On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (9)
-
LETTERS which April 21,1849. THE NORTHER...
-
LETTERS TO THE WORKING CLASSES. XL. " S*...
-
PUBLIC MEETINGS. CONDUCT OP MR. D'EYNCOU...
-
••» The Navigation Laws.—A meeting was h...
-
SILK KNOTTED BRANCH. Here follows a spec...
-
aSMice.
-
MARYLEBONE—A Qober "Lark."—Edward Woodal...
-
SHIPWRECKS IN THE BLACK SEA. CoxsTAXtiNo...
-
Fauii Accident.—A most melancholy accide...
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.
Letters Which April 21,1849. The Norther...
April 21 , 1849 . THE NORTHERN STAR . . _-,
Letters To The Working Classes. Xl. " S*...
LETTERS TO THE WORKING CLASSES . XL . " _S _* " *? i % « . and a small drop of ink _^ _Talhng-iike dew- upon a thought , produces ¦ tv _t _* makC & _thousaili _** - perhaps millions , A " GLANCE AT HOME AFFAIRS .
' FOREIGN POSTSCRIPT . _BspTHER _Proletarians , The writer of the "Parliamentary Review" in this journal , gave yon , on Saturday last , in account ofthe " Nine Weeks' "Work " Ofthe " noble , " " honourable , " and " right _honourable" legislators , who assembled in the "Westminstertalk-and-tax-trap , for the " despatch of _business , '' on the 1 st of February last . After reading the reviewer's account of their high mightinesses' proceedings , it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that Parliamentary ¦ "despatch of business" closely approximates , in its results , to the shearing of a hog" Great cry and little wool . "
Well , after more than a week ' s holiday our hard-working legislators re-assembled on Monday last , but still so jaded were they , so little refreshed b y their eleven days' relaxation , that during Mr . Scott ' s spoech in support of his motion for a select committee to inquire into the political and financial relations between Great Britain and her dependencies , scarcely forty Members could be kept together to constitute " a House . " It is true that when the moment "for a division came , the number of Members . present suddenly increased to one hundred and fifteen . The cause of so considerable an influx of industrious
legislators will be understood when I add , that Mr . SCOTT'S motion was negatived "by 81 . to 3 il Tuesday evening brought & still more " beggarly account of empty boxes . " A discussion of questionsin connexion with the subject ofthe sale of landed property in Ireland , was suddenly brought to a close h y " an Honourable Gentleman " suggesting that the House be counted , which being done , . it was found that only thirty-one Members were present : thereupon "theHouse" adjourned .
The " no-House" dodge was workedfor the purposeofpreventingMr . George Thompson bringing on his motion on the War in the Punjaub . At the commencement of the sitting , both HOBHO 0 SE and Goulburx entreated the Member for the Tower Hamlets to postpone his motion , which that gentleman refused to do . The burking process was then had recourse to . The " Honourable Members " slunk away , and hefore Mr . _Tsompsos could hring on his motion , the House was " counted out" and adjourned .
Why do not their high-mightinesses adjourn once-and for ever ? Why do they meet at all ? What ; good do they do ? Why should they assemble for no other purpose , that I can see ; than , to xob the people by " votingthe supplies , '' and render " night hideous" by their eternal mouthings ? Would to Heaven they would shut up shop and leave ns to the rule of unveiled despotism 3 But they are too cunning for that . Oppression and plunder are never so safely carried on as when masked with the hypocritical forms of " Constitutionalism . "
It is acknowledged hy all parties that the only novel production of the "Nine Weeks ' Work" of our legislatorshas been the speeches of Sir Robert Peel on " the Irish difficulty . " Mark you , speeches only ! Not a motion " for leave to bring in a bilL" or for the ap /> ointment of a commission to carry out his professed views ; not a hearty , and , therefore , honest attempt to efface the miseries of the
Irish people by immediate legislative action , but mere speeches—that is , a bid for power I But "Peel has renounced the very idea of resuming office . " Fudge ! "Well , then , " says another admirer of the " great statesman / ' " Peel is too sound a politician to risk a defeat by proposing his Irish regeneration scheme under present circumstances , and , therefore , ' bides his time , ' until , as Prime Minister once more , he finds himself in
command of a working and obedient majority in the House of Commons . " But is this the course a lover of justice , and true friend to humanity would pursue ? No . An honest legislator , seeing the misery of a nation , and believing himself possessed of a remedy for that misery , would at once propose his scheme in legislative form ; and if he failed on the first attempt , would propose his plan again , and— -if need be—again and again , until finally successful .
Peel has been a " statesman" longer than I have Jived years , and what has his statesmanship done for you ? When were you benefitted by his measures ? What advantage have you derived from his free-trade schemes ? Will he even now admit labour to at least a share of representation in tbe legislature ? Kot he , indeed . With all his plausibilities he is but a great state-juggler ; a trickster who prevents real progress by bis " timely eoncessions , and thimblerig measures of "judicious reform . " But it may be urged , that " it is unfair to judge of _T _* eel ' s Irish Reform Seheme by the antecedents of its author ; it should be judged on it own merits . "
Be it so . The ex-Premier suggests the appointment of a commission to—1 st . —take possession " on equitable terms "—of the lands at present uncultivated bv the insolvent landlords ; the said lands , divided into estates of 1 , 000 , 1 , 500 , and 2 , 000 acres each , with a clear parliamentary title , to he disposed of to private capitalists , public companies , < fcc ., possessing the means of cultivating the soil and giving employment to the peasantry ; 2 nd . To free the land " from its burden of redundant lahour , hy a . properly-organised scheme of emigration ; 3 rd . To administer the grants for the encouragement of the fisheries , Ac , and to employ labour in road-making and other public works ; 4 th . To better organise the
poor-law management and re-establish the workhouse test of destitution . As regards legal forms the Commission to have the power to set aside and dispense with the legal swindling which at present accompanies every transfer of Land . I admit that , contrasted with the miserable measures of the Whigs—the " sixpennv Rate in Aid , " the -650 , 000 grant , and the continuation ofthe Habeas Corpus Suspension , Peel ' s scheme seems vast and comprehensive . But a slight examination -wijl suffice to show that the scheme is wondrously insignificant , compared with the noise made about it . Some parts of the scheme even demand condemnation ; such as the projected organisation of
emigration , and re-establishment ofthe workhouse test . The suggested clipping ofthe claws of those foul birds of prey , the lawyers , is very well in its way . But the grand part of the scheme—the colonising , or , rather , I should say , the _re-landlordising of the West of Ireland , is open to the most serious objections . Landlords , under all circumstances , must be a _eurse to the community . It may be that the existing Irish landlords are the worst possible on the face of this earth , and that Sir Robert Peel's landlords would be the best possible , —say as good as our English landlords ! Will any man pretend to- show that such chopping and changing will banish misery , from Ireland ? I
grant that to supersede the existing bankrupt , broken-down lords of the soil , by a set of vigorous , full-blooded capitalists , will , in all probability , be a means of restoring a large breadth of land to cultivation , and giving at least temporary employment to a large number- of the pauperised population . Good , as a measure of relief ; and anything that affords relief to the suffering should be taken for what it is worth ; no more . But such a scheme of *• reform" does not call for any extravagant demonstrations of joy . It will not cure the ills of Ireland . Ji will , at best , bring about such & happy state of things as exists in " Merry England . " Labourers of Dorsetshire and Wiltshire , you can testify to ihe happiness of living under the dominion of wealthy , independ ent landlords 1 Peelscheme should
I can understand why s be regarded with favour by English capitalists . "Let us have Tree Trade in Land , " says Mr . Height;— "let the traffic in land be as free as traffic in cotton . " I dare say the hon . member for Manchester speaks feelingly . Capitalists troubled with a plethora of wealth , would be only too glad to dispose of their superfluous cash by purchasing land in the " cheapest market . " Imagine , too , the » tep in advance for our millocrats—factory kings in England , and landlords iu Ireland ; their feet planted on the necks of the wealth-producers of both countries . A consummation devoutly to he wished "—hy Johs Bbioht and hit order 1 There is a certain " philosopher *] named Cabitle , who has _acquired a reputation b y writing £ ome smart things , and many stupid things , but
Letters To The Working Classes. Xl. " S*...
which stupid things his admirers imagine must mean something very profound , seeing that they are expressed in a mystevy-mongering jargon utterly opposed to " plain English . * This queer genius is a great "hero-worshipper . " William the _Coxqueboh , " or , as he pedantically calls him , " Wilhelmus Conquestors , " Chomwell ; Dantox , and such characters , are the gods of his idolatry ! I have for some time past expected to see him coming out with a panegyric on Wixmschgratz , Jellachich , and Raoetzsky ! But no , he appears to have taken a peaceable turn , and , behold , bas
exalted Peel for us poor mortals to fall dowD and worship . [ That will not I . Thero is no greater " sham" on the face of this earth than plausible Peel . ] Last Saturday ' s Spectator contains two weary columns of Carltle ' s choicest bedlambalderdash in laudation of Peel ' s "beneficent " " prophecy ; " and the Editor "bangsBannagher " by adding , — _« England and _Irelaad , Ulster and Munster , 0 Conned and Cromwell , the House of Commons and the Ilero-worshipper , are in conjunction in the House of Peel ! Is it an oinen ? Does the member for Tamworth act under a spell ?"
I could have understood and joined in these raptures had the ex-Premier proposed—for instanceto commence a series of veritable reforms , by taking possession of the misused and uncultivated estates as national property ; and instead of disposing of them in 1 , 000 , 1 , 500 , and 2 , 000 acres , to speculators and _money-gorgers , to have let them in lots of 6 , 10 , 15 , and 20 acres , on long leases , at a corn rent , the rent payable into the national treasury . He might have suggested , in addition , the letting of large tracts of land to co-operative associations , similar to the Chartist Land Company . "But the capital for these small farmers ' _i' Surely our " strong government , " with the sanction of our '' omnipotent Parliament , " could raise a loan , the interest on which , and finally the principal , would be provided for from the rents paid into the national treasury . Such a scheme—which I have merely indicatedwould free the Irish tillers ofthe soil from the
exactions of tbe land-robbers for ever ; would raise miserable paupers to the rank of independent yeomen ; change a -wilderness of WOC into a paradise Of felicity ; and give to the legislator who should effect such a reform ( as the commencement , be it understood , of other _regenerating measures ) , an unquestionable title to the eternal gratitude of the Irish people . But Sir Robert Peel is no such legislator . Such a course would be denounced by the plunderers of Labour as " a violation of the rights of property . " Mark Peel ' s words : — "I wish for no violation of the rights of property . _Nothing can be more easy than to suggest remedies ,-if we choose to disregard the rights of property , which it is the first duty ofa British Legislature to uphold . " How comes that to
pass ? Because the British Legislature represents Capital in hostility to Labour ; capital in Land , produce , manufactures , shipping , railroads , houses , money , < fcc , < fec . Peel confesses that" if we choose to disregard the rights of property" remedies may be easily suggested . And why not disregard those " rights , " if necessary to protect the more sacred right of life , menaced . hy " famine , disease , and death , by starvation ? " Why not ? _Because says Peel , it is the first duty ofthe British Legislature _touphold the rights of property . The -first duty—a more imperative duty than to " uphold" the " £ _aboYwer's right to live . ' We knew this before the oracle spoke , but it is as well to take notice of the importantfactthatourgreatregeneratorwi 11 sanction no reform which will interfere with the " risrhts of
property" as at present acknowledged . I tell you that the " rights of property , " as at present recognised , are the rights of robbery . The " rights of property" must be re-cast , and made to include the Rights of Labour . The " statesman" who opposes or shrinks from such a reform , may be . a clever cobbler of worn-out constitutions , and a political tinker of the highest order _. buthe is not the max to regenerate society , and lay the foundation ofa people ' s greatness . But , brother-proletarians , you might as well expect grapes from thorns , or figs from thistles , as that men who live in palaces and enjoy princely revenues drawn from your toil , should feel any real anxiety for your welfare , or exhibit anything like ardour in the work of social reformation . " Put
not your trust in princes" said one of old—one of the tribe who knew his class well ; and I say , put not your trust in rich men , for it is impossible for them to do you justice . If ever your political and social emancipation is effected it must be by yourselves , through the instrumentality of men of your own class . From the hut , the cellar , and the garret must come the saviours of your order . It is " easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle" than for legislators of the Peel class to legislate for your welfare , or make laws in accordance with the dictates of simple justice . The half-confessions ofthe Free Trade leaders at the Wakefield banquet , and the Leeds meeting , of their despair of achieving " financial reform , so
long as the House of Commons is unreformed , is an important admission for us . When agitating for Corn Law Repeal , Gobdes , Bright , ana Hume did not so readily abandon the hope of victory because once defeated . Their cry raised upon every defeat was Hurrah for total and immediate repeal !" Xot so , now . They have suffered but one defeat , and already they are beginning to acknowledge their hopelessness of victory without a previous " extension of the Suffrage / ' But how far will they extend ? There ' s the rub ! Some weeks ago I was speaking to a person fully informed of the views , hopes , and intentions of the Financial Reformers , when he assured me that nearly all the men of influence in that party were secretly in favour of Universal Suffrage , but could not go so far
at present . I asked , " How far will your friends go ? " The answer was , " That depends on circumstances . If financial reform cannot he obtained from the present House of Commons , then the party will go for a large extension ofthe Suffrage . " " How large ? " I again asked . The reply was , " That depends upon the opposition . H * violently opposed , a demand will be made for such an extension of the Suffrage as will leave you Chartists nothing to ask for . " My rejoinder was , " Then God send you may be bitterly and violently opposed , if that will drive you into doing justice to my order . " I say so now : and I call upon you , brother proletarians , to shake off your apathy , and prepare to take a becoming part in the struggle which cannot
be much longer delayed . Remember that vour only ark of political salvation is THE CHARTER . I have not space for comment on the trial and acqidttal of Drouet , the Tooting child-farmer . His acquittal will not much surprise you ; and I dare say you will be as little astonished at the conduct of the judge as at the verdict of tbe jury . I will not trust myself with the free expression of my own feelings , but , will quote what the Morning Chronicle ( no very warm friend of the poor ) says .- — " The conduct of Mr . Baron Piatt was , as it has been too often—at Exeter , at Abingdon , and in the Central Criminal Court—most discreditable to the judicial bench . Throughout the trial his object appears to
have been to browbeat the counsel for the prosecution , and to insult and embarrass their witnesses . " This iustjudge (!) told the jury there was no case , and that the prisoner was entitled to an acquittal . Jfo sooner said than done . The jury , with as little hesitation as they would have felt at finding a Chartist guilty of " sedition , " immediately returned a verdict Of Not Guilty ! More than this—the verdict was hailed by the audience with cheers and clapping of hands , and Mister Dhouet left the court receiving the congratulations of his friends and admirers ' . * _' . ' . 5 _so easel "Sot Guilty ! and shouts of applause ! Of course"Laws grind the poor and rich men rule the laws !"
Aud what care _juages and jurors , commissioners and guardians , for your lives , or the lives of your children ? Those who applauded tbe acquittal of Dhouet , doubtless looked upon the death of so many surplus brats as something to be rejoiced over . Of course they will subscribe for a " Drouei Testimonial . " But the dead as well as the living demand their homage . That mucli-iujured samt and holy martyi ' _i Mother _BnowsBioo , who was hanged for merely starving and flogging her apprentice girls to death , deserves a memorial of Malthusian gratitude . Doubtless Mr . Baron Platt will come down handsomely both for the " Dkouet testimonial" and . the " Bbownbigo monument !" Poor , down-trodden , spiritless people * , when do
you mean to bring this horrible system to an end ? The liberation of Mr . Duffy , the proprietor and editor ofthe once famous Nation , is a matter toreioice . over . On his fourth trial , the jury again disa < _reed , and failed to return a verdict . Seven of tne twelve were in favour _jof a verdict of Not Guilty . Mr . Duffy has been discharged on bail . It is * not likely that any further attempt will be made upon his liberty—at least , for past" offences . " If Mr . Duffy is the earnest man I suppose him to be ( I say this with but small admiration for Mr . D . ' s politics ) , he must be a veryunhappyman , when he contrasts the realities of the present with the dreams of the past . Twelve months ago , Mr . Duffy went to prison , believing that his countrymen were about to engage in a death-struggle for the restoration of their nationality and freedom .
The hour struck , but tbe men were wanting . On emerging from prison , Mr . Duffy finds his countrymen—if the newspapers are to be credited—utterly indifferent to " Repeal" and " Independence , " looking to Peel as their saviour , and paying down their cash in aid of " His Holiness" the Pope . This "Papal Rate-in-Aid" is a disgrace to Ireland . Some weeks ago , I saw it reported that one thousand pounds had been collected in tbe diocese ofa Bishop , appropriatel y named Cantuiell ! It is now stated that the " Papal Rate-in-Aid" will amount to from £ 25 , 000 to _£ 30 , 000 . Oh ! miserable , priest-led people of Ireland , you have not the virtue to even attempt your own redemption , yet you will basely assist tyrants to enslave those who have broken their chains ! Is it not enough that _Emmbtt'b tomb still remains uninscribed ) that Miichel languishes in a felon ' s exile , and thatyour
Letters To The Working Classes. Xl. " S*...
if k nd _bravest are in prisons or in banishment 1 is such degradation not sufficient , but that you must aott tue shame of wringing from your rags and m , sery the means to restore Tyranny in a land winch is at this moment free ? By Heavens , you place yourselves beyond tlie pale of human sympathy ! , . ' ¦ _ Oil ! Erin , how low £ thou sunk , by misfortune and tyranny , till Thy succour of tyrants hath plunged thee below iims depth of thy deep , in a deeper gulf still . I can but direct your attention to the important—though generally melancholy intelligence from the continent , " in this number of the Star . I must defer comment till next week . You will see that after a courageous defence Genoa has succumbed to the arms of the treacherous
government of Piedmont ; that the counter-revolution is victorious in Florence—at least , so says tho French telegraph—and that the Roman Republic is menaced with instant destruction by the arms of Republican France ! The intervention to restore the Pope will render France the most infamous and hated nation in Europe , unless the French people put down and signally punish their present villa nous rulers . I commend to your special attention the account of thc progress of the war in Sicily . Read , mark , learn , and inwardly digest , the hellish atrocities perpetrated by King Febmnand ' s butchers . Read and remember that " statesmen " ¦ n the British Parliament have dared to applaud the Neapolitan miscreant ; and that nearly all the daily journals published in this metropolis have abetted that monster , and excited him to wade
through those torrents Of blood which , by the hands of his infernal instruments , he is now shedding in his attempt to re-establish his accursed dominion over Sicily . There is one—and only one—gleam of sunshine piercing through the dark cloud which " at present " envelope * , the continent like a funeral pall ; I allude to the glorious victories of tho Hungarians . According to the latest accounts , the Magyars having gained a bloody victory over Windischgratz and _Jjsllachicii at Waitzen , had , under their glorious General Bem , re-taken their capital and entered Pesth in triumph . But tho straggle is not ended ; the Muscovite tyrant is sending entire armies into Hungary , numbering some 30 , 000 each . Brother proletarians let your hearts' aspirations be poured forth for the final victory ofthe brave Hungarians , who have aworn to live free or die ! L'AMI DTJ PEUPLE . April 19 , 1849 .
Public Meetings. Conduct Op Mr. D'Eyncou...
PUBLIC MEETINGS . _CONDUCT OP MR . D'EYNCOURT , M . P ., ON MR . COBDEN'S MOTION . , A meeting of the Lambeth Electoral Association took place on Tuesday evening , at the Horns Tavern , Kennington Common , " To take into consideration the reasons assigned by the Right Hon . C . T . D'Eyncourt , for the absence ofhis name from the . division list upon Mr . Cobden ' s motion for Financial Reform , and upon the general business of the association . " There was rather a numerous attendance .
* Mr . Charles Jones was unanimously called on to preside . " ¦ Mr . P . Doultox , after referring to the previous meeting on this subject , and reading the letter of Mr . D'Eyncourt , explanatory of the course he had pursued , said the committee had no other course than to call this meeting . Since doing so , they had received another letter from Mr . D'Eyncourt . After reading this letter , Mr . Doulton moved the following resolution : — " That thc reasons assigned by the Right Hon . C . T . D'Eyncourt , in his letter ofthe 19 th of March , for the absence of his name from the division list , upon the important question of Financial Reform brought forward by Mr . Cobden , on tho 26 th February , are deemed bythis meeting most unsatisfactory . " Mr . Leccixs seconded the resolution . The Rev . S . Green moved , and Mr . F . Hardy seconded , an amendment , respectfully requesting Mr . D'Eyncourt to sustain by his votes the largest measures of retrenchment consistent with the maintenance of national credit .
Several gentlemen having spoken for and against the motion , the amendment was put and negatived by a large majority , and the original motion was carried amidst loud cheering . Mr . _ADDiNGioNmoved : — " That , in the opinion of this meeting , no member of the House of Commons deserves the confidence of the people who fails to record his vote _. in favour of such a measure as that brought forward by Mr . Cobden ; and that Mr . D _' _Eyncoujfcihas , by his conduct on that occasion , forfeited his claim to the support of the electors of this borough . " Mi-. Barber seconded the motion . Agreed to . Thanks . were then voted to the chairman , and the meeting separated a little before eleven o'clock .
••» The Navigation Laws.—A Meeting Was H...
••» The _Navigation Laws . —A meeting was held at Hull on Monday to consider the propriety of petitioning tho House of Lords to reject the ministerial measure for the repeal of thc navigation laws . The meeting was called by the mayor , who presided . — Ml ' . S . T . Hassell , merchant , moved thc first resolution , which affirmed that the bill now before parliament would materially damage the interests of shipowners and others connected with British shipping . Ml ' . Hassell would ult ' unately consent to some alteration in the navigation laws , but he contended that it should be preceded by remedial measures for the purpose of removing the peculiar burthens under which the shipowners laboured . He
had no doubt that tho country would havo free trade , for a time , * but there ought to be no free trade , unless accompanied by a reduction of taxation and expenditure . —Mi * . T . Ward , shipowner , seconded the motion . —Mr . W . H . Holdsworth moved an amendment , asserting thc soundness of the princi p le of free trade , and the } ustice and wisdom of its application to the shipping interest . He exposed the fallacies advanced in support of protection , and told the shipowners that their opposition would be as futile as that of the landlords was on the question of the corn laws . —Mr . Alderman Jones seconded the amendment . — Mr . J . Poster ( Belgian consul , and vice-president of the Chamber of Commerce ) , supported the amendment . His objection to tlie ministerial measure
was that it did not go far enough . It declared that the British shipowner might build his ships where he liked ; but he ( Mr . Foster ) would not be content until the shipowner could build where he liked , man where he liked , and provision where he liked . It was absurd to attempt to protect the interests of a small class at the cost of the whole people . —Mr . Richardson remarked upon the small number of shipowners present , as a proof of their indifference to the question . —Mr . French , shipowner , said he was a thorough-going free-trader , but he thought that free trade Should be preceded by retrenchment and financial reform . —After several other speeches on both sides of the question , the amendment was put to the meeting and rejected . The original motion was then carried , and a petition to parliament resolved upon .
Silk Knotted Branch. Here Follows A Spec...
SILK KNOTTED BRANCH . Here follows a specimen of Liberal ' s liberalism _. When , - wc wonder , will the eyes of those who live by their labour be opened to the doings of those who live upon the proceeds of unprotected labour ? Mr . Sweet , of Nottingham , the agent for the " Northern Star , " has Mr . _O'GoNNOR ' sinsti'uctionstopaytenshillings in aid of the Branch -whose sufferings are so graphically depicted in the following narrative , and we sincerely trust that this example will be followed by a long list of subscriptions in next week ' s " Star , " as the industrious classes may rely upon it , that support and defence of their own order will go farthest in checking the tyranny of their oppressors ; but we regret to
say , that the infernal system under which we live so vitiates the mind of man that few feel for the woes and sufferings of their fellows , while if one hundredth part of the amount that is spent in brutal anddebasingdissipation were applied to the cause of labour , the regeneration of man would be speedily effected . It is only from the disunion of the many that the supremacy and tyranny of the few is established ; and why is it that that hideous monster , disunion based upon jealousy , does not vanish ? Simply because the labouring classes are tho greatest oppressors of their own order . Ag ain we appeal on behalf of those struggling sufferers . TO THE FRAMEWORK - KNITTERS OP ALL BRANCHES , AND THE PUBLIC IN
GENERAL . Friends and Fellow Workmen—The hands employed in the above branch have for some tune past been thrown into confusion in consequence of their requiring a regulation or statement in the number oi courses in all hose made below Maids' or small Women ' s in size . This small request being granted , one manufacturer being apprised of the exorbitant profits of the second-band masters offered to the said masters a scale of profit , for their future guidance ; this they agreed to abide by . The workmen and masters emp loyed bythis firm , are thus _" This oeingthe case with the most important house in the manufacture of silk knotted hose , the workmen employed by other firms deemed it imperative , in self-defence , to adopt the same system , to accomplish which app lication was made to one master to
Silk Knotted Branch. Here Follows A Spec...
_ftlnSLJ _palejJw _, who refused to comply : ™ _£ _^ f \ l » fu - » l _««* _« M » d » _c _^ edto a . \ k -, ? aCt ? f thc _* ° _>* men alarmed the other _ffrfi _/* la _/ ter lln _Nottingham , who it appears . Heir workmen . These masters bavin * for years _ffftSStt _^ _*«*»«•* ¥ _oxorbitan _/ profats , ( bi ought on during the depression in trade ) feel reluctant to bo reduced to a moderate scale of prone . 0 _u _^ ; ? ? . on _* -- _« atid masters , a Mr . Bush , insulted his hands m the grossest manner , by taking from them _theic spare fee t and silk , at a time when the men were from the shop ; and when one of them went to his work , this worthy stated . " he _rcnuircd
the feet and silk to work up him-elf , that tho orders were all done ; but mark how soon this man changed his tale ,-the next day he said they might work , if they required nothing more than the _reguations ib the number of courses . Thus these men have been forced out of employ in self-defence , or submit to the tyranny of this little man , and to work too at a less price than tho majority of the trade . Under such circumstances as these , where , we would ask , is the independent-minded working man who would not have so acted ? What will the workmen in other branches and the public think , when _te Z Z mcd that these second-handed masters _^ 11 u T of _** o shillings andsixpence out _™* ipfhfc _fiJ 0 Se ? r _^ . e first h _» dM" _^ rehouse price being fifteen shillines for windino- .-mH t * _l-in «
Te ' eXoTl _^ Vv _which , the hand at this time icceiyes seven _smlhnge and eightpence : for the seaming , two shilling ! and . _rixVoe _fand _" _«« £ rent two shillmgs and fourpence ; and if we allow eightpence for needles , tallow ,-shop , aud other expenses , it reduces the workman ' _s-kire to seven shillings . Thus , if a man holds ten frames , and the produce from those frames be one dozen each , this holder of frames will receive for his trouble , for bringing out the silk and taking in the work the sum of one pound , leaving five shillings for winding the silk ; and the man who makes twelve pairs of silK knotted hose , the sum of seven shillings . We , the _workmen in the silk knotted branch , have determined to use our uttermost power to put a Stoto SUCh
p an unjust system of taxation ; but being few in number in Nottingham , and ours bem " a local grievance ( the other portions of the Urawcfi not suffering in like proportion ) are necessitated to appeal to our fellow workmen in other branches , and the public , for assistance to enable us to defeat the _resisters of justice . Any donations or subscriptions will be thankfully received by the committee , which will sit at the " Cricket Player , ' Barker-gate , Nottingham , on Saturday next , from five until nine o ' clock in the evening . A deputation having waited upon two manufacturers , to state the grievances under which the workmen were labouring , received for answer , that " they should not interfere between workmen and masters . "
The following is a statement of the required alterations : — Amount of Charges at present . Required Alteration . The _| lst , 2 nd , aud 3 rd size 2 s 6 d—to Is 0 d 4 th and 5 th ... ... ; .. 2 s fid—to 2 s Od 6 th 2 s 6 d—to 2 s 3 d N . B . —We are sorry to have to inform our fellow workmen , that we have two opponents ( journeymen ) in this struggle , whose names are ' William Russell and Edward Gilbert ; the first refused to act with his shopmates , and the other took one of the turnout ' s frames . These men are now working to Mr . Bullock , while his shop is struck by thc trade . Committee—John _Baogehley , John Cammery , Jun ., Thomas Shaw , Adam Barber , William To . mi . in son , George Scott . Secretary — Francis _BEARnSALL .
Asmice.
_aSMice .
Marylebone—A Qober "Lark."—Edward Woodal...
MARYLEBONE—A _Qober " Lark . " —Edward Woodall was placed at the bar before Mr . Broughton , charged with having stolen a silk handkerchief , the property of Mr . George Peach , a clerk , residing at No . 21 , Westbourne-grove , Bayswater . —The prisoner was attired in a mousselin-de-laine dress , a slate-coloured polka , and a straw bonnet and black veil ; his appearance was altogether feminine in the extreme . —Mr . Broughton ( to the prisoner ) : What arc you . —Prisoner : lam a ballet dancer , and am known at several theatres . I am now engaged at the St . James ' s . —Mr . Broughton : And does the manager know that you are going about in this way , in the disguise of a woman?—Prisoner : It was only done for a lark , Sir , and I have my own clothes underneath . ( He here pulled
up his female apparel , and exhibited a pair of black trousers and boots . —Sergeant Walker , 5 D , deposed that on the previous morning , between one and two o'clock , he was spoken to by Mr . Peach , who , pointing to the prisoner , said— " That girl has stolen my handkerchief from my groat-coat pocket . " Witness went up to the prisoner and told _hjui what ho was charged with , when he said—¦• 'Don ' t take mo to the station-house , I want to speak to you , and will give you something to drink ; I am no girl , but am a young man , living in Pickering-place . " He ( prisoner ) was , at the time , with two other persons . —Mr . Broughton : Did the person who lost the handkerchief say anything more to you ?—Witness : He told mc that he had been in
the company of the prisoner for nearl y an hour , aud that he ( prisoner ) had put his arms round him many times ; his belief was then that . the prisoner was a girl . —Mr . Holt , a tradesman , said ho had no other idea with regard to the affair than that it was a mere lavk on the part of the prisoner . Witness did not believe that he ( prisoner ) had ever had the handkerchief in his possession . —Sergeant Walker produced tho handkerchief , which , after the prisoner was locked up , he found within 200 yards of the spot where he ( prisoner ) was captured . —Mr . Broughton : Is the owner ofthe handkerchief here ? —Witness . —He is not , Sir , * but ho wa 3 desired to attend , and hc promised to do so . —Mr . Broughton ( to the prisoner ) : What is your answer to
this?—Prisoner . —I was not aware of the risk I was running in this freak , and if I had intended anything wrong by _putting on female apparel I should not have had my own things on underneath . —The person who said he had lost his handkerchief was much thc worse for drink when he met me . He said , "Are you going homo alone , Miss ? " and I said , ' Yes . " He would not let me go , or I should have been glad to havo got rid of him . I never put women ' s clothes on before , and am sorry that I should have acted so foolishly now , but I did not dream of any harm arising out of it . —Mr . Broughton looked upon the affair in a serious light ; to say tlie least of it , thc assumption of women ' s attire by a man in the public streets was an offence from which
great abominations might possibly arise . —The prisoner was bailed , himself in £ 40 , and two sureties in £ 30 each , for his being again forthcoming at the court ; and it was directed that a summons should be issued against Mr , Peach , whoso evidence is material in the case . The prisoner was again placed at the bar on Tuesday , when Mr . Peach was present , a summons having been served upon him by order of Mr . BYOUghton , who was resolved upon sifting the matter to the bottom , as he considered that it was an affair of too serious a nature to be lightly passed over . A solicitor attended for the prisoner . Some new facts were elicited , and the prosecutor alleged that , while in conversation with the prisoner , he
( the latter ) committed an act of the grossest indecency upon him . He ( prosecutor ) entered into many other particulars as to thc various places along which he and prisoner walked , and the nature of the discourse which took place . Ho unhesitatingly assorted that his firm impression was that he had been talking to a young woman , and was not undeceived until after he ( prisoner ) had been searched at the station-house . —The solicitor , who had cross-examined witnesses with much tact on behalf of his client , said that the act of putting on female apparel was a frolic of a very foolish natu * e . He ( prisoner ) had certainly been guilty of great indiscretion , and which he would regret to his latest _^ hour . He was a young man respectably connected , '
and good bail could be put in lor his better behaviour in future . He ( the solicitor ) did not think that the prosecutor stood in a very favourable li ght in the transaction , according to his own version of the matter . —Mi ' . Broughton considered that tho solicitor had , in his zeal for his client , thrown out an allusion against the prosecutor which was not called for . How the handkerchief had been ahstracted , and by whom , was a mystery \ but ho ( the magistrate ) had no hesitation at all in condemning the conduct of a young man dressing himself up in woman ' s clothes . That of itself was an offence contra bones mores ,- but a more grave offence had been preferred , viz ., that of an indecent assault upon the prosecutor . Mr . Broughton added , that
he should not as yet decide as to whether he should send the prisoner to trial or not ; he should take time to consider fully the case in all its bearings , and give his decision on Tuesday next . Good bail was tendered and accepted for the future appearance of the accused . The case excited an unusual degree of interest . WORSHIP-STREET . —A _Helpmatb . —A littl woman named Martha Jones , who has been several times before in custody for similar outrageous acts , was brought before Mr . Hammill , charged with cutting and wounding her husband , a foreman in the St . Katherine Docks , and also with _threatening The husbandwho
his life . — , appeared to be as peaceable as his partner was furious , stated that he hadbecn married for twenty years to the prisoner , by whom he had had a famil y of seven children , but that for a long time past she had given herself up to such vicious and profligate habits that his life had been rendered perfectly miserable . She had imbibed such an insatiable thirst for gin , that she was wholly reckless as to tho moans she adopted to gratify it , and neither he nor his children were able to keep a second article of wearing apparel , or any other article of property that could be converted into money without its being _seiied by the prisoner
Marylebone—A Qober "Lark."—Edward Woodal...
and carried off to the pawnbrokers , whose shops she was in the daily habit of visiting , and when lie ventured to remonstrate with her upon the ruinous course she was pursuing , he was constantly subjected to such furious attacks with the first weapon she could lay her hands on that his life was always in danger . " nc had been obliged to bring her before thc magistrate for such conduct , and she had been several times committed to prison , but she only became move callous and desperate , and while sitting at tea with his children on thc _preceding Friday the prisoner , who had been incessantly druuk tho whole of that week , suddenly began abusing him with the most foul-mouthed expressions , ana then , grasping one of tho table-knives , brandished it in his face with tlie most terrible threats and
imprecations . It was evidently her intention to inflict upon him some serious injury , and he tried to wrest the knife out of her hand , but failed in doing so ; and , after getting one of his fingers nearly severed from his hand , was obliged to rush into the street , or he was satisfied he should have been murdered . Notwithstanding all this , howover , he did not wish to press the charge vindictively against her ; and if the magistrate would make her find sufficient bail to secure the safety of himself and children , whose lives were in constant danger from her violence , he should be perfectly satisfied . —Rowland , the warrant-officer , said , that upon calling at the house the complainant , in illustration of his wife ' s desperate character , drew his attention to thc state of the wainscot in tbe parlour , which was marked in innumerable places with deep indentations , left by heavy missiles she had hurled at his head ; and
he produced a pile of duplicates for his own and the children's clothing , which the prisoner had pledged to satisfy her propensity for drink . —Mr . Hammill said that it was certainly a most lamentable case , but , as the husband , had abandoned the more serious part of the charge , he was determined he and his family should have tho protection from violence he sought , and he should therefore order the prisoner to procure two substantial householders to be answerable for her peaceable behaviour for the IlCSt month . —The instant she heard this decision , the prisoner turned fiercely upon hcv unfortunate husband , and bitterly exclaiming , " May my curses rest upon your head , you murdering villain , to the last day Of your life , " was removed by the gaoler , AV « i , _BOt being able at the close of the court to find any one who would be a guarantee for hcv future good conduct , was ultimately carried off in the van for the time specified .
WESTMINSTER . —Alleged Murder of a Wife nr nER Husband . — John Wardley , aged 49 , described as a labourer , was charged before Mr . _Brodei'ip , on suspicion of having caused the death of Anne , his wife , by assaulting her . —Caroline Donelly , a woman in humble circumstances , stated that thc prisoner and his wife occupied an apartment immediately over her , at No . 1 , Leg-court , Peter-street , Westminster . On Saturday evening , about tea time , she heard the prisoner and his wife quarrelling in their room , shortly after which the latter left him , and as she camo down stairs made use of angry words . She then passed along by witness ' s door , and went out . In about fifteen or twenty minutes more , she again heard them quarrelling in their room , and on listening she heard what
she thought to be a tremendous combat between them . The deceased made use of very low language to her husband , immediately aftev which there was a heavy tail which shook the place . As witness was going out shortly afterwards she heard something like a heavy sigh , which she thought proceeded from the prisoner ' s apartment . She paid no particular attention to this and went to market , but upon her return in two hours found that prisoner s wifo was dead . —Mr . Taylor ( tlie chief clerk ) : Had you any opportunity of observing whether she was sober on Saturday evening ?—Witness . ' I could hardly say whether she was sober or drunk . I had but little acquaintance with her . I should say she had had a drop . —Mr . Taylor : Is what you have described all you heard ov know upon the subject ? — Witness ; It is . I paid but little
attention , not thinking that anything like this would come of it , having heard similar quarrels between them before . —Mr . George Burton Payne , of 10 , Tachbi'ook-street , and 4 , Greycoat-place , surgeon , said , that at half-past eight on Saturday night he was called to attend the prisoner ' s wife , at 1 , Leg-court , and found the prisoner and two females engaged in lifting her into the bed . Witness , who at the first supposed she was in a fit , inquired whether she was subject to them , when the prisoner replied that she had not lately , and added , that he would not deceive him ( witness ) he had struck his wifo on the chest , and knocked her down . The women then informed witness , in a whisper , that it had had the effect upon the wifo of producing a miscarriage . Witness then observed that some
blood had been wiped off the floor , and on examining the woman , who appeared much exhausted , he found some appearances which seemed to denote that the circumstance stated by the females had occurred ; but he could not say positively that it had . She was insensible , and almost pulseless , and witness requested the prisoner to accompany him to his shop for a stimulant , which he immediately did , and on witness again going to thc house almost immediately he found her dead . Witness then thought it was his duty to g ive the necessary information to the proper authorities with respect to what had occurred , and intimated that such was his intention to the prisoner , who did not throughout exhibit the slightest disposition to conceal anything , but was open and straightforward . — Mr . Broderip : Have
you any notion of what caused death ?—Witness : I have not . I cannot tell the cause of death until I make a post mortem examination , for which I have received the coroner ' s warrant . —William Nolan , 56 B , stated that he went to prisoner's room at ten on Saturday night , and told him that he must accompany him to the station-house -, he immediately replied that he would . On his way thither he said he had earned ISs . and given his wife 10 s ., keeping the other 2 s . to buy a shovel to gO to _WOl'k witil on Monday morning . He asked her for 2 d ., and she would not give it him . She had been drinking , and abusing him for some time , and told him that she would go to the public house and spend all the money he had given her . She further aggm' ! it < _Kl him , and he struck her in the side and knocked her
down , but he little thought it would come to what it had . He was perfectly sober . — Mr . Broderip having inquired whether the accused wished to say anything to the charge , tbe prisoner , who has the appearance of a sober , quiet man , replied , in a subdued tone , " Nothing . "—Mr . Broderip said it was his duty to remand him upon this very serious charge for a week . — The prisoner , before his removal from the court , made an application to the magistrate on behalf of his four children , who were unprotected . — Mr . Broderip observed that they should bo properly taken care of ; andMv . Collis , one of the relieving officers of St . Margaret and St . John ' s , stepped forward , and said they should be admitted into the workhouse , and properly provided for .
BOW-STREET . —The Robbery oi ? Coins at the British Museum . —Timoleon Vlasto , who stands accused of stealing a quantity of coins and medals from the British Museum , and from the collections of several persons of distinction , was placed at the bar lefore Mr . Jardine , on remand from Thursday week . Mr . Bodkin conducted the prosecution ; Mr . Clarkson attended for the defence . On the bench were General Pox , Sir nenry Ellis , and the Earl of Enniskillen . —Mr . Douhleday , one of the curators of the antiquities , swore positively to two coins , now produced , as having been stolen from the collection in the museum under his care . Ife could not be mistaken about them , for he had taken , previously to the theft , a cast from each of them in a sulphur mould , which was of the most perfect kind
that could be made , and gave the minutest flaw and peculiarity of the original with great exactness . He could , therefore , swear without any doubt to the identity of those two coins . He had taken no cast since the robbery . The coins had been in the possession ofthe police since the arrest of tho prisoner , and they were found by Inspector Field , of the A division of police , concealed in a secret drawer in the prisoner's writing desk . The Inspector , in the course of his evidence , now produced in addition seventy-one valuable corns , which he also found at the prisoner ' s lodgings , No . 15 , St . James ' s-square . —General Fox identified the greater part of these as having been stolen from his cabinet , to which the prisoner had access . Of the remainder he could not be so positive , although , as they were all rare
and valuable , and similar at least to those which wero missing from his collection with the other more certainly identified ones , hc could have no doubt they were the same . The value of these coins as old metal might not be above ten pounds in tho whole ; but their value as antiquities was not so easily determined . There was none of them that was not worth at least three or four pounds , and he had paid at a greater rate for most of them . The gallant general took occasion further to say that he had been informed by persons of the highest respectability that not only was the prisoner ' s family highly connected , but his own conduct had been irreproachable up to the time when these charges arose . —Mr . Jardine said , that such testimony might be of some service to the prisoner elsewhere , but could not avail him at present . He was remanded
for another week . The prisoner a father , the late Count 'Vlasto , was connected with the Turkish diplomatic corps about twenty-three years ago . MANSION-HOUSE . —On Tuesday , Patrick Moore was charged by an officer of tho City of London Union under the new act of parliament , intituled " An Act to alter thc Provisions relating to the Charges for the Relief of the Poor in UnionB . " The act enables any person employed by tho guardians of the poor to , search any individual applying for relief , and to hand over any money found upon him of which he shall not give a complete disclosure to the guardians , and it enables the magistrate to inflict upon him the punishment of a rogue and vagabond . —Pound , one of tho officers of the City of London Union , attending in Northumberland-alley , stated thai fc the prisoner had called at the union and
Marylebone—A Qober "Lark."—Edward Woodal...
begged for assistance , declaring that he was starving and had not a friend in the world . Hc also applied to be passed homo to tho county of Cork . He had a bundle under his coat , and upon being asfcud what it contained , he replied " a few ould rags of clothes that had been given to him by a countryman of his own Witness suspected that hc was ; m impostor , and the _^ examination of tho bundle confirmed tlie impression , for it disclosed a quantity of bread sufficient for a couple of days . 11 U pockets were then searched and although hc had stated that he had no more than twopence-half penny in his possession , the officer found , stitched up in a bag and concealed in his trousers , lis . id . ; and upon his back found two
were excellent clean shirts . When ho was asked how he happened to be starving when he had so much bread in his possession , ho said , " Oh , faith , because I hadn ' t time to eat it . " He added that ho had put the money together to £ 0 home to Ireland , but he was told it was not enough , so he thought he would put it out of people ' s way and get a pass . He had been in England about three-months , but if he could get home he did not want to come back . —Alderman Gibbs . * I sco that the case is one of complete imposture , and I am glad that we liave an act which authorises the searching and punishing of such persons . You are sentenced to _imprisonment and hard labour for ono month as a rogue and vagabond , and the money
found ' upon you will be handed over to the board of guardians . As for your application to be passed home we shall consider that when your time ot" imprisonment shall hare ceased . —It appeared from & subsequent conversation between the prisoner and the officer , that Moore had never worked an hour since his arrival in England , hut bad contrived to live comfortably upon the benevolence ofhis countrymen here . CLERKENWELL . — Crimi . val Assault . — M . Kelly was charged , by Mrs . Elizabeth Waters , with having criminally assaulted her . —The prosecutrix deposed that on Monday night last , at twenty minutes to twelve o ' clock she was returning home , and on her arrival in Church-road , Islington , ; _-he was accosted by the prisoner , who asked her the
way to the Liverpool-road . She replied that she was a stranger , and could not inform him . He follOWCd her Until She came opposite a dead wall , when he seiied hold of her waist , threw her down on the pavement , and conducted himself in _an-ost brutal and cowardly manner . She resisted hiin , and called out " murder" and " police , " when he placed his hand on lier face to prevent her making an alarm . The prisoner used every effort to _aei-omplish his design , but he failed in consequence of her efforts tO prevent him . At length her cries brought several policemen to tho spot , when he was taken into custody , after a desperate resistance . Witness repeatedly begged of liim to have mercy upon her and let her go , as she was a married woman with a
family Of children ; but he refused to do so , and she nearly became insensible . —Michael Monafian , a policc-censtable , confirmed the evidence of the prosecutrix as to her cries and entreaties for " mercy . " When he took the prisoner into custody , he " exclaimed , "It ' s all right , policeman ; she ismy wife . " This the prosecutrix strongly denied ; and the prisoner said ho could not allow himself to be taken _. He then tried to run away , but witness secured him with the assistance of another constable . —The prisoner in his defence , attributed the blame to the prosecutrix ; and he was fully committed for trial . _Extensive Robbery _sr Boys . — Two boys named Daniel Pellat and George Vincent the eldest of whom was not more than sixteen years of a _? e ,
were placed at the bar for final examination , charged with having been concerned in robbing _MiiS-srs . Vivian and _Dii * ey , ladies' shoemakers , in Churchstreet , Edgeware-road , of property to a considerable amount . It appeared from the evidence that the prisoner Pellat was errand boy to the prosecutor , and that ou the 10 th inst . be was sent with a hi !! of £ 2 13 s . to Mr . Angell , a gentleman living in Groveend-road , St . John ' s-wood , and he had Ts . given to him in order that he _raij-ht give change in the event of three sovereigns being offered to him . Miss Angell not having three sovereigns by her gave the prisoner a £ 10 note , desiring him to bring back the change , but he neglected to return , and in consequence thereof a communication was made to Mr .
Vivian , who , from information which he had received , went down to Greenwich and found Pellat in the fair . lie asked him what he had done with the £ 10 note , when he delivered it up , saying , "Here it is . " The other prisoner was with him , and they were both given into custody . —Newman , 340 R , produced twenty-three duplicates , which he found upon Pellat . He ( the latter ) and the other prisoner admitted that they had pawned the articles to which the duplicates referred —Many pawnbrokers we'e in attendance , bringing with them the property pledged . —Mr . Vivian identified ah that was brought forward , and said that during the time theptisoner was with him hc had _missed ninety or a hundred pairs of shoes . —The prisoners were both committed for trial .
_SOUTHWARD .-Donovan and Powell , the two men charged with two other men ( not in custody ) , in criminally assaulting and robbing Mrs . Eliza Seal , the wife of a commercial traveller , in Coleman _^ street , were brought before Mr . Cottingham for reexamination on the charge . A solicitor handed in a certificate of the complainant's illness , arising from the outrageous nature of the assaults committed ou her , and said that he received the docu " ment from the medical man , and that such was her bad health at present , that she was quite incapacitated from attending tho present examination . —An inspector of the City police said that in consequence of having observed an account of the examination of the prisoners in the newspapers , he considered it his
duty to attend for the purpose of communicating that on last Sunday night week ( the night it was _allegedjahe was turned out by her husband ) , ehe was taken into custody by a policeman , who found heft at a late hour of the night in a state of intoxication in the street , and she was confined in the _Baw-lane station-house uutil the morning . Tlie inspector ad-led that the woman gave the name of Eliza Seal , and that if he saw her lie _shou'd be enabled to say whether she was the female upon whom the alleged outrage had been perpetrated . —The policeman said , that the complainant had already stated that after having been turned out of her house by her
husband she went over to Walworth , and slept at the house of her laundress . The latter had also confirmed the fact . —Mr . Cottingham siid that even admitting the complainant was intoxicated on the night in question , there was no doubt that advantage was taken of her situation , and that most brutal outrages were committed upon her . The certificate that had been produced described that the unfortunate woman was unable to attend , therefore hc should remand the prisoners * , but upon this occasion he would have no objection to admit them to bail , to appear on Monday next , themeslves in _£ 40 , and two sureties of £ 20 each . The prisoners , however , not being in a condition to find the required sureties , were sent to gaol .
Shipwrecks In The Black Sea. Coxstaxtino...
SHIPWRECKS IN THE BLACK SEA . _CoxsTAXtiNorLE , March 30 . —Several disasters ; have occurred in the Mack Sea : a Turkish vessel was totally lost on the 18 th , just outside the Bosphorus , on the Asiatic coast . On thc 20 th another " Turkish vessel was lost at Ivilice . A Russian brig ,, from Odessa to England , with grain , was lost tho > same day , on thc coast of _Karabournou . The ! English brig Expert , Capt . Jameson , from Odessa ,, and the Greek brig Alcibiade , Capt . Saktouri , came ; in collision ; the Greek brig foundered , but the ! crew got on board the Express . The Copia , Capt . Pane , of Liverpool , is lost at Soulina ; the Shakspeare , of London , Captain Lindson is also lost near port . Another English brig , name unknown , is reported lost . All the crews have been saved . It is hoped that the Black Sea gales arc at last over .
Fauii Accident.—A Most Melancholy Accide...
_Fauii Accident . —A most melancholy accident , : which terminated fatally , occurred on the Leabridge station of the North-Eastern Railway , on Tuesday evening , about six o ' clock . A middle-aged . woman named Fletcher , wife of a small grocer at i Leyton , Essex , returning from town , stepped out ; ofthe carriage before thc train had finally stopped ., It is presumed she lost balance , and her foot caught i in the step of the carriage ; she was thrown under . * the train , and when taken up was found to have her- * "im and her thigh bone broken , one leg nearly cutis off at the ankle , and her body much lacerated . The >
poor woman continued in great agony , but retained I perfect consciousness until twenty' minutes before *! nine o ' clock , when death put an end to her sufferings .. Mr . T . S . Dckcombe , M . P . —The health of thiss hon . gentleman has so far improved that it is _hisa intention to resume his Parliamentary duties shortl y _^ after the termination of the Easter recess .. Thaa disease under which Mr . Duncombe has suffered so > severely for a protracted period , has yielded to the * i skill and unremitting care of his medical attendants ,, who are , we understand , of opinion that , withproperr precautions , the hon . member for Finsbury has yetfc ; many years of public usefulness before him . —Globe ..
Loss op Life at _Baxswatkr , —On Saturday mora * - ing last a fire broke out at No , 10 , Park-place , Bayi _»« water . The premises were in tho occupation off Mrs . Mary Forester , a Swiss lady , who , it is to be » regretted , was burnt almost to a cinder . It ' appears that about eight o ' clock in the morning _eomea persons living opposite discovered the unfortunate * female making to the front window with the wholee of hor wearing apparel in flames ; Before , the _poorr woman had time to reach the window Bhefell iroma exhaustion . The neighbours having apprised thee inmates ofthe house of what they nad-witnessedd from the outside , they made to the room occupiedd b y the deceased . Owing to tho oxertions . of the re-tsidentsin the place , the tiro was extinguished , butt not until Mrs . Forester was burned to ; death , ahddl some considerable damage dono to the furniture , ¦ ,, & e . Fortunately the property destroyed was insured I ! in the Sua Fire-offk » .
-
-
Citation
-
Northern Star (1837-1852), April 21, 1849, page 5, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns3_21041849/page/5/
-