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~ — " ^ —^^ M Malice.
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— Illl III II I I Ml BRITISH EMPIRE FREEHOLD LAND AND BUILDING S0CD3TY. On an Advance your Rent is Saved,—you become your own Land »nd Householder.
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Printed by WILLIAM RIDER, of No. 5, MaeclesficW-stre :
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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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Peiront . —T . S . Duncohbe , Esq ., M . P . T . Waklet , Esq ., M . P . B . B . Cabbell , Esq ., M . P . I . 3 . HansAbd , Esq ., M .. P Banters , —The Commercial Bank of London ( Branch ) , 6 , Henrietta Street , Covent Garden . London Offiet . —No . 13 , Tottenham Court , New Road , St . Pancras , London . —Disra . VfmJAM Rum / Secretary . Aubanqkd in Three Sections . Value of Shares and Payments for Investors . Full Share .. f 120-payment of 2 s . 5 d . ^ Week , or 10 s . 6 d . per Month . ' HalfShare .. .. 60 - 1 21 _ 5 3-Quarter Share .. .. 30 — 0 7 J _ 2 g _ Applicants are reauested to state in their form the Section they desire to be a Member of . Wo SummoM ' . Solicitous , or Redemption Fbes . —The present Entrance Fee , including Certificate , Rules , &c , is 4 s . per Share , and 2 s . Cd . for any part of a Share . Price of Rules , including Postage , 1 b . OBJECTS . 1 st —To enable members to build Dwelling Houses . 5 th . —To give to Depositing Members a higher rate of InttB&sss&ssr *** both Mold r" ? - ^» f ^ i ^ SiSZiSSS on Property held by § & £ " ^ ** ** ^ « * ' ^ members . 7 th . —To purchase a piece of Freehold Land of sufficient 4 th —To enable Mortgagors being members to redeem value to give a legal title to a County Vote for Members of Wr Mortgages . , Parliament . Section I . —By joining this section every person in town or country can become the proprietor of a House and Land nhis own neighbourhood , without being removed from his friends , connexions , or the present means himself and family mav have of gaining a livelihood . . . Section II . —To raise a capital by shares to purchase Estates , erect Dwellings thereon , and divide the Land into allotments from half-an-acre upwards , in or near the towns of the various branches of the society . The property to be the bonafide freehold of the member after a terra of years , from the date of location , according o his subscriptions . Section III . —Saving or Deposit section , in which members not wishing to purchase are enabled to invest small sums , reoeiving interest at the rate ef five per cent , per annum , on every sum of 10 s . and upwards so deposited . N . B . —JB 600 will be advanced to the members of tha first Section in November next , when all persons who have and m « y become members for Shares , or parts of Shares , on or before the 4 th of November next , aud who pay six months ' lubicriptions in advance , or otherwise , will be eligible for an advance .
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- EMIGRATION . THE BRITISH EMPIRE PERMANENT EMIGRATION AND COLONISATION SOCIETY , To secure to each Member a FARM of not less than Twenty-Five Acres of Land in AMERICA , By iSrnaK Weekly or Monthly Contributions . Lonpon Ofhce : —13 , Tottenham-Court , New-road , St . Pancras . —D . W . Ruffy , Secretary . OBJECTS . nf A ° J ? . !! a n ai ? w ^ ¥ "& "V * 0 Wcstel > n s * tes To piu'chase in large quantities , for the common benefit , lit ^ Z f' « £ « £ ' lchto ^ . « Members , giving twenty- allnecessary live and dead stock , and other requisites to' « fM h Share subscribed for . supplying each member on location with the quantity re To erect dwellings , and cleara certain portionof the Land quired at-cost price . ' on each allotment , previous tothe arrival of the allottees . (« o ^ m l ^ iu el 0 Ca i - ° f . S . ' ou P ' hoIdin ? the Land To establish a depot , from which to provide each family hPwSw } ivo ^ Lf &r , . d ! v ldual 1 s ' . securinS to each with the required quantity of wholesome food , until their then- collective and separate rights and immunities . own land produced sufficient for their support . VALUE OF SHARES . Each Share to he of the ultimate Value of Twenty-Five Pounds , To be raised by Uonthlj or Weekly Subscriptions , as follows : — A Payment of Ninepence per Week for Ten Years will amount to 191 . 10 s . Bonus 51 . 10 s . UMo Sixpence per Week for Fifteen Years will amount to 191 . 1 O » . Bonus 51 . IOj . Repayments may be made to the Society in Money , Produce , or Labour . Prospectuses , Rules , Forms of Application for Shares , and every other information , may be had at the Offioe as above . All applications by Letter , addressed to the Secretary , must be pre-paid , and enclose a postage stamp for reply , s By enclosing twelve postage stamps a Copy of the Rules will be forwarded , post free . Forms of Entrance by enclosing I three postage stamps , i Agents required in all parts of Great Britain . t —______—_ - \ A-WEEKLY PERIODICAL , entitled " THE RIGHTS OF MAN , " will shortly be published , price i One 1 enny . It will be devoted to the interests of tho Working Classes , whose contributions to its pages will f always find a place , consistent with its size , and it will contain important advice to intending Emigrants .
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- «. - - , . , S , - e AN EFFECTUAL CURE FOR PILES , FISTULAS , &c . » ABEIiNETHY'S PILE OINTMENT . » "What a painful and noxious disoase is the Piles ! and , comparatively , how few of the afflicted have been permanently 5 cured by ordinary appeals to medical skill ! This , no doubt , arises from the use of powerful aperients too frequentli 1 administered by the profession ; indeed , strong internal medicines should always be avoided in all cases of this f complaint . The proprietor of the above Ointment , after years of acute suffering , placed himself under the trcit . metit of that eminent surgeon , Mr . Abernethy ; was by him restored to perfect health , aud has enjoyed it ever since without the slightest return of the disorder , over a period of fifteen years , during which time tho same Abornethian * Prescription has beentho means of healing a vast number of desperate cases , both inand out of tho proprietor'sch-cTo f offnends most of winch cases had been under medical care , and some of them fora very considerablethno Auer , nethy ' s Pile Ointment was introduced to the pubi c by the desire of many who had been perfectly ^ hea fedI byTapuiica B turn , and since its introduction the fame of this Ointment has spread far and wide ; even the medical p fS a ton 1 slow and unwilling to acknowledge the virtues of any medicine not prepared by themselves , do now freely and fr iiSt ? Sptb ^^ i ^ oS ^ nrtt ^ ^^^ iS ^^^ 5 °$ SKtfM ^ Sft ^ : It at , owing to tfaa great expense of Zangicdtnlf ' ' * * thC l 0 W ° P " Ce thC W ™^ * « Wcd to sel o —
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CORNS AND BUNIONS . PAUL'S EVERY MAN'S FRIEND , Patronised by the Royal Family , Nobility , Clergy , fa « S ® S ^ SS : SS « S ;^ " ~ nience . ™* * ° thei practice of cutting Corns is at all times highlyXeerou ^^ " "f ^ ^^ s nltpsether unnecessary : indeed , wemay say , the quences , besides its liability to increase theirmwS ^ uMS ^ i !^ ? ttenl V nttended wlt » lamentable consedelightful relief from toiWe , and with persSce in its IS ^ ™ W gen e Pvcssuro ' P 1 > oduces an » ist ™ t and Bunions . ^ rbtieiance in its application , entirely eradicates the most inveterate Corns and weXZt !^^^^ S urgeons of the greatest eminence , as country , speaking S high terms of this valuable mncdy ! d pmatc ? ettcrs from " S ™^ toml and ^^ ^^^^ is ^^^^ }^^ r v- - ™ i tobehad - «*«* *««« the stamp . A 2 s . 9 d . box cures the Sobdurate corns ? C ° U" y- e BeuUine has tUe name of JoUn F <* ° " Ch ^ T ^ are sold by the Mowi ng respectable Pa u ^ uC ? 7 j ^ gRaul ' s Chnvch-yavd ; Butler , 4 , Cheapside ; Newbery , S , Waioughtoandfe , ei , Bidi ^ street ; Prout . 229 , Strand ; Hannay and Co , 63 Oxford ^ reet ' - / C , h ? 10 " t-st 1 !; « et . ^ 'to ^« cent ; Bade , 39 , Goswell ! able chemists and medicine vendors in London uxtoia-stieet 5 lieutls » 84 . Edgeware-road ; and retail by all rcspectl &uS ^ SSTSlSSSi SMSSKKKS i a son i ' \ % ™> iS ' " -fa * ; *¦*» . ^ m »^^ sys fgffi IS ^ irfi" *™ " ^ ^ SSH ^ - ^^ sa : Whitby ; Bolton , Blanshardand Co ., Hargrove , Fisher , Otley Limiev YnUr ? w \ ¦ < ^ ner ' Kcl «* ing ; Stevenson Jefferson , MaUoiy ; Buctall , Scarborough ; Smith , Furbv BridlhX T * i ' Wai , T " lght ' Howdcn ? Ho « by , Svrangham atiSf , ^^^ n " " ¦ — :
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hundreds of cases of every variety of single and double rupture , m both sexes , and in many cases of a desperate nature , proves thatDR . BOOTH'S REMEDY is unfauiT not a single instance of failure having occurred . Itismoft simp e , and easy in application and effect , " and is coJE tiouslyguaranteed a cure in aU cases- l-Authcntic ° ST menial :- « It is now ten months since I u Sy 2 , nS ^ "W ^ ImgladtosaylhavoBone tK ^ S ^ c SSs ^ SCF ^^ e enclose twelve stamps ; a repiy . Lotter 8 of mquirymurt
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m $ mm « b 5 § J sexesofITll ffiClent Ol l ? extattt - ltis apptoatte to tfS ^ - * saa * = kss BJSTiJ&res , 3 ; , S , X « K , Sf S allM l > » Great RusseU-street , Bloomsbury-square London ; where may be consulted daily from ten tflloni moraine ; four till eight evening ; Sunday tentiUonc Jedxcalaad Surgical Advice ^ RMo £ p ^ on
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MABLBOaoUGH . SiaEET . -How to Dike joe Aothiso . —John Wil iam Molloy , an elderly person , apparentl y Tery deaf , vlwat one period moved in jery respectable society , and wk » reports himself to be a close connexion of a distinguished Irish family , was brought before Mr . Binguam , charged Tntu having enjoyed himself luxuriously at the Cafe de Paris , Haymarket , without having any means or intention of paying his bill . The prisoner for a length of time has been living on coffee-houses and hotel proprietors , and , though he has frequently t > een given into custody on the discovery of his true character , yet he has hitherto contrived to evade punishment by making his frauds mere cases of
debt In this instance it appeared that the prisoner had gone a step too far , and that now there is a possibility of hotel and coffee-house keepers being relieved for some time at least , from the impartial favours of such a customer . —From the evidence of Henry Manning , -waiter at the Cafe de Paris , it was proved that , just between the lights , -while it was raining , the prisoner rushed into the coffee-room and said , he really was so fatigued and the weather was so bid , that instead of going home to his residence at Barnes hi would take a dinner and abed at the hotel . The waiter , who appeared to be a "very sharp kind of personage , was thrown off his guard by this sudden address , and as the darkness favoured the prisoner on an examination of his
shabby genteel externals , he told the prisoner he could hare dinner , but it was the rule of the house not to let beds to visitors unprovided with luggage . The prisoner said , he would not break through the rules ; he would send for his luggage the next morning early , as it was too late to ask the house , porter to go as far as Barnes that night . The prisoner then ordered an excellent dinner , with aleparticularly cautioning the waiter " to draw it mild , " some of the best pale sherry , and a plate of nuts , which he got the attentive waiter to crack for him , as he had recently hurt his shoulder . The next morning the prisoner called for a sheet of paper and wrote the following note : — " Dear Mis . Harris , —Let Harry put himself into a Richmond omnibus
with my large portmanteau and travelling bag . Don't let him be later than twelve o ' clock , as I will give him an early dinner and send him home safe . My arm . is still very 5 ad , and I shall follow your recommendation and get medical assistance . Iam in comfortable quarters at the Hotel de Paris , Haymarket— " Yours ever , — " J . M . "—The letter was directed to " Mrs . Harris , Barnes , Surrey ;" tut the waiter , not liking the aspect of affairs , presented his bill , which amounted to 16 s . 6 d . The prisoner candidly owned he had no ready money about him , but he would draw a small check on his hankers , Messrs . Attwood and Co ., and this the waiter could get cashed the next morning . The prisoner accordingly drew a check , in his own name , on Messrs . Attwood and Co ., and handed it
over to the waiter . The prisoner then ordered dinner , and on the strength of the check the waiter supplied the viands . The next morning the check ¦ was presented at the bankers ' , and from information which was obtained the prisoner was given into custody on the return of the porter who presented the check . —Mr . Bingham asked the waiter if he " was induced to give ^ the prisoner additional credit after having received the check ?—The waiter said , he let the prisoner have a second dinner and a second night ' s lodgbg on the faith of the check being a genuine document . —Mr . Bingham said , tlio first dinner and bed must he treated as a debt , but the last dinner and bed had been obtained by fraudulent means , and he should commit the prisoner for trial on that account . —The prisoner was then fully committed .
Alleged Sireet Eobbebt . —George Williams , a young fellow with about twenty aliases , Julia Fyttes , and Ann Green , were brought up in custody , the former charged with having assaulted Mr . Frederick Smith , of 43 , Mount-street , Grosvenorsguare , and stolen a valuable diamond ring from his finger ; also with assaulting Mr . Henry Sparkes , timber merchant , Berr-yard , Blackfriars . The two women were charged with assaulting them on their way tothejoluestation . —The prosecutor stated that about two o ' clock on Monday morning , he and his friend , Mr . Sparkes , were proceeding up Great Titchfield-street , when they hear-l two persons walking behind them . On witsess looking round , hesa- * - the prisoner Williams and another man , who ,
seeing that they were watched , crossed over to the opposite of the road . Witness took no notice of this , and he and his friend walked on . They had not proceeded many yards , when the prisoner and the Other man , not in custody , crossed over again , and walked in front of them . The Drisoner , Williams , all at once turned round , arid struck Mr . Sparkes in the fece , while the other man followed np the attack . Williams then came up to witness and struck hi m a violent blow behind the ear and knocked him into the road . They ran away , and witness and his friend pursued them , calling out " Police ! " The man who was with the prisoner made his escape , and the prisoner was stopped by a policeconstable in "Wells-street , who held him nntil witness
got up , when he gave him in charge . He subsequently , on looking for his ring , found it had been taken from his finger . Oa their way to the station the two women came up , and as he had previously seen them in company of the prisoner , he informed the constable . They then became very abusive , and struck him and his friend several times . On their arrival at the station they were also taken into custody . —Mr . Sparke 3 corroborated the evidence of the prosecutor . —Pope , 117 E , deposed tint lie was on duty in Union-street , when he heard the cries of " Police ! " proceed from Tichfieldstrcer . On going to the spot he met the prisoner running towards him . Witness laid hold of him , and asked Mm what he was running for ? Prisoner said "he was running after a friend . " At that time the prosecutor came up , and gave him in charge . The women then came up , and requested
him to let the man go , as he had done nothing . On his refusing to do so they became very abusive , and struck prosecutor and his friend . —The prisoners , who denied the charge , were remanded . As Ixnmiix Driver . —James Moore , the proprietor of a Hampton-court omnibus , was summoned before Mr . Bingham for cruelty to two horses , his property . —George Sutton , the defendant ' s driver , was summoned before the magistrate in the first instance , when the following evidence was produced : —Frederick Stewart , the waterman at the Knightshridge stand , said , on Friday week his attention was attracted to a crowd near Hyde Park , and on going np he found that one of the horses in an omnibus , which the defendant Sutton was driving , bad dropped down dead . He examined the animal , and found it in a pitiable condition . It was a small puny horse , utterlv unfit for such labour as omnibus
work . It was in a wretched condition , seemingly from starvation and overwork . It had wounds on its shoulders , produeed by the collar , which had been painted over with flour of brimstone , and the holes in the raw flesh plugged up with fuller ' s earth . One of its legs had also a wound on it . "Witness inspected the other horse , which the driver was vainly endeavouring to make draw the omnibus ; but the animal , which was hardly a shade better in condition than its wretched companion , was quite unable to perform the task from weakness . This horse also had large wounds on the shoulders daubed with flour of brimstone and fuller ' s earth . —The driver said the animals had been inspected by the horsekeeper of his master before they were put
to the omnibus on the morning in question . — Other witnesses having deposed to the shocking condition of the lire and dead animal , and to their complete nnfitness for the work which they were required to perform , Mr . Bingham said , it would be quite inconsistent to punish the driver in such case—it was clearly the master who ought to be amenable to the law . As the new act gave a power to magistrates to reach the owners of horses where cruelty was proved , he should discharge the summons against the defendant , and make tho owner the principal . On Wednesday , the owner , James Moore , appeared to the summons . The evidence of the cruelty , in substance the same as had been given on a previous day against the driver , was then
gone into . Ihe defendant said , he had not been able to attend to his stable for several days previous to the occurrence , owing to a severe attack of cholera . He was not aware of the bad condition of the horse 3 , otherwise he should not have sent them out , and he hoped for a lenient penalty as he was in Tery poor circumstances . Mr . Bingham said , his first intention was to have inflicted the full penalty of £ 5 , but taking it into consideration that the defendant had lost one horse by death , was very poor , and had been attacked by cholera , he would mitigate the amount to 40 s . including costs . SOUTHWARK . ~ Sikeet Robbem .-Mary Hall , amascnline-lookingfemale , well-known to the police as a desperate street thief , was brought before Mr . Seeker charged with assaulting Mr . George Kent , a commercial . traveller , residing at Deptford , and attempting to steal from his person a valuable diamond phi . —Prosecator stated that on the previous
evening he had been enjoying himself with some frieeds in the Borough , whom he left a little after twelve o'clock , and proceeded towards home . While he was passing Bermondsey Old Church the prisoner suddenl y pounced upon him , and put both her arms round his neck . Not feeling inclined to such a rough embrace , he told the prisoner to let him alone , and goabonther business ; but she hugged Mm the closer , and she drew his pin from his stock with her teeth . She then got away from Jim , but he seized hold of her hand and wrested the pm from her , when a policeman came up to the spot and took her into custody . —In answer to the magistrate , complainant said she came so suddenly upon him , that he was unable to prevent her from embracing him , and the place was extremely dark being lighted with only two dim lamps at each corner . —In answer to the charge the prisoner said the charge was trumped up against her by the prosecutor because she would not allow him ttf poll jier about , and take indecent liberties with her . She
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denied all knowledge of the robbery , or committing any assault . —Ml . Seeker inquired whether she haf been convicted .-powne , the gaoler , replied that she was only discharged on the previous day for a similar attempt Siie had also been in custody lately no less than six times , but the prosecutors not appearing against her she was dischar « ed .-Mr . Seeker said she was not so luck y that time and as the evidence was clear against her he should commit her for trial . m t STilEET- - v *»« iivb Assault—Mr . T . Waller , a clothier in High-street , Shoreditch , and S . Waller , his son , were charge with havuig violently assaulted Mr . R . T . Tubbs , a wholesale haberdasher and trimming manufacturer
, in the same neighbourhood . —The complainant had obtained judgment in the Shoreditch County Court upon a debt due to him b y the elder defendant , whom he subsequently met in company of his son , and apprehending that he should bo subjected to personal violence , he found it necessary to enter the shop of one of his neighbours for protection . He was followed , however , by both defendants , the elder of whom caught him by the collar and shook him violently , and the younger one at tho same moment struck him a heavy blow upon the temple , which knocked him down , and continued beating
him as he lay on the ground , until he was forcibly dragged away by the by-standers , and given into custody . —The defendants admitted all the material facts ^ ofthe complainant ' s statement , but said that they had acted under strong feelings of excitement and provocation . —The magistrate , however , regarded it as a most lawless and unwarrantable outrage , and sentenced the younger defendant to pay a penalty of £ 5 , or two months' imprisonment in the House of Correction ; and the elder to pay a fineof 50 s ., or one month ' s imprisonment , in addition to which they were both ordered to put in substantial bail for their future good behaviour .
Highway Robbery . — William Morris , anas Haller , and William Lambert , two powerful fellows of notorious character , were charged with the following daring highway robbery : —It appeared from the evidence of a Custom-house officer named George , that while passing the corner of Wentworth-street , "Whitechapel , at three o ' clock on the afternoon of the 6 th of August , he observed the prisoners loitering there in the company of three other men , and the moment he passed them lie felt a sudden jerk at his coat-pocket . He instantly turned round and seized hold of tho man nearest him , when a simultaneous rush was made upon him by the others , one of whom struck him such a violent blow underneath the ear that he dropped to the
ground senseless . A considerable time elapsed before he was restored to consciousness , when he found himself under the care of a policeman , who had witnessed the outrage , but reached the spot too late to capture either of his assailants , who had in the interval got clear off with his pocketbook , contaming some private documents . He sustained such serious injuries from the savage violence to which he had been subjected that he had been confined to his bed for a considerable period , and had not yet wholly recovered from its effects . He had since been repeatedly on the watchfor his assailants ,
but had been unsuccessful hi tracing either of them until the preceding evening , when he recognised the two prisoners who were closely following a lady and gentleman in Commercial-street , with the evident intention of robbing them . He immediately obtained the assistance of a policeman , and having followed them some distance , to observe their operations , at length saw tho prisoner Morris with the skirt of the gentleman ' s coat in his hand , endeavouring to pick his poiket , covered by the other prisoner , but before they had time to complete the offence they were both pounced upon and secured . —Police-constable H 10 corroborated the latter
part of the prosecutor s statement , and intimated that both prisoners were members of a desperate gang of thieves who were the terror of Whitechapel , and that Morris had been several times in custody and repeatedly convicted of similar offences . —The prisoners in general terms denied all facts alleged against them , but were committed for the formal completion of the evidence . Cruelty to a Doskey . —George Ewing , a congreve-light manufacturer , in Wellington-row , Bethnal-green , appeared to a summons before Mr . Hammill , charging him with having wantonly and cruelly tortured a denkey , the property of a rival trader in the same business , named Lester . It appeared from the evidence of a lad named Bird , in the
service of the complainant , that while driving the . animal in question attached to a heavily-laden cart , along the Bethnal-green road , on the morning of the S ^ th ult ., the defendant suddenly advanced from the foot pavement , and aiter inquiring whether that was Mr . Lester's donkey , to which witness replied in the affirmative , instantly snatched his whip out of his hand , and exclaiming " I'll show you how to make a donkey go , " repeatedly drove the end of the handle , which was broken and jagged , with suoh force into the under park of the animal's flank , that it sprang forward in great agony , with the blood pouring from its side , and on witness stopping and examining it , he found that the flesh had been torn away , and a laceration left at least six inches in
length . The poor animal was also suffering from three other serious wounds in the same tender part of its body , and one of them -was sufficiently deep for the admission of the end of a man ' s finger . Several bystanders , who had witnessed the act , expressed their indignation at the brutal behaviour of the defendant , who thereupon threw down the whip , and exclaiming that he knew the best way to cure a donkey , took up several handfuls of mud , arid after rubbing them into the wounds , turned carelessly round . and walked off . The poor animal appeared to be enduring the most acute pain from the cruelty to which it had been subjected , and witness was obliged to lead it all the way back to his master ' s premises . His employer subsequently complained of the injuries his animal had received to Mr . Thomas , the secretary to the
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals , and by his advice the present proceedings were adopted . —The lad's evidence was fully confirmed by that of two witnesses and Holland and Fitzgerald , the warrant-officers , and Mr . Hammill , after characterising it as a most cruel and wanton outrage , said that this was clearly such a case , in his opinion , as was contemplated by the legislature in investing him with a summary power to deal with it in an adequate manner , and he had therefore no hesitation in putting in force one of the clauses of the amended act for the punishment of such offences , and should order the defendant to be at once committed to the House of Correction , and there kept to hard labour for two months . —The defendant , who appeared astounded at the decision , was then removed to tho cells .
WESTMINSTER . —Mysieihous Affair . —Thos . M'Donald , a tall , powerful Irish labourer , out of employment , the keeper of a low lodging house in Bolton gardens , Chelsea , Mary , his wife , and Mary Fox , two women who hawk lace and lucifcrs about the streets , were charged on suspicion of stealing seventy sovereigns and two watches . —Mr . Russell , the superintendent of the B division , said that" an Irish gentleman named M'Gouran or M'Guire , had resided many years at Lyons as a teacher of languages . Upon the disturbances breaking out there he was accused of having token part in them , had his effects seized , was arrested , and placed in confinement . He subsequently made his way to England , and resided for some time in Chelsea , where
he gained a subsistence by selling lucifer matches , < fcc . He memorialised Lord Palmerston on the subject of the detention of his property at Lyons , and in consequence of the interference of that nobleman the sum of £ 70 , two watches , and other property , were restored to him on the 24 th September . He was seen in possession of the property sit Chelsea on the evening of the day that he received it ; and he was heard to complain , after having been last seen under circumstances of a peculiar nature in company with the prisoners , that he had been robbed , and was then in miest of thq female M'Donald , whom he accused ; and from an hour of that time , when he was seen in the street wringing his hands and bewailing his loss , he had suddenly
and most mysteriously disappeared . The fact of his being missing was first communicated to the police ; and when from the result of diligent inquiry it was ascertained that he had been robbed , increased exertions were made with a view of discovering tho unfortunate gentleman , and although hospitals , workhouses , and every likely place had been inquired at , up to that moment not the slightest information had been received respecting him . — Several witnesses -were examined , who proved that the prisoners were in company with M'Gouran under suspicious circumstances on the night of his disappearance . A quantity of new clothing was found on M'Donald when arrested . Mrs . M'Donald made several contradictory statements respecting sums of money which she asserted M'Gouran had given her , and it was discovered that while in the Innl 7—iin naif ona nrwl m . nnitnj 4 ** »!___ « t *« lunungcu tu give ci
. . r *' * ^ " ^ purse containing thirty-five sovereigns to a fellow-prisoner to pass unobserved to her husband . —Tho prisoners said they were innocent , Mrs . M'Donald stating that M'Gouran had given her from fifty to sixty sovereigns as recompense for having kept him a great length of tune . —Mr . Broderip said he should remand the prisoners upon this very serious charge for a week , by which time he hoped something might occur to throw a light upon this most mysterious affair . —The missing gentleman is 55 years of age , about 5 ft . 4 in . high , grey hair , round full face , fair complexion , dressed in a brown over coat with pockets at the sides , black cloth trousers , blue or black waistcoat , black hat , and cloth boots . He was so much endeared to many poor persons at Chelsea , by his extreme kindness of disposition , that he had acquired for himself in the hour of Ms adversity , the general appellation of " father "
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CORN . SIabk Lane , Monday , Oct . l . —TIie fo ™;* week were again to a large extent T ? l" arrivals Un supply of English wheat this monuL * * " good consequence dull , and all buttta ? finestlT ^ Ct *« 8 English ami foreign were fully is 3 *» Js of I'oth foreign flour * u Is . per sack lower S Tho P ** of marks Fine new barley maintained ^ v ^ ° ! s ^ ing and distilling sorts of foreign went off « il , ' 8 'in-l . decline . Scarcely anything doTnVnnnh v ' ly ? il « W peas were plentiful andfully lTSer < &" 1 lCans : 4 creased suppyl of oats , the trade was verv Sifto tlle inbest samples Is . cheaper ; infcriw sorts . ii ' ilnd the gular prices . For foreign rye vm lTtHe , ?( ^ 5 ** "renew English scarce and inquired Xr and - > t ««« without altcratien . Carraway seed duller gS 2 > eed «*«» Wednesday , Oct . 3 . —With mmw ersale - since Monday ? we have a ! sSd " - rad t'T " ° ^ the prices of last day . * r . iae tor eveiy artiefca at Arrivals this week : —Wheat - Endid , i < , foreign , 9 , 810 quarters . Barley-E& $ 1 uart «« foreign 3 , 330 quarter * , Oata - ! £$ * ¦ E ? < W * s Irish , 2 , 870 quarters ; foreign , C , lGo Xer ! ° fi ^
BREAD . The prices of wheaten oread in the motive v 6 Jd . to 7 d . ; of household ditto , fld to Gd ^ m . S * ™
CATTLE . SHimnEH ) , Oct . l . -The supply of foreign i , » , . calves on offer this morning was ¦ but mXal f t and sheep extensive , and ot very middling Z £ >« ' » Uf standing that the arrivals of home-feuE ^ fiJ , Vlth ' day were less than those reported on Monday h t 17 * were again extensive , even the time of yew * ™ ' , "' 7 The weather being by no means favourable Watering , the beef trade ruled exceeduiclv hear * Vi = 1-pnmest Scots sold with difficulty at " last « wk \ - , - ^ viz ., 3 s . 8 d . pev 81 bs . In the middling and kt-L 7- ' ^ of beef only a limited business was transacted , ? k "" Js instances , turthw depressed rates . At thei clnV , ?*?* market a large number of beasts left unsold . Tkl e falling off m the large supply of sheep , yet itwZi Vn equal to the wants of the butchers . For molfhr i » demand was in a very sluggish state at prices about « . « 5 to those obtained on Monday last , the best dom » « w , T 48 . perSlbs . Although the number of cah-e ? was co lUt lively small , the demand for that desman T S ruled heavy at barely stationary prices . So little S doing m pigs-the number of which was limited—that tit quotations were almost nominal .
IiEwaATE and Leadenhali , , Monday , Oct . II . —Inferior beef , 2 s id to 2 s Cd ; middling ditto , 2 s 8 d to 2 s Wd ; n- \ l large , 3 s Od to 3 s 2 d ; prime small , 3 s 2 d to 3 s 4 d ; l »^ pork , 3 s 4 d to 3 s 8 d ; inferior mutton , 2 s lOd to 3 s tri . middling ditto , 3 s 2 d to 3 s id ; prime ditto , 3 s Gd to 3 s Hi ' . veal , 3 s Od to 3 s Od ; small pork , 3 s lOd to 4 s U ; lamb ' 3 s Wd to is 8 d per 81 bs . bv the carcase . '
PROVISIONS . London , October 1 . —The arrivals last week , from Irs land , were 3 , 510 nrkins butter , and 1 C 3 bales bacon -mi from foreign ports 7 . 34 G casks butter , and 385 boxes mid bales bacon . The demand for Irish butter at the com raenceoflast week was good , particularly for the finest ' buttowardstheendoftheweek foreign declined 5 sto «?' per cwt ., which checked the sale of Irish , and the maikat ^ closed quiet . The supply of new bacon having inere : i « td !? and holders being anxious to effect sales , prices declined ' 4 to 5 cwt from
s s per . We now quote GOs to C : ' s landed according to quality , &c . The government contract for the supply of the navy with pork , was taken on Tlmr « div last—namely , 6 , 000 tierces , at prices avcragiiv b 0 ' , ii £ 513 s Gd per tierce , whin is about £ 1 lL ' s Cd per tii- ™ less than last year's rates . Stocks and deliveries f « v th * week ending Sep . 29 : — m Birrmt . Bacox . Stock . Delivery . Stock . Deliver 1847 .... 20 , 750 7 . 8 G 0 2 , 130 c& ) 1848 .... 5 , 0940 8 , 700 1 , 170 (;; W 1849 .... 37 , 880 14 , 250 1 , 130 71 . )
ESGH 8 H Butter , October l .-Oui- trade is now become very dull again , owing to the late advance made on } je < = t parcels , aud prices are not supported , Dorset , fine wctkKSOs to 92 s , per cwt . ; ditto stale and middling , flSs to & ' Devon 70 s to 80 s ; fresh , 9 s to 11 s per pozen . Cheese , October 1 . —Several of the leading annual hire having been steady for most kinds of cheese , there it rather more disposition evinced to get into stock at full prices . The quantity of American cheese at this time oil py ^^ iA S ^ A" ^ JSSSSS ^ SS ? SSu ^ JKi ? 1 10 ^ illld * " » ^
FISH , POULTRY , GAME , Ac . , N nV H ^ erford , Tuesday .-Fisn .-Turbots . is ud l 0 12 s 0 d brills 2 s Gd to Gs Codfish 4 s Od to 7 s , ; d wh tin ' s 4 dto 9 d , red mullets 9 d to Is , haddocks 9 d to Is and lobsters Is to lsGd each ; soles fid to : ' s « d , and torbiv 0 s Od to 0 d 0 s per pair ; Thames flounders Is to Is Ku fresh hemngs Is tolsGd , and smelts Is Od to 2 s Od ner dozen ; Lels 9 d to Is per lb . —Supply middling , trade the o . nT " o ! v ? ' . *»"!«• - ?«»<' 6 S M tO 7 S Cd , fow l * 20 dto 30 d 3 Gd to
s s , capons s as fid , chickens Is Oil to 2 a 3 d , ducks 2 s Od to 2 s Gd , rabbits lOd to Is -Jd , haves u ^ » i to 4 s 0 d , grouse 2 s 6 d to 2 s 9 d , partridges Is ( id to 1 ? IM and pigeons 7 d to Sd each . —Meat per lb .: prime k- « ,, f mutton 7 d to 7 Ad , shoulders Gd , necks Did , and biws 4 Jd ; roasting beef 7 | d to Sid , boiling ditto " t ! d to 7 d ; dairy . fed pork 7 Jd to Sid , aud veal in proportion . Fresh bum * Is Od to Is 3 d , best salt ditto lOd to Is , common do . Td to * J Cheshire cheese 7 . Jd to 9 d , double Gloucester 7 d v . sfu ami singleditto aid to CJd per lb . —Supply moderate , trade
COLONIAL PRODUCE . London , Tuesday Evening , October 2 . _ Scgak .-TV sales of West India have been 382 hogsheads , includm ™ U / l hogsheads Barbadoes at auction . The market is vemlull , and priees are barely maintained . Of 2 , Sb'O bags JUen-.-al the better sorts of Benara were bought in at full pvki * , the lower descriptions nearly all sold at about fonm-r rates ; grainy sugars mostl y sold at prices a shade in iavuw ot buyers—about one-half have been disposed of , ami the quotatious are : Benares , middling to good , 3 t ) s Cd to 41 * yellow to low middling white , 3 gs to 39 s : grainv low to good yellow , » 7 s Gd to 42 s Gd ; white , 4 Gs . Of 2 , 970 * Mailra « about one-third sold Gd under last public sale : brown to middling yellow , SOs to 3 Ds Gd per cwt . Coffee . —l , 2 G 0 bags plantation Ceylon , and GO barrels Jamaica , chiefly sold at easier rates . OfS 70 bags Ota Hica , about 580 sold at a decline of Is to 2 s per cwt . IlicE . —3 , 730 bags Bengal sold briskly at 6 d per cwt . advance , 9 s to 11 s for yellowish to good middling white .
POTATOES . SooTHWAiiK , October 1 The arrivals of potatoes up : o the present time have been so few , that we can hardlv snv the season has commenced at the waterside . Those Wii the Continent have come very free of disease , and aiv celling at a low figure , considering their good quality . Tlitro is no doubt the quantity of potatoes in England this war is greater than it has been since the tu-st avjwa . va \ M : v \ Vriw disease . The following are this day's prices : —Yorlc Hegents , 70 s to 80 per ton ; Scotch , Ous to 70 s ; f .. ivt . 'ii whites . GOs to G 5 s .
hops . Bokoggh , Monday , October 1 . — There has been a to trade doing in the finer qualities of Kent and Sussex h . «« . with which our market is now well supplied . Thu samples on the whole are good , and well managed . In lMVs ^ cn n , dak's tll ( ire is sawcily anything doing . U ;; : v « ou , 000 . Ihe currency for new hops may be quoted al-ui as follows : —Miil aud East Kent , lGSs to 210 s ; Wi-uMvi Kent , 145 s to 108 s ; Sussex Pockets . 130 s to 147 s .
SEEDS . London-, Monday . —Nothing of much interest traiis | . ird m seeds . Canary scarcely sold so well as on Monday ta :. andiww tares were ottered rather cheaper , bin tho elinm .-in prices was not sufficient to render alterations in iiik ; itwus necessary . HAY . SMttnnEU ) , Tuesday . —Fine Upland Meadow and l ! n-Grass Hay , 70 s to 72 s ; inferior tlitto , 40 s to '> oi ; supakT clover , 03 s to l ) 5 s ; inferior ditto , COs to 75 s ; straw , - . 'I : to 30 s per load of U ( i trusses . Whitechavel . —This market to-day was well siipi'licl . but trade still continued slack , and p ' rices vcmauivd mudi the same as per last quotations . Best old meadow Iw . Vj from GOs to 7 Ss ; inferior ditto , 43 s to Ms ; new liny , «;•' = t " 70 s ; best old clover , 9 <) s to 95 s ; inferior ditto , iOs to ' . W ; new clover , UOs to SOs ; straw , 27 s to 29 s i . i ; r load .
TALLOW , HIDES , AND OILS . Monday , Oct . 1 . —Since this day sc ' imighf , ourmarket has continued in a very dsjiresscd state , ami prices Iiavoinither receded quite Gil . per cwt . To-day , I' . Y . C . on the » i' -- -t is quoted at 3 Us Gd to aiJs Dtl . For forward delivery tlu-re are offers at Stls 3 d per cwt ., at which price scarcely ; i ; iy business is doing . Town tallow is U 3 s . Cd to Ms ' k \ )•* ' ' cwt . net cash ; rough fat has fallen to 2 s Id perSllis . t'nr St . Petersburgh letter states that shipments were jisi « tv > sing rapidly . 7 , 300 casks had been sold at IMS } to H ' roubles for the usual shipping sorts ; 7 , 000 casks olmuaJ hands fov delivery next August , at equally low prices . Leadenualt ,. —Market hides , otilb . to Wlb ., 1 . U 1 to t ' . l 1 ^ lb . ; ditto , G 41 b . to 721 b .. lid to 13 d ; ditto , 721 b . t » Mh , 2 d to 2 $ d ; ditto , 801 b . to SSlb ,, 2 id to ;! d ; tlitto , ssib . " > Ofilb ., 3 d to 3 Jd ; ditto , 'Jtilu . to ' 1041 b .. 3 d to : ild ; 'iit'A lOilb . to 112 lb ., 3 J to 4 d ; Cult-skins , each , - . ' s to ?> s ;! . ; " » ' skins , Is Sd to 2 s Sd ; Horse hides , 7 s Cd ; Slieai-liua .-. UiJ to 2 s 2 d .
Linseed , pev cwt ., —s to 28 s Gd ; raposeetl , ]' . n ?« refined , 3 !) s Od to —s : brown . 38 s Od ; ( fallipoli , per !' 42 f .. ; Spanish , HI . ; Sperm , SOI . begged SU . ; So \>; U >< - 32 J . to 33 t . ; Seal , pale , 3 ti { . ; do ., coloured , oil : *> 2 fl { j cocoa nut . per ton , 3 SJ . to 40 ! . ; palm , 30 { .
WOOL . Citt , Monday , October 1 . —The imports of wool into Lot . donlast week included 21 ) 5 bales from Bombay , l . uT > m > - Port Phillip , 1 , 001 from Australia , 2 . 01 S from Peril . : i" ' . K ' from Germany . The public sales have been goto-, ' oil' mui * the same , and it is considered that prices are barely uji w the mark of those current some time back . Livesi-ooi ,, September 20 . —Scotch . —We continue fc > v « - ceive . fairly of Scotch wools , but a good part is for lV > nv : ivi ! ing into the interior . The business doing in all kinds < ¦ ' Scotch wool is limited , at barely late rates .
COTTON . Liveepool , October 2 . —The market to-day ha ? been very tame . The sales reach only 4 , 000 bales , and im-lude V'll <) for export and on speculation . iron ; BULMIMGUASI , October 1 The usual preliminary 'I ' ? " tcvly meeting oftlw ivonmastevs of South StatlWs " "' was held at Dudley a few days since ; it was there n-p sented that the trade was still in a very indifferent st » but that rather more buoyancy had been observable '' ull' = the last fortnight , therefore it was resolved to st : m V , - existing prices , which , as stocks small will in all I"' 01 '' bility be maintained throughout the next quarter .
GOAL . ( Price of Coals per Ton at the close of the Market . ) Wednesday , October 3 . —Hastings Hartley 17 s , ; » " ••' well Main lUs ; Tanfield Moor Butes 13 s Gd ; T »«« V . las Gd ; Wall ' s-e . nd : —Clavke lCs ( id , Gibson 17 s '• "' ; Hedley 18 s ; Hilda 17 s 9 d : Hebbura 17 s !) tl : 1 . : I 1 ' K 17 s 9 d ; Percy 17 s ; ttiddell ' s 17 s . Jd ; Lambtou l ' liu " ' - 18 s 3 d ; Braddyll IDs ; lletton 10 s ; Ilutton 17 s ' £ Stewart's l « s ; Hartlepool 19 s ; West lletton I **;; -. ' Helen ' s fees 17 s ; Tees 19 ; AVest Coniforth lSs •"' Graigola Birchgrove 20 Gd ; Kixou's Merthyr & t ! U' 1 21 s Gd . Ships at market , 43 ,
Untitled Article
in the parish of St . Anne , Westminster , at the 1 rim- ;;' office , 10 , Great Windmill-street , HaymaTket , in the >' of Westminster , forthePraprictor , FKA 11 GUS O'CO . Esq . M . P ., » nd published by the said Wiauu wdeithe Office , in the same street « nd parish . —Bat «» Octobir 6 th , J 81 » ,
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""^''"'^¦ ' ' " - " ¦ ' ^ i ^^ - ' ^^^^ - ^ x ^ wwwWV ^ The-Hetohi of MoDESir . — Going into a stationer si shop ; with sealing wax in your pocket , and asking for a light to seal a letter with . '
Untitled Article
HORRIBLE MURDER OF A HUSBAND BY nUtt HIS WIFE . At inquest was held at Tolerton , in the county of Leinster , on the body of a murdered man , the part iculars of which throw the atrocious circumstances of that attributed to the Manning , into the shade . We condense the evidence . Catherine Thompson , an interesting peasant girl , was wedded some time ago to a person in her own class of life , named Patrick Moore . The marriage was not a happy one ; the wife ' s prettiness had won her many admirers , and the result wasthat a casual separatio n took place ; the husband went to live with a relative of his named Bvennan , while the wife rem ained with her mother at Tulla , in tho
Ballickmoy ler district . Moore left for America , but on reaching Liverpool he could not divest himself sufficiently of his feelings for home to prosecute his Voyage , so he returned . On Sunday , September 2 nd , Catherine Moore sent a young woman , named Julia King , over to Brennan ' s to her husband , with a message , the substance of which was that she wished to see him on that evening . He came punctual to the assignation . Between ten and eleven o ' clock on that night ho was seen by two men leaning against a ditch at the back of his mother-inlaw's house , in company with his wife . After this night he was not seen or heard of in the neighbourhood ; he did not return to Brennan ' s ; but a rumour was set afloat that he had left for America .
and the following Sunday Mrs . Moore left Tulla for the ostensible purpose of joining him in Liverpool , in order that they might proceed together to New York . After she left , vague reports were circulated through the village , and people surmised strange things and asked why the wife did not accompany her husband . These indications of the feelings of the people in the neighbourhood having reached H . B . Warburton , Esq ., the sub-inspector at Ballickinoyley , that gentleman immediately made particular inquiry into the matter , and had the several coal pits in the district dragged , but without any successful result . While he was thus engaged a letter was received from a brother of Mrs . Moore ' s , who resided at Dundalk . It mirnorted that the
writer had seen his sister and her husband off from Dublin , on their way to America ; that they were in good health , and seemed perfectly reconciled . Thus matters remained until word was brought him on Wednesday evening that the body of a man was seen in a hole in the centre of the lonely bog of Rossmore , and that dogs had been devouring portions of it . He proceeded to the plaeo pointed out , when he perceived a mangled arm protruding from the depths of the bog-hole , as if outstretched to Heaven imploring vengeance . A stick being procured , the body was stirred , when a most revolting spectacle presented itself . A human head " started out of the water ; the nose and ono of the cheeks had been cut off , the eyes were gone , and the face otherwise fearfully mutilated . On , examination
the limbs were found to be very much mangled , and the body in a state of putrescence and decomposition . Mr . Warburton drove off to Tulla , it having struck him that the mutilated body must have been that of the missing Patrick Moore . When he reached Moore ' s mother-in-law ' s house , he made fresh inquiry as to where Mrs . Moore and her husband were ; the confusion and prevarication that ensued confirmed him in his idea of there being foul play . He then secured the attendance of a person who knew PatriekMoor , and could identify the body if it was his . On returning to Rossmore Bog with this man and a reinforcement of police , they raised the body out of the hole ; while doing so it fell into piecemeal , and the loathsome members had to be placed in bags . The remains were immediately identified .
In the morning the sub-inspector placed the mother-in-law , brother-in-law , and sister-in-law of the deceased man under arrest . The coroner , Thomas Budds , Esq ., held an inquest on Saturday last , at Grave ' s public-house . Several witnesses were examined , and from them were elicited the facts just stated . The most remarkable part of this dark tragedy remains to be told . On the morning of the inquest who should return home from Liverpool but Catharine Moore-She had come home with a pitiful tale of how her unnatural and brutal nusband had deserted . her on the quay of Liverpool , leaving her a lonely and unfortunate woman to beg her way home . Her astonishment-rher horror on hearing of the discovery of tho mutilated
remains of hor husband , operated so strongly on her feelings that she confessed her guilt , and all the ap « palling circumstances connected with it . ' It seems Moore s brains wore beaten out on the night he was last seen with his wife , and that on the next day the wretched woman and her mother dislocated the limbs , so as they fitted on an ass ' s oar , being concealed by straw . They then proceeded to Rossmore Bog , which was seven miles distant , and in the loneliest part of that lonely place they flung their gore-clotted burden into an unclean hole . The Jury , after some brief deliberation , found a verdict of " Wilful Murder" against Catherine Moor and Bridget Thomson , mother and daughter . The principal evidence against these wretched women will be supplied by two persons connected with them by the closest ties of consanguinity .
Tip TnucK System . —During tho last few weeks considerable interest has been felt as to the issue of three informations laid against gun-lock manufacturers , for paying their workmen a portion of their earnings in goods instead of money , in contravention of the provisions of what is generally known as the " Truck Act . " They were to have been brought before Mi . Leigh , tke stipendiary magistrate , at Bilston , upwards of a fortnight ago , but the hearing of them was postponed , inconsequence of its having been stated that the witnesses for tho prosecution had been drugged and kidnapped , for tho purpose of defeating the ends of justice . On Tuesday last , how- I i \ i f
ever , the charges were entered into before the stipendiary magistrates , at Darlaston , when Mr . 6 . Edmonds , of Birmingham , appeared for the prosecution , and Mr . Bolton for the defence . The case against Mrs . Margery Ridding , of Dariastongreen , was first taken . Mr . Edmonds detailed the facts of the case . The statute under which tho charge was preferred was undoubtedly one which interfered to a great extent with the freedom of trade , but , whatever opinion might be held as to the general principle , he thought he should be able to show that tho case before the bench was one of great hardship and oppression . Samuel Wood , the -witness he was about to call , had been in tho employment of Mrs . Ridding for fourteen or fiveteen » 5 1 f * f ,
years , and had , during all that time , been receiving goods instead of money in payment of his wages . Besides , the fact of the goods thus received being sometimes , both in respect to weight and quality , not what they ought to be , there was this improper feature , that Mrs . Ridding never gave the -witness or tho person whom he sent for the goods any account of what she sold them , but only marked them down in a book kept by herself . It might be said , why do parties continue to take goods , instead of mosey , which they have a right to demand ? The fact was that almost the whole of the masters in . the parish of Davlestou were truck dealers , " and therefore the only alternative was to submit to tho system , or else leave the district . Mr . Edmonds then called the witness Wood , who deposed to the fact that ho went ? i 5 : o
to Mrs . Ridding's shop on the 21 st of August last to ask for work , when she gave him an order for some locks . lie received some bacon , butter , and other articles , amounting in all , as he was told , to 4 s . Cd ,, and upon going on Saturday night to receive payment for the work he had done , this sum was stopped out of his wages . Tho bench , without any remark , imposed a penalty of £ 5 and costs amounting in all to £ 0 12 s . Cd . The two other informations , which were against Josophand George Golcher , were adjourned fora fortnight , by private arrangement , but it is said no further stcp 3 will be taken in respect to them , a sort of compromise having been entered into between the parties A person named George White laid the information , at . the instance , it is stated , of the the society mentioned m the course of tho proceedin ^ s .-lFoJuonampton Chronicle . ° Ge
,. «; £ ^ tt ™ ity .-A Mr . Brooks , fruiterer , S '" g m S e ™» -e-road , found on Thursday afternoon the 27 tTiult ., on his counter a pocketbook containing £ o 00 ., and having served a lady whhrV" ?^ artic ¥ some sr , orttime beK ri / KI i ^ aS g u 8 int 0 tha coimtrv . immediately called a cab and went to the Great Wes-K ? anJ ? Xamined allth 0 carriages to endeavour to find her among the passengers that woejAont atartuw b , the four o'llock t ? ain , but tLZMW tUem : - 80 hel returned and exa-ZZk t t , ° * *? " wartaui if there was any mark by which he might trace her , and finding a grocer ' s bill whose residence was in the city , he took an omnibus and went there , but with no more success than he had at the vailway . He returned home and gave up the search it being seven pm , Sndkg f ^ S nn fc f m th e P " - P ' the n ^ t day if she did not make inauiries fin . if . Th » ™ J .
morning the lady came and asked the tradesman if he had found such a book , for she said if ho had not she must have lost it in the streets or been robbed of it in an omnibus ; Mr . Brooks was verv glad the owner had made her appearance to receive it , so he called m a neighbour to witness his JE it up , and to his surprise saw her take it and * wall ? £ 33 S 3 Si £ « Hssrisasfs SSSSarl * - ? SHttsfaSaS
— Illl Iii Ii I I Ml British Empire Freehold Land And Building S0cd3ty. On An Advance Your Rent Is Saved,—You Become Your Own Land »Nd Householder.
— Illl III II I I Ml BRITISH EMPIRE FREEHOLD LAND AND BUILDING S 0 CD 3 TY . On an Advance your Rent is Saved , —you become your own Land » nd Householder .
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Untitled Article
* THE NORTHK'ftN STAR OoTmra * a iQ . n
Printed By William Rider, Of No. 5, Maeclesficw-Stre :
Printed by WILLIAM RIDER , of No . 5 , MaeclesficW-stre :
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 6, 1849, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1542/page/8/
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