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CHARTIST BODY. and had examined her person and found her most TO THE ,:' The jury found a verdict 'oi am now aoout to aiiurc* shockingly bruised Mt Dear Rhesus,-! Guilty, and the prisoner was sentenced to be trans- forfncoming Convents, : ; the subject of the ported for fifteen years. ' - • '[ • you upon land Scc- thcrc is a mmd — in Eng , '.. Warwick, Arnn; ], — BiGAXiy. — Juugf. Law AND l inow lhat a pros- i T!j Wales.towhkdiI can appeal with Law Justice.—Tlidnias Hall, a lias Thomas Rollins, Wc have lmd along ^l man - not possessed of a farthing in the SEE--** - a poor byavaneiy of™,- world, aged 35, was" indicted for having, on the 18th l agitation, «*«sea Ktolitica of of April, 1830, at the parish of Norl.flloacll, ill the * '¦ ' - ¦ _^_^^ , countyQ oi' Gloucester, taken for his wife Mary Ann tliat all c! society appear ' 'aS io ooserre Nicholls, and afterwards, on the 15th of February, S^ ^ 1840, at the parish of Hampden-in-Ardcn, in this work- , county, married and 'taken to wife Maria Iladlev. - but I am of opinion that the . ¦ »mv: nasi -AND : . ^_i- ¦ ¦ . . ; _n-__ ^__ _— nn _ 1 NATIONAL TEABIS' iQiIMM ! then alive, contra for mam. ct wlii,c his former wife being rfWr deretand tliefa ** The offence was clearly proved, but he stated that SSS ™ other classes is. 'likel . y to bt e SL** ?£ satisfaction of most- VOL. YIII. NO. 386. LONDON aPBiL , . ^^J^SSTg within a vcar or two of his marriage with Mary Ann, the satisfaction of their order is merely SATURDAyT 5 1845. Five jshe robbed him, and sallied forth with the child, and Permanent, ' may be blown away at any given he had, never since seen either, though he had at the descent, and . , seeing that time 'obtained a special warrant for her appre- prosperity of other classes what I aim at is, to establish the standard of wages found tor the surplus hand. (Cheers.) Mr. James Buncombe Testimonial.—Central Committee of which she dissuaded him from doing ; but . f oment I sav that the ¦ go down into the cellar himself, she hension, armed with which ho proceeded to the li all are complain- in the artificial market by the value of free labour in Walker, delegate from Norwich, seconded the motion. Trades, «&c, Parthenium Club, 72,- 'St. Martin's- he attempted to • Tifedv to be permanent, altliong down, and went for some beer, saying, region of her seclusion or retirement, where lain, tbe natural market. I only ask to destroy that He thought the Boot and Shoemakers had com- lane, Wednesday evening, April 2nd"; Mr, Grassby in bade him to sit * 1win tellyou why. Tlw landlordsof comp menced in the right way, by. the chair. " if he went he would tumble down stairs and break he got sadly handled by ruffians, and • was made 7Tn& shocking system of competition which makes work- setting their own house —The following sums were received per ' wt thpj have a sufficient amount political in order. Of this he was certain, that the present Mr. John Ardill. Northern Star Office :—Messrs. E. his neck." Soon after this she retired to her bed- heartily glad to make the best ot itis .way home to ^d ing men look upon their neighbours and friends as T the prisoner, who said he save his life, leaving his baggage in his precipitate 'the crisis conies, ito protect themselves local societies could riot effect their object. In Norwich B. Martin, Braintrce, os.; J. Martin, do., 2s. 6d'.; W . room, and then Mace left power, when deadly enemies, while it enables their employers to they had to " ' As Mace went out, however, the departure from that profligate retreat. The sub- Clunieh property, upon fdnded pro- contend with drapers' shops, hawkers, Payne, do., is. ; W. Bolton, do., Is. ; J. Bunn, do., was going to bed. br an assault nP°n &c. Norwich was always prisoner called after him to " come back and help stance of this, or at least much of it, he elicited from to which the purchase their labour at any price that theyplease to known as the sink-hole of Gd. ; Nott, do., fid. ; J. Martin, do., Cd. ; Barren, nerix and upon all other assessments England, but to her honour be it said she was desi- do., Od. ; J. Smith hrey Booking, him to kill liis hog." To which Mace replied. the witnesses for the prosecution. He was convict?*!, offer for it. Now you cannot misunderstand me, , do., 6d. ; J. Hump , " The prisoner and Mr. Justice Maule ] snibliable. The landed interestmay grumble, but ' rous of raising herself in the social scale, and lie Gd. : N. Plail," do., 3d. ; Wimbolt, do., Od. ; C. Fish, '' Pooh, your hog was killed long ago. , in passing sentence, ?;6\. because I write very plainly to you. What I require request to Mace, just as ho got i. that it did appear that he mav restassured that the proprietors of the soil believed this could only be effected by a Geneva! Witham, Is. \ A'letter was read from Mr. C. King, again made the same had been Jiardlv used. 'It vou the land for is, a refuge for the fifty of the one thou- Union. He did fervently hope Hertford out of hearing ; but nothing was seen or heard ot i was hard for him to be so used, and not be ablei ;i« starve, because they nave politicalpower. that workinsr men , stating that the local committee of that o will sand unemployed in any trade, rather than allow would forthwith take their affairs into own town would reihit the sum 5s, The com- him'till about one o'clock, when he came to Mace s have another wife to live with him, when the former interest would not suffer any- their of £30 od. begged had The luaiinfacturing their indigence to compel the remaining 950 to work hands. . (Cheers.) Mr. M'Carthy.in supporting the mittee thou adjourned. house in great agitation, and rousing them up gone off to live in an improper state with another from any violent change, than the motion of " come down quick, for lie had shot his man. But the law was more damage, for any wagesthat the employer thinks proper to , said,-he believed strikes, as far as they went, Derby -Trades.—A ' preliminary committee will them to the .same for him as .it lessening of a portion of their present enormous had proved beneficial, but at the same time it must poor dear Mary Anno." Mace on this got up as was for a rich man, and was equally open for him, jaere offer. This is Mr. Chambers' admission ; and it is meet every Wednesday evening, at eight o'clock, and while dressing himself could through iheni now be admitted the surplus hands were the great evil. during this month qu'ckly as he eould, its aid, to afford relief; but, as the rich man profits. If bad times were to come upon , of the one thousand , at Chester's Coffee House, Os- wretched man stamping the ground and the fact that the fifty unem- Mr. Wilson suggested that when the resolution was maston-road, to organise a permanent hear the would have done, ho also should have pursued the ihev could either retire with immense wealth, or committee of wringing his hands as he walked to and fro , exclaim- proper ployed regulate the wages of the 950 at work ; and carried that a copy of it should be forwarded to each tho Trades of Derby, to. collect subscriptions in aid means pointed out by law, w}mreby to obtain ose who continued in business would make np section ot the trade, in order that the general feel- ing, " Dear me, .what shall I do ?" When Mace was redress of his grievances, lie shottki have brought th all the power of strikes, combinations, ..restriction, of the Buncombe Testimonial. ^ profits by reductions in your wages. They could ing should be ascertained. The resolution was then up lie said: to him, "Why, Tottenham, you don't an action against the man who was living in tlieir and organisation never Ccin beat down that competi- Baensley Trades.—A glorious meeting was held shot your, poor could put, and carried unanimously. A vote of thanks was mean to say. you have really wife ?" the way stated with Jiis wife, and he could do this, because they are represented; andjyou tive power until you locate your surplus upon the in the Odd Fellows' Hall, on Tuesday, the 1st inst., replied, "As true as God, I have shot have Thus, then passed by acclamation to the Chairman, and( To wliiciike obtained damages, ami then should have net resist it, because yon are not represented. land. As to emigration, it is sickening, heartless this important meeting separated. to hear the report of Mr. Frank Mlrfield, the Weavers' her';" I "have blown her head off. " As they walked gone to the Ecclesiastic Court"and obtained a divorce, delegate ..to the Trades' Conference, when ajreat' ' ' I snowjou tbat tlie next change, if not prepared to depravity. It is. the very essence of folly, and the ' hastily to his miserable homo, Mace made a which would have done what seemed to have li.en working AXSVAL CO.NTEREXCE OP BOOT AJTO ShOEMAREUB. number'from all trades attended ; Mr. John Grim- similar remark to him, and he then said, "Oh, done already, and then he should have/gone - to the meet it, will be the most disastrous to the worst description of economy ; and for this simple —Delegates from all parts of tiie kingdom repre- slifirw was elected to the chair, and introduced the . foolish as to dose my eyes don't luivt ine ; it was all accident ;" and to House of Lords, and, proving all his.- case and the chases. I" am not so reason, because.it would not require one-half the senting this trade met in the large, room of the King delegate. Mr. F. Mirfield'g report was listened to Mrs. Mace at another time he said, preliminary see plainly. I know, and Queen ' "It was proceedings, have obtained a full and against what every man must amount to locate a family upon the land at home , Cleveland-street, Alarylebonc, oil. Tues- with great attention,.ahd'tlie people manifested their done by a pistol, which went off accidentally." complete divorce, after which he might, if he liked day morning last, April 1st. At ten o'clock Mr. A. compl e and you know, that a surplus revenue, and new that it would require to transport them from then* et satisfaction by repeated bursts of applause. On arriving at the lodge, the party found the poor it,_ have married again. The prisoner might perhaps Hunnibell was elected president, and Mr. Smythies The chairman read Mr; Buncombe's opening address jnarkets being opened for British manufactures, has country. Moreover, we lose the application of the , woman lying on her back on the floor , not far from a object to this that he had not the money to pay the secretary. The business transacted to-day (Tuesday) which elicited the hearty cheers of the meeting. A chest of drawers; in which Jed to brisk trade, and more general, if not more funds from their most profitable purpose; while we was of a preliminary character. The following is' " the prisoner used to keep expenses, which would amount to about £500 or a committee of seven was appointed to collect sub- his pistols her forehead and right , employment. And I also know that popu- list of the delegates, and the places theyrepresent :— , check being.all £600—perhaps he had not so many pence—but this lucrative also lose the value of every example that every experi- scriptions for the Buncombe Testimonial. blown off, while the walls on two sides of the room did not exempt him from paving the penalty for com- lar agitation is alwayskept alh-eb y the great mass ment would be sure to furnish. In conclusion, then, Birmingham, Messrs. J. M'Oee ; Bristol and Bath, To Joukxeymex Tailobs. behind her ' Hyde and Page ; Brighton, Scott ; Chatham Lavall ; —Fellow Workmen,—A were spattered with blood and brains, and mitting a felony, of which he had becit convicted. of the dissatisfied, and especiallyby the unemployed. I invite you to confer with y d l g e e , small society of our trade in 'Rochdale the ceiling our e e at s upon th Cheltenham, P ricker ; Carlisle, Harrison ; Cork, have been bore the mark of a shot. When the sur- His lordship might, perhaps, have visited the crime At present, the people are pretty generally employed, questions of the Land, the[increasing our number of compelled to turn out against their employers, in geon was sent for it appeared that the discharge more lightly if titc prisoner had not misrepresented Hosfovd ; Leeds, Smyth ; Leicester, Goode ; London consequence of and vr-i Sir James Graham lias told us that one in Parliamentary representatives d e o ' llanley ; London West-end the oppressions they were subject to must have taken place, in his opinion, close to tlm himself as a bachelor to Maria lladley, and so de- , an the corr ction f West-end men s men, from low wages and petty tyranny. left temple or wo ten of the working classes is a parish pauper. women's men, Loud ; City men's men, Pittam ; Being compelled of the po man, for there was there a, ceived her. If ho had told her the circumstances, every any faults that you see in our present system of to resist, they earnestly appeal to" hole about two inches large d , of itself is sufSeicnt to arouse you City women's men, Grcenslade; London strong every society in the , while the skin near it an said " Now I'll marry you if yon like to take Now this assertion agitation and organisation •, and hoping that I have kingdom for assistance in this their hour of need. was jagged and blackened with powder. Assistsiuce' tho chance," &c. : but this he had not done, and thus for nomaa knows wlien his own men's men, Johnson ; Borough strong men's men, to further exertion, made myself perfectly understood, Pratter ; London East-end, Charles ; Manchester, The members that are out do not exceed twenty, and was obtained as soon as possible, both, by Mace and the he bad induced her to live with him upon terms day wiil come. I remain, your faithful friend and sen-ant, Whitehead ; Nottingham, Watson ; Northampton, the smallest assistance from each will enable them to prisoner ; who, when asked to give an accouunt of which she perhaps else would not have done. It was many withstand tlieir oppressors to a successful termina- the dreadful event, said, that "he was thinking of a serious injury to her, which he had no right to It Is ijuite true that Ibave been laughed at by Feahgus O'Coxxoii. Kerns ; Newcastle-on-Tyne, Starkcc ; Norwich, tion. , J. Williams and Par- Subscriptions will be thankfully received by going out again, as was his duty at times, and that inflict because his wife and others had injured him. professing Chartists for the tenacity with which I Walker ; Oxford and Windsor Mr. John Kell ; For this offence he must receive some punishment, doe ; Preston, McLean ; Devonport, Grose ; Stafford, y, Cross-keys Jim, Cloth-hall, Roch- his wife dissuaded him that ho went to the drawer hare stuck to the several questions that I thouglit dale, Lancashire, and will be duly acknowledged.— to get his pistols, which were loaded, and while he and the sentence was, that he be imprisoned and kept Swann ; Sheffield, Steele; Southampton, Malcolm. J. W. should be perfectly understood by the working classes. Crates' ittobtrntnts The following, forming the Executive Committee of Rirkeb, Secretary to the Tailors' Protection was doing so his wife came up to him with a candle to hard labour for four months, which ho hoped Society. and put her arm on his shoulder. The baby then would operate as a warning how people trifled with rTLca I first propounded the Land as the only re- the Cord warners* Mutual Assistance Association, held " Freer Fruits of The Short-Time System. began to cry, and she called out to it ' Hush, I'm a matrimony. H'Uive, not one man in ten thousand knew its value, the National Trapes' Confer- seats, and the right to speak, but without the vote ; —Turx-out.— On Wed- ence.—A great meeting of the Boot and Shoemakers nesday evening week, about six o'clock, ">00 or 600 coming,' and just then, whether sho toxiehcd the NORTHEUN OTRCT31T. was found a very large number who Messrs. Hunnibell and Buncombe, West-end women's but while there of London was held in the hall of the Parthenium men ; Shell, Borough women's men ; Morrison and spinners in the employ of Messrs. George Clarke and pistol or he pulled the trigger he could not tell, Liverpool, March 28.—Ciutige of AnxiixiSTEraso turned my advocacy of the Land as a remedy to very Club, 72, St. Martin's-lauc g Co., cotton-spinners, Pollard-street in it went off, and its contents lodged in her temple." Poison*.—Benjamin Anderson was indicted for , on Sunday evenin , Daddo, City women's men ; and Mr. Smythies as , struck work, Such is the outline of this most lamentable event. TffijusiifeMc purpose?. They told you that I used it March 30th, to consider the propriety of uniting the general secretary. a bod}', without any previous intimation of their in- attempting to administer poison to his wife, Sarah Mutual Assistance Association and the Philanthro- tention to do so. The usual hour of stopping work At the close of the case for the prosecution, Mr. Anderson, and his two children. It appeared from for the mere purpose of throwingthe Chaiier over- Secosd Day, Wednesday, April 2nd.—Mr. Hyde Prendergast addressed the jury in a most impressive the statement of the-learned counsel in opening the lived long enough to see pic Society of Boot and Shoemakers, and through that being half-past seven, this unlooked-for movement " board: ijiit vou have now was called to the chair. On the motion of Messrs, of the men speech, and, going through the whole of the evidence, ease, that the prisoner was a millwright in the means, of drawing into one union the whole Boot naturally caused considerable excitement, not to be found guilty evtry toe, aye, every single one of my revilersthrow- Smith and llanley, the public, as far as convenience and, on Mr. Charles Clarke ~ reason of contended that his client ought employment of the Messrs. Fairbatrn , of Cnnal- and Shoe trade of the united kingdom. Mr. Harris inquiring the of manslaughter, as his whole conduct and demeanour street' -Maucliesteiv- Per some time before the fith ing the Charter overboard for some flimsy crotchet was voted to the chair, and called on Mr. P. Haniey would permit, were allowed to be present to hear the the stoppage, lie was told by some or the men that deliberation of Conference. On the motion of they y throughout the"transaction plainly indicated that the of January, when this occurrence took place, .lie iiad which would pay them better, and what is still more to open the business of the evening. Mr. llanley considered twelve hours a da was too long to attributableto accident. ' in this state he was, it Messrs. Smith and Lavall, a resolution was passc l work, and hereafter they should not remain more death of Ills wife was entirely been drinking, and when curious, tliose very men who have all but picked each said this meeting owed its origin to a desire to unite Guilty of manslaughter. Sentence deferred. appeared, very ill-tempered and morose. On the the Boot and Shoemakersof the united langdom, and justifying the Executive for admitting the men em- than ten. Next morning summonses were issued other to the bone, could discover no other common ployed in the firms of Messrs. Box and Hook, the March 31.—The " Red Barn."—Samual Stowe afternoon of the Gth of January, .about three o'clock, he should, before he sat down, propose a resolution, against five of them, named Thomas Scowcroft, Adam rea<'lr grounds of agreement—no other terms upon which faults committed by the men of the above firms being Hall was indicted for setting fire to a barn commonly he came home to his ten. It was nob quite , which he hoped would have the desired effect. No , Thomas Bridge, John Sidy, and Wm. Gawk- and tJie prisoner expressing some displeasure at this, they would shake hands and be friends, save and ex- man was more fully convinced than lie was, that no previous to the existence of the Cordwainoi's' Mutual rodgcr. These men appeared at the Borough Court, called the " Red Barn," at Polstead, in the occupa- Assistance Association. i tion of William Tabor. The barn in question is one an altercation ensued, until he finally turned >\)$ wne cept the destruction of Feargus O'Connor. Now isn't permanent good could be effected without a thorough on Wednesday, to answerthe complaint of Mr. Clarke. and son out of the house and locked the > forget their every cause of quarrel, and unite for the males, S02 ; boys, 1,10-5. In Ireland, Brogue*- besides paying the expense of the summonses. They tea for herself and the Northern Star. Mr. Malcolm said, the masters had a The prisoner lived with his father in a cottage ad housc. . Mrs. Anderson then made destruction of one humble mdivhlual1 inakers, males, 5,207 ; females, 9; boys, 110. narrow escape from imprisonment for a month. the children. It had a very peculiar taste, and sho Shoemakers, 45,856 ; females, 3,430 ; boys, !l,lG5, in the Southampton district were not satisfied with Tie defendants then left the court, after promising joining the barn, and was seen running from the fire "Well, I have lived and you have lived to see them their profits as Boot and Shoemakers, but they had on the night in question. The case against the threw the first cup away. A second cup was c.f ;ally and yet there was no craft more depressed through to pay Mr. Clarke for the summonses.—Manchester rv- ...•ncd. in their proper colours, and you have lived to see my also commenced selling tbe materials used in the prisoner was made up entirely of statements proved bad. She then made some coffee, which she • • the want of union. In Northampton the truck sys- G'iiar

, ' was fervour working men of Lbngto h have proved what power the SWITZERLAND. system had established strong political rivalry ther efore , return to us, secure in tho belief that as generous and supplied the funds, so long working classes possess, if they will but exercise it. —Commexcemen t or the Civil their oldest and most constant ' wc are high, and prom ise abundant ; but as soon as the ex- f ovtimx«etft s*itce Important News. among a class whose only salvation consisted in wc have been , One of the Longton manufacture rs said, "He would not Wab !—In continuation of the intelligence contained chequer became weak , that moment did the several oneness of opinion. The Trades , by some political the ir trues t and their best friend. euro for the Chartists getting the Highw ay Board ; but FRAN CE. in our 7th page , we give the following from the Paris so much upon the particular topic , factions of which the Convention was composed begin they will not be content with that , they are for inter - Paris pap ers of Fr iduy pape rs of Wednesday :—The Constitutionncl (of Wed- , have been fro m time Hav ing said we Tas FoBnncATioxa .—Th e fatuityand social infatuation show themselves in their true colours. And fering in everything !" Yes, Char tists of England , the M**- nesday) published a lett er 29th idt., to th e general question . We understand to yet, announce the deman d of 17,500,000 fi?n«J &. from Arau of the to time strong ly impregnated with th e respective now recur men of Longton are for interfering in everythin g con- armi ng the fortift- that on the company of carbi- resolved upon notwithstanding all the honest representatives of the shal Soult , to defray the expense of stating, 27th an entire political principles of the two great rival factio ns, aud that the Pro visional Committee have nected with their welfare. They have elected a Boar d hadagood dealo fexcitement neers of the force s with arm s and catidnsofPar is. ^rcad y of Lucerne deserted ing out the recom mendations of Con. Classes were enabled to preserve their prin- of Surveyors , Churchwardens , and Sidesmen. In fact much more vvoiild baggage on tlieir bodies for many years were controlled and go- vigorou sly carry Working manifeste d itself on this head , but , and joined the refu gees of that canto n ciples from the assaults of the Birming , the sub-secretary of the Charter Association is at fortifications of and by next week we hope to publish their ham ragmen the expected, layed. The the territor y of Ar gau. Onl verned by their sever al officers with a despotism , , presen t moment a Surveyor of the Highways it was be disp "y twelve men remained fcrence the Cobbetiites (but not the representatives of their , a Chu rch , , saysthe- ffe/iwine, have been erec ted against . the faithful. On the 29th the Insurrec tionary Com- rep ort , together with an appeal from the chair- though not perceptible to all, yet dangerous to tho first ' warden , and a journeyman potter. But here they will Paris of France and not against foreigne rs. lkis mittee sent expresses direc tions with orders departed leader), the Whig Working Men s Associa- libert ies , in various whole. bearing upon the several duties to be perf ormed not stop ; in a few days the election of the Guardian s of would be losing one ^ s time to the without man, is a feet so obvious, that it different cor ps of volunteers to repair , tion of London , the poor gentlemen , the rival news- the Poor will take place, when the men of the Potteries it to those who still affect to It was believed To eradicate this political Trades generall y. This we understand to be to attempt to demonstra te lossof time, to the general rendezvous. preference and class do- by the paper mongers , , who hoped to are determined to put men into that office who will doubt it. The forti fication s of Paris are menacin g that the expedition would commence its-marc h on the the wish of the Committee , and there fore , knowing and tho local traders honestl y expend the rates , and do mination, has required no little time and not less ca u- popu - justi ce to tlie 7>oor , Paris is enslaved. In on Wednesday derive a profit able trade by means of national for Paris, but, once armed 31st. Accounts were received in Pari s Buncombe 's desire to serve, we may expect com- crea tures whom-an unjust system reduce s to pauper ism. prop osing to arm the forts, our rulers call on Fran ce announcin g revolters in the cap- tion. We confess that, hitherto , we have been compelled Mr. larity. a first success of the upon his part . The one great object which Let, therefore , the Chartis ts of England follow their if she is tired of the representative Go- was said). They to speak the language pliance to declare ture of a small town (Sursec/it of infancy rather than of ma- From the lesson taught by the Convention of 1389, noble example , and never res t satisfied until thev have vernment , and read y to bow to an ignominious des- were mar chin g on Lucerne to the number of 14,000 we mean to keep in view is that of procuring such a ture judgment , to our friends the Trades : however , le have profited much and hence we find their fair share in the management of all local iin'«i«. potism. The ministry, wc are told , has lost its Very severe obser- as will carry with it all , , with six pieces of cannon . repres entation in July next , the peop If thuj neglect this important duty, they deserv e all the and the Chamber has only to pronounce its men withdrawal wc rejoice that the time has arrived when we can that each succeeding representation has been confided senses , vations were made in that capital on th e the we ight of a nat ional movement , embodying the tyranny that can be practised upon them . interact ion we maintain , is fully now address them in sincerity and truth , without the most part) to working men themselves. Too The Ministry, , the French Minister to the Swiss Trusting to (for The Fkamework-Kn ittebs. —The £i spoken of in our of ^its acts—it is of Count Pontois " Work ing Class mind of the country. conscious th e system that is prepa r- Government , at such a crisis. "It is, said the the fear of offending ; and in truth we tell them that last , as having been received from Harwich, should thejseveral large an amount of funds have not been placed at have ing to pronounce the interdic tion of its adversaries. parties , " iece with the whole policy of the lete and entire amalgamation of been acknowledged as from Hawick , in of a p their most valuable performance throughout their see a comp their disposal , , therefore , , which would Scotla nd. It Ministers obey the dictates of him who fostered them , French Cabinet. France withdra ws her Minister inter ests of the Labouring Classes , and to this end , and that time was subscribed by the Framework-Knitter s the establishment of a great of Hawi ck and directed their entire conduct durintli resume their several avocatio ns when their tire to me ' on application countr y of the llhoozties. consti- his , I gave 10s. a week as taking so difficult ; after sustaining so many defeats The enemy denti al persons to be elected by English before him , ar.d he is now negotiating, being unable of all wealth, aud wealth being the thing for which political work has been done. And , above all, we long as it (the rilumtnat or) lasted ; ;md on M? applica. on secondar v questions, to raise one that may prove them. His army begins to tuenc ies ; and this accomp , wc have no he- tion , I sent Aim £5 for wh to overtake or surroun d , if Labour alone was lished trust that the several delegates will receive instruc tions at I termed at the time 'his it is alleged, the height of im- the represented classes scramble bastard' their destruction, is, suffer severely from want of provisions , and should sitatio n in saying ' that the Irish Trade s, so long —the first paper he started. ' In the first place, prudence. We say that they are obeying an impe- the desert until , , from their constituen ts up on the several questions I repeat, Mr. O 'Conno r ' he persist iii remaining beyond represented in doingjustice to itself it could not fail political despotism , did not give 10s. a week to the rious necessity. The Rifonne then proceeds to cite bound down by will become " the hot season approach es, it is feared he may re- of conferring corresponding advantages upon every likelv to be brought forward. paper ' as long as it lasted ;' but only so long as it re- extracts from speeches delivered at different periods retreat. There goro us section of the movement. Indeed , ' , a inaiued the pro perty of the workin g quire to make a rap id and disastrous other class of society. Here , then , is our illustra- the most vi The Trades Conference , recently held was not men. In the se- by the King to pro ve that Ms Majesty, who was the seems little chance of his effecting anything re- liare no little pleasure in noticing the fact, that cond place, I must state that it is as notorious by tion :—The several interests in the country, Labour wc politic al Conference , but was elected pure ly f or as the originator of the fortifications , was pcrseveringly maining where he is. Scind e generall y , , now sitting in sun at noon-day to hundreds—I might sav thou sands— Lad conceived iu 1S33, and that is quiet y excepted are represented in the House of Com- at the Conference of Shoemakers ' The Chartist Convention will be, following the plan he and the troops, with the Highlanders , onl , Trades purposes. in Leicester , that it was not on my application at aU it carried into com- now on their London, a Mr. HoRSFonn, from Cork, acts as repre- he would not rest until he saw way to rjomoay, neaiiny. ine cuiupaigu in me mons. Even the Jews , thoug , a purely political represen tation ; at the that Mr. O'Conn orgave the 10s. per week , inasmuch as lete execution. The Reforms according ly invites h excluded from the however p Southern Mahratta country has closed—not very are amply represented by those who arc sentative of his Trade ; nor can we abstain from we trust prepared to shew clearly and die paper was started several weeks before I became a Char- Guar d and all the citizens of Paris to Tabernacle, same time, , the National gloriously, but it has closed. drawing marked attenti on to their proceedings , wliich , and was in existence duo or th-ee weeks before I knew against that libcrticidc project , and publishes The troops are on dependent upon them. Hence it is that wc find a country the amount of social benefit that tist protest their way back to their cantonments , and the exe- fully to the Of it. In the last place I observe , Mr. O'Connor did ar mament of the fortifications , " will be found elsewhere. The speech of Mr. Feicrer , a petition against the cutioner is winding up the work which the gun Prime Ministcr,Jwith the largest majority ever placed must follow the achievement of politica l rights. The not, ' on my applicati on, send me £5,' for either ' the &lreadv signed by hundreds of individuals. , will be left unfini shed. The troubles in th o Punjaub con- at the command of a leader , inca pable of satisfying the delegate for Cheltenham and district day has gone by when any the most powerful , the firs t paper I star ted ,' or tor any other paper ; uor aid of the fortifica tions of and in the same state as ¦ " The enceinte continue tinue with little change , read with pleasure by all , and has been perused with exist upon mere ho, at any time , in writing to me, term my pap -. my " the several interests, or any one of them, most popu lar , or cunning man can Paris ," says the (barrier Francai* , contains 04 in the past six months . Governm ent are quietly capriciously . • bastard. ' I have no doub t that Mr. O'Con nor v, .u not " by ourselves From his speech it as Mr. Buncombe well observed , fronts aud the detached forts 1)3, in all ITS fronts. moving up a force towards the north-west frontier , represented under the system of class legislation. no little vanity political furor ; for , only applied to for £y, bu t sent it to sow.e quart er (for I will probably fall will be seen that the Shoemakers , Each front , consisting of two half curtains and a which, bv the time it is collected, Debates of the most insignificant description are representing more the whole question at issue between the represe nted have heard of his generosi ty to other little (nheaxera. requires for its defen ce 20 ieces of artiller y little short of 40,000 men. It is not understood that persons , bastion , p , tha ii a quarter of a million of look to the unrepresented classes is a fair day's wage for started by working men , as well as to the IUukimtor) ; guns. As eac-h gun is to measure is intended : preparation s made to hin ge and turn upon political bias ; parties and the or for the lc>7 fronts 3.G40 anv aggressi ve Land as their only salvation , and therefore it is a but neither £5, nor five farthin gs,were ever sent to me for lied with ammunition for 600 rou nds^ , the war y pre ventive. Of the troubles only swayed by the hope of applying the resources of a fair day' , and how to preserve that blessing be supp appear to be merel' s work the support of any of my papers by Mr . O'Connor . Messrs have to provide 2, ,000 cannon in Nepaul Cashmere little or nothing since last mail. y to be brought prominently unjust interference of the capitalists. department will 184 the country to tho support of their own adherents. subject that is likel without the Seal, Markhnm , II, Green , Burden , Bowman , West on, 000 kiUogrammes (25, genera lly prevails through the British balls and upwards of 25,000, 000 Tranquillity before the delegates in July. Obstr uctives as wc are , we did not seek to obtrude ifcc, il'C, know best whe ther they ever appli ed tor , or From China we have intel- Thus presenting all the characteristics of legalised tons) of gunpowder. The 17, ,0001. demanded by dominions In the East. received, £y from Mr. O'Connor for carr ying ou the 000 rather than equable distributors Aware of the susp icion entertained by the Trades our political notions upon the Trades , because they Marshal Soult will consequently comprise but a por- ligence to th e 14th of Janu ary ; it is of peculiar com- plunderers, of the Illuminator. I can only say that I hcwt heard of it; that some mis- tion of the expense necessary for the complete arma - mercial interest. national revenu es. No question has more continu- upon all legal questions, it is likely are looking for the same end at which we aim, while aud for that reason I think the £5 must have been ap- ment of the fortifications of Paris. " legality of thei r ied the public mind than that of esta- givings may arise relative to the it would be a violation of principle , plied for, and sent to some other locality, and not to Disranssixo Suicide of a Polish Ref lgke.— ously occup a prostration of La EXECUTION AND CONFESSION of TAWELL. we think that tho well-know n Leicester. The application for aid to carr y on the the 31st ult. contains the fol- blishing such a system of representation as will insure proceedings ; however , , and a prostitution of mind , were we to lead 1/emocritiic Pacif ique of AYLESBCKl ' 1'IUDAT. honour Illuminator , and Mr. O'Connor 's promise of the weekly , sagacity of Mr. Buncombe , general and permanent good arising lowing :—" The continued and abominable tyranny " a fair day 's wage for a fair day 's work ;" and justly app reciated pation of th ree months nnouuee d for execution was eigb t o'clock and the to antici 10s,, were made at least before 1 wrote my of the Emperor Nicholas often operates injuriously The hoar a , knowledge and watchfulness of Mr. politic al total absence of all political subjects , the avoidance the great legal from any other source than that of perfect first letter to Mr , O'Connor, he beinj then in York upon the minds of those unhappy Poles who are pro- but about a quarter of an hour before eight a sudden Rober ts, together with our own proper caution , fur- equality—the equa lity contended for in the document Castle. Again, 1 say, this is all inadve r tent on tlie pan tected from his vengeanc ebyourhospitality. Thadcus motion of the crowd showed that the moment bad of all topics that could by possibility lead to, or ex- come. The most intense silence prevailed , ' Of J[ r. O'Connor , and I do not wonder at the lapses in Jionkiesiuiez , a native of Gedelif Id, become not a g ' nish ample guarantee upon that score. Upon Mr. entitled the People s Charter. having word escaped after tbe crowd had said " He is hibit any, the sli htest disagreement in the Trades his memory, when the multiplici ty of his business ij possessed with the idea that our Government , Roberts doubtless will devolve tho duty of legalising s-~*»^l^~*J<>J- *'/JSS~ Conference, at once establishes the fact tha t the considered. Thomas Cooper. threatened by the Czar , intended to give up the re- coming. " Tbe wretched man was greatly moved , and, perform- fugees, to be transported by the Autocrat of all the when he saw the crowd ; he trembled exceed- equalization of social benefits can be only discussed the Association capable as he is of THE FOREIGN SPY AGAIN. Those Agents who have not paid tlieir accounts will not Hussias to Siberia , became, under this groundless ingly, and was scarcely able to stan d as he and legislated upon, by a Parliam ent whose para- ing that duty, nevertheless we feel confident that The demand upon our space this week is too great receive any more papers after this week. Parties insane. Tormented with this idea stepped on the p talent to lie had sending post-office orders , or cash , to this office, ought impression , , the latform under the drop. The mount business an d desire it would be to carry into he will call to his aid the best legal to enable us to do justice to the unblushing admis- unfortun ate man , who possessed an independent sub- htcap having been immediately drawn over to be careful to write somethi ng in their letters , so that nig the great pr inciple of the . sistence , and resided at Valenciennes , cut his throat him, te knelt down to pr ay, whichhe did with the prac tice greatest happiness in the market sions made by Sir James Graham upon the motio n of we can tell who sends them, and what they intend us After he had been pra y ¦with , a razor , by which he destro yed himself instan- most apparent fervour. ing for the greatest number. Here we have seen Whigs, Thus armed with popular confidence and the law s Mr. Shkil. We regret our inability te enter largel y to do with the money. We have four or five agents " for abou t a minute or a minute and a half he was as- taneouslv. Tories, Radicals, Reformers, Chartists , Free toleration, we call upon the Trades of England to upon this subject , the less from the length at which who never write a word more than the address of this SPAIN. sisted to rise by Calcraft , who proceede d to place the office on the outside of the orders. We are partial to Traders (though not many of them), arouse from their long and enervating slumber—to and from which it will be The Gablists. —A letter from Bayonne , of the 20th rope round his neek . The meek demeanour of the Protestants, we have given the debate, short letters , when on mat ters of business ; but these wretched man from the time he first appeared on the , shake off tlieir destructive apathy—to rid themselves seen that the Home Secretary has from first to last- ult., contradicts fhe repor * of the flight of the Carlist Catholics, Dissenters ofevery complexion assembling are ra ther too short. If tliose who send will only sign chief Yilktreal from Borc-.aux, the only foundation scaftbld seemed to excite the utmost sympathy on the together for a week with prejudices in favour of of tlieir aristo cratic pretensions—to doff the garb of deceived the House, aud the country, by evasion and their names , it is all we ask ; and if they wil l nor do for which was the fact of his havin g kept his bed par t of the spectators. When the cap was drawn over that, they must expect that the cash wi 11 sometimes be , relig , slavery which they have so long and so willingly falsehood—falsehood so striking and apparent , from sickness for a day or two. " I beg to warn you," his eyes he placed his hands togethe r (as far as the cord their several political creeds ious tenets and that credited to the wrong agents. To correct such errors social notions , as strong as those entertained b worn, and to put on the armour of self-defence. not a colleague of the Right Honourable Gentleman says ihe writer, " against tlie fabrications of our by which he was pinioned would allow him), as in an y afterwards takes much time in writing for all par - jonruals , in respect of Spanish news. I Lave several attitude of prayer . The rope , we have said, was members of the House of Commons , and yet all are They may rest assured that, unite d, they are omni- was found hardy enough to volunteer a defence ticulars , besides the risk of the perso n seiiditt -^ the alreadyplaeed round his nook. The work of fasten- lteration times informed you that the Carlists here are active sunk , neutralised , and absorb ed in thj general 'de- poten t—that their President will stand by them to against the charge of qu ibblin gand thimble-rig broug ht money losing it altogether. From a recent a in their intrigues , and that an outbreak in Navarre ing it occupied nearly half a minute , but it must have in the post-office order depar tment , it is impossible to sire to accomp lish a great social purpose. the last—that their legal adviser will keep them against him by Mr. Buncombe. Ho was "left alone ishighly probable this spring. The country, however, been a period of terrible suffering to the unfortunate ascer tain tlie name of the person sending, without culprit as it undoubtedly was to every witness of th e clear of the meshes and trammels of the law—that in his glory " —the thin g, , writin g to the post-ofneo where the order was ob- is for the pres s*- " perfectly tran qu il, and the people , Now we turn to the consideration of the work per- as Mr. Buncombe observed Era so entirel dis:.. .sed as to he unable to defend them- scene. Tliis performed , , aud the wretched having now become so grossly to ad- tained , or'to thegencraromce. Several of our agents ai-u y the drop fell formed by the delegates ; and of that we shall their organ, which we have the honour to conduct , fraudulent as not who have appeared in the man became at once violentl y convulsed and his whole only say, still determined not to send their orders payable at 139, selves against r .bbers , will honestly, y, and zealously represent mit of defence. Notwithstandin g the Home Secreta ry 's ncirrJ iaurhood cf Pampeiuna. The country is guarded frame quivered—his arms and lejs contrac ted—they as the hypercritical say of Sir William Follktt , faithfull Strand. We have this week rece ived orders parable again them—that their enemies will dread them—tl ieir solemn asseveration that no comiuuiucation of tho - bv a nollc-everr Inadequat e in point of numbers. " tell again—were again contracted —fell , again that he not only ap plies his words well, but that he at the General Post-ofiicu from Wooclburn . Choi-ley . Ba xelcxa. contracted—and lie hung a motionless corpse. It friends respect them—and the world admire them , names of parties resident in England was made to ltodgcrs , Plymouth ; llollet, Nottingham jllarnett , litiH . - A letter from Barcelona , " the only " words that are illustrative of tlie of tne 23rd was expected that the wretched man would be re- uses If th ey would but , ask to have their orders mado p.iy. ult. says, :—For some days a sharp correspondence when they assume the position of freemen , and ma- , has been cxclnngei between the captain general ceived with groans and execrations by the crowd , point that he wishes to expound. So we say of the foreign powers we have his after admission that the able .it ISO , Strand they would oblige. Several of our but nifest the determ ination to be no longer slaves. whole matter was communicated BUT ONLY to the ana tie Neapoliran consul relative to tv-o Neapo- 20 such disgraceful proceeding took place. On the Trades, that they have not only performed good work , agents address their orders to Mr. Hobson. They contrary, a most decorous and becoming silence was Austr ian Government—the very Government—the would save us much time and themselves d isappoint- litr -i.s, Vicente Ferrazana ar.d Thomas App ignoni , have performed " the onl y" , and whom General C. pray- per- distribution . However Sir Robert Peel may gratify neutral in the midst of the trou bles which had being still clasped as thoug h he had not left off , , Adsrdeex. —If the secre tary of the Aberdeen Co-opera - ten minutes after the ' formed it—to promulgate the several grieva nces it wonderful in such a dilemma and after such a occurred, had, on the contrary, , ing. It was nearly rope the Catholics of Ireland , however he may endeavour tive Society will send a copy of their rules addressed to excited them he was contortions which indi- under which they laboured , that Sir Robert Peel should have left decided to inquire into the conduct of each , and to hail been fixed before the , and to map out a general confession Henry Dor man, 10, Clare-street , Nottin gham, the char ge ceased. It is not in- to satisfy the representatives of tlie landed interest his colleague to get out of the mire as best lie could, expel, not only from Barcelona , but also from the cated his extreme suffering outline of those means by which they propose to re- for the same will be returned in postage stamps. one connected with in the House of Commons , province, all whose conduct had not been comp y tended to cast blame upon any and however he may to wash the stain of blood from off his hands as he Ma. Peplow, of Stafford , will oblige several Loudon letel this law ; but the mechanical medy their several grievances . Had they done more , neutral. General Concha added , that he regretted the dreadfidfuhrlm ent of convince the free traders that his measures are the was best able , while the Premier , in his hu rry to friends by inserting his address in the ensuing number ht to have been so perfect as en- they would have surpassed the duties assigned to these measures , but that he was obli arrangementsoug best that under existing circumstances he can ex- of tlie Northern Sin: adopting ged to punishment being , left his coat behind him, and , in order to preserve tranquillity in the province tirclv to prevent the little more , while they would have failed in ensuring the escape the conflict Mr. Colquhocn , Glasgow, is informed that a letter of do so , who was so them , and how- snubbed the lazy reserve as they unwillingl under Ms orders . Almost at the same time a French than an act of torture to the malefactor necessary co-operation for carrving out th eir mea- tract from his Parliamentary adherents y marched pressing importance was addressed to him from Mr. ever temporary employment may for the moment subject , M. Kessler, was thrown into prison by the short and small in person that he could scarcely have to sustain the forlorn hope ? When was the honour Harney, on Priday, the 21st ult. An immediate answer weighed more than seven or eight stone. He died sures. orders of the captain general , on the most futile reconcile the Working Classes to the partial im- of the country before at stake, and its defence left to is requested. motive. M. Fiury, the French consul, hastened to " hard," as the phrase is; and his light body dangled Seeing, , that the most enthusiast ic could Ma. Beesley, late of Accrincton' , appears not to have forwards , and round however provement in their condition ; yet all the signs of the solitary individual charged with the disgrace ? demand his liberation , and , in addition , required an in the breeze , backwards and carr y nothing of themselves received the letter from Mr . Harney, of date Hie -21st and mela nchol spectacle. , the y wisely abstai-:od the times must convince hini of the impracticability But so it was— Sheil preferred the charge ; Graham indeniiiih' to bo paid in proportion to the length of about , a most pitiable y ult., addressed to liim at the Temperance Hotel , King- spectat ors ? It froni enunciating any defined plan , leavin g to that 3L KesslcVd detention. But if I am well informed, "What was the effect upon the of legislatin g for Labour until the representatives of endeavoured to flounder out of it, but was unable to street , Blackburn. An answer is looked for. the criminal. it would s-. ein that all steps taken by M. Flur y have produced a feeling of sorrow for mind which will have time to contem p Labour are allowed to speak and vote upon its beha lf P. O'Brien -, Penzance. —We are sorry that press of " about the execution to give late upon their refute it; while Duscoubb charged him with quib - not Litlierto prod uced any result , tbe cap tain general There was nothing several suggestions and propositions till Jul matter compels us to withhold his letter this week. le of the badl y (when It is, therefore , refreshing to find the Working bling, thimble-rig evasion , and falsehood. The House having referred the matter to Ids government for it the force of a warn ing examp y We will try to find room for it next. lace before the accustomed and theymeet again) the task of moulding general views ping their claim to representation alive decision. - This incident has produced muc h excite- disposed. It took p Classes kee voted him , like the Herefor dshire jur y, " NOT Mr. Llewellyn, the Welch Ciiau tist. —Wo ha ve re- no official persons present ment among the lacinliei -s of the consular body, who expected time ; there were into a national plan of organization. Instr umental even iu the midst of circumstances , which, but for ," but recommended him to mercy ; and ceived the following appeal from a correspo ndent : ire exceptthc turnkeyand the hangman ; GUILTY all app ear decided to support the rights wMch treaties on the scaffold, then as our humble exertions have been in procur- recommend it to the attention of our readers. —Brother , sub-sheriff, nor chaplain was their training, they would be led to look upon as we trust that ho will, receive more than his victims afford their countryme n." neither the sheriff ing the first skeleton of representation CliartistSj—The S of last week, in reporting thu the County- , wo shall not permanent. received at his hands. He has now laced Mr. Maz- tar More Arrests. —The Madrid papers of the 26th visible; and below, in the space before p proceedings of the Metr opolitan District Council , will , be charged with vanity if wc confess our great ult., state that twenty-seven persons had been ar- hall, therewas not even a constable, policeman or Wc must in some respect consider the Working zki in a positio n from wliich he must extrica te him- have made you acquainted with the name of Mr. John javelin-man . There was no air of authority about anxiety as to the sequel, rested, charged witli partici pation in an "TS spar- nor with interference if, self. We believe him innocen t Llewellyn. Permit me to inform you that he is in need the proceeding ; nor was the re any public display of Classes as litigants , claiming a right long withheld, , but to convince the terist" conspiracy. from time to time, wc impress what appeared to be of your immediate pecuniar y assistance. He dislikes solemnity suited to it. The consequence was, that and merel y waiting the fitting opportunit y to push world that he is so, ho must prove that his accuser is PROJECTED ABSOLUTIST KEVOLUTIOX—IXSUBKECriOXS informin g you himself of his straitenc- 'J position , but the subdued exclamation of the popu lace, uttered the wish and meaning of tho delegates upon our OF THE CAKUSTS ! their claim to a final settlement ; and, resolved that guilty. by his permissi on I have under taken to do so for hiai. " more in sorrow than in anger ," was, " "VVhy they colleagues of the Provisional Committee, and, Tlie correspondent of the Times , writin g from turned Mm off like a dog .' " A just observation ; it the Statute of Limitation should not operate against He will be deeply grateful if the Chartist community _ through them, upon the Trades generall will render him some assistance in this the hour of his Madrid, on the 23rd ult., gives the following most was truly ahang-iog affair . y. Perhaps tliem, they have wisely determined upon keeping it the greatest str ength that a public man can possess is need . He has abstained making this appeal hinuell important intelligence:— ' —Tawell drew up a confes- Tawell s Coxfessiox. alive by an annual representation of their grievances. , I v t e*S*l**V •A'A////^//^J////^.///'//////^/.//•W^, I J thro ugh motives of delicacy, better to be under stood Notwithstanding the apparent liarmony tha t reigns be- of wliich he mad e a copy at a that of knowing the proper time for action, and tlie * * ,/^^ J> -«^^— sion some uavs since, There are many in our ranks who remember the than described. He was persecu ted by tlie Whi gs for tween tlie Queen-Xotlier , ana tbe affected reconciliation ' clock tliis morning, (Friday). fitting time for repose. From the present moment The U'Avr to get the Charter. —"We have received the quarter before five o the Newport riot , or rather , it should be the Whi g-made bet ween Iier and the new Ma rie du Palais (Xarraez), you Rev. , following from a correspondent at Long ton, in the Pot- This statement he placed in the hands of the to the 28th of July, we aver to be the time for boastings of Prosperity Robinson in 1S24 and there may depend upon it as a fact tha t the animosity which then, teries :—The readers of tho insurrrectiou. He has been ruined for his pa triotism , Mr. Cox, the chaplain, are not a few who have a stinging recollection of the Star are aware , exists between them is of such a nature as not to have in which he begged of that general Trades action. The country will look for- report which appeared in from a and is in want of your immediate assistance ; and I gentleman to keep, but said that he had no objection calamity wluch so speedily followed the promised our last, that the workin g the slightest degree diminished , and on the first oppor- t am sure it is sufficient to inform you of this to ensure to the substance of it being made known to the public. ward with intense interest and anxiety to what will men a Longton have carried, by an overwhelming ma- tunity it will break out. Sot long since thrae military perpetuity of English prosperit y, These, and such your kind aid. Any monies may be forwarded cither The statement will be so far satisfact ory to the then be considered a full , free, and fair representation jority, men of tlieir own order to serve the office of privatel y on Hunoz, and in- to th e Star Office ; to the Council , Turnagaln-lane : or chiefs of high rank waited public that it takes away all doubt as to the guilt of like results , emanating from the fictitious system en- Surveyors of the Highways for the ensuing year. moment 's notice of the Working -class mind of the country. The dut to Mr. Wheeler , '2i'6h, Temple-bar.—J. P. Linden. formed him that they were ready at a the deceased. He confessed that he was guilty of y, gendered by class legislation , have taught the Work- Such a victory never was achieved by the work- aga inst the Minister we had almost said the task Sheffield.—We are informed that the agency for tha to rise in favour of the Queen-Mother the murder of Sarah Hart , , of bringing about the ing classes, under the like circumstances. There at 'Wa r, and that they could count on the forces under and also that he was ing Classes the necessity of being prepared , when- Northern Star will be removed ou Saturday , April 13th , guilty of the attempt to murder her on the prev ious first representation . of the Trades , y had been a poor rate laid on a few days previous , and not a mer e rumour. exclusivel ever an opportunity occurs , to demand equalit y to Mr. George CaviU 's, No. 21, fig Tree-lane. All com- then * comman d. This is a fact , , as stated on the trial. with being the fifth for this year ; and when the marry the young occasion, in September last devolved upon Mr. Buncombe and ourselves . munications for the Sheffield Chartists must be ad- They were aware of her anxiety to He also confessed that he did not commit themurder those who create sufferings , but never partici working men came to register their rotes, they Queen to the son of I>on Carlos, and they were prepared No other paper even noticed the " great fact ," pate in dressed George Cavill, News Agent, 21, Fig Tree -lane. p , but from the dread that the them . And while to some the proposed Convention were asked by the chief bailiff , who sat us ret urn- to support her in carrying out Iier object. The new pro- from ecuniary motives , relation in which he stood towar ds Sarah Hart would and yet, through our humble exertions, we saw ing officer , if they had paid all their poor rat es ? They Communications from Rochdale , Hevwood , Diiad- posal, about introducing Prince Trapani at Madrid , may appear to be a work of supererogation , we con- transpire, and come to the ears of his wife. 110 honest industrious men sent to London said, and said trul y, that they had never been called FOttu . and other places , , but too late is only a concession made to the exigencies of Louis have been received tend that there never was a time more imperativel y upon for their fifth rate . He then said , " Well, then , for insertion this week. Press of matte r compels us to Philippe. to represent their sever al Trades. Thus Ave OLDHAM. demanding tlieir vigilance. The letter of Mi*. you cannot vote until you have paid all your rates. " withhold severa l communications. I have lor some time pas t alluded to the accounts re- have painted the miniature Mr. Hobson Ox Sunda y last Mr. Edward Clar k , of Manches- , and while we will Determined not to ho swindled out of their votes, hun- being absen t from London , answers to several ceived £xan Catalonia respec ting the disturbed state of O'Connor , which will be found in our first , delivered two lectures in the Working 's not leave the perfectin g of Labour 's full-length page dreds of them took their goods and chattels to the letters received are unavoidabl y postponed. and the movements of the Carlists. ter, Man that part of Spain , of itself furnishes ample matter for deep considera- pawnbroker 's, to procure the money to pay the fifth he received with , Horsedge-street. portrait to any other artist , we may safely infer that These accounts were at first affected to Hall , while there arc other topics to which he does ra te. IVe know of many instances where the poor mockery by the Conservati ve press here , and the facts Oldham. —To-morrow (Sunday) two lectures will we shall have all biddin g for partici pation in the tion MONIES RECEI VED BY MR . O'CONNOR . , Colliers have said to their wives in the morning, , be delivered in the Working Man's Hall , Horsed ge- not refer and to which we trust attention will be "Now EOIl TIIE KXECU TU'E. £ ». ii- were attempted to be suppressed. Xow, however, the great national work. The Conference has adopted my lass, tho u knows th at it will be after six o' same press is obliged to admit their exactitude ; and the , at half-past two in the afternoon and at six in directed. clock ' Common tea part y 1 -5 '1 street several questions as worthy of consideration—it has before I can get home, therefore, thou must get nic From Wovsboro repeated eneouniei - between the insurg ents and tlie the evening. suBScnimoNS . Tho Chartist body has in nothin g suffered so much money, and pay the rate , so that I may give my vote." From Redditch .. ., , ,, o 5 » troops , in which the Litter have had the worst of it gene- wisely decided upon none ; and, therefore, wc may , "I don 't kno w where to get it." THOMAS COOPEB, rally, have forced those who support the situation to call gress to express our regret that so numerous damage as from the practice of allowin g poor gentle- The wife replied di and " Why , thou must take my trousers or my coat From F. B,, London .. o 0 » on the Government to disp lay more ener gy and resolution , , aud THE N ORTHERN STAR influential a body as the Hand-loom Weavers should men and willing idlers to live upon any amount of pawn it." Tliis was done, and the DCN'COMBE TESTIMONIAL, in suffocating -n-hafii -jw appears to he the commencement SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1815. noble-minded have felt themselves called upon to dissent from what excitement that they can create , , , fellows were to be seen coming to the polling booth From Block-printers of Lancashire , Derbyshire , of a formidable insurrection. and therefore if a Y orkshire , and Cheshire, per George Waine ,.5 Convention was otherwise unnece ssary in their pit clothes and black faces, to record 0* A plot has been discovered in Barcelona , the objec t of TRADES ' CONFERENCE. was done with respect to Local Boards of Trade. than to devise From the Packers ' Society, per Mr. Hackney .. 3 S tt THE their votes for which was to effect a rising of the Carlists in connection means by which the vermin can be taken off the men of their own choice. Resolved, , They should understand that the way to enforce a the Char- RECEIPTS PER GENERAL SECRETARY . with the bands of Tristany. They were to have com- asfar as we were concerned that Labour Here is an instance of manly independence which we question is by argument tist body, we feel convinced that every district in the SUBSCRIP TIONS . -vitb. the assassination of General Concha. On should speak for itself, and through its own representa- , y withdrawing mus t not omit noticin g. A. journeyman Potter went to menced - and not b £ S. d. £ 5, '1. of horse and foot paraded tives, we purposel from the contest : and that that country would hail such purification with gladness. his master to borrow the money to pay the rate . The the night of the 16th , patro ls y abstained from commenting at one princi ple para- Marquis of Gr anby 0 16 Mr. T . Samiowtwo mas ter asked him "W hat he wanted the money for 1" the stree ts until morning ; and on the following day seve- length upon the proceedin gs of the delegates last mount with them , and peculiarl y applicabl e to their This is a change that we have long contended for, Manchester .. 11ft G months .. .. o 1 « any He said, " To pay my ral arre sts were ma ;!?. In the north of the Principality every day 's practice teaches us poor-rate. " " Who are you Oldham .. ..077 Mr.W. Salmon do. » 1 » , lest a coincidence of opinion between our- trade , remains an open question , and one wliich may and , , going to vote for ?" , afresh encounter Ins taken place between the factions week that until it is " For the Workin g Man 's Board," Mossley .. .. 023 Leicester .. ..030 ' , there can be no hope of a thor ough orga- said he, " Rochdale .. a? • \ They have even approached the selves and Labour s representativesmig ht give rise to be discussed in the forthcoming Conference, and with effected " Then, replied the master, " I will lend ..060 and a part of the » "" the alarm has been great, that every probability of success in cases to nisatio n of the Working Classes. It is a remarkable you no money. " " Tli<.n, said the worki ng man , DONATIONS. Ampurdan. In 7. = so jealousy upon the one hand , or the charge of inter- which it was "I Proceeds of harm onic 3 S his despatches , the duringtimes of excitement will work no more for you!" With this he meeting at the Feath ers .. 0 in less than an he - fter receiving ference or premature criticism on the other. We applicable, and where it would be considered a fact, that, , when th e needy turned on Rochdale .... n li 0 lace at the Ins heel and left the counting-house . But the " " ' Commandant- Gen: - Castel lan, left that p will pay liberally , that we find a man Oldham n 0 U cavalr y; and now. however, return to the subject, when our re- triumph. .The Hand-loom Weavers have ever com- for marketable stuff being a good workman, and one that the head of the whole or the disposable force of mouthing patriots spring up, master could tEvA. ' on the mornin g of tVi 19th a battalion of the Reina regi- marks cannot affect what has been done, or be re- manded our especial interest and consideration. We crop of as if by magic, not well do without, he sent for him back, and lent him Tiverton o 10 0 the money. The Hammersmith , first porti on "' " ' 6 ment of -n&ntrv ak- . left in the directi on of Solsona, garded as a desire to force upon the public mind have battled for them when we stood alone. , upon the other hand , when temporar y employ- man paid his rate , and gave his vote .. .. . o - We while to the men of his own CARDS, ifcc. where i= ipears th-- notorio us priest , Tristany, had ment and comparative comfort cause a lull in order. Whilst the workin g men what more we would desire to see accom p have described them as the very foundation of the politi- were thu s Paisley , account -book Q i 0 shown Li -'£ proclaiming Don Carlos VL, and collect- lished. The harassed , the masters , at least many of .. cal agitation , we find those very mouthers the first to them Baeup, cards .-. o 1 1 ing toget' :.,- from all parts the large force which is said proceedings of Conference are now public property, present agitation and movement, and to lose their , were using every means to intimid ate , not only ' ' ' ' their Greenock, cards Gd., hand-book 2d...... 0 0 « to be at his disposal. The general outbreak was to have and from the clear an d lucid opening of the honor- co-operation now would be a source of unmiti- prop ound a new code of philosophy suiting to the ex- workmen , but the tradesmen of the town. And it is our MRS. DUNCAN. taken place this day (Easter Sunday), the Spanish , all must come gated sorrow. However temper ament. duty again to record that the Free Traders were, Proceeds of harmonic meeting i able chairman, to his closing remarks , we will not lose them, isting as usual at the Feathers .. 0 <> troops, insurgents or otherwise, generally selecting a , the parties who were the most intolerant and MRS . ELLIS, to the conclusion that they present the first step In except throu gh their own ' folly. We will reason For ourselves we have always justified the excite- Sunday, or a Saint's festival, for the commencement of tyranni cal. One of tliem went to a respectable trades- Clock-house , Wes tmin ster i? it * their operations. There is now no doubt that a formid- that grand national movement to which, from the with them because they have brains to understand ment pro duced in 1837, 1838, and 1839 ; but what man with some work he wanted doing on Tuesda y Mr. Leach havin able Carlist conspiracy exists th roughout the whole ex- Northern Star, we have invited our us. We]will commune kindl we have objected to has been the altered evening ; he first asked him if he could do it, and being g resi gned as a Candida te for the Execu- birth of the y with them, because tone of tive Committ ee, his name from answered in the affir mative , he then said, " Who is requested to be erased tent of Catalonia , part of Xavarre , and Galicia. The readers. they are who breathed fire in those days ar e those ballotin g 11 3 susceptible of kindly impressions; and in the those , and would now you going to vote for ?" The man papers issued previously to receiving ' ostensible object is to proclaim Isabella absolute Queen of said, for neither decision. The candidat es 'ConnWi Independent ly of the striking facts and startling langu age of sincer ity wc teli them that even between heap revilings upon men of equally ardent party. are the following :—O Spain, and to demand her marriage with the son of Con tempera- " But you must ," said this liberal Pree Tr ader M'Grath , Doyle, Clark , Gaol), ** Wheeler , Cooper (of Stafford Carlos . A junta of Carlists exists in Barcelona , and ano- truths promu lgated by the representat ives, who ourselves and the proprietor of the North ern Star, ment, but who have not equally abandoned their you must vote for us." "No ," said this independent Moir (of Glasgow), and Ross (of Leeds) . Anv place, or er ther in Berga. These juntas are principally composed of there is a difference of op false Englishman , "if I was to vote at all, I would vote body of Cha rtisis , not havin g received a balloting P»r ' spoke from experienc e, the cordiality, unanimity, inion upon the subject of trust. Many conclusions have been drawn from tten ecclesiastics. against you!" " Then," said the Fr ee Tra der » must apply for one immediatel y, or make out a wri prevailed throug hout establishes Local Boards ; and yet tha t difference does failure of tho Convention , list of their Secre- In Orense also and agreeme nt that not dis- the of 1839, while the fact see you damned befor e you shall I will votes, and tran smit it to the Genera l (province of Galicia) the friar Saturnine have -tlie job, or any tary . All the I7tn has placed politica l princi ple for. which we turb the general cordiality upon all other uld riever be lost si other from me." Nor is " votes must be forwarded previous to the himself at the head of a part y of insurgents. the trut h of a great subjects , sho ght of, that the delegates of this all ; some of these tyrants of this month. The fommandant -general brou ffh t their men up to the of that place receive d des- have ever contended. If it be true, as none can nor is it likely to be dogmatically enforced one way that year should rather be looked upon as a scram- poll, and compelled them to THOMAS MARTIN " lVHEEliE fl i patches on the lCth to inform him that vote for the manufactur ers' Boar d. Secret ary . Saturnino had that polit ics are the " madness of the many or other to the prejudice of the princi le. Wh then bling section of thefriddle One instance we can- enter ed the fronti er from Portugal doubt, p , than as a representation of not omit mentioning at , between Celanova and y, ; the master gave his men mone y Va th e heaa of 30D inen. The in for the gain of the few," tne proceedings of the not tolerate a division|of opinion among the delegates ? the Working Classes. It was a second " " to pay then-rates " ?^ second command bid for an , and then came leading them to the poll was immeuiatel y sent out with two ' an apt illustration of or why should the Hand-loom of popular One of the men was bold enough the I? * andcompa nies, Trades Conference furn ishes Weavers capriciously amount enthusiasm to carry a more to dar e the tyn mt'ii MARYLEBONE. 8 aud S^rdia civil, to give hate , for, on tenderin g XHUItSDA T 4SXTENSIVE KOBBEEX BV A LAD* 9 K"' 1" TMrtflT w? ^ the insurgents the feet that politics to he tlmgain of the many, subject themselves to such a charge of complete middle class Ms vote, he gave it to the wor k ttat Satu mino liad that , , inconsistency reform than the mock- "O!» —Ann Purner , who was Thurs day, t'1 m^ f ^ ^ i att acked a detach - ing men. said the mast er , « then rem anded from must be participate d in by all. Howev er we may as that of withdrawing from the contest because measure of 1842 ; besides, •« you will not 20th ult. , upon the charge of notes, :i»^0 at there was a large fund, suppor me?" So," said the man , »I having stolen bank 8 the hav- alwa ys suppor l other proti- '-w of differe nt descri ptions to a consMwaWj- -* , that the Work ing Classes one preliminary meeting they could not secure the no less than £9000, together with many myself!" Well, notwithstandi ng , ^as^issT" understand the fact weekly the man ufa cturer ainoui. ^ belon ging to the Hon, Colon el Finch , 6. "}'}"; ing one common interest should be ruled by one com- adoption of one single principle salaries of six guineas gave h-om two to sue votes ' - «—- ? It would be each, which served as golden each , accordin g to Stur E e< Park-gardens , was again placed at the bar «^V?'* , resmtofBaSL^acS/f^' y at Wk The Bourne s A.ct, yet ot «'ii- t ^22 " Sth ^ t ' mon policy, we coidd not shut out the fact from childish—it would be worse than childish—it would links to bind the robbers until smglchandc d the hard y sons of the sitting magistrate , Mr. Long. The particu lars Eaa attempt the plunder was dis- mmc and the potter y, previ ously transp ired this uai' J ' ; surrectionialJpperTavarrcr * **' combined with other honest have already appeared in Qurselyes, that the power and cunning working of be foolish ; and our friends are not foolhjh and will tributed amongst them son* The proper ty recovered b prod uce" 'm , , . So long as the country was of tod, beat tbcm by a glorious 1 y the officer was majorit y of 343 Thi identified , and tbe pris oner was committed for U'ial. April 5, 1845. . THE NORTHERN STAR. ~— ' " ' ¦ 5 ^ ^ .„ i_ ... . \ . ^^ ^ =*== : = — ^ lL. - - I did not know whathe *—*— ' then^was, bat 1 have" since heard not the proper judges of the , # Inquests that he was a smith. nature of insanifv. The and one ou the „ght arm, and then made his escape from gccfiitnte, Gffitiitt* barbarous verdict of felo de the house. pointed to bring out the Hymn Books, "to get one Mr. Perry had been sent there by a body who had been Inspector Haynes se had fallen almost en- The prisoner', who said he had scarcely anv said that person was taken into tu-ely out of use. Such a recollection of thousand copies printed immediately. The above out of society, but who were desirous of again uniting ; custody; but, verdict would not only send what he did, was fully committed for trial HOIISIBLE on examination, he was found not to be tlie the prisoner to his grave as a murderer deprived of on the charge committee to draw the money now in the Treasurer's and lie hoped they would be afforded Hie opportunity. man suspected of murdering the woman , of cutting and wounding. " " That our Secretary " ,, . The witnesses Christian burial, but stamp disgrace upon his wife hands. ^T;te to the Con- The amendment of Mr. Bush was then put when the - who saw the man withthe woman on the night of the ¦ GUILDHALL. vention informing them that thev Chairman declared the riocs had it.—A division was IN ST. GILES'S. ~ and family. The consequence of such a verdict would W£DXESDAr will comply MURDER murder had positively stated that he was not the man. also be .—Robbery.—John Matham, a porter, was with whatever they pass, and wllf assist called for when seventeen voted for the amendment, and Bimr.-l 'HCiiSDAT.-Mr. Waldey, that the whole of his property, both that wliich finally examined the next , West ox tub The examination of the deceased's sister was then re- he possessed , charged with stealing six pieces of Executive all in their power." " That any locality thirty against it. Middlesex, having appointed ten in Ms own right and that which he pos- merino, mid other «,rSroner for sumed.—When I saw my sister on Saturday, she did not sessed in the right of his wife goods saved from the fire at the pre- receiving an amount of Hymn Beoks, must pay for The 5th paragraph of the Committee's Report was then fi r the holding of the inquest on say she was living with any , would be forfeited to mises of Mr. Newton, in county delegate nMirit thismomins man, and, as I have said, I do the Crown. It was impossible Gutter-lane. Mary Ann Chapel, them either to the meeting or trans- put and negatived. tlie unfortunatewoman , Mary Brothers, not believe she was. Mellen was the to tell what were his a young woman who cohabited with mit it to the committee at the committee-rooms 4I«T bodv of man whom she was feelings when locked up, and committed for trial on the prisoner, and , at The fith paragraph was also put and negatived. S,n was so inhumanly murdered in a brothel, in afraid of. I believe she had done something which she James Dolnn, a tailor, lodging at No. 22, Old Bailev, in Mr. T. Rankin's, 9, Scholes-strcet, Tib-street, Man- ' a capital charge, nor what effect that fact had upon whose •¦ The 7th, with a few verbal alterations, was put and SLe-irect, St. Giless, on Monday nightat last, the ought not to have done, and they had quarrelled. premises the goods were temporarHv lodged, were chester." That the next delegatemeeting be held agreed for the occasion met the his sanity. If, however, the jury did not see cause charged with to. imv^uunuoued Angel Henry Oldham was next examined. He said he was a receiving the goods knowing- them to be the last Sunday in April, at ten o'clock iu the morn- The Stli near St. Giles's Church, to return a verdict of insanity, there was a middle stolen. The evidence recommendation, that respecting the General Tnii Hi-m-strect, aud their cutler, at No. 10, High-street, directly opposite the house course ; they was extremelv long. Matham ing, at Bolton Chartist meeting room." -'That Secretary 's salary, was then considered. been called over, Mr. Wakley, could find that " there was no evidence earnestly endeavoured to get Dolan for his travelling naiics having before in wliich the inquest was held. The knife lying on the as to liis state of mind oft; and loudly pro- our Secretary receive 4s. ex- Mr. Williams proposed 7s. per day as salary. the oath, inquired if any one were pre- when he destroyed himself." claimed him an innocent man who ' Sn'istermn table, I sold on Monday night, about ten minutes to ten Rather than bring ought not to be com- penses, &.G." Mr. Gardner SDeoiukd the motion. could identity the nody i Ihe husband of a case under the barbarous law mitted. Mr. Alderman Gopelaud said he sent who o'clock, as near as I can reeolleo, to a man who came ot felo 'i was about 5 feet 4 or -5 inches in hei , the jury nesty until last week, when, on the occasion of a " o Police-constable llis, 64E, esauilnc-d—lam ght. He had returned a verdict that the deceased dinner Mr. Wm. Evans, Chairman of the Committee to dra w in them. "" ° on a dark coat, dirty trousers, and a hat. I died, &c, but party, the discovery was made that the plate, cmplovt-a at the George-street station-house, and while think tlie that there was no evidence as to the pnncipally belonging up the outline of a Plan of Organisation, brought up the The hour for dinner having now arrived, the coat was cloth, but I am not positive about it. state of his to Mrs. Shipley, was missing.- Confer, 0n dnty there as gaoler ou Monday night, the 31st His age I mind at the time. The Hon. ltiehard Kowley, of 47, ISerkeley-snuare, stated, Bcport of that Committee. enee adjourned. a woman named Palmer came with should think from 10 to 21, and he spoke like a youth. I that his mother-m-law Jlarcl:. police-con- Fatal Siiipwheck.—During the storm of Wednes- , Mrs. Shipley, lived at Jfo. 101, Bqmt of the Committee to Expedite the Business of the Afternoon Sitting. ctable Alien and stated that a man had been stabbing a did not notice whether he had any whiskers. He was of 1 iceadiiiy. a quantity of plate now produced by several day night last, a vessel, laden with wheat, was pawnbrokers, and National Trades' Conference. flow , a* - n- George-street, I then was directed by a rather sallow complexion, and his features were large. upwards of £500 in value, was his The chair was resumed at two o'clock. s" :°- wrecked near the point called the Monastery at mother-in-law's property, and had been intrusted Your committee, having taken into consideration the inspector ,0 t0 me bouse with tliem. I did so, and He had no gloves on. I think I should know him again. to the DISCUSSION ON' STRIKES. jay S° Moher, in the west of this county. The captain and care of the prisoner in his capacity of butler. Some resolutions and the general feeling of the Conference, beg procured a candle, and saw three or four women He was sober, and did not appear at all excited. I never other articles of there five men were on board, all of whom, it is melancholy plate were the property of witness's bro- to state that, from the limited time allowed for their deli- Mr. Firth supported the motion of Mr. Booth , wliieh standing at the door of the room on theleft side of the saw the man before. He looked a low character, as if he to relate, have been thcr-inJaw. Thomas Smith, footman to Miss Wvnn, lived in the low part of St. Giles's. He bad lost. From papers that were said the articles of berations, they can do no more iu the elaboration of a was put aud carried. The 11th and 12th paragraphs of passage. I went into that room, and saw the deceased a dirty ap- picked up on the sea plate then shown to him as having the Committee s Report were put, and negatived. pearance altogether. It struck me as extraordinary when , it is thought the vessel was been pledged by the prisoner were the property of his plan for the organisation and government of the Society ' pith her back against the fire-place, her head bent down ; bound for Greenock THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE. he wanted to take the knife out without anything on it. , or that the captain's family mistress, and worth about £50. Most of the property than offer a few suggestions for the guidance of the and I heard a gurgling noise in her throat She was resided there. was produced b It was proposed — I have the corresponding piece of paper that the knife At the time of the occurrence the y the pawnbrokers with whom it had been Central Committee, whose formation the Conference have " That the number of Hie'Central Wet-ding greatly ftom the left side of her neck, and there vessel was not more than 300 or pledged. The prisoner, who declined to say anything in Provisional Committee be nine." The motion was was wrapped in. It was brown paper, with some writing 400 yards from the already decided on. was much blood at her side. I raised her head, and saw shore, but owing to the darkness of the night,' and a defence, was fully committed. 1. That the object of this Society be the raising of two adopted. a wound above her left shoulder, and a hnife sticking in on it. The man had on dark trousers. My daughter strong wind blowing from the S.W. The following persons were then elected :—J" beside me at the , it was in vain CLERKEXWELL. separate funds : one for the purchase or rental of land for . Skclton, it. I desired constableAllen to pull it out, and he after- was standing time, and took particular to expect assistance. After having Shoemaker: J. S. Sherrard, Weaver; J. Yfarttiauy, also. I saw the been dismasted, Wednesday. — Shocking Destitution. — A wretched- the purposes of the Society ; the other for the purpose of Car- wards wentforthesurgeon. 2ir.Fitzgerald came in less notice of him man who had been in cus- she sank withinview of the land where penter ; J. Fifth, Plasterer : C. A. Fleming, but he was not the man who purchased the knife. she lies. Some looking woman, with three half-starved-looking children, supporting Trades' strikes. Hatter ; than ten minutes, but the woman was quite dead. She tody, of her buckets were driven on shore, applied to the magistrate for assistance. In addition to Joshua Hobson, Editor : vV. P. Iloberts He was much stouter. but it is sur- 2. That the fund for the purchase or rental of land be , Solicitor ; James did not speak or move from the time I first saw her, and prising that they were not marked with the name of the three children mentioned, the poor woman had an in- raised by a general levy of one penny per member per Rattray, Block Printer ; T. S. Duncombe, M.I\ It was aegurgung in her throat ceased in about four minutes. John James Allen, 159 E, examined—I am a constable the vessel. It is likely that the parts of the wreck re- fant at her breast. She said she lived at 67, Turnmill- quarter. also resolved that five should form a quorum. at tlie George-street station. On Monday night h was in street, Clerkenwell, aud that her husband was a smith, 1 then locked the door. I did not see any person in the ferred to in the following communication, belonged 3. That the Central Provisional Committee of this (So- Mr. T. Barratt was unanimously elected General Secre- charged with haring caused tlie death of the wo- tlie gateway in George-street, three doors below the house but being unable to obtain work in London, he left them house to the vessel ;—Some fragments of a vessel, with tho that momimj to look tor it ciety he made up of one member from each organised tary. There was another room adjoining that in which where the murder was committed. It was theu a quie- elsewhere. Previous to his de- man. greater part of the mainmast, were thrown in at parture they had all suffered the severest privations, and trade of London, with the exception of the President. WAYS AND KEA.V3. the woman and on a bed there I saw marks of ter to eleven o'clock, and 1 heard the door open, and saw I saw , Liscaunor, in the west of this county, on Thursday when going he left her the last three halfpence he pos- 4. That the selecting of this Committee shall he made Mr. Fleming then brought forward the account of There was a window there with a saw a man ran down past me towards Broad-street, but on re- blood. in it. I night and Friday morning. The word Lucy, painted sessed, with which she purchased bread for her children : by the several societies of the London district, and have ceipts and expenditure attendant on marts of blood on the waiuscoatuig, as if the blood the opposite side of the street. There was light enough that was all the food they had upon that day. She applied the convening and saw on a portion of the timber, would induce the belief power to act until the next meeting of Conference. holding of the Conference, and concluded by moving the iiad spurted there. from the lamp to see him. He was about five feet six to Clerkenwell parish, but the officials at the workhouse that such was the name of the vessel.—Clare refused to do anything for them. They must all starve if 5. That a levy of sixpence per fifty members be laid on following resolution :— " That each delegate who has AUe:=, the constable here produced the Knife. It was a inches in height. He had a cap on with a peak, but I Journal. all the Trades of the Association for the purpose of de- would not say whether It was a cloth cap or not. He had the magistrate did not interfere.—Mr. Combe, upon this , not already done so, be requested to forward to the Gene- common sized black handled table-knife, sharpened to the County statement, despatched a messenger for one of the officers , fraying the expenses of the Committee ; and that when on lightish coloured trousers. I should know him again, Disturbed State of the Roscommo.v.— ral Secretary elect (Mr. T. Barratt) the sum of one penny paint, and encrusted with blood. and Mr. Bennett, the relieving officer , attended. — Mr. the same is expended, tlie Committee have power to call but would not like to say features were. I think We regret to find , by accounts from this county, that per head for each person he represents, within one month Mary Yuliner, an old woman, was next examined. She what Ms Combe asked him if he knew anything about the ease ?— for more. I have seen him before in this nei hbourhood. I am po- it is in a very disturbed state. The plea for crime Mr. Ijciinett : I was present from this time." that she was a-widow and lived at 13, Ciiarch- g when she made the applica- G. That the duties of the Committee be to elaborate a Mr, stated , sitive it was a cap, but will not say whether it was a seal- Is, that the peasantry are unable to obtain land for tion to the overseer, who could not attend to her applica- Skclton seconded the motion. savet, St. Giles's. I used to sell fruit for ray living, but code of laws for the government , agree- skin cap or a eloth one. About five or six minutes after conacre, owing to the greater portion of the county tion because she was a married woman, and because liev of the Association Mr. Lloyd Jones remarked on the cordiali ty now pre- latrerly I have been employed to dean, and act in the scommon husband was not with her ably to the resolutions of the Conference ; and that the the woman Palmer came to me and said— Come here, being laid out in grazing farms. The Ro , otherwise both would have vailing between those in union and those out of union. fa-achy of a servant, at 3drs. Hall's, 11, George-street. , " been received into the workhouse. — Mr. Combe (to the same he so formed as to admit of enrolment under the (Laughter.) policeman : here's a woman been stuck atMrs. Hall's." I Journal , a Repeal print, says :—" This county has Hall is the landlord ; he pays me my wages. I did woman) : Where is your husband ?—Applicant : I don't Friendly Societies' Acts. The motion was carried unanimously. Mr. heard no alarm, and the wonjan Palmer came very quietly never been in so disturbed a state, owing unfor- know the murdered woman by the name of 3Iary know, sir ; he left me to look f or work.— Why does he not 7. That a secretary be elected, whose duties shall be to net indeed. Palmer said the woman was bleeding very tunately to the wretchedness of the peasantry, and apply With yOU foi' relief ?— He said he would rather starve Business being now ended, and Mr. Dtiucouibe having Brothers, but by the name of Man* Tape. Tape is tlie the attend every meeting 6? the Central Provisional Com- maeh. I told Hr. Inspector that there U'aa their anxiety to- raise food for support of them- to death than go into the workhouse.—Mr. Combe said it left the chair, aud Mr. Webster having been called to it, via shoemaker -frith venom she had lived. I do mittee of the Association, and receive communications zone and Willis and I went there. selves and their starving families. Every town and was evident from the miserable appearance of the family her age. I was never told it was forty-five. I something wrong below, they were in great distress. The parish was bound to re- from the provincial branches of the Association, , Mr. G-. A. Fleming in an able speech proposed a vote of not know In the passage there were three or four women and on almost ever}'village in the county is now a military last alive about a quarter to eleven o'clock on , * ceive them, being destitute poor in the parish, and the 8. That the salary of the secretary' be fixed by tho Con- thanks to T. S. Duncombe, Esq., 11. P., for tho great saw her entering the room we found the woman on the floor with station, and we understand that we are to have an ht ot Honday last. She came to the parlour-door parochial authorities could then look out for the husband. ference. services lie has rendered the working classes on all occa- the nig the kuifa Slicklne;in the wound at the back of the neck. addition to our police force of one hundred and fift y oiihtrhooscani asked f or a three-pennyroom. A man The poor creatures must not be allowed to starve.—The 9. That in each town, if practicable, a Committee of sions, and especially for the able and strictly impartial It was in about five inches. I tried to pull it out lightly, men, with another stipendiary magistrate—the ex- magistrate directed Duke to accompany the family to the maimer in. which he had presided over their deliberations. with her. I had never seen him before, and I do Delegates be appointed, whose duty shall be to communi- was but found it sticking fast, and I was obliged to pull it out penses of which the misguided have to place to their workhouse as soon as they all had a good meal.—The poor -* The motion was seconded by Mr. Rattray, d d nothaov.hls name. I think I should know hhu again, woman thanked the magistrate heartily, and the officer cate with the Central Provisional Committee all infor- an carrie ' with a jerk. She was not dead then, for she gave a sort own conduct. Would to God that something may be by the repeated acclamations ofthe whole house, cheer l iii a cauilie and gave it to the woman. The man did took them to the Acton coft'ee-shop, where they were sup- mation relative to Trades' proceedings, together with the " " le, and I ran for the surgeon. Mr. Simpson was done to put an end to the deplorable state wliich tliis following upon cheer. -jKeik. He gave me the threepence. 1 did not see of smi plied with a substantial meal. number of paying members, rate of wages, hours of noi. not at home, aud I ran for Mr. Fitzgerald. part of the country is at present in, and that we may Mr, Buncombe rose, amidst enthusiastic cheering, and anrlluus-in Lis hand. I noticed his dress. He wore a WORSHIP-STREET. working, number organised, tie. The coroner here stopped the inquiry by oosernng shortly see peace, order, and tranquillity again re- Sail! : Gsmtlenien, although you must be almost tired TclVeteen coat, which came down to his knees, with Wednesday.—A young man, 21 years 0? age, named 10. That in all strikes, where the parties are desirous of thai all the witnesses had been examined, and that no- stored." The Longford Journal of Saturday gives during the -kets at flu .-ides. It was of a very dark colour by the Edward Barlow, by trade a bookbinder, was brought up receiving the assistance of this Association, application with having heard my voice so frequently p*. thing further would be done this day. The inquest was an account of the fatal affray between a party of on a warrant before Mr. past week, yet I cannot refrain from expressing, the eau.He-light. Tie had a sealskin cap on his head, and " On Wednesday last an ih-oughton on Monday, charged be first made to the Provisional District Committee ; and accordingly adjourned. police and the peasantry :— with having been concerned with others in committing a pleasure I have felt in presiding over jour deliberations. vro:c light brown trousers. His coat was closely but- lace at Ballinafad if thought worthy of support, to be reported to the Cen- unfortunate occurrence took p , near violent assault upon Mr. Samuel Vincent Phillips, a clerk When Mi\ Drury, th , aslced for my opinion toned. The -.voiisan said nothing more, and they went Abihiiosxl Pahticcxass.—Friday.—Immediately tral Provisional Committee for their final approval. some mou s ago Strokestown, in which one man lost Ms life. A party in the Dank of England, and residing at Bai'usbury-park, as to the propriety of holding such a Conference as we room t'-jtelhai-. 1 should think the man was after the adjournment of the inquest, the body of the Islington.—It will be recollected that two young men 11. That should the Central Committee decide ou a into the of six policemen were out on patrol at mid-day, and , have had, I at once answered, that from my limited know- tlarryyears of age. He was very dark, with hlaei Mary Brothel's, was removed from named Carter aud Herbert, were charged at this court on strike in any ofthe Trades of this Society, they shall be about murdered woman, came on a party of upwards of 300 men in the act of ledge of the machinery by which Tmiles' Unions Jll'C Lair, and small dark whiskers. I did not notice the the house, No. 11, George-street, by direction of the turning up a large grass field. They ordered them Wednesday with participating iu this assault, and that it empowered to make a levy, or levies, equal to til* necessity appearing from the evidence that the chief injuries the managed, I could venture to give no opinion tiiat should colour of his eyes. He had a long pointed nose. Neither coroner, to St. Giles's workhouse, in a beshell , in order to desist but they would not. The police then made of the ease, on every member of tlie body. » mortffii migh ycosecutovhad sustained had bean inflicted by the man 12. That the next General Conference of this Society- carry weight with it, upon the subject of au improved o &.ail Wel'6 di-uiik. I sat Jomi on the stairs, and is that a ^c e:\Tiinination t made, prior prisoners of some of the fellows, on which one of who had then escaped (the present prisoner Barlow), the organisation and consolidation of the various national ilur- take place in London ou the first Monday of the coining about five minutes after I heard the woman cry " to its interment. During the whole of yesterday the them made a blow at one of bhe police with his loy, man Carter was fined by the magistrate in the sum of'2'»s., Trades ; but if such an object was required I saiu I fcnew I went to the door of the room and she repeated extraordinary exertions to trace out or iu default of . payment to undergo six weeks' imprison- August. Wk. Evans. Chairman, , dcr." , police were using and fortunately struck only his carabine, and another no course (excluded as the working classes are from the , and asked purpose upwards of one niCllt ill the House of Correction, and the otiier prisoner, of the cry three times. I knocked at the door the murderer, and for this of the police, seeing his comrade in such danger, dis- Tiie Chairman made several important suggestions Parliamentary franchise) belter calculated to gke effect Ihe matter ? I heard no or noise. the detective force Herbert, in the sum oi'lOs., or a fortnight's imprisonment. whiit wu= scuffling hundred men, in addition to , charged his piece and shot the fellow dead, and —Having so recentl relative to the report brought up by Mr. Brans. to that object than that Hie u'ise and % ')-tuot!?/rom nil pans !¦•*•"* bulled, ud I were distributed in various y published the evidence in the former Mr. ricmin- ;iot The maslc-v.o answer. Tiie door was " dressed in olain clothes, wounded two others." The police and military in case, arising out of the same transaction , it will be unne- ,' thought the suggested plan would be of the empire shovld meet by delegation at a Conference in get :n. The room that they wen> iu was the parts of the metropolis and its suburbs ; all the low allosved to pass as the rules of a friendl Society, , could not that district are dreadfully harassed patrolling both cessary to say more than that the prosecutor (who still y by JIi' London, where, co-operating with the metropolitan trades, middle roe*;:, where the bed was. cofiee-nonses, beer-shops, and publie-housas, have night and day, and are still unable to prevent the wore a shade over his left eye) repeated the testimony he Tiud Pratt. They had agreed to the formation oi'a gene- they could endeavour to devise such means as should had before given Jlr. JliUSj tiie deputy t!.'ror.er.—Did you bir.si tlie i» ior been visited, to ascertain if there was any one in peasant}*turning up whole fields of grass land, they , and in addition stated that on remon- ral Society, and Co the formation of a general Central not only obtain protection to ihe sons of toil from that op- 's description. The strating with the prisoners for insulting him, he told them Committee ; which committee could onl opes !—Yes. them answering to the murderer declaring that they must have conacre. y be provisional. pression and persecution of which they have so long and sir.Jlhl-s—When you burst open the door what did you murdered woman, it appears, is a native of Wales, that if they did not desist they should get the worst of it; Ke did not like tlie exchisimicss of the outline just sub- Destructive Fire is Si'ital?if.li)s.— Thursday that a regular encounter ensued between them, which so justly complained, but should also tend to disabuse sec- ?—-When I burst open the door die woman was sitting lorn at Haverfordwest. Her maiden name was Davis, ' mitted ; it would shut out some highly useful aud well- ' morning, soon after three o clock, a very destructive lasted ten minutes ; that the prisoner fel l from one of his the public mind of those prejudices which are op.jSk- bed. tb'.t being the name of Mrs. Trout, her mother s which was nearly attended with fatal conse- blows, aud that when the fi ght was over he ran after and informed men. They had agreed to certain well-digested now so industriously encouraged against every the deceased saw her fire, Mr. iiiiis—What was the iKan doing ?—He was stand- first husband. The last time quences to the inmates, broke out at the whole- collared the prisoner, whom he struck twice. Ke also loading points, and he thought the business might !)(i combination but that of capital and of power. Gen- months since, when he that though the youngest oi the men (Herbert) as- ing over her in this way—(The-witne ss held up her hand husband was about eighteen s d m actory belong to Mr. stated, fairly left in the hands of the Central Committee. (Loud what this room has b his employers ale watch an clock anuf ing sisted the others and annoyed him very.much, he was not tlemen, I have seen and heard iu ck-acned bemud her own neck)—and I thought lis was was attending a funcivil furnished y , el-field situate at No. 1 cheers.) convinced me that the working classes have elected the at St. Giles's church. Joseph Tu , , Church-street, struck by Herbert. In other respects the prosecutor's hitting her. Messrs. Pratt and Hatfield , of the parish church. Mr. Bush wished to call attention to.one part of that wise and virtuous as their representatives, and that the the solemnity of the occasion, she Spitalfields, within a few doors evidence was the same as that he hart before given ; " " Mr. Milk—Was Ins side or back toward y«u.?—IUs Notwithstanding The premises were rather extensive, being five stories but he called in support of his statement three outline—the land fund. It was proposed to make this time has arrived when the working classes can do their skirts of his coat off. side was rowan's me, for he was facing the woman. rushed at him and tore the including the basement floor. A witnesses — two girls, mimed Ellen TunbTldge and compulsory on all trades. This he could not coincide own business. I agree with Mr. Fleming, that a new ; was performed last high, person 3Sx 30115—Did you see him strike ha'!—Xo his hand The examination of the body in front of the building was the first to Susan Emery, and a boy about fifteen years of with. era for the working classes has arrived ; and the just of Dr. Kenny passing whose evidence was so very wasliiied up, and I said, " Don't yon strike her no more." iikht bv Mr. Fitzgerald, iu the presence make the discovery by perceiving smoke issuing age, named Richard Henry,of Mr. Coruish thought the Conference had the power to claims of the working classes must he attended to, and and one or two other medical men, but the result contradictory upon^some the principal facts, that it was adopt or reject the report. With that he turned round. from the ground floor windows. An instant cry their grievances redressed, if the Government wishes the rumour states that an extremely doubtful whether Carter, on whom the heaviest Mr. Mills—Did you see anything in his hand at has not transpired. Another " was raised, and after considerable trouble Mr. G. White said he hoped the Conference, after elect- security to continue to the upper classes. (Loud cheers.) c-lue to the discovery of the murderer of of " fire fine had been before imposed, or the present prisoner ing the Committee and keeping them at work for four or time —So, Sir, nothing. important their slumbers and Barlow had inflicted the chief injuries the prosecutor had , I do believe that if the working classes meet in Con- communicated to Super- the inmates were aroused from , five hours would not now stultify themselves by throwing Mr. Mills—Did he let his hand fall 3—So, Sir, not Mtay Brothers has just been made sensible of the great danger to which they were sustained. The prisoner, in answer to the charge, said, , , as you have now done, they of the F division, at the Bow- fcrence a time or two more then. intendent Fearc-e, exposed. This, however, was not accomplished until that he and his companions had all been drinking, and overboard the acts of their own duly appointed servants. will create such a public feeling in their favour as will be 3!r. MilU—What did you say to Mm ?—I said, "You Street station-house, who considered it of so much whole of the ground that while crossing the fields they met the three young If they did, in his opinion it would be oue of the most irresistible. (Hear, hear.) Ko just man who has tlie flames had laid hold of the women, whom, after some conversation, they ottered to have hit the woman enough, do not hit her any more." importance as to start invmediately to follow floor and a great portion of the staircase, thereby cut- foolish things they could be guilty of. He thought the re- heard the statements delivered here but must admit up the inquiry. The unfortunate woman was well take to the theatre ; that the girls laughingly ridiculed port should be read paragraph by paragraph. Mr. Mills—What did the man say then ?—He took his ting off all means of descent in that quarter. The he r offer and that they threw their amis round their that the wealth-producers do not enjoy a fair share ot the frequenter of the va- t i , The Chairman read the first paragrap hand away and ran out of tlie room. known as a constant residents were therefore obliged to retreat to the'top llGOks and kissed them but that they meant nothing more h. wealth they create. (Loud clvcers.) I believe these neigh- , Mr, Blackhurst considered the proposal an impractica- Mr. Mflls—Did he run past you f—1 caught him by the rious coffee-houses and public-houses in the but after some trouble, they succeeded than a joke, and" that the girls took it as such ; that statements are a fair sample of the grievances borne by which are kept of the house, ble one, coat, but he got away, and ran out immediately without bourhood of Covent-gardeu-markct, in escaping to the adjoining house and thereby es- the prosecutor accused him of throwing the stone at him, and that its adoption would impede the progress the working classes; and a fan- inference of the effects of salesmen which he did not, and ou his denying the action, tlie pro- of that great object the Conference so much desired. He saving anything. open all night for the convenience of the , caped uninjured. Several engines speedily arrived, You have , and others frequenting it, and are the resort secutor " pitched into him right and left," and offered to had no doubt when the Trades saw that the projected profit and loss may be drawn from. them. Mr. Mub—Did yon sec that he left anything behind nnrters but the fire continued to rage most furiously, forcing denied striking the agreed to some general leading andimportant propositions; -jot out of of both sexes. She was generally in fight all three, one at a time. He Society was likely to be a national one and formed on him ! Nuuung but the knife. The woman of the dissipated Its way Into tlie adjoining house, No. 0, in the occu- prosecutor cither of the principal Wows he received, being , you have elected a Committee to carry out your objects ; ±5k- :«1 iicrsrlf n«d cair.e Into the next room. She then a state of cbrietv, wandering about from house to pancy of Mr. Huitson, and the attic over Mr. Price's, five yards off at the time; and, though he had certainly a just basis, thousands would join it. He thought :hat scanty supply ot loou and urinn several of the recommendations contained iu the .Report you have faithfully and honestly done your duty. It gaiy a bit of a stagger, and down she fell at tlie fa-e-place. house picking up a No. 8, which were also enveloped in flames. The struck him, he had himself been so severely beaten by Mr. now remains for the Committee to do theirs ; and the persons she met with, taking Phillips, that although nearly a week had now elapsed he were premature j the sums required by such strikes as Mr. jliUs—Sid she say anything ? Not a word; Sir. from the charity of firemen continued to labour without the least inter- , when you meet in July nest, I have no doubt Mr. Mills—Did you see any blood ? She was covered occasional repose, and wandering for many nights in ' , still had a serious contusion on the eye (which the pri- were there projected could not be raised even iu. Sheffield , mission until half-past five o clock when they at last soner exhibited). Mr, Broughton sentenced the prisoner where Trades' Unions were compact : a difficulty pre- the Committee will be prepared with such a plan with blooi, and a pool of blood was beside her. succession, destitute of a bed. A man answering iu got the mastery over the fire. By that time the . as will tend to make England what she has often been of the supposed to pay a fine of 20s., or in default of payment to be com- sented itself, from, the large sums required when a strike Mr. Mills—What did you do then ? I ran out to the many particulars the description flames had extended throughout the whole range of mitted to the House of Correction for six weeks. boastedot' being— The envy of surrounding- nations b in her company was rendered imperative. He irotrld therefore propose " , and front door and said, "Mistress, mistress, here is a wo- murderer, has frequently een seen they began, destroying in their admiration of the* world"—(Loud cheers)—but which premises wherein the following as an amendment :— the Central man murdereu." A policeman came into the house and on terms of loose intimacy, and has been heard, on " That designation under present circumstances, is a morkery progress the wholeof the valuable stock in trade, fur- Committee be now ax'pointed by this meeting, to whom , palled the knife out. more occasions than one, to make use of threats The total damage is very GREENOCK. and a delusion. (Hear, hear.) I must again beg to por- niture, and other effects. shaU be entrusted the duty of carrying out the various Mary HaU examined—I live at No. 11, George-street. against her. He was employed as an occasional The Vacancy ix tile ItErnESEXTATioN.—Impor- repeat my great gratification in having had the high ht, has not large. propositions agreed to by the Conference ; and further My husband's name is John. He is a leather-dresser, and ter in the market, aud, since Monday nig tant to the Chartists.—On Monday last it became , honour of presiding over your deliberations ; and 1 can that they shall cause to be printed and circulated among rents the house from Mr. Grout. I do not know what been near his usual places of resort. The unfortunate known here that Mr. Wallace, the member for this only state that my humble services, whether in or out of the Trades such plans as they may decide upon, for con- Mr. Groutis , or where he lives. He lives somewhere in the deceased was a very intelligent woman, and this burgh, had vacated his seat in Parliament by the Parliament, shall be very much at your disposal . (Tre- \Mitt MeHigtittt* sideration, previous to the Conference to be held on the country. He conies for his rent every week. I do not excited much sympathy in her behalf for her fallen acceptance ot* the Chiltern Hundreds. The Chartist mendous ehGeinfig.*) know what rent my husband pays. The furniture be- condition, and her countenance bore traces of con- Committee met in the evening, when it was agreed last Monday in July, In London, for the final confirmation longs to Mr. Grout. I was in the house whan the man siderable former personal beauty. LAMBETH. to get up a public meeting of the electors and non- of such plans ; and that in the interval the delegates now It was then moved, seconded, and carried unanimously, that this CowfcvcYice be now dissolved." and woman came, but I did not see them there. Palmer Doxcasteu.—A fire oroke Monday.— BoaotAaY.— Edward Sullivan and John electors to take into consideration the nomination ol* present shall endeavour, by all legal means, to prepare " Dbeadful Fike xeau their various Trades for giving effect to the same. The delegates shook hands very cordially, and parted in gave me the 3d., bat she said nothing to me. They came out on Fridav, March 23th, in the village of Misson, Murphy, two notorious characters, were charged before a fit and proper person to fill np the vacancy in the " in about ten minutes to eleven, and in about seven and about three Mr. Henry with burglariously breaking into the Gun representation of the burgh. Amongst otherWties, Mr, Blackhurst haring agreed to withdraw Ins amend- the besloffidha with each other. about ten miles from Doncaster, , minutes I heard Palmer cry that a woman was murdered, which has laid in ashes a house, Tavern in St. George's Fields. Mr. Charles Pitcher, the Mr. McCrac, of Stmtlmven, has been named as tho ment for the present, the Chairman put the first and from Bawtiy, which were aaJ I ran &>r assistance. The man ran past me In the several adjacent farm-buildings, and some outhouses landlord of the Gun Tavern, in Lambeth-road, deposed person likely to be honoured with the nomination of second paragraphs of the Committee's Report, passage and pushed me aside. There was no light and buildings at a short distance therefrom. It ap- that on Saturday night at twelve o'clock he closed his the forthcoming meeting. Mr. McCrac is much negatived. that I could see him by, for the light was in the an outhouse, house, and having secured aU the doors, as usual, retired respected by the inhabitants generally, and if he The Chairman said, in respect to the third proposal in fott!)commg ;#feeimg& pears that about eleven in the forenoon ' room. He said nothing when he ran past me, and I did premises of Mr. Frederick Styring, to test. At about three o'clock on the following morning stands at all, will go to the poll, as we shall have no that Report, be thought the Conference should appoint belonging to the The long-continued Nottixghasi.—A general meeting of tho Co-opera- not know him at all. I knew the woman well. She situate on what is called the Bull Hill, a little 1o tho lie was awoke by a violent knocking at his front-door by sham-fight here. dearth of trade the Central Committee, and not leave it for others to do. lodged with me about £ve or six months poliee-constable C9 L. He hastened down stairs when he has much reduced the condition of the working tive Society, held at Donnan's Temperance-house, , but I had not outside of the village, but with several honses and This was but just to himself, whom they wished to act cveuinguext seen her since she left me, some time ago. Her sister found the bar-door open and the things strewn about, classes of Greenock ; there will consequently be some Clare-street, will take place ou Sunday , buildings closeb y, wasperccived to be on fire. The wii-d as president of such Committee. It was but just to their at six o'clock. used to come to see her while she was with me. She was at the thne*blowing most tremendously from the and it was evident that the place had bean regularly ran- difficulty in obtaining the means to. meet indispen- constituents likewise.— On the third paragraph being great-coat and a Should our Chartist did not live with any man while lodging with me, neither south-west, and the effect of this was, that the fire sacked. He missed his musical snuff- sable expenses. friends in other about to be put, Mr. Fleming suggested that this was the Mr. M'Gkath's Route for tho ensuing week :— Aid any man come to see her. She was a quiet sober communicated to the other out- linv which he had left safe in the bar when he left it localities be disposed to aid us with their pecuniary time when Mr. Blackhurst's amendment should be pro- Saturday, April 5th, Campsie ; Monday, 7th, and was almost instantly a e i woman. I never saw her intoxicated. She never told buildings and to the house itself, all of which were shortly after twelve o'clock, and observed that the cellar- help, they may m t r ally assist the good cause in so posed. He then rea d the amendment as previously moved Tuesday, 8th, Kilmarnock ; Wednesday, Bar-head ; me that any one had threatened her life. I do not know covered with thatch, and, with the exception of the door, which liad also been closed, was open. He admitted doing. Any sum of money may be remitted through by Mr. Blackhurst. Thursday, Busby; Friday, Hamilton. where she lodged after she left me. I do not suspect valuablethree the police by the front door, but by that time the thieves the post to John Marshall, boot and shoe maker, Mr. Mooney thought the agreeing to such amend- house, burnt down to the ground. A Greenock. any one, nor from what I have since heard do I suspect years old bull was literally roasted alive. The liad inade tlieir escape.—Police constable C9 L deposed Sinn ichel-strcet, tnent would prevent his bringing forward the short-houi The Chartists of Newcastle and Gateshead any one, except the person who was with her at my sight of the poor animal was indeed a melancholy one, that between the hours of three and four o'clock on Sun- STOCKPORT. Question. arc requested to attend a general meeting to be held house. I do not kuovv the ivutn who is suspected oi hav- end to the day morning he was on duty in the Lambeth-road, and The Chairman said the delegate was mistaken. He on Sunday evening, April 6th, at Mr. Martin Jube's, being completely burnt from one —On Sunday evening Mr. C. ing murdered her. I nerer saw him before the night in from the body. on passing the Gun Tavern observed a light inside ; this Lecture. Doyle de- would have the opportunity of submitting that, or any Sun Inn/Skle, Newcastlc-upon- T,yne, at six o'clock other, and the legs quite separated livered a very instructive address on Trades' TJmons, question. He rapidly passed n;a in the passage, and Thebuilding in which the poor annual was destroyed being unusual he listened for some minutes in front, when other proposition. precisely. pushed me aside. I caught hold of his coat which from hard drop on the floor, which he had which gave general satisfaction. , was completely burnt to the ground. From thence he heard something Mr. Dunning could not agree that any one but paying The North Nottisoiiajisiiibk District Couxcie the feel I should think was velveteen. the flames communicated to the thatch of a cowhouse, no doubt was the lock of the bar duor, when forced off, Progress of Chartism.—On Monday, March 31st, members should be members of the Central Committee. of the rate-payers was will meet at the house of" Mr. Thomas Pomfrcy, the The husbaudoftiicdeceasedwastlieivcalleiL He isa or shed, in which were three young bea'sts, which and also hearing footsteps, he at once suspected that there a public meeting hold in the He certainly would . take an opportunity to test (lie Con- on Sun- respectable-looking Court-house, at ten o'clock, a. m., for the purpose of sign of the Horse and Groom, New Basford, :=ian, between forty and fifty yearsof were fortunately let loose and escaped the fury of the were thieves iu the house. Of this fact he was confirmed ference on the subject. day (to-morrow), at six o'clock in the evening. The age, and was much affected. He stated that his name raging element. This place was also burnt down. by observing a mark which he had placed on the ceUar- electing overseers of the poor, and a board ol survey- Mr, Cox thought that such a resoluion would be very was James Brothers, and that he was employed by Messrs. The Whigs and Tories have .hitherto had the Operatives' Hall Committee will meet at the same A stable adjoining shared the same fate, in which flap removed, and he inconsequence whistled, when police ors. exclusive. time and place. Tratt and Hatfiehl, upholsterers, 39, tower Brook-street, was a fine foal, which was burnt to death. When the cmistable L 125 came to him. He was then returning local government matters entirely in their own hands, Mr. G. White said the amendment contained an insinu- in the capacity of porter, and that he resided with his two live *vas at its height, the wind blew some ignited to the house when he saw the prisoner Sullivan with not from any inability of the working classes to op- ation that working men could not do their own business. Rochdale.—Mr. Frederick Taylor, of Royton, is daughters, at 3, George-court, Crosvenor-souare. lie embers from Mr. Styring's premises across an entire his head above the cellar-flap, but the moment he ob- pose them, but in consequence of not being able to He thought the working men understood their own busi- expected to lecture on Sunday next, at two and six said the deceased's name was Mary, and her age about field and several gardens, over a number of stacks served theni, he drew it back, and so closed the flap that find, amongst the "independent" constituents of the ness best, and to them it should be left, o'clock, in the Association-room, Mill-street. forty-six. I liave been separated from her fifteen or sis- and thatehed buildings, which at length caught the neither he (witness) nor his brother officer could move it. renowned and liberal Richard C'obden , honest men Mr. Skclton supported the amendment. teen years. I am not quite certain as to the time, but I thatehed cow-house or stable; and in the Sullivan at that time had no hat on, and he (witness) who were qualified for the several offices to which Mr. Wartnaby supported the third paragraph oE the ton of a have been elected. could tell by the Marlboroughpolice-sheet. course of a short time that-building, as well as two saw him so sufficient as to be able to swear positively to they might Notwithstanding this Committee. BIRTH. Mr. Mills]—Didyou know where she lived within the barns and another outbuilding, were levelled to the his identity. Other constables came up at the time, and serious difficulty, the Chartists attended, and suc- Tho amendment was then put, and declared to be Registered, on the 25th of March, Feargus O'Con- last six months ? Witness—I do not know exactly. earth and scarcely one stone rested upon another. suspecting the thieves would make their escape by the ceeded iu carrying one of the overseers and several carried. The Chairman was about to put it as the main nor Barnard, son of Susan and Benjamin Barnard, Somewhere, I believe, in this neighbourhood. back way, he desired them to go round to the rear, in the surveyors, who are honest^Chartists, much to the dis- question, when Mr. Bush said he could not consent to nienibeas of the City of London locality of Chartists. Mr. Mills—When did you sec her last ? Witness—I The Sutposeed Muhdek at TThitiixgtox, xear Westminster-road. A.t this time Mr. Pitcher opened the appointment of the Leaguers and Tories. The Char- have men on the Central Committee who were not bona have not seen her for the last eighteen months—perhaps Gkestehfield.—Ixquest ox Hawksley.—The inquest door and admitted him, when he went into the cellar and tists carried every man they proposed, and m ight have f ide members of Trades' Societies. two years. My children have not seen or spoken to her on this wretelied man was held on Wednesday week, found, as he had before suspected, that the prisoners had elected more if they had had persons properly quali- The Chairman said this question could be raised when DEATH. $or seven years. at the Commercial Hotel, Chesterfield, before a efteeted their escape by the back. Witness, with the as- fied to be put in nomination. the members of the Committee were proposed, e d, on Thursday, the 27th inst., Thomas was At Sheffi l Mr. Mills—How did you know the deceased was your highlvrespectablejury, of whom R. Daniel, Esq., sistance of a ladder, got over eighteen walls, many of The Chartist Conference.—On Tuesday, Mr. Bush said he must press his motion at the pre- Booker, a Whig victim of 1840, and an inmate of foreman. Having been sworn, the jury proceeded to April wife ? Witness—Her sister came and told me that she them over ten feet high, and which was the only way 1st, a public meeting of the inhabitants, called sent time. Northallerton Gaol. Bv his own desire he was in- bad been Murdered. She was in the habit of seeing her, the House of Correction to Tiew the body, which lay w hich the prisoners could have made their escape, and by placard, was held in The Chairman observed, that in its present shape it terred by the side of the martyr Holbcrry. ( The confined . the Chartist-room, for and had been sent for. in the day-room, where the prisoner had been was told that two men were in the custody of his brother the purpose of electing a delegate to represent would prevent any country delegate being elected. members of his trade and numerous Chartist friends Mr. Mills—Do you know if any one had threatened to The body presented little appearance of the violent officers , and 011 their way to the station-house. He (wit- Stockport in remains to their last resting-place. He " the forthcoming Chartist Conference. Mr. Bush would withdraw the word " London" fr om followed his do her any injury Sir, I do not. death to which the prisoner had resorted. The ness) then went to the station-house, when lie saw both to deplore his loss, her position being ? Witness—So, A few minutes after eight the chair was taken bv his amendment, which was then about to be put, when has left a widow Mr, Milk—Have suspicion of the person who countenance was placid. In the window lay the the prisoners, when Murphy addressing him said, " I hope Mr. John Ashcroft " a most painful one. During her husband s tatal ill- you any , and resolutions were adopted, Mr. Cornish murdered her ! , not in the least. I saw Praver Book which he had used : it was open at a you'll make it as light as $ou can when you get before approving of the wished to know if there were any present ness she received a small allowance from the parish ; Witness—No some leaves had been torn out. A leaf decision of the Chartist body in who the body on Tuesday—it is the body of my wife—(Here part where the magistrates," Sullivan did not say anvthiiig, though calling a Conference were not paying members of societies ? Out since his death, the miserable relief has been page and a pair of spectacles on , and also of Stockport being the witness was and tears roiled down his lay partly over one , witness had observed he had seen his head over the cel- represented ; after Mr. Lloyd Jones thought this was the time to withdrawn, and she is told by the unfeeling guardians nir.cli affected, A mug containing water stood near the which Mr. T. Webb was unani- &ce.) He said his daughters, whom lie bad brought up, the other. lar-flap. He returned to search the premises of Mr. mously elected to represent the town of Stockport. settle the question in dispute, as to who should, or who that she must break up her home and enter the bas- were years of book. Just before the time when he must have Pitcher, that should not be qualified to act on that Committee. The deceased was a staunch and untiring fine women—that the one was nineteen water but it would but did not find anything ; he saw, however, SOUTH LANCASHIRE. , tilc. age and the committed suicide, he asked for , the place had been ransacked and that had been One member (Mr. Dunning) said there were povsons On&vtist, afti »• member of the Association at the other twenty-one. none, or very little of it. In , the gas Delegat Mr.Wakler—We you anything more : appear that he drank tUVlied on ill tlie bar. Mr. Henry Price an engineer, e Meeting.—The South Lancashire dele- present " who did not belong to us." " Who were us ?" time he was taken ill. His death is lamented by all will not ask to which the prisoner had access, there are , gate meeting jou had better retire. The witnessthen left the room. the yard residing at 10, Lambeth-road, said, that about four o'clock was held in the Chartist Association Why, there appeared to be parties present wrapped up who knew him. prisoner's handwriting on three of the Room, Mill-street erel because they were Jane Crook, the sister of the deceased, was the next words in the on Sunday morning he was awoke by the violent bark- , Rochdale, on Sunday last ; Mr. E. in a sort of aristocratieal dignity, m y witness woman, stones. Part of this writing was observed on Monday, ing of a smaU dog, the Mitchell in the chair. Delegates from the following Trades' Unionists. Now, his trade had sent him there examined.—She said she was a married but no particular and on getting out of bed he saw laces were ° and resided Euston-square. Mary beforethe committal of the prisoner, prisoners climb over some p present :— Manchester, Mr. Ra«kin - to represent their sufferings. They wanted a better or- ENGINEERS, MILLWRIGHTS, ME- at 55, Seymour-street, appeared to have seventeen or eighteen walls, TO THE Brothers -was I had. The last notice was taken of it then. It 01'them ten feet high, they Oldham, Mr. Homier ; Rochdale, Mr. Mitchell and ganisation, one in which they could take part, SMITHS, AND IRON-MOULDERS my sister—ihe only one On the stone and the agility with which Walkden ; out CHANICS, tune I saw at Xo. 2, Chnrch- been written with a piece of brick managed to do so was truly surprising. The prisoners Mr. Mossley, Mr. Watei-house. The as the old system had proved of no service in carrying her alive was on Saturday, the door were the following words:— Joseph minutes of the last meeting were ' his sympathies were with the OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. Court,between five and six o'clock, on my return home nearest were remanded. read and confirmed , their objects, for his part, ilty of this charge god bless niy alter which the following sums had been all his life amongst them, and Advertisement has appeared iu the Liverpool from market. That is not far from the place where her Hawksley is not g were paid in to the Unionists. He AN chilrdren dear I never shall be thought Tuesday.—Cutting and wodnbij-c—James Herbert, South Lancashire fund - what was wanted. They wanted the AS and also in a Preston paper, of last Satur- iody now lies, a woman named Ann Scoones was wife and .-Rochdale, 8s. 4d. ; Oldham, had some idea of Mercury, nathine of no more Mark Siddel." It will, be a journeyman shoemaker, was brought before Mr. Henry 7s. id. ; Mossley, 2s. 3d. For the Executive - support of all, both those that were iu union aud those day, the 20th inst., stating that any Operatives of the there. No man was there. I do not think she was living for final examination on ¦£! —Man- for some remembered that at the examination, Mr. Hollmg- a charge of cutting and wound- chester• 16s. Cd. ; Rochdale, 6s. : that were not, How could they obtain such support ? above-named Trades may have employment for a f ixed with any mac. I had seen her more latterly than ing William Curling proceeds of a month of Oc- werfh stated , that on the loth instant the prisoner with a shoemaker's hammer, in so Ball, at Rochdale, 14s. ; Mossley, Bv acting on a broad, comprehensive spirit, and by dis- term, by applying to Messrs. R. Walker and Brother yearsbefore. I Saw her frequently in the serious a manner that his 2s7 3d. ; Oldham, , charged a person named Mark Siddall with having life is still in danger. From ofthe wlleetuig carding from tlieir minds the little jealousies and puerile Engineers and Founders, of Bury, Lancashire, we hereby tober last. the statement of the ir li ' U ! M? boxes, on Sunday, mischief. Ought threatened committed the murder, but that on the following prosecutor, whose head was bound March 23, at Oldham, lid. The following resolu- distinctions that had worked so much caution the operatives of the above Trades, that there is: Mr. Mills—Did she ten you that any one had up, and who appeared in a wherever they could get it ? man whom she mornine:he denied having said so. The second stone very weak sickly state, it ap- tions were passed unanimously :—" That as certain thev not to take help and aid a Strike at the above r/hro. • and also at Uussbs. Walker ler life ?—Witaess-^She told me that a peared that the prisoner feel proud that W. linn- ,, had bovethe words—" The Lord pviteet them.aU. , Inc , who was related to him by members oUho Victim Fund' Was there a man that did not Smith, and Hacking, machinists had lived with a short time before, but whom she marriage Committee took um- , of the same place ;;, third stone was inscribed—" I cannot live m this , had latterly become much addicted to drink. brage at the resolution of the combe their chairman, had come among them ? And , left , oning to some quarrel they had had, Sad threatened last delegate meeting, ' exclude that gentleman and, as the Men are contending for privileges that crer*y lace no longer." And the words appear to have been Ou Thursday-midday last he returned home much the referring to money being in the vet the motion now made would ' her, and that she was afraid ' out for him. She^said p hands of some one Operative Mechanic should bo in possession of, wo trustt to go written subsequently to the others. Alter tue worse for liquor, when some words arose through his belonging to their bodv from a position where he could best serve them. He ishe had him- sa}^! , we beg leave to assure them * that none of our Fellow-workmen will be base enough too been Terr imeoEfortable with J- evidence—which was very immaterial—the Coroner beiug backward iu his rent, and witness told him he that it was not of the members of that fcodv wc com- called on the Delegates to set tlieir faces against such a woadtr, Mary, you can content yourself to live in the hire themselves under such degradirjr circumstances. said it was quite clear that the prisoner had been should at once pay tlie arrears due, or leave the house. plained , but of Mr. Cleave, of London, fer 'not'send- narro w, ' contracted spirit. Let tlie foundation of the way yoa do/ , and that while The prisoner became much escited, and in his rage ing out a balance the projected Union be broad and comprehensive, and there By order ot the Executive Council of the Protectivee man. committed on a capital charge sheet to the countrv, showing ' • r . •- Jir. Mills—Do vou know the name of that circumstances he had destroyed himself. He snatched up his largehammer, with whichhe gave witness amount he hold e tvou ld be some chance of the superstructure being in Society. " Mcllen. I am not Jn these s b longing to the Victim Fund Com- Witness—She said his nsrae was coroner) had long felt that a coroner's jury were two violent blows OU the left side of the head ,-ind temple, mittee. " That we request the committee ap- accordance, Bolton, Usft-ch 30th , 13-13 e?rtain of his Christian nasac. bat I fliink it was William. /tbe , - — ¦¦¦- ¦- —¦ ------April-5, 1845. .. THE N ORT HE» STM -- . -¦ - - - * • . & . — '•Loss or the Thomas Lowry.—Suicide of tiik cheapest small carving knife they had. He showed East India Docks, and not far from the engine-manu- Mysterious Disappearance.—On Monday morn- examined their points, he ' Samuda, so lately the scene was received by the metropolitan Pilot.—The ship Thomas Lowry, from Sydney to him three, and having se- &SD THE RENT OF LAM). , & Iit-ytedte factory of the Messrs. ing information _ which had the narrowest blade, and LORD RABSOr gafteiite, Offinice* t of a fatal accident. One of the large iron-yards for police of the mysterious disappearance of a young London, arrived off Dartmouth on the 27th ult., lected that f0r boats and their machinery letters, received a supply of provisions, which he paid a shilling. He was about to take tho Editor of Hie lima. the construction of iron man named Piper, who resided in the vicinity of landed her hand, when Mr. To the John Taweu/s Cosmsiox.—Aylesbury, Stoday. side of the Orchard-road, not very far , under circumstances which have caused and shipped at the same time one of the most knife away naked in Ivia Oldham the insertion of tie en- is on tbe river Sudbury, it in paper. He then took Sir —3b Tcnturing to seek —The public must for the present content themselves distant from the Blackwall-pier. It was just inside considerable excitement. It appears he has been experienced pilots out of that port. By some unfore- said he would put th© , I am influenced by a grateful to the knife and having set the edge, put it in paper closed mToOTJ^S Times with what has been revealed to them relative the "ate of this yard that the fatal calamity occurred. missing since the night of the 15th Hit., and the seen circumstances the ship struck on some sunken , , and sen^oTaSentproteetionwhichthc affords The document and was run ashore the man went away. He did not observe the all classes in guilt and confession of John Tawell. On the right-hand side of the gate, just within it, is most persevering inquiries have been made, but rocks, became waterlogged, man tothe ration of the civil rightsof brief and conclusive, and exactly opposite, near the harbour, where she filled . The pilot the very minutely, but his daughter did, and they both address you sir, out which contains his confession is the workmen's pay-office , on without any intelligence being obtained of him. imfcounby- I would not thus be hereafter explained, of the gate, is some framework used for companions admit having been with him on day after put an end to his existence by hanging state that he had a hat and not a cap on, but that being one of that numer- but from reasons wMch may the left-hand Sonic one as described, ofundue compliment, but its contents will not be some time to come, pre- large collection of long iron rods or the night mentioned, and that a disagreement took himself in his own house. his coat was such a cither of dark nighlv-respcctablcbody of men, the tenant , for the support of a Shortly after the murder ous and sented to the public. That the murderer did confess bare. This framework is constructed against a wall place between them on the road, when he left them, Singular Robbery.—On Friday night a daring velvet or fustian. was dis. fanners, I respectfully beg you, as flie conservator of never denied covered, a woman, who is of the same class as the public tho injuries himself guilty is beyond all doubt. He running on the left side of the gate, along the entrance and lias not since been' heard of. It was thought pos- robbery was committed in the office attached to the the such*rights , to place before admitted ; andhedidnot the riverside. Sleepers, or might have missed his road and fallen at Maidstone. unfortunate deceased, gave information to the police we sustain from the present. unrea- the fact which he ultimately to the yard, and towards sible that he brew-house of the late Mr. J. Ilcathorn, wM(m tne7and deed to paper without extend from the wall, and into the river Stour, which was dragged, but no trace An iron chest of the common kind was broken open which will, in all probability, lead to tho apprehension posed on us by the owners of land. commit Ms avowal of the transverse nieces of timber, murderer, blie stateu that sue knew sonable*" terms im nor until all prospect ol es- longitudinal border team, wnicn is has been discovered of him. by the application of gunpowder, inserted at the key- ol tho the man Aecoi-ding to the recent sfetement of Lord Radnor, some reluctance, are affixed to a well by sight, and had seen him with decease* as follows cape was gone. Mr. Cox, the chaplain, to whom supported by perpendicular lengths of timber, or —About one o'clock on Tuesday hole ofthe lock. The iron chest standing upright, on a the rent of land is calculated , and if"the , dechnes Extensive Fire. previous occasion. On Monday night, shortly , he takeslessthanhisdue ":—There the important memorandum was committed piles driven into the ground. Leaning: obliquely morning a fire broke out in the premises of Mr. some portion of the powder ran down to the bottom after landlordtaicsless subject of his trust. ±lis of iron-bare ten o'clock, she was standing at the corner of Gcoro-Q_ the expense of cultivation; secondly, the wear to say one word upon the against the sleepers was the collection Kirby, oil and colourman, 83, Minories, which was ledge of tho false door, or frame, containing the three " is, first, to be limited, rawcll to fifteen tons. About the lock caused street, when he accosted her and asked her if she had aid tear of Ins live and dead stock, and the cost of silence, however, is likely alluded to, in weight from ten attended by an extensive destruction of property. bolts. The ignition of the powder in deceased that ni observe to his wife, that his love tor were standing in the gangway, below, and it seen tlie ght. On her replyin-r that keeping them up * thirdly,if he makes improvements, went so far as to thirty workmen The dense smoke which entered the bed-room of the explosion of that which had fallen she had not, he said "he was looking for of capital her had brought Mm to his prison ; implying that, between the bars and the pay-office, waiting to re- them that the together blew the lalse back sufficientl y away to ber." on the interest expended on this object, and her eyes, lie had Mi\ Kirby and his wife first informed Tuesday a number of persons were taken into the replacing that capital during his tenancy ; in order to avoid deeradation in ceive their week's wages, when one or more of the lower part of the building was on fire, and they in- admit the insertion of a bar of iron or chisel to prize custody Hart, but inducing her to believe outside, and forming but > to accom- on account of their answering in some measure the fourthly, remuneration to himself for labour and murdered Sarah sleepers gave way on the stantly rushed out in a state of nudity, with their open the door ; great force had been used tion of the murderer, but the onl that his clandestine visits, kept secret solely out of pport, the bars slipped off from the wall l ; rom s p ron near descrip y one UI)0n car*. These are the outgoings. Then, on the other an inclined su child in their- amis, and alarmed the other inmates p ish this f the mark left u on the i whom strong suspicion still rests is a man - regard to her, had brought about the fatal position side and toppled into the gangway, burying wholly and who fortu- the bolts, a steel chisel must have been used. No named side, will be the probablevalue of the produce • and ° Tawell at the time of his whom they succeeded in warning, Medows, and who was taken into custody by lie rent will Tie determined b in wMch she was placed. or partially seven of the unfortunate workmen be- h a trap-door in the roof, report was noticed , and from the nature of the ex- J[v. ln. y the probable average conditions with Mr. Cox, to nately all escaped throug specter Tcdman at nine o'clock on Tuesday " of excess of this aver and above the probable averages execution made certain neath their weight, and slightly injuring with their and thence through an adjoining house into the plosion it is not probable a very loud one wasmade. morning which that gentleman will religiously adhere. When les and ends many more. So soon as the This man lodges in Southmolton-mcws, and works oftheforegoing ex penses. sharp ang street. The fire spread most fearfully, notwith- The thieves were adroit in tlieir work, but their with Mr. Frost, a brass-fitter, near he is at liberty to make a disclosure, he will do so. fall of the iron was made known, all the uninjured who speedily ar- booty was very small, being only a few halfpence ; Davics-strcet Such a statement from his Lordship has, indeed, have written the memo- standing the efforts of the firemen, Ou the inspector's telling Medows that he " a tendency to make us dwell upon our prospects. I Tawell would not otherwise workmen in the yard, to the number of more than rived with their engines, and at two o'clock had ex- fortunately the books, &c, sustained no injury.— wanted randum in question merely according to promise, hurried to tho spot, and knowing that him for the murder or the woman lie had cohabited "would, in the name of justice, ask, what claim has a hundred, tended to the ajoining house, occupied by a Mr. Maidstone Journal. w ho said, " I am not the man. and for perusal of one man, to whom a verbal con- some of their comrades were beneath the ponderous ith, " Obscrvm" as the landowner to the profits arising from his tenant's conclusive of Orncr and numerous families, and a very few Explosion.—The boiler of the steam-boat V ictoria- he thought, something which looked like Wood ' capital, fession would have been in that case as mass, they began with alacrity to remove it, and before tliis house was entirely con- while she was engaged on the stall, or to any part or portion of his bcyend feeling so convinced of her minutes elapsed exploded on Saturday evening, man's clothes, he examined him, and found a food the rent estimated according to the nature and pro- bis <*uilt. Mrs.. Tawell completed their sorrowful task in seventeen minutes, d, and the roof fell in. The flames then reached at Shields. Ihe s innocence—a fact of wliich lie was well sume in tewing a vessel into the harbour deal of blood on his right hand, and in ], U poclret ductive quality of the soil, and such as it will rea- husband' having broken down the gate to expedite their an adjoining house, occupied by a Mr. Gregg, but force of the steam, which was fortunately upwards, a aware—Tawellwas anxious that his wifeshould have that the fall had proved handkerchief having a great quantity of blood on it sonably let for in the market— such a rent, for efforts. They then found there the firemen fortunately succeeded in arresting severely scalded John Thompson, the engine man, On questioning Medows as to tliis overcome the shock of his execution before she fatal to two fellow workmen, the one a labourer , he said that it instance, as is now the basis of the poor-rate assess- the destruction, and at three o'clock all farther dan- who was standing on deck, but no other person was had come from his nose which had been ment ? received what to her would be a still greater shock— named John Payne, aged twenty-five ; and the other The property destroyed is very bleedinn- g by his own confession. ger was at an end. injured. violently that morning. Ou his wav to tho His Lordshiii's claims appear unprecedented in the admission of his uilt an engineer named Bates. Their bones and bodies, and the origin of the five is at present station! resumption tliat the newspapers considerable, Attempted Murder of a "Wife by her Husband house, Medows admitted that he had cohabited with their exorbitance, when he says " the rent is deter- This was on the to use the expression of one who saw them, were unknown. would be still kept from her. Muck remains to be They were taken to the rs Liyerpooi,.—On Tuesday morning the inhabitants the deceased some time since, but she absconded mined by the probable average of excess of this (the completely " smashed." c thrown from him with his propert produce) over and above the probable average of the told connected with this affair besides the mere Poplar dead-house to await a coroner's inquest. Of Fire at the Prixce's Dock.—About eleven o clo k of Vauxhall-road and Tithebarn-strect were y several months back, and was observed y a rumour, ra- that he had only seen her before-going expenses. So that the rent, in fact, is particulars ' of the murder. Some disclosures of an the five other men, two were so severely injured that yesterday forenoon a quantity of smoke into a state of great excitement b once since, when he met extraordinary nature are promised, and likely to be to to issue from the fore-hatch of the Syria, of Liver- pidly circulated, that a man had stabbed his wife at her last Christmas in Holborn. On their arrival at determined according to the sum total or beneficial it was deemed advisable to convey them speedily " given, in the course of a few weeks. In the interim Their names are Edward pool, a splendid ship belonging to Messrs. Hamilton No. ll, Lower Milk-street, and that the most serious the station-house, the two women at the house where result arisins from the industry, experience, and the London Hospital. d was the murder was committed capital of the tenant ; ibr from these proceeds not public curiosity, like the law upon tliis occasion, must Burster, aged twenty, and William Jackson, aged and Baines, merchants of this town, lying at tlie apprehensions were entertained that the woun were sent for, as also the merely the " probable," bu