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tcircumstances to £aih Coach Accidekt.—On Monday -afternoon ** adjourned isque~: UK>k place at the Cumberland fiao Tavern, Citv-ro&d, before Mr. Baker, coroner,
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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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*** £ iSVrEB TO J . C . ELLIOT'S CHARADE . t iiTonr first , tia essential to fife , * ^ . pujai" — a ^^ osoi your wife ; t ! T 7 «> or *«» ' ^ ^ t c " seen > TTith the rich it hath also constantly been , -o jitow third , which in MeloocToe is seen , Better known by the title of cook to the Queen , e ^ your fonrth , in Daniel "Us found , Whose treachery curses the . Emerald ground . R js the fifth , 'tis the head of Jack . Bussell , -SVfco in Stroud -will soon be all of a bustle . w ji your sixth , ¦ which in ketfle Mid pof To see with delight may it oft be my lot X is yonr ls * t » which in Yorkshire is found , And they hail with delight its raptTous sound .
tool whole is a cause I hare striTen to gain , vy danger and toil , through trouble and pain , gjar dear to my heart and sweet to my eye , Your esigEia mart be , for it means LIBERTY . Thojias M . Wheeleb ., Kensington
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m —The following lines to the memory of the uni-maie Fkosx are humbly dedicated to his friend and Sn ^ -martyr , Tsj . ~ b . cth O'Connor , by an admirer ? d follova of his patriotic principles , JOHS MtTLHOLLASD .
THE EXILE'S FAREWELL . fgr list rsvs of day linger still o ' er the billow , < i& tjngiig is beauty the gold crested -wave , i / j list iook I take through the tear slowly gathering , Of she land of my fathers I struggled to save . it jfcrouzh tlie wild waste of waters in crossing , Onr bark bounds aleng o ' er the bright heaving swell ; jjd jnoimain and spire in the distmee receding , jeT for etet I leaTe thee take an Exile ' s farewelL f tnsd isle of the ocean . ' just sinking in glory , J 28 dread once of nations , their sport now and scorn ; gsjj glory to save e ' er its sun set for ever ,
I tore from oppression the mask it had worn . jj » g ii -ws that the despot and tyrant had made thee , Iseora'd to obey them—I dared to defy , Ob liberty ' s altar I swore to avenge me , 35 jt rights to restore thee , defend tbein , or die . To the erj of the millions my bosom responded , Iteii wrongs called for vengeance , their sufferings a t « ar ; Concentred on feeling alone knew my bossm , The hopeless a home , and the tyrant a bier , jjgni the heath-covered mountains of stern Caledonia , To the sonthermost point of Britaania ' s shore ; 2 . jpirit 1 walk which never shall Elumbrr , jj ] I liberty ' s flag be nnfurled ones more .
joist , ruthless fate , too quickly impending , By treachery I fell in the zenith of fame ; Ttt ' greai »>»* H my merawy be still in your valleys , ffben a Russell forgotten shall save not a name . ( joold nothing but blood sate thy vulture-nursed ven ceasee , Poor minion ef faction—base tyrant in power ? Ha curse of the widow and orphans shall curse you—0 Connor still lives and bides but his hour , Cyo , his brave spirit parades vale and mountain , >* or silest i : stalks in the heart of the throng ; 5 hs sons of * ld England fire their seuls with its story , And Siotis repeats in her Highlander's song . 53 > e strong hand of power for a moment may lull it , lad tyranny seem more secure in his reign ; tit ? the calm that precedes the wi . d blast of the moun
Ere the simoom descend strewing death o ' er the plane . Bst s morn shall arise , nor distant its dawning , When o ' er your sweet valleys now sleeping in shade ; lie broad sun of freedom oppressing , dispelling Its beaadas diffusing in g ) oiy shall riiie , ¦ W hen labour protected , the millions releasing , Enfranchised , united , resistless in power ; Pare science , injustice and error repeiiing , Eren exQe were sweet could I breathe such an hour . Bun the pale rb «*> r > of beauty by poverty blighted , Alternate the victims of suffering and fear ; ill radiant with smiles , woman ' s blessing 3 bestowing , £ f c * n -srarin o ' er my story and grant me a tear . And ye , dearest partners , whose spirits unbending , Shall yet reap the fruits of the toils that we bore ; Will fhinV on the exile that shares in your dangers , AM sigh for the friend you can never see more .
fee tear , 15 a the last , and the struggle is orer , 0 a , memary be tranquil , nor goad to despair ; Sear wife of my bosom , and children , I bless you , Eeign , reign in my heart's core your empire be there . Jew night draw thy curtain , wake winds from your slumbers , And quick waft me on the dark heaving swell ; So lear has the exile , when hope shuns his bosom , 2 dj friends » Tiri my country—farewell , farewelL JOHN MrLHOLIAXD . Burton-on-Trent , March 12 th , 1 S « .
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A FRAGMENT FOR THE LABOURER . TThx > " virtne—mDd firtne—mast hide its fair head , And the glories of truth in eSnlgence lie dea 4 ; When modesty droops " neath the lathings of scorn , ixd worth—honest worth—of its vaine is soorn ; When labour , productive of all that is grand , Of wealth , and of ease with its money an 4 land ; Of plenty that tills the rich field 3 with their store , The bams with their food till abundance runs o ' er ; ! T ± ai supplies the rich drones with their fairest array Of grandeur , of luxury , trappings and pay ; Of titles , of honours , and merit and name , Of bocks and of laming to build up their fame ; Asd when these materials , united , combine
10 tear the last remnant of all that ' s divine , From the brow of tfes giver , producer , and slave , With his back all in rags aid his foot in the grave ; Bj hunger , oppression , —by tauntings and pain , — By robbery—barr * d e ' en the right to complain : Dispirited , —breken , —a fugitive band , Be-beggar * d , be-pauper"d , and worse than be-damn'd ; With wires and with children imploring for bread , T& denied , even that , while the beasts are well fed , What hsart fesls not siek ? what reasoning brain 11 uot maddened ; asd * reels with a stnse of its pain ? Tbs winds in their fury shall swell with our fighs , And earth shn' 1 re-echo our woes to the skies !
0 , soul of my country , her strength and her pride . ' Whom falsehood wonld shackle and tyrants deride ; Baiinew and bulwark in danger ' s dark hour , The saa of her glory , the arm of her power ; That must make her the gem of the prond swelling sea ; derate among nations , when all shall be free , Aroase , ye prodncers : and , arm'd in your might , At owe put the rebels ' gainst freedom to flight Is year majesty come—come east and come west ; Come from the north ; let the south do it ' s best ; fte&ias leave—prejudice—come and be blest . ' Ccme for the Charter—come weal or come woe , Kflyour title to freedom ' s established by law . Wm . Hick , Leeds .
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FEARGUS 0 C 0 XX 0 R . Dear friend of my country , with foul chains they ' ve bound thee , Ths cold chill of silence has hung o ' er tbee long , Bst firmer thy heart than the fetters that bind thee , And true to thee still are the labouring throng . let still though the minions of tyranny sear thee , C&n they chase from the heart , or erase from its page , Im bright star of freedom , that ' s lingering near thee , la the hearts that are true to their leader encaged . So , cold though thy cell be , and treachery near thee , And ecill on thy brow blows the wittry blast ; let still shall sweet visions of liberty che « r thee , Aad shed on thee lustre and joy for the past . E . ii .
Tcircumstances To £Aih Coach Accidekt.—On Monday -Afternoon ** Adjourned Isque~: Uk≫K Place At The Cumberland Fiao Tavern, Citv-Ro&D, Before Mr. Baker, Coroner,
tcircumstances to £ aih Coach Accidekt . —On Monday -afternoon ** adjourned isque ~ : UK > k place at the Cumberland fiao Tavern , Citv-ro&d , before Mr . Baker , coroner ,
wurresngate ee relating xne aeam ofiir . James Motiram , aged fifty , a proprietor of pie Rockingham Lseds coach- The inquiry was &d-J ° 2 rned from Saturday last , in order that the body ^ wild be disinterred . Mr . Hammond , of No . 18 , | rederick-p ! ace , City-road , said , on the 4 th of February last , at about six o'clock in the eveniDg , « e was alarmed by & loud crash in the road opposite his house , and , on going out , saw the Roek-^ oa aa Leeds coach , drawn by four horses , over-« raed on the footpavemest , and the luggage strewed tt ill directions over the pallisades fronting his « op . With the assistance of several persons , the Pteeogers -were extricated , and the deceased and Mother person ( iiuce dead ) were taken to a eutleon ' s in the neighbourhood , and the deceased , after
™ wounds vrere dressed , "was removed to his "Mpigs in York-street , City-road . The aocident ** s occasioned through the driver of the coach at-« ttpt ! £ g to pays a loaded waggon in the centre of ™ 8 Toad , in the most dangerous part , and , as it was « o » to the kerb , the vehicle swerved , and immey ^ tely overturned . Mr . Fairhead , surgeon , living tttheCitj-road , stated , b « had attended the deseed at his lodgings , in York-street , since the unwtcnatc accident , until about ten days ago , when w was attacked -frith malignant typhus fever , re-Hutmg f : om the injuries he received , and ¦ which was w * cause of death . The Coroner adjourned the inwy for further evidence . He stated the case ewie under his notice by a letter which he had re-«« ed from & Mr . Wm . Richards , of No . 21 , HigheJff-fi ?* ' wherein it was alleged that ihe dej ** &ed had been neglected , the attendance of whom " « K « e directions to Bennett , 'the Emcmoning omccr , to enforce at the next assembling of the
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GLASGOW . —Execution of Doolan and Rbd-DI » G . —On Friday , May 14 th , pursuant to sentence , * « » t » n . i ";^«» Uv of the lavy was carried into tu 6 extreme p *^ ^ ¦ — - - — - execution upon DennisDoolan and Patrick Redding for the murder of John Green , ganger on the Edinburgh Railway . The great interest excited by this melancholy aSair brought vast multitudes from a distance to see the unfortunate men expiate their offence near to the place where the murder was perpetrafed . As early as five o ' clock on Friday , the people began to assemble in thousands in front of the gaol , and the numbers kept swelling until the prisoners were brought out . Judging from what was passing in front -of the prison , no one would have thought there was going to be a public execution
all appeared to be glee and merriment , aud the writer of this actually heard jokes passing , and sportive allusions made lo the doom and approaching sufferings of two fellow-mortals about to be sent from this world to another . A little after seven o'clock in the morning troops of dragoons , posses of police , and one or two small companies of foot soldiers and artillerymen , came to prevent any outbreak on the part of the overwhelming multiiades assembled . Several carriages were coming at this period ; one was along black vehicle , with seats across for the unfortunate prisoners , and Bishop Murdoch , and one or two ministers of the Catholic religion ; and a number of other carriages for the Sheriffs , magistrates , and executioner , all stood in front of the
gaol . At eight o ' clock the prisoners came out of their cells , took their seats in the carriage withont any assistance , and sat seemingly indifferent to what was passing . Redding , on first coming out , was pale and agitated , but with an effort regained his composure . The procession having been formed , and every thing got into a state of readiness , the assembla ? e be ^ an to move to the place of execution , aboat four miles distant , to the place called Crosshill . As the mass of human being 3 moved from the gaol up Highsireet till it got out of town , the press was really awful ; the windows above and the streets below were swarming with men , women , and children , all
anxious to see the prisoners ; nor was the road lnucn thinned till the procession be ^ an to approach the place of suffering . Redding , all the while , seemed to sit with his head boweJ and indiffjrem to everything passing ; Doolan remained quite firm till he got beyond Bishops-bridge , aud be ^ au to approach the place of execution—his whole frame shook , and be turned as pale as death . When within a mile of the scaffold , several dragoons from Edinburgh , who had been guarding the place all uight , now rode and met the procession , j ? oing along with it io the place , formed a lame circle round the ratal scaffold . The place chosen : ' or the gallows was arising ground at a short distance from the Kirkintil ] och road on the
right ,-si-uate between the road and the bridge where Green lost his iife . Right below the scaffold , in the direction of Glasgow , was a regular declivity , from the base of which the instrument of death was easily seen ; beyond this , in the same direction , the road took a gradual rise , forming an amphitheatre , where thousands upon thousands saw the melancholy scene . Between nine and ten the prisoners arrived a ; the scaffold , where was a temporary erection , in which the finisher of the law pinioned the prisoners ; io this they yielded with the greatest firmness , and then took their stand under the fatal beam . Bishop Murdoch accompanied them to the drop , and prayed most fervently for the unfortunate men , and in this exercise they engajred like men on the threshold of
another world . Their religious exercises having been gone through , the executioner began to do his duty , by putting a cap over Redding ' s 1 ' ace , which had been provided for the occasion ; the unfortunate man ' s shirt collar was ' . hen put down , and the fatal noose placed round his neck . Doolaa ' s eye was stedfastiy fixed upon his companion while the preparations were making . Just before the cap was palled orer Daolaii ' s face—the following expres-ionsin prayer escaped his lips—and with a strong voice . " O God , be merciful to me ; forgive ray sins ; Lord Jesus Christ , into thy hands I commend my spirit ; Lord . Jesus , reseive my soul . " Everything being in a state of readiness , the signal was pnt into Reddin ^ ' s band . The prisoners stood a few seeoEds , as if making their last appeal to
Heaven for mercy , when the handkerchief dropt ; ihe bolt was instantly drawn . Redding died almost without a s : rn £ gle . Dylan's sufferings were great ; the noose had got shifted , and for four minutes his agonies w ^ re horrific . The bodies , after hanging forty minutes , were taken down , and buried within the precincts of the gaol . The drolleries indulged in upon * the road Ehowed how little capital punishment- does towards awing the multitude , and mikinj ? salutary impressions upon the minds of the pcopie . Let us hope that these disgusting scenes will not be repeated—that poverty , the superinducing cause of every crime , shall vanish before mild and equal Jaws ; and that peace , contentment , and equal laws shall be the portion , as they are the birthright , of erery inhabitant of this country .
The Convict Habriet Longlet . —The Jury who tried her for . the murder of her child recommended her to the mercy of the Court , and the Judge ordered sentence of death to be recorded against her , intimating that he thought the ends of justice would be fn ]] y answered by her undergoing a punishment short of death . A few days since an erder was received at Newgate directing the convict to be transported for the term often years . The unfortunate woman still remains in Newgate , where she has conducted herself with propriety , but shortly will be removed , in brdir to be sent abroad by the next vessel that sails with female convicts .
C AB 2 iISXi £ t»—The Akti-Corx Law League defeated i > the Tow > ' Council !—Afew days ago , at a meeting of this body , Mr . Alderman Ross brought forward bis promised motion for a total repeal of the Corn Laws . There was an unusually large atteiidanee of members present on the occasion , and considerable difference cf opinion prevailed on the subject . Mr . Ross made a long and tedious speech , full ' of quotations and false data , from which he erroneously reasoned—drawing the most groundless and extravagant conclusions ; he concluded by moving" That the Town Council of Carlisle do petition Parliament for a total repeal of the Corn Laws . " 3 Ir . James Steel , Editor of the Carlisle Journal , cecoDded the motion , but reserved anythiDg he had to E&y until any other gentleman might addrtss the meeting . Mr . Alderman Mounsey moved
an amendment to the effect— ' That the Council ou '^ ht not to in terfere in the matter ; but let a public meeting be called , and the sense of the town be taken on the subject . ' As Mr . Mounsey ' s amendment was about to be put , Mr . Ellwood Brockbank proposed a second amendment to Mr . Ross ' s motion , to the effect that the Council approved of the Ministerial measnre for an alteration in the Corn Laws . Here some very angry discussion look place , Mr . Railton and others charging Mr , Steel with deceiving the Council on a former occasion , by giving it to understand that they oiiiy wished for inquiry . Mr . Steel indignantly denied the charge ; but which-was distinctly reiterated by several members of the Council . The Mayor then put Mr . Mounsey ' s amendment , when it appeared as below : —
Mr . Mounsey ' s amendment 11 Against it 15 Majority ... 4 Mr . Brockbank's amendment 17 Against it 9 Majority against Mr . Ross ' 3 motion ... 8 This is a very important decision , for it shows the feelings of the members of the Town Council ; and that they are not to be misled by the mis-statements of the anti-Corn Law League , of which ilr . Ro .-s , the Mayor , and some others form a part . They dare not call ' a public meeting , for they know they would be beaten .
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Poob Joe . —The Kilkenny Journal eayff there are already eight candidates in the field desirous of contesting the representation of tLe seat now filled by Mr . Joseph Hume . A bcmour ha 3 reached us , that the extensive cotton mills of R . J . Peel , Esq ., at Burton-on-Trent , are likely i < j be closed ; no less than eight hundred hands will be thrown out of employment . —Derby Reporter . Sir Chahles Napier has addressed the electors of Marylebone in characteristic terms : — " Gentlemen , if a dissolution of Parliament takes place , and yon would like to be represented by an Old Sailor , I am at your service . "
Hops . —In the better grounds the bines are nourishing most vigorously , many of them already tied , and most others in progress . One bine in the Old College ground was ascertained to have grown , within twenty-four hours , last week , no less than thirteen inche 3 . —MaidsUtne Gazette . Bt the Report of the Select Committee of the Heuse of Commons on Public Petitions , brought down to the 7 th May , it appears that the petitions presented—for Repeal of Corn Laws , are 344 , the signatures 126 . 753 ; against , petitions 225 , signatures 13 , 119 ; for revision of Import-duties , petitions 80 , signatures 31 , 462 .
Railway Traffic , &c—The followingis the total amount of traffic on the several railways in England and Scotland ( 29 in all ) for the last week , that is to say , ap to the latest period to which the several returns are calculated , viz . total amount of passengers conveyed , 222 , 210 . Total receipts ( including passengers , parcels , carriages , horses , merchandise , Sec ) , £ 61 , 850 . Riotous Conduct of a Magistrate . —Wm . Flood , Esq ., J . P ., of Paulstown Castle , was charged , on Thursday last , at a Police-office in Dublin , with being riotous on the preceding evening , and calling out" To h—11 with Pope and Popeij . " He was obliged to find bail to keep the peace .
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Mr . Dteb , the magistrate of Marlborough-Btreet police-office , London , died on Monday afternoon . As Epidemic has been for some weeks raging among the soldiers of the first battalion of Grenadier Guards , stationed in the Tower , which has in some instances proved fatal , and not less than eightymen , - — " WAaniUl » t Wasthave been sent to the auunu ) . .. minster . It resembles influenza . Lobd Melbourne and the Boy Jones . —At Queen-sqnare police office , on Saturday , William , John Donovan , described as a brioklayers labourer , was charged with exhibiting a placard on the footway in front of the House of Lords , to the annoyance and obstruction of the passengers . Tho charge was
made under the 8 th section of the 54 th clause of "the new police act . Police constable Carter , 151 B , stated that about half-past four o'clock , he was on duty in front of the House of Lords , when he observed the defendant parading up and down , in the front of a House with a board , on which was a p lacard , reflecting upon the character of Lord Melbonrne . The defendant ' s desire appeared to be that of -attracting the attention of the Lords to his placard . He then took defendant into custody . —The placard was exhibited in court , and was as follows — " Extract from Jones's Peep into the Palace : — 1 There certainly is , my Lord , a vast majority of palace dinners in favour of your Lordship over myself , for on making reference to the palace circular I find from June , 1837 , the time when her Majesty ascended the throne , to tho present time , your Lordship has taken pot luck with her Majesty 867 times ; four times
myself ; or , to place it thus : —Visconnt xMelbourne , 867 dinners ; f . Jones , 4 ; majority for Lord Melbourne , 8 G 3;—thus giving your Lordship a clear working majority of 8 U 3 dinners over me . ' London : Pattie , 4 , Brydges-street . " Mr . Burrell ( to the defendant )—Have you anything to say ? The defendant said he was a poor labouring man , and glad to earn a shilling . Ho knew nothing of the laws ; he had been employed by Mr . Pattie , of Brydges-street , to carry the placard , and was told to go down to the Houses of Parliament . Mr . Burrell said , defendant had committed an offence punishable under the police act , and he could not do otherwise than convict him in the mitigated penalty of five shillings , or in default seven day ' s imprisonment . The defendant being unable to pay the fine , was locked up , but in the afternoon Mr . Pattie , the publisher , came down to the court , and paid it for him .
The validity of baptism has been decided by Sir Herbert Jenner , in the Arches Court . An action had been brought by Mr . Cliff , an inhabitant of Gedney , in the county of Lincoln , against the Rev . Thomas Sweet Escott , vicar of the parish , for having refused to bury the corpse of the prosecutor's infant daughter . The proceeding was instituted under the 68 ih Canon , whereby it is decreed , that" No minister shall refuse to bury any corpse that is brought into the church or churchyard , convenient warning having been previously given to him ; aud if he shall refuse to bury the same ( except the party deceased were denounced , excommunicated for some grievous crime , &c . ) he shall be suspended by the Bishop of his diocese from his ministry for the space of three
months . " The defence was , that " in the Rubric of the Book of Common Prayer , which was part and parcel of the statute 13 th aud 14 th Charles II ., c . 4 ., in the order for the burial of the dead , it was enjoined that such office was not to bs used for any that are unbaptized , excommunicated , or having laid violent hands upon themselves ; that the deceased having been baptized by a Wcsleyan Methodist minister , any rite of baptism performed by him was null and void ; and that the child was therefore unbaptized in the eye of the law and the church . " Sir Herbert Jenner , in a speech which occupied beiween
four and five hours in the delivery , decided that baptism by a Dissenting clergyman was tantamount to lay baptism ; that Mr . Escott was bound , according to the canons and constitution of the Church of England to bury the child ; and that by refusing to do so he had subjected himself to ecclesiastical censure . It had , Sir Herbert said , with a most praiseworthy aud benevolent spirit been decared , that the party proceeding was on | y desirous that Mr . Escott should be admonished , and not canonically punished ; but the Court had no discretion in the case : Mr . Escott was therefore sentenced to be suspended for three mouths , and to pay the costs .
Arbival op the Great Western . —Bristol , Mat 14 . —The Great Western arrived at Kingroad from New York this evening at eight o ' clock , having left New York at two o ' clock on ; he 1 st inst ., thus completing her home voyage in thirteen days . Her outward voyage was completed iu fourteen days and a half , having arrived at New York on the 23 rd of April . She has brought home ninety-seven passengers , and some despatches for Government , but no specie . We have rectived by her New York papers to the 1 st inst ., but we regret to say that up to tho time of her departure nothing whatever was known of the President , although news had reached New York from Havannah , and other West India islands , to the loth of April . In the House of Assembly for
the State of New York an important debate upon the case of Mr . M'Leod had taken place on the 19 th uh ., on the motion of a Mr . Homann ( a decided Locofoco J for the release of Mr . M'Leod , Mr . Homauu holding it to be inconsistent with the national honour lo continue Mr . M'Leod in prison after the Government of Great Britain had taRen the affair of the Caroline upon themselves . Mr . M'Leod however , still continued in prison at the time the Great Western sailed , and nothing definitive was known of the negociations between vhe United States Government and that of Great Britain , nor would anything definitive be done in the matter until the extra session of Congress . It was , however , known that a good understanding subsisted between the organs of ; he two Governments at Washington on the subject . Congress was to be convened on the
31 st of May , and the eyes of the whole country , it was said , would turn in anxious expectation on the first movements of the dominant party . The new President was going on well , and the impress was becoming general that he would infuse into every branch of the public service a degree of energy and integrity that had not been seen since the early days of the republic , occupying , as he did , a position independent of all parties , la Canada a strong opposition was growing up against Lord Sydenham , and the Canadians were in a state of considerable excitement at the proposed alteration of ihe timber duties iu the Imperial Parliament . A meeting of the commercial interest had been held at Queb"c , and strong resolutions against it passed , with which they had waited on the Governor General . London paper .
Mistress and Maid . —At Hatton Garden policeoffice , on Saturday , Ann Horwell , a respectably attired woman , who was described in the police sheet as being married , and residing at No . 11 , Park-terrace , Camden-town ; and Hannah Milligan , a young woman , who was described as her servant , were placed at the bar , before Mr . Greenwood , charged by Sergeant Grey , No . 12 , G . division , with being drunk , fighting , and creating a disturbance . — Grey having been sworn , stated that , yesterday morning , about one o'clock , he was attracted by a noise in Swinton-street , Gray's-inn-road , and , on proceeding thither , he found the prisoners fighting together . Milligan knocked Horwell down , and rolled her in the kennel ; and , on Horwell getting up , she belaboured her with her para ? ol . Witness
separated them , and threatened that he would take them to the station-house if they did not go home . They left the spot ; but , in a short time , they returned , and commenced fighting again , when , with the assistance of policeman 39 G ., he took them to the station-house , when a bottle of gin was found in the possession of Horwel ! , who said she was a respectable married woman , residing at No . 11 , Park-terrace , Camden-town , and that Milligan was her servant . —Constable 39 G . corroborated this evidence , and produced the bottle of gin ( a ginger-beer bottle ) . Inspector Penny here stated that the mistress was well known . She had been in custody a month ago for being drnnk , and she was then bailed out . She had also been at Islington
stationhouse , under singular cirenmstances . —Horwell : I certainly was in custody about last Christmas . I had a party of friends , and took too much wine . ( A laugh . )—Mr . Greenwood : What have you to say to being drunk and fighting with your servant , as yoH call her ! Horwell—I went to see my husband off to New Orleans yesterday morning , and I received an invitation to take some wine at the docks ; I took my servant with me , and we certainly did take more than agreed with us , and we quarrelled on our way home . Inspector Penny—She told me that Bhe had a " tasting order , " to taste wine at the docks , and she was so fond of " Malaga" that she took too much of it . ( A laugh . ) Mr . Greenwood—How do you account for the possession of the gin , after " tasting"
much " Malaga ! " ( A laugh . ) Horwell—We called upon our baker on our way home , and he gave me the gin . Mr . Greenwood—Such conduct is not very reputable—drunk and fighting at such an hour in the morning . Inspector Penny expressed his suspicion that Mrs . Horwell and her servant were no better than they should be , and that the former kept a house of a certain description . She had been seen about at late hours in the Pentouville-road . Mrs . Horwell ( starting with apparent astonishment . ) Oh , dear ! I can assure you I am a respectable married woman , and I am living with my poor old mother , with her broken finger , in Park-terrace . Hayliss , the usher , said he knew Park-terrace , Camden-town , to be a most respectable place , and they ware all
highly respectable houses in it . Mr . Greenwood asked the servant what she had to say \ Servant —( looking downward)—I certainly quarrelled with mistress and we fought together , I am very sorry for it . ( Laughter . ) Mr . Greenwood said that whether they were mistress or servant was quite immaterial ; if she , Horwell , was mistress the case was rendered more disgraceful , that she should be found drunk fighting with her servant . He would convict her ( Horwell ) in the penalty of 20 s . and Milligan in the penalty of is . Mrs . Horwell clasped her hands , bawled out and exclaimed , " Oh ! my God ! I hav ' nt got the money , what shall I do ; do forgive me , I pray . " Both prisoners iwere locked up until their fines were forthcoming .
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A tounq ladt named Jenkins poisoned herself with a dose of laudanum , at Dover , on Thursday week . The loss of her parents , end disappointment in a love affair , led to the melancholy act . ^ Siticidk . —A determined aot of self-destruction was lately committed by a married woman , named Linted , residing ia Marcham-street , Westminster . A lodger went to draw some waier '' Jl ™ , Zt I ? " * * into the water tank , saw the deceased sitting at the bottom of the tank , the water barely covering her head . When got out she was cold and lifeless . The unfortunate woman got into the tank and deliberately sat there until ehe was suffocated .
A Bit of Bullying . —The Vindicator , an Irish paper , says : — "Once again , and again and again , we call upon tho people of Ulster , as men of shrewd sense , as men of the world , to consider , looking at their interests alone , whether they will rather pull diif- rent ways , like greyhounds in couples , for insolent , wnorant , plundering England , than pull together as one man , for the elevation of their common country . " ! ¦ -. Disturbances in Russia . —According to the Augsburgh Gazette , some disorders had broken out in the Government of Moscow , caused by the dearness of food , resulting from a succession of bad harvests . The same paper states that the differences on Church matters between Russia and the Papal See had been settled . This journal , as also the Suabian Mercury , announce that the French Government had at length consented to liberate Don Carlos , who was to receive an annual allowance from the Northern Courts .
Useful Hint . —A graduate , who had taken high honours at the University , was selected , on account of his known attainments and learning , as Incumbent of a new church in a populous parish . Inexperience , however , in a most important duty led , much to the surprise of his parishioners , to a failure , which was promptly rectified by au old matter-of-fact churchwarden ieavinj , ' iu the vestry-room ihe following note : — " Rev . Sir , if you would preach 50 per cent , slower , and 110 per cent , louder , ' you would preach with 1 , 000 per cent , greater effect . "— Cheltenham Examiner .
Last London Park . —On Tuesday week , Mr . E . J . Sunley nioved a resolution to the effect that a sum , the produce of the sale of York House , with the interest accruing thereon , now vested in Exchequer bills , should be expended in tho purchase of a royal park , to belaid out for the accommodation of the public in the neighbourhood of Spitalfidds . The particular site fixed upon was that piece of land called Bonner ' s fields , containing 290 acres . Gerjiamsji . —Germanism 1 is " going it" at a more furious rate than ever . At the Court and the camp , in fashion and literature , the transcendental pretensions of these whiskered hordes are thrust upon us . A Gorman newspaper in London , it appears , is the next nuisance to be endured by the public ; as if German principles aud habits were not already sufficiently propagated among an English community .
Such a speculation could , " of course , only be entered into upon tho supposition that there is Germanism enough amongst / us to make it pay , for the idea of Germans doing anything from disinterested motives would be utterly ridiculous . Ab to a German paper being taken in by the vagabondising personages who infest this metropolis , its projectors are much too shrewd to form any such rash expectations . They rely mainly , doubtless , on the amiable propensity of native noodles to patronise foreign talent . Yet we might be content , one would imagine , with German singers , German musicians , and German humbugs of other kinds too numerous to mention . We might havo hoped to keep the press pure ; but it seems as if the fashionable German infection of the day was to spread over the surface of English society . —Satirist .
Single Stick . —It would seem that this old English athletic game , for which the county of Somerset was onco so famed , has not been entirely relinquished . On Monday , two matches came off , at the Three Crowns , Walcot , between tho celebrated Simon Stone , and the well-known Uriah Wall , for £ 25 aside ; and between Henry Dove and Israel Hole , for £ 10 aside . The game between the two former was most scientifically played . Stone was the winner in the third bout . Hole was the winner
in the eighth bout . Also a match between two Batheaston men , named Beasley and Sweet , which was won by the latter . Stone and Wall then commenced play again , but seven bouts having been played without any decisive result , Wall " gave his head" ( as it is technically termed ) to Stone , and he was accordingly declared the conqueror . In like manner , Dove also " gave the head" to Hole , who was declared the victor . A considerable number of spectators assembled on the occasion . —Bath Chronicle .
A Thirsty Soul . —At Union Hall , London , on Saturday , Ali Babao , a lascar , was charged with entering a brewery and drinking a quantity of beer , beside spilling a quantity of the same liquor . At an early hour in the morning , as a policeman was on duty at Peckham , he heard a noise as he was passing Berryman ' s Brewery , and , on entering , he i-aw the defendant , who was on his hands and knees , drinking beer out of a waste tub , which was underneath a barrel , from which the tap-cock had been drawn , and the porter was flowing into the vessel beneath it . The tub was flowing over ; and , when the defendant was discovered in 6 uch a situation , his excuse was , that he was thirsty , and that , having
found his way into the brewery , he was determined to make the best use of his time , and having no smaller vessel , he pulled the tap-cock out of one of the barrels , and filled the waste butt , out of which he drank until he was satisfied . He added that he had no intention of stealing and carrying away any of the liquors ; aud all that he wanted was to satisfy his appetite , and hoped that he would not be punished thb time . In reply to the magistrate , tho defendant said that he was a native of Calcutta , and wanted to go home , but could not get a passage , and ho was starving about the streets . The magistrate committed the defendant for a mouth , as an idle and disorderly character .
The Waldegbavb Affair . —There is a strange story abroad , relative to the outrage for which Lord Waldegrave and Capt . Duff are now confined in the Queen ' s Bench . It is said that one of the parties could , without any difficulty , have proved an alibi , but that it could only have been done at the expense of a young aristocrat , whose orthodox prospects would have been endangered . The awkwardness of a possible exposure , it is eaid , was the real reason of a late resignation of a seat in the House of Commons . —Chronicle . Mr . Hetherington , a prisoner in the Queen ' s Bench , complains of the indulgence shown to Lord Waldegraye in being permitted to promenade with his lady between the gates ; and he asks whether ho and his fellow prisoners are not entitled to a similar indulgence ? He adds , that the " liberal" donations to the poor prisoners were confined to a solitary 2 s . 6 d . dropped into the poor-box by a gentleman who accompanied Lady Waldegrave when she first visited the prison .
Extraordinary Fields of Ice in the Atlantic—The following letter , which will be found very interesting , was given to us by the commander of the Great Western on boarding that vessel : — " Great Western steam-ship , Bristol Channel , May 14 , 1841 . —Sir , —Under the impression that ice , to the extent it has been seen this year , has never before been heard of in these latitudes , I give you the following particulars for the information of your readers : —On Sunday , April 18 , the Bhip steering west , at six p . m . first saw one iceberg on the starboard bow ; at 7 30 , passed it ; at that time , four or five others in sight ; at 9 15 , passed several small pieces of ice—slowed the engines . In a few minutes after , the ship was surrounded with light field ice
which appeared similar to a field I ran through on the 11 th February , 1839 : this induced me to go slowly , with the hopes of getting through , as I had done on that occasion , bat , by 9 30 , finding it became closely packed , and much thioker , prudence dictated our escape by the same channel we had entered . I then stopped , and attempted to get the ship ' s head to the eastward by turning a-head and astern until there was room for her to come round ; in the course of this operation , the ship bad occasionally ( at least ) two strokes heel given by either wheel passing over large masses of ice . At 10 15 , succeeded in getting the ship ' s head to the eastward , and by 11 entirely clear ; from that time went slowly , passing several icebergs : the night at times very clear , the aurora
boreau ' 8 very bright . At 3 30 a . m . of the lihh , again got embayed in the ice , stopped , hauled short round on our keel , and steered out E by S , coasting the ico for five or six miles ; 4 40 , kept her to the westward running through innumerable icebergs until 8 30 , when we passed the last iceberg and point of the field ice . When the sun arose the ico was visible as far as the eye could reach in an unbroken line from NE by E by the northward to NW by W . at the same time icebergs innumerable in every direction , forming one of the most magnificent sights I ever beheld . The first iceberg we saw was in Iat . 43 , long . 48 . 30 , and this last in Iat . 42 . 20 , long . 50 " . 0 . 1 am quite sure there was an unbroken field of that extent , and from what I heard from Captain Bailly . of the American packet ship United States , I have no doubt the field ice extended , with very little break , to Iat . 40 SO , where Captain Bailly fell in with
it on the morning of the 11 th . Several other ships also fell in with it in the same longitude , and were completely stopped , giving them an opportunity of killing seals , which were on it in great numbers . Some of the icebergs I estimate a little ( if at all ) less than a mile long , and from 150 to 200 feet high ; this field of ice was in large masses , 6 ome of them not less than twenty feet square by six feet thick or more . The temperature ef the water , when within two mileB of ths first iceberg seen , fell suddenly from 50 degrees to 36 degrees ; air , 40 degrees to 36 degrees . When in the ice the water was 25 degrees , air 28 degrees ; during the remainder of the night and following morning the water was not higher than 30 degrees , nor the air higher than 32 degrees . Immediately after passing the last ice the water became 36 degrees , and the air 42 degrees . I am , Six , &c . Jahes Hoskin , captain . "—London paper
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New Sect . —They hava established a eociety of ** Sacred Virgins" at New Orleans . The Crescent says— " Each member is to be fifty years old , with a policy of insurance on her life for ten years more . All flirting with bachelors vitiates the policy , and the ' fair penitent' is to be instantly excommunicated , and denied the benefit of clergy . "—New York paper . m » t ' J ttfcaw « uMttMMt £ dd rail . The North Midland anu „„ T ^ *^ ways are making arrangements by which they will be able to convey passengers from London to Edinburgh in about two hours less time than they can go by the western routes . They will also be able , by the starting of a coach from Newcastle at half-past five in the morning , to take passengers from that town to London in a single day . The mails will shortly be still further accelerated on the liiie . — ffyne Pilot .
The Hat Trade . —There aie more than one thousand journeymen hatters out of employ in London and the North of England , in consequence of their demanding an advance of wages and regulation of prices . The strike has continued eleven weeks , and there is do chance of a settlement . This applies to the fur hats ; and as the country shopkeepers cannot get a supply of their beavers , they are compelled to sell silk , so that the makers of the latter sort of goods are now reaping a rich harvest . Election Proceedings . —Mr . Thomas Gisborne , M . P ., made his appearance in Leicester on Wednesday , and breakfasted with his Radical friends at the
Bell . We understand this movement is in connection with the tottering state of the Ministry and the impending dissolution . The Radicals here are in great fear about returning Mr . Ellis , and intend to propose Mr . Gisborne instead of him . As an instance of the versatility of this worthy , we may mention that he told the farmers-that , under any circumstances , co'n could never be less than £ 3 per quarter . " How , then , " they inquired , " can you talk about cheap bread ] what benefit will the change bring to the poor t what can you say to them ! " " Oh , " rejoined the Liberal , "I must think about that—I must hit upon something to say to them ["—Leicester Journal .
Destructive Fire . — About twenty-five minutes to one o ' clock on Monday morning , the cooperage of Mn Bryant , in Cross-street , Blackfriars , was discovered to be on fire : in a very short time the engines from the Waterloo-road station and the West of England were on the spot , followed by those from Watiing-street , &c . In less than ten minutes after the outbreak of the fire the whole building was one mass of flame ,, and the greatest feara were entertained for the safety Of the houses on the left hand side of the street . By the united exertions of the firemen , assisted by a good supply of water , the flames were confined to Mr . Bryant ' s premises , and by half-past one o ' clock all danger for tho safety of the adjoining property was at an end . Owing to the confusion which prevailed , we could not ascertain whether Mr . Bryant is insured .
Bigamy and Abduction ; or , Possession Ninetenths of thr Law . —A rather novel case was tried at the Belfast Petty Sessions last Thursday . A gay-Lothario , named Pat M ' Cann , having succeeded in securing the affections of one of the fair daughters of Ballymacarrett , called Nancy Walsh , offered to lead h « r to Hymen ' s blissful altar . Nancy embraced not only Pat , but the opportunity of being made happy through life ; and thereupon the pair proceeded to a couple-beggar , got married , and were returning homo ; but being , unfortunately , detained at a friend's house , another fair lady , called Peggy Burns , alias Graham , whose prior claim on Pat ' s hand is evident , stepped forward , and " forbade the banns . "
Pegg succeeded in carrying off by force the astonished wight , and left the hapless Nancy to enjoy the benefits of single blessedness , not , indeed , until the windows of her friend ' s' house had been left minus divers panes of glass , and her own fair person presented with a few tokens of affectionate recognition , in the shape of black eyes . Peggy , in the meantime , thinking that not a moment was to be lost , managed matters so well , that Pat allowed her to make him a happy man , and herself an honest woman . The case and cross-case being fully heard by the bench , both were dismissed , Mrs . Peggy M'Cann having to pay over to the less fortunate Nancy Walsh all costs . — Vindicator .
A Hint to the Female Chartists . —A writer in the Scotch Patriot , speaking of Mr . Moir , says : — " Like Mr . Feargus O'Connor , of whom he is an ardent admirer , Mr . Moir is a tall , handsome , wellproportioned gentleman ; and , so far as outward appearance goes , is in every way well qualified to hold the position of a leader . He has a clear complexion—a bald , open forehead—is also of fair height , and well-proportioned . His hair , which is not of very thick growth , is of a light sandy colour . He has a pair of small sparkling eyes , that , when adorned by his speotacles , seem to penetrate every object on which they may be rivetted ; and , upon
the whole , he may be described as a genteel , welldressed , good-looking , middle-aged gentleman . We would suppose him about forty years of age . He is a bachelor , by the bye , and , being free and affable in his manners , he would doubtless prove a very agreeable companion for any marriageable female Chartist , who was fortunate enough to inspire him with the tender passion . But he is not a man to be cozened out of his own opinion , or to be turned aside from the path he has chalked out for himself for any ordinary consideration . Hois a man , too , who seems to look to two sides of a picture , and to look well before he leaps . "
The Armstrong Liver Pills are recommended as an Anti-bilious medicine , to every sufferer from bilious complaints and indigestioa , or from au inactive liver , and are procurable at all Druggists , and at the Northern Star office . It is only necessary to see that the stamp has "Dr . John Armstrong ' s Liver Pills" engraved on it in white letters , and to let no ene put you off with any other pills . N . B . The Pills in the boxes enclosed , in marbled paper , and marked B ., are a very mild aperient , and are particularly and universally praised . They are admirably adapted for sportsmen , agriculturists , men of business , naval and military men ; as they contain no mercury or calomel , and require neither confinement to the house , nor restraint in diet .
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NEWS FROM AMERICA . The Columbia steam-ship arrived at Liverpool on Saturday afternoon . She left Boston on the 1 st and Halifax on tho 3 rd inst ., and has made the passage in about twelve days . The following are the only extracts from the American papers of the slightest interest : — Liberation op Mr , M'Leod . —The distinguished Charles H . DeJavan is again in town from Washington , where he spent the last two months . Mr . Delavan informs us that at a Cabinet Council on Saturday Iast . it was agreed to deliver up M'Leod to the
British authorities—and perhaps Mr . Delavan himself will be appointed to the important trust of making the delivery . —New York Herald , April 30 . General Jackson . —The newspapers have busied themselves very much of late with the pecuniary affairs of General Jackson , and considerable sentimentality has been expended upon a statement made in several of the journals that he had become poor by endorsing for his friends . The old Roman don't stand this , and has authorised a Pennsylvania paper to pronounce the story " false in every particular !¦" We need not say that we are very glad to hear it .
Execution of Negroes . —Havannah . —Havannah papers to the 15 th have been received in New Orleans . The Courier says— " A few hours previous to the departure of the Natchez , intelligence reached Havannah that sixty-two negroes from Jamaica , believed to bo abolitionist emissaries , had effected a landing on the south side of Cuba . Thirty of those black subjects of Queen Victoria had been arrested and ordered to be shot . The Spanish authorities were in pursuit of the others . " Tho Bee , of the same city , says , that these thirty " were immediately arrested , tried , condemned , and executed . " The Courier adds , "It waft understood at Havannah , that 8 , 000 troops were about sailing from Cadiz for Havannah . Indeed , a few of them arrived last week . This looks as if Espartero was apprehensive of an attack on Cuba from some European power or other .
Attempted Murder and Suicide . — -An attempted murder and suicide occurred on board the steamer Clipper , on Sunday evening last , while on her way from this city to Bayou Sara . As we could learn the particulars , it seems that Mr . Tiernan , an old and respectable planter of Point Coupee , had a sum of money stolen from him while on board the Clipper , and soon ascertained that it was taken by a yellow boy belonging to him , some fourteen years of age . He did nothing to the boy at the time , but threatened him with a severe flogging on reaching
Point Coupee . Shortly after Mr . T . went to his berth , lay down , and was soon asleep . The boy , probably instigated by the fear of future punishment , got a large butcher ' s knife , went to his master ' s state room , and stabbed him twice in the throat , inflicting severe , and it was feared mortal , wounds . He then fled to the bow of the boat , and , as the men were approachiug to secure him , jumped overboard , and was seen no more . We learned the particulars at Donaldsonville on Sunday evening last , at which time it was feared that Mr . Tiernan would not survive . —New
Orleans Paper . K The notorious Vessel the Malek Anhel arrived at Baltimoro on Tuesday , from Rio Janeiro , under command of Lient . Ogden , of the U . S . Navy . The crew have all been arrested , examined , and committed on a charge « . f piracy . Joseph Nunez , the captain , escaped » t Bahia , and was not retaken . Five young mer . are now in gaol at Brooklyn , New York , for comir . itting a most atrocious rape ; on a married womajj , in Myrtle-lane . They were of a gang of fifteen , and strong hopes are entertained that those now at Wge will soon be secured . The poor woman , we ur iderstand , is dead . No punishment can be too sevese for these inhuman rascals .
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Morb Mormons . —The' St . Lonia Bulletin says" Two hundred and thirty-seven Mormons came up in the Moravian yesterday from New Orleans . They are from Westmorland , Lancaster , and Yorkshire , England , and are bound for Nauvoo , Illinois . " Mr . Fox . —It is intimated that Mr . Fox , tho British Minister , is about to marry a sister of the Russian Minister ' s lady , Miss Williams . The bridegroom in this match , should it occur , will be 2 seu ioout ± } l : dMr mdQ about akfcW vTAfc * York Toiler . The Temperance Reform is exciting the most intense interest in MontfeaL Meetings are frequently held and fully attended , eloquent addresses delivered , and during eight days 328 new signatures were obtained to tho pledge . Its beneficial influence is felt , particularly among the soldiers stationed at that place .
Manufactures . —Numerous cotton , manufactories have been erected within a few yeara at the South , most , if net all , of which are successful in their operations . In the city of Fey teville , F . C , six large mills have been erected , and the amount of capital invosted ir 3 ff 0 , 000 dollars . More ill News from Floeida . —The correspondent of the Savannah Republican , in a letttr dated Pilatki , April 19 th , says— "I am sorry to inform you that the war has broken out anew . I have just learned that all the Indians , sare about twenty , have left Tampa—among them Wild Cat , and , in fact , all of any note . They have killed a couple of express riders . The bag containing tho mail has been found perforated with two bullet ? , one of which was found in a package' © f letters . I fear we shall hear bad news shortly from these Indians . "
Captain Ward , a passenger on board the ship Grotius , below at Boston , from Manilla , and last from Sc . Helena , reports that seven vessels , slavers , had arrived at St . Helena , with 700 slaves , prizes to her Britannic Majesty ' s cruisers on the west coast of Africa . The last that arrived ( March 2 )" threw overboard sixty dead slaves in sight of . Helena . Daring . —On the 15 th . ot February , a * Mr . Tancy of Washington county , Ma . was awakened about midnight by a sound like the breaking of a door , in an adjoining room to that in which his family were sleeping . He sprang from his bed , seized a loaded rifle , and stood waitiHg-about fifteen minutes when
the door was softly opened , and he saw his servantman by the light of a fire in the stove , with a large butcher knife in his hand . Upon his exclaiming , " advance once step and you aro a dead man , " the negro instantly ran , and . succeeded i ) i making his escape to Pennsylvania . Fire . ^ —Tho cotton mill owned by Messrs . James Rhodes and Song , at " 'Riiodesvills , Thompson , Ct . was destroyed by fire on Wednesday night . The building was of brick , and ei g hty feut iu length , Ii contained 3 , 000 spindles and 50 looms . It wa 3 insured for 10 , 000 dollars at the American Office , and for 12 , 000 dollars at the Manufacturer !! ' Mutual Office , in Providence . The origin of the fire is unknown .
Shocking Accident . —While Mr . Martin Mikesell , Cambria comity , Penn , and wife were absent from home at a sugar camp , their house took fire and was totally destroyed , with all its contents . When they returned they found their dwelling in ruins , and that three little children left in it had perished in the flames .. Thb Cincinnati Chronicle of the 17 tli inst ., states that Edward Layton , tho young man who had been arrested on the charge of having caused the death of Mr . Griswell , a Baptist preacher , was brought before the Mayor for examination . After hearing the testimony in the case , he was committed for trial on the charge of murder .
Murdkr . —The Portland Argus states that Mr . Moses Butterfield murdered his wife and two youngest children , in Sumner , Oxford County Maine , on Wednesday last . Two others of the family only saved themselves by flight . Mr . B . has been hitherto a highly respectable citizen of that town , but has be « fi subject to fits of insanity . His alleged reason for murdering his family was to save them from eternal ruin at the approaching end of the world . He has been committed to gaol in Paris .
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From the London Gazette of Friday , May H . BANKRUPTS . Cpchran Davidson aud Samuel Bradley , Fen-court , Fenchurca-street , merchants , to surrender May 25 , at eleven , June 25 , at half-past one , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-street . Solicitors , Messrs . Wood and Ellis , Corbet-court . Gracechurch-street ; official assignee , Mr . Whitmore , Basinghall-street . John Walter , Carburton-street , Fitzroy-square , cheesemonger , May 29 , ateleven , June 25 , at twelve , at the Court of Bankruptcy , Basinghall-street . Solicitor , Mr . Humphreys , Newgate-street ; official assignee , Mr . Edwards , Frederick-place , Old Jewry .
Thomas Dare , Exeter ; builder , May 27 , June 25 , at one , at the Old London Inn , Exeter . Solicitors , Mr . Pearson , Essex-street , Strand ; and Mr . Floud , Exeter . Thomas Toney , Birmingham , draper , May 28 , June 25 , at one , at the Union Inn , Birmingham . Solicitors , Messrs . Barker and Son , and Mr . Bartlett , Birmingham ; and Messrs . Holme , Loftus , and Young , New Inn . . . Alexander Fothergill , Rochdale , Lancashire , cottonspinner , May 26 , June 25 , at eleven , at the Commissioners' Rooms , Manchester . Solicitors , Mr . Smith , Chaucery-lane ; and Messrs Shuttleworth , Holdgate , and Roberts , Rochdale . William Wetton , Coventry , riband-manufactiiier , May 26 , at one , June 25 at eleven , at the Craven Arms Hotel , Coventry . Solicitor , Mr . Beck , Ironmongers ' Hall , Fenchurch-street .
John Algar , Great Yarmouth , flshiDg merchant , May 18 June 25 , at nine , at the Star inn , Great Yarmouth . Solicitors , Mr . Palmer , Great Yarmouth ; and Mr . Storey , Field-court , Gray ' s Inn . Ambrose Riley , Burnley , Lancashire , cotton manufacturer , May 27 , June 25 , at twelve , at the Bull Ion , Burnley . Solicitors , Messrs . Milne , Parry , Milne , and Morns , Temple ; and Messrs . Caistor and Farnworth , Manchester .
DISSOLUTION'S OF PARTNERSHIP . R . Sharp and S . Thompson , Bradford . J . Crookes and H . Crookes , Sheffield , manufacturer of pen-knives T . Jones and T . Swinton , Warrington , Lancashire , groceis . E . Lamb and £ . Overcnd , Manchester , publicans . W . Hutchinson and S . Buxton , Leeds , brickmakers . A . Johnston , R . Hardey , and S . Stephenson , Kingston-upon-Hull , timber-merchants ; as far as regards A . Johnston . R . Guest and J . Farnworth , Bedford , Lancashire , brewers . H . Rhomer , sen ., J . Rhoiner , and H . Rhomer , jun ., Manchester ; as far as regards H . Rhoiner , ' sen . F . Pickersgill , R . Pickersgill , and j ] Pickersgill , Leeds , common carriers .
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From the Gazette of Tuesday , Hay 18
BANKRUPTS . John Kingsford . and Flavius Ebenezer Kingaford , wine-merchants , Dover , to surrender May 26 , at two , and June 29 , at eleven * at the Court of Bankruptcy . Lackington , Coleinan-atreet-buildings , official assignee ; Dimmock , Sizu-lane . William Mallison , merchant , Blackburn , June 8 and 29 , at eleven , at the Town-hall , Preston . Milne , Parry , Milne , and Morris , Temple , London ; Neville , Aiusworth , and Beards worth , Blackburn . William Day and Thomas Day , oilmen , Gracechurcb * street , May 29 , at twelve , and June 29 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Edwards , official assignee , Fredeiick ' s-place , Old Jewry ; Capes and Stuart , Field-court , Gray ' s Inn . Robert Field , banker , Cartmel , Lancashire , May 26 and June 29 , at twelve , at the Commercial Inn , Kendal , Westmorland . Wilson and Harrison , Kendal ; Norris , Allen , and Simpson , Bartlett ' s-buildings , London .
Ralph Harris , merchant , Lower Thames-street , May 28 and June 29 , at twelve , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Belcher , official assignee ; Luttly , Fourdrinier , and Morse , Dyers ' -hall . College-street , Dowgate . H . W . Fernyhough , bookseller , Reading , May 25 and June 29 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy Pennel ) , official assignee ; Lamb , Furnival ' s-inn , Holborn . Jonah Wheeler , victualler , Bath , June 8 and 29 , ateleven . attheConiniereial-roems , Bath . Horton , Furnival ' s-Inn , London ; Mant and Harvey , Bath . W'lliam Knowles , clotbeaman , Hyde , Cheshire , May 23 , at eleven , and June 29 , at two , at the Commis sioner's-rooms , Manchester . Clarke and Medcalf , Lincoln ' s Inn-fields , London ; Brooks , Aahton-under Lyne .
Peter Higgins , brewer , Salford , Lancashire , May 28 and June 29 , at ten , at the Cummissioner ' s-rooms , Manchester . Adlingtoh , Gregory , Faulkner , and Follett , Bedford-row , London ; Morris , Manchester . Ralph Johnson , builder , Newcastle-upon-Tyne , June 10 , at eleven , and June 29 , at two , at the Commission room , Newcastle-upon-Tyne . Cuvelia , Skilbeck , and Hall , London ; Keenlyside , Nowcastte-upon-Tjne . Richard Runmer ; tailor , Liverpool , May 31 and June 29 , at one , at the Clarendon-rooms , Liverpool . Neal , Liverpool ; Hall , Bishop , and Meurilyan , Yernlambuildinga , Gray ' s-Inn , London . . Thomas Dash , innkeeper , Naw Windsor , Berkshire , May 25 and June . , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Gibson , official aasigaeea , Basinghall-street ; Ward . Essex-street ,
Strand-James Cadbury , cheesemonger , New Bond-street , May 25 , and June 29 , aV the Court of Bankruptcy . Green , official assignee , Alderonnbury ; Humphreys , Newgate-street > ' ' ¦ John Noble and Joseph Freer , hosiers , Leicester , May 24 , at eleven , and June 29 . at three , at the Castle , Leicester . Stone and Paget , Leicester ; Taylor , Sharpe , Field , and Jackson , Bedford-tow , London . John Knowles , Henry Rod well , George Russell Parker , and John Thomas Bang , silkbrokers , Throg niorton-street , May 31 , at half-past ten , and June 29 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy . Turqoand , official assignee , CopthaU-buildings ; Crowder aad Co ., Mansionhouse-yard , London . .
William -Northcroft , builder , Egbam , May 28 , and June 29 , at eleven , at the Court of Bankruptcy Cannan , official assignee , Finsbury-square ; Byte , Hancourt , Temple , '
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' . THE NORTHERN STAR . o
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Northern Star (1837-1852), May 22, 1841, page 3, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct707/page/3/
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