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Withe Printed by WILLIAM RIDER, ofiSo. S. Macclesfield-street,
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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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culties . It was gratifying to find a determination expressed on the part of the Sovereign to maintain the rights of the Crown andtiie independence of the nation against all encroachments , and with that feeling he considered that the attempt of the Pope to interfere with our internal and domestic concerns should be met by a legislative enactment . At the same time he trusted that Roman Catholics would Btill enjoy the right of full toleration . Lord Creuoese seconded ftie Address , and observed that most of the Roman Catholic peers and members of the other house would approve of the policy of the government in maintaining the supremacy of the Crown against the measures of the Court of ltome .
lord Stanley , though not altogether satisfied with tho language of the Speech , would not propose an amendment . He rejoiced that the important classes of landowners and occupiers were now spoken of with respect , and that their distress was at length acknowledged ; but he saw no hope held out of a diminution of their difficulties by the agency of legislative measures . Be maintained , unaltered and strengthened , his convictions of the impolicy of the measure of 1 S 1 C ; and he could not see any prospect of a permanent increase in prices under the existing law , without some alteration in our financial system . Ho characterised the aggression of the Itoman Catholic Church as most
dangerous , and unconstitutional , and insolent ; but he had not the remotest desire to deprive his fellow countrymen of that persuasion of their religious freedom . Still , whatever was done in England towards meeting the emergency by legislation , must be extended to Ireland ; for what was a violation of the supremacy of the Crown in one case was just as much so in the other . He looked , then , with anxiety for tha measure of the government upon this subj-. 'ct ; but he warned them that if it was inadequate in this respect , they would be trifling with the feelings and convictions of the people . L ? t them deal mantully and boldly with the question , or not deal with it at all .
The Duke of Richmoxd , after complaining of the effects of Free Trade , hoped that tho government would return to protection , in order to restore the energies of the British farmers . After some observations from the Earl of Wis-CHILSEA , Lord Camots , as an hereditary Catholic , distinguished between the authority exercised over things spiritual and things temporal . For the former he looked to Rome ; but with regard to the latter , in common with the large majority of his co-religionists in this country , he owed loyalty to the Queen , and should protest equally against any
Papal interference with individual consciences , and every attempt he might make to exercise temporal jurisdiction here , Jle argued for the perfect maintenance of toleration , and submitted that the Roman Catholics in England had not violated the compact made with them , under which they were admitted to civil privileges . Some expressions in Lord John Russell ' s letter he looked upon as in-Eulting to himself as a Catholic , but he considered that epistle as wriiton in a merely private capacity . lie eulogised the forbearance exhibited by all sections of the Catholic clergy and laity in spite of the Violent denunciations hurled at them , and the obloquy to which they had been subjected .
The Marquis of Lansdow . se rejoiced at receiving EO high an assurance of the loyalty and British spirit of the Roman Catholics in England . Briefly reviewing the principal topics of the address , he offered a few sentences of vindication as to the course pursued towards foreign powers , the free trade policy of the government , agricultural distress , foreign competition , the emancipation act , and law reform . Lord Robes was disappointed at not finding in the royal speech a promise to maintain the protostant principles of the constitution . The address was then agreed to . Lord Redesdale returned thanks for his selection to succeed the Earl of Shaftesbury , as chairman of committees in their lordships' house . Their lordships adjourned at a quarter past nine o'clock .
HOUSE OF COMMONS . —The house met for Ihe despatch of business at four o ' clock . Mr . IIayieb announced , upon the part of government , that on Friday next Lord John Russell would introduce a bill "to prevent the assumption of certain ecclesiastical title 3 in respect to places in the United Kingdom ; " and that on Friday the Mth the Chancellor of the Exchequer would bring on the budget . Among a multitude of notices of motions and questions , Mr . Catlkt announced his intention of proposing a resolution for the abolition of the malt tax ; and Mr . Oisiueu , that he would , on the 11 th inst , call the attention of the house to the continued distress existing among the owners and occupiers of land , with the view of devising means for their relief . The Speaker having read the Speech from the Throne ,
The Marquis of Eilbabe moved the address in reply , very shortly recapitulating and echoing the topics and sentiments of the Speech . Mr . Peto was the seconder . He dwelt especially on the excellent fiscal and social effects which had been derived from the late commercial reforms , instancing the increased quantity of our exports , ihe satisfactory condition of the manufacturing labour markets , the increase of ship-building at the tmtports , and the general decrease of crime , basing his propositions with respect to these points upon elaborate statistical evidence . He called upon the house to adopt the paragraph respecting Papal aggression as binding no one to a particular future course of action , as scouting any infringement on the rights of conscience , and read a quotation from an old speech of Lord John Russell , maintaining ihe right and demonstrating the duty of one State to stop short the veiled and insidious encroachments of another .
Mr . Roebuck rose with profound pain to accuse a so-called Liberal Ministry of taking the first backward step towards the revival of an obsolete intolerance , and that , too , at a time when the house was being congratulated upon the prosperous social state of the country arising from the abolition of ancient and bigotted restrictions . The Bill Contemplated by government -was to be directed against the Pope , not as an Italian prince , but against him as the Bishop of Rome , and in his ecclesiastical capacity . It was therefore directed against the spiritual rights and belief of the Roman Catholics , and was no wore nor less than " gross persecution . " Besides , this so-called Papal aggression was nothing new . It began long ago ,
and with the full sanction of the Premier . England had been " parcelled out" for years ; but inasmuch as the dignitaries of the Catholic Church were now made bishops , instead of vicars apostolic , the powers of the Pope in England were actually diminished , because the bishops would act so far independently , a power denied to their predecessors the vicars . He ridiculed the petty jealousy which cavilled at a mere empty title , advertd contemptuously to the " columns of rubbish" which had been spoken on the question , and , quoting Lord John Russell ' s formerly expressed sentiments , to the effect that we could not and ought not to try to fetter the spiritual authority of the Pope , demanded to know how and when his lordship had fonnd out
the rottenness of all his old opinions . The Catholics , Mr . Roebuck contended , had beenled to understand that what hadrecentlybeendone might bedone hy them without offence—instancing tho universal official recognition of the territorial titles of the Irish Catholic hierarchy ; and then , after comparing the TvWieyanwith the Catholic " parcellingout " of England , concluded by declaring that the recent agitation was a disgraceful revival of the ancient Puritanic bigotry of the country . Sir R . Ikous replied to Mr . Roebuck , insisting that no country in Europe would have submitted to Bach an act as that by which the Pope had usurped the prerogative of the sovereign , and treated the people as a nation of heretics . Resistance to such aggression was not new in oar history , though he admitted too large concessions had been made by the present ministers in Ireland and the colonies
He appealed to the extraordinay unanimity of the nation upon this subject , and trusted that the government would not be deterred from acting up to Ihe spirit of Lord John Russell ' s letter to the Bishop of Barham . Mr . J . O'Cosseiii vindicated the act of the Pope ib substituting a regular hierarchy for vicars apostolic , which , though not sanctioned by , was known to , the government of tbi » country . Mr . A . Hope , representing not tha church of England , but an English constituency , was bound to uphold liberty of conscience . In 1829 we had granted emancipation to the Roman Catholics ; everything we know now we knew then , and had provided for ; and he thought the church of England , if left to itself , was strong enough to contend against each an act as the appointment of thirteen men , with certain titles by the weakest prince in Europe .
l 7 C f ^ conld flnd notbin « " » the address to which he did not heartily and fully subBcribe . As a Catholic , not of the court , but of the church of Rome , he was not ashamed to call the act of the pope an aggression ; it wa « an aggression upon the Boman Catholic laity , who had struggled against their subjection to the undue power of the prelate * The letters apostolic would deeply affect the civil rights of the laity , and make our courts of equit . the instruments of injustice . Legislation , however most not stop at the barren question of title . ' Mr . PtouTRs took the same view of the subiect as Sir R . Inglia .
The E arl of Abusdel was prepared to oppose any measure of persecution , or any attackupon the constitutional liberties of Roman Catholics . Mr . » V . Fagas denied the right of the Legislature to lntcrfere . - by an act of coercion , with the Roman Catholic Church , which was not an endowed Church with reference to a measure most salutary to that Church
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Mr . lluME drew the attention of the house from the subject of the Papal Aggression—his observations upon which he should postpone until he saw the promised bill—and noticed some other topics ' in the speech . He regretted the occupation by the Auatriaus of the free town of Hamburgh ; he rejoiced at the projected reform of the Court of Chancery , which he wished to see abolished , and at the prospect of a system of registration ; but he lamented that nothing was said in the speech on the subjects of a reduction of taxation , the state of the representation , and the colonies . Colonel Sibthorp arraigned the whole policy of the Ministers with respect to Rome , agriculture , free-trade , and the Exhibition . Mr . G . BERKEi . Br adverted briefly to the condition of the labouring classes , of the tenant farmers , and of the colonists .
Mr . Ghahas protested against any attempt to fetter or coerce the Roman Catholics of the United Kingdom by re-opening a question which was settled in 1829 . Mr . Baxkes , on the part of the agricultural interest , thought it his duty to make some remarks upon that part of the speech which referred to the condition of that interest , whose "difficulties , " it was said , would be diminished by the " prosperity of other classes . " He contended that if the producers of the food of our labouring classes were foreigners , it was a fallacy to suppose that increased consumption could benefit British farmers , who were desponding and alarmed . Agriculture must have relief , and the only shape in which it could be afforded was l > y a fixed duty on foreign corn .
Lord Jons Russell , after expressing his satisfaction that there would be no division upon the address , justified the course pursued by the government in respect to foreign affairs ; and i n allusion to the suggestions of Sir . Banke 3 , observed , that although a temporary fixed duty upon foreign oowi , adopted in ISiO or 1841 , might have prepared the agricultural interest for an inevitable change , he did not believe it could have been maintained , as the foundation of a permanent system . Be that as it may , however , tho Legislature had adopted another course , consonant to tho great interests of the country , and tending , in his opinion , to its political and moral tranquillity . Lord John urged various arguments against the policy of aprotcctive
system , and in favour of that of free trade , which , he observed , must be considered as a whole , and as a whole it 3 prosperity proved that it was a system grounded upon sound principles . He , therefore , gave Mr . B . mkes and his friends no hope of a os . duty upon foreign corn , which would be only valued by the farmer as a symptom of a return to a system which would abridge the material comforts enjoyed by the labouring population . Addressing himself then to the subject of the Papal asgression , Lord John delicately reproached Mr . Roebuck for the low motives he sometimes imputed to public men , and avowed that he had written the letter to the Bishop of Durham , because he entertained the sentiments he then expressed , and could not refrain
from giving publicity to them . He enumerated tho concessions made to the Roman Catholics , the liberality , and even favour , with which they had been treated by the present government . In this state of things—the Roman Catholics bavin" no reason to complain—the Court of Rome suddenly thought proper to divide the whole country into dioceses , creating an Archbishop of Westminster , of all place 3 , and proclaiming to the people that English counties were to be " governed " by Roman Catholic prelates . It did appear to him that such an act , which he believed the Roman Catholics of England generally did not desire , could not be passed over in silence . With respect to the measure necessary to check this proceeding , his opinion
was , that the authority of Parliament would be sufficient , and it was not hi 3 intention to go beyond the occasion in the measure he should propose , which would embrace the whole of the United Kingdom . He did not attribute to the Court of Rome a spirit of hostility towards this country ; but Lord Shrewsbury had declared , that there was a party at the Court inimical to England , and that party was paramount there , which would go far to explain the step it had taken . Mr . Disraeli applied himself to the depressed condition of agriculture—a condition , the long continuance of which was at length astonishing even the ministry . The landed interest was in fact furnishing the capital in which all other classes wer »
thriving . Last year , government grudgingly acknowledged agricultural complaints . This year agricultural distress was announced . Uextyear , as this was an age of progress , agricultural ruin would probably be trumpoted . But what was the use of these acknowledgments of a great interest in difficulty , if no attempt was ever made to ascertain , and then to grapple with the cause ? All that the ministry said was , that they " hoped " the depression would pass over ; using in fact , tho language of " amiable despair . " He complained that artificial protection had been swept away , while artificial burdens had been left ; and on a future occasion he pledged himself to point out the natural remedies which justice demanded and which policy sanctioned . With respect to tho Papal aggression , he took Lord John Russell ' s
letter to be the manifesto of a cabinet , and he believed that when that letter -was ¦ written much more was contemplated than the mere preventing the assumption by Cardinal "Wiseman of a territorial title . That the aggression was " insiduous , " he did not agree with ; on the contrary , the pope had only frankly dono what the noble lord had said there was no harm in doing , and what had long ago been done in Ireland with the noble lord ' s full consent . Unless , then , the Premier was prepared to attempt the solution of the great problem of the reconciliation of the claims to allegiance of the English Throne with the demands of obedience made from the papal chair—unless he wa 9 prepared to undertake this great task , he would have done much : better in leaving the whole matter alone . The address was then agreed to .
WEDNESDAY , Feb . 5 . HOUSE OF COMMONS . —The house Bat at four o'clock . Mr . Hatter stated that he had on the previous evening moved the issue of a new writ for the borough of Dungarvan , under an erroneous persuasion that the seat had been vacated by Mr . Shell . He now moved for a superseded * to stay any election proceedings being taken on the writ . Mr . Roebuck having interpellated the law advisers of the Crown respecting the presidents to be followed in such cases ,
The Attoisnet-Gexeraji replied that Mr . Shiel havingonly been appointed to an office on the foreign diplomatic staff of the government did not thereby vacate his seat in the house ; and as the writ which had been moved for would be necessarily inoperative , the proper course to adopt was to stay further process by a superseded * . In reply to Mr . Rbt . xoi . ds , Lord J . Russell announced his intention of submitting to parliament during the session a measure for abolishing the vice-royalty of Ireland . To a question by 6 . Berkeley , Lord Seimour replied , that three bills were in preparation having reference to the administration of the royal forests , one of which would apply to the New Forest .
Lord Joiix Russell moved a resolution , expressive of the application of the house of the long services , extending over a space of forty-nine years , of the late Mr . Ley , so long their indefatigable and excellent clerk . Sir R . H . Ixolis corroborated the eulogium pronounced by Lord John Russell . Mr . Hbme , while agreeing cordially with the resolution , expressed his strong feeling that the vacancy had been most improperly filled up by the appointment of a gentleman utterly inexperienced in and utterly ignorant of the practices and the customs of the House of Commons . ( The honourable gentleman ' s brief address was loudly and siguificantly cheered . ) Mr . Godlbbues said a few words eulogistic of the late clerk .
Lord John Russell defended the appointment , slating that , in his conscientious opinion , the selection of Sir Denis Le Marchant was an excellent one . As for want of experience , a Speaker , a far more important official , could necessarily hare no experience , when first appointed to the chair . The "Rush" of ihe Commons to hbab ih « Queen's Speech . —Mr . Hume said be wished to aay a few words on this matter . Those who had , yesterday , accompanied the Speaker to the Hous * of Lords , would recollect the disorderly manner in which the members had been compelled to follow him , and what danger the Speaker himself had to find his way there . ( Hear , hear . ) He thought this was highly derogatory to the dignity of the house
Even wnen they did arrive at the House of Lords , there was not room enough below the bar to contain one quarter of the members . He happened to be the twenty-fifth after the Speaker , but both sides of the bar were so filled that he neither saw the Queen nor heard her voice . ( "Hear , " and laughter . ) It was an eternal disgrace to the house and to the country , that they had expended so much money on a place so ill-suited to carry on the business of the country . Conld no means be adopted by whioh decorum could be preserved in future ? ( Hear , hear . ) He recollected that , on one occasion , the coat of a member of the house , who now filled
a high office abroad , had been torn —( laughter)—and that his shoulder had been dislocated . That was in the old house ; but it wa 3 as bad or worse iu the new house . What he wanted was , that a committee shsuld be appointed to consider of such arrang ements as would enable them to go to the House of Lords as became their character and position . ( Hear , hear . ) If there was only room for a hundred members , lots might be drawn to ascertain who were to accompany the Speaker , that order might be preserved , and that they might be able to conduct themselves as other men , soberly and aeeeatfy , not like a mob . ( Hear , hear , and
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laughter . ) He was himself knooked ' againafc the corner there , his head was knocked against ' the post , and he might have been injured if a stout member , to whom he felt much obliged , had not come to his assistance . ( Hear , hear , and laughter . ) It was no laughiug matter . It concerned the character of the house , and it must be matter of regret that such a scene as that which had taken place yesterday should have been presented to the Queen of England at the bar of the House of Lords ( Hear , hear . ) He thought that this matter might be left m the hands of the present committee , who were perfectly competent to deal with it ( Hear . ) Mr . C . Lewh having moved the usual sessional orders ,
Mr . Hume moved an order enacting that no Tntmey -vote B&ould be passed after midnight The motion was opposed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer and SirG . Grey : and supported , for various reasons , by Mr . Williams ! Mr . Spoonkr , and Colonel Sibiuorp . Being carried to a division , there appeared—For the motion ... 47 ,. 4 gain 8 t 167-69 Mr . Broiherton moved an order that the house should adjourn regularly at midnight , the Speaker to vacate the chair when the hour arrived without putting the question . On a division this motion was also rejected by 1 QS votes to thirty-two—seventy-six . The Marquis of Kibkdalb brought up the report on the address . *
Lord D . Stuart referring to the paragraph relating totheforeigarelationsof this country , said , that he thought it would have been moro creditablo to our government , and more agreeable to the noble lord the Secretary for Foreign Affairs , who had so often declared his anxiety on the subiect if he had been able to come forward and say , •'• We have not allowed the Turkish government to be coerced into delivering up these unfortunate men , nor iiave we permitted the Turks to be forced by Austria to become the jailors of that government . ( Hear , hear . ) It would have been most creditable to the noble lord could he have said , " Kossuth is no longer detained a prisoner against the law of nations , and contrary to the avowed desire of this
country . ( Hear , hear . ) He ( Lord D . Stuart ) felt tho more upon this subject , because it was very well known that the sovereign of Turkey had no desire to detain these poor men in captivity , seeing that they had done nothing against him or his dominions . It was notorious that the Turks ha'd no desire to continue these barbarities , but were compelled and coerced into doing so by the representations and influence of Austria . More than that , it was perfectly notorious—or at least it was generally believed by every one who had any acquaintance whatever with the affairs of Turkey—that if the influence of this government wero properly exerted , earnestly aud siucerly exerted , the Turks would be very glad to return , as they bad before , decided
a negative to the unjust demands of Austria and Russia . ( Hear . ) He wished , therefore , that something of the kind had been mentioned in the speech from the throne , instead of the subjects which had been thought worthy of a place there . The last year bad passed over in complete silence , and instead of Kossuth—that great man for whom such interest was felt in this country , throughout Europe , and in the United States of Americabeing liberated , he was allowed to lot in an infamous gaol , in which he had been immured through the brutality of the Austrian government , and allowed to remain , through the ^ apathy of our own . ( Hear , hear . ) The question that tho report be read a second time , being put , and no member of the government rising ,
Mr . Hume called the attention of the ministers to the question which had been put by his noble friend ( Lord D . Stuart ) on a matter on whioh the public out of doors deeply sympathised , and which last year commanded as much interest out of doors as the Papal aggression did now . The question which his noble friend had put was—why was the paragraph relating to tho the Hungarian refugees , and the efforts of her majesty ' s government to ameliorate their condition , omitted from the present speech , while the cause which had led to its insertion of the speech of last year still existed ' He thought respect for public opinion ought to extract from government some explanation whether there was any hope for those unfortunate men , who were now , at the instance of Austria and Russia , confined in Turkey . It would bo satisfactory , also , if the noble lord would state the number of them .
"Viscount Palmersion — I can assure my hon . friend that her Majesty's government were not inattentive to the subject alluded to . ( Hear , hear . ) Communications have been carried on by her Majesty ' s ambassador at Constatinople , with the Turkish Divan , with a view of obtaining the release of these persons , but I am sorry to say that those efforts have not , as yet , been attended with that success which we could desire . Mr . Hume—Will the noble lord state whether all the Hungarians who took refuge in Turkey , are still detained there , or whether any have been set at liberty ?
Lord FAniBBSTON—I cannot atate exactly . The number now at Katayah is not ao great as it was ; a considerable number , 700 I believe , who remained at Shumlah for some time , have , I understand , lately been forwarded to Constantinople , but whether to be stationed at any place in that locality , or for the purpose of being conveyed elsewhere , I cannot say . The report was then agreed to , and the house adjourned at a quarter past seven .
THURSDAY , FEB . 6 th . HOUSE OF LORDS . —In the house of lords , last night , in reply to a question by Earl Fitzwilliam , The-Earl of Mixto stated that during his recent visit to Italy , nothing had come to his knowledge relative to any intention of altering the constitution or the nomenclature of the Roman Catholic hierarchy in England ; and that when the missive from the pope was published here , the circumstance took him completely by surprise . Their lordships adjourned at six o ' clock . HOUSE OF COM " MONS . —In reply to a question by Mr . Wood , Lord J . Russell said is was his intention to carry out the resolution of last session respecting the oath of abjuration , with a view to the relief of a certain class of Her Majesty . ' s subjects .
The noble lord then moved the following resolution : — "That the house will not proceed upon any motion for an address to the Crown to which opposition is offered but in a committee of tho whole house , except with respect to matters which have been previously submitted to a select committee . " He pointed out the incongruity of the existing practice with the general rules of the House , and the inconveniences attending it , as exemplified last session in the case of the Postoffice . The House adjourned at a quarter to six o ' clock .
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O'CONNOR DEFENCE FUND . TO MR . RIDER . Sir . —You will find enclosed a Post-office Order for £ 2 7 s . 4 $ d . for the Honesty Fund , payable to you at the General Post-Office , St . Martin ' a-le-Grand . To be acknowledged as follows : —C . Potts Is . ; A . Hassall Is . ; J . Hassall Is . ; J . Stubbs lSi ; J . Cartwright Is . ; J . Clay , sen ., 6 d . ; "W . Hassall Id . ; J . Wight 6 d . ; S . Sigley 6 d . ; G . Bullock 6 d . W . Hewitt Is . 5 J . Sigley 6 d . ; J . Parker 6 d . ; R . Griffin 3 d . ; W . Buxton 3 d . ; D . Bromley 6 d . ; J . Sover 6 d . ; W . Matties 6 d . ; R . Johnson 6 d . ; J . Hammer 8 ley 6 d . ; G . Bates 4 d . ; E . Wright 7 d . ; Jamps Kay 6 d . ; J . Bromley 6 d .: J . Wilkinson fid ; C . Woodward 6 d . ; J . Clay , jun ., 3 d . ; ft . Mooney 6 d . ; S . Holmes 6 d . ; E . Box 6 d . ; A Friend 6 d . Proceeds of a Theatrical Representation by the Longtoa Dramatic Amateurs £ 1 10 s . lid .
The Committee return their thanks to those friends who have assisted them on behalf of the above fund . The Longton Dramatic Amateurs also return their grateful acknowledgments to those persons who visited them on their theatrical representation , and beg to state , that as their humble abilities were so well received , they will feel pleasure in rendering assistance to any good or charitable cause at any future time . Friends desirous of contributing to this fund , can do so , by applying to Chtrles Potts , Finance-road , Longton Potteries , Staffordshire .
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HONESTY FUND IN THE POTTERIES . Since my last letter I have received the following ( urns , and I cannot but express my extreme regret at witnessing the apathy displayed towards the People s Fnend by the people themselves . The disposal of the china and vases will take place on the first Monday in March ; therefore not a moment should be lost ; let me hear from all without further delay , so that the sum may be worthy of presentation to assist Mr . O'Connor , as well as creditable to yourselves . Money received : —Robert Johnsen , Glasgow ; Thomas Haworth , Burnley-lane ; Samuel Healey , Macclesfield ; Edward Thurman , Mrs . Littlewood , Miss Nottingham , all Gd . each ; Joseph Pickford , Congleton , Is . ; W . J . B . Mills , Brighton 2 s . 6 d . , , R . Hopuinsoh , Secretary . Old Hall-terrace , Hanley , Feb . 3 rd , 1851 .
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Motions in ihe New Session . —The order book of the House of Commons contains exactly fifty notices of motion , on an equal variety of subjects , by different members , to be brought forward during the session , which commenced , on Tuesday .
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* THE PROPAGANDIST SOCIETY . A public meeting convened by the above , was held on Monday evening , at the City Chartist Hall , Golden-lane . Mr . Leno was called to the chair , and spoke on tho present and future prospects of the democratic movement in this country . Mr . Hakman moved the following resolution : — " That this meeting is of opinion that tho poverty and its attendants , misery , and vice , which charaoterises tho thorough career of the industrious portion of the English people , will . never cease to exist until the principles of the " People ' s Charter" in their , entirety are recognised as truthful , and adopted by tho country . " ^^^ 1 ^^^—— ¦
Mr . Fisles seconded the resolution , and was greatly applauded . Mr . Bezer supported the resolution , andt n al lusion to the attendance . of tho police ( who are now invariably to be found in uniform at every Chartist meeting , ) stated that on that day fortnight he intended in that hall to deliver a lecture , " Upon the use and abuse of our police system . ' iacts had come to his knowledge that the government , in the most unmanly manner , were endeavouring , by sending police to their meetings , and by gutting tradesmen and others to caution their workmen against joining any physical force movement , to impress upon
the public mind that an outbreak was about to take place in May , and then , under the pretence of having received secret information , to place the metropolis during the period of the Exhibition under a physical force despotism . He then commented upon the fact of their being sent to Chartist meetings whilst meetings of every other description wero unattended . He intended to write to Sir George Grey and the commissioners of police for sending police to his leoture ; and he thought it incumbent upon the Chartist public to speud , at least , one evening , in considering this new insult placed upon them . Mr . Bezer was loudly cheered . The resolution was then carried unanimously .
Mr . Crowe moved the following resolution , and quoted many authorities in support of his views : — ' " . Resolved , that this meeting is of opiuion , the socalled Act of Union between England and Ireland passed , in the year 1800 , was unjust in principle , contrary to the express will of the Irish people , and is maintained only by virtue . of that treachery , which was so extensively indulged in to incompasa it . And this meeting is further of opinion , that the Irish people not having learned to acknowledge the same as a Donate national compact , are qualified in demanding its immediate repeal . " Mr . Slocombe seconded , and Mr . Ryan supported , the resolution , which was carried unanimously .
Mr . Wood moved the next resolution as follows , and entered into a detailed statement of the expenditure of the English and American Government : — "This meeting being impressed with the belief that monarchy is the most feigned source of crime and destitution , engendering monopoly , selfishness , and injuBtice ; thereby becomnu a foul hot bed of corruption , profligacy , and legalised plunder , is unanimous in its opinion that nothing short of a pure republic , in which the rights of every member of the community would be alike recognised , can benefit the now impoverished people of England , who are , in fact , the only true and lelegitimate sovereign- the source of all supremo power . " Mr . Hewett seconded the resolution .
Mr . Stallwood spoke in opposition to it . Mr . Wheeler replied to the observations of the last speaker , and supported tho resolution , which was unanimously adopted . It was then announced that Mr . Hamilton , of the Aylesbury News , and — Lookharfc , Esq ., would address the meeting in that hall , on Sunday evening . A vote of thanks was then given to the chairman , and the meeting separated at a late hour .
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THE SAILORS' STRIKE . Huli ; , Saturday . —No arrangement has yet been oome to between the shipowners and seamen here , and both Btand out upon the rates respectively fixed by them . The Sisters , emigrant ship , has not yet Bailed ; but a crew has been engaged , and have signed articles at the reduced scale of wages , £ 3 a month , without small stores . Some of the crew now on board were taken to the vessel this afternoon under an escort of policemen , and they were a good deal hooted by the seamen on strike . The Sisters will sail to morrow for her destination , New York ,
% The following are the twenty-two regulations sanctioned as permissive by the Board of Trade , and so much complained of by the sailors : —1 . Not being on board at the time fixed by the agreement , to forfeit twotdays' pay . 2 . Not returning on board at the expiration of leave , one day ' s pay . 3 . Insolence or contemptuous language or behaviour towards the master or any mate , one day ' s pay . 4 . Striking , or assaulting any person on board or belonging to the ship , two days' pay . 5 . Quarrelling , or provoking to quarrel , one day ' s pay . 6 . Swearing , or u&ing improper language , one day's pay . 7 . Bringing , or having on board spirituous liquors , three days' pay . 8 . Carrying a sheath knife , one day's pay . 9 . Drunkenness ( firBt offence ) , two days' half allowance of
provisions . Drunkenness ( second offence ) , two days ' pay . 10 . Neglect on the part of the officer in charge of the watch to place the look-out property , two days * pay . 11 . Sleeping or gross negligence while on the look-out , two days' pay . 12 . Not extinguishing lights at the time ordered , one day ' s pay , 13 . Smoking below , one day ' s pay . 1 L Neglecting to bring up , open out , and air bedding , when ordered , half a day ' s pay . 15 . For the cook not having any meal of the crew ready at the appointed time , one day ' s pay . 16 . Not attending divine service on Sunday , unless prevented by sickness or duty of the ship , one day ' s
pay . 17 . Interrupting divine service by indecorous conduct , one day's pay . 18 . Not being cleaned , shaved , and washed on Sundays , one day ' s pay . 19 . Washing clothes on a Sunday , one day ' s pay . 20 . Secreting contraband goods on board with intent to smuggle , one month ' s pay . 21 . Destroying or defacing the copy of the agreement , which is made accessible to the crew , one day's pay . 22 . If any officer is guilty of any act or default which is made , subject to a fine , he shall bo liable to a fine of twice the number of days' pay which would be exacted for a like act or default from a seaman , and such , fine shall be paid and applied in the same manner as other fines .
The Tyne . — Another Strike . — The South Shields shipwrights struck work on Saturday morning last . The Tyne shipwrights are about 1 , 100 in number , and are well known as close unionists . In the fall of last year they met , and adopted a code of rules . The masters met at Newastle in November last , and re-adopted a set of- regulations passed by the dockowners in 1842 . These regulations came into effect on the 31 st ult ., and the strike at South Shields is the result . It is supposed that if some arrangement
is not come to between the masters and the men , the whole of the shipwrights on the Tyne will turn out . The Trident and Hecate , war steamers , sent down by the Admiralty , at the request of the Mayor of Tynemouth , in case of a riot amongst the sailors during their strike , are at present lying in Shields harbour ; but there is no necessity for their presence , as the river is clearing of ships , and the men are receiving the advanced wages as soon as the vessels are laden . A great number of colliers have left the Tyne during the last three days .
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Fire in MAUYLEBONE . —On Friday morning a fire , attended with a great destruction of valuable pro-Sjrt y , broke out in the Coachmakers' Arms Tavern , 0 . 24 ,. St . Marylebone-larie , Oxford-street . A police constable perceived smoke issuing from the bar windows , and immediately called up the family and domestics . By the time he had done so the fire had reached the stairs , and immense volumes of smoke and flame kept pouring up so that it was utterly impossible for any one to descend by the staircase . Several of tho inmates having gained Ope of the front windows , they begged some one to go and procure the Royal Society ' s fire escape from the end of the lane . Whilst the intelligence was being conveyed to the conductor , a man living in the neighbourhood brought a ladder to tho spot and ho assisted three or four persons down Thp
fire escapes belonging to the society by this time had arrived , when the conductors were informed that Mr . Sadler s two femalo . servants were in the second floor front . They immediately placed the machines to the window , but on ascending they found the rooms in one body of flume , so that atw one therein must have been beyond the reach of help . The two servants had , however , effected their escape over the roof , and descended in safety through the trap door of the adjoining house . Owing to tho scarcity of water , the flames were not extinguished until the whole of the upper part of tho extensive premises wero burned out . The bar is also partially burned , but fortunately the liquor vats escaped . Mr . Sadler was insured for contents in the Alliance Fire , office , and the building was insured in the Imperial office . r .
A Rbmkdt fob Highland Destitution . Among the remedies for the destitution which prevails in the Western Isles , none would be more efficient than the opening up of foreign markets for the produce of the herring fishing . All the narrow firths between those islands Bwarm with herrings during particular seasons ; but , as the produce of the fishery already execods tho demand for tho article , there is no inducement , but the contrary , for any inhabitant of the sea-washed rocks of tho west to prosecute the fishing . Were France , or any other of tho Roman Catholic countries of the Continent , from which our herrings are at present excluded , induced to lower their prohibitory tariffs , tho new outlet would cause the fishing to be prosecuted with success in the western isles , and this branch of industry would prove a far moro permanent remedy for the pauperism of the Hebrides than any scheme for splitting up these islands into crofts , and rearing a famil y on the produce of half an acre . —tols / iire Journal .
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BOW-STREET .-The Pieecsd CABMiN .-T . Brown , 50 , a labouring man , was charged with refusing to pay for his conveyance in a cab ,- —The prosecutor stated that on Saturday night ho was proceeding down Long-acre , having just set down his fare , when he was hailed by a boy , who asked him if he wanted a job . The boy took him into King-street , where he found prisoner with a woman , whom he supposed to be his wife . Tho woman asked him to take them to the streot at the back of Snow-hill , and agreed to give him a shilling , the fare being Is . 4 d . On arriving at a house in the quarter indicated , prosecutor set the woman down , who said sho would be back in a minute , but
ho waited an hour for her la vain . By this timo he began to think he had been cheated , and applied to tho prisoner , who was asleep in the cab , and apparently unconscious of what was going on . Ho was quite drunk when the woman put him in . Prosocutor then gave him into custody . Prisoner said he knew nothing of the woman ; he was intoxicated at the time , and had lost all bis money , which he believed the woman had stolen . —Mr . Ilall asked prosecutor whether he did not think that prisoner and himself had alike been cheated by the woman , who wanted a ride for nothing ?—Prosecutor thought it was so ; and the magistrate dismissed the case . Stkawno a Letter . —William Smith , a lettercarrier , employed in tho district of Pimlico , was
brought before Mr . nail charged with stealing a letter , containing a half-sovereign , which came into his possession for delivery . —Mr . Walter R . Sculthorpe , a president of the London district , stated that owing to the loss of several letters passing through the receiving house in Pimlieo , he was directed to send a letter vrith marked money , which he did , addressing it , " Miss Tibbetts , care of Mrs . Itingham , Chapel-place-mews , Belgrave-square , " and sent it to the inspector at tho office in Pimlico , by whom it was dropped into the box to be sorted , after which , haying ascertained that it had not been delivered , inquiries wore made among the different persons in that office , the result of which was that the prisoner was tho person through whose hands it
passed in sorting , although , when asked , he denied knowing anything about it . Ho was then searched by Peake , the constable , who not only found the marked coin , but also the envelope of the letter upon him . —The prisoner admitted to the constable that he had taken tho letter wilfully , and that it was the effects of drink that caused him to commit such an act . —When the prisoner's lodgings were searched by Mr . Cole , inspector of letter-carriers , ho found a great number of newspapers and periodicals of all kinds , from each of which the direction had been torn . —The prisoner declined saying anything to tho charge , and he was fully committed to Newgate for trial . Training for Newgate , —Patrick Coghlan , 12 years of age , was charged with stealing a small
quantity 01 lead pipe , the property of Baron Overstonc—Tlie boy was employed as a plaster ' s labourer at the mansion of his lordship , in Carltongardens , and was searched on suspicion as he was loiiving work on Monday night , when the lead in question was found in his basket . —Prisoner did not deny the charge , and when at tho station said that he had seen his father do so , and thought it was quite right . —Air . Jardine said that whether the boy ' s statements were true or not , it was evident he had been abetted by persons older than himhimsolf . He was reluctant to punish the boy , who was obviously the agent of others ; he must , however , commit him to the House of Correction for fourteen days , and to be once whipped .
MANSION-HOUSE . —Robbing a Cuurch . —H . Wilson was charged with having stolen a coat in tbo vestvy-room of tho Church of St . Mary-le-Bow , —The sexton of tho church said : On Sunday , at a quarter past three o ' clock , the prisoner came into the church , and sat in the south aisle , close to the vestry door , while the service was being performed . I soon afterwards went into the vestry , and found him there with the coat of the Itev . Mr . South , who is evening leoturer , on his baok . The reverend gentleman was performing service at the time . The prisoner , in answer to my inquiries , said he entered the vestry because he wanted to see the clergyman , and he pulled off tho coat , and said lie had put it on because ho was in extreme distress , —The Lord Mayor sentenced the prisoner to imprisonment and hard labour for six weeks .
Robber * at a Concert . —William Probert , who was a few days ago charged with having robbed a young lady of her gold watch in Sussex-hall , Leadenhall-street , was brought up for final examination . —The young lady and her brother , and two female friends , had gone to a concert in Sussex Hall , and the prisoner , who was accompanied by a welldressed female , gare up his seat and that of his companion for the accommodation of the prosecutr ix and her party . In the course of the bustle of
making room the prisoner put his hand round the lady ' s waist . He and his female friend then became invisible , and the watch was missed from the chain . The prisoner was subsequently taken into custody by an officer , who observed him departing from-the room . —Storey and other officers recognised the prisoner » s the constant companion of thieves , and stated that he was in the habit Of " woi'kin * " in steam boats in summer and in concert rooms in winter , and that a well-dressed female always " worked" with him . —Committed for trial
An Inveterate Window Smasher . —Mary Pulham , a desperate old woman , was charged with having smashed a pane of plate glass in the house of the landlord of the White Hart Tavern , in Abchurch-lane . —The defendant , wbo has been very frequently imprisoned for offences of the kind , and had been just discharged from Bridewell , swore she would repeat the mischief upon the first opportunity —The complainant suid the woman had broken his windows upon two former occasions . —The Lord Mayor said that a course had been adopted to check the taste for breaking the Mansion House windows and it had proved efficacious . Perhaps a similar plan would "tell" at the White Hart Tavern . — The complainant said he was prepared to administer the preventive medicine upon the next appearance of the defendant or any other window smasher —The defendant was committed to hard labour for six weeks . Upon being removed from the bar sTie said she should certainly bonnet the comolainant
upon ner discharge and do for him , and ho should never know anjthing about it . Buying Bargains . —William Dubois was charged with having defrauded William Allan , a cooper who resides on Garlick-hiH . The prosecutor said ' On Saturday evening last at six o ' clock , as I was going home through Aldgate the prisoner stopped me , and asked mo if I wanted any tobacco . I said no ; and he then said that he and a mate of his had come ashore , and were without money , and they had a tow articles which they brought from abroad-I think he said from China-and he asked me to go with him to Jewry-street . I consented , and he took mo to a public-house , in the parlour
m wmonwe saw a man , whom he called his mate He showed me a shawl , but I refused to purchase it . The other man then showed me two waistcoatpieces , which he said contained enough to make four waistcoats , and he offered them to me for 25 s saying that one piece was silk velvet and the other was satin . I refused the price , and was S « away when the prisoner stopped me , and 8 S 1 should have the articles for los . I offered half a sovereign for them , and the prisoner agreed to take it , and I paid his partner that money . As I was S ^ " ? , , ? J A tailor what m > - b < "'gam was Kiif h 6 dG - that the articles we « either silk velvet or satin , and that they were not worth more than between 3 a . and 4 s . The prisoner was committed for trial .
CLERKENWELL . - Equality of the Law . -. James lilcox , a groom in the service of Mr . Danby 1 u-, Su 8 Sex , was charged with deserting the child of his wife , from whom he had Ion" been separated . —The case was not established , and after it had been heard Mr . Danby bitterly complained of the unjustifiable intrusion of the warrant officers into his residence . On Monday , just as he was about to sit down to dinner , he was summoned to the library , where a row wa 3 going on . The constable and another person had entered that room wholly without his authority . They might do what they liked outside the house , but he advised them , if they should come that way a ^ ain , not to repeat the intrusion . Had they applied to him , he would have seen that defendant surrendered . —Mr Combe said that having seen their man , the officers
were oounu to loUow him to effect tho capture If a party made an escape into a poor man ' s cottage , he was followed and captured , and why should he not be m a gentleman ' s house ? The matter WORSHlP-STREET . -HioawAT Robbery . - S . Cole , alias Pluckrose , was nharged with stealing from the person of W . Bishop , a purse contain 5 twelve sovereigns , a half sovereign , and a cheque for U 4 s .-Prosecutor stated that about nine o ' clock on the evening of the 23 rd of January he was passing across llaggerstone-fields , when he met the prisoner , who observed "It ' aTdirk h'ft f , ? 1 > osecuto 1 S ? ssent ° d , remarking th it ho had lost his way . Prisoner said he could find the path , and volunteered his assistance , which was do clmed . Prisoner then crossed to the right a little m advance , and spoke to some PSn % u instantly returned , and crossing th-ijfill ««
sight embankment , saying "Oh horV t £ path ; &Hi i 1 l - IwiUhelpyouup . » W E 5 L S ° b . " u was at that moment seized ^ m bemnd by another man , who put his arm round his neck , and threw him to the ground . Prisoner instant y drew a knife , and said " Hold him down . " He then cut off- the right-hand pocket of prosecutor s trousers , containing the property named , and afterwards twisted his gold guard from his neck , Both men then made off , while he was calling for help . —Police-constable Morell deposed to having taken the prisoner into custody at a coffee-house for another offence . Prosecutor identified him from among others in the station-house , —Prisoner
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at his request , waa remanded for tbnTT ^ prove an alibi . inree davs fn WANDS WORTH . -Wantov Tw ,, ' ' Italian Organist .-A , 7 SSSn 2 SS ? , ^> no other name than Guiscppe , was elZlj ° &V timidation with intent to extort m £ " ^ & breakmg the window of his victim whi tf ^ had failed . The offence was proved j SfiJ ^ tended to know nothing of English , wlS ^' spoken freely enough in m «« aoo 8 .- £ . oh £ e H fined him one shilling or seven dava' imn , Cca < lon WESTMlNSTEltf-Mr . SamSViT ° » O
carrying on a very extensive businek ^ $ aeifs-fcuildings , Brompton , and Jg ; at ' ' ( headborough of Kensington , was ohwJf aIs ° violently assaulting and wounding John tP ^ h engineer , employed at the Crystal-palace ??*• * ing him w , th a policeman ' s truncfi hj ^ dant was ordered to find sureties for hi * bianco at tho sessions , which he immediate ]* $¥ **'
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COM . Mark Lane , Monday—The show of wheat samples from our neighbouring counties was small this moraine C having a large arrival of forei gn wheat and flour , the for mer principally from the Black Sea and Mediterranean the sale was very slow , and Is . cheaper for all but tha best quahhes . For forei gn the sale was very limited at barely last week ' s prices . In flour little doing Bari } ^^^ . ^ '" ^^ . ^•^ . ffwwatoS slowland white
y , peas declining in value . With oats ™ were well supplied , and unless for the finest fresh samples sales could not be made unless at a reduction of fid . m qr . upon last Monday ' s prices . ' WEDNESDAT .-Our supplies of both English and Forei ™ grain hayo been moderate since Monday . In spite of this a general dullness is prevalent this morning , and we note no lmprorement for nny article upon Monday ' s prices IticimoND , ( YoKKsniRB . ) Feb . l . _ We had a fair supply of wheat this morning , and all was cleared off . Wheat sold from , 4 s 6 d to 5 s Gd ; Oats , Is lOd to 3 s ; Barley , 33 Od to 3 s 6 d j Beans , 4 s to 4 s 8 d per bushel .
CATTLE , Ssiithfihd Monday , February 4 .-Our market to-day was seasonably well supplied with foreign stock in the toced . The demand for it was , however , very inactive &T , V ; - Owngr ? zine districts < the "rival , of C s Zte ^ "Wo again somewhat extensive « the time of year , whilst their condition was unusually good . Owing ma great measure to the large receipts S meatuptoNewgate and Leadenhall . the beS taK « ia c « "V 7 lmctive 8 tate at Prices barely cnual to tlo e bS 8 ( i nt m hi « « Ufcs to ! Ztil S ° o being 3 s . 8 d . per Slbs . On the whole the supply of sheen was good , both as to number and quality . All breads Zn in moderate request , at last woSK Imoy . The III generalfi gure for the best old Downs was isAi . . £ M hM S't r qUaU"CS realiSed 4 s - 6 d- P » 81 bs . Nearly 100 K ef toK off tl V ? ; a ? d there " » " * " * ..... uois « lambs on offer . Calves , the supply of whinh
mnriirf » ii • * luntatums . We were scant j SoflKffiSSJ " ^ very limited bu . iness fi t J »» ¥ n ! S Gd l i o ! mutt ° n . 3 s 4 d to 4 s 4 d ; veal , 3 s Od ifflSiia 11 ioato 4 sod - pric 6 *»*»• * £ prime large , 2 s 8 d to 3 s Od ; prime small , 3 s Od to 3 s it large pork 2 s 6 d to 3 s Gd ; inferior mutton , L fid to Is 8 d ' ml 51 Gd ° ^ 1 ° fli ° 3 s 6 d }** »• *< toBdStoW ; 'l £ k £ ff < ££ JiL 8 ma 11 pork 3 s 8 d to is «
PROVISIONS . SErSsSr ^^ ttK SMSSir ^ fflBftWBS 7 ' 4 ' t ' o 7 fis 'tiiJ ^ ^ L mericl { > 74 s t 0 SOs J Watcrford , ForeiVn w ^ S d T )" aIeC l 70 s t 0 74 s per cwt . landed UYnd ? S oA ^ T" ? re ( luestat 103 B l ° s *»• ^^ 03 . in ™ U « rt - ' n lOOs best Quality ; and for other UrnJs LP » ? ° "' Bacon was held with firmness , and for higher rates m consequence of the governmentTadvcrtis if for a large extra supply of pork for thl navT md Whi a 1 , SS demand . P " <« ran S ed from ^ s to «? V " riih landed and on board ; ITanibre ' , 38 s to 42 s per cwt H 1 ns aStot o « . ? wlSi f ^? - ^^ t « aa ybu ¦ Psm , «? n Wa < \ d , ored and teRS at 408 to 44 s . _ iMJUsii Butter Makket . Feb . a .-nnrt-artnio ,- .. ^ . ^
, i i ^ ss" ^ s StoSf ; assfjss ? - ^ - ^ suiie
BREAD . 7 d Th 7 ; T . n Wl ? eiltel } ? ' tlle metropolis are from loaf . 4 5 household ditto , 5 d . to 6 jd . pei' 41 te . Sides . Snb \ Ut 4 i b ^ - ? 72 lb V 2 id- t 0 ' ^ d ; ditto , 721 b . to 88 h'K , « J iS' 80 lb -to 881 b ., 8 d to 8 > d . ; ditto , ditto Vm - ' ^ nV * - <"" o 9 GIb . tol 04 lb ., 4 d . to 4 Jd . 2 s to I u Ph * t 0 4 * -5 Calf-skins , each « . to 3 s . ; Horse-hides us . to 7 s .
WOOL . uS ^ A ^ ^?'~ P ^^ ^ MojM ° U ««™ Tff r ? ObaIes from South Australia , 4 'J 7 from Sffifllu > SiSn 5 iniy ' and 145 from Mogadoro . The v , 001 trade is steady for most descriptions . r ^ JS ff V ^^ -There ? i " still only . 1 modemorehS / f Laid W ^ White Highland ' is rather kinds of orA « ir . - ere is sti 11 a d « W demand for all leTa mon ^ 5 od CheTO ! Wool , and to force sales a littlo leas money would require to he taken the 6 thTnT ™ i \ nOUn . 5 of P uWic sale 8 here for XoutinM 1 " " about 2 . «« 0 bales colonial , and has t ;! ! ? . , 7 wols oa the 7 th , after the fine ones , contrao ' i-M f ^ B like active business by private Detitbn Jxu I '* JV Vfttag mvi "Z on arriTOl B « at competition exists , and very high prices tiaid 9 sffieV ' Weuk 2 ' bales / wtou ^ y thii year
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From the Gazette of Tuesday , January 28 tf » . BANKUUl'TS . M& 1 > JKh ^ Aberd <* n , merchant _ John Falkirk ; gS' *** manufa ««« r-AleXander Young , SCOTCH SE QUE 9 TRATION . J No r ?? S l 'Z ^ r - v Queel ? s-roa ( i- Bejwatar , baker-Robert CorTer SvH ° l'POOl ) merchant-James Tyars , I ' adnals shire ! eft " ' farmer -A Walkden , Horksto > ; Lincolnfrom the Gazette of Tuesday , Febntatyi , BANKRUPTS . Andrew Eve , Charlotte-street , Fitzroy-squarc , turner-YUUiam 1 Hood , Lawrence-lane , Cheapside , commission agent-Richard Tredinnick , Threadneedle-street , mining baker " ' ^^^ P 1011 - 3116 " . Pentonville , SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS . D . Jack ana Co ., Glasgow , wholesale stationew-A Sonierville , Longstone , inkeeper _ J . Rose . Bantt ) bauker-A . leiidngh , Edinburgh , merchant . —^ .
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. BIRTHS . Youxo PATBiOTS—Late ly , at Kadford , near Coventry , was registered Feargus O'Connor Bird , tho son of Benffabwe ( ace ° ' ° < Sjn ° f Jolin 1 > arkcrs ' bothof DEATH . At Darlington , on the 31 st January , Jane , wife ofllr . William Carlton , aged thirty-three . The friends of Democracy bore her to her final resting place on Sundaj last She was an ardent lover of liberty ?
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parish oi St . Atme , Westminster , at the Printu * - ottice , 16 , Great "Windmill-street , llaymarkot , iu the City < u W esonhister , for the Proprietor , FEAR 6 US O'COiNN 0 « if ni * ' an < 1 P ubUsl > ed « y the said William Kideb , at me ohi « p m the same street and j > arish ,-Saturi ] ny . February 8 ; b . 1 S ? 1 :
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. - 8 " THE NORTHERN STAR Februaby 8 lav . g ¦ ^ ^^ T - i ... . ¦ - i - . — . ¦ _ ¦ ¦ M ^ ^ ^ WB— — ¦ in .. ' . ^^^^***>>* l *^*^ fc ^ A ^<^^^^^ . ^_ v X
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Shockino Accident . —On Fridav a v William Thomas Hathorn , aeed eight vl » " ^ ed in the accident ward of St . irffl iv ^ T CXjD if 4 from the effects of injuries roeoiwd b ^ W \ f ° & which was being driven fcJJJl Su \ w ket V T £ e paronts of ««> « nfortuna ; o f"lltllfi e ! at No . 7 , Key-street , St . Andrew's ^ II ?}' ^ Commons , and on Wednesday afternoon l , ? ° ctot ' s proceeding towards home , I bSSt ^ ' ^ k mtod state , which had made its way irom t" ¦ inf « ' street , ran at him with great speed , ' and Lf gatc < little boy could get out ot the wav th Olc t ^ gored him with one of its horns , which « ailini » l the right cheek immediately beneath thi » « nctrat « 4 drover and several persons who witnewL 5 ? " Ha t ™ L ™? * . ° ™ nded boy , who w , su 3 ' i
uopiousiy rom me laceration , and m l * . "i ? from the fury of tho bullock , whicht \ Tt hi « Thames-street . and irom thence OYorV ? " . ** bridge The poor boy was taken home in + n * ' insensibility , where he was « een bv £ . * M surgeon , who , after dressing the woumi , ^ his removal to St . Bartholomew ' s hSi V * he was placed under the care of Mr j 0 „ v Wllef e the assistant-surgeon , but notwithstandL ?* 11 ' aid that medical skill could suggest 1 JS >' day ( Friday ) morning in great agony H yew « - The Window TAx .-The vestry of Sf n Danes have passed tho following MBoluUon « n' ° ?* subject :- ' < That this vestry , behj ? of oninin $ * the window duty is unjust in pS ? ho n that leyiedfor the purposes ' of warfa 3 ? 2 t &Bi ! if * £ S , and no t ^^^
A Guard was killed on Monday , on the Whit haven andPurnoss Railway , in consequence I t head coming m contact with the brioWk " „ f bridgo ; he being on the top of a carriage ™ M- « , " train was going at full speed . ; ^ Constitutions , however Weas or Debilitated h , , COMPLETELY BENOVATED HI HOLLOWAj ' s PlHS . _ Tl , c " ev . ordinary sale of these admirable pills throughout « i part of the civilised world , is the most eourincin ~ { their efficiency in the cure of varieus disorders I . ol of week or debilitated constitutions , tS \ ToJ ^ T ? such as to purify the blood , invigorate the s « D I establish the . soundest health , l ' ersons suft&f" * lowness of spirits , nervousness , imperfect digestion ? ranged stomachs , bilious affections , liver comS determination of blood to the head , or " even epuj' ts ' ati etaclSmS " lUa medicin ° ' * ^ « 5
Withe Printed By William Rider, Ofiso. S. Macclesfield-Street,
Withe Printed by WILLIAM RIDER , ofiSo . S . Macclesfield-street ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Feb. 8, 1851, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1612/page/8/
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