On this page
-
Text (5)
-
654 ®f)e 3Ltaatr. [Saturday,
-
MEETINGS OF THE WEEK. The distribution o...
-
ANOTHER MURDER IX NORFOLK. A murder esse...
-
THE EXPOSITION. Tlic receipts at the doo...
-
MISCELLANEOUS. The Corporation of London...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Man-Hunting In The West. The Sail Franci...
started on foot in pursuit of the thieves and animals ; but , finding the Indians very numerous and dangerous on the route , seven of the persons returned , leaving four men to follow the trail through the mountains . These four—B . F . Bradford , J . J . M'Kinnis , W . H . Mitchell , and Coleman Jameson—followed the trail on foot six days , and arrived at Mr . J . Klanton ' s , on Cottonwood , on the 26 th , after having been without food for two days . Mr . Klanton kindly furnished them witn food , & c , and they continued the pursuit . When they arrived at Major Reading ' s , weary and suffering with sore feet , they were 6 hown that kindness and hospitality which have ever characterised that man , furnishing them with horses and provisions to continue the pursuit . They were joined by Mr .
Peasley , who had taken the valley route on horseback , and ascertained when the . thieves had crossed the Sacramento River . While crossing the Coast Range Mountains , they were attacked by a party of Indians numbering from fifty to one hundred . The whites gave them a desperate fight , and killed thirteen of their warriors , after which , unhurt , they reached the valley , having followed the serpentine course of the thieves through the mountains ,, a distance of some 175 miles . The pursuers , now numbering five , left Major Reading s on Saturday , the 26 th , and on the evening of the 27 th found the animals quietly grazing in a secluded spot on Antelope Creek . When they recognized the animals , they looked around for the theives ; but , from the fact that the encampment was almost surrounded by chapparel , did not discover them . But on entering the chapparel they were fired at by two of the thieves , though this
fortunately without receiving any injury . Seeing , two others , more bold and determined than the first , rose to their feet . The first , J . Spafford , from Ohio , rose with his gun levelled upon Bradford , when , at the first glimpse , Bradford shot him through the heart ; the second , John Emory , known as Sailor Tom , with his gun levelled at M ' Kinnis , was shot dead by that quick-siehted Texan before he could pull trigger . George M . Holliday , the third thief , is supposed to be one . of the first that fired . He escaped , but is supposed to be wounded . There must have been a fourth , as two guns were fired from the chapparel , while SpafFord and Emory fell with loaded guns . The camp seemed to be one loDg frequented . They had a good stock of provisions and cooking utensils , seven riding saddles , a pack of cards , and ' Lorenzo Dow . ' The driving of the animals seemed to have been done by about fifty Indians , who were doubtless sent back on the trail to kill those pursuing . "
654 ®F)E 3ltaatr. [Saturday,
654 ® f ) e 3 Ltaatr . [ Saturday ,
Meetings Of The Week. The Distribution O...
MEETINGS OF THE WEEK . The distribution of prizes at University College , Gower-street , derives its public interest from the remarkable men who yearly preside on the occasion . This year Sir James Graham occupied that post , and under his auspices the prizes were given away last Saturday . When that business was concluded , Sir James delivered the customary address , and in doing so , he touchingly referred to his late friend , Sir Robert Peel . Referring to the value of the art of sculpture , he said : —
" It stimulated the warrior and the statesman to deeds of fame , by handing down their names to succeeding ages . Already those younger than he could only form conjectures of what was the appearance of Pitt by the statue of Chantrey ; their notion of Canning from the work of Westmacott . He also within the last fortnight had had to appeal to statuary to perpetuate the recollection of one whose Iosr , while life remained , he must from his heart deplore . It was not , indeed , that the worth of Peel—{ loud cheers )—required to be recorded on a
monument of bronze ; for he had ' scattered plenty o cr a smiling land , ' and his history might be read in a grateful nation ' s eyes . { Applause . ) Still statuary was wanted , for to it he must appeal to convey to the next generation some idea of that face which he ha d so much loved in this . ( Applause . ) Then , as regarded law—were they not proud of the names of Itomilly , of Horner , and of Brougham ? ( Hear , hear . ) The studies which were pursued in that university might lead his audience to equal eloquence and equal fame . "
On a topic of more interest he thus expressed him-Bclf : — " He was one of the original subscribers to the college , one of those who thought it desirable , considering the unhappy difficulties which existed upon religious topics , that secular education without reference to religious creed Hhould be freely provided within those walls . That opinion he still entertained as strongly as ever . He believed , with Junius , that really to improve the
under-Htanding was to enlarge the heart ; but though such was his firm conviction , h « could not stop there . It whs not , indeed , the duty of th . it college to impart religious instruction ; but he should ill discharge his duties if he failed to remind them that each in his individual capacity wijs bound to examine for himself the sacred truths , and was under nn obligation not to-neglect that subject which , ufter all , was the ; moat important to which humanity could apply itself . "
After Sir James had concluded his address , the Btudents separated . At a public meeting convened by the National Reform League , and held at tlio Eclectic Iiitttitutf , No . IK , Denmark-street , Solio , the following resolution , moved by Mr . F . O'Connor , M . l \ , seconded by Uronterrc O ' Brien , wan unanimously passed : — " That thin meeting observed with indignation niul regret that of lute years ( especially Mince the Reform act . gave increased political power to the middle classen ) , there him been manifested , on the part of judges and juries and of tins Crown also , a growing disposition to confound diflercncrti of political opinion with criminal and illegal acts , arid to punish the former ( when expressed againat class legiulation )
with as great , and even greater , rigour than the law awards to crime itself . Such practice this meeting holds to be disgraceful to a civilized country , and dangerous to the public safety , inasmuch as it Btifles the free expression of individual opinion , closes the legitimate channels of public complaint , and tends , through the preventing of free discussion , to force the injured and discontented classes to have recourse to secret and illegal combinations . For confirmation of these alleged truthsthe meeting appeals to the harsh
, and cruel sentences passed in 1848 upon Mr . Ernest Jones , and his fellow-prisoners , and that these sentences were carried out in a manner even more harsh and cruel than the law or the sentences warranted we may infer from the petition of Mr . Ernest Jones to the House of Commons , praying for Parliamentary inquiry into his case . " A petition , founded on the above resolution , was read , and unanimously agreed to ; and also that Lord Stanhope be requested to present the same in the House of Lords , and Mr . Wakley in the House of Commons .
The National Patent Law Amendment Association met on Tuesday evening at La Belle Sauvage Hotel , Ludgatehill , to consider the new Patent Law Amendment Bill , now progressing through Parliament , and to take steps to secure the abandonment of certain clauses , " which threaten to render the operation of the law highly injurious both to inventors and the public , and to hasten the enactment of a real patent reform bill . " Mr . Shepherd , C . E ., moved the first resolution , which was to the effect , that as it had been acknowledged by the Government and the public that the patent law required amendment ,
the bill now before Parliament should effect an efficient amendment forthwith , and the meeting wa 3 of opinion that , if this were not done , the inventors who had provisionally registered and exhibited hew inventions at the Great Exhibition , would be subjected to the injustice of having been induced to publish their inventions without reasonable means of protection being afforded by the Legislature . The motion was carried unanimously . Mr . Stocken moved the second resolution , which was to the effect that the new patent law was contrary to the interests of the inventors and the public , which was also carried unanimously .
By a report read at the annual meeting of the friends and promoters of the Grotto-passage Ragged and Industrial Schools , it appeared that , during the past year , 37 boys had been boarded , lodged , and educated ; 100 children of each sex had been under daily instruction ; 75 had been instructed in industrial occupations ; 25 of each sex had been provided daily with a dinner , the only condition being that they worked for it ; and a large number of boys had been enabled to emigrate to the colonies . A Sunday school , with an average attendance of 140 , had been in operation . Lectures on various interesting subjects had been delivered . A library and reading-room had been open gratis , and in the former there were 198 volumes , of whksh 28 had been added during the present year .
A very enthusiastic meeting was held at Exeter Hall , by the Metropolitan Wesleyan Reformers . The hall was crowded to excess , and the audience were in tt . e highest spirits . Altogether a most remarkable meeting , not at all on account of what was said , but on account of the unanimity and animation of meeting and speakers . The bazaar , held also at the hall , has at present yielded £ 350 .
Another Murder Ix Norfolk. A Murder Esse...
ANOTHER MURDER IX NORFOLK . A murder essentially stupid has been committed in Norfolk . The facts are very simple , and few words will suffice to explain them . Henry Groom , a labourer , who had been discharged from the service of the Earl of Leicester , lay in wait for the foreman of a gang of workmen engaged in building a new terrace at Holkham-park , named Ayton , on Friday last . The ambush he selected was a clay pit . While he waited there , he heard a vehicle coming along the road ; and , thinking it was Ayton , he came out , but it proved to be Dr . Young , a physician . Presently , however , Ayton did come by , and was induced to leave his donkey and cart and go with Groom into the
pit . It is conjectured that as he was returning Groom shot him , for he was fmind with the back of his head perforated with large shots . Groom Tilled the pockets of Ayton , and carried off his watch . When the body Was found , it was remembered that Groom had been seen near the spot , and a policeman was sent to search his house . There they found the money and notes which Ayton had just obtained to pay the workmen at Iiolkam park , and also the watch . Groom had attempted to get a note changed ; but failing , he had gone straight home , lie was arrested forthwith , and no doubt is entertained that he is the murderer . His motives appear to have been pnrtly revenge and partly the desire to get possesuion of the money .
The Exposition. Tlic Receipts At The Doo...
THE EXPOSITION . Tlic receipts at the doors on Saturday amounted to £ 1 />(>/> 15 s ., and the numbers entering the building wore 11 , 7 ' 17- On Monday the receipts were respectively £ ' 2 H ' ) 2 2 s ., and 01 , ( 570 vinitorn ; on Tuesday , receipts £ . 'fl (> <) f > H ., vi . sitorH , 05 , 002—the largest " take " except two , since the Exposition has been open . On the following day , however , the nunibcra fell to /> H , ()< 15 , and the receipts to Ju ' 2 , 770 Oh . On Thursday the numbers were 01 , 492 , and the receipts , £ 2904 ( is .
The removal of the gla . s . s from the eastern and western extremities of the ; building and the hides of the transept has had the effect of reducing the temperature considerably , and the highest point attained during the la . it two days was 77 degrees . The Dei by town council have agreed to an address to the Queen , pra y ing that the ( ! ryntAl Palace may be pro . served and adopted as a wjuUr purk . The directors of the ( Jit-at . Northern Railway Company have given all ' their Hcrvunis leave of absence , for five days each to visit the Great Exhibition , with each a free pass over the company ' s lines , and permission to the
married men to take their wives , and those not married to take a friend . Among the articles shown at the Great Exhibition is » drinking-glaBS divided by a partition , and intended to be used for effervescing powders . The soda is dissolved in one compartment , and the tartaric acid in the other and by applying the mouth to the place where the parti ' , tion joins the outside of the glass , the two liquids co m " bine as they flow into the mouth , and effervesce as they are drunk . More ingenious than useful ! '
Miscellaneous. The Corporation Of London...
MISCELLANEOUS . The Corporation of London have granted a further sum of one hundred guineas in aid of the funds for the erection of the City of London Hospital for Diseases of the Chest , at the Victoria Park . The second annual meeting of the " Westminster Freehold Land Society was held last Wednesday evening , the Parthenium-rooms , St . Martin ' s-lane , P . E . Barnes Esq ., in the chair . The following gentlemen were unanimously reflected officers for the ensuing year : — President , C . Lushington , Esq ., M . P . ; Vice-Presidents C . Hindley , Esq ., M . P > , and J . Wyld , Esq ., M . P .-Trustees , Q . Thompson , Esq ., M . P ., W . Lane , Esq .,
and G . Wilson , Esq . ; Solicitor , Mr . G . Edgar Dennes ; Secretary , Mr . G . Huggett . The Committee were then nominated , after which a proposed alteration in the rules , whereby the society would be enabled to make purchases more rapidly , was submitted to the meeting , to be discussed at the adjourned meeting on August 20 . A vote of thanks to the Chairman closed the proceedings . Admiral Alexander Jones has been had in the police , court for hitting Mr . Robinson , a navy agent , over the eyes with a stick in St . James ' s-street . He was ordered to find bail in £ 100 to keep the peace . Bail not being forthcoming , he was locked up for a time and then conditionally set at liberty .
An inquest has been held on the body of the fireman killed at the late boiler explosion near Liverpool , and , after much discussion , the jury returned an open verdict , " That death was caused by the explosion of a locomotive boiler , but that there was no evidence to show the cause of that explosion . " Messrs . James Starkey and Co ., of Liverpool , have been compelled to suspend payment , in consequence of the entire destruction of their stores and property at San Francisco , by fire . They were unable to protect them selves by insurance , although their warehouses were of iron ; their shippers are in a similar position . Their loss is estimated at 130 , 000 dollars .
Mr . and Mrs . Head , who suffered so severely from the collision of the Enfield express and the Hertford train , on the Eastern Counties line , in December last , have brought an action against the company , and obtained , on Thursday , £ 1000 damages . The jury have at last returned a verdict on the great fire . It is to the effect that the evidence was insufficient to show how the fire in warehouse A originated ; but that there was the highest degree of probability that the fire in warehouse D was not the result of accident , and suggested that the Secretary of State be solicited to increase the reward of £ 200 , offered by Messrs . Wigan and Co . for the discovery of the person or persons who fired the warehouse .
Whilst a person named John Thomson was engaged , on Saturday , in carrying bags ashore from a vessel in the Clyde , he by some casualty being precipitated into the river , disappeared , and with the force of the fall remained embedded in . the mud at the bottom . The mate of the vessel , who at the time was at dinner in the cabin , heating the plunge , rushed on deck , and with a courage and promptitude beyond all praise , threw himself into the water in his clothes , and brought up Thomson , who must ; otherwise inevitably have perished . The gallant seaman performed his feat at very considerable
personal risk ; for , on emerging , Thomson , impelled by the instinctive feelings of persona in his situation , grasped his preserver by the waist , and would "have taken him down again , had he not , putting forth all his strength , seized a rope , and , with one strenuous effort drawn both so far up the vessel ' s side as to be brought within the reach of his shipmates , who drew them on deck . The jury , empannelled to inquire into the death <>' James Hogan , who was kilted in a fray in Shoe-lane , on Sunday night , returned the following verdict : —" That the deceased died from the effects of violence at the
hands of the police , but who the officer was they had not sufficient evidence to prove . " The Coroner said it » ' »» most extraordinary that in a place like the city "' London they were unable to tell who the policeman was . Having called Sergeant Patterson forth , he ""' pressed on that officer ' s mind the necessity for '' police authorities doing all they could to find out wlio the policeman was who caused deceased ' s death . The J » ry then handed the following memorial to the coroner , with a request that it might be forwardedf the proper authorities : — " And this jury are of op i " . " that tne neighbourhood in which the deceased die" ' in a most disgraceful state . In the house in which deceased lies , the drainage , or some other cause , m an effluvium ho creat that the iurv were compell * ' "
leave the place as quickly as possible ; and hIiouI ' epidemic again vist the City , from the dreadful fitutc , these courts they think they would be a llUIHCr ^ i ety pestilence and disease . They also suggefit the I . 'l ' . [ ftt of an additional light in those courts , more esp 1 ' * " * the Holborn end . " c \ s The ( llaaffow Daily Mail in informed that the P <) S P , of this grouse season are much better than for H \ ^ o yearn past . In the first week of June , 1819 an v 11 , oVl . rmoist , tbo rainH did not fall in Hu < : h suluV " Illl ( , j | , (! whelming toirents as to injure the y oung u " ' „ fur
duHC & Hi' , also , which huu bc . ourgi . il h <* many " » " "' (< ,, i ; Romp yeuru , ia now alniOBt totally extinct . '!» ' YBto ei , ous disease waa co-exi $ tcnt with that of th « P
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), July 12, 1851, page 10, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_12071851/page/10/
-