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TilliersJ in tlio
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SUICIDES AND INQUESTS.
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^ Colliery Explosion ,—An inquest was he...
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CRIMES AND OFFENCES
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Uttering Forged JNotes.—A young man, giv...
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Untitled
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Destructive Fire.—On Friday morning week...
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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Transcript
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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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— 0-Tthe Followiug Is An Extract Of A Le...
_tfr . TilliersJ in wording tlio resolution he put the question to _himajf , "What , under existing circumstances , would Sir R . Peel have done if lie had been still alive ? " and he assured the house on his honour that he believed , from the best of his jud gement , and his intimate acquaintance with the feelings of that Statesman , he would have framed a far better resolution , but one in the same spirit . ( Cheers ) He then sent the draft resolution to Lord John Russell , with whom _jie _was happy to say he had been in cordial and friendl y communi cation ( Ironical laughter from the Government benches , and loud cheers . ) The answer of his noble friend was , that he approved of the resolution but he suggested the insertion of the third clause , viz ., that the house would be ready to take into consideration any measures consistent with the principle of free trade that might be submitted to the house
"by the _Government , m order to show that the movers of the resolution did not wjsli to offer any factious opposition . ( Hear . ) He " ( Sir James Graham ) thought the suggestion admirable , and the clause was inserted . Such then , in fact towordsthe close of Tuesday night ' s debate , afresh amendment by way of compromise had been introduced by rhe noble lor _° the member for Tiverton . Between these three distinct documents tee opinions of the house were divided ; and now , according to his suggestions , the course most reasonably to be taken by the Opposition and the Government would be to recognise in the words already intimated the recognition of the free-trade principles , without having a chink open for future compensation , and without wounding unnecessaril y the sensibility of the existing Government
. Mr . _uxabstoxe rose to say a few words with respect to the question raised by his right hon . hon . friend . He found that even up to that moment some progress had been made towards a settlement of the whole question , and he ventured to hope that they would agree to the suggestions of his right hon . friend with regard to the insertion of certain words in the amendment _nroTiosed by the noble lord the member for Tiverton .
Now , the whole question that was before them , related to only two of the changes of policy and feeling which had taken place in the house , and it was now proposed in order to perpetuate that policy to make a change in the first resolution , from the phrase— "in a great measure , " to the word " may . " He did not think that any objections was to be taken to that change , and therefore he should confine himself to the words proposed * to be inserted in the second resolution . He
was not willing to preclude the Government by an anticipatory motion from bringing forward on this subject . He thought the most acceptable course would be for the house to adopt the course . Mr . T . _Duxcombe said , that for the nine parliaments duriug which he had set in the house , he never before had seen it so trifled with . First of all , they had been made fools of , just as if it had been the _fircf nf _AtymI _. nn _MnnrJfl . v trio-lit last , when _tliR motion for _tlifi rail of
the House had been adjourned . Me _confessed lie should like to have _seen the face of his hon . friend the member for Montrose when he saw in the papers that his motion had been withdrawn . The quarrel , as he thought , very pretty as it stood originally , but with these amendments upon amendments , he was quite of opinion that the country would be puzzled . There was the ori ginal motion of the hon . member for _Wolverhamton , and the amendment of the Government , and so far the course was plain ; bnt then came the motion of the noble viscount the member for Tiverton , and now they had something more Tf > _pA « f . from Carlisle ? Hfi should like to ask that noble lord how it
was that he had becommed possessed ot that motion trom the right hon . gentleman , the member for Carlisle ? The conclusion the coutry would come to on the subjeot would be , that the gentlemen below , the "Wliigs , —and he heartily wished that Whiggery were about to be hurried with protection—were not yet ready to occupy the places of the gentlemen opposite . He supposed tht hon . baronet had been re"Whigged for the occasion . The best course would be to take the hon . baronet at his word , and adjourn the house , fto give the right honourable gentlemen time to settle amicably their little differences . Af ter a . few words from Mr . Cayley and Mr . E . Palmer ,
Lord Palmerston hoped the supporters ot the _Government , and those who were once favourable to protection , seeing the hoplessness of any attempt that might be made to a reversal of our prosent commercial policy , would at once bow to the force of circumstances , and accept the amendment which he had proposed as altered by the right hon . hon . gentleman the member for Carlisle . For his own part he was quite ready to anopt the alteration . He therefore hoped both the original resolution and the amendment proposed by the Government would be abandoned , and his own resolution , as amended , unanimously « _irJ _< _YnfprT
Sir E . B . Lytton thought it very important tnat tney snouia adopt that form of words that would best satisfy the house and the people out of doors ; and it seemed to him that the great principle under consideration was most likely to meet the general approbation of the house under the form of Lord Palmerston ' s amendment . The Marquis of Granby could neither agree to the motion nor to any of the amendments . rm _. _^ nn _. _^ _r _r _rtD nf flm _Ethhrotter made some observations
with _reo-ard to the imputations cast upon mm oy several or me _preceding _Ipeakers . He had done everything in his power on behalf of the land of England , which he believed to have been unjustly treated by recent _legislation ; at the same time that he must confess that that _legislation had , as far as cheapening provisions was concerned , contributed to the welfere of the working classes . With regard to the motion and amendments before the house , lie refused to give up the question of _" compensation ;' but between the proposition of the government and that of Lord Palmerston he saw no real difference
Lord J Bussell suggested that trom the various amendments before the house , a motion might be drawn up calculated to reconcile 3 . 11 _1131 _'tlGS Mr . _CoBDEtf ridiculed the idea of compensating any particular in-After an indignant speech from Mr . _Newdegate , Mr Vita _rejected any modification of his motion , and pressed for a division . Mr Barrow and Mr . Stanhope spoke a few words , and Sir James Graham withdrew his motion for adjournment . _mTcH _4 S 0 BLL 0 B of the _EXCHEQUER said he should not be ajle _, __ _, ' * ' _, _^ m _« _. _flnnnmalstatement on the day he had intended
_^ S _^ _U ShbV _ZTobta _W leave to bring in a W tU . dav ° _^ : _Sf ° K & flt _adjourned debate on commercial _legis-U _uX _^ _wM _Eschew thought that after the relhe 0 HA _^ Jr _^ Palmel , ston , and the opinions expressed in cellar of lhe Exchequer ) withdrew h . _s amendment . m . j mm , t . hmws been accordingly withdrawn ,
»« . „ _nWvationsftom Mr . . Booker , Air . usDorue , _wuu wu .-Ate some o _^ ervatmn _^ _^ _^^ Mr ft Tt _£ ? i _^ ood , and Sir John _Pakington , thed , ££ _* . £ _- £ ¦ , _-d the house adjourned _* , after the tran , _« _^ _e o _^ _mo . formal business .
Tilliersj In Tlio
Suicides And Inquests.
SUICIDES AND _INQUESTS .
^ Colliery Explosion ,—An Inquest Was He...
_^ Colliery Explosion , —An inquest was held on Monday on a collier named James Farnworth , of Singing Clough , near Bolton , who had lost his life by an explosion of gas in a coal mine . The deceased worked in one of the coal mines of Messrs . Knowles and Stott , at i Singing Clough , and on Wednesday last , after leaving the face of coal at which he was working , he returned with a naked candle . A quantity of foul gas accumulated in the place instantly exploded , and he was much burnt . He was carried home , where he died on Friday . Fortunatel y none of the other workmen were injured . The jury were of opinion that Farnworth _' s death was entirely owing to his own want of care , and found a verdict of " Accidental death . " Frightful Occurrence in Aldermanbury . —On Saturday an inquest taken b
was y Mr . W . Payne , the coroner , at St . Bartholomew ' s Hospital , as to the death of Henry Pineher , aged 41 . He had beeh in the service of Messrs . Chadwick _, of No . 7 , Dyer ' s-court , Aldermanbury , velvet edgers , and , althongh his residence was at No . 31 , New Ivy-street , Hoxton , he had been allowed , from the great pressure of business , to sleep in the house in Dyer ' s-court , for the last iew nights . On Wednesday night , about 12 o ' clock , he went to the top of the house to turn off the gas , and there is a well-staircase all the way up . As he was coining down , he afterwards said , he was Teaching over the well to turn off a branch of gas which was in the centre , when having a lantern in the other hand , his foot slipped , and lie fell all the way down the well-hole . Upon the noise being heard , some of the persons in the house went to his assistance , and a surgeon was sent for , who advised his immediate removal to the hospital , where he was seen by Mr . Fletcher , the hou se-suageon , who found fractures of the thigh and knee-cap , as well as severe injuries to the head . He died on Thursdav . Verdict . " Ar . p . irlevi +. s » ] < Wt . lv "
Ihe Accident on the London and Brighton Railway . —An inquest was held on Monday evening , on the body of Mary Cloves , an elderly lady , the widow of the late Mr . P . Cloves , an extensive coal merchant in London . She has latterly resided at 18 , Regency-square , Brighton , and she was the most severe sufferer in the collision that occurred at Reigate Junction three weeks ago ,. A considerable amount of evidence was laid before the jury ; but that of most interest was given by the medical gentlemen who have been in attendance on deceased since the accident . —Mr . Beniamin Valance stated that the
injury she sustained was a compound fracture of the after third of the right leg , with severe contusions . By a post most mortem examination , he found that the unfortunate lady had been afflicted with a disease of the heart , and he was inclined to regard that as the immediate canse of her death . He could not say positively that the shock which the system sustained in the accident did not facilitate the cause of death . Mr . Latham , a surgeon , agreed with Mr . Vallance as to desease of the heart being the actual cause of death . It was possible that it might take its rise in a shock ; as to -whether the shock accelerated the fatal termination , it was impossible to give any certain opinion . The jury , after some deliberation , gave a verdict of " Died by fatty degeneration of the heart , of long standing . "
Suicide by a Pauper . —An old man , named John Heywood , who had been for some time in receipt of relief from the Manchester Union , committed suicide on Tuesday morning by drowniug himself in a water-tub , at the George and Dragon public-house , in Garden-street . He had been in the habit of sleeping on a bench in the kitchen of this house for the last two years . On the Monday evening he told the keeper of the house , whose name is Brotherdale , that the eighteennence a week which he had received from _thermion was to be . taken
away from him . He had an order for admission to the workhouse , but he declared he would not go in . He did not know what he should do for a shelter , as Brotherdale was going to remove , and thought he should cut his throat to make away with himself . Brotherdale left him in the kitchen when he went to bed , at half-past 12 on _Monday ni ght . At half-past 7 next morning lie found deceased with his head in the water tub , and his legs hanging over the side . He was quite dead , but the body was still warm . There was no other person in the house exceDt a little rirl of four vears old . and deceased could not
have got into the tub by accident . Deceased was 68 years oi age , a factory carder by trade , and was said to be disposed to work when he had an opportunity . An inquest was held on the body on Tuesday by Mr . Herford , when the jury found a verdict that the deceased drowned himself under the influence of temporary insanity . Deaths through Visiting Chelsea Hospital . —On Monday morning a respectable tradesman , of the name of Mr . Jeremiah Pea ™* builder , who resided in Hart-street , Covent-earden , exmred
irom injuries he received on Saturday morning , the loth instant , while endeavouring to obtain admission to see the Duke of Wellington lying in state at Chelsea Hospital . No day is yet named for the coroner ' s inquest . —On Monday morning Thomas Wakley , Esq ., held an inquest at the Fishmongers' Arms , West-street , Seven Dials , touching the death of Charles Barton , aged 47 years , japanner . It appeared by the evidence , that the deceased went on Tuesday , the 16 th inst ., and was nearly suffocated , being in the crowd six hours and a half . On his return home he was taken ill , and died in a few hours . Mr . New , surgeon , proved the deceased died from the effects of extravasation of blood on the substance and ventricles of the brain The . inrv returned a verdict accordingly .
Crimes And Offences
CRIMES AND OFFENCES
Uttering Forged Jnotes.—A Young Man, Giv...
Uttering Forged JNotes . —A young man , giving the name ot Pierce , has been uttering forged Bank of England notes in Manchester , and there are at this time in the hands of Mr . Richard Beswick , chief superintendent of police in that town , one 10 _£ . and two 5 _Z . notes , all of which are forgeries , paid by this person . All that is known of the man at present is , that on Thursday last he went into Grosvenorstreet , Choiiten-upon-Medlock , and engaged respectable lodgings . On Saturday evening he gave the servant woman a 10 L Bank of England note , and asked her to get it changed . She obtained change for it without difficulty at the shop of Mr , Bracewell , butcher , and the man bavin ? ascertained from where she had got the change , afterwards
went to the same shop himseli and got a ot . . dank ot _England note cashed . It turned out that both notes were forgeries , and the other 51 . note , mentioned above , was sent to the police office by another person who had been similarly victimized . The man had ordered a good stock of provisions at his lodgings , but never returned there after getting his notes changed as described . The notes are tolerably well executed on watered paper , with the words " Bank of England" in the watermark similar to real Bank of England notes , but the paper has a rougher surface and much harsher feel than the genuine . The man is described as a light-haired , thin faced person , with bushy whiskers and effeminate voice , and as about 5 ft . 8 in . hi gh , and 30 vears of acre . The notes bear date " London , April 12 , 1852 . "
Daring Garotte Robbery in the _strand . — -un _Saturday , information was received that as Mr . Chalmers , of 12 , Cambridge-street , Golden-square , was passsng through Agar-street , Strand , he was attacked by a man of Herculean frame , who seizing him by the neck , cut the guard-chain of his watch , and , throwing him violently from him , decamped with his booty towards Covent-garden Market . Several persons who witnessed the struggles of Mr . Chalmers , gathered round , and as soon as he recovered himself sufficiently to explain that he had been robbed , went in pursuit . The robber , however , who was joined _Tw flTintfier in the market , sot clear away with his booty .
Uttering Forged Jnotes.—A Young Man, Giv...
Poaching Affray on the Colonial Secretary s Preserves . —Two young men , residing in the neighbourhood of Droitwich , Worcestershire , named John Smith and Charles Cook , have been committed to Worcester County-gaol , on a charge of attempting to murder one of Sir John Pakington ' s gamekeepers by shooting at him . It appears that the keepers had found that on Sunday mornings poaching was carried on in the preserves , and accordingly on _Sunday , the 7 _ffo inst ., the underkeeper and two watchers lav in wait for them . About
5 o clock-in the morning the prisoners made their appearance , and Smith was seized by one of the watchers named Nott . Upon this both men attacked Nott , who received a violent blow on the head , and also had an arm broken with a gun-barrel . Smith also called to Cook to blow out Nott ' s brains , upon which Cook put a percussion cap on his gun , and pul ' ed the trigger . The cap exploded , but not the charge in the gun , or Nott must have been a dead man . Both prisoners were afterwards taken into custody .
Extensive Robbery op Jewellery . —Bristol , baturday . —Information was received by the police this morning that between the hours of eleven o ' clock last night and half-past seven this morning , the house of Mrs , Woodhill , jeweller , No . 5 , Sion-place , Clifton , near this city , had been burglariously entered and the following very valuable property abstracted : about 100 gold rings set with diamonds , rubies , pearls , & c , 30 gold lockets of various sorts ' . 39 gold pencilcases ; a large number of silver pencil-casesfive gold chains and three
, gold necklaces , several silver butter-knives ; several gold brooches , silver chains , guards , & c , and a large number of gold pins set with precious stones . . The police are making every exertion to detect the burglars , but at present they have not the slightest clue as to who the guilty persons are . From an examination made of the premises it appears that the back-door leads out towards Caledonia-place , and a wall about eight feet in height runs along this entrance to the premises . Tt , is p . nm ' er _' . t _. _nred f . _hat the _theivesTnnsf , have climbed this
wallwalked along the top of it , and then dropped themselves into the area . There they found a pair of steps , which bad been incautiously left outside the premises , and by placing these against the back wall of the house they could succeed in reaching a square pantry window , one of the panes of which had been accidentally broken . Through the aperture thus made , one of the burglars , for it is evident there was more than one person concerned in this daring wholesale robbery , must have undone the fastening of the window . Having thus gained access to the premises , they forced the lock of the shop door , entered , the sho , and nearly stripped it of its contents . It is supposed , although the inmates of the house did not hear any noise , that the burglars must have been in some way disturbed , for they left behind them a lar _^ e number of valuable articles of silver plate .
The Murder op a Farmer and his Wife near _Stafford . —r Committal of Three More Men . —Stafford , Wednesday . — After a protracted sitting , the magistrates , the Hon . and Rev . A . O , Talbot and Dr . Knight , last Tuesday , committed Edward Welch ,. Charles Moore , and Peter Kerevan , for trial , charged with the wilful murder of John and Jane Blackburn at the Ash Flats near this town * Henry Blackburn , son of the deceased , as we have already statedhad
, been previously committed for trial upon the same charge . The exclusion of the press from the inquiry before the magistrates , prevents us giving an outline of the evidence upon which the accused have been committed . It is supposed that to-day Welch has made a statement throwing additional li ght upon the matter . It is expected that , in order to bring the principles to justice , one of the accessories _wjU t ? e _arlnniMerl _a . _rmrover .
Ar00306
Destructive Fire.—On Friday Morning Week...
Destructive Fire . —On Friday morning week a vast _irregalar mass of building , consisting of a cotton mill , a woollen mill , and a steam corn mill , were totally destroyed by fire at Elland , near Halifax . The work of destruction began at a little before 6 o ' clock in the morning , and had its origin in the third story of thie cotton mill , where a man . when liahtin _p it ud _against the arrival of the
workpeople , permitted the match to tall upon some " cotton fly , which immediately igniting burst into a blaze . All efforts to extinguish the flames were unavailing , and the various floorings being greatly saturated with oil the work of demolition went very rapidly on . The mills were completely gutted in two hours , by which time two fire engine ? belonging to the Halifax and Keighley Assurance Company had arrived from Halifax , but too late to be of any essential service . The
premises were the property ot Messrs . A . and U . ritchforth , ot Elland ,. who themselves carried on the woollen mill , but the other portions _, were let off to tenants . It is estimated that the damage done is between £ 4 , 000 and £ 5 , 000 , the whole of which is fortunately covered by insurance . _, [ Since the above was in type , we have received the following particulars from our own Correspondent : —] The mills are the property of Messrs . Pitchforth . The first is occupied by this gentlemen as a woollen mill : the second was in the
occupancy ot Messrs . . bakes , cotton spinners , and the third was used as a corn-mill , by Mr . Joseph Beaumont . The fire broke out in the cotton mill . _MEost of the hands had assembled , and the mill was in course of being lighted up , the engine being just ready to start , when by some accident yet to be explained , a quantity of cotton waste , near a gas-pipe , in the second story , became ignited . In a few minutes the room was in a perfect flame , the destructive element spread with amazing rapidity to other parts of the premises . An express was imme t to nalitax tor
diately senon the fire engines ; in the meantime the alarm was spread through the whole neighbourhood . Hundreds of people were shortly on the spot , who , added to the mill-hands ,, formed an efficient corps . All were speedily at work , using such means as came to hand to arrest the devouring element ; but without effect . The flames bid defiance to all they could do , and speedily seized upon the corn-mill , which in less than fifteen minutes , and before half a dozen sacks could be removed , was one mass of flames from top to bottomAn immense quantity pt
. corn was spread out upon the floor ,, which was seized upon and devoured in a few minutes . The flames ' _, bursting through the window and blowing off the roof , shot up to _^ great height , and presented a scene awfully grand and sublime . Illuminating the heavens like some huge volcano . B y great exertions on the part of the people , the machinery in the low-room of the woollenmill was removed into the field adjoining . By this time the engines from Halifax , Bradford , and Keighley Insurance Company , and ' the Leeds and Yorkshire Insurance company arrived at the _scene-of destruction . From the breaking out of the fire to the arrival , not more than three quarters of an hour elapsed , yet such had been the rapidity with which the devouring element had done its . work , that the cotton and corn-mills were destroyed beyond redemption - Had the wind blown in an easterly direction , the woollen-mill would have shared the
_r . _** . _—~» a £ c \ _4-rv II 11 / "I rvi * 4- \~\ r \ nr \ / i _^ _v / _Mivt _^ _nJ-mi a _**« . _"ftyf . C _~ _i . same tate . under these circumstances Mr . Swaine , the foreman of the engines ordered the whole of the exertions to be directed towards saving the woollen-mill , for which purpose a _plentiful supply of water was at hand . The fire was eventually subdued in the short space of two hours from the time of its first breaking out , nothing was left but the bare walls , and a heap of broken machinery , piled in _heaw amongst the smoky rums . We understand that the parties are to a certain amount insured . Messrs . Pitchfortli are insured in tht Atlas company , for 300 ? ., and in the Halifax , Bradford and KeiffhK insurance company , for 500 _Z ., upon the cotton-mill , and 500 _Z in fh same company upon the corn-mill . Messrs . Bakes * are insured in th amount of 1 , _6002 . m the Atlas company , and Mr . Beaumont k ai insured to the amount of 700 L , in the Halifax company Those •' surances are , however , a mere trifle compared with the actual iol _™
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Nov. 27, 1852, page 243, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/nss_27111852/page/3/
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