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WEST BIDING OF YORKSHIRE.
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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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Untitled Ad
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , that a SPE C 1 AL ADJGURKED SESSIONS of the Peace for the West Riding of the ; County of York , Tvill be holden at the Coort House , in Wakefield , on Fbidat , the Twenty-Third -Day of Jdmb instant , at Twelve o'clock atKoon , tofreceive and take into consideration the Report of the Committee appointed at the last Pontefract Sessions , for the puroose of considering what measures might be desirable to adopt in order to carry out those provisions of the Statue of the 5 and 6 Viet ., c . 109 , intituled " An Act for the appointment and 1 payment of
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WEST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE . MIDSUMMER SESSIONS . NOTICE IS HEREBY G 1 TEN , that the Midsnmmer General Quarter Sessions of the Peace for the West Riding of the County of York , will be opened at SMpton , on Tuesday , the 27 th Day of June instant ; snd by Adjournment from thence will be holden at Bradford , on Wbdmssdat , the 28 th Day of the same month of June , at Ten of the Clock in the Forenoon of each of the same days ; and also , by further Adjournment from thence , will be holden at Rotherham , on Moxdat , the 3 rd Day of July next , at Eleven of the Clock in the Forenoon , when all Jurors , Snitors , Persons bound by Recognizance , and others having business at the said several Sessions , fire required to attend the Court on the several Days and at the several Hours above mentioned .
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LOAN of HiB Royal Highness the GRAND DUKE OF HESSE DARMSTADT , ( guaranteed by the States of the Country ) of * 6 Millions 500 , 000 florins , to be reimbursed with ] 21 , 419 , 800 florins . Unrivalled distribution of Prizes . 1500 Money Prizes musk be obtained by the next drawing of this Royal State Loan , taking place on the 1 st of July , 1843 , asfollows : —1 priz 9 of 40 , 000 florins j 1 ofl 0 , 000 fl ; l of 5 . 000 ft ; Iof 3000 fl ; 6 ofWOOfl : 10 of 400 fl . ; 20 uf 200 fl . ; 60 of 100 fl . ; 100 ef 90 fl . ; 500 of 88 n . ; 800 of 86 fl . ; 1500 prices amounting to 1 P 9 . 800 florins . 10 fl . being equal to £ 1 sterling . Price of Bondsfor this drawing—One Bond , £ 1 ; 11 do . £ 10 ; 24 do . - £ 20 . The Official Original lost of Numbers of the 1580 prizes -win be forwai-ded to the Shareholders immediately after the drawing . The amount of prizes'will be paid in cash at Frankforton-ihe-Maine , and'London .
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READ AND JUDGE ! ADMI 1 TED TJKDEB FIFTY TEABS OF AGE THB FIRST KIKE M 0 K 1 HS J A MOST favourable opportunity to the Industrious Classes to ensure themselves Proprietors of Land and Property—to provide against Sickness , " Wast , and & Poor Law Union—is ' offered to Healthy Men , in Town or Country , by joining the TOOTED PATRIOTS' BENEFIT AND CO-
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JustPublished , pric 6 2 b . 6 d ., and sent free , " encZosf d in a sealed , envelope" on receipt of a PoBi-office Order for 3 s . 6 d . MANLY VIGOUR : a Popular Inquiry into the CONCEALED CAUSES of its PREMATURE DECLINE ; iwith Instructions for its COMPLETE RESTORATION , addressed to those suffering from the Destructive Consequences of Excessive Indulgence in Solitary and Delusive Habits , Youthful Imprudence , or Infection ; including a comprehensive Dissertation on Marriage , with directions for the removal of Disqualifications , and Remarks on the Treatment of Ghonorrhoe , Gleet , Strioture and SyphiliBi Illustrated with Cases , &o .
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0 GRIMSHAW AND ! CO ., 10 , Goree Piazzas , I Liverpool , Despatch fine FIRST CLASS AMERICAN SHIPS , ofdarge Tonnage . for NEW YORK and NEW ORLEANS , ever | week ; and occasionally to BOSTON ; PHILADELPHIA and BALTIMORE , and for QUEBEC aud MONTREAL , also first rate British Vessels to NEW SOUTH WALES and VAN DIEMANS LAND .
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Just Published , the 12 th Edition , Price 4 s ., and sent Free to any part of tho United Kingdom on the receipt of a Post Office Order , for AV
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THE BEST MEDICINE IN ) THE WORLD a BEAD ! AND JUDGE FOR YOURSELVES 1 ' THE following statement of facts has been com . , municated to the Proprietors of PARR'S LIFE PILLS : — Messrs . T . Roberts and Co . Malton , Jan . 30 , 1843 . Gentlemen , —Though it is but a very Bhort ting since I last wrote for a supply of Parr ' s Life Fills , I find that owing to an astonishing increase in the sale of them , I am again compelled to request you to send me twenty dozen of the small , as also a supply of the large size . I should wish you to forward theia by railway to York , thence by carrier , as early &s
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Just Published , Price 2 s . 6 d . ( Or sent free to the most remote parts of the Kingdom , in a sealed envelope , on tho receipt of a post-office order for 3 s . 6 d . )
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TEETH . 3 RADFORD AND LEEDS . MESSRS . MAJOR & CO ., Sobgbon Dentists , 13 , TRAFALGAR STREET , Leeds , adopt in their Practice all the recent Improvements in the Dental Ait , and all Operations on the Teeth , Gums , and Palate , on those sound Surgical Principles which nave gained them such extensive Patronage . Having studied Surgery , they can with confidence undertake those difficult Operations which so often prove fatal under the hands of the mere Mechanic . Their Charges are such as to be Within the means of those who are often deterred from consulting a Dentist , through the fear of Expense , and are thus driven into the hands of the unskilful or itinerant Practitioner . -
Untitled Article
The prisoner -was described in the certificate as " Elisabeth Eleanor Burrows , gentlewoman , " and it was dated the 30 th nit : . Caroline Cox , of No . 24 , Ebnry-place , Chnrch-Htreet , Chelsea , produced the certificate of the prisoner * * first marriage by bans , on the 26 th of February last , at St . Lnke'a Chelsta , to John Richard Cox , -witness ' s brother . They slept together at Ho . 17 , Manor-street , and the next morning he -went to a situation as porter in Ghsxlesstreet , Gfrosvenor-square . He , however-, came home every otber Snaday , snd lived with the prisoner nnta the last fortnight On one occasion of coming home her brother fonnd Mr . Williams there , and tamed him out of the honse- Witness had hereelf told Mr . Wiffiama that the prisoner was a married woman , hut he would not believe htr . She had that morning seen her brother ( the prisoner ' s first husband ) , and told him of the prisoner being in custody , when he said he would attend at that court if he eonJd .
Mr . ¦ Williams said the last witness had alw&yB been called to him by the name of Ganliner , and when he accompanied the officer , Mount , -to apprehend the prisoner , they with difficulty traced her to &e house in Ebury-place kept by Jttra . Cox , the mother of the first husband , which female he found to be the Bame woman he had known as Mrs . Gardiner . Mr . Clive told the witness ; Gardiner jshe would be ¦ very lucky if she escaped , being also charged , as he had no doubt the whole parties had been engaged in a deep conspiracy to entrap Mr . Williams . He had great doubt whether the whole ought not to be indicted . The prisoner , who had faulted during the hearing of the voluminons evidence , and been removed into the yard of the court , was then brought in , and again placed at the bar . She appeared in a very weak state , and covered her face with her hands .
The ferma . 1 depositions having been read over to her , in answer to a question if she had anything to Bay which she wished to be taken down in writing , Bhe replied that she had nothing to say . ; She was then fully committed to Newgate for trial .
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% THE NORTHERN STAR . _ J _ ^
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KENSINGTON POLICE C 0 I 7 KT . KS TK AORPINABY GASE OF BIGAMY . f On Friday a young woman o ? pleasing appearance , xslber under ths middle stature , of fair complexion , Kith a profusion of fi * x- * n hair , who was entered on the police-sheet as * EHzibeta Williams , aged 17 years , residing in Church-street , Chelsea , " was brought up before 2 dr .. fi . Clive , ihe sitting magistrate , in the custody of police constable Mount , T 126 , charged on suspicion of having stolen a silver table-spoon , the jjK-periy ol Hr . B 5 lchcDt £ , the proprietor of the Glocester Asms Tsvera , Glecester-rosd , Kensington .
The case , from the extraordinary disclosures made tfofiag the Examination , excited the greatest interest , sac the Court was densely crowded . 5 Mr . Hitchcoct Etatecl , that the prisoner , aeesmpaniea ^ 5 a young man of iugh respectability , came to his iussa on Saturday , the 27 th ult > , and , representing th- niselves as man and wife , inquired if they could biT 3 accommodation fer a faw days . Not doubting thrxr respectability from their appesraDce , he told them \ htj could , and they took possessisn of apartments in the iiessa . On the morning , of the third day after Vi < 3 s the fSOih ) the young man came to him , and acfcaowledging Ebst tiey were not man and-wife , asked his to be a witness to their marriage that day at Kenfasirton Church , and produced a license for the purpose . Witness , however , being vexed at the deception they
ixa played on hia , refused to do so , and they left the tease . On their , return , about an hour afterwards , Hit" produced to Km a certificate of the marriage , and he ; n consequence permitted thest to remain . They soi anned to reside at his house until Tuesday last , ^ ten ths young man went out early in the morning , snd did not return until dinner time . He then inquired for Ms wife { the prisoner , ) bnt she could nowhere be found on the premises , and not returning home that XQ 2 ~ t , he the next day examined the rooms occupied 3 > y lie parties , and missed a silver table-spoon which the prisoner had had to take some medicine in , and also » tt ; 3 spoon from another room . He immediately gave 3 nf nnstion to the police , who succeeded in apprstignSmg her . The spoon had , however , not been foand .
31 z .-GIive inquired if the young manioiwhom the pri -aier had been married was then present ? 3 Lr Hitchcock replied , that he was , and that he had a charge of bigamy to prefer against the prisoner . A young man'was then called forward , who having fcesa sworn , stated Ms name to be Arthur Williams , and deposed that he was a draper , at present residing it tha GRoeester Amw Tavesn . He knsw the prisoner fit tbe bar ; to whom he had been aiarried on Tuesday , Jhe 30 th of May la » t , ij licsnsa , al Kensin . gton Cfcnren . Be first met her on a Sunday si £ ht in the menth cf Ser " . ember last , about ten o ' clock , at Hyde > park-corner , ¦ B fo-: TecognrnTig her as a frequent customer at a house ta 1- snffisTrith which he was st that time connected , is botred to her and spoke to hec She immediately complained to him that a gentleman who was walking Jxiid her , and whom she pointed out to witness , had
peea aniioyisg her , and she claimed witnesses protectioo . "WiuiEss accordingly offered to see her home ; but on ihr-T arrival si iha bottom of Gafiogsn-place , Sloane-st , she refused to allow him to accompany her farther , and Ihej parted . He , however , persuaded her tff lnate an appointment to meet him again , whictf-she kept , and ¦ $ re * a the conversation he had with her , he considered her a young woman of strict moral principles , and felt f bz . " she had completely won his affections . At their thb-1 interview the prisoner stated to him that she was sn Italian ty birth , and that her name was Elizabeth £ Le ^ sar Buttowb ; that her father was an EngliEhj nai , who having married an Italian lady , had died mh ' . esbe was an infant ; that when she was between Xhrea and four years old she was sent over to this country under the care cf a Captain , which xomahe had forgotten , and placed with the captains ^ rifr at nurses that Captain- Jiad since died ,
sod that his widow had subsequently married a person xuiiEed Eiheridge , with whom she waBsSU living . She slst fold him that when old enough Ehe was placed at a Iwsrding-school st Fool ' s-Cny , Sent , from which she ii 2 < r been subsequently taken away by her guardian , Sir Harry Dann , Bart , of Boss house , Dartford , Kent , who had placed her with a Mzs . Cex , redding at Ho . 3 , Old 3 &ai or-street , Chelsea , who had an aBowance ^ of £ 200 per ¦ annum Tf 3 h her . About four months since , the jpt' -aser wrote to him a letter , r * questing to see Ti ^ tti on business cf importance , and upon meeting her in the £ V £ aing , she told him that she had been much annoyed ly her guardian ; Sir Harry Dann , Bart , pressing her to lEsve England with a Counte BeDivante . -whom-she stated her snariian said irs 3 a distant relative of her
ftbt prisoner ' s ) iuother , and in a moment of pretended ceiEdence , she told lum that both the Count and ' Sir Eauy J ) inn had itnu ^ p nnsnccessftil attempts on her virtaa . He twitnesa ) under these circumstances , advised Lsi to go to her old nurse , Mrs . Etheiidge , who , she fcsfl previously I told witness , lived in Nelson ' s-terrace , Gri- ^ awich , who would no doubt protect her ; but alii jugh Tritness offered to aecempany her , she declined going there , saying that although she could not go back to . "• Irs . Gax 3 s on account of the importunities of the Cc ^ s ^^ nd Baronet , she couli go to her laundress , a 3 ta . Gardiner , leaflinng at No . 17 , Manor-street . Witness accordingly lecommenged her to do so , and * he ba-niig hinied that she had left Mw . Cox ' s in haste , *•« SishabZle , '' snd Trithont any cash , he gsrre ier 30 a . at
32 ie uexi day he ^ sair her Mrs . Gardiner ' s , and also subsegusnHy , when she appeared to be so ill that he stopped at the house for two days and nights , but dnnxig . that- time lie was never for one moment alone with hex . When -witnEss 'was there , Hrs . 'Gsx finer told him that sh& had a sister , who was the ¦ Wilt cf a 'higWy ia 5 > ectable ¦ fi » i-mpy named Senuett , zesiGkig at Henley-npon-Thsmes , Oxen , and adted ¦ siinrss if he ¦ wonlfl 3 Ile the prisoner to ^ o down there lor a weak ? Witness at first objected to being any psrtyto such an arrangement , bat the next day the prisoner pressing the same suit , he gave her £ 2 to pay her expences . About a fortnight afterwards , he rexieived a sole irom the prisoner , informing T » im that she bad retamed to town , and was again under the
sare , f Mrs . Cor , and that she had out of her pocketjnoEcj ^ been in the habit of paying the rent , amounting \ o i £ l 8 , of ier old nurse , Hxb . EtherMge , -sriich she was t 2 isn unable to do , having , by leaving Mrs . Cox . incurred the displeasure of her guardian . The same evening , iemethtr , and gave her £ 4 10 s . Tor Mrs . Bi ± h _ -idge * s quarter * lent , £ 2 to pay the physician who had attended her at Mrs . Gsrainer ' s , and £ 2 for ber bwn uBe . About a week afterwards , she informed him that the reasoa she went hack to Hrs , Cox ' s was , that tie Count had gone off to the Confineat , and that Six H . 3 > 5 nn , her guardian , was very angry with her lor losing airing that had belonged to her father , but ¦ which , the-troih was , she had taken it with her to 2 irs . Gardiner's , whose Imsbssd had pledged it for 16 s _ ,
• watifatljar knowledge , and he immediately gave her 26 s . to redeem it He continued after that to meet her almost daily , believing her to be still residing at Mrs . Cox ' s . While he Tisited her at Mrs . Gardiner ' s ^ on cos -occasion , a yonng ¦""^ came into the room , * r » f > demsijledtoknow -what he { witness ) "wanted there ; said theprisoner-was his { the man ' s ) wife , and that his name tras Ccx , but ) ths prisoner persuaded witness that ffiwt was the nepnew < jf her gnardisn , and alihoTign the cezemony of marriage had passed between them at Sealey-upon-Trhsmes , it was sot a valid one , Inasmuch as it was performed in a private house , she comply ing in consequence of Sir H . Dana ' s threats , but it . had sever Tf * " * ct ? n ' * Tn * fr ^ j and witness subsequently spoke to a solicitor an the subject , who told- him
such a ' inarriagB was null snd void . About six -weeks ago she represented to Mm that a friend o ? her father ' s bad come from the country , a 3 Ir . Richardson , who "Would ^ rsm that the marriage with Cox was illegal ; 3 mi she then admitted that the marriage had been consummated , and said that on account of the unplea sant situation in which she was consequently placed , ISx . ¦ H ichardsoiiliadiemoved her Irom Mrs . Cox ' s to She honse of Mr . Body , a clergyman , 31 , Church-street , Chelsea ; - and about three -weeks ago she told him that , notwithstanding the positiveorders of Mr . Bichardson , yr- Body had yjniiftwi Cox into the home as her hoslaacLs On Thursday , the 25 th Hit , the prisoner again same to him apparently in great exdfement of riind ,
and said that , in consequence of Cox having been ad-Bitted by MrTBody to h # room and bed , she had xladthe house , and could soi return to it , and he ¦ walked about the street all that sight , as he could sot pet her to go into any place ef shelter . The next sight Ihey ^ gain walked about , and on the third , night he jperEuaded her to enter an iim , where they sal up in a zocm all night On the Saturday ( 27 th ) she , however , yielded to his earnest entreaties that they should take lodgings until he could procure a license to marry her , snd the apartments at Mr . Hitchcock ' s were consequently taken . OntheHonday he wentto "Mr . Brother ' s , ihB parish clerk of Kensington , who directed him ¦ where to get a license , which having been procured , Jhey were married on tha next day { Tuesday . - }
By ISz . Clive—Prisoner told me before our marriage UnVifce -was in the receipt of certain sums of money zs pocket-money from , a Mx . -, a Bolicltoi is Wel-Jjetk-street , and Oat she was sure that vhezi she was anamed to "wifeless , Sir H-Dann would give her the s £ 200-he allowed Mr . Cox lor her keep , and also the ¦ proceeds of the Tent of a honse and farm at Fooi ' s-Cray her faSher n * d Jelt her . After its had siarried fcfir , she abpwediim alettes- ahB said she had received JremBir H-Dann , appointing to meet witness at the
fireen Mas 5 nn , ^] ackheaa , between twelve and Maee Cdock , in order to come to as arrangement , to which Sflaee -witness wm 50 ns -when the prisoner absconded . She also showed lum -a letter addressed to "Lord Segrave , 2 fibnBae ^ eD » Toretta , Mflan , Italy , " -which ontained four sheeta of paper , which she said had been written by her guardian to his lordship , who was 2 m ddiriendofher father ' s , lor the purpose of maligning jar chwmhfar , ana shn inrlnced witness to write a letter to bis lordship explaining the particulars of her marriage , in ier vindication .
ilr . CHve askeS the prisoner If she -wished to put any |[ uesHon to the "witness ? Prisoner said all she had to say -was that the witness itnewsrellthatshB was a married woman , aa she and ter hnsbandiad hoth told him so . He had , however , laken ; her away -wiaoiit isr cobbed ! , and when she granted' to : gb" home again : he would sot let her , and , Jkerefors , sherasiway in his absence . Monnt , TJSS / p ^ sdnced tte certificate of the seeona marriage , which he had ionnd in Sie prisoner's pocket on taking her into custody . Ths « erSficate was signed j ^ thB ^ er : Harry Barbar , curate of Kensington , and Via signed hv the clerk and pew ^ penez as witnesses
West Biding Of Yorkshire.
WEST BIDING OF YORKSHIRE .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), June 17, 1843, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct806/page/2/
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