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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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2 ^^ t > BRS AJSHP SOTCIDES , An inquest was held on Monday on the bodies ^ the inan A fhe two boys found drowned near , the residence of the ma Vice Chancellor at Putney . He" turns out to be a Set-maker , named Spankhurst , late of Barking , and rtTbovs were bis sons ; His -wife was examined . She aid her husband had once tried to cut her throat , and S ^ S ^^ ed li *; - . HBl ^ li «/ to : t 1 » e ..-7 j » - . aBA S £ ard Sfeg of him -until she received thefolloTv | ng letter ;— - "Apart ' ;' . . « Bv the time that you receive these few lines , or hours hefore , me and my boys wilT be locked in the arms of death * andlamvery tuohappy to think that my girl is not with us ; and you have no one to thank but your own temper towards ine , and 1 made up my mind what I should do as I lay on my pillow this morning before I started . And I have but little comment to make , but your temper lor
has been that to me that it Has preyea on my mma sometime . But it is finished before this time . I hope that my girl will grow and bei a good girl , and I should have been happy if I had her here with us . I hope you will govern your temper for the future , and you have no one to thank but yourself for this , and I hope that you will do well . God bless you both for ever . N , S . " . An apprentice strengthened the testimony of Mrs . Spankhurst that her husband drank a great deal . The coroner summed up the evidence , and the jury returned separate verdicts , to the effect that the deceased children , Nathaniel John ^ and William , had been wilfully murdered hv their father , Nathaniel Joseph Spankhurstj and that
the latter afterwards committed suicide by drowning him self , bemg atthat time of unsound mm ^ John Dawwasa miller ' s man , living near Lynn , jNorfolk . He had a wife and one child , and his cottage was situated on the banks of Rising River , For about a week John Daw was in " low spirits , " and at the end of that time , on Sunday week , he yas found lying in the river stripped tp his shirt , and his throat cut quite across . A neighbour went to break the news to Mrs . Daw . The cottage door was open , the sitting-room door was open , and to his horror he saw M ± s . Daw and her son lying on the floor in their night cldtheSj ^ with their throats cujt . It was testified by his master that John Daw was a good
servant and to all appearance , an affectionate husband . The jury found " That the deceased John Daw did kill and slay Honor Daw : anct Martin Daw , he . being at the time insane ; and that the said John Daw did also drown himself while in a state of insanity . " Three boys were " crow scaring" afr Outwell , about 10 miles fromXynnrNprfolk , on Sundayy the eldest carrying ' a gun with which to frighten , the birds , A trifling quarrel arose , when the eldest boy , aged 13 , deliberately raised the gun to his shoulder , and blew put the brains of one of his companions , aged 0 , brightened at the apt which _ he had committed , the murderer prevailed upon his remaining companion to assist him to dispose of the body , by
dragging it to a dry ditch , where it was carefully buried . The two boys then returned to the spot where their companion had been shot , and , gathering up his brains and the shattered fragments of his , ekull , they threw them into his cap . After this they kindled a fire of turf ( the field being in the fens ) , upon which they placed the cap , which they watched until , with its contents , it was entirely consumed . Upon their return home , inquiry arose concerning the murdered child , when the companion of the murderer confessed to the particulars above narrated , and was with the murderer himself taken into custody . A Coroner's inquest on the body of the boy , William Day , who was shot , terminated on Wednesday night , having Bat twn dnirfl TVia nf t / vit Tirt firnfi tVio tri two j tne is
_ nama -Ma H xo- . m m am aays . , jcie name pi Doy wno nrea cne gun William Pearce . John Day , brother of the deceased , proved discovering the body and digging it out of the ditch where it was buried . James Pearoe , brother of the acoused , corroborated this evidence , but neither of them had seen anything of the murder . Wm . P « arce , ten years old , and brother to the accused , gave more important testimony . He stated that he went to bed with his brother ( James Pearce ) on Saturday night , when his Irother told him that he had shot Bill Day . They were sitting in the field by the fire , which boys are acouatomed fco keep up while crow-scaring , when they quarrelled , and Day struck him a violent Wow over tho eye ( his oye was blackened and bruised when
« " « """ custody ;; ana that Ho tnon tooJc up tne gun and blowed Day ' s brains out . Day did not die directly , but lay upon the ground bleeding fast . My brother , continued the witness , ooid , "I did not know what to do with him . * mtod him up . and held him sitting on the ground , A * j | P ° * o him , but ho could not speak to me . fu I ° . minut ° s I saw ho was dead , and I dag a holo in the drain and buriod him ? and after covering him up X jumped on him and jammed him down . I did not JiKo to boo the blood on the rods whore he fol # and so I Pup them altogether , with Mb cap , and tried ftrburn them . " William , Goulott . a lifcfclft hnv f , \ crhh ve > nrn n ]( l sn . w Pnnrnn
« i ? y . P lavin ff together , and hoard tho gun go off : wougut it was to frighten the crows . Soon after eaw a oarco wandering about by himself : did not suspect anything A constable of tho Norfolk police related a conversation ho had with William Pearco at tho station-house . J oarco said , — " Have you soon poor Billy Day P" Witness « -B ,. , ** " > affirmative , when tho prisoner replied , if i ? ° 5 T ^ follow - I have told a good many lies about W t r i } now toU y ° u tho *»»* h- * did n ° * Bl » oofc Wm , l , « n , T A ) od to burv Mm by tho drain aide . " Afterwards n « « lttod thafc ho did Bhoot Day , who had first got up , as they Woro eittlng b tho flr 6 ) ftnd Mfc him ^ ^ * j . no jury brought In a verdict of Manslaughter .
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The Eight Hon . Sidney Herbert , M . P ., obtains a seat in the House of Lords by the death of his brother , the Earl of Pembroke , in Paris . Xord Panmure died at Brechin Castle pn Tuesday , at the age of 82 . Mr . Fox Maule , his son , succeeds to his title and great estates . , . Lord Dunsany expired at Dunsany Castle on the night of the 7 th instant . He is succeeded in his titles and estates by his only brother , tie Hon . Captain Plunkett , E . N . Lord Dunsany was born the 6 th of September , 180 % ' and \ yaa consequently only in the 48 th year of his age . By his death a vacancy is created in the representative peerage of Ireland . Lord Dynevor , -who had been for some time an invalid , expired at his seat , Barrington Park , Oxfordshire , oh Friday last , at 1 , p . m ., in his 87 th year . He is succeeded in the title and estates by his son the Hon . George Bice Trevor , Lieutenant-colonel of the Carmarthenshire Militia . The venerable peer has also left six daughters .
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Prince Frederick of Sehleswig-Holstein is at present staying at Exmouth , where he has taken a house for a short tune . The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland , the Earl of Eglinton , proposes to give a grand tournament at Fermanagh ! The presence of the Duke of Wellington is expected I ! Preparations are being made for ' erecting the pedestal for the equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington in front of the Register House , Edinburgh . The statue , by Mr . Steel , is all but completed , and will be inaugurated with a fitting ceremony on next Waterloo day . On Sunday last , April 11 , was presented to W . Kaye , Esq ., of Broughton , Manchester , by his lady , the extraordinary number of three daughters , who , with . Mrs . Kaye , are doing well . This is an Eaater offering !
Ann Kelly died at Lewisham , Kent , on the 5 th instant , aged 103 y ears . From early youth she was a member of the theatrical profession , and acted at various theatres in England , Ireland , and Scotland . She was in the same company with the late Edmund Kean , and also with James Sheridan Knqwles , and she had often played " Alicia" to the " Jane Shore" of Mrs . Siddons . About the age of 60 slie lost her hearing , and was obliged to relinquish the stage . Mr . Knowles learning her destitute situation , took her from compassion into his family , and from that timo she had been eololy dependent on that gentleman ' s bounty . She retained all her faculties to the last , and was only confined to her bed three days previous to her decease .
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The greatest activity has been displayed at Woolwich Dockyard to complete the stores required for the vessels of the Arctio Expedition , under Sir Edward Belcher , that all may be on board to-night or oarly to-morrow morning , as the wholo of tho squadron are under orders te be ready to proceed down the river between nine and ton a . m . on Thursday , Apxil 15 . On Wednesday , Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort , K . O . B ., the hydrographor to tho Admiralty , visited Captain Belcher at an early hour , and witnessed several experiments made to explain to the officers tho mode of inflating balloons , and the bombardiers of tho Marino Artillery , tho plan for blowing up tho ice by moans of tho galvanio battery .
Mr . Hunjo lias addressed a lottor to tho daily papers , in which he states tho result of tho labours of tho committoo appointod at tlio public meeting held on the 7 th of August , 1860 , at tho Whittington Club-room , to collect subscriptions from tho working classos for a memorial to tho lato Sir Robert Pool : —Including tho subscriptions begun at tho Bolvidoro Hotol , Pontonvillo , thero has boon rocoivod tho sum of 1 , 7371 . Os . Qd ., chiofly in penny subscriptions ; and that amount has boon paid into tho Bank of England , to bo invested in threo por cont . consols in tho namos of threo trustees . Tho committeo havo already decided that tho yearly interest of tho fund shall bo applied to educational purposos , under tho title of " Tho Working Man ' s Memorial to the lato Sir Robert Peel , " and they will sparo no endeavours to render its application judicious . Tho
number of individual subscribers is about 260 , 000 , among whom ' are English workmen at St . Potoraburgh , who havo contributed $ , towards tho fund . ( A largo meeting of tho inhabitants of Marylobono was hold , on Tuesday evening lost , at tho Princess ' s Concert Rooms , to consider tho propriety of petitioning Parliament against the Militia Bill . Mr . J . A . Nioholay was- in tho oliair ; and tho mooting was addressed by Mr . Jacob Boll , M . P ., Mr . Cobdon , M . J ? ., Mr . Buckton , Mr . 0 . George , and othor gentlemen , Resolutions woro passed doclaring tho opinion of tho mooting that tho cnrolmont of tho militia would bo oppressive to all classes pf tho community , injurious to tho morals of the people , and cortniu to render nocossarv a largo amount of general and local taxation from which the people might otherwise be relieved , and
to have the effect of deranging the habits of business , and injuring the prospects in life of those who would be brought immediately under its operation ) and pledging those present to adopt all constitutional means to prevent its passing into a law . A petition embodying the above objections was then agreed to , and having Been signed by the Chairman on behalf of the meeting , was ordered to be forwarded to the members for the borough fer presentation to Parliament . : .. ¦
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The Grand Duke of Baden is dangerously ill and not expected to live many dayi . Navarro , the Jeifreys of Naples , unenviably immortalized in Mr , Gladstone ' s Letters to Lord Aberdeen , ifl dying from a gangrene in the foot . The Gazette de France Bars , "We are assured that M , Thiers will soon return to France . " The coronation of the King of Sweden and Norway in the latter country , which was to have taken place in the summer , has been postponed to the summer of 1853 . The delay has been occasioned by the works in the Cathedral of Drontheim not being likely to be completed in time . There is a rumour'in Quebec that Lord Elgin Jias tendered his resignation to her Majesty as Governor ' General of Canada , and expects to leave this country at an early date . —Montreal Courier , March 25 .
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The Portuguese steamer , Porto , left Oporto on the morning of the 28 th of March , with a crew of twentytwo men and thirty-nine passengers . All went well tili the vessel reached Cape Mondego , when a furious gale sprang up , and the worn-out boilers only enabled the ship to make a head-way of a mile an hour . The mate in command tried to run for Vigo or Oporto . The pilot decided that it was possible to cross the bar at the mouth of the Douro . The sea was not high , and they made for this perilous passage . In one minute more the ship would have been in safety , when by some mismanagement she sheared and struck on a sand-bank , and unshipped her rudder . The rebound threw her on the Toiro rock , where she stuck fast for an hour , only forty yards from shore . The beach was crowded with the families and friends of those on board . A boat from the land failed in an attempt to rescue the crew and passengers . In an hour and a half the vessel went to pieces , and all the passengers were drowned , including Mr . Joseph Allen , Mr . James Anderson ,-and his nephew , Mr . Elinsley , Englishmen . Only eig ht of the crew reached the shore , and one was saved from the wreck in the morning . Several young men were arrested , a few days ago , at Pesth , for having woruL tricolour ribbons , and cried " Long live Kossuth !"— Two foydealers were also arrested for having exposed for sale dolls and toys ornamented with the national colours .
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The Perth Courier states that the estate of Bichael and Glaschorrie , in the parish of Blair Athole , which was sold the other day for 8 , OO 0 Z . to Richard Hemming , Esq ., Worcestershire , was bought by Captain Beaumon ^ upwards of twenty years ago , for 5 , 000 Z . The rise in value since that time is solely owing to tho grouse shooting . How many families were turned off this estate , among many others , to make room for the grouse ? On Sunday afternoon , two privates of the 4 th Light Dragoons were drowned in the river Thames , off Isleworth Church . Five of the men in the same regiment , about 12 o ' clock , hired a boat , and after a short time , ono of them began to rock the boat , tho effect of which was that it was
capsized , and they wcro all precipitated into the water . Several boats put off promptly to their assistance , and they were conveyed to the " London Apprentice , " adjoining tho churoh , where restoratives were immediately applied , by several medical gentlemen . Two of them , however , woro found to be past recovery , after lengthened efforts to restore animation . Daniel Tuffrey , of Juniper-hill , Cottisford , near Bicestor , convicted at the last assizes for horse stealing , and sentenced to seven years' transportation , and Charles Eock , convicted of robbery and attempt to murder , for which ho was
sentenced to transportation for life , attempted to escape from tho county gaol at Oxford on tho evening of Friday . At about ten at night ono of tho watchmen hoard noises from two cells , which convinced him there was somofching wrong . Tuffrey and Rock had , by breaking away an iron bar from tho grate in thoir respective rooms , obtained tho means of making a hole in tho wall for tho purpose of getting through it into the yard . Rockhad succeeded in gotting from three to four foot of tho brickwork away , and would in a short timo havo boon from his cell . TufFrey was loss forward with his work ; ho , however , had made considerable progross . Thoy woro secured , and will for tho futuro bo ironed , at night as woll as by day .
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' A ^ M ^ ^ :, , . . : .. : H E L E AD E R . ¦ : ¦ ¦ ' . . - ¦ ¦; ' . ' . W . ; '
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MlSOELIiANBOlTS . TrtWrE ? * Jolm "Wilapn has announced in a letter tp tho iiZ ? *? J 0 lit ftr > d Town Council of Edinburgh his rosigna-W « ° f th o chair of Moral Philonophy in the . Univoraifcy . we rogret to say that the cause is continued illness .
The Duke of Northumberland , aecpmpaMed ; by Commodore Herbert , the Fourth Lord pf the Admiralty , Captain Chads , G . B ., of the Excellent , and Captain the Hon . F . Pelham , Private Secretary to the First Lord , visited the ships of war at Spithead , the Dock-yard , and Sailor ' s Home , at Portsmouth , on Wednesday . The Duke subscribed 200 ? . to the Home . _ : Sir James Mathespn , M . Pi , proprietor , of the Island of North Eona , has offered it aa a gift to government for a new penalsettlemeht . ' Thisislsuidis situated in the Atlantic , in latitude 59 dee . 7 min . 15-48 sec . and longitude 6 dee .
48 min . 60-45 sec . west . It forms part of the Lewis property . It lies 38 miles N . E . of the Butt of Lewes , forming a nearly equilateral triangle with it and Cape Wrath . Its highest point is 360 feet above the level of the sea . Its greatest length is nearly a mile , and its greatest breadtk the same . The island contains 270 acres ^ three feurths of which are arable . The cost of maintaining a convict in Australia is 40 Z . a year . The cost of maintaining a convict in Rona would not exceed 151 , a year , and this on 1 , 000 convicts for four years would save 10 Q , 000 Z . The climate and soil being favourable , the arable parts of Rona might be cultivated by the convicts as a garden farm .
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An oxtonsivo firo , undoubtedly causod by an incendiary , broke out in several parts of tho farm promfaos of Mr . John Covo , Groat Loo , in tho parish of Shinftold , three miles from Reading , at about eight o ' clock on the evening 1 of Eaator Sunday , and was not got under until tho entire homestead presented a cgmploto wreck . Tho farm house was only saved by tho wina blowing in a contrary direction . On Wednesday night , about half-past nine o ' olock , afire broko out on tho promises of Mr . Woldon , bookseller , of Patornostor-row . By tho aid of tho engines , which aoon arrived , tho flames wore extinguished in a short time ; fcho damage done was howovor considerable . Mr . Weldon ' s atook was insured in tho Sun Firo-offloo . Tho inhabitants of Nassau-street , Middleaox Hospital , woro moBfc painfully oxcitod on Tuesday morning-, nboufc four o ' olock , by a scono at tho houso No . 16 , occupied hff Mr . Charles Lansiiold , a carpenter . A police constable , scoing clouds of emoko pouring fVom tho boaornont floor , auccoodod in arousing tho inmatoH , numbering no fewer than nineteen persons , Thoso who woro in tho lower portion of tho promiaea gained tho stroot at groat risk , but six who woro on tho socond floor , on reaching tho stairs , woro driven back by tho hofc emoko . They then made
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Leader (1850-1860), April 17, 1852, page 367, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1931/page/11/
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