac :, and au-ai : i her one month ' s imprisonmcjil in the Howe of C'jirecilou , with hard l : ibour .
LAilBSTH . TczsDiT . —CscEirr to Axiiin . ? . —John Gordon , a ¦ .: ir , n-yuianinfueseiriceof Jir . Estoa , lir . lcher , cf lloi-re-}» lace , Westininster-ro : ! 'l , ajiju-ared l > cl "< : rc 31 " . ileury . us a summons iliarging ldm will : v . cntonly and rnivlly ill . nsiu-r a Jrailoi- '; . The case -. v . -is go : « e i :: to at ccnisiJeral'It ien ^ tn ; au < 5 , aiter hearing t : ; e evidaace . Jlr . Henry a-. liuil . ft-d tht defendant to pay a aas : of S' . ' s .. ur to usu ' , Si-gv 3 iJUrtv days'imprUwnueut . *
MAKT . B 09 01 " 0 . 'I-STIirST . ¦ Moke " AmsTGcsvnc Mok . wtt . " — t . » n Jiomlay a welldresswlyoung v . - . im : in left a : i infant , v . hh a letter , < ia the a ' -ojiof tlie tloorof Xo . 74 . i ... v . « r Gro £ ve ::., i- -stn * et , a l-uu > . occapic-i at present by tl , < : Uon . Wiiii-. mi Lnc ; is Uo-: s having prenouslv knocket . aad rung : " , t !; c Joor Yi'la- ; Sic butler «;> t «* l the , ; oor , and f ..: iu < . « h :: th ; t : lbfende-; msite < l there , he made ilic cbrcuitiatanw k- . iu \ vu to V-r . Hous , to whr . -. u she Sfttcr was dhv ,- ! . »« . The letter was :: s fuliows : — " air . lluus . —I have * r , ; .. i no answer to the iet--r « f y «! Ste :- ! lay . there . ' - :-s I Lave youy « ar chii « L The li * t laiisg I tilt ! for him I gave iiiin iiie breast , and then fell oil v . iv linees and i ' . r . ploved Heartai to v-oti ' et l » -. n . If ur , f « - ' I . " limbs will support me so far . 5 am «« iv going to X " . -: \ T « tl : iK-= tn > ct . I have eaten ti ; -- last pieco of i-. read , :: :. ¦«! < rank the las : -. iivnyht of v . -attr that sliali cater niy h ' jis ifll I hats fan h-Ah him a «« l y « a . I ilieiii jieace witn % ua ::: ; . i all tin- world , iiay C » nl riy Saviaur i . votect my cLil . i . — $ :. ? .- \ n Pixcisni . "—AiiiiS-.-e-coustaMcwasscntfiir , and the ciaS-. l ami the letter < : iv-i-rod to 5 ^; taken to tin :
• KtirUlMiUEC . i he « n : rat v :. s received and carefully aticndcd to . a-.-ii Lat-y , the iBr ^ cnger , v . ;; s < lc ? i ! uiciicd tf ; ? isikcin <;! i ! rU- 'i after t ! .-j mother . Lacv with ^ reat d : i : i-• . " uity at iei-. sih 'JjuIkc .: a < frav i : i \\ w ' v . v- ^ i > .-r . av . fl sm--ccsaetliii tjsT «; : « :: l : j ; s hcr on Tuesday , .-. iu-i- which , l . v tlit 'iireclfon tf : hv bo : iv-3 , us lava-lit her t .. li : ?? court . — »» hen itKcd U Mr . Ixi-J- ^ « i ; v ^ had U-ti ihe cluM ; : t lherc :: a-. iii-eei'i : r . l' ; -. > ::=. f : ; e ? : i ; -i . } , , , ;< - •— ¦ :-, ; j - -. voj-r that Mr Kous vrus l' .-. c-fathtr . S ? i « )¦ „ ' . . & ^\ n \\ k- st rd e of juro . Hous a ? l :: h' .:-mii-L at . V « iste . 5-liousc . ; Horwin . She v-E ? scduc-. a liy Mr . llou ? , sna the result of ; h » iau-rcource was the tiMO . i : < rtr ten v .- :: Ui ? old , which she hat . lii " i « atl ; e suit . > f 3 ! r . jious ' j <" . _ , ¦ .:-. JJ 3-. jj uus j , ] <^ . herlnmr . -y to ci-v . r the ispc ; : ; . . oi her cMjf . i ] c-ji ' . ; nt * an ' i for the suvinst yf her chiiii , l-at r < s-eati 5 - ' -t had wiUn-javrr all EBrpart , an < 1 s : ii- had bc-ta olligcd to travel i-.-. i froia
the country to take the oidy -tt- ;) iu her jsowcr i ; i ordrr to compel the fatiicr to <]•> something for hi « oltsjiiiK . —Mr . Alaltby recoumieiided Lacy to lake the young woman haes to the workhcase , ami ths ' jiext dav to maWappliiMti-jn to Mr . Kous on the sabjet-t . —On AVc < lm-= dav Lacv ir . f « rmt : ( Ur . aaltby that he hnd called on Mr . lba =. and 3 Jr . Rons lied l-cfusod U . ilo anything fuv tl . e diild , on tlio j . lca that Jje-was not thefather . trey added that tiie overseers were vUm to leave the case in the hands of the magistrate , so i J ? ? 3 caraed the < les ^ wn .-Mr . Aiaituv iuquiied wheiherjt ^ -as the desire of thejiarish authorities to press tte charge of deseruon against tlieyoung woman ? -iacy wSs ^ w rf « ° ^ » Baaera « the circuuistar . ces , to P ^ that charge . The young woman and Mr . Rous's "" ease . —Mr . Maltby said the regular course vras to
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proceed by summons against the alleged father . —Lacy then , on behalf of the young woman , applied for and obtained a summons for Tuesday against Mr . Kous .
GUILDHA 1 L . Satuhday . —Geoss Assault . —A German Jew , named Emmaneul Sparrahhus , was charged before Mr . Alderman Hooper with assaulting a young girl of the name of Maria Insellin the public street . It appeared that tlieyoung girl was looking in a print-shop window , iu Fleet-street , when the prisoner came up to her and commenced taking very improper liberties with her . She rcsistedhis importunities and walked away , desiring him " to get off about his business . " The prisoner pursued her and asked her whether she was a regular prostitute . She immediately called a police constable and gave liim into custody . The prisoner denied the charge , and said he ought rather to give her into custody for that she had attempted to pick his pocket He was remanded until euquirics could be made respecting the respectability of the girl and the character of the prisoner .
CLERKENWELL . Thursday . —The Iovebs' Poisoxisg Case . —Daniel John Cock , a young man , was charged with having attempted to poiFon himself . It appeared from the evidence , which was voluminous , that on Monday night the prisoner and a young woman named Hannah Moore , who has since then died from the effects of poison , hired an apartment at 26 , Cross-str ^ et , Hatton-garden . They passed as man and wife . On tlie , following morning both seemed in very low spirits , and left the house without ating or drinking anything . They said they were going to the west end of the town , and would be home early . At seven o'clock they returned to the house and appeared much agitated . They entered the parlour , and the woman soon after complained of illness .
They proceeded to the bedroom , and the womsn complained of violent pain in her head , exclaiming she was very ill . The prisoner endeavoured to sooth her . She appeared as if she had been crying . About an hour after they entered the bedroom , the prisoner came downstairs and asked for a pot of boiling water . It was supplied to him , and he hastened upstairs with it . He soon after came down again in the same haste , and anxiously inquired for the residence of the nearest physician . He went for Mr . Pollock , a surgeon , who returned with him , but the woman was quite dead on their arrival—foam was oozing from her mouth , and all the appearances exhibited of death from -poison . When the prisoner found she was dead , he fell upon his knees and cried bitterly . He exclaimed ,
after a moment , "We have both taken potions alike , " and , taking little packets from his pockets labelled " poison , " gave them to the doctor ; the papers contained a white powder . He also handed the doctor a letter . The doctor gave him into the custody of a police-constable , 74 6 , whom Ute prisoner asked , on his way to the station , if he thought he would be hanged , aid admitted that he bought some of the poison . He exclaimed , " What a very foolish young man I have been . " He was very ill at the station ; the stomach pumps were , however , used with effect by the police-surgvon , after wliich he was conveyed to the hospital . Upwards of £ 2 iu gold and silver were found upon him , and a paper containing some of the same white powder , and marked "Poison . " To Inspector Penny at the station-house , the prisoner said
that the deceased had told him what sort of poison to buy—saying her father was a boot-maker , and used oxalic acid to clean the tops of boots . The prisoner , after the usual caution , having been asked if he wished to say anything , made a long and rambling statement , of which this is the substance—that both he and the deceased had been servants at the Bell a » d Crown , in Holborn , whence they were summarily discharged on Monday ; that they went to the norse and Groom , where the deceased took out her money , laid it on the table , and declared she was going to make away with herself . She then ran into tlie room ; he pursued , and canght her : upon which she said she would throw lierself into the Thames , ne told her she should not , and they walked into Holborn , where they went into a coffee-shop and had some coffee ; they were refused a bed there , and went to Hie Coach and Horses , where they were accommodated . In the morning shejuimiedoutof bed , and seizing a knife which lay upon the table ,
attempted to stabhcrself , bat he prevented her . They went out to a coffee-siiop and had breakfast , where they read in a newspaper tils account of a . young woman having destroyed herself by oxalic acid , which made a deep impression upon her . They walked np towards Islington ; he asked her if they could do nothing else but destroy themselves . Sha said not , and that she was resolved upon it They bought four pennyworth of oxalic acid at different places ; went into a public-house in the Cityroad , and had some gin and -water ; here he mote a letter which he gave to Doctor Pollock . It was at the Coach and Horses they took the poison , where the deceased mixed it in two tumblers . He asked her to kneel down with him and pray . She said she could not pray , and drunk of ( he potion , which he likewise di < 3 , saying he would pray for her , and much of the poison came ofl" his stomach involuntaril y at the time . When he found she was dying he went for a surgeon . ( The prisoner was frequently convulsed with grief whilst making this statement . ) He was remanded .
SATUKDAT . —RoBBEHT FROM A LoDGIXG-nOCSE . —A girl named Ficxinore was this morains charged bv Mr . Matthew , of M , Wlntc-Lion-streefcri ' entonvilie , vitii stealing from his premises £ 30 , ar . d several other articles of property . The prisoner was a servant out of place , and was lodging in the house of the prosecutor , being allowed accommodation there till she get a plr . ee . Last Wednesday week the wife of prosecutor put thirty sovereigns in : i box while the prisoner was standing by . The box was afterwards
plsecd in the room , where tlvc prisoner slept , along with the daughter of the prisoner . On Monday inornlag last the box was missed , and the prisoner being suspected , she xtss taken into custody . She had been seven weeks in the house , and was very Short of money alj the time , ^ On being searched by tlie police , a quantity of gold wasfouiid Upon her ' ; and on an investigation taking place , various articles , which had been missed , were traced to the neighbouring pawnbrokers . The charge being fully brought home to her , she was committed for trial .
MARLBOROUGH STREET . Smium . — " Dkat that Dosket . "—Two elderly people , named Stewart , were charged with being drunk and disorderly in Oxford-street , and with recklessly d rivinga donkey-cart . It appeared that thev had been spending tlie day atllaropstead , and had taken rather move to drink than was either proper or requisite for the sustenance of their bodies , or for rational cnioyraent , and in their return home the donkey became , to use the words of the defendants , " obstropolus , " and would not go , disturbed a whole cab-stand , and pitched the male defendant , who was driving lustily , iuto the street . They were taken into custody , and the donkey and cart were sent to the greenyard . A fine of 53 . cadi was imposed , which was paid , and tlie donkey having been brought to the door of the court , the two defendants drove away aniidsfc tlie cheers of the multitude .
QUEEN SQ . UAEF . Saturday . —Gcbious Case . —A Bakoset axd M . P . is Titouisu ; . —Mary Macilonald , a well-dressed woman about thirty years of age , was this morning brought before Mr . Bun-el , the sitting magistrate , on the charge of annoying Sir John Rae Reid , M . P ., who resides at Ko . 4 , Heaton-plaee , Westminster . — Mr . Marshall , butler to Sir John , deposed that tin . defendant had for some lime past been in the habit ci" eomi ps to lac residence of Sir John , and wishing to see ins master . She also was in the practice oi ' bringing and sending notes and lettyty , and following him when ho was going to the Ilouse of Commons , or to his place of business in the City , and about eight o ' clock as night she canw to Heatou-ukcc , r . m \ rang
the bfil . Witness answered the door , when the defendan t , wished to see Sir John . Witness said he could uot be seen . She then give witness a note to dflivvi- to him , and said slic ( tlsc defendant ) s-: cuidr . ot leave iiicliousfltiUan answer wnsrescivci . The 23013 was to the following efiect : — " Mis . Aiaedouakl wishes to see Sir John , in order to !; now what he lias uone with the property in Borer , so loiy in Ins p < sjfcsrie-i , belonging to her sister . "—Wii-.-t-ss iold iic-r to " ijf off" two or three times , ami at last , veeuw ste would not move , lie cti' M n yolk-o amstno * , aiiil-. u-c her in charge . Siv John had toisl hw on ; : former occasion that he knew iiotluKg ataut :: «• or her property ; yet s-. tiil sha continued to annoy lira iu tV . c maupcr described . Only a week ; u ; o she ; fi ! £ - ! - ;;> . o in a similar nmner , when the iVont door
being shut against her she opened the area door , :: nd after standing a short t-hiw in the p :-.: - . ss ^ e she ' t . t ; v , t in leaving tasked the ; looi-, aj-il took tiic kev v-: ?' i her . Poliriscoiisteble 01 of tiic l > div--sion deposcd to taking her Into custod y under the tire . i :. " stances describe- ! . The defendant , who ap-V ? r-ved to be labouring urnler insanity , mane a ramis-Ihuj statement about the family having sn uunwusi .-amount of wealth , tha wiicrealouis ' of which she could j' . ct ttecrib ? , and that a larce porJ'nis of it had eeine improperly iuto the vmm'ssfon of Sir John Rae iloid . Shu cMisideml Sir Jehu ouslit to provi .-le ; i good home for her , and that ] r > was not a party to the treatment she hatl receive ;! r . r th * hands of his servants . Mr . ] 3 nn-el said he wnaW yc ' -lpine tlvcase till so :: ic inquiries were made about tha t > a * t eirairistanci'S and character or tiie defendsnt .
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HOUSE OF LORDS , Tuesday , June 3 . The Lord Chaxceiaor took his seat on the woolsack at five o ' clock . On the motion of Lord Brougham , the Small Debts Bill went through committee pro fonnCi .
MAYXOOTII BILt ,. The adjourned debate on the second reading of the Maynooth College bill was resumed by the Earl of Hardwicke , who admitted that a strong feeling had been raised against the measure , which , however , it was somewhat difficult to understand , for it involved no new priciple , and only extended to Ireland those measures which bad already been adopted in many of the colonies of this country . lie was friendly to the endowinentof the Roman Catholic Cluivcb . ) n Ireland . Athough it had been called an antagonist Church , its endowment might tend to strengthen the position of the Protestant Established Church , even if thei funds forthatpnrposc were derived iroin the ecclesiastical revenues of those 151 parishes ,
amounting to £ 58 , 000 per annum , in which no Protestants were to be found . He was opposed to any inquiry into the system pursued at Maynooth ; he gavc ' no spiritual sanction to its dogmas ; indeed there was much in them that witlioutctfencc he must say he abhorred , but he hoped by raising the standard of education at Maynooth to make those educated there repudiate many of those absurd doctrines and opinions which men of taste and learning must disown . The Earl of Carnarvon considered it the duty ot Parliament to maintain the Protestant Church in Ireland ; but it was impossible to deny that it formed the most anomalous , and therefore the most endangered , part ot our Irish polity . But if that establishment were to be shaken by the mere breath of toleration and kindness , having no strength in itself , it must be , not of God , but of men . The question now was , whether the spiritual instructors of the great
body of the Irish people should be well or ill educated ?—whether they should be for or against us ?—whether they should be attached or hostile to British interests ? They had already sanctioned the principle of appointing Roman Catholic chaplains to prisons and workhouses ; and if they refused their approval of this measure , their Lordships ought not only to retrace their steps in that respect , but t , o withdraw the grant to Maynooth altogether , and repudiate the kinder policy " so long pursued in our colonies , lie vindicated the priests from the charge of disaffection , and commended them for the part they had taken in times of danger to preserve the loyalty of the Irish people . There could be no assured safety for our institutions in Ireland , unless we not only consulted Irish interests , but Irish sympathies too . He hailed this measure as a good omen and lie sincerely trusted that a just and equal policy would efface the wrongs of past misrule in that country .
The Earl of WiscniLSEA reprobated the measure as the most deadly blow ever aimed at Protestantism —our national Christianity—the foundation oi our long-cherished civil and religious liberties , and the true source of England ' s greatness . Were these to be cast away for the purpose of conciliating an ultramontane p riesthood ? If their lordships passed this measure in spite of the respectful remonstrances o { between 1 , 200 , 000 and 1 , 500 , 000 people of this country , they would forfeit tlie confidence and respect of the nation . He protested against this bill as a , national endowment of Popery . " and in contravention oi
the oath taken by her Majesty at her coronation . He reiterated the charge that anti-social , disloyal , and intolerant principles were taught at Maynooth , and called special attention to the fact that in Franco they were making laws to exclude the Jesuits from all interference with education , while the Parliament of England wa 3 insanely throwing it into their hands . He concluded by solemnly entreating their lordships to reject this measure , which he warned them , in the excited state of Protestant fcelinc ; , must produce an outbreak , not in Ireland , but in this eountrv .
The Marquis of Normasby reminded tiie house that they were now legislating for V , 000 , 000 Ruiniin Catholics , whom they could not help continuing Catholic . Though Protestantism had " done much for England , yet after all the ingenuity of Legislatures and the severity of Executives could do , in three centuries nothing had been accomplished by Protestantism in Ireland , because it had not boon in accordance with the sincere convictions of the vast majority ; of the people . They must judge of the tree by its fruits . There had . been no complaints whatever of the moral conduct of the students educated at Maynooth ^ and as to those whom they instructed , was it nothing to say tlie Irish were the most honest , the most modest , and the most temperate peorile ? It
was said tha Catholic priests had stimulated crime in Ireland ; on the contrary , he must bear his testimony that no body of men had ever exerted themselves with more energy and succes s in defecting and preventing crime than the Catholic priests . It was true they had often expressed themselves strongly , but what did their Lordships say who heard last riiglit the speech of the Bishop of Cashel with reference to vehement language ? The lioble Marquis strongly condemned the spirit of that right rev . prelate ' s address , and read an extract from a charge said to have been delivered by the Bishoi ) of Cashel , In wliich some very vituperative expressions occurred .
I he Bishop of GAsnKL declared the entire document to be a false and impudent fabrication . The charge had been printed and circulated at the time ; he should send a copy" < sf it to the noble Marquis tomorrow , and advised him to read a portion of it to their Lordships th ^ next time he was in want of a speech . The Marquis of NonMAxcv explained that the document he had quoted purported only to be a report written by a gentleman who hoard ' tho charge . For himself and those with whom he acted , he would say , they gave a humble , sincere , and he trusted an effectual , support to the policy of which he honm ! this was ho isolated measure .
The Archbishop of Dcbux had often felt and expressed that the system oi' education at Maynooth was imperfect—scandalously imperfect ; but it never occurred to hitn that , wistiim ; for Us improvement , he should bs considered inconsistent . If they gav . v the Roman Catholic priests the best education tiK-y were prepared to receive , one great evil would bo cured . He protested , on the part of many of Ihu most sincere , best informed , conscientious , and active , though not the most clamorous , of his clergy , that they were not tt > be held indifferent to their own faith on account of the perhaps mistaken toleration am ! indulgence they might show to that of othet' 3 . lie : claimed no jurisdiction over the Roman Catholics .
although lie had spoken awl written against- their errors ; his duty was to drive out erroneous and strange opinions in his own Church , and no one on the episcopal bench had exerted himself more assiduously and energetically than he had publicly to censure those who held the principles of one Church and the emoluments of another , lie avowed himself the advocate of expediency in this matter , and lie denied that expediency and duly were at variance with c : uii other . He believed the bill , though it might not satisfy agitators , would do much good iu Ireland . Lord De Kos supported the b'iil , and stated , with reference to the doctrines tau « l > t at Maynuoth , on the authority of the head of that college , that lie v « ts opposed to tiie agitation for Repeal .
The Bishop of Exist ; : ;; insisted that the reclr . su mode of education practised ; ifc Maynooth was wholly inconsistent vritii the growth of * manly charaC ' lei-. During the seven yours die students were skit up to tlwir superiors in rank or ataiion , and could not , -jxcqit occasionally in tha vacations , even take a v . r .: h in tiie country iiy the ; useiv « s . They were inerts ) iiv < :. « , and the o : iiy consolation they had was , th . it at the end of their servitude they were to go forth , not as the ministers , but as tlie vcprcseiitaiivi'S i-. i their God . They wcuv , educated ; u spiritual despots , and they became i ' mhv . s agitators , unlit to be the guides of the people . Instead oi' <« ic great moi-. asiio establishment , he wished , in auditi ' . ifi to tha bill in
another place forfoinidiiigllirce iUaikniifiii institutions in livhnd , there wi-re a lb ; irtii , or rculi . T , . ti : ; : ova : branch in ciinnccUnn with ca ; : h ol thusciiisstjtuti ' -Kis , in winch .- . liberal ouueatiau miglst ta giveu hi rl . man Catholicpria : ! - ; , v : \ u \ a n-on . i'system of Oilseipiine , consistent with f : \ ii- opportunities of ini ; : i : U . with the : rv . -ntry ami other wiufntwl youths of f ' . w country . They would thus ts-oate in Inland a body < i" priests such as they hail in this cun . stry . The prosr at measure would nevpatuatu , i vi- . v . iv . in li-cL ;' . ! . ] . it would ho easy before- a wnnroittr-e of inquirv u prove that intolerant and' anti-sociai doctrines vwi taught at iiaynooth , of vUkh ha cited various instances .
Lord Brougham felicitated { he opponents or i . L !> ii ! ll who had silicon before tho llb ' . um ot' Exeter or the reiaarkr . hly discrepant support given to then anraidniont by that ri ^ ht rnv . p : viate , who , stron ^ lv as he was opjio .-ed to iYlnyuoDth . had yet no objeetToii to the cstablUhi : u >! : t of Ibui- colleges , " wlusws , vnvvMitio : j to t ! : e tcacliing of scenes and letters tu ia - - puj'ils , there s ' luuld bo ecclesiastical seminaries for ti ; e express piirpose of fitting fonii Roman Catholic priests on tiiuir mission for propag ;> tir . g Popish errors . Lot the pier . ire . 3 of Maynooth , Its defective police , habits , discipline , and education bo as unexaggeriited as they n-. i ia be , the real question was how those evils should bo remedied ? The system of visitation prescribed by this bill ftmirsli-. nl an effective cure for taosemischiefs , lie adroit * pil i . ' rtP . orrnrs nf t . lm lin .
imsii Cuuvch , kv . 1 tba cvj \ tendencies politically cf the policy engir . fied on the Catholic system , intolerance was not confined to the Romish Church , or popes or pnusts . Just in proportion as any Churaii was armed with secular power by an alliance with the State , was its tuudency " to iv-rseeute other scats . Even tlie Anglifan Church " had i ! s minatory service . The Dissenters were the bmlest iu their opposition to this bill ; but had the Independents and the Calvinists no persecn * , in >> doctrines ? John Calvin was himself author of tlje ° inust elaborate treatise on the propriety of putting heirtics to death ; and had , by the most atrocious pro ceedings , got Servetus condemned and burnt i '< t being suspected of Socinian or Arian doctrines , This
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was no question of conscience , but of policy and expediency . The Government had been most unjustly and heedlessly calumniated in reference to this measure . It was a pure anachronism to allege that fear of America had counselled it ; for "the message of peace" was sent to Ireland before the Oregon question was referred to by Sir 11 . Peel . He cordially approved that policy which tended to allay agitation in Ireland , agreeing with the Prime Minister in thinking that agitation could not be put down by force until it broke out into open violence , which that right lion , gentleman had triumphantly quelled . The popularity which followed great actions was infinitely more precious than that which was run after ; and if the Government performed such actions , he assured them they should receive that applause . The adjournment of the debate until Wednesday was then put and agreed to . Wedsesdw , Juse 4 . Their lordships met at live o ' clock .
THE ADJOURNED DEBATE ON THE MAYNOOTlt BILL The debate was resumed by the Earl of Ciaxcauti , who supported the amendment with the view that the doctrines taught at JIaynootli might be made to harmonise , which at present they did not , with the institutions of the country . He praised the course pursued by the Catholic peers , from whom no proposition hostile to the Protestant Church had emanated . They strictly adhered to the obligations they undertook on their admission to the house under the Act of 1829 , and every measure brought forward since that period , injurious to the Established Church , had originated with Protestants . Tlie Duke of Clevelakd regretted being obliged to differ from many of those with whom he had been in the habit of usually acting , but he felt himself called upon by a sense of duty to support the bill which recognised no new principle whatever .
EarlSrEKCER thought it only fair to her Majesty ' s Government , as well as to those with whom he formerly acted , that every one who had occupied a prominent position in public life should , entertaining the opinions he did , openly avow those opinions , and thus by sharing , dilute the burst of disapprobation which this measure had called forth against its advocates . It was for this reason , aud uot from any hope of being able to throw any new light npon the subject , that he thought it right to intrude himself upon their lordships' attention to give his most cordial support to the bill , which , however , he hoped would be only the precursor of ulterior measures . The Bishop of Noawicn said the measure had his cordial and sincere approbation , considering it as a religious measure associated with justice and equity , aud a Christian measure as carrying out the principle of doing to others as we should wish that others should do unto us .
The Earl of Mohnington thought this measure the first step of all that could bo adopted with the view of conciliating the great Catholic body of Ireland . Lord Colchester opposed the bill on the ground that it was not right that the funds of a Protestant state should be applied to the maintenance of such an institution as tliatofMaynDoth . Lord JIonteagle considered the measvwe as the most important which liad been presented to Parliament since the Emancipation Act oflS 29—if not since the union ; and ha huilcd it ns a proof that all parties were at length united in the wish to do justice to Ireland , The noble lord dwelt strongly on the fact that this country liad endowed Mahomedan Churches at Calcutta and Benares , and asked if they would be less considerate to theii fellow Christians and countrymen in Ireland , The Bishop of St . David ' s supported the bill .
TheEarlofCuAMEVinE asserted the impossibility of reconciling Mv . O'ConucU ' s conduct at Ihe Repeal Association with the oath wliich he took the previous year as Lord Mayor of Dublin , and argued at considerable length against the measure of the Government , contending that Maynooth was a Jesuit college , under the orders of Jesuits ; that many of the pupils had been received into the Society of the Sacred Heart , contrary to a clause in the Catholic Relief Bill , and that therefore the inquiry nslseil for was necessary . The noble lord concluded by cliai-giiy the Government with negligence in not allbrding sufficient protection to the inhabitants of Dublin on tlie occasion of the recent Cisplay made in honour of Mr . O'ComVell in that city .
Lord &TAN 7 . ET said that the assumption of want of caution or care oti the part of the Government was altogether gratuitous . In fact , every precaution was made by the Irish authorities , and nothing occurred which could vender any one amenable to justice for any violation of the law on the occasion referred to . With respect to the introduction of pupils into the society of tlie Jesuits , it was a misdemeanor , and the parties were liable to banishment . The law was therefore open to bs appealed to , instead of resorting to a vague inquiry leading to no useful result . He could not see that tlw endowment of the Catholic priesthood must necessarily follow the endowment of Maynrjofn . lie saw groat difficulties in tlie way of any suck endowment , but he frankly confessed that those
difficulties were , by no means of a religious character . Tlie . toWe lord concluded an able spooiA by saying that he had no hopo that the bill would satisfy the fanatical firebrands in the Catholic Church , still less the political agitator , whose trade it was calculated to destroy , but it ' wouW conciliate a puople whoso worst enemies never charged them with ingnitiiiuje ; anil if even , owing to agitators , the appearance of ingratitu'lu should still remain , it would ere long be ( l . is-. tvmei ' l by kindness ; ui < V peace , and eontentmvat would be restored to ihe country . Their lordships then divided—For the amendment , Contents 59 Non-contents 13 , 5 Majority against Hie amendment ... 0 G For the second reaiUsg : — Present contents 144 Proxies > J 2 220 Non-conleiits present 55 Proxies u 09 Majority for the second reading ... 107 . Thursday , Jusi 5 . After a short discussion in the House of Lords , the Ecclesiastical Courts Consolidated Bill was , un tlie motion 01 the Bishop of Exeter , referred to a select committee , The Small Uobts Kill and the Calico Printing Bill wen tJit'is respectively raeel . 1 third time and agreed to .
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HOUSE OF COMMONS , Tcbsday , Jose 0 . The house sat at Four o ' clock . Mr . Ucmb moved an address to her Majesty , praying her to grant a suitable pension to Sir Henry l ' o ' tlinger ,. in reward for his eminent public services . The hosi . member r eviewed theso services , ; u : il complained tliat , in leaving them unrewarded , the Government was acting contrary to the wishes of a vast majority of the commercial men of the country . Lord Sasdos seconded the motion , and in doing so passed an eloquent eulogium on Sir 11 . Pottinger . Sir J . C . lloBiiousB could not forbear taking part in the tbbste , because tiie ofHcial station , which he had formerly heldhad made him specially acquainted witli the distinguished ability and noble disinterestedness in the cause of his country displayed on every occasion by _ Sir Henry Pottinger , whose extraordinary services in ( Ji . ina deserved an extraordinary reward .
Sir Robert Peel , fully concurring in all the praise given to Sir Henry Pottingcr , said , it might be snppo : sei . l from Mr . Hume ' s speech that the Government had withheld from that jyilhuit officer wimp distinction which it was in its power to confer . So i ' av was this from being the ease , that the Grown liad already granted him all the honorary distinctions it could bestow . With regard to the pension prayed for , tiie Crown liad no power to grant it , owing to 11 resolution of the House pressed on it by Mv . ilmno himself , whicfi prohibits ] any grant for diplomatic services , unless the recipient Lad been engaged ten years in active service , it was very dangerous , when ivoil-iiiivitcd claims were dail ' v
m : \» . lc upon l-. ie Government , that a precedent- should be esstabUsii ' - 'd for suoa appeals ! to the Crown ; and he thought , : is ; i general ruly , that public services wt-ru lust row . wlcd !> y a continuance of employment when th- ) scYV . isitsat' the public were in food ht ' alth . Stiil , ;; : i this was an oxtrjiordinary case , he was ready to take the responsibility on himself oi" advising her M-ijesty to make the proposed provision for Sir II . I ' octingcr . 1 , 01-d Jon . v ItcssKLt thought there was no ground b :.- reproaching the Government in ti-iis mutter , and iave iii . 5 cordial support to the determination exlii-csswl bv Kir R . 1-V < ' | .
I . onl 1-auiei ! 8 to . \ - also testified his satisfaction at the course ptirsned by the right hon . baronet , am ! Doped that Jiir- il . Pottlngor might long retain his j-wei't health for tiie sen-ice of fiis country . Mr . lira-.: Jeiiicd that he had any intention of sayjig jinyrhing personally offensive to Sir 11 . Peel ; aiul r-iio motion was unanimously agreed to . All-. W- . nD - oiien moved lor a select committee tts iiupiiro whether there are any peculiar burdens specially allecting the landed interest of this country , or any uccuiiar exemptions enjoxod hy vhat in ' « rest , and to ascertain thtir nature and extent . The hon . iii'iitlpmau , iu the course of his ar-umeuts , asserted that it was necessary to have an iii < m _ iry in ouier to expose tiiis the hut fallacy behind v .-hiuh the asricu ! -
tiu-ists entrone : ied thenwolves—in oi-der to cbai the ground for the motion which would be subsequentl y broug ht ibnviird by iir . Villiers for tiic repeal of the Coin Law . Mr . S . HntiBKni opposed the motion as unnccessavy contending that t !; e extreme partisans of free trade were just as wrong us ihe extreme protectionists and that the Government was correct in kecpii " ' - the middle couisc , affording considerable latitude to the manufacturers while protecting the agriculturists from very sudden and great changes in tlie valre of " agricultural produce . = Cobiikx contended that there were no peculiar burdens on the landed interest , but that there were a great many peculiar exemptions iu its favour from the ordinary burden of taxation to which the other interests ot the country were exposed Mr . Kewdigatf . entered into a variety of statistics ui order to prove that the land was exposed to pecu . liar burdens not pressing to the same extent on the other classes of the community
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TIIE LAND-PLAN ABROAD . I Ueruhem , near Antwerp , M-iv " S 'J- 1 Mr . T . M . WnMMv-Slr , You will » 0 fi ^ . sti-iui ( jcto receive a letter from this place on « ,,. ?¦ tUt Co-operative Laud Society ; but being a suUrifo the Northern Star from its commencement , uhU n J , admirer of Mr . O'Connor ' s small-farm system 1 ' „; ' "' know if you will admit three of us , who aiv u , 4 , here , in the £ 2 12 s . class . If we are admit ! . - -, ! v , « ' f , ionvard you our first year ' s subscription iminuJiatelv have been here about fourteen months . I r , ^ " , n-oAea at Leeds , and once had the pleasniv o ?^ eh ¦¦• « \ at How s Coffee-house . The " nnaUJhrm H > te-. i » V ? nporation here , and a contented vace the fttnnM , J ? Berchon » about three miles from Autu . My a t country district . Tl , e gardens are laid out in ' the m , l tasteful mannw . In this . Ustrict there are vr :-vZ
, * few , who have not a small plot of land attadie . l to U . 4 houses . The people of this port of Belgium Lave ft * eyes open to the value of the land ; but « , «« , is a Mttf greedy , gnnjUng capitalists , W ] , « ro everun thcw , t , l , for a snlc of land . Listen ! i ^ tou , „ S ! . of , ' taking place , placards are distributed o \ oi- : < . « $ - ' J , wliere ttie laud lies . On the placard a plan ,, i " {| - ., ' , '' ,.. is lithographed , the estate being divided ; ,. („ ra . ^ w from two acres down to a quarter of an am- to ' ; ' .,,, ' people a chance of toying ; but at the time nf snlr n ^ . ¦» i of these moneyed gentry pop in , and geuwlly w ^ il purchasing the whole . Then they re-let it . ' 17 vi !! .,: ' you an instance . About seven months ag-., - . * iuniwhi lnend of mine died '
, and his land was wit 01 hs ]\ K ments . One allotment was adjoining to : i s- j -alf f ^ .,, ' , occupied by a vwy iudustvious mm ; one who i ; ad in j , ;! industry scraped together 5 fl 0 francs . He ftilly i . t . vo -. | to purchase the lot , the sum he had buinj ? tlio ^ Iit ' . ' -iV sufficient for the purchase . 1 attended tlio m . ' p ' a ,, ; when the lot was put up , these gentry run it •!; , to \ m \ francs , and got it . The curses on these ii : l !( v , vS' liftl , | : were Ion . ? , loud , and deep . I have my house hung vJwi with the plates given by the Northern Star . ' . ' . '<• Jiav- a feast every Wednesday evening when the tf ,- ? arrive and arc right glad to s « o that the trades ui Eaglan . ! anon the move . Hoping you will forward mo an , r , isv . -, ; K soon as possible , r
1 remain , jours , most respectfully , I V- 'i . O ' isiti in- I [ This is not the Manchester Griffin—thon-: h l . Mi-3 ii £ : !; , samename . l ' - ¦ -
Thirty-Two Pages Fob, Oke Mot Milb London Exteutaimisc. Iucr&Z^R- W 1 Library Op Romance , Published W-Iilv ' Cm!
THIRTY-TWO PAGES FOB , OKE MOT milB LONDON EXTEUTAIMISC . iUCr&Z ^ R- w 1 LIBRARY OP ROMANCE , published w-iilv ' cm !
Priutedbydougal M'Gowaw, Of 17, ≪. R.'Iii'iinibstreet, Haymarket, In . The City Of W-. ¦ . '^Tor, ;: . : •)¦* D¥L\Fin \R\ +L»/% Nan\A Ol..I,,I _„ .1 T\ .. *Ii_I I'L'A*
PriutedbyDOUGAL M'GOWAW , of 17 , < . r . ' iii'iiniBstreet , Haymarket , in . the City of W-. ¦ . ' ^ tor , ; : . : •)¦* d ¥ l \ fin \ r \ + l »/ % nAn \ A Ol .. i ,, i _„ . 1 T \ .. * ii _ i i ' l'A *
vniw mi 1 , 14 c aniJits dLiuft ttliu iii ! , . " t * ** ¦ * prietor , PEAKGUS O'COSKOB , Esii .. ; r-iibUf ciiei l « Wimuji HkwITT , of No . 18 , Charlie ¦ ¦ - . Brandeustreet , Walwtrth , in the Parisb of Sj fVi Newi » 8-ton , in the County of Surrey , at th- t ; :- " , N * -84 * Strand , in the Parish ol St . Mary-1 ? .:: : md , in . * « City of Westminster , . Saturday , June 7 , IMS /
Mm Intcnigence. 8 Thic Northern:.. " S.Iar: .. „ Vm ^ -,^
Mm intcnigence . 8 THiC NORTHERN :.. " S . IAR : .. „ VM ^ -, ^
Imperial 9aiiiament»
imperial 9 aiiiament »
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Sxw Sis ; .:: » Tur . iTUi :. —VTe visited this pretty lUtie liw-aire oa 1 ' vUsiy tvening , for the- : i « i time f ; nee Ihe iirodiit-iioii of - '¦ ir . Leinnvi llcde's jicvr ur :: r . ? a , { lw . •? ylj'in « iut Cdl'ir : or , V : j mt ; l Downs of J . ' / c . Vi ' c tspsu'twl somciiiing tKiierioi from the jien of Lvniau livus , and our exlisctiUons were r . iore ihun realised . The characitrs wt'iv wc' 3 sustaiii- il—so well »;• all , that it wuuld bs invidious jo single <> ut particular aciorc or actresses for laudatory notice . C'laircogtince followed , and Icept the awl : e :: re in good huuiour throughout its
performance . The new three act drama , entitled London by Shltt , was the next piece ; in which figures a nwslcy assemblage of London Sash men ,- ral . t-s , piemer ., baililis , sweeps , baked- 'iato merchauts , aud other knowhg characters , male aud female , who are to be found flourishing in London hy Sight . The whole concluded with the extravaganza of . Robinson Crusoe , or tlie Adtsentttres of a Friday . A very respectable audience was present ^ and the whole of the performances elicited universal applause . For an evening ' s entertainment of the right . sort we can warmly recommend this deservedly popular theatre ,
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IIorrible Case . —Asotiibb Pkitate Invkstiga tion . —\ v lion we received a communication vevealin " the following facts , which , we believe , are beyond contradiction , we asked ourselves this question" Do we live in a Christian country V So far back as Sunday , the Oth of April—the hushing up process was so effectual as to prevent us from hearing of this affair before last week—a man , named William Gregg , was arrested in Park-street for being drunk
and assaulting Serjeant Devine of the B division . On this ckargc he was locked up in the Lad-Iaue station-house , suddenly from wliich , having been taken ill , he had to be removed to Baggot-street hospital , where he remained until the 2 ith of the same month , lie was then brought before the magistrates of College-street oflice to answer the chargo of the serjeant , but set at liberty in consequence of having made this awful disclosure : — " That on the 6 th of April he was passing along Park-street , accompanied by John Morrison , between four and live o ' clock p . m . ; that they went into the School of Medicine ( to light a pipe ) , where there were a number of students , who asked him to drink whiskey , and after having drunk a good deal he was conducted by them
10 uie dissecting-room , where they gave him more whiskey and made him drunk ; they then caused him to sing and dance , and play cards on the body of a dead man ; that they * * ami forced part of the liver of a corpse into his mouth , beat Mm severely witli the limbs of the dead bodies , and threw him out , when he was discovered by Serjeant Devine " Gregg further asserted that his companion , Morrison , was also beaten by tlie students , but being a teetotaller did not drink any oi' the whiskey . The police traced out Morrison and produced him before the magistrates , when he fully corroborated the statement of Gregg in all its hideous particulars . "What course should have been pursued by tlio magistrates under such circumstances ? Verily , to take the informations of Gregg and Morrison against the students ,
and lay the onus of producing them upon the police . But not so did the Solons of the Collegestreet bench act ! Betraying a leniency for wretches , who—if a tithe of the above statement be true —must be a libel upon human nature , they wrote to Sir James Murray and Dr . Carlile to bring forward tlie students of Park-street School of Medicine in order to have the case investigated ! Of course so polite a method of dealing witli beasts in the shape of men was properly appreciated—Dr . Carlilo waited privately upon Mr . Tyndall , and the matter was dropped . We trust , however , that tlio Executive will not allow so grave and suspicious an affair to be thus cushioned , and that immediate steps will be taken to have the criminals brought to
justice , and a lesson read to the police magistrates , whose practices have now become pevfectiy intolerable . [ We give the above statement from the Dnllin World of Saturday List , just as it appeared in that paper . It is evident that something still more beastly and abominable than what is detailed above js known to tlie writer in the World , but properly suppressed by him as being too horrible to appear in print . Our solo object in giving publicity to this enormity is to aid the Dublin World in its efforts to bring to justice the miscreants who have been guilty of the abominable outrage alleged against them ! We must , however , take this opportunity of
nrotostinoagainst the infamous calumnies against England and Englishmen to which certain Irish journalists lend themselves . Wo allude not to the conductors of the World , but to those of the Nation and Freeman ' s Journal , who have for their imitators all the smaller hy of Repeal quill-drivers , in sucli papers as the Belfast Vindicator , Droghcda Argus , &e . If a murder is committed in this country , forthwith the appallin " tact is heralded in tlie Irish journals as '' another barbarous English murder . " If some case of ruffianism occurs itis announced as " another specimer of English brutality . " If a casts oi' rape or seductior comes before our courts , it is forthwith introduced tc the Irish reader as a " horrible case of Euglish immorality . " So Ions as the " Liberator- "—
" The saviour of the nation not yet saved , " confines himself to humbugging his countrymen am countrywomen with his precious blarney , tliat thej are the bravest , ablest , most intelligent , most hi dustrious , most beautiful , midmost virtuous men aw women on the lace of the earth—in fact , the oi > l "true Caucasian breed , " awl that their country is till greenest hi all creation ; so long as King 1 ) as thci . says and sings , Englishmen have no cause for complaint ; on the contrary , they have much ibodfoi mirth in tucse miserable egotistical displays . Bui when the said King D . ix belches his foul-mouthed calumnies against tlio women and the men of England , and is imitated in his disgusting diatribes bj liis wretched sycophants , the Repeal pvcss-gan f , liiiglishmeu arc bound to protest against their , odious imputations . We protest against those imputations
, not because they can harm Englishmen or Englishwomen , but because we hold in abhorrence the vile object for wliich those calumnies arc fabricatedthat object being the prejudicing of the people cf Ireland against the people of this country , and so to icecp the two nations eternal enemies and slaves , instead of being as they would be , did they once understand each oilier , brethren and freemen . ' Were we to net in the * diabolical spirit which appears to actuate ( herabii ! writers in tuc Nation and Freeman ' s Journal , we should retaliate upon Irishmen bv eharitimj the crimes committed in Ireland upon the Irish people generally , r . iid as being - . lainnatory to the Irish euarac-tvT . Tiiis is what the writers iu the above papers do with respect to Engl .-iiid . Would it bo just to Irishmen—would it be in accordance with truth that
we . should Iier . d ihe abovo shocking statement with tlie words " Horrible Im-h brutality ?" or " Dia-: boiical specimen of Irish immorality ? " or "Infa-i 1110115 case of Irish bestiality ? " 1 ' ot this is just what is ( lone weekly in reference to England by the Re- peal newspaper-iiit-n , There arc good aud bad in nil countries , ill Ireland as well as in England , but far ' be it from us to impute ihe crimes of a few to an entire people . The writers , who pursue the op- ; posite course of slandering an entire people , a \ u \ in- ' venting their hedious calumnies for the purpose ofi sotting nation against nation , instead of being the best are the tvorst possible instructors society " could have . _ There are 100 many such in Ireland , and tuuir liiilncncc is Iijo most nialancholy sign of the present state of mind of the public thev address Ed . JV . S . ] |
Allkued Ikcesdiauy Fire at T 5 ir . KEx : iEAD . — ! th About halt-past two o ' clock on Monday mornb" the ' ' « office of Messrs . John and William Walker , builders ' IlamiUon-laiie , at the reav of Hamilton-square , uirkenhciul , was discovered to be on fire . The two engines belonging to tiic township were immediately ' * conveyed to the spot , but in consequence of the saddletree over the water plug adjacent to the premises ' not ,, admitting the stand-cock , neither of the engines could I , lie got into play for some time , and then only bv . obtaining water from a plug in Cleveland-street , it' ? distance iii" 200 yards from tlie fire . The oll ?* c was I ¦ the ¦ j tUt ; i j
completely gutted , and the whole of its contents destroyed , with the exception of the books , which i were tesked up in one of Mihier ' s patent wife * . Tiic ! diimogo to the building alone is about £ 200 , but it j isjmpossible to estimate the probable loss to the ' afeisrs . Walker of an immense number of plans ami syoeiiicatioiis oi ' buiUlinps , erected and inproavs of ' erection , which iierisiied in the ilame ? . Tlio parlies \ were , ufco ; ir .-w , nwuvyd . iuv . iW lhwg . tlw attivc ' supi-riuteiuk-n' of liirkenhcftd , who invt ? tigat ? d ail tho circunigtances , has rciioried to the Watch Committee of the township that there can be very little doubt that the olhee was nuilieiuuslv set 011 fire . ( j i j j •| \ ' | . ; ,
Siioceiso Accident at XornsmiAM . —Nottisoiiam , Mosu . vr . —Several liiphly-rcBpecfaWe fatnilies iii this town have been plunged into a state of distrrss by a shocking accident wliich took place here to-day . A very li'ie . young man named George Fish , of the Li'in of Eixh and Sons , Imilders , Jiinrbuen amusir . ' . t himself by firintj at a mark- in the back premises . At iiM >! , t- ! ic workmen wont to ( iimior , requesting Mr . J . Fish to lock the doovs , in ease he retired il ^ oiv their return . On entei-inj thtj workshops aftei' dirncr , tho men found lui- . Fish lying buU-oon two of the oenclics , on : i lu-. rp of sliavii !« s , ami in an ulr . 10 . -t lilcless state . There was a pool of blow , around linn , and on lifliii : ; ! iira up Ihcv wore hevrorstneken at tV . « Hwctnck . Wliilo in the act of ¦ > ! - ! ; t ' ; ! l '* ' 1
eli : ir » ing his ; r «\ i , l : e incautiously put oil a detouatii "' , cap , ami selecting tu sceuro it from gsting o ^ ' i ' so soon ns he iidemptcd to force down the wadding ! ' : iio \ . -::. n went ofl ' , aud the ramrod passed through * | us upper jaw , on i !< o . left side , going along the nasal j organs , ami protruding ilis-o ^ li the top of his skull , ' o as to make about nine ini-hcs of the ramrod ' visilJe above his hciul . Such was tlie force withj which it was drive ;) that two men , in attempting to ! extricate it , broke ( ho rod close to \ vlt ? rc it paaswl in at tiio jiiw ; find it was iiltiiuatfly forced out \>\ moans of : i heavy nifiiler . D : iriii . ^ this process the shrieks of the poor fellow wwo lieiivil a long wrv o St Surgical aid was instantly called in , but there arc no hopes of his rocoverv . a ' ¦> | n j 'j ! j J j ' ; j " j ! i j 0 n ' . V jjj' "'
bticiPi : nto . M IIcxoiiKFoiiD Suspessiox Bridgi- — On Tuesday morning , about three o ' clock a man of apparent respectability was observed by the tollkeepers to deliberately spring from the centre of tho bridge into the river . A boat with some persons tWn was passing at the time , but from evident alarm the parties rowed away ; and although boa' « put off from the shore , no trace ofthe deceased could be discovered , who , it is supposed , wa s carried down the tide , which was then ebbing rapidl y .
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Masciiksteh Cork Maukft Svtitih .- m The weather , since our las ^ K ee > fc ^ r changing from a warm atmosphere to S " of ^ posite character , but cold easterly w nft-l f mmatcd , under the influence of wh Ih nf ! " ? » - extensive business was transacted in « m » m , * V vancc of Gd . to Is . per sicfe n « U ' a " a « l-There but a modcfSe det , S £ S ^ ^ oatmeal without alteration in value wk ? ts * favourable change in the weather , the wfcfV" ? at our market this morning , was exceedV , ? ,, ? % and no improvement on the currency ofiS ^ se ' nn . ght could be realised . In flour tfiew ^ ^ little passing , bnt holders fimly demanded * ln ? current during the week , and we SStZj ?* accord . ngly . The inquiry for both 0 . ( ' J $ ?* wasbnnted and sales were with difficulty cCoT previous rates . Beans in moderate S ^ t ** % , * without variation in prices . J w 0 !! l J ' .
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MbM » Bn op an Officer an-d Eight Mn . " Wasp bv the Crew of a SuvEr . _ a mo ! & , ^ oircumstance lias occurred in the Afi-Ip . « ^ n > The ff « p , 18 , Commander £ & **!* & * £ winch was sent to Sierra Leone fa ^ cm l l n « On her way ( . his prize fell in with ' and tSft ^ slaver ; the lieutenant in command « il ) i " otlle >' charge of the first vessel , put amiddiin L ^ h Harmer , with eight men , into the other ft aTn 0 ( i then separated . Unfortunatelv , Mr . &JZ' W * b a strong party of the slave crew to reml ' "?? M ii l
u »» j ana at night they rose and murdo " 0 , 1 of EoghBhman oh board ; and when daylH , h ' ° J changed signals with and fired atthe ofW , ? > ^ then bore her away . In a day or twr \ fT ' an ( i took her , and brought the whole of 1 J-- «„ i' wh » piratical crew to Ascension . The vilW- » -v S » be sent to England in the H « SS fl 1 S' ^ H minder Foote , andtheRapid . l ^ CoilS V f
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t f ' m so ° V 8 ervati ° ns from Mr . V . Smith , Sir u w ' a- ' an Dv Bowril » Si the house divided , and lS ' tllOO WM nogative ( l b - niajorlty of Wednesday , Jusr . 4 . There not being forty members pvesent in the louse at iour 0 clock , fcne Speaker adjourned it to Thursday . . TuvnsDAY , June 5 . The principal business was the Scotch Banking System , wliich , after a preliminary discussion , was carried into committee , and after a desultory discussi on , several of the clauses were agreed to .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 7, 1845, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1318/page/8/
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