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Colonial attti foxti$n. Cnlnm ' aT aitTl Ifhrrintt.
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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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_ . ' . . JBAHCE . DIECDBSIOH 01 TH 1 COBUTITUTIOW . The debate en the important qaetUon of one or two chunbers terminated on 'Wtdnesday by the rf ]« dion of H . Duvergier de HauruWs sunsndment bj 530 to 289 . The assembly hujtdopted tbvsjsUm ol one ¦ dumber . •'
THl IXiUtK QBMTIOW . On Monday , M . Bovienn , who had given natiee of his inUutioa to addrtn questions to the Cabinet relative to ItalitnafiUn , Mid , that tie country was much occupied Vita the fate RMrred for Italy by diplomacy . ( 'Notat all . *) It wai , be maintained , the more pre > occupied with' thependlmi ; mtgotUtion , aa it was the general belltf , both in Germany and France , that Austria vti * procttstiostiss ; foe the purpose- . of imposing o ' er ' exerbitantooadftidni , amdUat she had only accepted the" mediation of 6 ri * t Britain and Franca after being assured by liete ^ wcn . ttat they rwopiiMd fceriiitrti ta Italy . Sa « a a declaration would be in open . opposl-- * ion to tfeewfib expressed by ths National Assembly , in fsTor of the ooaaplete eauudpatien ot Italy .
General LAKoiicreu , Mlnlsttr of War , protested gainst the charge of hypocrisy directed against French tploaswy . He prayed the Assembly to oonsUertbat segotiations were pending , snd that it night be inexpedient to discuss the question at this moment . SsneraiOlTiiaiAcreplied , that when it was anf lounced to the Assembly that Franca asd England had offered fhelr Joint mediation to Austria , ithad sanctioned ttereierreif the gOTerameot in not replying to queifions like those put by If . Burignler . The Assembly , lie trusted , would again manifest Its e ' etuminatiea to remain-silent at the present advanced stage of the negotiations . He accordingly called upon the Assembly to pass to the order cf the day . -
M . Lsbwi Boura , who followed , stated , ' that the AssemUy could net be utisfied with so lacoaie a reply . The country had aright to be taore enlightened under a republic than under a monarchy , when the aonarcb alone possessed the right of coadudiag treaties . The course ftnaeuiced by the General was contrary to the teiy essence of tke Republican GoTerament , and to the teal Interests of Fraace . After the revolution of lebrury the attitude assumed bj France towards Sutope was ihh : —the Provisional Government bad te make choice of two STttsms-HKsuusst , or propaganda by force , and Boral propaganda . This latter conse was adopted , and It was so fruitful , that in twe months and ahalfalltbe Icings and princes of Germany and Italy gave liberal institutions to their subjects . M . Lsmartine had proclaimed
that every nation that rose to caaauer its nationality anight rely on the assistance of France . France weald aot take the initiative , but it was well understood that if Germany wished to recover her unity , and Italy her independence , ' ' . France was bound to assist them . The Bspuhlie , continued tt . Lesra KolUn , should make ho concressiens to absolute powers . The Advances of the last government to the Holy Alliance wen the real causes of its downfall Why court the recognition of despots ! Toe old monarchi es reluctantly acquiesced in the revolution . —If any doubt existed on the subject , he
would lay before the Assembly a secret treaty , by virtu of which Welling ton was to keep a ooastsnt wateh ever France , la his opinion war was imminent , and it now remained to b » seen whether it was nor preferable for France * to cenaence it at once on the territory of others by i&ToktBg a noble principle , than to wait until all her friends were crushed and engage in it on her awn soil . What the despots wUkid was to gain time—temporise sad prepare for wsr . Washington was opposed to all alliances . France should distrust them likewise . What he recommended was that France should hold a firm language to aU Powers , and aemasd the complete emancipation and indepeadenoe of Italy .
The Ewsranrr of the CeoxciL briefly replied byre , peering that the government would not compromise the interests of Italy or honour ef France , and declare ? he bad as little afieottoa for tkt treaties of 1815 as M . Sollin himself . The question of the orier of the flay purely and simply having been put to the vote , was adopted by 441 to 835 giving ministers a majority of 109 . Ezcmsa son—the dekocutio bihquets . On Saturday , M . Dakjot rose to address interpella tiensto the Minister of the Interier , respecting a banquet commemorative of the proclamaUoa of the Republic of 1792 . given at Toulouse on the 22 nd ult .
, At that banquet all the first magistrates of the city were preseat , the Prefect of the Haute Garonne at the head . Yet they had beta sufficiently cautioned , for the ¦ Ewanefpalicm contained , on tha 18 th , the programme of f kefele , in which it waa stated that oaly one toast would be proposed— "The democratic and sedal . Republic / The Prefect had accepted the invitation , and was asked to ba included among the subscribers . The municipality , by a majority of nineteen to eleven , decided thatit should O&ctally assist at the banque ^ and the mayor , three of his deputies , and the remainder of the municipal council actually assisted at it . The Hector of the University , the whole Academy , the Attorney General and his officers , all participated in that xnanisfestatlon in faveurof theBedBepublic . Its ofcject could not be mistaken ; tie hall wasjiung with red ; the pillars aad the pedestal , supporting the bust ef liberty , were covered with red doth ; the txfcoloured . flig had been banished , and the white and blue of the cockade were concealed so that
the red colour alone was visible . The Prefect—whose weakness he did not mean to excuse—had , he should aay , the courage to propose a toast to the National Assembly , which was received with cries of ' Dowa with the Assembly . ' The toast to General Oavaignae wes similarly treated , and the authorities quietly looked on with , out protesting . In the evening the guests traversed the streets In procession , preceded by the Sappers and the band of the- National Guard , vociferating , 'Vive Robespierre ! ' Tire Marat ! 'Tire la Montague ! 'Mert aux riches ! " A bai l'AssemNee Nationale ! ' 'Tire Batbes ! ' Tive la Guillotine ! M , Sanjoy a < ked if it waa by fcolding out sucn doctrines to the country— -whether they were profetsei on the bowling-green of Toulouse , or ia the garden of the Coalet , in Park—that the partisans ef the Bed Republic expected te cosvert the nation to their principles ? Was it by holdingout to France the prespsct of aisiguats , foreign war , and , ultimately , the guillotine , that the conversion was to be effected !
At those words sucn & scene of confusion arose as sever was before witnessed in the chamber ; the deputies of the Montagne rushed into the 'hemicyde / surrounded the tribune on all tides , and rereral who attempted to scale it were prevented from doing so by the interference of M , Clement Thomas and General Lebre ton . The offiosrs of the Assembly occupied the two staircases leading to the tribune and protected M . Sanjoy . . Tea scene resembled oa a small scale the invasion of the hall by the people oa the 15 th of May . When the hemicyde was cleared and silence restored H . Dik / ot explained : He protested that he had no intentien of accusing any of his colleagues , but be
maintamed that the advocacy of the doctrines of 1793 was ex . tcecely dangerous , inasmuch as the people regarded the guillot ine as their natural consequence . ( Cries of' Order , order ! ) . M . Dapjoy ., next read from the Jocmax , du Cat * tha " acc < 5 ant of a banquet which took place at Bourges on the same occasion : The first toast proposed was directed against the Ixnirgtaiiie , whom it depicted under the most odious colours aadcharged wlih co war dice and i agratitude . In conclusion he called on the Ministers of the Interior , of Justice , and Public Instruet ! ca ,. to tell the Assembly what measures they had thought proper to adopt towards the authorities who had assisted at those manifestations .
M . Skmxd , Minister of the Interior , said , that he had sot awaited these interpellations to adopt measures for the maintenance of order . He thought that those aceonnti should not be hastily credited , aad be hoped , and had reason te ) btlleve , that the atatemeat waa erroneous and exaggerated . Htrue the c ^ saussel of those functionaries wculd be too light a peaalty , and the Assembly might rest assured that the moment he ascertained the truth he would perform his duty . M . Jolt , former commissary of the government at Toulouse , contested the accuracy of the statement which M . DaEjoy had borrowed from a journal ef that city . The accusatica was directed against the whole population of Toulouse , for nesrly- ^ OOO of its inhabitants stt down at the fraternaland patriotic bsnquet of the 22 nd . The banquet , he contended , had been a patriotic necessity , in presence of the weakness of the government .
General Lsxosicieu , Minister of War , rose and repelled the charge of weakness directed against the government . Had the chief of the Executive power not considered tile banquet of the 22 nd as dangereus for the SspubUe , he would not have ordered htm to forbid the general commanding the division to appear there at It . After bearing M . Mathieu de la Drome , who protested in the noise of the Bepublicans present at the banquet of thtOiule * , ftgslnsttheaccusations directed against them , the Assembly passed to the order ef the day . Htrcband was arrested on Friday within the precincts of the Assembly , for telling one of its members that unless '< ha Assembly released Bupail from coDfintment within three days , the Assembly should be inv&dtd by ' 160 , 000 men , and overthrown . ¦ - DE 1 I 0 CS 4 TIC B 15 QDET .
On Saturday evening a social and democratic banquet vas held at one of the barriers of Paris , called the BartierodeSsTret . Among those present wire MM . Joly and Kule , and a few ether members of the National Aei-mbly ; The number of gussts was about 1 , 250 . A great number of toasts was proposed , from which the character of the meeting may be gathered . The following are the mest remarkable : — ' To the right ef labour _ ¦ To social regeneration '— 'To the social and democratic B-public * — 'To the fraternity and union of nations . * ' The healtk of the democratic representatives tob Tecslted with inwsense cheerieg , and shouts of 'Vive la Rtpub ' iiqne Sodale '— "Vive Ra'fsll '—' Tive the Martyrs of Jane who are groaning ia dungeons . ' The governm ent had taken precautions to prevent a disturb , acce , but tiey were not considered necess&ry , as the asatmbly separated quietly . No second of the speeches tas bsen published .
TheBsdBepublicauBand Socialists appear resolved to play over again the drama of thsbacqaets of last year . Seen manifestations are acccrdiBgly announced in aeTeral cf the principal cities . A banquet is aoHOUCced at Lille , of colossal proportions and ia a new form , Long tables are to be laid ccavirglDg towards a centre like the rays of the sun , which will permit a great number of guests to hear the D Kdui delivered . Agents are laid to bare been lent
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to the provinces to txclte the people to make limUar manifestations . . The Bsi Republic , is ssll to be advancing ' with giant stride . ¦>¦ V 1 K 8 S 1 HCE OF THE VIcioiIODf BOOtQBOHIB A captain and lieutenant of ths National Guard were tried by courfcrnarttal in Paris oa Friday , for having taken an actlvspartin the insurrection of June . They were acquitted of tke capital charge , but were found guilty of illegsly carrying arms . The captain was sentenced to two , and the lieutenant to one year * a inu prisonment . * » the provlneei to tselte the peonle to mrta 11
Five of the insurgents of June , named Baland , Leroy , Bouland , Grssaot , and Jacquot , were tried by courtmartial on Saturday last , for the murder of Major Maswn , of the 11 th L'gtenof the National Guard Of Paris . The trial , which was adjourned to Sunday , was concluded on that day , ; by the acquittal of the priioners of the murder . They w « e , however , found guilty of appearlsg in arms against the government , and were eenteneed u fellows •—BaUnd . to one ye « r '» Jipprlienmeat ; Leroy , to fivejsus' impiiummtat BouUad , to ten years' imprisonment ; Grassot , to hard labour / or ten years ; and Jscqup ^ to har d labour for fifteen , jean . Tke goverament Is putting down every club that opens , under some pretext or other , and the excitement of tkadubbists is consequently oa the increase , -. * ubebtt , ZQUAun , niTnnir . ' -
TheClubSt Antoine was doied on Saturday by the authorities , and the officials and some of the speakers In it are to be prosecuted , for haviog tolerated disenssionj contrary to public order . '¦' :: ¦'
. GERMANr . Letters from Cologne of the evening of tie 27 th ult . state that publio tranquillity had not been further troubled ia that city . The National Guards had but . rtadered their arms , and the garrison had beta coasU derably reinforced . . ! The CiauiUHK Gazbitx of the 27 th gives officially theaeojunt ofthearrost of M . Strove and bis wife , but does " not confirm the repsrt of his having been tried by court martial and . snot , , ' The Aix-n- ' CffiPiixE Situn gives the fallowing from Staufen , dated the 25 tU : — "
'The R-publlcans have fled . towards the moantains near the Bebberge , hotly purautd by the grape shot and musketry ef our soldiers . SSruve fled with his wife to Bolihwill and St Ulrio in the direction of Freiburg aad the Black Forest . The military , chest , containing about 1 , 700 fljrins and his correspondence , with some very important . papers , have been selssdat the Hotel de Ville . This morning the drums beat to armi , and sooa after firing was heard . At first the caase was apt known , fcut we have since learned that eevtn Republicans were shot , Six of them were " fouad inhidiag places , but the ' seventh openly fired upon the soldiers as they were quietly passlog . - ' v It Is officially suted that the cotfliot at Siaufen hated two hours ; that the town was barrioaded , and . that the insurgents numbered about 1 , 400 . ] : Ills said that Strove is now a prisoner at Freburg ( Bsdea . ) ' ^
aipcBtieiH nrsuaaicnoH . The Republican insurrection in Baden , is now it may be said , suppressed , but another one has broken . out in Wuriemburg , a certain popular orator named Ban , haiing prodamed the Bepuslia at ' Bottwejl , in that kingdom , in presence of ' a great number of . anned , adherents , who intended to make an attack on Stutt . gsrd sn the 28 th ult . ' The government are well prepared . , ' ' ¦ ; . . . . - : r ; -ji , MocLHiuc , Sept . 28 . —Strove has not yet been shot . He and his wife , as well as his wife ' s brother ore Xept in dese confinement . ' They are all guarded by sentinels having cocked pistols , both In ths apartment and on the outside . They are not permitted to' have intercourse with aay one ' . >¦ :. ¦ : ' " ¦ . 3 :
KOTMBHI IM TKHKA , v ! SiniUBn 28 . —Last evening there was a democratic movement in the Faubeorg of SchotWnfeld . The Hational Guard appeared , aad the people threw stones aad fired oa them from the windows . Some were killed and several badly wounded . r ¦
THE WAR IN HUNGARY . The advance ef the Ban Jellacbioh of Croatia towards the capital of Hungary , the check he met with on the river Sxila , and his ' subsequent triumphant entrance into Stuhlwelssenburg , are confirmed . : It > as confidently rumoured at Yienaa on the 27 th ult ,, that he was under the walls ofPesth . Stublweissenbarg , % < : kesFtjervar , or Alba-regaUs is only eight and a half post stages frcm Pesth . The archduke Stephen has fled ta Vienna . Ths scene In the Parliament at Peith was a stormy one on the 24 h ult . Kotsath , pale from illness and exdtansnt , mounted the tribune , and declared that he had
been authorised by the Prims Minister to call the people to arms . ' I call you to arms , ' he said , ' to extirpate the hostile brood . You will never see me more ,, unless at the head of any artsy capable to do it . Half an . hour hancelsbaUtakea standard In xnj hasd , and let who win follow me . ( Cries of We will , we will ') When I look around me in Pestb , I see men enough oapable of bearing arms . If they cannot procure them , they have teeth , sticks , spadea , aad stones ; anything will do to knock out the brains of a robber , and we are saved . Let all the shops be closed ; let it not be said that traffic is carried on by some , whilst others are fighting for their independence . Let our sittings here cease , if necessary . ' Kouuththen rose and left the Assembly . ' "
The victories of the Ban seem to have somewhat startled his protectors at Vienna . The Aiisshkibe OttTxuiscBiCHE ZiiiBBQ of the 27 th ult . ; contains the following : — . ' . It has pleaiea his Majesi y the Emperor to appoint LleutenaBt Field Marshall Count of Lsmberg ( a born Hungarian ) to the functions of Royal Hungarian Military Commissary , placisg under his orders all the laud troops , Grarz ? r ( frontier regiments ) and guards not eweptiity the Croatian */ His Majesty demands the immediate tuppnision of the civil war in Hungary , and has therefore ordaiasd that an aimUOce do take place forthwith between the contending ? parties , and that troops be Immediately sent to pat down the Sclavonic insurrection in Moravia
COKQCBBT OF HCNSiXT . The PstESE announces the solution of the Hungarian question by the complete triumph of the Baron Jellachicb . He turned the Hungarian camp at Vesfzprim , aad marched straight to Sluh ' weUsenbourg , He had appointed Caont May lath Governar of Hungary . The Diet is to be dissolved . The different Ministries established at Pesth are to be transferred to Vienna , and Hungary aga i n becomes a province of Austria , with the Emperor its constitutional King . The National confirms this news iu part by a letter dated Pestb , Sept . 24 th , which announces that tke Diet had resolved not to defend that capital . The Croats were about to cross the Danube aear Adony ,
ITALY . Lstttrs from Nicaaf the 24 th alt . state that a Republican movement has taken place in the small town of Monaco , with the consent of the retgaing prloce . The town has bsen placed under the protection of the French nation . French pstrlotio soogs were chanted accompanied with cries of ' Titela Franetl' ' Vite la Bepub ' Aque Franeaut ! ' Tbe French flsg is forthwith to be hoisted , and the city of Monaco is to sand delegates to Paris to place itself at the disposal of the French Goverament . . The Milak Gszeiie of the 24 : h ult . publishes a proclamation from the military Governor of that o ! ty , an . nounoingtbat any person wko Bhall be discovered after the 26 th to ba the possestfrr of concealed arms shall be tried by jjourt-martial and shot within twenty . four hours , ¦ " .. ' . '
STATE 01 AFFAIRS IK SICILY , Palermo Is crowded with National Guards aad armed men , from the mountains . Id this city the strongest feelings exist against the Sing of Naples . The report of the King having a large royalist party ia Sicliyhasnow fallen to tbe ground , an € the enthusiasm of tke people appear greater than ever . The policy of England In the a&airs of Sicily gets a bad word from all , whilst Franoe , and especially Admiral Baadin , stands high ; Letters frcm Naples , of the 24 : h nit ., announce that the King of Naples has determined to decline the media , tion ef France and England , aad threatens to enforce his rights against his Sicilian subjects In the face of all opposition .
The Psesse announces tbe receipt of letters from Piedmont , which state that hostilities had been resumed between tho Neapolitans and Sicilians , It was reported that the inhabitants of Messina , reinforced by some thousands from Palermo , had recaptured Messina and bad taken slgaal revenge on the Neapolitan troops . The fame letter add thtt Helazzo had been recaptured » y the Sicilians . INDIA . The India Mail brings news of an insurrection , of the Sikh troops in the moun t ain districts of the Hazsrafa , a province of the Punjaub , where it appears an outbreak had occurred .
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' GUILDHALL . —WboUbals System of Swindiiho . —On Tuesday a respectably dreiied individual , named James Hare , of No . 11 , Prssideat > street , King ' s-square , was charged with ebtalning goods under false pretenoes . r-The court wm crowded with tradesmen in the City , who had been victimised to a very considerable extent by the prisoner ; who , there was not the slightest doubt , was connected with other psrties . — Mr Robert Turner , of No . IS , Ludgate-hUl , said : On the 19 th of August theprisoneroare tomy shop and said he was going into the country , and should be glad if I would let him take four shawls , at he had an . epportunity of disposing of two of them . IrepliedtiiaVperhapsitwquldbebetterifhBweat to a wboleiiie hoWe , wh ' era he wbaldget them cheaper than from m » . fcut he said he did not know where to go
to get the precise sised shawl . Having known him for lome years , I at last ordered my uslstant to' let him have thoD , and on being atked for Us address ^ be gave his residence a * being at Ktng-sqatre , Q ojwell-otreet , and want awsy with the artlolea , On the Monday fol . lowing he again called , whUel was absent ^ and informed ay assistant that he had eold two of the shawls , and that he had no doubt he could sell the others , but that he wanted a length of black satinet for one of the puroha sera It was here intimated that another prisoner , who was " at ; the MansioniHouiej , was to be brought for the purpoie of implldatlDg htin in the traassotiori of Hare , and aebordingly the cue wasadjournedfora short time , whena young man named Wtttles Behdsn wasplaced in the dock , ana Michael Hay don . 21 , of tbe City detective
force , deposed to the following effect : —I charge Rehdtn witt \ obtaining three sovereigns from me under false pre . teaces ^ At eleven o ' clock this meming I met tbe prisoner by appointment , at Red Lion . street , john . streot-road , for the purpose of rMe'lving ( ntbrmatibn to enable me t » apprebead ihe : prisoner' Hue . B ; hden said , * If you place in my hands three sovereigns , I will give you information which : will enable you to take Hare . ' I ( aid , ' If you enable me to recover the ' property I will do so . ' He replied that he would ; , upon Whloh I placed the monej In Wshaids , when he turned rohh ' u ' wift a laugh , and said ; Iinlght go to the stttida . housei and I would there find him in enitoflyr I asked htm to retSrn the money , . when he told ebb I might . do my best or worst , for that he should , not return it ; In consequence of whioh I took him Into
custody , and on being searched atBow-hue station , I found among other things ' a duplicate relating to a piece of satin belonging to a party now present , but whioh ha said had been give * to him by Haw . Tthen went to his lodgings , In Towler-• JFW * yf 6 . , *! . "P »» w , mother aad sister , who polnts . d out . apprtmanteantome . It waslutheprisoEw ' sroom andreprelented as belonging to " Hwe . I took poBies . ston of it ; aid Webb ; another officer , who accompanied me , had a desk . 'W theportmaateau 1 found a number of duplicates , to the amount of between £ 50 and £ 6 » . When I conversed with Behdea the prevloKS diy , he told me that he knew where the dupllcat «( were , as also where the portmanteau ; Was , bnt he , would not tell me until he got the money . ' r . gbtthe information from the
prisoner that Hare was in custody after he got the money . I get other'i nformaMon after he was in onstody , bnt not from . the prisoner . —Behden : I told you at' the stationhouse where the portmanteau was . —Haydon : Tou did not . . I found fiftyleight duplicates of different kinds of P ° P « tt » , » , n » m ?> er of whioh are pledged in the name of BAden ;> nd I also found the various Invoices relating tothepreperry , a psrtloii of which ' coufd ' be'identified » y pttson * now piesest . ' At' any rate I think if they were remanded I could ; establish between twenty anft thirty oa !» « g » lnst them . —A number of indivi duals here said they , had been swindled In -a similar manner —Alder .
man Moon asked the prisoners if they wished to say any . thing f-Behdeneatd that he certaUlypawnediomeof the things , as ' theethsr prlsoner , ' a distant ; relation ;« aid they were thewmalns of BUbSnkrnpUtock . —Aldennsn Moon said the charge was of so serious a nature , and , as !¦* . *• widenoe went , prayed that a regular system of swlndllBg . h ^ d been carried onj' that he must remand them both aotil Tuesday next , — Bshden asked to be admitted to bail ; buthls appHoation was refused . —Hare thenms . de a similar' request , wben ' a general laugh throughout : the court todkplaoe , in ^ hlch he himself joined , but as a matter « f course that was refused also They were then removed , .
• MANSION-HOUSE . —Pbatioal Rbvolt . — J . J . Smith , first engineer , and A . Beed , second engineer , of the Lion , steamer , trading between London and Holland , and J . James , D . GUller , J . Payne , J . Kelly , B . Bsrday E ; Sorrell , and J . M'Donald , firemen and trimmer * , were finally examined oa aoharre of piratical revdt : BByner , the fireman who remained on board the Lion when the prisoners deserted the vessel , was now called . He confirmed tbe evidence given by Cept . Neville , the master of the vessel , upon the first examination as to the conduot of Smith , the first engineer , in inciting all the rest to abandon the vessel on the lG : h of September , when she was to sail for England , at nine o ' clock in the momlnjt . The captain , he added , asked me in the presence of a gentleman whom he brought on board , whet her I was
willing to go to work ; I said yes , and M-Donald said tbe same . All the rest refused . They said they wonld not go home in the vessel , unless Smith did . ' Smith said to them , 'Mind what you say , or » he captain will get hold of your words . ' Gillier came on board again and said he would do for me before I went home in the ship , This was after the refusal , and he was taken oa snore by the police . I got the steam ' of the vesssl up , but I did not attempt to go on , for I did , not know anything of engineering . —Joseph KavanagB , second mate of tbe Lion , also corroborated tie captain ' s evidence . ' He added that after all the prisoners wenton shore , except Bayner and M'Donald , QillUr ,. James , Payne , and Barclay , returned on board , and asked him what he was doing there . Witness said he was left In ohiir ge of theenglne room arid refused to let them go in . Afterwards , when James and Gillter came on board upon pretence of gstttng bread , the first mate said to them that he wonld send them bread , but had lefhe shi
as they t t p of their ownaocord , he would Hot . allow them to came -on- board for that purpose . Witness , heard Smith , the , first engineer , shout bnt CaputaKevUle , the great machinist ,: n 6 w where an yon ! Why don't you take away tha sHp V Daring the night double watch-was kept , and soldiers and police were : In readiness ., The sailors had cutlasses . Ifwasfearedlest the firemen ' wouldcometodamagethe machinery . —The Lori Major said , I shall give Smith , as well as the rest of the prisoners the opportunity cf giving In ball for their an . pearanse at the next session of the Central Criminal Court ; but , as I oonslder Smith to be the ringleader , I shall require fremhim bail himself Intaeaum ' ef £ 100 and two sureties ia £ 50 each . I shall require of ' Seed ! James , and GUlisr , as next in criminality , eaoh In £ iO and two sureties In £ 20 each : and of Payne , Kelly , Barday , Soirell , and M'Donald , eaoh , in £ 40 , and one surety in £ 28 . —The prisoners were then committed for trial . .
• AFbikbdw Nsed , '—H . T . Pearmanwas ehorged , upon suspicion , with having determined to rob an old gentleman . —A policeman , as he was going his rounds on Saturaaj night , ia CorahM , " saw the ^ rlioner and an old gentleman lying on the pavement at the end of F « eman ' s-oourt . The old gentleman was drunk , and the prisoner appeared to be very little better , The offl . cer raised up the former , and then found that the ' prisoner had suddenly recovered , and wbb resolved to olaim intimate acquamtanca with the old gentleman , who had been just awakened . As the policeman had judgment enough to discover that the prisoner bad some objegt beyond the friendly one of seeing his Intoxicated cam . panion home , he insisted npon the immediate departure of the prisoner ia another direction ., The irequeit was contemptuously n j « cted by the prisoner , who Insisted that he was the friend of the . ' overdone' party , that he knew all about him , and that he would coavey him to his house . The suspicions ;« f the officer wera inoreased
. by the conduct of the prisoner , and he called to a gentleman who was passing by to assist him in tfiWtiug a separation . The moment the party applied to " offered to render aid he received several violent blows from the pri . toner , and was at length obliged to retaliate . —Mr Wlllocks , of Cheapside , optician , said he . was the person to whom the policeman nude appHoation for , assistance , arid that . while the officer was taking the old gentleman out of the way ' of . misohief the . prisoner , upon being prevented from following , assailed' him , and was only checked in bisvioltnoe by a knook-down blow . —It was stated by another witness that the prisoner had bean endeavouring to Mil the duplicate of a watch in a publiofeousete tha , old gentleman , who refuted , to ba a customer te him , but gave him a glass of gin and water and teopeacB to get rid of him , and that , suoh liberality had the effect , no doubt , of exciting more profitable expectations , and finally led to the selebilori of Freeman ' scourt as a place of repose . —Prisoner was remanded .
- The CioA * NmsAKCB . — 'Rbai Hatahhas . '—A dls . pute between an extensive oigar manufacturer whose warehouse is near' the ¦ private residence of the Lord Mayor , and one of bis apprentices , waa submitted for decision to the Lord Mayor . The apprentice had , it was quite evident , used the most abusive language in address . iBg his master , who bad refused to allow him to return to the concers . —the Lord Mayor ( to the Master ) : Haw many of these lads do you keep at work in your ware , house ?—The Master : About sixty are at work now , my lord . —The Lord Mayor : You are iu my ward , and assure you that your cigar manufactory constitutes tbe moit offensive nuisasoa imaginable , for orowda ef these lads issue from It , all smoking cigars . I wish you would endeavour to get away from tke ward . —The Master said he wished he could procure accommodation elsewhere ;
be was aware of the annoyance of which his lordship complained . —The Lord Mayor : I suppose , that it is in your agreement your youBg men should ba supplied with ' c ! gars , for sueh is generally understood to be the caso ? —The Master : I- never give taem any , and have no agreement of tbe kind with them . — The Lord Mayor : Then they take them . I certainly consider the cigar system , amongst boys of this description , to be excessively troublesome to society ; in fact , to be tbe cause of at least half of the rows and confusion which occur . These boys are constantly puffinj and puffing , and after all they are puffing nothing bat dried cabbage leaves . ( Laughter . )—The complainant and defendant , upon tbe advice of the Lard Mayor , egreid to separata , and his lordship expressed a bops that the vegetable alluded te would be once more confined ts its legitimate use ,
'ADmptooMdch . '—A young woman , of very decent appearance , the wife of a person respcotably employed in tbe Borough , was charged with having attempted to drown herself on Saturday night . Tbe defendant said , she had turned into a public house ( aa she was going ever the water to her husband with soma mono ;) for the purpose of taking a glass of beer , and that she there
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met with two females , with whom she supposed she drank something , for from that moment she remembered nothing . The husband of the defendant said he had never since hia marriage known her to drink any beverage but tea or coffee , and that his surprise at , hearing ahe had nude an attempt upon her life was as great as the shock he felt upon finding that suoh was the fsot . He had been out aU night looking for her ; and he kepsd the Lord Mayor would not . add to her and his affliction by the Infliction of any disgraceful , punishment . —The Lord Mayor , having reoelyed , solemn assurances from the female that tbe pablie house should , never have a oustomer In her again , and from her husband that he wonld henceforward look very olosely afttr her discharged her from the bar—She had , it appeured , either spent or been robbed of geven shilling ? , and it was coneluded that , ttie few of meeting her husband with a diminishedpur « e , J 3 laedto the excitement caused by petatlonj of bad gin , was the cause of tho attempt .
: WOB 8 HIP-8 TBEET . ^ -Ai , HoBi > Embezzmmswt bt a R 41 WAI . Cail .-0 n Tuesday , ' William Brown Watts JV 8 I charged with embwzltog monies belonging to the Eastern Counties Ballway . -Mr Ponsford , land agent of taei Company , said the prisoner was employed as clerk £ o ° lleolo '« . f aB 8 l «> . ? U 70 a-, eBr , and had to col £ JS"J " ' from * flnanll 0 f P' ?* i , es belonging to the Company It was hi . duty to hand over the raoneyte witness when ; hls oolleotlon amounted to about £ 20 , ana SK 1 ? 7 lBr |! e " imoi ! Mtallll 4 ™ I «"'»' on , gI hit Saturday week he abseirtsd himself from hi employment , andhis de . k being . Ward . owned and oooks
wa examinefl . lt was diiobversd ^ tbat a very largo amount which he had received was ' not accounted tor ¦ Assaow bt : a » Omnibds Co » Dcoto * .-F , Waade . love , thecondaotpr ofaHoxton and-Cnelsea omnibus was charged with ,. Want , n ! ,, a « uU- / upon Mr Mark aSiTsW ^""*!? T' J * % hBX Ott * « B 00 B of the 17 th ult ., his wife and hlmsojf entered the d » fend- ' aat s omnibus In ¦ Sloane-square , with' the intention of proceeding toHoxtOB , bntthey had ofalytravelledW short distance . nheahU attention ' wasdraratto the ; offensive conduot of tueconduotor by some , female pMsengers , who
complsined that he had-grossly lusulted them , and auailed them In the raost indelicate manner as they werestepplrig out' of the emhibus . ' Wfttiess was aooordlogly inaucedte wat ( ih hlm olosely , and having him . self seen him aot In the manner described to one or two respectable women , as they trere leaving the Omnibus , he and other gentlemen present remonstrated with him upon auoh disgraceful conduoywhea . tbe defendant , who was evidently Intoxicated , commenced swearing at them and asBBlilng them with abusive epithets , whioh he kept up without Intermission the greater part of the ioutriM :
Witnefs at / length fold . hins he shonld noVallotr his wife to near such language , and tbat . unlesB he Instantly de . sisted he should be compelled } o leavers vehlole , He had no sooner made the . observation than the defendant exclaimed with an oath , I'll take care that yon shall and , seizing hold of his collar , dragged him forcibly out into tha roadj and then struck him a violent blow under the ear , which canted him to stagger back several paces . His wife , who was very much t errified , got out after him as quickly as possible , and before he recavere * tke * ff * ot » of the blow , the defendant' hastily mounted tbe steps of the omnibus , ' which' Was driven rapidly off , The
complalnarit added , that he entertained no vindictive feelings against - . his- assailant , who . had rtrfce expressed great contrltloBj and offdred . him an ; ample , npology- / and he therefore wished to recommend tbe . case to the lenient oonslderation of the maglsirate . —Mr Tjrwhitt ' sald that it waB a verygroaa case ' , ' and as the defendant was manifestly a most unfit perion to be trusted wlth ' a licence , his only doubt was whether he should not withhold it from him altogether . He should' direct it , however to remain suspended in tbe hands of the warrant-officer , and order the defendant to pay apeaaliy of forty shillings , or stand committed for'two inoHths to the House of Oorreetlon . ' " ' . ; •' ¦¦ - ' ..- ; .. » . ¦
SOUTHWABK . — Yokksbisemen rtLosDOK . * —J , Hibbert was charged with being loorioerned wlif three others ( not in custody ) in asoaultlDg and ; robbing Blchard Smith and Joseph Prootor of fifty-eight sove reigas , two £ 5 Bank of EagliiBd notes , and two silver watches , —Smith ataied ' tiut on Tuesday be and Prcctor arrived In London , for the ' first time'in their Hves . iirom KnattiDgley , In Yorkshire , by the Birmingham train at ; Eustoa-sq-iare , and went from thenoo to the Silver CrttH , ' in ChB , ring . cros 8 , They slept at the latter , house ! the same night , and , on the following morning ttuy . proceeded to , St Jamcs ' s-patk to see the guard relieved , arid while there they were addressed by the . prlsoner , who entered into familiar cenversfttlon with them , and ' finding that they had jost come np from Yorkshire and were
novices in London / be preffared his services to show tkem , as he termed it , ' the lions , ' at the same time asserting that he . waB a YerkBhlremanblmself , and that he took a pleasure in rendering a kindneBS to any of his countrymen who came up to td&n . They gladly availed themselves oftheeff ^ r , and the prisoner then proposed that they sboald prooeod to Bsdlain , where thej would have an opportunity of beholding Oxford , the young man who sbet at the Queen , He ( Smith ) and'his | fritnd proceeded with their new acquaintance to the Bouttvslde oi the river , and having arrived at . Bedlam j th ' e '' prisoner ; instead of taking them into the . building , proposed having some refreshment , and they went into a publiohouse , and he'd some ale and bread and cheese ... Here they remained for some time , tmd were joined by three
other well-dressed ^ men and a oonversstlon having sprung up , time passed away , and their visit to the above plaoe was postponed . . On leaving Ithepublic house oomplainant and his friend were taKen to another homo , where they bad more ale , but werb pirfectly sober and from thence to the King ' s Head in the Mint , with which looallty they ; were , totally , unacquainted at the time . A ^ . thia latter house they , remained for seme length of tfme , and while . there his friend Prootef laid his head on the table and went to sleepy when the prisoner suggested to him ( Smith ) that he had hettertske his friend's mo-ey ana watch out of bis pockete , in cbbb of aocident , and restare them to him when he awoks . He ( Smith ) availed himself of the advice , and accordingly took poaaeteion of . his friend ' s , menpy and watch , and — 1 A I ¦ ' " — S * ^^ ' ^^ ^^ ^^ r ^^ ^^ ^^
* Boon afterwardB , when his . friend aroused himself , the ; both got up and left the room , saying that they were going to tho Silver Croaa to sleep , they were followed out , however , ' , by the prisoner' and the ' three other men who had continued . with them from the morning , and when they were walking along a narrow street the three latter came up , and taking him ( Smith ) by the arms , forced him down a very narrow alley , . exclaiming that that was tbe tray to the Silver Cross . When they had got him down ' this place some distance they pinioned hie arms , while another held his hand over . his mouth , and a third man proceeded to plunder him , and for that pur . pose tore the buttons off his top coat in his eagerness to get at hla pockets , from which he took fifty-eight sovereigns , two £ 5 . Bank of England notes , and two watches .
onoof the latter beiBg that of his friend , which he had previously taken from him iu thet public-house by the prisoner ' s advioe , ' When they had robbed him they all disappeared ia a momint , the place being very dark ; aad although he oalledfor the police , no person eame to his assistance for some time , and he wan afterwards shown the way by a boy to the Btation-hpuse , where he pjave information of . the robbery . He added that , on Thursday morning , in passing a lodging house near Bueton-equsre , he saw the prisoner coming out , and knowing him to be one . of the parties by whom he was plundered he gave him into custody . — Joseph Prootor cpnfirmeilheabove account . —Inspector YateBproduced a bundlo of flifh notes andooua tar felt sovereigas taken from the prisoner , who was remanded , .
iNOEATiibDE . —Ann Kally was brought before Mr Cottlnghanai charged with stealing a purge , oontftlnlng four £ 5 notes and two eovoreigas , from the . person of Mr . Samuel Coosh , of Lsrkhall . lane ; Olaphami—The oomplainant stated that on , the . previous evening as ho was walking along Hlgh-street , he was accosted by the prisoner , who prevailed on ; him to treat . her to » pmo refreshment , and ' on their leaving the p ' ubHo ' houtie he stood talking to her &t the corner of the street . While they were engaged In conversation she thrust one of her hands Into bis trousers pockot- and pulled outhis purse , pontalnlng four 45 bank notes and two sovereigns , with which she ran awayv , He pursued her , and , on coming up wltli her , found her lii the cueted y of a policeman , who had his purse and money . —Policeman 1 C 6 M * 4 ' afe-. S fl . A . A ^ . . if
. stated that be observed the prisoner running with great haste from the complainant , and that he saw her drop the purse on , . the . ground , before , ehe got up to him , when he caught her is his arms , He , added that tb ? complainant claimed , the purse , whioh was found , to coniain tho exact sum he represented that he had been ribbed of ; —TheprlBoner said Mr Goooh was intoxicated , and that he was with' another woman previously tb Ms having met with h ' e ' r , and that It waa by the latter person h e was robbed . —The complainant , however con . tradtefed the assertion , and the magistrate , In committing : the prisoner for trial , said that theBo afreet robberies on the south side of the river had become bo freq uent of late , and many of them of so daring anature , that it was absolutely necossary to make an example of the offenders . ' - ¦ ' : •• .:
THAMES ;— Eobbebt IN Whiteohapji —Mary Anne Wat 60 n , with several oliaaeB , was charged with being concerned in the robbery of : Mr W . Ebblewhlte , of No . 80 , Nottingh » m . plao 8 , Commerolal . road , Oae of tbu gang to which the prisoner belonged , named Julia tonnard , and a noted . thief-trainer named Jtailo ' ng , have alread y been oommltted , . the former as a principal in the robbery , and the latt&r os an accessory afier the fact . Mr Bbblewhlte having changed a soverelga on the even-: wg of tbe 8 ; h ult . at the Angel and Crown , apposite to Whltechapel church , to pay a cab fare , was followed by four women ^ one of whom hnd a child In her arms , to a dark turning of the road oalled Fleldgate-street , where ho waB hustled and knocked down . Ono of the blews , which appeared to have been inflicted by a life preiomr , or a stone tied in a baadkerchlof , rendered him insensible .
While he waB down , Lennard , the woman already committed on the evidence of a bo ; namtd Benjamin , cut away the watoh from bis guard , whilst another , with a child in her arms , took four sovereigns from his pocket , and shared them with her associates . Kelly , who i » well acquainted with tho persons , haunts , and habits of all the Buepectoa characters In tho district , inBtantly recognised in tho ladBeDJvnin ' a description of the woman with thu chili In her arms the prisoner Watson , for whom he kept a oharplook out , but she suddenly aban . doned all her usual baunta . Kelly having aioertalned that she belonged to one of the city parishes , and concluding that sho had two phces of ultimate refuge , lefi notloes at the Peckbam and Steptes olty uoions , where her person wae well known , that h'j should : be -Immediatel y Informed on her arrival at either of them , and owing to this timely precaution ho took her into cuitodj
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w « i ' lnIt % t , Ube 8 t 9 Pn 6 yMlon . « na « hewaBbrought wWt ?» m 8 g ' : trat 0 *• « wlag day , but Mr Ebble . th ? & " > " * ° ? tt 9 nd ' owin « ' coDonsBlon of nolr . mL " . on 1 ha » oJ « rlea he sustained . He JartlcnU T * t * ' *•¦? WU *^ ' « " ^ ¦»« detailed the ? heDri . on Ot th 9 robber y' fcut waB unRbl « to identify 2 HFSKA *? ? oni by ffhom he hBd ^ wasthe womai JS f , " 38 ? " ' b 0 W 6 Ver « P rov ' d that 8 he Mr EhSu . WUhJb' oWld Bh 0 took * ° » o «> ey torn was ^ 5 fll !^ ip # Oket on the O 00 Mlon . "ntthisevldeuoe hiwSS SSln ^^ er « "nt K «» y B 8 W * ll » t * hU « Zm of i ? . S nM . tbe obarSe » « d toId h « » e names of the boys who , wpald prove her share In the « ES 1 " * * 9 ^««»« edSn ' S
LAMBBTH . -Diii » o Hichwat Bobbish .. — Caotiok » mi Pobmo -Mary Ann B » ktr , a wdLdNsses Wle resldlDg at Plccsdllly . plaoe , Pall-mall , aad An . « hony Walsh , were charged , the former with assaulting ana attempting to rob a young gentleman named Bri . tain , aad the Utter with attempting to reicue her from the police . —It appeared that , on Saturday night , the oomplainant mtt'the prisoner , who threw her arms ft . mUlarl yabeat his neok , and put one of her bandi into bis waistcoat pocket Id which was his watch . He disentangled himself from her , and having no doubt she in . tended to rob him , he charged her With it , upen which aVe struck him two or three times . He then followed to give her Into oustod y , when the male prisoner and a second man made their appearanceasked him what he
, wanted with the woman , and placed themselves In a position to Impede his further progress By this means the female got off and so did the man , On seeing a een . stable he gave an accurate description of the female prii oner ; and this led to her ' apprehension as well as that orher male companlpn . ^ . ppiieen ) an 88 Ptisld ^ he , took the female prisoner , upon w h ' feh the nsiepilspner would have rescued her had it not been for the assistance of another offloeri The prisoner was himself secured , and both were leckedup . —The oomplainant here stated that several daring street robberies had recently taken place In the nelgbboorhoodof ff alworth . Onegcntitinan whohad been robbed was then present , —The young gentleman al . iuded'to by the complainant stated that four or five nights ago he was proceeding along the Walworih-road , when
some person from' behind ,, suddenly , placed bis band on bis mouth , end he fonnd himself Instantly surrounded by several others . From some cause or other he became uuooniolous . of what was passing around him , and when bcr epovureal hofouBdhlmeelf ,, lying In a garden into wbloh he hsd no . doubt , been flung , minus bla watoV chain , and purse . He had no doubt that some narcotic of a powerful nature must have been applied to his mouth and nose to have deprived him of bis senses se instantaneously . —A gentleman In court sold that about ten days since n friend of his had been robbed cf his
gold watch and chain , worth twenty . five gulmas . at the early hour of eight o ' clock in tee eveBing , in Holland , street , Blackfrlars . On that occasion the robbery was effeoted by one of a party coming from behind tho gentleman an J placing hls hsndB on his eyes , while a second 8 r _ 5 ? P ? d Wm _ by . the .., throat , jnd . forced him . 90 the ground . A stranger , coming up , atked what was the matter \ when one of the gang merely , replied , ' Only a young gentleman In Iti , ' and the fellows got clear iff . — MrUprton remarked that , such , apts-were rather alarm . ' n ? , * ahd remanded tho prisoner ! . . ''
. CLEBKBI ( WBLL . * . CsDiLTr to Childben . —J . E , Wonall . andC . W . Chandiey were again charged with oriielty t « ' - the four ohlldren of the former prisoner . —Mr Copmbe : told MrstCbandley that . she was discharged . — Mrk' Chahdley , who loektd pale ¦ And ghastly , burst into tears , and informed hls , wor » bjp that it was her Intention to take refuge . in the Magdalen . Asylum in Blackfriararoea and there wire' Jstveral of her Mends and other humane , persons present whom rbb intended to aocp ' m papy ' th ' ither paleaviBg the'court . —Wcrrall was cpin mttted ' fpr trial , ; " ; ; - ' ) : ; : vr ¦ ' >¦; ;/ -.
MARYLEBOHE . — Robbut orPim , &c , to xn Auouht of £ 100 . —On Tuesday , James Langley , Mary Jtfffej . Qiariz , and Jane Charlten , the Utter of whom was servant to Mr Marshall , 21 , Edgwsre-ioad , were charged with having ; been concerned in an extensive robbery of plate . In the early part of last month , prossoutor , ' whliestaying at Lswes , Sussex , received information thBt his house had , been plundered to a considerable extent . He Immediately retornvd to town , end , finding , that a great deal ef property had been extracted from his premlsos , he lest no time in communicating the particulars fo th ~ e * p » llce , and through the means of the HttE . amd Csi Langley was captured at Sa'isfeury , and Quartz at Warminstcr , where she and Langley had been for some time living together as man . and wife . A vait
number of the stolen articles were found in their posses , elon ,, ; Laogley and Quartz , prior to their going to Warminster , " dwelt -in a room in Charlotte .-street , King ' s * ctobb , and there were found forty-sevea duplicates , some of which related ; to the property . parried off . Unas proved that Cbarlton had , upon many occasions ad * mitted Langley to her . master ' s house , - and that along Inilmacy had existed between them , she ( Charlton ) not being' aware of'his connection with Qaarlz . None of the stolen plate has yet been traced . Quartz was discharged , and the other two prisoners stand oommltted fortilal , BOW-STREET . — Thomas Phillips and William Crcmar were brought before Mr Henry , tbe former charged with stealing , and the latter with felonlomlj
receiving , a kilderkin of beer tbe property of Sir Henry Meux and Co ; The prisoner Phillips ; a drayman in the service of . the above firm , was sent out with six . hogs , headsjof . porter on the 21 « t of August , to be t » ken to St Pancras Workhouse . He ' . ' was , accompanied by a lad employed at the brewery , who saw that In addition to tke 'six hogsheads , a kilderkin of beer had been put . up at tto'back of the dray ; which Phillips took donn and left at a beerBhop near the . tollgate , called tho Jolly Brewers , ; kept by , the other prisoner , Cremar . On receiving information of this clrcumsUnco , Mr Jenkins , a storebonse clerk in the employ , of . Messrs Meuz , bad a conversation with Phililps upon the subject ,, during which ' the Utter made several important aduiiBBions , and he then went to Oremar's house for a similar
purpose , ' i Seeing a catk there . with the brandmark of Sir H . . Meux and Cp . obliterated , he asked the prisoner , what sort of beer It was ? He replied that It was 'Seotoh stout . ' Jenkins informed him that there was no such thing as . 'Scotch stout , ' all the aloutin Scotland being sent np' from- London ; and- then asked' him if he did not occasionally have beer from Meux and Co . ! The prisoner stated that he ,. never . did , and also that he know none of . the men , in their employ ; but several conflicting statements were afterwards elicited from him , tfce result bting that Jenkins gave him into oostody , —Matilda Wilson , a young married woman , who stated that'Cremar was her mother ' s tenant , proved that she frequently saw barrels er casBBbrought to the prisoner ' s bouse , by Meux and Co . ' s . draymen , i sometimes in rubbish carts . She had Been a man named Bath obliterate
the brand-maik trom the oaeks , and take them to a coopor's in St Panoras . road , nasied . Aastlss . —AustisB stated that he had been In the habit of buying casks of Bath ; who had sold him a great many , from time to time , at Is .. GJ . or 2 s , 6 d . each , according to their size . —Daring , tbe examination it transpired that some of Messrs Barclay ' s casks were found at Gremar's altViough he had had no dealings with the firm . It also appeared evident that , in addition to the prisoners already com . mitted from this court ( and two of whom have been convicted at the Old Bailey ) , many others : are implicated , to a greater or lester extent , In the systematic robberies whioh have been parried on for a length . of time . past on thepremisea . bf SirH , Meux aDd Cj ., if not likewise at the other large breweries in London . —Mr Henry com . mitted the prisoners for trial . They said nothing in Ihelrdefence . ' ' ¦ ' - ; - . ¦ ' ,..:: . f 1
MARLBOROTJOn-STBEET , —Ommibob Ricbeationb . —Wi Andrews , the conductor of a Chelsea omnibus , ' was summoned before Mr Blngaem for refusing to lot out of his omnibus with reasonable expedition , W . Ralph , when rtqueatdd to do so . The complainant said , ou Monday last , at twelve o'olook at aight , he and kis wife got 1 bto the defendant ' s omnibus ^ at Cromorna Gardens . A great number of persons got on the rotf , and two others hung on to the steps behind . . While the omnibus was making its way down Sloane-street , the persons outside , who were evidently the worse for liquor , began singing and making a great noise . Tbe omnibus stopped before a publio houBe , and some of the passengers got down and had refreshments , ; . ; One of the outside passengers called for braady- and water , -and ; was supplied with it .
The omnibus , after waiting some time , went on and tbe noise outside was pontihued . Some of thepersens outside let off firewprke . One ' person whose legs hung over tbe side of tho omnibus elbse to witness ' s head , pUced a catherlnc-wbeel at the end of a stick- and set fire to it . The window of the omnibus being out of repair it could not be put up . The sparks , from tie fire-work came into the pmnlfcuB over tho passengers , and oaussd much alarm . Witness spoke to the conductor , mho merely aald , ' Oh , Its all right . ' Witness ' s wife , being rather nervous , instated en getting outef the oianltus . Witness applied to the defendant to open the door ; but the defendant made some . excuse , and did not open the door . Witness again applied to have the door opened , and in this , request he was . joined by other persons inside .
Finulag the conductor would pay . no attention to their request , witness , asiisted by . other pereoss ; pushed the door open and got put . Por refueing to open the door , when desired , witneas took out the present summanfl . — A witness named Thurlow corroborated the statement of the * complalnaat in every material particular . —Mr Lewis , for the defendant , ple&ded tb at the persons who were outBlde the omnibus had been enjoying thomselvee at Cremorne Gardens , and , therefore , were posaibly run quite bo steady when they left as when thojr entered tho gardeus ; - They made a great deal ef noise , and this prevented the conduotcr fram . making the conehmnn near tho request for him to stop and lot out the passengers . The defendant , who bore a very good
oharactor , was exceedingly sorry for what had happened . — 'Mr Blngfcam said be bad his public duty te perform . It bad been clearly proved that the defendant had suffered parsons to mleconduot themselves outside of tho omni . buj , very much to the annoyance , of thosa who w . sro Inside . It bad also been satiBfactorily . proved that the defendant had nst opened tho door when requested , and , though he pleaded his inability to make the driver licav nooadr , owing to tho noise mado by tho outside paBsengers , that could not bo received as ea cicuso , in asmuch as it . was the defendant ' * duty to have prevented that nolBd . He should bo far listen to the application of the complalnaut by iriflicHcg the mitigated penalty of 108 , aad costa only ,
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Oob Kavt . — Altogether , of tho £ 6 , 000 , 000 which our navy costs ui , £ 1 . 500 , 000 ia wasted , — Timu . TheRivlfllngEarrlBterB , who w « e formerly paid tea guineas a day , now rcoeivs 200 guineas for the entire session , including their expeFses . ¦ : A FOBTOKAIJS PsKBIONM . —The I ) PNMIBS STAHDABB states that Mr James Gordon , of Coatbridge , who has reotntly been declared heir to the Kenmura titles and estates , formerly served in tbe Sapptrrand Miners , from which body he obtained bie discharge in 1831 , with a pension of ninepenoo e-dsy ; Tha eacutoheou en tbe cap of the French soldiers nOW Btats a cock with his foot on a globe . A man named Duchie has murdered his father la France , and been sentenced to death . In the eourse 0 hti trial at La Yrndee , he coolly declared , in answer to a quettlon , < ( bat he had kept the hoij of bit lathef buralng in an oven for thlrty . slx hours . ' i "
A Tbavbueb . — Mr Anderson Miller , post between Bai . lantrae and Daljarrock , has , through all weathers , with unremitting attention to his builaeBf , walked nlueteau miles ptr dim—Sunday exoepted—for the period of fourteen yeart—making in all 83 . 268 miles , or more than thria * the oircumferenpe . of Jhe globs . Pies and Potatoes . — More than one person in Guild * ford has lost some valuable pigs from giving them dls * eased - potatoes . Oa their being opeutd the tatettiuM were found to be mortified . PcBiio . Hopsis . —London consumes 1 , 40 ^ , 000 barrell of beer annually , and has 5 000 public-houses . jAiCHitn . wiTH Twehti Kamss . —The Madrid Ga . miti officially announces tbe birth of the Duchess ds MoatpensUr's child , and that the bed b « en fcaptlne * Maria Isab » l Pranclsca de Ails Antonio Lu ' za Fernanda Crlstlna . Amelia Fellppa Adelaida Joicfa Elena EBriqulta Carolina Justa Rufina Gsspira Melehora Baltasark Mit « a ..--- " . - " ¦ .. .: . .
S 8 ATH 9 tBnulHTEiiPtXAKCE . —Theooroncr at Thorpe * on-blll , Lincolnshire , stated that , is ten years , he had hold inquests on 111 persons who bad died in consequtnoe of Intoxloation , Cocbaosotjs Hobsc- A man at n fair was asked if his horse was timid . ' Not at all , ' said he ; 'he frtquently spends the wiolo night by himself in a stable . ' . A QoBuKimn . —A three-letgtd kitten was brought into the world on Saturday week , at Padlham , by a cat which had onoe rendered herself remarkable by produ * ciag a kitten without a tsiL . Sbak'Peabb . —At the sale at Stowe , the celebrated portrait of Shabspeare , presumed . to be the woik tf Burba g * , the original ' . itpreBfn'ative of Richard II ! ., was purchased for 355 guineas , for the Eirl of Earners . PAiTiKa . —There is something In pBrtlDf that Bofteni the heart ; -iUs ' asif we had ntvtrfelt how uuulterBbly dear a beloved object could be ,, till . we ore about to low t for ev * r . : - /¦ ¦¦¦
Indian Jdqolib » . —The Indian jugrlers and snake ohsrmers are said to drug the reptilts with opium , which renders , them quiet and harmless , tho t&ct mot wearing off f « r a fortnight or three weeks . Astoumhhq Ankodiicekkht . —The dames of CU « theroe , young and old , married and single , were thrown into a state of great alarm and , peiplexlty , last week , by an announcement cf the bellman that' a large quantity ofblBck'dfomjflli ' had " arrived , Tand w « re ehsalHntfee market plaoa . ' They rushed to the spot , and happily found that the articles on sale were fruit , not females , A 'Gbeai FiOT tot Hemwivis — A 'cute Tankei has invented . a nist , lp the bottom of which thrre is a kind of trap-door , through which tbe egg . when laid , im « latdiately * drops ; and , the hen , loohinj round and perceiving hone , lays another' ' .,. ¦ :, ' The son born to the Empress ef Brazil , on theWlh of July ., laat , displaces the presumptive helrship of the Prlocess de Joiaville , who is the Emperor ' s sister .
There is ft large I zenge-shnped epot now visible on the easiorn limb of the sun . It is estimated to be 50 , 800 miles in diameter , sud may to Been through a darkened ' glass ,.. ¦ . ' . ... " : \\ k OAt belonging to a farmer at Bhesby , NottB , vjbs lately four din > he middle of a large wheat stack , where it bad been confined during sixteen dajs which had elapsed Bince the building of tho stack , and where It must inevitably have perlehed ii its plaintive mewings had not been accldtntally board . . , , \ 'We know notfaiag of revolutions , tows , and demon * stratlons In the South , ' says Sit ' s Afbicam JonsNAt , ¦ except from pictures and hearsay , and what the London journals are plenaed to tell up . We sit quietly under our vines and fig trees , and read of these thiegs in Cape Tewe , but they create little stir or surprise . ' Philoso . phcra .
Dr Kaox ( Medical Tihss ) , ssys of the men and anU mals in South Africa— 'All must disappear shortly before the rude civilisation of the Ssxon boor—antelope and hip < poUmus , giraffe and Kaffir . ' A coalmine , the first known in Portugal , ia stated to have been dhcovered at a thoit distance from Lisbon , The Portugut . se army list comprise * , nearly 12 , 000 officers on full or half-pay , though the army la fixed at 18 , 000 mea , many of 9 horn are . always on furlough . Con 8 lderable ., quantitl 8 s of preserved mcatB , portable soups , « Sso ., have lately been ff'P&Kd la New Sou' . tt WaleB , for shipment to the London maiket . For the lastfour years not a single death has occurred in Easton Hastings , Berkshire . At the late West Riding ( Yorkshire ) sessions there was no * one female prisoner for trial—a circora . stance which bas not oceurred for many ye * rs pre « viously .
A London inventor has applied vulcanised Indian * rubbw to tho purpese of making artificial leg * , whioh are said to be the moat useful substitutes for a limb that beve yet keen devhtd . The mail guards are rapidly diminishing in number . There are not above 200 in England , WaUs , and Scot ' land , A Email batch of them have vrry recently been compelled to accept of the gratuity of £ 50 allowed them by the Treisury , and leave the service . These wcra aU juniors . There are 30 , 000 clergy , cf all denominations , in the United States . Tbe John O'Groat ' s Joubnal calculates that In the proEent season there have been 93 , 802 crans of herrings captured . Supposing that each oren holis 70 dczen , we have 6 . 487 , 740 dozen , or 77 852 . 880 herrin «! " '
MrJoBepaArmi'nge , oi Nswtown Mills , while driving a wedge la a pole on which . the wheel mill turns , was Btruck with such violence by the pels on the head that he died Instantly . . Fanacre , a Neapolitan physician , states tbat tha human body can be rendered insensible to fire by the following embrocation being applied : —One ounce and ah&lf of alum , dissolved In four ounces of hot water ; to this must be added one oucce of fiBh glue , and half an onnce of gum arable A parliamentary return , founded on tbo probates 0 wills , and rande in 1832 , gives the total amount of money left by ten Irish bishops at £ 1 575 , 000 . Tho highest was an Archbishop of Caghol , £ 400 , 000 , tbe lowest Stopford Bishop of Cork , £ 25 , 000 .
The sew act relating tb the windihg-up of iha Join Stock Companies , appoints the district Commlsttancrs 0 Bankruptcy and the JudeeB of the County Courts ums < ters extraordinary of the Court of Chancery , for the purpoBes of toe act , As Mr Grant , of Redcar , waS killing some drone bees at his hives he was stung uudcr tbe vlght eye , ar . d having been informed thet a cut onion laid to the wound and ' . he ju ' ce pressed into tho woundtd-part waa an ex . cellent remedy , he applied . an onion in iho way indicated and , was Instantly relieved of pain , and all swelling was prevented .
Toe-first English lottery was drawn A . D . 15 G 9 . It oonalsted of 40 , 000 lots at ten shillings each lot ; the prizes were plate , and the profits wero to go towards re pairing the hivens of the kingdom . It was drawn , aa Stow informs us , at the west door of St Paul's CahedrAl , The drawing began on the 11 th of January , 1569 , end oontlnued incessantly , day and night , until the Gih of Usj following . .. It appears that since the opening out of the great lines of railway bo extesded has been the d < macd for grouse shooting on tbe Scotch moors , that advanced ond most exorbitant rests are being exactod for tho privilege . It is stated that three frhnde pay £ 200 a year to stoot in two glens , for which the tenant farmer to whom th « y pay 1 % p&ys but £ 140 to the owner ; Hiu » he bas bis farmitg profits on tbe £ 140 and £ 200 pcrsnnum for bad shooting into the bargain ,
Manx Giant . —Oa Friday morning lat-t the prcme . naders of Douglas Pier had their nerves eomtwbat shaken by the sudden apparition of a giant gravely b'Hiking amongst them , and yet apparently ' enjoying the lively eceno ef the departing malt-aUamer , ' with a zee ! not awhlt behind that of bis pigmy ne ' ghtours . This stalwart descendant of An&k turned out to be a youth frcm tho parleh ' of Bailaugli , nnm ' ed Arthur Cahy . Be stands seven feet ana o&e Inch in beightj though" only twenty years of a jp , , ls stout in proportion , and t > ni < z ngl 7 powerful . Re has a brother whe exceeds h ' w in height , bulk , and strength . —i / ajis -Sun .
A Pbofbetic Jebt bt Loun rnmrpE . —Several years age a very diatlBgulabcd English uohltuiun—Lord B—m—haviog had the honour of dining wjth tho K ' sg in the uncerainoniout mauner In which ho delighted to withdraw himself from tho trflinuK-lu of Btatp , the c < n « versation waB carried on as if between two cq-ials , and bis Majesty , inter alia , remarked , 'that . be van the only Sovereign now in Europe fit to oil a ihruno . Kings are at suoh a discount in our days , there is no saying what may happen ; and I am tho only monarch who has oloaned his own boot ? , and caa do it agniu . '
Te those who C 8 E Faise Tkitb . —It ia stated as a fact , that fiace ihe late insurrection in Poris , there has hecn a large lmpoitatlon of human teeth into this country , which bave biin tbkcu from the cprptea of the insurgents and their opponent ? , slain during tho tattles 01 the barricades- ; tho object < -f tho importation being tOBupply thejnn '< eroof urti 6 dal tectJj ulth raarer ' als for their buaiuesB ( co us , at locst ) , a disguifing jrau-ico , mid fraught , we conceive , with danger to tboic viko wuur them , iuaou-uoh as it is quUe pofsitle ttu-y may courcy aaj ( JisuaBu nuh wliicU their ( rginal poesteacra wero affcclcd to their subsequent wearure . ; [ I'jbdibly aa insum-ctionury diEeate . ]
A New Phajb in the Potato Rot , —Halifax ^ Nova Scotia ) papm state that sUco ihe henvy rains the pjtato v ' . n « 8 hafo btcoac grttn n ^^ in , w ' uh prccpscts of u gooi and lioaltby yield . This is a new fact in the profreril of the rot , which wo do uut rtmembev lo have uosfci-sHii j any othir country , M / jm
Colonial Attti Foxti$N. Cnlnm ' At Aittl Ifhrrintt.
Colonial attti foxti $ n . Cnlnm ' aT aitTl Ifhrrintt .
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Aitikicul Teeth . —An ingenious method has very recently been discovered by Mr . tioggridge , of Old Burling , ton-street , who some time ago obtained a patent for au invention by which the pneumatic principle was made applicable to the fixing of artificial palateB , for forming artificial teeth , and for constructing and tinting them in such a manner that a closer resemblance to nature is produced than has hitherto been obtained ; in fact , a method by which the graduated opacity and semi-transparency ef natural teeth are represented . This inveHtionisofiateresttoavast number of persons , and -will supersede the somewhat repulsive custom of making use of the teeth of dead men to supply the wants of living , a practice which engenders in many instances disease . It is a fact that there has lately been an importation of teeth from Paris iBto London , the teeth having been extracted from the jaws of the insurgents and their opponents slain in the late insurrections in the former-city . Any person interested in this invention can form his own opinion of its merits by examining the results of the process , which are worthy of investigation . —Times .
Mrs Bcrgess , Laundress , East-street , Marylebone , London , maketh oath and saith—that she had been afflicted upwards of ntae years with the Piles both inwardly and outwardly ; the pain was at times so violent as to prevent her following her occupation . -Being ; recommended by Thomas Sharpe , who had been a sufferer , to try a Is . Gd . pat of' Abernetby ' s Pile Ointment , ' and a 2 s . Sd . packet of' Abernetby ' s Pile Powders , ' she became perfectly well , and is now quite free from any particle ef ' the - . ' complaint . The said Thomas Sharpe had been a martyrs to the Piles , and has not had a return Bince he used the Ointment Sold by all respectable chemists and medicine venders ia our town , and throughout tae kingdom ,
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OoiOBBK 7 , 1848 . THB northern STAR ¦ " " ' . "" g * ¦
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 7, 1848, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1491/page/3/
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