On this page
- Departments (4)
- Adverts (3)
-
Text (14)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
police.
-
ifttarftet*, &c. ^"~ *
-
Untitled Article
-
POR 8ALE, IN ALLOTMENT at LOWBANDS, -ti. near the public road, consisting of Four Acres of L&ria
-
Printed by WILLIAM KIDER, of \o. 5, Mateic at Printed bv WILLIAM KIDER, of Xo. 5, Mnf'^ pl iuti!!-;
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Ad
, togetner witn a cottage , having therein a Yorkshire oven , ash grate , boiler , and a large copper set in the kitchen , with an excellent dairy ; also a cellar under the parlour , and oow-liouse fitted up for two cows , with a large yard , piggeries , and fowl-house ; two large stacks of straw , several tons of manure ; a tank , two swril-tubs , and a quantity of stones for a barn : one acre and a quarter of wheat , a quantity of black barley , ajquarter . of an acre of ash-leaf potatoes , and seed to plant another half-acre ; ? iso a quantity of peas , beans , and cabbages , all planted ; and one acre of land laid down with rye grass and clover , with fanning implements . Ill health is the reason why the allottee wishes to dis * pose of the above . All parties desirous of purchasing must apply ( prepaid ) to W . Bentley , Lbwbands , Redmarley , Worcestershire , and inclose a stomp for reply . Ccmpam ' ' expenses all paid , l J
Untitled Ad
MO MORE MEDICINE ! NO MORE ¦*¦* 1 ) ELICATE CHILDREN!—Dyspepsia ( Indigestion ) a Irregularity of Intestines , the nisdn causes of Biliousness , Nervousness , Liver Complaints , flatulency , raiprtution of the Heart , Nervous Headaches , poises in the Head and Ears , Tains in almost every part of the Body , Asthma , Gout , Rheumatism , Scrofula , Consumption , Dropsy , Heart . bmu Nausea after eating or nt sea , low Spirits , Spasms , Spleen , &c , effectually removed from the system , ns also Constitutional Dehilitv , by a permanent restoration of the digestive functions to their primitive vigour , without purging , inconvenience , pain , or expense , by
Untitled Ad
UNDER ROYAL PATRONAGE . PERFECT FREEDOM FROM COUGH , In Ten Minutes after use , and a rapid Cure of Asthma and Consumption , and all Disorders of the Breath and Lungs , is insured by DR . LOCOCK'S PULMONIC WAFERS . The truly wonderful powers of this remedy have called forth testimonials from all ranks of society , in all quarters of the world . The following have been just received IImportant Testimonial from the Rev . Owen Thomas , Holyhead . Dear Sir , —Dr . Locock's Wafers do a great deal of good to my voice . I got a bad cold from a damp bed about th'irty-five years ago , and my voice had been very bad ever since , giving great pain to me when preaching or singingand I am very fond of singing . I used many different medicines , and some of them did good for a . little time , but
Untitled Article
e ^ mr * imZM ^^^^^^ sa ^ ^^^^^^^^^ nssms ^^ the lion scntlfenAa states-askeu Mni- { L 0 rd Pal-SorSinvhct ^ v thc-rc ^ ould be any objection to San iccWVinodation . His reply was at once that BKfcftss any ; and the guns were accordingly delivered . On further consideration it appeared to him tB * perhaps the Neapolitan government might take a different view of the transaction , and according the British minister at Naples was told if the ttsaftcr became the subject of remonstrance , or evp , n « tecrvailon , ioexnkinhow the thing really Irap-> csed—thattUe permission to take the guns had
keen given inadvertently . Sir J . AVjosn ^ charged the noble lord with assuming * n independent ' lino of action , which had been repudiated by the majority of his colleagues . Mr . M'Gregou applauded the conduct of the Sicilians , and passed R high eulogium on the noble lord for the manner in which he managed the foreign affairs of the country . Mr . J . O'Cosseix vras de % hted to hear the full recognition , onthc part of the noble lord , of the right of nations , when desrous to manage their own affairs . After this recognition he shosld ask the noble lord fcr Ms vote lav legislature freedom for
Mr . Ifcit expressed his delight to licar that the inorai uowcrof £ nehnd was now se great that she could operate upon the rest of Earape by peaceable influences , because it would affowE him the opportunity «? claiming the noble lead ' s vote whea he ( Mr . * Eonic ) should propose a reduction in the army estimates . ,.,, » , i . m c Lord- ? . Russeu . denied feat any difference of opinion had existed between the noble lord and his colleagues ,-oe the subject of the supply of arms , for so Sir from the explanation -suggested having originated with them , it had emanated from ihe noble lord Iflreself . As regarded anything being analogous as between the cases of Ireland and Sicily , as su ^ rested by the member for Limerick , the only resemblance was , that Ireland was an island and so was Sicilv . ... .
ifr Bjlxkes would consent to modify the return thus : " Account , &c for the pui-pose of being sent to the Sicilians in arms against her Majesty ' s faithful airy , with the consent of her Majesty ' s Minister for foreign Affairs . " This proposition being declmeda division followed , when the motion was negatived by a majority of 95 —the numbers being 39 lo 134 . The House then adjourned at six o ' clock . ( From our Second Edition of last week . ) THURSDAY , March 1 . HOUSE OF LORDS . —A conversation took phee between the Mar quis of Salisbury , the Earl of Carusle , and the Earl of Ellesmere , respecting some inaccurate statements which had appeared in the newspapers with reference to the late report of the committee of the House of Commons on the < hawn Lands , and after some further routine business the House adjourned .
HOUSE OF COMMOXS . —Agkiceltitrai . Disthess . —Mr Mhaer Gibson asked Mr . Disraeli if he was-preparwliolay his resolution with respect to Agricultural Distress upon the table ? Mr . DisRAEU said that he had laid his resolution upon the table , and that the Clerk might read it to the House if desired . Mr . IIcme wished to have it read . The Clerk thereupon read the resolution , which ¦ was to the effect , that the whole of our local taxation , for national purposes , fell mainly , if not exclusively , upon the real property of the country , and boi'fi ' with an undue severity upon the owners and occupiers of land , in a manner injurious to real property , and otherwise injurious and unjust ; that more than one-third of the revenue derived from the Excise was levied from agricultural produce , which lad been exposed by recent alterations in the law
to competition with the untaxed produce of other countries ; and that the House should resolve itself into committee , to take into consideration sueh measures as would remove the grievances of which the owners and occupiers of land justly complained , and would tend to the establishment of a more equitable apportionment of the public burdens . { Cheering from the Protectionist benches . ) Lord AsHLEr then rose , and moved , " That an bumble address be presented to her Majesty , praying her Majesty to appoint a commission to inquire into the practicability and mode of subdividing , into distinct and independent parishes , for all ecclesiastical purposes , all the densely peopled parishes in England and Wales , in such manner that the population of each , except in particular cases , at the discretion of the commissioners , shall not exceed four thousand souls . "
Mr . Hume objected to the motion and moved , as an amendment , the insertion into the resolution , after the word " population , " of the words , " and further to inquire into the best mode of putting an end to all ecclesiastical sinecures and pluralities , and of uniting parishes which separately contained but a limited number of persons . " After a discus-* lon , in which several members joined , the House divided , when the numbers . were—For tbe amendment ... ... 18
Against it — HI Majority against ... ... 03 The amendment having been rejected , the motion was agreed to without a division . Poor Laws ( Ireland ) Bill . —Upon the question that the House go into committee on the Poor Laws ( Ireland ) Bill , with the view of moving therein a resolution imposing for the next two years on eveiy union in Ireland a rate of 6 d . in the pound on each electoral division towards the relief of the poor , Mr . S . Crawford moved that it is unconstitutional and unjust to impose upon Ireland separate
national taxation for particular localities , so long as the public general revenue of Ireland is mixed with the whole imperial revenue , and applicable to the general purposes of the United Kingdom . He stated at some lens ^ h , the grounds upon which he rested this proposition , contending that any advances made to particular localities should be made out of the public revenue of the empire , the lands of those localises being held responsible for such advances . He tailed upon English members to join him in resisting the imposition of a tax upon the industry of Ulster to support other parts of Ireland .
Several members urged Mr , Crawford to withdraw Ms amendment , in order that the proposition of the Government might be made in committee ; nut he declined , and upon a division it was negatived fey 139 to 15 . The Speaker ' s leaving the chair was then opposed by Sir John Walsh , who contended that , after the appointment of a committee , the bringing down to the House a cut and dried resolution , without evidence , before that committee had completed its
inquiries , was a violation of the practice of parliament and of the spirit of the constitution . He insisted that arae in aid of sixpence , which was vicioas in principle , and had already created a flame through out Ireland , was utterly inadequate ; that it would oppress the occupying tenantry of Ulster and Leinster ; and that whilst the poor law remained as it was , engulfing all property , any partial re ' ief would be thrown away , lie expounded what he considered a sounder policy , and said he should divide the House upon this particular rate .
Mr . Napier ridiculed this substitute for the comprehensive measure promised by the government . Sir G . Grey pointed out the inconsistency of those who obstructed the Speaker ' s leaving the chair , when an exposition of the views of the government might have been made , of the absence of which they complained , and deprecated the continuance of this preliminary discussion in a case of such urgent necessity . Mn Disraeli , after justifying his vote against Mr . Crawford's motion , observed that this vote did not preclude him from opposing the vacation of the chair to go into committee to sanction a seheme of the government which bad not been explained . Where was the evidence in support of the poHcy of the Ministers ? Why was haste required here , when the House of Lords would move deliberately ? If the Government had brought forward comprehensive , business-like measures , they might have Asked for temporary ones ; but Ministers were trifling with their reputation .
Lord . * . Rcsseix observed that , according to the forms of the House , he could propose the resolution only in committee , and he retorted upon Mr . Disraeli that in demanding delay he was trifling with the welfare of Ireland . lie complained of a want of candour on the part of Mr , Napier and Sir J . "Wal-h , and briefly pointed out the insufficiency of the remedies they proposed , of circumscribing the area of taxation , and of emigration , and the mischiefs which would attend a property rating . Lord Casilebeagh regretted that this proposition should have been brought forward , which was at variance with the feelings that had prompted the Union , and which , he believed , would ultimately be given up as impracticable . Colonel Duxke , Mr . Keb , Mr . Gbogax , and
Sir W . verxeb , spoke strongly against the proposition of the government ; Mr . Retsolds , though hostile to a rate in aid , supported the proposed rate , otherwise the poor must subsist upon the charity of England or die : but it was upon condition that all property should be rateable : whilst Sir L . O'Brien , though he had voted for the rate in the committee as part of a general scheme of measures , should now oppose ibe proposition of the government . After a few observations from Sir T . D . Aclakd , the House divided , when the motion was carried by 195 to 96 , and the House went into committee / wo forma , the chairman obtaining leave to " sit again this day . The other orders were disposed of , and the House adjourned at half-past one o clock .
From our Tfdrd Edition of last week . ) FRIDAY , March 2 . . HOUSE OF LORDS—The Marquis of Lass powjiE , in reply to a question from LordBKOUGHAM , stated that there was no truth in the report that the British Consul at Leghorn had recognised the Revolutionary Government in Tuscany . HOUSE OP COMMONS , —Naval Expe / di VXSr-The House went into Committee of supply
Untitled Article
ssms . at six o'clock , wher a vote of £ 200 , 000 on account of excess of nav ' j expenditure was aueed to . The IV joneRS IN Kilmainham . — Mr . * - O'Cosw ^ SdI whether the right hon . gentleif so , whether he had any objection to lay them on tius table of thehouse ? ( Loud laughter ) . Sir Gborgis Grey said it was not consistent with his dutv to reply to the question . _ , _ the
Rate in Aid . —Upon resuming , House again resolved itself into committee on the Poor Laws Ireland ) , when . LowUf . Russell rose to move a resolution , that in each of the next two years a rate in aid for the relief of the poor in Ireland of 6 d . in the pound .-hoald be paid by every union ; anil in doing so . expiated the course which the government intended to pursue with reference to these laws . He began by acknowledging that , although they had realised the object of sustaining the poor in Ireland by means of a rate , evils had arJ ? en from the adoption of this principle , and that in many parts of Ireland the rate imposed a heavy burden . It appeared to the government that although it was a divergence from the principle of the English poor law , it would be expedient to propose a man mum rate , and he had proposed to the committee that the rate should not exceet
5 s . in the electoral division , and , when it wou c exceed that amount , a rate not exceeding 2 s . should be collected from the union , making 7 s . in all . The committee , however , though generally favourable to a maximum rate , differed as to the amount ; he therefore withdrew the resolution he had moved , and he did not intend now to make any proposition as to a . maximum rate , but should wait for further evidence . But it was the decided opinion , of the government that a maximum rate was desirable , in ordrr to combine with the relief of destitution the employment of industry . Thealterations con t emplated by the Government with reference to the Poor Law were these : — That when agricultural improvements of lands took place , there should not be , fnr a certain number of
years , not exceeding ten , any increased valuation on account of these improvements . With immediate reference to the resolutions he was about to propose , he stated , as the result of the report of the Poor Law Commissioners , that , out of 131 unions , there were 20 for which some external aid was absolutely required ; and the question was , whether that aid should be afforded , or whether Parliament deemed it wiser to withhold all relief , and allow these unions to take their miserable chance . After showing that an income-tax would be open to the same objection , on the ground that the Imperial Exchequer was the legitimate resource , vindicating the loyalty of the people of Ulster , and answering the fears of those who apprehended that this rate
in aid would become a perpetual charge upon the income of Ireland , he concluded by asking the committee whether they would consent to this mode of relieving the wretchedness of those parts of Ireland which had suffered from the failure of their staple food ; whether they would prefer any other measure ; or whether , lastly , it was the deliberate decision of the House of Commons to deny relief altogether . Mr . Stafford opposed the resolution , arraigning the whole policy or the government with relation to the question of the Irish Poor Law , and wished to know what amount they expected from this rate ; what extent of destitution they anticipated ,
and what resources they looked for in the destitute localities . He warned the House of the effects which this measure would produce in Ulster , and of the evils of administering a local tax by local machinery . Mi-. J . O'Coxxell dissented from Mr . Stafford's theory of property rating , but found little ground for hope in the plan of Lord J . Russell , though he should not vote against it until he heard a better plan proposed . He thought the people of Ulster , who had their tenant right , had less reason to complain of this rate in aid than the poor ratepayers of Leinster and Munster ; but an appropriation of surplus church property , a tax upon absentees , and credit for the income-tax and other imposts which Irishmen paid , would render a rate in aid
unnecessary . Lord Bernard urged the injustice of taxing poor ratepayers in Ireland , upon the ground that the affluent in that country were exempt from property ane assessed taxes . If there was an inequality in the taxation of the two countries let it be remedied , but not made the ground of a tax vicious in principle and ruinous in its effects . Mr . Fagas deprecated allusion to differences between classes in Ireland , He maintained that the relief required should come from the Imperial resources . Ireland was a creditor of England , not a debtor to her ; and Manchester was more interested in the prosperity of Cork and Wexford than Dublin was . He was , however , favourable to this national rate in aid , knowing the destitution of 200 , 000 of his countrymen , and seeing the reluctance of this House to make further grants ; but it would require great qualifications to make it a perfect measure . Mr . Bankes was sure that if Lord J . Russell had
unfolded his scheme the night before , and the house had found that after all that had been done for Ireland we were to advance more money and take as security the chance of this rate in aid—which some members said the Irish people could not pay , and others that they would not—he would not have got his committee . Mr . Moxsell trusted that the obvious injustice of singling out property in so lamentable a condition as that wliich was to be solely taxed , would prevail upon the House to reject the proposition .
The Chancellor of the Exchequer said , thai ' some members , in their zeal against this proposition , seemed to have lost sight of the pressing emergency of the case , official documents stating that in the west of Ireland , without assistance to the local resources , large numbers of the people would be in a state of starvation . The mode of this relief , by means of a temporary national rate , had been actually suggested for other pnrposes . 3 fo objection was offered to a national rate for assisting emigration ; then what became of the objection on principle that it was unjust that the farmers of Ulster should be taxed for the relief of destitution in Connaught , when they did not refuse to assist emigration there ? Mr . Osborse moved to report progress , and Lord J . Russell assenting , the Chairman obtained leave to sit again on Monday .
The Petty Sessions BUI underwent some discussion in committee . The House adjourned , ata quarter to one o'clock , until Monday .
Untitled Article
A Judicial Tiger dj his Lair . —Capture of Judge Jeffrets . —A scrivener , who lived at Wapping , and whose trade it was to furnish the seafaring men there with money at high interests , had some time before lost a sum on bottomry . The debtor applied to equity for relief against his own bond ; and the cause came before Jeffreys . The counsel for the borrower , liaving little else to say , said that the lender was a trimmer . The Chancellor instantly fired . " 'A trimmer ! where is he ? Let me see him . I have heard of that land of monster—what is it made like ? " The unfortunate creditor was obliged to stand forth . The Chancellor glared fiercely on him , stormed at him , and sent him away half dead with fright . "While I live , " the poor man said , as he tottered out of the court , " I shall
never forget that terrible countenance . " And now the day of retribution had arrived . The trimmer was walking through Wapping-, when he saw a wellknown face looking out of a window of an ale-house . He could not be deceived . The eyebrows indeed had been shaved away . The dress was that of a common sailor from Newcastle , and was-black with coal-dust , but there was no mistaking the savage eye and mouth of Jeffreys . The alarm was given . In a moment the house was surrounded by hundreds of people shaking bludgeons and bellowing curses . The fugitive ' s life was saved by a company of trainbands , and he was carried before the Lord Mayor ( Sir John Chapman ) "When the great man , at whose frown , a few days before , the whole kingdom had trembled , was dragged into the
iusticeroom , begrimed with ashes , half dead with fright , and followed by a raging multitude , the agitations of the unfortunate mayor rose to a height . lie fell into fits , and was carried to his bed , whence he never rose . Meanwhile , the throng without was constantly becoming more numerous and more savage . Jeffreys begged to be sent to prison . An order to that effect was procured from the lords who were sitting at Whitehall ; and he was conveyed in a carriage to the Tower . Two regiments of militia were drawn out to escort him , and found this duty a difficult one . It was repeatedly necessary for them to form , as if for the purpose of repelling a charge of cavalry , and to present a forest of pikes to the mob , The thousands -who were
disappointed of their revenge pursued the coach , with howls of rage , to the gate of the Tower , brandishing cudgels , and holding up halters full in . the prisoner's view . The wretched man , meantime , was in convulsions of terror . He wrung his hands '; he looked wildly out , ' sometimes at one window sometimes at the other , and was heard even above the tumult crying , " Keep them off , gentlemen ; For God ' s sake keep them off ; " At length , having suffered far more than the bitterness or death , he was safely lodged in the fortress where some of his most illustrious victims had passed their best days , and where his own life was destined to close in unspeakable ignominy and horror . —Macavlay ' s History of England .
Mb . Surra O'Bhiex . —The infant son of Mr . . Wff Smith O'Brien wa s christened last week in Richmond Penitentiary . All the state prisoners confined with Mi-. Smith O'Brien were present at the ceremony except 5 Ir . OTonohoe .
Untitled Article
LAMBETH . —Alleged Crtomi to a Child . —H . Martin , the governess of the National Infant School , in Dorset-street , South Lambeth , was charged with having placed a child , three years old , named Hughes , upon a heated stove , whereby it was severely injured . Three children were examined ; two of them of eight and the other six years of age , and one of them , an intelligent little boy , deposed to having seen the governess , Miss Martin , take up little Hughes and place him sitting on the top of the stove . The child cried a good deal . —Mr . Evans , the medical gentleman , who had been called in to examine the child , deposed to the injuries inflicted , and said , that havinff examined tlie stove in the
school-room , ho was certain the child had been placed on it . The life of the child was at present in great danger . —Mr . Games , on behalf of the child ' s S . rents , applied for a remand to a future day . —Mr . umphries did not object to the application . It was the wish of the guardians ; of the schools by whom he was instructed to appear , though he could only do so as the advocate of Miss Martin , that the most searching investigation should take place . — Mr . Norton complied with Mr . Games ' s request ; but said , that as the case had assumed a much more serious aspect , he must have bail for the appearance of Miss Martin—herself in £ 100 and two sureties in £ 50 each . The required sureties were entered into , and the accused was liberated . —On Tuesday , Mr .
Humphreys , who attended for the accused , said that , having received the authority of Miss Martin to do so , he felt it to be his duty to make a statement of the facts as they really occurred . The child entered the school wet and crying , and Miss Martin thoughtlessly took him up and placed him on the top of the stove , regardless at the moment whether it was a stove or a seat . The child did not cry at the moment ; but , when he did , Miss Martin , seeing the nature and extent of the injuries , and fearing also that the circumstance might affect the interests of the school , or that she might lose her situation , foolishly denied her guilt in the first instance , and persisted in her statement . In conclusion . Mr . HumDhrevs said he had the pleasing duty
to add , that by a certificate which he would read , it would be found that the life of the child was out of danger , and Miss Martin would be in attendance on the uay appointed to meet the charge . —Mr . Games said , he wished he could join Mr . Humphreys in the belief that the child was out of danger ; on the contrary , he was sorry to say that Mr . Evans had seen him the day before , and considered him in great danger . —Mr . Norton remarked , that he did not think Miss Martin had put herself in a worse position by making the acknowledgment she had , and here the matter dropped . BOW-STREET . —Alleged Attempt to Murdee . —Mary Anne Milley , wife of a man who keeps a small shop in Great Wild-street , Lincoln '
s-mnfields , was placed at the bar before Mr . Henry , charged with stabbing her husband in the neck with a ki'ge case knife , from the- effects of which his life is in danger . —Charles Lane , a labouring man , stated that on Saturday night he was standing at the prisoner ' s door , about eight o'clock , at which time Tier husband was sitting at a fire in the room at the rear of the shop . They both appeared to be under the influence of liquor , and the prisoner having taken the large knife produced from the rack , went into her husband , and , with a backhanded blow , stabbed him in the neck , which instantly caused the blood to flow profusely . Her husband , after rising from his chair , came to the shop door and told witness that he had been wounded by the prisoner .
Witness immediately conveyed , him to the shop of Mr . Gray , in Drury-lane , while the prisoner followed , with the knife in her hand , -without making any observation until she entered the doctor ' s shop , and then she said , "I did it , and I had just cause for doing it . " He had known them both for about four years , and that they were of drunken habits , but he could not ascertain the cause of their quarrel . —Mr . Gray ' s assistant said that the wound was in a horizontal direction , about half an inch deep , such " " might be inflicted with the instrument produced , dividing a main artery , and had it been a quarter of an inch further it must have touched the jugular vein , which must have caused instant death . The prisoner followed her husband into the shop , shaking the knife in a . threatening manner , and saying , <( l have done it , as he has abused me . " She hada black eye , and appeared very much excited , and while the man was haviifsr his wounds dressed he expressed a
wish that she should be taken into custody . —Mr . Henry inquirednf any one was in attendance from the hospital ?—The officer replied that the housesurgeon was at present unable to attend , but he told him that it was impossible as yet to form any opinion of the wounded man ' s condition . —The prisoner , having received the usual caution fi'om the magistrate , said that contrary to her wishes her husband had become a dog fancier , and about two years back he broke her jaw , because he did not approve of the manner she attended to » dog . Her husband was in the habit of spending the money at public-houses whicli she received in the shop , and although she had thrown the knife at him during his dmnkeness , it was because he . assaulted her , and blackened her eye , as it appeared . —Mr . Henry said he should have the evidence of some persons from the hospital , and ordered the prisoner to be remanded for that purpose .
SOUTHWARK . — Attempted Escape from Hobsemonger-Lane Gaol . —George Lord and Jane Mrrgan were brought up for re-examination , charged on suspicion of an attempt to aid and assist in the escape of some of the prisoners from the county gaol , —A few nights ago , at a late hour , the prisoners were discovered in an enclosed piece of ground under the ' walls of the above gaol , from which they tried to make their escape , but were pursued and taken into custody . Upon the return of the policeman to the spot where the prisoners had first been observed , he found several articles constructed for the purpose of communicating
with the inmates of the prison , and amongst them two bags attached to an article like a fishing rod , capable of being put over the walls . In the bags were some letters written by the inmates , and , from this and other circumstances it was strongly suspected that the prisoners were there for the purpose of assisting in the escape of some of them , and it was strengthened from the fact of the woman Morgan having a son in prison for being engaged in the late Chartist riots . —The prisoners , who denied that they knew anything about the articles discovered under the walls of the gaol , were held to bail . , :
WORSHIP-STREET . —An Innocent Victim . — T . Johnson , an elderly man of sedate and imposing appearance , who stated himself to be in independent cu'eumstances , was placed at the bar for final examination , charged with having feloniously appropriated various articles , the property of numerous tradesmen in all parts of the metropolis . In consequence of the proceedings on tho first examination having obtained publicity , a host of tradesmen now presented themselves , and complained that they had also been victimised by the prisoner , and were prepared to substantiate fresh charges against him . The first additional charge was brought forward by
Mr . John Watson , an ironmonger in Judd-street , Brunswick-square , who stated that in the early part of last month the prisoner called at his shop , and representing that he held a lucrative appointment at Somerset-House , selected a variety of articles , which he requested might be sent with him at once to his residence , 24 , Tonbridge-street . Witness himself accompanied his lad with a portion of the order , but as they were proceeding in the direction indicated , the prisoner insisted upon relieving him of part of his load , and took possession of a coffee biggin , but had only carried it a short distance , wnen he intimated that he had occasion to turn for
a moment down a dark entry , and that he would overtake the ' m before they reached their destination . The prisoner , however , failed to rejoin them , and having ascertained at his pretended address that nothing was known of such a person , he hastened back in search of his customer , but saw nothing more of him until he saw him in custody at this court . _ The next charge was preferred by Mr . Richard Smith , an ironmonger , in the Queen ' s-road , Chelsea , who was favoured with a visit from the prisoner about a month since , under the same circumstances . Another case was proved against him by Mr . E . Lawrence , a ehina-dea-W , in Goswell-road , to whom he had given his address at 25 , jMyddleton-squarc ; and that prosecutor was succeeded by Mr . Henry Monger , a hardware dealer in the Borough , and Mr . John Piper , of Beech-street , Barbican , each of whom positively identified the prisoner as having obtained various ( roods bv means
of a similar stratagem , the last offence bavin * been committed only a few hours after ho had been liberated upon bail from this court . —While each successive witness was under examination , the gesticulations of the prisoner , expressive of mingled indignation and astonishment , were most amusing ; and after several cases had been established , he , at length , exclaimed , " Well , really this is most remarkable . I could not help thinking , at the outset , that the first two or three witnesses were indulging in the most wicked and wilful fabrications , for some purposes of their own ; but as it does not seem very likely that all the others would join the conspiracy , lean only conclude that the whole of these good
people nave really been scandalously swindled by some unprincipled rogue , bearing a personal resemblance to myself , and whom they actually believe to be me . " Having thus delivered himself , the prisoner assumed an attitude of lofty composure and listened to the relation of his subsequent delinquencies with , the air of an immaculate martyr who had resigned himself to endure in silence the unmerited obloquy arid persecution of an iniurious world . —Several other , tradesmen pressed forward to give evidence , but ; the magistrates considered ttot there was amply sufficient to secure the ends of justice , and five conclusive cases having been reduced to depositions the prisoner was committed for trial ,, protesting his innocence to the last , and declaring himself to be one of the many ill-used
Untitled Article
victims among the countless cases of mistaken 1 e MARYLEBONE . — Thb Cur of London Trade Protection Society and the TowzeryGang . '• — G . Hall was charged with having caused £ a ob . structionto foot passengers . —Mr . T , A . Siddcrs deposed that on the same moromg he opened a shop at 15 . Vere-street , Cavendish-square , for the sale of shawls , silks , and other goods , and that between eleven and t welve o ' clock he saw prisoner just off the kerb directly facUig the premises , and he continued to walk to and fro for a considerable period . He had two immense placards , one in front and the other behind him ; and in his hand a number of bills , wlik'li he distributed to ladies . One of the said bills was here handed to the magistrate : it ran thus : —
'Towzery Gang . —( Jaution . —xne pumic are respectfully cautioned against the attempts oi a gang of strolling drapers , known as the Towzery gang , who are getting up fraudulent sale * for the purpose of imposing on the public—By order of the Comroi tee of the City oi' London Trade Protection Societv . — ( Signed ) H . Owen , Secretary . '—A constable stated that the prisoner had followed Mr . Sidders about to various places in and around town , where he ( Mr . Sidders ) had been selling . —Mr . Rutter contended that no offence had been proved againstj the prisoner under the Police Act . The society for which he appeared had considered it necessary to adopt such steps as might have the effect of putting the public upon their guard , as it was well known that a set of
men were going about selling goods which were not what they purported to be , and thereby injuring the fair and honest trader . The man charged had received express orders not to go on the pavement but to stand in the road to deliver the bills ; and it had been shown that he had not disobeyed the instruc tions given to him . —A prin'ed bill issued by the complaining party was put in , and the premises were described as the Oriental Room * for the sale of satin dresses , shawls , &c , the proprietors being Messrs . Moody and Co . It was set forth that they had the largest srock of any firm in London , and they had no connexion with anv other sale , —Mr ,
Broughton expressed his decided opinion that the society had acted wrongly , and that their handbill , which he had read , was a libel- There was nothing before him to show that complainant was a fraudulent dealer , and the course which had been pursued , with the view of preventing parties fromeoing to the shop , was of such a nature as to be calcu ' ated to cause a breach of the peace : it was in the power of complainant to prefer an indictment for a libel . The magistrate then ordered the prisoner to find Burety for keeping tbe peace towards complainant for three months . The bail required was given , and the prisoner was liberated .
Untitled Article
REINFORCEMENTS FOR INDIA . WHAT WILL THE FINANCIAL REFORMERS SAY ? On Monday orders were despatched from the Horse-Guards to the various district Generals , to suspend the recent orders for the discharge of men from the army . This is owing to the indecisive nature of the last Indian news , as most probably more troops will go to Bengal from this country , and thus this service will absorb a portion of the contemplated reduction of 7 , 000 rank and file . — Daily News . Appointment op General STapieh to the Command of the Indian Forces . —On Wednesday a Court of Directors was held at the East India House , when Lieut . General Sir Charles James Napier , G . C . B ., was ' appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Company ' s forces in India , and an Extraordinary Member of the Council of India .
Untitled Article
ASTLEY'S AMPHITHEATRE . A Vfry important addition has been made to the amusements in the circle of this theatre by the engagement of a young American equestrian , named flernandez , who appeared for the first time on Monday night . Even the feats which he achieves in common with other performers gained a novelty by the perfect ease and finish with which he executed them . Generally the very best artists of the class make a hitch or two in the course of an evening though they always repeat their attempts
ti' . l every proposed difficulty is solved . Tliis young Hernandez on the contrary , never so much as approached a failure ; while the most daring leaps were taken without a show of effort , and with a cheerful smiling countenance . Judging from his appearance , we shou'd say he was under fourteeen years of age ; but , young as he is , he has brought an elegance and a ' poetry of motion' into the art of equitation which bas for a long time been unknown at Astley ' s . He was twice called , amid raptures of applause , by a crowded audience .
Untitled Article
WONDEBS OP THE WHITE JNILE . —It 13 , perhaps , hardly necessary to remind the reader , that the river Nile is formed of two confluent streams , the Blue and the White , whose junction is in South Nubia , between 15 deg . and 16 deg . of north latitude . The source of the Blue Nile was ascertained by Bruce , and by subsequent travellers , to be in the mountains of Abyssinia ; but the course of the other branch , which is by far the longest , had been followed , until very lately , only as far south as 10 deg . or 11 deg . north latitude . Even now the river has not been traced to its ori gin , although Mr . Wevno and his companions penetrated to 4 deg . north latitude . Further they could not go , owing to the rapid subsidence of the waters . The expedition had been delayed six weeks by the culpable dilatoriness of one of its members ; and this was fatal to the realisation of its object . Wo can
conceive few things more exciting than such a voyage as Mr . Werne has accomplished and recorded . Starting from the outposts of civilisation , he sailed into the very heart of Africa , up a stream whose upper waters were then , for the first time , furrowed by vessels larger than a savage ' s canoe—a stream of such gigantic proportions , that its width , at a thousand miles from the sea , gave it the aspect of a iake rather than of a river . The brute creation were in proportion with the magnitude of the water-course . The hippopotamus reared his huge snout above the surface , and wallowed in the gullies that on either hand run down to tho stream ; enormous crocodiles gaped along the shore ; elephants played in herds upon the pastures ; the tall giraffe stalked amongst
the lofty palms ; large snakes lay coiled in slimy swamps ; and ant-hills , ten feet hi gh , towered above rushes . Along the thickly-peopled banks hordes of savagea showed themselves , gazing in wonder at the strange ships , and making ambiguous gestures , variously construed by the adventurers as signs of friendship or hostility . Alternately sailing and towing , as the wind served or not i Constantly in sight of natives , but rarely communicating with them ; often cut off tor days from land by interminable fields of tangled weeds ; the expedition pursued its course through innumerable perils , guaranteed from most of them by the liquid rampart on which it floated . Lions looked hungry , and savages shook their spears , but neither showed a disposition to swim off and board the flotilla . —Blackwood . The Irish Insurgent Dillon . —A letter from New York states that Mr . Dillon arrived there from Galway , disguised in tho character of a Catholic
priest , and his first act was an interview with the brother of the convict , Mr . John Mitehel , who was at the time in company with Mr . M'Gee , proprietor of the American Nation The captain of the emigrant vessel in which Mr . Dillon escaped did not discover who his passenger was until he reached New York . The same letter says : — " Confederate clubs are fast organising in New York—the members are all armed and regularly drilled . " Alleged Discovery in Voltaic Electricity . — A correspondent says : — "Mr . Alfred Smee , the surgeon to the Bank of England , has announced that , by a test , which he terms electro voltaic , he has discovered that the terminations of the sensor nerves are positive poles of a voltaic circuit , whilst the muscular substance is the negative pole . The sensor nerves are the telegraphs which carry the sensation to the brain , and the motor nerves carry back tho volition to the muscles .
Untitled Article
CORN , Friday , Mnrdi 2 .-Thei'o is a g 0 O ( i j ^ , . , wheat this week , which would hare been l . inrer w S ^ 'SU contrary winds winch have prevailed . In the t » " has been no activity to-day , and wheat prices Zl ^ '"e fuvouroftlie buyers ; to make any conside raC asaiu iu in sales lower prices would have resulted . Flo ,,, ? Pro J ?> 'ess to be neglected , and prices nearly nominal . n , ii ° mill ues dull as wheat , ana the value of any but nrimn y " Sas < iualities is rather less than on Monday . / eedi n'a » in in very limited demand . Malt is similarly affpp ? i ' ' J must be quoted the turn lower . Althou gh there 5 « ani 1 supply of oats , it is adequate to the demand vtth " i S 1111111 prefer waiting for further arrivals ; so ' ^ np eri » demand , that the bestcorn only maintains Drevinm , , tlle and inferior are nearly 6 d cheaper to effect sales i . ' s » peas , rye , and tares are in limited request at al 7 "'" S ous rates . uout I'revi . M , vbk-lane , Monday , March 5 . —We had a smill . of English wheat at this morning ' s market bit llval vessels with foreign from the near ports having arn " ?' : ' 11 the course of the morning , the trade was verv iImi a English Is cheaper ; foreign was held nt p ^ vU ' "d but little business done . Flour slow sale , andlsT CJ » and barrel cheaper . Fine malting barley without iif * tion ; inferior and grinding qualities offered at low ~ ., a " Malt very dull . Beans dull , and peas Is to 2 s chm . u . , Rye very little doing . Of tares there were fever h In than last week . The supply of oats was mod . /? 3 fine samples unaltered m value , but inferior lieht ,, , *• ties difficult of sale . In clovcrseed we had not muth , i but we cannot quote any change in price iZ cakes dull . CC ( J
British . —Wheat . —Essex , Suffolk , and Kent red -v 44 s , ditto white , 33 s to 48 s , Lincoln , Norfolk ! and vf ° shire , red , 3 Gs to 43 s , Northumberland and Scotch uri 3 Csto 40 s , Oittored , 3 istoils , Devonshire and Son , " !' shire , red , -s to -s , ditto white , - to ~ . , rye <> & ?„« - barley , 24 s to 31 s , Scotch , 23 s to 27 s , Malt , ordinirv Vt ' —s , pale , 52 s toSGs , peas , grey , new , 27 s to 30 s mavfr ? 32 s , white , 23 s to 25 s , boilers ( new ) , 2 fe t 0 ^ $ T > - «¦ " > new , 21 s to 23 s , ticks 22 s to 24 s , harrow , 24 s to'I ' i '"^ 80 s to 32 s , oats , Lincoln and Yorkshire feed , \~ i M )! ' ditto Poland and potato , 18 s to 23 s , Berwick " m ? Scotch , 20 s to 24 s , Scotch feed , 19 s to 22 s , Irish feed black , Irs to 20 s , ditto potato , 20 s to 2 is , linseed ( scminM DOs to 52 s , rapeseed , Essex , new , £ 2 G to £ 28 per last cii ' raway seed , Essex , new , 25 s to 29 s per cwt , rape cake V to £ ' ) 5 s per ton , linseed , £ 1110 s to £ 12 per 1 , 000 , timr per sack of 2801 bs .. ship , 30 s to 82 s , town , 38 s to 42 s . ' Fokeigv . —Wheat . —Vantzig , i 8 s to 55 s , Anhult an ( j Marks , 44 s to 47 s , ditto white , 45 s to 49 s , Pomeranian 45 s to 47 s , Rostock , 4 « s to 4 ys , Danish , Holstein , ail ( j Frieslnnd , 42 s to 44 s , Petersburg , Archangel , and mra
40 s to 43 s Polish Odessa , 42 s , to 45 s , Mawauopoli and Ber dianski , 38 s to 43 s , Taganrog , 35 s to 38 s , Brabant and " French , 40 s to 44 s , ditto white , 42 s to 4 Gs , Saloniea , : ) . ; 38 s , Egyptian , 25 s to 28 s , rye , 22 s to 24 s , barley , Wisniw and llostoek , 21 s to 23 s ; Danish , 22 s to 20 s , Saal , -n sZ 27 s , East Friesland , 18 s to 20 s , Egyptian , 10 s to 19 S n , nube , lCs to 19 s , peas , white , 22 s to 24 s , new boilers to 27 s , beans , horse , 22 s to 24 s , pigeon , !> Gs to 30 s p' 4 tian , 21 s to 23 s , oats , Groningen , Danish , Bremen 'S Friesland , feed and black , lGs to 18 s , ditto , thkk and / ., ™ 19 s to 21 s , Riga , Petersburg , Archangel , and SwSH- ! to 18 s , flour , United States , per lUClbs ., 23 s to '' 5 " it .. „ burg 22 s to 28 s , Dantzig and Stettin , 23 s to 25 s , PrenVii , „ 2801 bs ., 32 s to 34 s . " ' pcr ¦\ Ved > -esdat , March 7 . —We have this week a lavce siinnl of foreign wheat andfljur , whilst of other grain V , 1 English flour the supply is but trifling . The trad- tut morning is in a very dull state , but prices without varh tion . ' ' * Arrivals this week : —Wheat — English , 780 foroim 27 , 190 quarters . Barley—English , 560 quarters ( h ¦ ' English , C 90 ; Irish , 1 , 010 ; foreign , C 10 quarters . Flourl English , 810 sacks .. BREAD . The prices of wheaten bread in the metropolis arc from 7 d to 7 ^ d ; of household ditto , 5 d to OJd per 41 bs . loaf
CATTLE . Friday , March 2 . —The supply of meat at market this morning was short , of all kinds , and partly in consequence of which the tone of trade was better . The weather bejj fevourable , contributed towards the improvement , l ' lfa » remained the same as on last market-day ; but veal was 4 d per stone higher , owing to an unusually small supply Smithfield , Monday , March 5 . —The numbers of ibreiira stock in to-day ' s market were by no means extensive « t they were quite adequate to the wants of tlic bud'hers The beasts from Holland were in better condition but those from Spain , which comprised 80 head , bem « a por tion of the cargo from abroad , were very deficient in qua ! lity . There was a further slight falling off in the arrivals of beasts fresh up this morning from our principal grazine districts . As the dead markets have been toleral . lv well
cleared of the country supplies , mid as the attendance oi tmyevs was tolerably good , the beef tvaue nueil tody at fully Friday ' s advance in the quotations of : 'd per Slds The general top figure for beef was 3 s 8 d , yet a few very superior Scots sold at 3 s lOd per Slbs . PrioV to the close of the market , a fair clearance was effected b y the salesmen . We had a very moderate supply of sheep on offoi-. This circumstance somewhat favoured the mutton trade , which ruled firm , and prices were quite 2 d per 8 tbs higher than this day se ' nnight . The primest old downs , in the wool , sold steadily at 4 s 8 d—out of the wool , 4 s per Slb =. There were about 800 shorn sheep on offer . Calves , though in good supply , moved oft' steadily at extreme quotations : viz ., from 4 s to 5 s per 81 bs—being the same figures as tlw < c paid on Friday last , In pigs , only a limited business was transacted ; prices , Jioivever , were firmly supported in every instance . Head of Cattle at Smithfuxd . Beasts .. .. 849 ( Calves .. .. Ul Sheep .. .. 15 , 620 1 Pigs 190 Price per stone of Slbs . ( sinkiug the offal ) Beef .. 2 s 8 d to 3 s Sd I Veal .. 4 s Oil to 5 s 00 Mutton .. 3 s 2 d .. 3 s 8 d ( Pork .. 3 0 .. 4 4 Ter Slbs . Vy the carcase . Newgate and Le . adenhall , Monday , Mar . 5 . —Inferior beef , 2 s 4 d to 2 s Cd ; middling ditto , 2 s 8 d to 2 s 10 d ; prime large , 2 s lOd to 3 s Od ; prime small , 3 s 2 d to 3 s 4 d ; lar .-e pork , 2 s lOd to 3 s 6 d ; inferior mutton , 2 s Od to 2 s Sd ; middling ditto , 2 s lOd to 3 s 4 d ; prime ditto , 3 s Cd to as 10 J ; veal , 3 s lOd to 4 s lOd ; small pork , 3 s 8 d to 4 s 4 d .
PROVISIONS . London , Monday . —During the last week Irish butter was move freely dealt in . Sales to a respectable extent were effected of ordinary and middling descriptions on ratlicr easier terms , and for the best at no decline . Prices ranged , according to kind and quality , from OSs to 78 s per cwt . Foveign . —The supply of IMesUmd was small , and all cloavcJ at 114 s to 116 s , and Kiel met more buyers at from Oils to 102 s per cwt . For Irish bacon the demand was dull and the transactions few and unimportant . Prices current , Ms to 58 s per cwt . Hams saleable , at 60 s to 76 s per cwt , LarJ improved slightly , and prices ruled for bladdered at Sffs to 02 s , and for kegs at 42 s to 46 s per cwt . American produce sold steadily . Singed bacon 42 s to 46 s per cwt . Short middles rib in 42 s to 43 s , lon <* boneless 43 s to 45 s , and tierces at 42 s to 44 s per cwt , as in size and quality .
ExGLisir Butter Market , March 5 . —As the supply w new milk Dorset butter is yet very scanty ; a brisk demand is continued for fine quality , at full price . AYe have still a large quantity of old butter lying about ; but as the trade for it is gone for the season , the end thereof will be very bad . "With fresh butter we are better supplied ; and as tlic quality is pretty good , prices are tolerably well supported Dorset , fine new milk , 112 s . per cwt ; ditto , middliiij . ' , Mils to 104 s ; ditto , autumn-made , 76 s to 84 s ; ditto , summermade and inferior , nominal ; Fresh Buckinghamshire , I ' - 's to 14 s per dozen ; ditto , West Country , 10 s to 12 s .
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES . Covest Garden-, Monday , March 5 . —Rhubarb , Is Oil !* 2 s 6 d ; and brocoli , | 6 d to 2 s per bundle . Apples , Is , 1 to 5 s ; pears , 10 s to 15 s ; onions , Is 3 d to Is tid ; Brussels sprouts , Is to Is 6 d ; spinach , 6 d to 8 d ; and parsley . Is to Is Od per half sieve ; red cabbage , 2 s to 3 s Gd ; savoys , W to lOd ; celery , 4 d to Is 3 d ; and horseradish , Is Cd to l's per dozen heads ; turnips , Is 3 d to 2 s ; carrots , 2 s Cd to 4 s : and greens , Is 3 d to 2 s 3 d per dozen launches ; foiwp 1 grapes , 9 d to 2 s flpine apples . S s to 7 s ; and filberts , Is » 2 s per lb . ; oranges , 4 s to 10 s ; lemons . Ss to 9 s ; forced asparagus , 2 s to 4 s ; and forced French beans 3 s tid to 4 s per hundred ; sea kale , Gd to 2 s ; mushrooms , 6 d to lfi and new potatoes , M to Is per small basket ; tunw greens , 6 d to 8 d , and brocoli sprouts lOd to Is per to * basket ; young radishes 4 d to Od per hand .
POTATOES . SouTiiwABK Waterside , March 5 . —The arrivals of tlw past week have been rather extensive , particularly lo * shire Regents , wliich are meeting a very heavy sale i W although we have not much reduction in price to rcpo . » ouv market is very dull for all sorts . The Mowing an this day ' s quotations : —Yorkshire Regents , 100 s to W- > Scotch ditto . 100 s to 120 s ; Ditto cups , 90 s to 100 s ; dp whites , 70 s to 80 s ; French whites , 80 s to 95 s ; Belgiani 70 s to 90 s .
COAL . ( Price of coals per ton nt the close of the market . ) , Monday , MarchS . —Buddie ' s West Hartley , 14 s ««; I J "; Hartley , 14 s 6 d ; East Anglian Main , 12 s ; irartlepool \ ft-Hartley , 14 s ( id ; HolyweU Main , 14 s Cd ; North KM Hartley , 14 s ; Ravensworth West Hartley , 14 s ; Ti *? Moor , 13 s 6 d ; Townley , 13 s ; Wvlain , 13 s 3 d ; Brown ' s < £ 12 s ; Framwellgate , 15 s ; Hotspur , 14 s ; Wharnchtte . !>'; Eden Main , 15 s 3 d , to lGs : Bradacll ' s lletton , Ms - , Hct « - 16 s U ; Lambton , lfls 6 d ; Morrison , 14 s fid j llcttoi ) . ll >«» Stewart ' s 16 s fid ; Whitwell , 14 s Cd ; Cassop , 15 sM \* r : loe , ICs ; South Hartlepool , 15 s 3 ; Trimdon , Us 3 d ; W £ unison ' s Tees , 14 s ; Dern-entwater Hartley , 145 3 d ; > ' " ton , 14 s Cd—Ships at Market , 132 .
WOOL . Monday , March 5 . —The imports of wool into London fo » week were 1 , 000 to 1 , 100 bales , of which 5 G 8 were from " •' Cape of Good Hope , 408 from Odessa , and the rest w Germany and New . Zealand . COLONIAL PRODUCE . Loston , Tuesday , Marcii 6 . —The large public adf Jj sugar have gone off to 4 ay with spirit , and the balk » buyers at fully ( id . advance on the closing pricesj >» ' £ week . Inpuhlicsale , 4 , 000 hags of Mauritius , tfi Bengal ( 5 , 000 withdrawn at very high prices ) . iM " $ renang , and 2 , 700 hags Madras , all found buyers at < ^ vance quoted . 400 hds . West India sold in tlie 1 % contract market . A cargo of brown Pcrnambuco » l sold afloat at 20 s ., deliverable ata near port , w hicu' - > sidered a high price , and 2 s . to 3 s . above the l « te ' ° point of the market . The refined market firm a ''" . vance quoted yesterday ; low to fine grocery lumps . * J- ' O ' - ' S , . K ly Rice sold heavily , and last week ' s prices were «» supported .
Untitled Article
BIRTH . J ( p On Sunday , Feb . 25 , at Macclesfield , the wife ot •> " West , political prisoner in Kirkdale , of a dnug hw-DEATHS . |( t | ic We regret to announce the death of Bernard ^ r ^ Quaker poet , which took place suddenly , at ; ' ° lUje ' on Monday week . Affection of the heart was tne his death . .. nobiiiw ?' Recently , at Wiekham , Hants , Mr . DaviU « \\< many years a contributor to the leading ma "' . , 1 ( i t ,. il' { regret to add that after years of hardly « 5 "" , i af died in a state of family misery , leaving a wl ^ ' tiVL . s . v'f mother , whose situation should command the u ufc " - pathy of those who have the means to raise up tunate and console the distressed . , tj ncter , '' ¦ The daily papers record the death of Edivar . ^ , f litpresidentoftheLinnioan Society , in the Mt » .
Untitled Article
^^ in the pirish of St . Anne , Westminster , "" j , !„ . . V office , 16 , Great Windmill-street , » a ^ a p fs V'd- VM . i ofWestminster . fortHePrqp r ietor . ltAlJ'JJ K , Eft ¦ » Esq . M . P ., and published by the said W H ^ atu ^ - the Office , in the Same street and p . uisii . March 10 th , 1849
Untitled Article
¦~ ? ' ¦¦¦» " "' CHOLERA . The following fresh cases were reported to the Board of Jlealth on Saturday : —Shepherd ' s-bush , Hammersmith , 5 , 1 fatal ; Edinburgh , 4 , 2 fatal ; Glasgow , 5 , i fatal ; Riccarton , 75 1 fatal ; Hamilton , 4 fatal ; Greenock , 3 , 2 fatal ; Alloa , 2 ; Stow , 1 . —Total , 29 new cases ; 14 deaths . Tuesday . —The following fresh cases were reported to the Board of Health : —Bethnal-green Lunatic Asylum , 1 ; Shepherd ' s-bush , Hammersmith , 5 , 1 fatal ; Sunderland , 1 fatal ; Edinburgh , 6 , 2 fatal ; Glasgow , 3 fatal ; Stow , 1 fatal ; Riecarton , G , 1 fatal ; Kilbirnie , from Jan . 21 to March 3 , 241 , 69 fatal ; Linton by Kelso , 1 fatal . —Total , 265 new cases ; 70 deaths .
Police.
police .
Ifttarftet*, &C. ^"~ *
ifttarftet * , &c . ^"~ *
Untitled Article
THE NORTHERN STAR , ___ , „_ _ Mabch 10 , i 849 .
Por 8ale, In Allotment At Lowbands, -Ti. Near The Public Road, Consisting Of Four Acres Of L&Ria
POR 8 ALE , IN ALLOTMENT at LOWBANDS -ti . near the public road , consisting of Four Acres of L&ria
Printed By William Kider, Of \O. 5, Mateic At Printed Bv William Kider, Of Xo. 5, Mnf'^ Pl Iuti!!-;
Printed by WILLIAM KIDER , of \ o . 5 , Mateic at Printed bv WILLIAM KIDER , of Xo . 5 , Mnf' ^ pl iuti !! - ;
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), March 10, 1849, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1513/page/8/
-