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373. THE LEADER. [Saturday,
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MISCELLANEOUS. S*b Jamsetjee Jkejeebhoy....
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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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Naval And Military News. Admiral Dtnsuas...
animated one , and the fineness of the weather attracted a crowd of spectators . The first vessel , the Meteor , was launched soon after half-past one , and the second , the Thunder , a few minutes after two o ' clock . These floating batteries , orenonnousgunboats , as theymaybecalled , present a very imposing appearance . Their length between the perpendiculars is 172 feet 6 inches , their extreme breadth 44 feet 6 inches , and their depth in hold 14 feet 7 inches . Their tonnage is 1469 . They are coated with iron about 4 inches to 4 £ inches in thickness , and are pierced for 28
10-inch Lancaster guns , carrying 68-pounders . ^ The decks are of 9-inch oak , the beams being 12 inches square , and only their breadths apart . One peculiarity worthy of notice is that the mooring-holes are below the water-line . The extreme draught of water ( with everything on board ) -will be 7 feet 9 inches . The Meteor and the Thunder were launched with the steam up . Their engines are high pressure , and of 200-horse power . Three more of these batteries are in course of construction for her Majesty ' s Government in other yards , making five in all .
The Camp at Aldershott . —On approaching the heath , said to comprise 3000 acres , the long ranges of wooden huts have a curious appearance , and suggest the temporary towns of the gold country . Six hundred of the nuts are ready ( about half the number intended ) , and these stand eighteen feet apart , on each side of a road ( a sufficient number being together to serve for a battalion ) . Each hut for the privates is to accommodate twenty-five men , with a kitchen , and a range , or cooking-stove . With the exception of the fire-place , the huts are wholly formed of timber , boarded inside and out , and , in the first instance , were planted down on the soil without any foundation . Those erected more lately , howeverhave some concrete , with a few courses of bricks ,
, for the woodwork to stand on . The roof is formed of feather-edge deals , covered with asphalted felt . The arrangement of the huts is not good . In fact , we should not Tje honest if we did not say that it seems to us to be very Dad ' . A flat ceiling is formed with boarding at the level of the underside of the tie-beams ; and the windows , hinged at the top to make the matter worse , are . placed low on the sides of the . hut , not more than four feet six inches from the hinges to the floor . The room has the aspect of a large eggbox . With a quarter of " a" hundred men sleeping in it , the atmosphere will become poisonous .
It is true , there is a hole in the ceiling , to allow the smokepipe of a stove to pass through ; but the small annular opening left round the pipe-would be altogether insufficient for the purpose of ventilation . Why have the flat ceiling at all ? If the boarding followed the line of rafters-at a sufficient distance from them to enclose a layer of air , protection would be obtained from sudden alternations of temperature , and a more lofty and healthful apartment formed , of a convenient shape for draining off the vitiated air . The greater number of the huts are being executed by Messrs . Haward and Nixon . —Builder . .
Lord Carlisle has paid a visit to the sick and wounded soldiers in Dublin . His Excellency entered into-conversation-with-them , and , shook ., hands , with each previous to addressing him , and when about to leave . The British Foreign Legion in America . —An examination into the facts connected ¦ with the enlistment , in America , recruits for the British Foreign Legion has taken place . Fifteen have been arrested at Philadelphia as they were leaving that city on board a steamer for New York . The number that has been raised in Philadelphia is estimated at 500 . In New York , a person named J . R . Bucknell , said to be an officer of the British army , has been arrested and sent to Philadelphia , charged with enlisting persona for this object .. Mr . Bucknell represented himself as an engineer engaged in employing men to work on railroads in Texas .
Sir Thomas Coohrane ' s Squadron of the Baltic fleet returned to Spithead from the Downs on Wednesday morning . Large Bodies of Men etill continue to embark for the Crimea . Tiie Baltic and the Fleet . —A communication from the Sound , dated the 10 th of April , and published in tho Ind ^ pendance Beige , says that the ice in the Baltic had not then broken up , but that tho entrance into that sea from the Sound and tho Great Bolt would , no doubt , be navigable in eight days at most . The Gulf of Finland , it is added , would not bo frees for another month . From Kiel we hear that the principal part of Admiral Dundas ' s fleet waa expected to arrive there in the courso
of throe or four days . A despatch from Hamburg of Thursday says that an English fleet , of twelve ships of the line and four stoamor corvettes was acen on tho preceding evening in front of Nyborg . Polish Volunteers for the Foreign Legion . —Tho Morning Herald of Friday contains the following piece of satisfactory intelligence from Plymouth : — 14 Two hundred Poles belonging to tho part of tho Rusjian garrison captured at Bomarsund , now . in tho military prisons at Plymouth , have volunteered for sorvico In the Foreign Legion , and have been accepted . On rhursday morning thoy left the prisons , and embarked jn board the Royal William , 120 , Captain Kingcomo , there to wait for a steam-transport to take them to the Aepdt of the Legion . "
373. The Leader. [Saturday,
373 . THE LEADER . [ Saturday ,
Miscellaneous. S*B Jamsetjee Jkejeebhoy....
MISCELLANEOUS . S * b Jamsetjee Jkejeebhoy . —The Court of Common Council has resolved to present the above-mentioned Indian gentlemen with the freedom of the City . Alderman Kennedy , in making a motion to this effect , said : — " The gentleman for whom , as a personal favour to-himself , as well as on public grounds , he asked the freedom of the City , had given in charitable donations , of a public and private character , the almost fabulous sum of 300 , 000 / . By an oflScial document issued from the India House , it was shown that his donations through Government , and in a public form , amounted to the enormous sum of 86 , 000 £ At a public meeting held in Bombay , on the 16 th of January last , for the purpose of raising subscriptions for the Patriotic Fund , a donation was announced of 500 ? . from Sir Jamsetjee , and 250 ? . from each of his three sons , making a total of 1250 ? . When her Majesty , some time ago , was pleased to confer on Sir Jamsetjee the dignity of knighthood , the Parsee community , in token of their sense of her Majesty's condescension , and of the noble and patriotic character of him on whom the rank was conferred , subscribed a sum of 35 , 000 ? . a 3 a fund to be designated ' Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy ' s Fund , ' for the purpose of defraying the expenses of translating European works into the Indian languages , for free distribution among the Parsee community , and in furtherance of popular education . To this sum , Sir Jamsetjee had added 35 , 000 ? . ; and the money was now invested by the British Government for carrying European knowledge into India . "
Damaging Pictures . — At the Liverpool Assize Court , on Saturday , an action was brought against the Chester and Holyhead Railway Company , by J . Naylor , Esq ., to recover the sum of 4500 ? . for damages to certain pictures , which , while being conveyed across the company ' s lines at Oswestry , were run into by a train , destroying the horse , van , and the property above named . The pictures had been on view in Liverpool during the visit of the British Association , and were highly prized . After the case had been called on , the respective parties effected a compromise , the company paying the plaintiff 2500 ? ., and costs . Mb . Roebuck ' s Committee . —On Saturday , the first volume of the evidence in the Committee of Inquiry , respecting the army before Sebastopol , was published by order of Parliament . The Blue-book contains 729 folio pages .
Barnum ' s " Baby Show . "—A baby show is to take place at Barnum ' s on the 5 th of June . The premiums range from 250 dols . down to 10 dols . A committee of ladies has been appointed to act as judges . The " finest baby under five years of age" will receive 100 dols . for being so nice . The " finest" twins , 50 dols . ; the " finest" triplet , 150 dols . ; the " finest" quatern ( four at a birth ) , ' 250 dols . The fattest child , 50 dols . These are inducements . Barnum says , " Two triplets and one quatern are already engaged , and we expect the woman from Ohio with five at a birth . "—New York Daily Times .
Death from Machinerv . —We derive from the Manchester . . Examiner ^ the l . following details of a most appalling accident which has recently occurred at Staleybridge : —" Luke Carter , a self-acting minder , was engaged with another man in piecing a strap ; ho was suddenly taken up to a horizontal shaft , and became entangled among the machinery , so that the strap had to be cut to set the body at liberty . Before he could be got at-both his feet had been torn from his body a little below the knees , both his arms were also broken , and he
was nearly knocked in pieces . One of the spinners heard the deceased shout out , and ran towards him ; but before ho could get to him , the foot of the deceased flow off and hit him on the arm . Tho deceased ' s body was then going round the shaft . The engine was stopped in about three minutes after the deceased was caught . In going round , ho broke a steam-pipe . During the three minutes , tho deceased ' s body would go round the shaft close upon four hundred times . A smnll basketful of the remains of tho deceased was picked off the floor after the accident . "—Accidents such as these , which arc
not of rare occurrence , render imperative some protection to tho workman by means of inclosing the machines ; yet all such moasures are opposed by the master manufacturers . Railway Accident . —An engine-driver on tho Great Northern Railway has been killed by an act of great rnshness . AVhilo tho train was at full speed , ho sprang off tho back part of the tender on to tho guard ' s van , and -was in the act of walking over somo luggage nt the
top of one of tho passenger carriages , when the back of his head struck ngninst an iron girder bridge , and he was instantaneously killed . Ho was fond of betting on horse-races , and , in order to talk with any of his turf friends who might happen to be in tho train , lie would often pass from tho engine on to tho footboards of tho carriages , or roach the latter by clambering over tho roofs to tho steps at the end . Ho had already had one or two narrow oscnpes , but obstinately refused to take warning from them .
Mounted Escort Corps for Australia . —One hundred men , selected from tho polico of Glasgow , Liverpool , and other northern towns , have Bailed from Liverpool in tho Exodus . Tho force , which is to bo mounted ,, consists o £ 90 mon , 8 sergeants , and 2 inspectors : the last-named officers being Captain Hampton
and Mr . John Cecil Reed , late an efficient and active inspector in the G division , of the metropolitan police Garratt , the bank robber , proceeds by the same vessel . The African Slave Trade . —By the last maila from the African station , we learn that certain notorious slave-dealers had attempted to re-establish the trade at Lagos , but that Commander Miller succeeded in obtaining their expulsion . The King of Dahomey and the King of the Ashantees were on their march to attack Abbeokuta , the Olake of which place had made appli . cation for a naval officer to conduct the defence of hig
town . Extraordinary Case : Rifling a Tomb . —A painful sensation has been caused at Bristol by the violation of the vault in which for several centuries have reposed the remains of the Smyth family , of Ashton-court , situated about three miles from Bristol . It is now scarcely two years since the celebrated case of " Tom Provis , " alias Sir Hugh Smyth , was tried at Gloucester . It -will be remembered that the trial attracted general attention at the time , owing to the success an audacious impostor obtained among the citizens of Bristol and Clifton .. The present attempt , however , had probably more to do with anticipated booty than the recovery of documents . From inquiries made on the spot , it appears that there m ust
have been at least seven or eight persons engaged in the matter ; and , from the artistic manner in which the vault was laid open , it is equally plain that some stonemasons were engaged to conduct the operations . Owing to family differences , the aunt of the late Sir John and Sir Hugh Smyth resided by herself . She was of somewhat eccentric habits , and it was currently reported at the time of her funeral that a quantity of jewels were interred with her ; that , the body having been embalmed , the heart was placed within the coffin , enclosed in a silver box ; and that the breastplate , handles , & c , upon the coffin , were of pure silver . The thieves cut open the lead coffin of the late Sir John Smyth , and also that of
the late Lady Smyth . The former they must have had some difficulty in removing from its position , as it took four men to replace it . They were disappointed , however , in their anticipations of plunder , the leaden coffin in which are contained the remains of the Dowager Lady Smyth remaining intact . It is supposed , also , that they were disturbed , as they left ajlark lantern behind them and some massive silver ornaments , which had been appended to the exterior of one of the coffins . A large reward has been offered for the discovery of the offenders ; but at present the police have no clue to them , although it is more than suspected they belong "to a gang who have-long infested the parishes of Bedminster and Long Ashton , near Bristol .
Discovery of a Druidical Circle , & c—The Perthshire Advertiser records that a small Druidical circle close to the highway has been laid bare at Tynrica by the removal of some masses of broom and bramble that had hitherto concealed it . It is about 18 feet in diameter , and quite entire , each of its huge stones standing erect and in its proper place- ; but an additional interest arises from the fact that , while digging and levelling the interior , four huge urns , about two feet in height and one foot in diameter , at ..- theljnojutli , _ were _ ex- _ humed , quite full of calcined bones , beside three or four stone coffins , formed of thin , unshapen slabs , evidently from the adjacent ground , and likewise containing the mortal remains of the ancient Caledonians of a
prehistoric period . Unfortunately , either from the extreme brittleness of the urns , or a want of care on the part of the labourers , the whole were broken to pieces ; but enough still remained to show that they were of tho very coarsest manufacture , in shape remote from classical , and with no pretension to decoration but a profusion of scratchings without method on the outside of tho upper portion of each . The coffins were equally unceremoniously dealt with ; but it is worthy of remark that they lay in no particular order in reference to the compass , but , if anything , rather inclined to south and north—indeed , one of them lay exactly in that direction .
Boyle v . Wiseman . —This never-ending case has been again brought before tho public . In the Court of Exchequer , on Monday , Mr . Serjeant Shec moved for a new trial , upon the grounds—first , that certain evidence was improi . erly admitted j secondly , that material evidence was rejected ; thirdly , on tho ground of misdirection by the judge ; and fourthly , that the damage were excessive . In order that tho matter may upon somo future occasion bo fully discussed , tho court granted a rule nisi upon tho first and fourth grounds . Sik Henry De la Buciik died on tho 13 th instant at ten o ' clock . Ho was director of tho Geological burvey , of the Museum of Practical Geology , and of tho Government School of Mines
. ... Injury mkm Elki-hants . — A keeper attached to a travelling menagerie now nt Manchester , Imiviuk , wiuio drunk , gone into tho elep hants' den to rioon , was trampled upon and much crushed , but was n-scucO , niw two broken ribs , and other injuries . He hunst-lf mya that ono of tho olephnnts , lying down to rest , enmo win all his body , weighing 70 cwt ., upon him , and that tncro was no intentional attack . , The Crops , aidod by tho late fino weather , wo ooginning to put on a favourable appearance ; but , ow B to the length and severity of tho winter , they are no cessurily very backward .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), April 21, 1855, page 12, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_21041855/page/12/
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