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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 0.78 | 0 | MARKETS.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 86 | 0.9076 | 0.1366 | THE. SCHEDULE ABOVE REFERRED TO
Description or Premises,
Ai Piece or Parcel of rand, situate on the
south sideof Prince Edwin-lane, in the township
of Everton, in the said borough
A• Piece or Parcel of Land, situate on the west
side of Florist-street, in the parish of Liverpool,
in the said borough
A Quarry, situate on the north side of ➢lill-lane,
in the township of Everton, in the said borough .1
Amount to be
recovered, be-
sides expenses:
s. di
23 1 3
39 0 9
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 59 | 0.9483 | 0.1198 | WENHAM LAKE ICE.
___
THE GREATEST LUXURY OF THE SEASON.
The WENHAM LAKE ICE, celebrated for its purity, and
the present Stock never before equalled in transparency, being as
clear as glass, ON SALE, in large or small quantities, upon
reasonable terms; also, the PATENT REFRIGERATOR for pre-
serving Ice and Provisions.
ROPES AND CO.,
28, NORTH JOHN-STREET, LIVERPOOL
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 449 | 0.8939 | 0.1532 | TIDE TABLE
MORN. EVENO.IHOHT.! HOLYDAYS,ETC
DECAYED TEETH AND TOOTHACHE. -
Patronised by.per Majesty, the Queen, and His Royal
-Highnes;Prince Albert.
MR. HOWARD'S PATENT WHITE SUCCEDANEUM
for filling Decayed Teeth, however large the cavity. It is superior
to anything ever before used, as it is placed in the tooth in a soft
state, without any pressure or pain, and in a short time becomes
as bard as the enamel, and will remain firm in the tooth for many
years, rendering extraction unnecessary, and arrests all further
progress of decay. All persons can use the SUCCEDANEUM
THEMSELVES W E ITH ASE.
Prepared by Mr. HOWARD, Surgeon Dentist, 17, George-
street, Hanover-square, London, who will send it free by POST
to an y part of the Kingdom, witirfull directions for use enclosed—
price-2s. Gd. in POSl2fie Stamps. Sold by all respectable Chemists
and Medicine Vendors. Caution—Observe that the Signature
"THOMAS HOWARD" in. Red Ink is on .the outside of the
Wrapper, without which none is Genuine. Price 2s. 6d.
IN THE MOH COURT OF CHANCERY.
TRI ES ENIA R.
ON THE 29T11 OF MAY, 1355, AN INJUNCTION WAS GRANTED BY
THE HIGH COURT OF CHANCERY, AND ON THE 11TH OF JUNE
FOLLOWING WAS MADE-PERPETUAL, AOAINSTJOSEPH FRANK-
LIN AND OTHERS, TO RESTRAIN THEM. UNDER A PENALTY OF
£l,OOO, FROM IMITATING THIS MEDICINE, WHICH IS Imo-
TECTED BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT OF ENGLAND, AND
SECURED BY THE SEALS OF THE ECOLE BE PHARMACIE DE
PARIS AND THE IMPERIAL COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, VIENNA.
TRIESENIAR, No. 1, is a Remedy for Relaxation, Spermatorr-
licea. and Exhausti nu of the System.
TRIESENIAR, No. 2. effectually, in the short space of Three
Days, completely and entirely eradicates all traces of those dis-
orders which Capsules have so long been thought an antidote for,
to the ruin of the It calth of a vast portion of the population.
TRIESEMAR, No 3, is the Great Continental Remedy for that
class of disorders which, unfortunately, the English physician
treats with Mercury, to the destruction of the Patient's constitu•
tion, and which all the Sarsaparilla in the world cannot remove.
TruEsEMAR, Nos. 1,2, and 3, are alike devoid of taste or
smell, and of all nauseating qualities.
Sold in tin cases, at Its. each; free by post, 2s. extra, divided
into separate.doses, as administered by VALPEAU, LALLEMAND,
Roux. &c. &c. To be. had, wholesale and retail, in London, of
JOHNSON, 68, ; HANNAY. and Co., 63, Oxford-
street; SANoza, 150, Oxford-street; R. H. INGHAM, Druggist,
46; Market-street, Manchester; H. BRADBURY, Bookseller,
Deansgate, Bolton ; J. PRIESTLEY, Chemist, Lord-street,
Liverpool; WINNALL, Bookseller, High-street, Birmingham ; and
POWELL, Bookseller. 15, Westmoreland-street, Dublin.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 870 | 0.9585 | 0.1027 | AN INCIDENT IN NEW YORK.
" The lower part of Broadway—below Barnum, that
is to say--is, pretty much given over to, business and the
masculine gender. Ladies seen south of St. Paul's, except in,l
omnibus, excite that certain indefinable curiosity, which, like,
the active attention to a glimpse of a pettidoatin a monastery, .
arises from our sinner's interest in things, apparently astray:
The impression, consequently, from seeing alady come out of
Delmonico's, contains a certain indefinable difference from,the
impression of seeing the same lady come out-of the New Yak
Hotel—define it at your leisure. This,or.perhaps the mag-
netism of a pair of boots such as usually: contain a voter, but
were then occupied by one of the unconetituent sex, drew a
crowd of two or three hundred persons, the other day, to, the
front of the masculine hotel above mentioned—patient spec-
tators, all, of the very ordinary phenomenon of a lady. about
mounting a horse. The horse had his- objections. A man's
hat, a riding habit of cloth of our wear,_ boots of indefinable
extent, and whip held with an air of unmistakeable. efficacy,
seemed to fail of their ordinary control.. The stable-man drew
the spirited animal again and again, to- the edge of the side
walk, and, as often, the lady tried in vain to get her foot in
the stirrup. After repeated failures- she re-ascended the steps
of the hotel, and stood observing the groom's. eftbrts to quiet
the horse, not at all disconcerted by the very large audience (?)
that was assembled, and, in fact, the whole affair, with the
circular bowling green, below, looking like a scene in a circus.
Presently came along a plainly dressed man who bad an idea,
and no objection to lend it. He knew how to produce sub-
mission (probably in quadrupeds only) to• female domination.
The horse was coaxed up to the side walk once more, and,
stepping to the other side, the man took up the off fore legi
and held it while the lady mounted, the animal having
evidently no confidence in resistance on three legs. Once-in
the saddle, she put on the whip, caracoled up and down in
front of the hotel till the pace was disciplined to her mind,
and then, quietly dropping the reins, walked her steed tran-
quilly toward the South Ferry. The crowd looked after her
till she was out of sight, it being yery busily whispered about,
that the load, thus unwillingly borne away, was no less than
the indomitable will:of the celeliyated Mrs.. Fanny Kemble."
• •
The above is a fair illustration of Mr. Willis's skill
and taste as.. a. pen-and-ink picture maker, and few
will venture to say that the thing is not knowingly,
indeed cleverly, treated. Yet, all must agree in pity-
ing at least, if they do not condemn, that wretched
taste which induces a man to see only in his fellow
man the subject for a picturesque sketch—to perceive
in his intercourse with nature and society only the
materials out of which to fabricate a racy scene—that
either or both may be coined into a few miserable
dollars. This is a sort of literary and social treason
which has been long bitterly complained of and no
offender has been more flagrant in that species of
delinquency than Mr. Willis. It is, therefore, some
consolation for outraged humanity to know that his
" Sketches from Nature" do not now include " interior
representations taken surreptitiously on the spot" in
respectable mansions, but are necessarily confined to
" street views," and " passing portraits," taken without
the owners' consent. it is to be regretted that talent
such as that indicated in the above sketch, and such
as Mr. Willis has been long admitted to possess,
should not have been accompanied by that delicacy of
feeling—that sense of social propriety, which impresses
on every gentleman the knowledge that the door
which has been unfolded in hospitality, should not be
left open by the guest to the gaze of vulgar and idle
curiosity.
A Series of Christian Biography. No. 1, Life of
James Bonnell. No. 2, Life of Nicholas Ferrar.
London : Masters. Price 2s. 6d. each.
The enterprising publisher, in his prospectus of
the above series, states that—.
In no branch of devotional literature is the Church of Eng-
land so deficient, as in biography. Indeed, she can be said to
possess but one single standard volume of the kind—and that
but ill adapted to the unlearned reader : we allude, of course,
to Walton's Lived. Whether we look to the Fathers of the
Primitive and undivided Church ; or to those great and good
men by whom the Gospel was brought into this land : to
those who have toiled and suffered in its defence in every age ;
or to those who in the privacy of their Own homes have lived
the most saintly among us, there is no accessible record con-
cerning them which we can place in the hands of our people.
Particular schools and parties, within or without the
church, have not indeed been insensible to the benefits to be
derived from this kind of literature. put the Church of
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 89 | 0.9269 | 0.1155 | RANKIN'S NEW PATENT
SMUT MACHINE AND CORN SCREEN is a
great improvement, having a simultaneous double action
upon the Grain, extracting sand seeds and light matter in one
process; also, au Improved Separator.
RANKIN'S NEW PATENT
B ONE MILLS
are a decided improvement upon those in ordinary use, take
ess power, and work much more efficiently, grinding to dust the
hardest bones.
SOLE MAKERS OF THE ABOVE:
R. A.ND J. R ANK IN,
MILLWRIGHTS, ENGINEERS, IRONFOUNDERS, &c.,
UNION FOUNDRY, JIAACHESTER-STREET,
LIVERPOOL.
Apnts for
CHANTER'S PATENT FURNACE BARS.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,313 | 0.5882 | 0.3314 | OF EVERY D
INCLUDING.
FORMS, INVOICES,
BILLS OF LADING, CUSTOM• HOUSS
CARDS, ENTRIES,
CIRCULARS, &C. &C.,
POSTING BILLS OF
EVERY SIZE,
'ITH THE GREATEST PR
POOL STAND
,MPTITUDE, AT
,RD OFFICE.
li 0 17 S ER 01, D C 0 A L S
SUPPLIED IN
LIVER P O O L,
BIRKENHEAD,
SEACOMBE NEW BRIGHTON,
HUYTON,
ROBY, RAINHILL
ROCK FERRY,
To Order left or sent by Post to the Undersigned,
23, CASTLE-STREET, LIVERPOOL
Or to the following Yards and Offices, viz. r*,
,ROWN•STREET, Liverpool ; EogicroN DOCK QUAY, Birkenhead ; DEMEAN-
STREET, SeSCOMbe.
W. and H. LAIRD.
23, Castle•street, Liverpool.
[JULY 17, 1855.
Insurance Notices.
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON FI
AND LIFE INSURANCE CONIPANY.
CAPITAL, TWO MILLIONS.
ESTABLISHED IN 1836.
Empowered by Acts of Parliament.
OFFICES. PO °I
37, CASTLE-STREET, LIVER-
-20 .5- 21, POULTRY, LONDON;
Persons whose 6
l(FliNreGAlTißcieEsEreTithMthAisAr
AND
CCIpSCIRTYgeII:Ptir‘AI
24th instant, are respectfully reminded that receiP
renewal of the same will be found at the Head Office: 4W
pool, London, and Manchester, and in the hands of the
Agents. sif
DAMAGE occasioned by EXPLOSION of GAS is!'
as a Loss under the Company's Fire Policies.
SWINTON BOULT, Secretary to the ConWndon
AGENT FOR BIRKENHEAD.—MT. Robert Hughes, 1311-
Hamilton-square.
20th June, 1855,
10;0
AGE ASSURANCE CO.,-Ivr -
64, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
CHAIRMAN.—The Rev. George Ro be
• Arts E..
DEPUTY-CHAIRMAN.—COI.—CoI. Faris, •
The first declaration of Profits will be made intstrn,
the 31st of December next, in which all persons ml
that date will participate. tiff
by 0 i
THE AGE—never disputed a claim and are
Settlement Administration from doing mo IP
litocalculslido
Fractional
_parts of a year are allowed in
_go
peculiar
t plane,
adopted
by thi as nodffiLceeg. Legacy Duties
—BRADFORD, SHEFFIELD, MANCHESTEEtkr4OV
UPON-TYNE,—SUNDERLAND,—ABERDEEN, ---,pi:oo '
EELS. EDWARD Kw'
LOCAL MANAGER FOR LIVERPOOL f...101p
R. R. HUTCHINSON, Esq., 9, Eden Cni'voiti
South John-street.
SCOTTISH EQUITABLE LIFE .--A SS
4,A
SOCIETY.
0
pA 4
°,16.144
INCORPORATED BY SPECIAL ACT OF -- 11 r. P. r
The TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL GRNlthogsm Otr,
of this SOCIETY was held at Edinburgh, on ' is
May. The Report by the Directors, among other
con lined the following particulars :
During the year closed on Ist March last-
-628 Policies have been issued.
~ 01l .
The sums Assured thereby amount to .e 28.,,
And the Annual Premiums thereon to
..e9,o4'ersl
The position of the Society at Ist March was 0.4, olio
Existing Assurances s 011, gs JO
Annual Revenue
Accumulated Fund.
Copies of the Report, and all other informatietb°,,,,,
application attire Head Office, or Agencles, 00 . '
View of the Progress and Position of 1*
•
thlts
„..."/
Amount
Assured.
Annual '
Revenue.
- • I
„
At Ist March, 13 £740,462 £26,99/
1E43, 1,707,716 64,000
1849' 3,067,376 114,106
1835 4,392,733 163,394
ROBERT CHRISTI'
WILLIAM FINNY'
HEAD OFFICE-25r Sr. ANpREW SQVARge
_tpr
Office in Londen,-126, BlsnoesoATa•'-'
111
A iIENTS.
L4VICR?OOL .... Archibald Tad, 3.. Liver Chambers,
street.
Andersons Thorborn, 51ere"litk
j•
Manchester .. 1. Edward Corbett, Surveyor.
/".
ofr 1
THE ROYAL INS ANCE o
„o
of '
CAPITAL, £2,000,000, in I00;00n SIIAR..o-g
HEAD farVics, of OS
NORTH JOHN-STREET AND DAL
TRUSTEES;
John Shaw Leigh, Esq., and John Naylor, ~, P
DIRECTORS, &C., IN- LIVERIVO;:iiii toe ,
Charles Turner, Esc,, ChairiP i,iti.
,
J: • Bramiey-Moore, Esq., M.P., and, Ralph Atooo.
Deputy-Chairmen. erto 101.
Michael B'elcher, Esq. Richard übillAS,A.
George Booker, Esq. Edvrardov,iw's tlzo
Thomas-13buch, Esq. Lbger"r;f6,
Michael Bousffetd, Esq. James ..4.040,
Thomas-Dbver, Esq. I Rohert Pi )45
R. Ellison Harvey, Esq. • •J. tleo,
I W:lliani„,,,,, a.
James Holme, Esq. I Francis- P''' jib,'
T. Dyson Hernhy, Esq. Wilfietsm-0.
litivid Cannon, Esq. Jotarlo
'' rrr
George H. Hbrsfall, Esq. 0
AUDITORS. 100'
William Titherington, Esq., and John"D
SURGEON, Hugh Neill, F.E.4'io'rrorn' 0
SURVEYOR. sol..,micetri,
Samuel Hoime, Esq. septinail-Fve, i°°''
MANAGER AND ACTUARY, Percy M.
tfroor
BIRKENHEAD BRANen,,,,,
OFFICE—HAMrLIION-BUILDINGS, WWII." .
oe
Agent.—Henry Cole, EE;fltosAtill
Sargeon.—Sames T. Vale. Esq., Don' _,O
SPRCIAL • NOTICE.
CHARGED. dened:eols
Attention is directed to the fact that tabion Its
Premium: are not euNeet to Income-faxauaavoliOnl"
NOTICE—STAMPS
AF
ME
PTA:NC Hi,
fit . route:oo
Life-Fdlicies are exempt from the New '
BRANCH'
SPECIAL•ANNOUNUPEIRMEEr,„*A.:IO—sion-11,,gies„.tode-el this
C '
T °
cover Losses occasioned by GAS '''-iireCted a' ;-; of a'
FIRE, INSURANCES will lbf the ad 0,
ving, • , tserf by' I
Premium, The Company, 11° distinguiso 1
Directory, will be.enabled t?_.
ness in the settlement of Claims' pow"-, _SI
No Chargenx
sade for the
v
LIFE BRANCH. fitod
l'F'''
c'''''''''''''Y ''
'''..4" ....re LiVes on an", .
contingencies, nansely..— ....,,e;......
ntOt;aebirystb,ip.ot
For the WHOLE cesuremtrAwca or LlPE.—Z;rfr
cease flttpr a T.T.MITEn N7fATI4TOR 4W ANTNYTTA L. ix
For a Sum to be payable at Age 60, or at Des....,Pm
_,01,4
PREMIUMS ON CREDO-40040
CREDIT, A
MAY BE _, sp,'
VARIOUS WAYS, NOT ENUMERA_IBilliify,OO
CONVENIENCE OF:THE PARTY BIA 10
ANCE. allOt
TOIORNAOSSFUTRLEcEsPREMIUMS mitil2sose
ed by the. ao
The•important advantages afford _
... r
Branch will include-the following, Vii,',' Mora/a- ff'
GUARANTEE OF•ANANtPLE CAPITe.. wi 1,148
LARGE PARTICIPATION OF PROFIT 1, ar.
ThFeeseutsoumaleCdoicma
SMALL CHARGE. VOR" MANAGEMEN I!
PERCY PI. mod OP
Policies due at MIDS.UarMSt should be rese
the 9th of July next.
June 20, 1855.
_f
Commission
Rtrerenesalare lediketwoiglii...l
. •
114EAFNES AND DISTRESW.I(I,, ,
/4
IN. THE EARS AND HE'6ilollo4o d')
This day published, by a Physician of fifteen:ft/40A
diseases of the Ear•only„ a Book, to be give 'WV -40...-
to any part of the- world, MODE of SELF I fiP,•Oe
.illb -4,
Pc:bents, by means-of his new and infallible., sitir fr..,
covered within the last few weeks by Dr. Ain:JArof ',,isn4 0.,,'
Aurist. Thousands.itt this short space of tier or Iska" 4,
to perfect hearing, without absence from ntco,oo; 11151
leastpain or inconvenience to the most age0L4.1"4.. $ll.O,
although havingbeen deaf for twenty or t1it70111,04,,,,
enabled, almost instantaneously, to hear 1,1 fleol6 le 4
covery has been proclaimed by all the head...lBoV Ar
;eons of Londoui.to be one of the most miritsnipof i
ife#
ever made in Aural Surgery; and the same pt. - otti ,
auaded Dr..MA.:4FREIN to give publicity to ?Its, OA
saving the poor afflicted from the advertising isr4ii
titles,. whose-fraudulent advertisements are s_A i.sOA9 '
their only desire being to plunder the afttictfitiro-vozi
many hundreds are rendered incurable fortitenoo(9, 4i
ignorance of the. treatment. Doctor NtAr4t.iiiilto.:tooid.
Physician and Consulting Surgeon to tl•.e Ifil!ssr iy
of Deafness,. 84, Wimpole-street, Caveat' if 'l.Ol,
receives Patients as above, and applies his" 1"; OP I
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 1' tioleoplir
Monday and Thursday, between 6 and,B in
MA. N FRSEI• hopes they will not refrain froto.e iisrir I
means of his-recent discovery; and if confrden4 10
MANFZED will be happy to show thousands v
sons zured„ both rich and poor.
0/
jj OW TO PROLONG LIRRA-34
.A.A_ TILE GREAT PURIFYING. Arro
MEDICINE,. ill; 4,
What though the sun ""
beauty R 07J
And you have countless.hoardS•
What though the world.-.all, all waltb.,,, pl,coo/4
If you but want thablessing.,., ObrffiO4
Dr. DE ROOS' PILUL/E VITAL or VEuall .1 ,P'ilop9
A universal Restorative for both Sexes and y (t
tnafs,,o ,t„,4
solely from the VEGETABLE kingdom;, JP
to the youngest Child, or to the most delicalestrelyteir
regulating the dose according to the age audio theictArit,
son. They remove all Disorders and Pains we'd
Bowels, as Costiveness, Spasms, Loss Of Ayr" lairiekicy
Fulness after Meals, Indigestion, Liver Cougoli3O"11
the Bowels, Listlessness,. Heat,, Pain, and Jn Olineg
and while they act thus salutarily, tlieyn'il.,,stdinesi_...'o„.`
the strength of the Patient. Headache, VnleVieretr,
Ears, Fluttering of the Sight, and other nea'Zitrilif teP,lO
—the forerunners of many fatal diseases,-td
Strokes, Epilepsy, &e.,_ are effectually war.,,,,,51101
of these Pills. They also produce sound el'n 1:11
Appetite, and possess extraordinary effiCadg tieppr
system, and imparting a pleasing serenitlollloo efl`lol
unequalled as a Family Medicine; in few to flpio
sionally employed in Families and SchoOio'
be needed. resa dieffiliel'ees4
For Females, they are truly excellent,ri 111.tett'
Depression of Spirits, Dizziness of Sightvitic#l,o'
Sallowness, and giving a health y j uven ile b' 00'4 ,00,411,
Ladies, however delicate, will find thetagide ,ott:egll",tf
both befora and after confinement. Fof._:tecsll4
the most comfortable Medicine that can
Persons going Abroad, Captains, and 00: staPtiet; ti4ol/
important articles of health than the abes"tbecolOUrff,
the Stomach and Bowels, and tranquilliZilt 1110 ciiiio7
will prevent those fatal iseases so prevaLet
Sickness and other complaints incidental, beres
irregular living. No Emigrant's Chest en OEOI (t,O.
ti
without them,_ for when far removed fraM„,,e..,o I. 0
or
find in these Pills a never-failing restota',r et: feel 0 j
Mr. Smith, St. Ives : "Since taking y 0" and .0 0,°,0 0'
required the services of a medical Olan;e net iiel` fr, if
would be the case generally, if people vre,..,near_A
by prejudice."—T. Webster, Esq., S leafor oure_..fe.
"Having read your advertisement, I felt a. 11.1.',11101,
be of use to some of my poorer neighboll..7 tagswirtlif
and they have derived great benefit °Flo t°ol6lo,
continue to recommend your valuable.,oo:odse
Mr. Edwin Highley, 4, Mount-street, 11 b
Vita; a very pleasant medicine in re r 4.. Wayre of 0
wrog, Tan-y-Bwlch, North Wales:
d cilia ° 01(
to Dr. De Roos, and he finds no medicine wbel
dt logad
as his Pilula; Vibe." . led Arendar64o4,ilit,
IM PORTA NT.— Some unprincipled
to Nist e -
DE ROOS' Pills, have attempted _ couipOu bate 0f
other Medicines, or trash of their own p
they obtain a larger profit. The, ts;hiee. ivirytt
" WALTER DE ROOS, LONDON,
cry, eacaissi/el-010.
ground printed in the stamp, nffixebie Conitro iol
direction of Her Majesty's Honour!' „_te whi ,
tect the Public from Fraud, and to I.lJcitne vesir,rectiftato
May be obtained through all get", with notroit,
thricer 130^' ro'
e street,
APrlg
ROOS, 10, Berner's.street, Oxford- 01,74
sc2sc..? do. ,r 4bs
enclosing.y6d . , andpo3st3.Bo.
sent per return. „8, 1,0, of ft 4,
t and ' I°. e
Sold by Jones, 5, Paradise.stree ,___d 6, Argon geelf
tram, 24, Waterloo-road, Liverpoorneol. iat' 1t
head. Priestley, 52, Lord.street, I.,,;;;iiillocafster%yfe!ity:
street, Hindley. Clarke, Gazett - IT'cran Me,`oo, ;00,00"
No. 4, Market-street, Manchester; nncleeff/
N.B.—Respectable persons in "iv' ake 'are I'
allowed a liberal commission, blaY. 000
Preston. Marsh,Wallgate, Wigan;
orv.., Lanc..,icivpub
coming a favourite Medicine with L.
to their income, by selling these Pr lair Public.
streei, 04,
died
,rell
Printed an a Published LelvVeErygPT°uT's 0 A.,;(61(111:144,?,
Proprietor, ROBERT PEARSON nlyggiol, pit'
Percy-street, at the STANDARD 2046prr0
OFFICE, No. 4, Sr. GEOBVE'S ‘dap
Tuesday, July 17, 1855.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 63 | 0.9311 | 0.1062 | CLERICAL OBITUARY.
July 4, at Bonchurch, Isle of Wight, the Rev. R. W. Sutton,
Rector of Layer Breton, Essex, aged 56.
July 6, at Kincaldrutn, Forfarahire, the Rev. John Paterson,
D.D., aged 79.
June 17, at the Palace Hospital, at Scutari, of diarrhoea, the
Rev. Henry John Whitfield, the Officiating Chaplain, aged 46, late
of Downing College, Cambridge, and Vicar of Granborough, Bucks
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,272 | 0.8963 | 0.1486 | BIRTHS.
On the Bth inst., the wife of Mr. John Lindsay, Upper Par-
liament-street, of a daughter.
On the 9th inst., at Deane-street, Fairfield, the wife of John
Morrow Esq., of a daughter.
On the 10th inst., at Highfield, Orton, the wife of Mr. George
R. Clover, of a daughter.
On the 10th inst., at Rudgrave-place, Egremont, the wife of
William Maddock, Esq., of a daughter.
On the 11th inst., in Evertou-bow, Mrs Robert Tronson,
of a daughter.
On the 11th inst., at Higher Bebington, Cheshire, the wife
of Mr. William Corfe, of a An.
On the 12th inst., the wife of Mr. William F. Sim, Spring-
field, Claughton, of a daughter.
On the 12th inst., at Bleak-cottage, Everton-road, the wife
of Mr. Thomas W. Hughes, of a son.
On the 13th Inst., at Yonderton, Renfrewshire, Scotland,
the wife of Mr. Moses Buchanan, jun., Liverpool, of a
daughter. -
On the 14th inst., in Bride-street, Mrs. J. Battersby, of a son.
THE LONDON GAZETTE.
TUESDAY. JULY 10, 1855
BANKRUPTS.
John Taylor, Manchester, chymist, Juiy 25, Aug. 9, at 12 o'clock,
at the Manchester District Court of Bankruptcy: solicitor, Mr.
Wise; Manchester; official assiznee. Mr. Hernanian, Manchester.
Emilio Pistrncci, late of 'Windsor-terrace, Piinlico; general
mission agent:
James Henry Langdon, Exeter, merchant.
Aaron l‘larks awl Nahum Salamon, Sheffield, merchants.
Thomas Wade, Newlay. Yorkshire, stone merchant.
David Mackechnie, West Hartlepool, Durham, chymist.
• PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED.
W. Blenkiron, Son, and Co., Wood street, Goldsmith-street,
and Manchester, warehousemen; as far as regards C. Mallett.—
Durham and Co., Manchester, and Durham, Son, and Co., Rio tie
Janeiro • as far as regards W. Durham.—Syke Mill Company,
Syke Mill, near Haslingden.—J. Dean, J. Cronkshaw, and J. N.
Slater, Broadhilden.mill, Haslingden.—J. Hepherd and CV--;
Warrington, maltsters ; as far as regards T. Powell.—Stitt,
Coulirough,,,and Stjtt, Liverpool, merchants; as far as .regartis
H. B. St'tt.—L. Davies and Co., Liverpool, woollen-drapers.—
H. Goodall and H. Chilton. Tokenbouse-yard, Lloyd's Coffee.
house, and Liverpool, merchants.—S. and M. Walmsley, Stock-
port, cotton-spinners.—W. Blantern and Sons, Manchester, com-
mission agents; as far as regards W. Blantern.—PiLing and
Fielding, Heap Clough, Haslingden Grane, Lancashire, cotton-
spinners.—Wenck and Storp, Liverpool, commission merchants.
—J. Davison, jun., It. Booth, and J. Hall, Haslingden, Lanca-
shire, brewers. •
DIVIDENDS.
July 31, J. E. Ward, Burnley, Lancashire, cotton-spinner.—
Aug. 1, E. Jackson and E. Clarke, Manchester, wholesale milliners.
—Aug. 2, T. Dawher, Manchester, calico printer.
SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS.
N. Morrison, Patrick, near Glasgow, provision merchant.—J.
Neill and C.- C. Heerup, Leith, merchauts.—J. Christie, Glasgow,
clothier.—R. Hodge, late of Edinburgh, coppersmith.—T. C.
M'lndoe, Glasgow, commission agent.—J. Tarbat, Dundee, mer.
chant.
FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1855.
BANKRUPTS.
W. Walters, Chester, coal agent, July 31, Aug. 21, at 11 o'clock,
at the Liverpool District Court of Bankruptcy : solicitor,' Mr.
Greatly,liverpool ; official assignee, Mr. Morgan, Liverpool.
E. Titcomb, Clover, Berkshire, builder.
E. Over, Barossa-terrace, Cambridge-road, Bethnal-green, oil and
colobrman.
A. King, Chiswell-street, Finsbury, wholesale grocer.
L.Delorine, Divad-otroat_bUlldlnsa.City. mArmi,..t.
W. E. Coles, Strand, dealer in waterproof clothing.
W. Grant, Brighton, newavender.
W. H. Pates, Wallingford, Berkshire, grocer.
J. E. M. Williams, Whitstable, Kent, apothecary.
'l'. B. Armstrong, Mount •street, Grosvenor.square, and 2, Car-
penter-street. Mount-street, fishmonger.
Clarinda Kilner, Walsall, Staffordshire, licensed victualler.
E. 'Whittaker. Walsall, Staffordshire, draper. •
T. Hickery, Bristol, brickmaker.
B. Hebden, Filey, Yorkshire, innkeeper.
N. Marshall and W. Smith, Sheffield, edge tool manufacturers.
PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED.
G. C. Arbuthnot, A. S. Gladstone, AI. Gladstone, D. Mickinlay,
and W. M'Adam Steuart, Liverpool and Calcutta, merch:nts (so
far as regards G. C. Arbuthnot).—R. Brown, J. Hunter, %V.
M'Adam Steuart, G. C. Arbuthnot, A. S. Gladstone, P. Ewart,
D. Mackinlay, M. Gladstone, and A. G. Latham, Manchester,
merchants (so far as regards G. C. Arbuthnot).—G. C. Arbuthnot,
P. Ewart, A. G. Latham, R. Brown, and J. Hunter, Liverpool and
Bombay, merchants (so far as regards G. C. Arbuthnot).—J.
J. Daily and T. P. Joyce, Manchester, manufacturers.—P. Roy-
lance and E. W. Roylance, Manchester, Irish provision commis-
sion agents.—H. Riley and J. Ibbotson, Law's and Rakehead
Delfs, Lancashire, stone dealers.—R. Marsh and J. B. Marsh,
Liver Pool, commission agents.—E. Marsden and F. S. Jackson,
Liverpool, coal merchants.
PAYMENT OF DIVIDENDS.
J. Schofield and R. Schofield, Rochdale, cotton spinners, sid..
on Tuesday, July 10, and every following Tuesday, between ten
and one, at the office of Mr. Hernaman, Manchester.—G. Long-
more and J. Longmore, Manchester, provision merchants, ls.2id.,
on Tuesday, July 10, and every following Tuesday, between ten
and one, at the office of Mr. Hernaman, Manchester.—J.
Hampson, Manchester, ironfounder, 3s. lid., any Tuesday,
between ten and three, at the office of Mr. Hernaman, Man-
chester.—S. Eason, Liverpool, merchant, 15s. on Thursday, July
12, or any subsequent Thursday, between eleven and two, at the
office of Mr. Cazenove, Liverpool.—T. Mellor and S. Eason,
Liverpool, merchants, Gd., on Thursday, July 12, or any subsequent
Thursday, between eleven and two, at the office of Mr. Cazenove,
Liverpool.
DIVIDENDS.
Aug. 3, T. C. W. Pierce, Manchester, merchant.—Aug. 7, W.
Graham, Blackburn, draper.—Aug. 3, T. Bourne, Liverpool.
SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS.
M. M'Lachlan and P. Boyle, Glasgow, fish merchants.—W.
Meikle, Edinburgh, solicitor.—D. Prophet, Inverness, solicitor.
SHIPPING NEWS.
TUESDAY, Juiio Wind S.E., light.
RRIVEn.--Isabella. Evans,. from Dominica—Effort, Brown,
and Sextus, Barbara, Alexandria--Sasantes, Mazaga, and Maxima,
Artete, Bilboa—Puella, Cane,.Sines—Wilhelmina, New Orleans—
Jacob A. Westervelt, Hoot-Hess, New York—Anglesea, Tarragona,
—Windsbrandt, Dneros, Konigsberg—Tit Bit, Hannah, Para—
Britannia, Dutton, Montreal.
SAILED.—Julius Cmsar- Augustus, Konow, for Dantzic—Wm.
Large, Smith, Barbadoes—St. George, hlascha, Malta—Professor
Baum Sell wortz, Dan tzic—Coustance, Kilgony, Melbourne—Arab,
Burton, Quebec—Union,Potter,Ostend—Henry Holman. Morgan,
Malta —Mary Sparks, Fisher,. Calcutta—Cornelia, Menchaca,
Manilla—Felix, Kenning, Konigsberg—Fides, Atkins, D.intzic—
Angora, Rimmer, Leghorn—Victory, Jones, eville—Julia, Mel-
huish, Salonica—Tom and Ann. Lee, Dram—Martaban, Neilsen,
Calcutta—Embla, Hansen,. Halifax.
The Elvira. Graham, from Table Bay for Akyab, was abandoned
in a sinking state. between the Cape of Good Hope and Mada-
gascar. Master, his wife, and crew arrived at St. Helena, in the
Earl of Balcarras.
PERNAMBUCO, Jusz :W.—The Arbuthnot has foundered at sea.
Crew saved.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 11.—WindN.W., light.
ARRIVED.—Cs.t,,r. 'le Burco, Artar, from Bilboa—Frederick
' William IV. Daotzic—Sobrao.. Africa—Sillery,
Bernie, and Shakespere, Cummins, New Orleans—hem., 13
bait, Alexandria—Vasco tie Gama, Taylor, Lisbon,—Polynesia,
Rowland, and Ruby, Poole, Cadiz—Arrow (new barque), Berwick—
Gondar, Michaels, Charleston—Miles Standish, Lord, and Ed-
mund Kaye, Harvey, St. John, N.B.—Asia, Cochrane, Parshro—
Premier, Heard, Montreal—Venus, Toronto—Daring, Reed, Mar-
seilles—Henry Clay. Caulkins, and Dreadnought, Samuels, New
York --Jun ia to, Allegro, Bilboa—Zenobia. Lisbon—Amity,
Munroe, Oporto—Frebandel, Larsen, Odense—Gannet (s.s.) Rot-
terdam—Dorchester, Power, Mobile—Jessie, Graham, Newfound-
land—Resolution, Santander—Johann, Beckman, Havre—Juno,
Paterson, Reikvoick—Datdolus, Filiberti, Alexand ria—Schom-
berg, Forbes, Aberdeen—lmperatrix (s.s), Cox, from Balaklava
and Portsmouth—Concordia. Vein, and Gertrnida, Spelman,
Ragusa—Lucy, Tinmouth, Alexandria—Flora, Yates, Trieste—
Marieta, Pavlovich, Smyrna—Summer Cloud, Irving, Miramichi
—America, Guthrie, Montreal.
SAILED.—SaIIy. Earle. for Rotterdam—Napier, Sanford, Phila-
delphia—Rattler (s.s.), Rutherford, Oporto—Evangeline, Fairlem,
Calcutta—Crown, Woods, Africa—Elbe, Reimers, La Guayra—
New York, Edwards, Havannah— Bertha, Memel.
Woodman, hence at Maranharc,
City of Hamilton, Penson, at Quebec.
Painelia, Brownlow, sailed from Rio Janeiro for this port, 30th
May, and Portena, 6th June, for New York.
Day spring, hence, after having grounded successively on Point-
Indio, and on the Chico and Ortiz Banks; and Wilhelmine,.
Stege ; Clio, Gruchy ; and Corbiere, Yibert, hence—all at Buenos
Ayres.
Ranger, Hunter, and Rosamond, Gething, both hence ; Cru-
sader, Williams, and Christina,.M`Kenzie, from Rio Janeiro;
and Esther Ann, Smith, from Newfoundland—all at Bahia.
Erie, Curtis; Kitty; and Come on; all hence; Catherine,
Speakman, from Valparaiso, and sailed 28th May, for this port;
St. Domingo, Encarnacas, hence and Lisbon; Mary, Russell,
frOm Dundee; Cecilia, Han Sen, from Callao, in distress, bound
to England—all at Rio Janeiro.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 230 | 0.9413 | 0.1183 | TO EMPLOYERS,
NICHOL -i)eg,si4; attention to his
W• AGENCY, as affording superior facilities for securing
the services of suitable assistants, while it relieves employers
from the painful task of dealing with numbers of incompetent
applicants.
W. Nichol can always introduce persons of unimpeachable
character and tried efficiency.
TO MERCHANTS, BROKERS, AND OTHERS.
Clerks. Cashiers,
Correspondents in various Salesmen,
lan ages, Travellers,
Bookkeepers, Superintendents,
Accountants, Managers, •
Collectors, Agents,
And skilled Assistants in the various practical arts.
TO SHIPOWNERS.
Masters ; Mates ; Surgeons; Pursers ; Stewards,
TO PRINCIPALS OF SCHOOLS AND FAMILIES.
Teachers whether for fixed appointments or occasional tuition;
Governesses, whether resident or visiting.
TO PRIVATE FAMILIES.
Companions, Housekeepers, Nursery Governesses.
TO NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN.
Land Stewards, &c.
No Charge to Employers.
GENERAL MERCANTILE, PROFESSIONAL, PATENT,
AND INSURANCCE AGENCY,
7, CASTLE-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
ESTABLISHED 15 YEARS IN LIVERPOOL.
A SINGLE TOOTH FOR THREE SHILLINGS,
AT 29, BOLD-STREET.
MR. F. L'ESTRANGE, SURGEON-DENTIST,
(LATE OF 10, SLATER-STREET,)
Successor to Messrs. COOPER and CO., and sole Manager for the
last Ten years in the Surgical and Mechanical Departments.
In order to meet the wants of a numerous class of patients, Mr.
L'ESTRANGE has REDUCED his charge from ss. to THREE
SHILLINGS.
L'ESTRANOE'S PASTE ENAMEL for permanently restoring
decayed Teeth and preventing Tooth-ache, 2s. 6d.
A Single Tooth, 3s. A Set £5.
Attendance from Ten till Six daily, at
2 , BOLD-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,917 | 0.9499 | 0.1116 | DIOCESE OF CHESTER.
PREFERMENT.---The Rev. Edward Pearson has been licensed
by the Lord Bishop of Chester, to the Stipendiary Curacy of
St. Martin's Church, Liverpool, upon the nomination of the
Rev. Cecil Wray, the incumbent.
SALE CATTECH.—The Lord Bishop of Chester has renewed
the license for the performance of divine service in this church
for another year. It is expected however that the necessary
preliminaries to consecration will be very shortly completed,
and that this important ceremony will not be long delayed.
DIOCESE OF MANCHESTER.—APPOINTMENTS :—The Rev.
John Graham Hollingworth, B.A. to the Perpetual Curacy of
Coppull, in the parish of Standish, near Wigan, on the nomi-
nation of the Rev. William Harper Brandreth, rector of Stan-
dish, the patron, vacant by the death of the Rev. Henry
Woraley Jackson, the late ',incumbent.
THE Rev. Fielding Ould, A.M., is, we understand, about to
leave Liverpool, having had conferred on him the Rectory of
Tattenhall, worth about £330 per annum, with a rectory-
house and a small glebe, situated about ten miles from Chester.
OPEN-AIR PREACHING.—The Rev. B. Addison, Rector of
Collyhurst, Manchester, is carrying on open-air preaching in
his district with increasing success.
THE Bishop of London has interdicted a sacred concert in
one of the churches of the metropolis, in aid of the school and
organ funds, on the ground of the "indecency of making any
charge to an edifice devoted to Divine worship, according to
the forms of the Established Church."
PRESENTATION TO A CLERGTMAN.—The Rev. H. Lomas,
is about to be presented with an elegant silver inkstand, by
the candidates for the late confirmation in Walton district.
It has been manufactured by Mr. John G. Jacob, silversmith,
Church-street, and is now on view for a few days in his win-
dow. It has an elegantly-pierced round stand, bearing the
crest of the reverend gentleman, and inscription—" Presented
to the Rev. Holland Lomas, 8.A., by the Candidates for Con-
firmation belonging to Holy Trinity Church, Walton Breck,
as a mark of their affectionate esteem. Liverpool, A.D., June,
1855."
THE INCUMBENCY of GREAT CROSBY.
IN the York Ecclesiastical Court on Tuesday, the case of
Myers v. Clarke was heard. Mr. Blanchard was advocate, and
Mr. Mills proctor for the promoter, and Mr. Shepherd was
advocate, and Messrs. Lawton, sen., and W. Lawton, were
proctors for the defendant.
This suit was brought by letters of request from the diocese
of Chester, the office of the judge being promoted by John
Myers, Esq., of Crosby-house, Great Crosby, near Liverpool,
against the Rev. .Toseph Clark, of Lunt, in the parish of
Sefton, in Lancashire, of which parish he is now curate,
under the Rev. R. Rainshaw Rothwell, the rector, and had
been so for twenty-five years.
From the statement of Mr. Blanchard, it appeared that Mr.
Clarke had been presented to the incumbency of Great Crosby,
and that rumours having reached the ears of Mr. Myers, one
of the principal inhabitants of that place, respecting Mr. Clark's
alleged propensity for intoxicating liquours, he felt it his duty
to bring the matter before the court. It had been admitted
that the clerk, Thomas Williams, had a public-house, near
the church-yard, and that the custom had been for the clergy-
man to go there before and after christenings and funerals,
and take a glass of spirits, or something of that kind. A
general charge was made, and particular instances were ad-
duced by the witnesses in which, during the years 1853 and
1854, the defendant was said to have been in a state of
drunkenness, and had staggered to and fro. Mr. Blanshard,
therefore,• prayed that Mr. Clark might be canonically cor-
rected.
Mr. SHEPHERD, in praying that his client might be dis-
missed from this suit, delivered a long address. He would
say, with unbounded confidence, that whilst this was one of
the most painful cases a court could investigate, it was a case
in which there was not the slightest ground or foundation
for the charge which had been made. He denied there was
any truth in the allegation brought against the defendant,
and one of the parties who had given publicity to the accusa-
tion had been decided by a jury to have been guilty of slander.
He lamented that Mr. Myers had not applied to the Bishop
to have a commission appointed to inquire into this matter,
by which an enormous expense and great delay might have
been avoided, and he also regretted that Mr. Myers had not
done something by way of atonement for the charge which
had been preferred. Mr. Shepherd then went through the
whole of the evidence, noticing the great amount of testimony
there was to rebut the accusation of intemperance, besides
that of the defendant himself, and to prove that, except at the
christening of his eldest child, when he became, unintention-
ally, a little elevated, he had invariably being an abstemious
and temperate man. It was also shown he was a zealous,
amiable, and kind-hearted man—a man, as one of the witnesses
described it, in whom there was no guile—a man who was
generally loved and esteemed in his parish—a man in whose
religious teaching his parishioners had confidence, and one
who was constant in his attendance upon the sick. He was a
person, however, of a curious and staggering gait whilst walk-
ing, which might give rise to the impression that he was in
liquor when he was perfectly sober, and he frequently had a
swimming in the head after he had been preaching. He had'
likewise a scorbutic affection in the face, which did not arise
from drinking. These circumstances might have given the
witnesses a colourable reason for having fallen into the mis-
take which they had done.
Mr. Blanshard having replied, the Chancellor, after stating
his reasons at some length for having come to the concision
he had done, dismissed the case, leaving both parties to pay
their own costs.
A nomination had, previous to these proceedings, been pre•
sented to the Bishop of Chester, through Mr. Brabner, Mr.
Clark's solicitor.
COURT AND FASHION.
Hmt MAJESTY has appointed Miss Fanny Cathcart, second
surviving daughter of the late Sir George Cathcart, to be one
of her Maids of Honour.
TITE visit of his Majesty the King of the Belgians to this
country will, it is understood, be prolonged to the end of the
present week.
HER MAJESTY'S VISIT TO PARIS, which had at first been
intended to take place on the 2nd of August, is now defini-
tively fixed for the 17th. Parliament will, of course, be
prorogued before Her Majesty's departure.
MR. PUSEY, of Pusey, formerly M.P. for Berks, died at his
brother's residence, Christ Church, Oxford, on Tuesday after-
noon, after an illness of several months' duration. The Puseys
are said to have been settled at Pusey prior to the Conquest,
and to have held that estate by cornage or the service of a
horn, under a grant of Canute. Camden and Fuller mention
this circumstance. The horn is still preserved at Pusey.
AN INCIDENT TO ROYALTY.—Her Royal Highness the
Duchess of Kent embarked from Southampton docks, on
Friday, on board the Fairy, Captain Crispin. Just as her
Royal Highness embarked an incident occurred which caused
some little sensation and amusement. A respectably-dressed
elderly gentleman, wearing a profusion of rings, evidently of
great value, and carrying a cane, the top of which was set
gwainthgwhauygientoprtecheioFusairs:,,osntaes, tinmga.t)heasttically walked
he
hadapresendtowfn for
thethe
Sir George
eowrgheieh "couhpeerw,sishaettdenptrieosnenuteasd bi thaen hr
layu gdur
as tw
nm ottoh etr.h
e
circumstance, who politely bowed the gentleman ashore, inti-
mating that he must take some other method of communicating
with the Queen. The gentleman, much chagrined, retired
into one of the offices of the docks, and calling for pen, ink,
and paper, hastily wrote a letter, which he declared he would
immediately post to Osborne ; and, having sealed it with a
seal of no mean dimensions, left the scene of his eccentricities
avowedly for that purpose.
DEATH OF REAR-ADMIRAL SIR W. E. PARRY.—This
distinguished and most estimable officer, born in 1790, died at
Ems, in Germany, on Sunday week, at half-past ten. He had
held the post of Lieut.-Governor of Greenwich Hospital since
the 19th December, 1853, and while in that institution gained
the universal esteem and respect of all with 'whom he was
associated. In every relation of life he was exemplary. As
the commander of four Arctic expeditious he gained high pro-
fessional renown, and as a parent and Christian Was equally
estimable. The following epitome of his services is from the
" New Navy List :"—Sir W. E. Parry, mid, of Vanguard, in
the Baltic, engaged with Danish gun-boats, 1808.9. Lieut.
of Hogue, and in 1814 served in the boats at capture of three
American privateers, and destruction of naval stores at Petti-
page Point. Lieut.-Commander ofAlexander, and accompanied
Captain Ross in 1818 in an expedition to the Arctic regions.
In 1819 commanded an expedition which crossed the meridian
of 110 deg. W. lon., in 74 deg. 44 min. N. lat., and returned
1820. In the same year fitted out a second expedition, con-
sisting of Hecla and Fury, which sailed 1821, and returnedi
1823. Commanded a third expedition in 1824-5 ; and in 1826
commanded a land expedition, which reached 82 deg. 45 Min.
N. He was knighted for his Arctic services, and received
£l,OOO from government as a portion of the reward offered for
reaching the meridian of 110 deg W. within the Arctic circle.
THE QUEEN AT ALDERSHOT.—The Queen paid her first
public visit to the encampment at Aldershot, on Tuesday.
Her Majesty was accompanied by the King of the Belgians,
the Prince Consort, and their royal highnesses the Prince of
Wales and Prince Alfred. Her Majesty first drove through the
Guard's quarters, and after making the circuit of this portion
of the encampment, ascended the elevated plateau opposite
Caesars' camp, where the whole of the troops at present en-
camped were drawn up in review order. After Her Majesty
had passed along the line, the royal party took up a position
near the flag staff, on the saluting point, while the several
regiments marched past in review order. As soon as the
troops had defiled past, the Queen proceeded to the openw
ground where the various regiments formed in sou
her majesty an opportunity of conferring the
Alma and Inkerman
on three gallant men whose bravery at
sergeants at Alder-
has led to their appointment as barrack
loth R •
'dine of the o Regiment,
shot. These were Sergeant J. Tun'
Sergeant J. Cunningham, of47th, 'and Sergeant Alex the _ an.
crlna;.ean medal
before four o'clock, and returned Farnborough, whence the
special train to Gosport, en route for
royal party proceeded by
der Macdougal, of the 57th. Her roajeyleftthe camp shortly
Osborne.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,316 | 0.9677 | 0.1023 | THURSDAY.
Their lordships had only a short sitting, in the course
of which they forwarded several bills a stage.—ln thy early
part of the sitting, Lord LYNDHURST withdrew his Oath of
Abjuration Bill.
FRIDAY. _ _ _
In answer to a question from Lord Monteagle, Earl GRIN-
vILLE said Her Majesty's Government had become parties to
a joint guarantee for five millions as a loan to Turkey ; and
undoubtedly this country was responsible to the creditor for
the whole amount. The course adopted on the present occa-
sion had not been arrived at in a hurry, but had been maturely
considered.
The Earl of ECI.LINTON presented a number of petitions
against the Scottish Education Bill, from various places in
Scotland. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Several bills were advanced a stage ; and their lordships ad-
journed at twenty minutes past six.
HOUSE OF COMMONS.
TUESDAY.
During the morning sitting the house was engaged in
committee in considering the details of the Nuisances Re-
moval Bill.
At the evening sitting a petition was presented by Captain
Scobell, from a meeting at South Shields, representing the
seamen of 17 of the northern ports, praying that the crew of
any vessel not seaworthy may have power to make legal com-
plaint thereof.
No CONFIDENCE IN MINISTERS.—Sir E. B. LYTTON gave
notice that when the house went into committee on Friday
he should move " That the conduct of the Minister
charged with the negotiations at Vienna, and his continuance
in office as a responsible adviser of the Crown, have shaken
the confidence which the country should place in those to
whom the administration of public affairs is intrusted." (Hear.)
In answer to questions put by Mr. Stafford, Mr. F. PEEL
stated that Dr. A Smith continues to officiate until his suc-
cessor is appointed; and that, with respect to Dr. Hall,
during the time Lord Panmure had been at the head of the
War Department there had been no complaint as to the man-
ner in which he had performed his duty, and therefore Lord
Panmure had not removed him from the headship of the
medical department of the army in the East.
LOAN TO TURKEY.—Lord PALMERSTON, in reply to Mr. J.
L. Ricardo, said a treaty had been signed, by which the
Governments of France and England agreed to guarantee a
loan of £5,000,000 to Turkey, and her Majesty would recom-
mend to ParliaMent to guarantee one-half of this loan. As
soon as the ratifications were exchanged the treaty would be
laid before Parliament. He added, care would be taken that
the loan should be applied to military purposes.
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM.—Mr. V. SCULLY moved an
address, thanking Her Majesty for the order in Council of the
21st of May last, by which certain persons were directed to
examine into and certify the qualifications of all young men
proposed to be appointed to junior situations in any depart-
ment of the civil service; and praying that Her Majesty will
be pleased to direct the examination to be an open one, and
held in public, and that the examiners have regard to superior
qualifications and merit.—The motion was seconded by Lord
GODERICH.—The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, after a
lengthened address, in which he reviewed the various allega-
tions of those who supported the Administrative Reform
movement, and also stated the measures adopted by Govern-
ment for securing an efficient administration of the different
departments, concluded by moving the previous question.—
A discussion ensued, in the course of which Mr. Wimarrsorr,
Mr. W. S. LINDSAY, and Sir S. NOETTICOTE spoke in favour
of the motion; Mr. GLA.DSTONE and Mr. TITE in terms which
made it doubtful to which side they leaned; and Sir C. WOOD
and Lord PALMERSTON in favour of the amendment.—At the
conclusion of these addresses, Mr. ScULLY replied in facetious
terms, after which the house divided, the previous question
being carried by 140 to 125.
CALL OF THE HOUSE.—Mr. ROEBUCK moved that the
house be called over on Tuesday, when his motion would
come ou for discussion, the importance of which he considered
a sufficient justification of the present motion.—Upon a divi-
sion, the motion was negatived by 133 to 108.
Leave was given to the Chancellor of the Exchequer and to
Mr. V. Smith to introduce certain bills, and the orders of the
day having been disposed of, the house adjourned at a quarter
past one o'clock.
WEDNESDAY. _ _ _
On the motion of Mr. WALPOLE, after considerable dis-
cussion, it was agreed that Baron Lionel De Rothschild be at
liberty to appear by his counsel and agents, before the select
committee on the London writ.
Some discussion took place on the Scotch Education Bill,
in the course of which the LORD ADVOCATE intimated his
conviction that the bill could not pass this session.
CHURCH RATES' ABOLITION BILL.—On the order of the
day for going into committee on this bill being read, Mr.
FOLLETT moved that it be committed that day three months.
In doing so, he said, the object of this measure was, in his
opinion, to make it the first and main step towards the des-
truction of the Established Church in this country, and to
alter our institutions in a manner prejudicial to the political
as well as religious liberties of the people. He adverted to
what he considered to be the extraordinary conduct of
the government upon this question, especially that of
Lord J. Russell ; and read declarations made by Dissenters,
showing that the real and even avowed motive of their
hostility to church-rates was hostility to the Established
Church. He defended the principle of an Establishment,
and maintained that anything affecting the stability of
the Church of England, which had not failed in its duties
and its obligations, would be an unmitigated evil.—The
ATTORNEY-GENERAL observed that the house having
already affirmed the principle of the bill, and it being im-
possible to believe that the abolition of church•rates was more
than a question of time, the wisest course was to discuss its
provisions in committee, embracing the opportunity it offered
of settling the question, and of putting an end to an annual
agitation and constant strife and discord.—Lord J. MANNERS
i asked how it came to pass, if there was any justice in the
denunciations of the Attorney-General, that the government
had refused to legislate upon the subject, and that Sir
Alexander himself had not proposed a remedy? The grievance
complained of by the dissenters was, that church-rates were a
burden upon their conscience ; but the bill, from its preamble
to its close, had not a single provision with reference
to that grievance. The proper mode of relieving the con-
science of dissenters in this particular was to exempt them
from the rate, and he would support such a proposition,
which had been made, but, when made, had been resisted
by supporters of this bill, which imposed a new tax
upon churchmen in the shape of pew rents.—Sir W.
SOMERVILLE expressed himself in favour of proceeding with
the bill; as did also Mr. E. BALL and Mr. C. FOSTER.—Mr. R.
PIIILLIMORE, Mr. WIGRAM, Mr. G. VERNON, and Mr. Gus-
NET expressed themselves in opposition to the bill; when Mr.
BENTINCZ, adverting to the fact that there was not a single
member of the Cabinet present, moved that the debate be ad-
journed. This led to a discussion, in which the adjournment
of the debate was opposed by Mr. COWPER, Sir W. CLAY, and
Lord EBRINGTON, and supported by Mr. SPOONER, Mr.
MOWBRAY, and Mr. L. DAVIES ; upon a division, it was nega-
tived by 175 to 118. The debate was then resumed by Mr.
L. DAVIES, who continued his address till the hour for ad-
journment arrived. The debate was therefore adjourned till
next day, and the House rose at ten minutes before seven.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 105 | 0.9275 | 0.1082 | Eburatton.
'LIVERPOOL EDUCATIONAL
ESTABLISHMENT,
OBfiERVATORY VIEW.
Conducted by the Principal, Dr. W. M. FISHER, A.M., F.R.A.S..
and experienced Masters.
In this Establisment YOUNG GENTLEMEN are prepared for
any of the Universities, Public Colleges, Learned Professions,
and Mercantile Pursuits.
SCIENTIFIC DE PA RTM ENT.
Dr. Fisher's Lectures on Astronomy, Chemistry, Mechanics,
Optics, Electricity, Galvanism, Pneumatics, Meteorology, Steam-
engine' 8.c., are Illustrated to the Pupils by his extensive Philoso-
phical Apparatus, which is of the most costly description.
SILVER MEDALS,
Prizes, and Rewards are Annually Distributed in the various
Classes, for Gentlemanly Conduct, and the highest Attainments
in Classics, Mathematics. Science, and General Literature.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 178 | 0.9853 | 0.0548 | MORE RUSSIAN PREPARATIONS.
Writing with respect to the new preparations of the
Russians, a correspondent of the same journal, on the
25th,- says :
The night before last, I am informed, a party of our engi-
neers succeeded in approaching the mouth of the harbour
sufficiently near, in the Banshee, to enable them to discover a
star battery in the course of erection, in the immediate rear of
the Malakhoff—an addition to the strength of that position,
which, I need hardly say, would greatly enhance the difficulty
of its capture. There is reason to believe that similar
strengthening additions are also in preparation behind the
Redan; but these are less important, as it is not likely that
that work will again be made a principal point of attack, its
abandonment following as a matter of course on the seizure
of the Malakhoff. Against the latter, the next combined
effort of the Allies will be directed, and they will merit defeat
if, after the experience of the last attempt, less uncertain mea-
sures of attack be not adopted.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,567 | 0.9771 | 0.0748 | LITERARY EXTRACTS.
THE RUSSIAN MILITARY JESTER.—The Russians
have discovered a martial stimulus unknown to the
Western nations :---" There is often a buffoon attached
to each company, who amuses his comrades by his
jests and his antics, and is generally a great favourite.
On one occasion in the Caucasus, when the troops were
driven back by the eircassians, the buffoon was wounded,
and left behind. A favourite jest of his had been to
crow like a cock, and as he lay on the ground, he
thought of the only way to save himself, and crowed.
This had such an effect on his comrades that they
rallied, charged again, and saved him."— Seymour' s
" Russia."
THE NAUTICAL SKILL OF THE RussuNs.---Ilax-
thausen is quoted to show that Cruys and Byng would
have been esteemed in Russia, where the example of
Golovin is followed---the admiral who said it was his
rule never to fight unless he had three Russian ships
to engage two Swedes. Clearly, the maritime forces
of the empire are yet in embryo. At Sevastopol there
was an outcry against the English engineers of the
steam-vessels, and the Emperor consented to appoint
a Russian on trial, who took a steamer out to sea, and
damaged her machinery so much after a few hours,
that she was towed into port again by another steamer
sent out to fetch her. The Emperor then said that he
would continue to employ the English until his own
people were really able to undertake their duties.—
Seymour's " Russia."
LITERATURE FOR CHILDHOOD. Facts cannot
civilise ; but imagination, which sets all the generous
feelings of the young into motion, and which com-
mences its work at the mother's knee, is the first
humaniser. Heroism of the best kind has grown out
of children's old tales, such as, in the earlier stage,
" Jack the Giant-Killer," and the " Seven Champions
of Christendom." I can believe that these fabulous
heroes have been fighting for glorious battles. I
entertain a temporary Pythagorean creed. Cinderella
and the damsels rescued by the Champions have tamed
many a young savage. The boy who, in his dreams,
has never fought a giant, nor saved a lovely maiden
from a dragon, never will make a true man. The
well-developed man has borrowed from the tenderness
of a motherly-instructed childhood. The chivalric
spirit is the worker of civilisation. Let facts sink into
the earth, or die upon its surfaee like rotten leaves, if
they are accumulated and enforced into young minds
to the exclusion of generous fictions, that, promoting
love and valour, become by-and-by noble truths. No,
Eusebius. " Once upon a time," at a mother's knee,
and afterwards under the flickering light and shade of
a secret place in a greenwood, is the real talisman, the
" Open Sesame" by which excellent virtues enter
young minds : the rock of the heart opens to the
words. Let not facts smother the age of heroism....
Blackwood .
AMERICAN LADIES BATHING.- --I was greatly amused,
the following morning, observing the ladies bathing,
for as they are attired for the double purpose, as I pre-
sume, of bathing and being seen, there is no impro-
priety whatever in looking at the fair creatures in the
water. The garments worn on these occasions are of
the gayest colours, consisting of a Bloomer kind of
costume, in which the upper part contrasts strongly
with the lower. The head is generally surmounted
by a quaintly-shaped white cap, which seems to have
made a deep impression on the author of a poem on
Nahant, who says,---
" Still where the sea beats on the shore,
I sit and drink its music in—
The music of its thunder-roar,
And watch the whitecaps swirling o'er,
The blue waves restless evermore."
In truth, it is a stranze scene ; and does not abate in
interest when the ladies emerge from the water, in
their gaudy costumes, exhibiting trousers of all colours,
and countless pairs of little white feet, twinkling on
the sand. This early bathing must be as conducive
to health as it is to an exhilaration of spirits ; for,
during my travels, I saw no ladies with such glowing
complexions as those at Nahant. In the words of an
American enthusiast, " They come down to breakfast
after their bath, freshened up, looking as sweet and
dewy as an avalanche of roses."---A Vacation Tour
in the United States and Canada.
THE RussieN SOLDIER.---The morale of the soldier
is that of passionless, rigid, inveterate courage. He
obeys the Emperor, because it seems impossible, and
would be unnatural, to disobey. A soldier on duty at
the palace of the Emperor at Petersburg, which was
burnt a few years ago, was stationed and had been
forgotten in one suite of apartments that was in flames:
a Greek priest was the last person to rush through
the burning rooms, at the imminent risk of his life, to
save a crucifix in a chapel, and returning he was hailed
by the sentry, who must in a few instants more have
been suffocated. " What do you want ?" cried the
priest ; " save yourself or you will be lost."---" I can't
leave," replied the sentry, " because I am unrelieved,
but I called to you to give me your blessing before I
die." The priest blessed him, and the soldier died at
his post. The late Emperor himself on one occasion
attempted to pass a sentinel in one of the corridors of
the palace at St. Petersburg, who had orders to let no
person pass, but the man resisted him, and when the
Emperor tried to disarm him, wrestled with him, and
flung him back against the wall." The first of these
stories seems apocryphal. The Emperor Nicholas,
however, gave his troops credit for incomparable stea-
diness. The Jews, though good military artificers,
failed in the field.- - -The story is told of the late Emperor,
that on one occasion, when he was reviewing some
troops, he found out all the Jews by snapping his
fingers in each mans's face. If they stood immoveable
they were Russians, and if they flinched they were
invariably Jews."---Seynzour's Russia.
A VISIT TO AN ENCAMPMENT OF INDIANS. The
trip was delightful. At the head of Clear Lake, a
reach, not unlike that separating the upper and middle
Killarney lakes, occurs, studded by wooded islands.
On one of these the Indians were encamped ; but there
was no sign of life, nor could we detect, amidst the
dense foliage, a landing-place. A wild whoop
from my companion was answered by an Indian, who
burst through the bush, and motioned us to a little
creek, where we disembarked. Following our' swarthy
guide we came suddenly on a small clearing, in the
centre of which was the lodge. A more picturesque
spot could not well be conceived. The ground,
mantled by a - variety of wild flowers, sloped gently
towards the lake. Lofty trees shut out the oppressive
sun, and a tiny brook gurgled sweetly as it leaped into
daylight froni the gloom of the forest. The lodge was
constructed of birch-bark, open at the top for the
egress of smoke. Around were various hunting and
fishing implements. Portly fish, with strips of bear-
flesh and venison hanging on poles in process
of curing, attested how efficiently they had been used.
Pushing aside the buffalo-skin serving as a door, we
enter the lodge, from which, however, I was nearly
driven by the dense and acrid smoke. The family
consisted of the Indian's wife, mother-in-law, and two
girls, who were squatted round the fire superintending
a savoury mess of boiled ducks, fish, and squirrels.
The women and girls could not speak a word of
English. The excessive natural simplicity of the girls
and the freedom of their limbs were remarkable. With
thpr naked feet, which were beautifully formed, they
seized fragments of wood and cast them on the fire
with the same ease as we should perform the same
operation with our hands. The whole scene was suffi-
ciently wild and novel to be very interesting ; and I
sincerely recommend the tourist to turn aside from
the beaten track to visit the Indians in the bush.---
Weld's Towr in the United States.
SIR ISAAC NEWTON A LOVER.—It appears from
Sir David Brewster's life of Sir Isaac Newton, just
published, that the great philosopher, at the ripe age
of sixty, made proposals of marriage to a widow. The
lady was the widow of Sir William Norris, who died
in 1702. The following is Newton's philosophical way
of " popping the question :"—" Madam,—Your lady-
ship's grief at the loss of Sir William shows that if he
had returned safe home, your ladyship could have been
glad to have lived still with a husband, and therefore
your aversion at present from marrying again can
proceed from nothing else than the memory of him
whom you have lost. To be always thinking on the
dead is to live a melancholy life among sepulchres,
and how much grief is an enemy to your health is
very manifest by the sickness it brought when you
received the first news of your widowhood. And can
your ladyship resolve to spend the rest of your days in
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 129 | 0.9359 | 0.1098 | GENUINE COFFEE.
QHARPE and COMPANY, 14, EXCHANGE-STREET
EAST, respectfully announce that, through the extensive and
increasing demand for their Coffee, they have appointed agents,
as under, for the convenience of families who do not reside in
their immediate vicinity.
Mr. Richard Wearing, Chemist, 75, Upper Parliament-street.
Mr. John Brownrigg, Chemist, Post-office, Old Swan.
Mr. William Baxter, Chemist, 81, Kensington.
Mr. J. M. Buck, Chemist, 1, West Derby-street.
Mr. William Wilding, Chemist, 11, st. Anne-street.
Mr. J. Gill, Chemist, Netherfield-road.
Mr. Thos. G. Fearon, Chemist, Walton-on-the-Hill.
Mr. Thomas Kirk, Chemist, 109, Salisbury-street, Everton=
crescent.
Mr. H. S. Alpass, Chemist. 91, Park-road.
Mr. Jones, Chemist, Waterloo.
Mr. Thomas Welch, Chemist, Fairfield.
W. and H. Jackson, 97, Mount-pleasant, and 23, Netherfield-
road North.
Miss Makin, Confectioner, SoUthport.
Mr. James Fingland, Chemist, Wavertree.
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1.,11%1't"j
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,086 | 0.9436 | 0.1176 | COMMITTEE ON ADULTERATION OF FOOD.
THE committee appointed by the House of Commons to in-
quire into the subjects of adulterations of food assembled at
one o'clock on Friday, Mr. Scholefield in the chair.
Dr. Hassell was the first witness called, and he stated the
results of his investigation into almost every article of food,
not one of which escaped adulteration. The substances em-
ployed in the process of adulteration were sawdust, red ferru-
ginous earth, Venetian red, vermilion, Prussian blue, turmeric,
and things of the most filthy and poisonous character. In such
articles as arrowroot, mustard, &c., there was scarcely a particle
of the genuine substance which they pretended to be. The
witness stated that tea-leaves were dried up, coloured with
offensive matter, and resold as genuine tea. In the manufac-
ture of pickles copper was very extensively used. Red lead
was often found in Cayenne pepper, and was apt to be very in-
jurious to the system if taken two or three times a week.
Chromate of lead was used so extensively in snuff as frequently
to produce paralysis. No leads escaped freely out of the system,
but were cumulative, and consequently dangerous. It might
be mentioned that a strong redness in Cayenne peper was a
suspicious circumstance, though not conclusive„an the addition
of salt to pure Cayenne would render it more visidly red than
even red lead itself.
Lord Claude Hamilton—With regard to other articles, are
they adulterated chiefly by the wholesale dealers, or by retail
dealers, to whom they are supplied ? Witness—No doubt by
the wholesale dealers. _ _ _
On referring to the adulterations of marmalade, the Chair-
man inquired whether it was always made of oranges. Wit-
ness—Oh no; generally of turnips. (Laughter.)
In answer to questions in reference to coloured con-
fectionery, the witness stated that scarcely a year passed
without deaths arising from the consumption of these
adulterated articles. The largest consumption was amongst
children, who were consequently the principal victims. He
had purchased such confectionery at large and small shops,
and he found very little difference between them. There was
an enormous consumption of this coloured confectionery, and
there had been a great increase since the diminution in the
pride of sugar.
After some evidence on the adulteration of gin; the com-
mittee adjourned till Wednesday next (to-morrow).
THE MODELS OP PARIS AND PEKE LA. CHAISE, it will be
seen, are still on view in Old Postoffice-place. At the present
time, when so many are availing themselves of the facilities
and other inducements held out to visit the French capital,
an' attentive study of these models must be generally useful.
To those going to Paris it will greatly abridge their labour
and increase their comfort by enabling them to understand
the different localities which they will require to visit. To
those who remain at home, it will increase the means of un-
derstanding what is said to them of it by their more fortunate
friends who have made the visit.
STEALING PROM THE ADELPHI HOTEL.—On Saturday,
Margaret Lewis, a middle-aged woman, was charged before
the Pdlice-court with stealing a large number of knives, forks,
glasses,. towels, and other articles, from the Adelphi Hotel.
The Officer stated that information had been given by Mr.
Radley, of a number of articles having been stolen. The
Officer suspected the prisoner, who had been employed by Mr.
Radley as a charwoman. He went to a housed bad character,
'4ll Dance-street, which was kept by the prisoner, and he there
Found a great number of articles, bearing the mark of the
hotel. The prisoner did not deny the charge. She was sent
to gaol for a month. It appeared that 'the woman had got
into Mr. Radley's employ on the faith of a false character,
she having passed herself off as a poor widow, anxious to
work hard for a living. She has a small annuity, derived
from some property in Carnarvonshire.
A MAILINt STORE DEALER IN TROUBLE.—On Saturday,
Samuel Winter, a middle-aged man, who keeps a.marine store
in Sumner-street, was brought before the POlice-court, for
having about 701bs of metal bolts, and a large quantity of
compositim nails, for which he could not satisfactorily ac-
ccount. The officer who had charge of the case stated 'that a
boy, named_ Johnson, who was •an apprentice with Messrs.
Humble and Grayson, of Neptune-street, had gone at various
times to Mr. Marsden's in Argyle-staeet, with forged orders
for nails and bolts,which were supposed to be for his employers.
It turned out, however, that tthe boy lad sold about 31 cwt.
Of nails to marine store dealers. The boy's employers did not
wish to prosecute him, as be was a poor orphan, and had pro-
missed to go to sea. But, as the boy had told to whom he had
sold some :of the nails, the officer went and searched the
prisoner's premises. A large quantity of nails and bolts were
found, of which no entries were made in his books; and some
of the property was found at the prisoner's private dwelling,
in Gildart's Gardens.—After some comments by the magis-
trate, a fine of 20s. and costs was inflicted ; and his license
\was ordered to be revoked.
THE CHANGING SCENES OP A POLICE,OPP/CE.—A young
woman, raving mad, was•conveyed to the Salford Police-office,
on Thursday, for safekeeping. She was a mother, and had an
infant six weeks old. The cause of her derangement was the
enlistment into the militia of the young man who was the
father of the child. She was a Roman Catholic, and she called
loudly and repeatedly for a confessor. A priest was sent for,
and though it had previously required two men to hold her,
when left alone with him she vas as quiet •as possible. He
remained with her, a few.minutes, and when,he left the room
she broke out again, and•was as violent •as ever. The child is
six weeks old, and- as it had not been baptized, and is not
likely to live, the priest ,proposed to baptize it. Water was
accordingly sent for, and the ceremony was ,performed in the
superintendent's office, in the presence of -the woman folio
cleans the police-offiee, and one or two women who had accom-
panied the lunatic to the station. In• the course of the day
the unfortunate creature.and her child, were removed to the
workhouse. Previous to this, however, an• elderly man, who
had for many years been a public servant, • was conveyed to
the police-station, prior to -his removal, under the usual certi-
ficates, to the county asylum at Prestwich. He was a reli-
gious monomaniac. Later in the day some boys took to the
office the bcidy of a prematurely stillborn child, which they
had found in the river ; and the police would have to see to
its interment, whiohwould, probably, be effected with all the
expedition consistent with coinmon decency.—Manchester
Guardian.
HEALTH' COMIITTEE.—At the usual meeting, on Thurs-
day, Mr. Dover presiding, the Medical Officer represented that
the mortality of the borough was lower in the week ending
on Saturday than in any 'week of the preceding twenty
months. The total deaths were 170, the average of the
same week ,of the preceding seven years 228.—A tender
from George Ravenscroft fee sewering Harrington-streei,
Bell-street, Fisher-street, &c., at a cost of £1039, was re-
ferred ; a tender of Jame Jones for sewering 'Water-street
and King-street-lane. West Derby, was accepted ; also a
tender from John Hankin, for similar work in Fairclough-
lane.—ln accordance with a notice of motion previously
given, Mr. Dover proposed an Increase in the salary of Mr.
Davies, the deputy borough engineer. Mr. ,Beckwith saw
no grounds for the proposed advance, and • stated that in
1846 Mr. Davies had an advance to £2OO, in 1850 he was
-advanced to £3OO, and in 1858 to £350 per annum. Mr.
-Johnson moved that the salary of Mr. Davies be advanced to
4400 per annum. Mr. Beckwith would oppose it not only
there but in the council. Some conversation took place, and
After a suggestion that the subject tbe referred, the committee,
without coming to a division, allowed the matter to drop.—
The Law-clerk informed the committee that Sir Benjamin
'Hall had declined to proceed further with his Public Health
.13111. With regard to the alleged encroachments by the Dock
Committee at Wapping, he had 'forwarded to their secretary
a oopy of the resolution passed by the Health Committee, but
had not received any .official answer. Some desultory con-
versation took place ,moon the subject. Mr. Halhead sug-
zested a resolution referring certain understood arrangements
as to the land, &c., to the surveyor of the two trusts, but no
decision was come to upon, it.—This being the whole of the
business, the Board adjourned.
THE DUKE of CAMBREDOE is to be immediately appointed
Generalissimo of the Foreign Legion.
Sulcru2.—On Thursday afternoon, a gentleman named
Thomas Wilson committed euicide, at Eastley's Hotel, South-
ampton-street, Strand, London, by shooting himself with a
pistol. A letter was found in the room, • directed to Mr.
David Wilson, Belfast ; which contained, also, a request that
his portmanteau should be sentto Miss Wilson;Tictoria-street,
Belfast.
•
INFRINGING THE LIBERTY QP THE :SUBBECT.—A rag-
gatherer, about fifty-five years of age, on Friday threw himself
into the Seine from the Pont d'Austerlitz. An octroi man,
who happened to be on the towing-,path, immediately plunged
iu and rescued him. The rag-gatherer, instead of thanking
the man, was no sooner brought safe to land•than le flew into
a ;violent passion, and abused him grossly. " A pretty thing,
indeed!" cried he,." not to allow a man to leave the world
when and how he pleases ! And," he added, "I ought to be
allowed to drown myself, for I have three times merited the
guillotine !"
Cniusrivo IN THE ,YEW ROYAL Y.ACHIC.—The Queen and
Prince, accompanied by the King of the Belgians,,the Count
of Flanders, Princess Charlotte of Belgium, the Princess Royal,
and the Princesses Alice and Helena, embarked at Osborne-
pier on Thursday afternoon, for a cruise in the new Royal
yacht Victoria and Albert. The course was round the Isle
of Wight, which was accomplished in three hours and twenty
minutes. The distance is about 62 nautical miles ; the Royal
yacht, for her tonnage, may therefore be considered the fastest
vessel in England. The same evening, Her Majesty took a
second cruise from Osborne round the Nab light-vessel, and
back again.
MURDER AND MUTILATION OP A CHlLD.—Elizabeth
Perkins, aged 28, has been committed for trial on the warrant
of the coroner of Shrewsbury, charged with the wilful murder
.of her female infant. The evidence at the inquest was to the
effect that the prisoner bad lived as cook with Mr. Harding,
manager of the business.of Messrs. Redmaine and Co., mercers,
Shrewsbury. The prisoner's sister was the chief witness ; and
from other evidence it was proved that the child had been cat
into small pieces, and the remains had been found in the water-
closet. The witness stated that she had not been aware of the
condition of the prisoner, and that she attributed her appear-
ance to dropsy. The surgeon stated that the prisoner had
admitted the birth of the child, but said it had been born
dead. In his opinion, however, this was not the case.
SALAD VlZTEGAR.—Esebalots, sweet savoury, chives, and
tarragon, of each three ounces ; two tablespoonfuls of dried
mint-leaves, and the same quantity of halm ; pound all these in
a mortar, and put them into a stone jar holding a gallon of
strong white wine vinegar, cork it down securely ; let it stand
for a couple of weeks exposed to the sun, strain it off, press as
much as possible from the herbs, &c., and filter it through a
flannel bag.
REPEAL OF THE NEWSPAPER STAMP,
Issued Weekly, with
THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD,
A SUPPLEMENT,
CONTAINING EIGHT LARGE QUARTO PAGES,
Especially intended for FAMILY READING, and
containing Reviews, copious Extracts from New Books,
amusing Varieties, Fashions, Hints on Horticulture
and Floriculture, Progress of Science and the Fine
Arts, with a careful Selection of interesting Mis-
cellaneous Intelligence. In future, the price of
PAPER and SUPPLEMENT will be
3111. Unstamped ;
42d. Stamped.
ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION:
Unstampeci, Credit £o 16 0
SP in Advance 0 14 0
Stamped, (to go free by Post,) Credit 1 0 0
22 „ in Advance 018 0
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 59 | 0.8198 | 0.2855 | Jlllebitrrrantan.
STEAM FROM LIVERPOOL TO ITALY.
Warranted first Steamer, or forfeit freight.
vu,r, -114' The swift and powerful new Steamer
Air - EARL OF CARRICK,
Now loading in Nelson Dock,
Will be despatched immediately,
For GENOA, LEGHORN, NAPLES, and MARSEILLES,
(Calling at GIBRALTAR.)
For terms of freight or passage apply to APLARTY and CO.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,446 | 0.9393 | 0.1246 | RANKIN'S NEW PATENT
SMUT MACHINE AND CORN SCREEN is a
great improvement, having a simultaneous double action
upon the Grain, extracting sand seeds and light matter in one
process; also, an Improved Separator.
RANKIN'S NEW PATENT
BONE MILLS
are a decided improvement upon those in ordinary use, take
ess power, and work much more efficiently, grinding to dust the
hardest bones.
- - -
SOLE MAKERS OF THE ABOVE:
R. AN D J. R A N K I N,
MILLWRIGHTS, EN G INEERS, IRONFOUNDERS, &c.,
UNION FOUNDRY, MANCHESTER-STREET,
LIVERPOOL.
Agents for
CHANTER'S PATENT FURNACE BARS.
MILNERS' HOLDFAST AND FIRE-
RESISTING SAFES.
Improved under the experienced and extensive Working of
MILNERS' QUADRUPLE PATENTS,
SEALED 1840, 1851, 1854, AND 1855.
The Strongest, Best, and Cheapest Safeguards in the world
against Fire, Robbery, or Violence. With Milners' recently
(double) Patented "Gunpowder-proof Solid Lock and Safe Door,
without which no Safe in the hands of the Public is secure.
NOTE. —All Milner's Holdfast Safes in use may be made com-
plete with these" Improvements," and every information afforded
on application as below.
The attention of the Public is invited to the following Experi-
ments (see Liverpool Mercury and Standard of following dates:)
" Liverpool, December Bth, 1854.
" We hereby certify that we have this day witnessed some very
highly satisfactory experiments at Milners' Phoenix Safe Works,
proving the perfect security of their newly-patented `Gunpowder-
proof Solid Locks and Safe Doors,' against attempts to force the
same open with gunpowder ; the door of another safe, experi-
mented upon, fitted with the open six-lever and detector lock,
although of equal strength, being shattered and blown off by the
explosion of the gunpowder introduced through the key-bole.—
Wm. Brown, M.P. ; Joseph Boult ; William Rishton, Surveyor;
Henry Hulme ; Joseph R. Beck; James Johnson, Deputy Chair-
man of the Watch Committee; James Robertson, Ditto; J. J.
Greig, Head-Constable; Robert Clough, In-door Superintendent;
Benjamin Ride,Divisional-Superintendent ; Thomas Quick, Ditto;
Joseph Bates, Detective-Inspector ; ' Robert P. Thacker; John
Willox; and Samuel Moiler."
FAMILY TICKETS, between Liverpool and Southport, avail,
and fur Three Persons, members of one Family, at 15 per cent. lr
RETURN TICKETS are also issued at less fares, available
Sundays, are available until the following Tuesday night.
MILNERS' PHCENIX (212°) SAFEWORKS, LIVERPOOL.
The most, extensive and complete in the world, employing from
two to three hundred hands, assisted by powerful, original, and
elaborate machinery and implements, adapted for every branch
of the work; established for carrying out the important improve-
ments under Milners' Quadruple Patents to the interior and ex-
terior of their Holdfast and Fire-resisting Safes, and for supply-
ing to the public the Strongest Safeguards against Fire, Robbery,
or Violence extant, at the lowest prices consistent with the most
perfect efficiency and security.
CAUTlON.—Milners' Holdfast Safes are of three qualities—
the cheapest superior to_any other safes—and range under three
Lists, namely, Milnersoldfast and Fire-resisting Safe, List No.
2, at 10s. per foot; Milners' Strong Holdfast and Fire-resisting
Safe, List No. 3, at 15s. per foot; Milners' First-class Strong
Holdfast and Fire-resisting Safe, List No. 4, at 20s. per foot. The
public are deceived by comparisons being made between the
prices of the latter superb class of Milners' Safes and the inferior
articles offered by incompetent makers to booksellers, ironmon-
gers, brokers, or any others who will incur the serious responsibi-
lity of selling them, which are really worthless articles, and dear
at any price. What greater delusion than an unsafe Safe?
SHOW ROOMS, 6 and 8, LORD-STREET, LIVERPOOL
LONDON DEPOT, 47a, MOORGATE-STREET, CITY.
FJ. CREASY, FURNISHING IRONMONGER,
• 62, GREAT GEORGE-STREET. LIVERPOOL.
PURCHASERS OF FURNISHING IRONMONGERY, CUTLERY, ELECTRO-PLATE, &c.,
Are respectfully invited to visit
E. J. CREASY'S EXTENSIVE SHOW-ROOMS,
Where may he seen the Largest Assortment in Liverpool, at Prices Lower than any other House.
His system of business being to Buy and Sell for Ready Money only, every Article will he marked in plain figures, at the
lowest possible price, from which r.o abatement whatever can be made. The money returned for any article not approved of.
BELLS HUNG on the most improved principle, in Town and Country. All kinds of SMITH WORK done on the Premises.
Houses, Churches, Chapels, &c., fitted up with HEATING APPARATUS. REGISTER STOVE, and KITCHEN RANGES of
every description. Boilers and Fittings for supplying Baths with Warm Water. Experienced Workmen sent to all parts of
the country.
FURNITURE.
FURNITURE. NOTICE.
REMOVAL TO No. 14, BASNETT-STREET,
(A FEW DOORS FROM CHURCH-STREET),
LIVER P O O L.
WILLIAM BAY ES, UPHOLSTERER and CABINET-MAKER, returns sincere thanks to his Friends for their
liberal sunport durinr, the last ten years, and announces that, owing to the expiration of lease, he has REMOVED from
No. CHURCH-STREET, to' more spacious and convenient Premises, No. 14, RASNETT-STREET, where he hopes to secure
a continuance of their favours.
W. B.'s new Show Rooms are now ready for inspection, where may be seen every requisite for the Mansion or Cottage. Several
Suites of Drawing-room and Dining-room Furniture ready for delivery, at Ten per Cent. less than the usual Prices.
wtiOLF.SALF. WAREHOUSE, FACTORY, AND TINIBER YARD, WOOD-STREET Art o FLEET-STREET.
S ELLING OFF. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS, AND LEAVING LIVERPOOL
B. L. JOSEPH, 42, BOLD-STREET,
Returns his thanks to those Friends who have honoured him with their confidence for the TWENTY-FIVE YEARS he has been in
BUSINESS IN LIVERPOOL, and begs to inform them and the Public that he is RETIRING from TRADE, and that he is determined
to offer the whale of his SPLENDID and USEFUL STOCK, at any sacrifice, to enable him to CLOSE the BUSINESS at an early period.
Althouzh the nature of the stock is so well known, he begs to submit the following p trticulars :-
500 GOLD and SILVER WATCHES, English and Geneva, with all the modern improvements.
100 ORNAMENTAL and other CLOCKS.
An immense Stock of MODERN GOLD JEWELLERY, in Chains, Rings, Brooches, Bracelets, Pine, Studs, &c., set with
diamonds and other precious stones.
Silver Goods of every description.
ELECTRO-PLATED Articles of superior quality, in WAITERS, DISHES. and COVERS, Tea and Coffee Services, Cruet and
Liqueur Frames, SPOONS, FORKS, &c.
PAPIER MACH E Tables, Desks, Caddies, Work Boxes, Dressing Cases, &c., Tea Trays.
CUTLERY, by Harrison and other approved makers, in Table Sets, with and without cases, ivory, silver, and pearl handles,
Pen and Pocket Knives, &c.
CABINET WORK, in DESKS, DRESSING CASES, fitted with silver and plated, Work Boxes, Tea Caddies, Jewel Cases.
Bagatelle Boards, Race Games, &c.
Splendid Stock of ORNAMENTAL CHINA, BOHEMIAN GLASS, and ALABASTER, in Vases, FIGURES, &c., Glass Shades.
LEATHER DESKS, DRESSING CASES, Reticules, Pocket Books, and Portmonnaies.
Bronze Inkstands, Candlesticks, Figures, &c.
Barometers, THERMOMETERS, Telescopes, OPERA GLASSES, COMBS and BRUSHES, Perfumery, Walking Sticks, Um-
brellas, Carpet Bags, Toya, &c.
TO PARTIES FURNISHING.
E• J. C R E A S Y, I R O N M O N G E R, 62, GREAT GEORGE-STREET,
(OPPOSITE ST. JAMES'S MARKET, CORNER OF FREDERICK-STREET,)
Begs to call the attention of his Friends, and the Public in general, to his large and extensive STOCK of FURNISHING
IRONMONGERY, which he is offering at Prices lower than any House in the trade.
Japan Oval Tea Trays from 12s. Od. Set of Three.
Metal Tea and Coffee. Pots (newest patterns) from ss. Od. each.
White-handle Table Knives and Forks from 7s. ed. per dozen.
Electro-plated Table Spoons and Forks 3os. Od. „
Do. Dessert Do.
• • Do. Teaspoons
Do. Cruet Frames
Nickle Silver Table Spoons and Forks l4e. Od. per dozen.
Do. Dessert Do.
Do. Tea Do. 3s. 6d.
Best Tin Dish-covers from Ns. Od. Set
PI
of Six.
Copper Tea Kettles
Fenders
Fire Irons
Gilt Window Cornices, in great variety from 55. Od. to 60s.
BATHS, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, CONSTANTLY IN STOCK, ON SALE, OR HIRE.
FAST LANCASHIRE RAILWAY.—SOUTHPORT.—The Public are respectfully informed, that
FIRST-CLASS CONTRACT TICKETS will be granted on the following scale, to the above delightful Residential and Sea-side
Watering-place:-
12 MONTHS. 6 MONTHS. 3 MONTHS. 2 MONTHS. 1 MONTH.
LIVERPOOL £lB £l2 .e 7 0 .. £2 10
PRESTON
BLACKBURN 27 17 9 0 6 0 4 0
CHURCH
ACCRINGTON
BURNLEY
BURY
1 36 20 11 0 8 0 5 0
MANCHESTER
-- -
FAMILY TICKETS, between Liverpool and Southport, available for Two Persons, members of one family, at 10 per cent. less;
and for Three Persons, members of one Family, at 15 per cent. less than the above charge.
RETURN TICKETS are also issued at less fares, available for return until the following day; and those issued on Saturdays or
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1854
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 39 | 0.9759 | 0.0557 | PARTNERSHI PS.
WNICHOL Clients possessed of
• Capital, who are disposed to Join Established Mercan-
tile Concerns as PARTNERS.
W. NICHOL has also several highly remunerative Concerns to
DISPOSE OF.
Mercantile, Professional, Patent, and Insurance Agency, 7,
Castle-street, Liverpool.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,746 | 0.7759 | 0.324 | SCIENCE AN,73 ART.
WHY THERE ARE SO MANY CLERICAL DYSPEPTICS: Dr.
Hall, in his Medical Journal, asserts that one great cause of
dyspepsia in ministers is eating too soon after preaching.
For two or three hours the tide of nervous energy has been,
setting in strongly towards the brain, and it cannot be sud-
denly turned towards the stomach; but the mental effort has
occasioned a feeling of faintness or debility about the stomach,
and a morbid appetite ; and if food is taken at all largely, there
is not the nervous energy requisite to effect its digestion, for
the brain will be running over the discourse.
GOVERNMENT AND ARCHITECTURAL COMPETITIONS.—If
ever there was a turning-point in the history of art in Europe,
we believe it is at the present instant. Under discouraging
circumstances, many recent works in England are such as our
architects may be proud of. The element of danger we believe
to be solely that difficulty which the professional architect
meets with in getting proper reward of the ordinary kind.
To no other profession could such an offer be made by a
Government Commission, as that which has lately appeared in
our advertising columns—where, by holding out offers of
premiums to three sets of drawings, the endeavour le made to
40
procure a hundred others without any compensation whatever.
What it is to the interest of the country to possess, it is just
that the country sluiuld pay for; and' the offer of premiums,
even if larger than are now generally offered, but which would
be by no means excessive for really good sets of drawings, is
quite beside the question—so long as all drawings are held
possession of—the competitors in general going unrewarded.
If the unsuccessful drawings were returned, their authors
would have—as the pernicious system of competition runs—
no cause of complaint. As it is, the profession should note
that a new phase of the encroachment upon the just " hire "
of which labour is "worthy," has commenced.— The Builder.
IMPORTANCE of REGIMEN IN DISEASE.—In the treat-
ment of diseases, regimen—that is, the regulation of the vari-
ous functions of the body, as affected by rest or exercise, by
temperature, by air, by mental excitement er quietude, &c.,
has always been considered as of great importance. The ten-
dency of modern medical practice is to set a higher value upon
it than ever. " The regulation of the diet alone (forming one
Single subsidiary department of the general doctrine of the re-
gimen) is, indeed, sometimes in itself sufficient to arrest the
action and progress of disease. In the first day of a catarrh,
for instance, simple abstinence from fluids generally effects a
rapid and speedy cure ; a proper vegetable diet is sufficient in
most instances to remove the most aggravated cases of scorbu-
tus ; the inculcation of a due animal diet forms, in the same
way, the sheet anchor of the physician in the treatment of dia-
betes ; and there are few cases of constipation or of dyspepsia,
however chronic or obstinate, that cannot be ultimately recti-
fied by dietetic means alone, and without the aid of medicine."
—Dr. Simpson.
WORKS IN CLAY.—Why do we not now do more with clay
than is done ? Many houses were erected in England about
the time of Henry VIII. which display coats of arms,Capitals,
cornices, and parapets, of burnt earth, and were allowed to
remain, these have endured well. Fronts of great durability
and elegance might be produced readily in this material. As
to colour, white, buff, yellow, blue, and red may be obtained ;
and if a glazing were applied, they could be washed clean
without difficulty. Some idea of what could be done with
moulded bricks may be gained from the entrance to the station
for the Woking Cemetery, in the Westminster-road, a very
good piece of brickwork, though wanting in free art. The
improvement effected in tiles—thanks to Mr. Minton especially
—is very great, and will, doubtless, lead gradually to an ex-
tended use of them. This species of decoration was anciently
held in high esteem, and regarded as a mark of wealth in the
possessors, whence, says Mr. Marryat, in his volume on Pottery,
arose.* old Spanish proverb, He will never have a house
idOined with;glazed"tiles rriunca hitreoasa
thit'is;• he will never ,thrive; be erichinan:;-‘
MAY-BLossom PERFUME.—Alfthiarts'orthe chemist are
inadequate to produce so-exquisite - an. odour as • that derived
from the natural flowers. The most beautiful perfumes are
not obtained by distillation, as is generally supposed, but by a
much more simple process, called maceration. The flowers
being gathered are put into sweet oil; after macerating for
twelve or twenty-four hours the oil is pressed out of the flowers,
and poured on to fresh-gathered blossoms. This process is
repdated at least twelve times, and often thirty times : it then
partakes of the perfume of the flowers used in the operation.
To extract the spirit out of the oil, it is also necessary to shake
it in a bottle with an equal bulk of rectified spirits of wine.
After standing for a few hours the spirit rises to the surface
of the oil, and can then be poured off; however, before this is
done, the oil and spirit must be shaken together repeatedly for
several days, otherwise all the odour will not be extracted from
the oil. When the spirit is finally poured off it will have all
the fragrance of the flower used. In this way may be obtained
the delicious odour.of the hawthorn or May-blossom.
SALTPETRE ON WILLS.—Mr. C. H. Smith, in a communi-
cation to the "Commissioners on the Fine Arts," says :
The mineral substances chiefly used in building, consist of
lime, sand, and different-kinds of stone, neither of which con-
tain any saline or deliquescent matter as an integral part of
their composition. No trace of salt or alkali is mentioned in
the analyses of various stones that were examined with refe-
rence to the selection for building the new Houses of Parlia-
ment. Bricks are made of clay, which consists principally of
alumina and silica, but generally containing some portion of
lime, in the state of carbonate or sulphate ; carbonate of
magnega ; iron in the state of oxide, or combined with sul-
phur ; and common culinary salt ; these various materials,
when exposed to a red heat, act chemically on each other ; the
magnesia most probably will combine with the sulphuric acid,
which it obtains partly from the iron pyrites mixed with the
clay, and partly from the fuel, if coal is used. It is this sul-
phate of magnesia (common Epsom salt) which is occasionally
found to cover the surface of newly-built walls with an efflo-
rescence like hoar frost. Under ordinary circumstances it is
scarcely possible to' get rid of the various saline or deliques-
cent substances that have once been admitted into the walls
of a building. The only way to abate the evil is to brush off
the crystals, dry, whenever they appear in the most flourish-
ing condition.—The Builder.
INGENIOUS CLocK.—ln our recent visits to many of our
large manufacturing and other establishments where watch-
men are employed during the night as security against fire,
we have been reminded of an ingenious clock which we once,
saw in a large cotton factory at Cincinnati, which performed
the remarkable feat of reporting in the morning every half
hour the watchman may have devoted to sleep during the pre-
vious night, instead, of looking after the interests of his
employer. It was new to us, and perhaps may be so to some
of our readers. The building was five storeys high, and the
clock was in the lower storey. Around its face, just outside
the figure, is a circle of pins jutting out from the dial, and
capable, by means of reeChinery, of being drawn in even with
SUPPLEMENT TO THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD.
the dial. Outside of these is an index which points to each of
these pins consecutively every half hour. At the expiration
of each half hour the index, owing to the broadness of the
head of the pin, requires five minutes to pass over, thus allow-
ing the watchman that amount of time to remove the pin,
which duty is made obligatory upon him. To effect this, so
ingenious and complicated is the machinery, he has first to
ascend to the fifth storey, then pull a wire, which prepares the
machinery for the next move, and then descend to the third
storey, and there pull another wire, connected likewise with
the machinery below, which removes the pin from the face of
the clock in the first storey ! This must be done at the time
pointed out by the index before alluded to, or else the pin
cannot be pushed in until the index has traversed the whole
circle, and returned to the same point again, which would be
some time during the next day. Consequently, if the watch-
man is neglectful, the dial in the morning will point out each
half hour of his delinquency during the night ! It will be
perceived also, if we have made ourselves intelligible, that he
will be compelled to go over the whole building once every
half hour.—St. Louis Republican.
by their chromule being co)
degrees. When leaves are,
and part with it by day; bi
colour, they cease to part w,
to absorb it at night. Hei
aire, that oxygenation takes
discharges the blue and lea,
red ; for in all cases, red is
change their hue. It is an
caused by alkaline matter,
present, and that in what
mule is only in an imperfect
of which, De Candolle poin
colour with that of blanched
proportion of white flowers
countries ; and, third, the .
which are at first white beco.
Cab.
HOUSEHOLD • J
oo
''
-- sOf roe
c
„fua tile.#
GLAZING FOR TARTS.—MiX s" et 5" 9
01 of 0 '
thick paste-like cream, and brush.,o 461 0
RICE RISCDITS.—Sift seven ou"„ice,ro, A
half-a-pound of the best ground to 9' Oil
, so,
seven ounces of flour, and mil 11' Aci'dr#r
are sufficient for this quantity. i5—,,,,,i fo:;rt"#
u
CREAM CHURNING.—It has 34, rtyfr ly
fitable by Bs. in the £7, or £5 10. 0614, o.l'''
to churn from cream alone, and biii,e Oiy'
churn the milk and cream, and seer YAA,,,,1),
TEE TIPTREE GA.THERING.—ZattIoII
nual agricultural gathering for 'tollo, ~'
there will be, as usual, a large ale,art y „410;i;
tical men to inspect the crops, an c ,of, 0/
the owner of the hall.
,float'a olh, 68,01
CINNAMON BISCUITS.—HaIf a r as .10'. '
of lump sugar, finely sifted, one 13°01 4
worth of powdered cinnamon. Tbie or/ IP/
glass of brandy, or rum, then rolled reetliti
quick oven. Is of trllcliiltpl'i
LEMON DROPS.—Grate the Pee ea $' el: .
a large piece cf refined sugar, til_a s'„it„ 401
plate, add a teaspoonful of flour,
~..",',yirooii, I, tj
light paste with the white of an e'rlfe,a °CIO;
and put the drops into a moderatesoos 00,4
1
VEAL, POTTED.—Pound the re,ave''',oos
mace, pppercorns,„„two or threeo!fe4te i
press it well into...p. 0t5,Q.tbe...„1140,010r dto
!Alterriaqlaiers-of, pothlded : brph'ioa o, ot. of;,
foiml,fine comPOund fOi!",tbg.l.llZeigaPetl/34e,,,,r
' BEEF -RiSsciLEs.-'—' Miriee,anu, 0 ice/001:1;4
it with mushroom or walnut eat C 01640?
very thin paste ; roll it out in `"0 0`;1 'te P
square ; enclose in each piece s°:af e r l'ltJ
way as for puffs, cutting each 11 0 get
dripping of a very light breiol' Ift'il PO I
rolled out too. thin. ....- yr-Au be
coif' et,' ;$ i',.,d falli
EXTRAORDINARY DAIRY ifs' ~.;,, , if; 0/
Crick, has in his possession a 0,311 dttbs.:A of
Pembroke breed which has 1" e" ~clo',lit,,
day, and 141-lbs. of butter iO4O la a 4 frog
days 171b5., and the next sent 10 tree! 05 to
month. The cow has been k/arbere 6"°,44•01; 9
reedxptecnnhtle,ErNivr)iiectshn;forty fruit and t'Ailt tlof 9-pArt'ee
ERE
reduceiß S .
halfl a I':
-el ti1013133f ;11e: 01'11°061-'
place a layer of fruit on the beto tl4t 1 40 -0;
with a layer of sugar, and s° (t)ilea T . clf 4011
Let this stand for three days, v Velatir..„o.4,
up half-a-dozen times over a 11190;15, lift D0117e0',4
the syrup, and spread thou t used
sro soree ~ I'
a quick oven, turning theme ltped ' tpitifi
moisture. The syrup can be vegeot t,Ilto:
pudding making at the time. r best ig 11 olitt
GREEN PEAS are one of el/ dolt,' OD . ,41j
but the usual way of SerVillt use 00,0" rd
who wish to retain their tociccoatail, prre 01(
most economical ; for theYogetablie rg; s,dr,
together with many other ieting t
gee
001,
the state of fecula for completing
ill Ile eig 9.
far more easy of digestion vy. t, a la
_teoa, .
peaitself. By boiling then? but bir are Y j
better part of the pea is lost ~tialitle.o to jv
or meat, all the nourishing 4 congers 4ii
they form a dish that is most
,S JO, #7,
a wasted habit of body, Grafiat:iviiiii", fisige
How TO BURN COAL Ding, frorau je v:001if
on coal buying and bur. ~,ka o
.. tile _,0,„,
great rills' n.featei,, the t:t wi
lowing :—" The —the b- lie(' Viy
coal, as if it were wood.
coal is aPPis , cliegoo`
ti
the heat. If too Innen ,b, fire_ _ col.. oto ,
Barfly imperfect, because o;its of ti_!!,,,iiedtbe ~,6
and, the elem atop' if 'ply/
destroyed, , . ,coney ~.as, ~,, t, .
it, pass off to the crnl__. liruer:, aroal, Poi,
gases through the
,?..L.',e will P','!•,',o aarhatotor
but moderate, a red tat" iv L 1:4 ll !
secured.stov e, by f coal,-- - aiw
wOhneichtonenotire,eat.haeurdefo_r,t,:r: spa
will often secure nic:ro ~V„e ordinT,,
two tons secured
111
monstratea.
which can easily be de
tt
ti
zn,
Printed and TH Pubßilled y
ROBERT PE
ii" OKO 0
ST ANDARD GENERA a
GEORGE'S
try
111
relfo'o
*whined Iciii.ert)
green, theY3l4o gl
but just oo'
vith this gnu k
nice has bee:ciiifl
Ivesce, %%f, It4tilti
the
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|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 206 | 0.7553 | 0.2492 | ICE:-
SUNDAYS
1,2,&3 1,2,80
A.M. A.4aM.
40
31.1
Liverpool depart....
zouttiport amt au...
Southport depart....
Liverpool arrival....
WEEK DAYS.
1,2,80 1,2,&3 1,2,&3 1,2,5g3 1,2;50 1,2,&3 1,2,83
A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M. P.M.
in on •o as o oo s TO b 15 6 10 8 0
11 25 130 325 5 0 550 715 850
1,2,&311,2,&3 I 1,2,&3 I 1,2,&3 I 1,2,&311,2,6c3 1,2,&31.-1,2A3 1,2,1 k,
735 850 910 1 50 120 230 350 530 725
845 930101510 1 40 220 320 1455 610,+ 835
1,2,&3 I 1,2,&31 1,2,&31 1,2,&3 1,2,&3
A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M.
6 15 930 1 0 5 0 830
723 10 25 210 610 923
,
11,2 e 1,2 e ve 1,2,84 ..
• •
8 0 9 5 410 1830
...
9 0 10 15 520 940 ..
WEEKLY TICKETS.—On and after MoNEty, the 24th instant, in addition to the Annual, Quarterly, and Monthly Tickets
between LIVERPOOL and SOUTHPORT, WEEKLY TICKETS will be issued—laS Class at Iss. each, being available every day
during the period by any Train.
Periodical Tickets may be obtained at the Livertrool and Southport Booking OMCes.
General Manager's Office, Bury, June 18th, 1855.
C. W. EBORALL.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 324 | 0.9331 | 0.1099 | OBSERVATORY.
There is an excellent Observatory on the Premises, furnished
with a powerful Achromatic Telescope, not only for Private Use,
tut for the Instruction of the Senior Classes in Practical Astro-
nomy. CARDS OF TERMS
for Boarders and Day Pupils. References to numerous Clergymen,
Merchants, and Professional Gentlemen, Printed Testimonials,
and Extracts from the Public Journals of Liverpool, may be
obtained at the ESTABLISHMENT.
The SCHOOL, 39, GREAT GI..OEOE-STREET, will be RE.
OPENED, (D.V.) on TUESDAY. the 31st instant.
P.S. An ASSISTANT WANTED.
WANTED, a JUNIOR ASSISTANT, of Protestant Principles,
who has been accustomed to the general routine of Scholastic
Tuition. First-class Testimonials will be required.
BOARDING AND DAY ACADEMY, 5, PARLIA.-
MENT-PLACE, UPPER PARLIAMENT-STREET,
Conducted by Mr. D. WRIGHT, with the assistance of experier.ced
Misters.
The principal object of this Academy is to Educate Young Gen •
tlemen for Commercial Pursuits. The course of instruction com-
prises English, French, Draw ing, the Practical Branches of Mathe-
matics, the Elements of the Latin and Greek Classics, and the
Sacred Scriptures.
The BOARDERS, who consist of a limited number, are treated
as members of the family. Terms (including Board and Educa-
tion), from 25 to 30 Guineas per Annum.
The Scholastic Duties of this Establishment will be RESUMED
on TUESDAY next, the 24th_instarit.
Prospectuses, containing Terms and numerous References, may
be had on application.
EDUCATION.
INFANT
23, MYRTLE-STREET, ABERCROMBY-SQU ARK.
Mr. and Mrs. W. PESCOD will RE-OPEN this Academy on
MONDAY next, the 23rd instant. Fees and routine of Education
as conducted by Mr. W. Clark, late Principal.
MR. T. GRAHAM will RESUME his LESSONS
on the Piano-forte, Organ, and in Singing, on and after
the 30th instant.
12, Lever-street, Manchester, and Marsden-place, Wigan.
CLIFTON PARK ACADEMY,
BIRKENHEAD,
Conducted by Mr. JOHN SORLEY, with the aid of efficient
Masters,
Will be RE-OPENED on Tugs DAY, the 3i3t instant.
Prospectuses may be obtained at the Academy, or from Mr.
Ross, 7, South Castle-street, Liverpool.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 7,980 | 0.6208 | 0.3545 | THE ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM.
WHILE Conservative statesmen claim, and claim
truly, great credit for the purity of their motives, the
sincerity of their patriotism, and the high and honour-
able principles by which they have been actuated in
their public conduct, they have allowed themselves to
be overreached by their political opponents in the de-
tails of office and the exercise of patronage, which
forms one of the strongholds of Ministerial influence.
One of the movements of the day is the agitation for
what is called Administrative Reform, got up chiefly,
if not wholly, by Whigs and Radicals ; and yet the
abuse of which they profess to complain is one of
which Whigs and Radicals have been peculiarly
guilty ; which they have even reduced to a system ;
and which, indeed, constitutes the chief ground upon
which that party has been so long enabled to keep in
office. It has often perplexed observers, not in the
secret, to understand how it is that the Whigs,
enjoying so little of public sympathy, and being
known to be actuated by thoroughly selfish motives
in almost all their proceedings, should have continued
so long to preserve an available majority in the House
of Commons. The secret of their success is to be
found in the organised system of patronage against
which the Administrative Reformers profess to com-
plain. From the year 1831, when the Whigs, under
Earl GREY, attained their desires, down to the present
time, they have laboured indefatigably and unceas-
ingly to Liberalise the State, by filling up every avail-
able vacancy with their own creatures. From the
Primate of All England, down to letter-carriers and
door-porters, Liberalism have been the passport to pro-
motion ; while the workings of the system in its nu-
merous ramifications have enabled many a seat for a
borough to be purchased for a Radical and his vote to
be purchased for the Ministry. It is this fact which
accounts for the apparent anomaly between speeches
against the Government and votes in their favour ;
but the evil is of far greater extent, for so many places
have been filled by Whig creatures---so much of the
machinery of the State is carried on by officials of
Whig appointment, that the Government in the hands
of Conservatives has been rendered almost impracti-
cable. It is this which accounts in some degree for
the brief duration of the last Conservative Adminis-
tration, and which may in some degree influence that
change which so many members of the House of
Commons appear to dread. There is a clamour for
Administrative Reform, and why ? Because the
Whigs have had all the appointments, and they have
preferred the incapables of their own party to the able
men of the Conservative side. We want Adminis-
trative Reform, but it should be a clear sweep of the
doings of the last twenty years. If, then, the Govern-
ment places were filled without reference to party,
but solely with regard to personal qualifications and
individual merit, we might hope to see the public
affairs of the country conducted in a more efficient
manner, and the ground cut from beneath the feet of
the present agitators, who, on the plea of a plausible
grievance, are endeavouring to forward those wild
schemes known as Vote by Ballot, and Universal
Suffrage. The country, no doubt, feels the evil con-
sequences arising from Whig-Radical nepotism, and
which never, perhaps, was more apparent than in tha
gross mismanagement which, last winter, almost
annihilated the British army in the Crimea, The
danger, however, now to be avoided is in choosing an
erroneous remedy, the only effectual one being that
which we have pointed out. It is from the Whigs
that all the mischief has sprung, and the obvious
remedy, therefore, is a return to Conservative policy,
not for the elevation of this or that individual, but
the promotion of those principles under which Great
Britain attained the pinnacle of national greatness,
and without which no country can prosper.
OUR LATE MINISTER TO VIENNA.
WHEN Lord PALMERSTON despatched Lord JOHN
RUSSELL as Ambassador Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary to the Conferences at Vienna, there is
no doubt that the chief object was to get an unma-
nageable colleague out of the way, in order to avoid
inconvenient explanations. The characters of both
had been so compromised, that the least that was said
about their principles or their consistency would be
the best for their ephemeral reputations, while the
danger of recrimination was not beyond the bounds of
possibility, considering recent antecedents. If, how-
ever, the PREMIER really intended to destroy effec-
tually the already damaged reputation of his Envoy,
he could hardly have been more successful than in
entrusting to him a mission in which duty and incli-
nation have come into such violent collision. While
the whole country was intent upon the objects of the
war being gained—desirous for peace, but at the same
time determined that conditions should not be yielded
incompatible with the prospect of peace being perma-
nent—we find Lord JOHN RUSSELL, to whom the
interests of the country had been so foolishly entrusted,
not only entertaining proposals from Russia, which
should have bean immediately and indeed indignantly
rejected as a palpable evasion of the object of the Con-
ference, but actually recommending to his colleagues the
acceptance of these proposals as sufficient concessions,
Here then we have aproof from his ownconfessions that
a member of the Cabinet, which is pledged to prosecute
the war with vigour, is of opinion that we ought to have
made peace according to the terms offered at Vienna ;
and yet, while thus ostensibly differing in opinion with
the rest of his colleagues on the subject of the greatest,
if not of sole importance, as far as the present Admi
nistration is concerned, he clung to office with a
tenacity which was essentially and peculiarly Whiggish.
No wonder that even Radicals were disgusted with such
political turpitude, and loudly demanded his dis-
missal. It would be an effort of administrative reform
far more useful than interference with the appoint-
ment of treasury clerks, to go a step further
and include the rest of the ministry in the condemna-
tion, not for the temporary triumph of any party dis-
tinction, such as have too often on previous occasions
led to ministerial changes, but in order to justify the
honour of the country from the obloquy which has
recently attached to it through the trafficking of
Whigs, Radicals and Peelites. There is hardly a vari-
ation of political feeling which has not been attained
by Lord JOHN RUSSELL at some period of his life,
and yet, in spite of this political harlequinade, he has
contrived by a species of tact peculiarly his own to
keep himself in a certain position before the public eye,
[JULY 17, 1855.
as though he were indispensable. Let us hope, 11;
ever, that eyes long blinded to his multiplied clefogi
can now see somewhat clearer, and that, beog
of office, he may have no further opportuo
doing mischief.
HARVEST PROSPECTS•
-4o-
moTnrinEe
cleosns
agriceosnotfinliufaenhcaesogif
high
pI
degree of interest to the prospects of aWA°
,
the approaching harvest. We are feeling a 1014 iii
the consequences of war in the combination 01_.10
taxes and dear provisions which have now Pthieewif
for some time, and any portion of relief frfromAd
den would be an appreciable boon. It is, the
9
arts
i)
vena mroicre esth for
a e?:
n ther
hg ruanavitetiefydbienicegni
nt
rogedbe
oee
iinva
......be
dl e,n tonor
ot stht,aotsneoluyt ht
haf
r,t 0
emtahset all,a
an
lc c ;du :::.5 ;;:-
.Ars
also from other parts of Europe and from Alf
concur in representing the appearances of PIP',
Os
being most satisfactory. This is also the )10
has .
reference to the potato-crop, which this Sear is;AO
planted to a very considerable breadth, and. tedwP.- /4"
said to present fewer symptoms of being attaf'.ol
blight or the dreaded disease than has been titte 91
gew f
for many years. Should these hopes be real_ di
era P"
no causes have yet been apparent to 013 tipiti
result impossible, it will have a very imPer: oos-;
ence on the condition of the people of i'lli° air
inasmuch as the springs of industry will be
witoo4o-0,
Ihe 00 Oe
rahenaadsc
ht
already
ameansN.ceormy
molfaerncgeoeendsuimi proportionp tt ihoeibroofu Unitedg;:;
t. zodevi'lier,
h el) jifall
Oge 0
This is evident to some extent in the - . a- 34'
atates' oitei
to the abundant yield of the crops of wheat or
the harvest in that country beinc, consider )0 -,„„
mob, beto
than in this. The price of flour, whicilseorilir
srhuillilningglsligpherfobraarrello,n‘gvitpheraiodp,rohspaseeftalol:l:si,
wei
; till l'if
reduction; so that we may look forward ' 4-
f
portations into our markets, an increase o ieo,
which, added to our own promised abuntlan'of,
rit
staple crops, should help to restore that cO •
which is indispensable to commercial P ti. of
This prospect of abundance, the anticPi
i
or ew
blessings in store for us, should excite 0- art)
thanks for the bounty of Providence, TOta 00
ho
laxly as it is vouchsafed at a time when, P>itt o
sition with reference to the rest of Eurer a
e.ti
with Russia and at dubious peace with Gerl°oper
consequences of peace and plenty can he
appreciated.
~yoo<tillesl.t
THE BODY OF A CHILD FOUND IN LIVE.--A Otor
eleven o'clock, on Saturday morning, a boy foam" -di"' 1
Michael's church-yard, containing the body of a -0,
male child, evidently still-born. „A Sts..„,tsse,,
SAILING OF THE ATLANTIC.—The United rtie-or
steamer Atlantic, Captain West, took her dera,ade
Liverpool on Saturday last, at 11.15 a.m., with a ' of
the usual mails, and 247 passengers. Well
4.4 be too
A HINT TO TRADESMEN.—In a conversation
ce of c,
advertising tradesmen, recently, on their exper?elloso do,
benefit of advertising, one of them, a draper, n' try- ,
chief streets of the town, said he had drawn £lOO el 40
the month since he had commenced advertising• ea yri
A FATAL STEP.—Richard Moloy, a boy 9014
age, who worked at a rice mill in Bedford-street,
0,0 c 64
by a nail running through his shoe, while he be OA
some wood on the 4th instant. He was taken to t, ~d I),A
Hospital, when lock jaw set in on WednesdaY,lo4l'
yesterday morning. At an inquest yesterday 3 130!;
accidental death was returned,
THE NEW LINE OF AMERICAN STEAMERS .•-• •••••••
TON AND LIVERPOOL.—BOStOn, MOndaY .1" iif b DO
Bl;;Tiri.l,iortis,;:•.,
M`Kay's model of the new steamship Cradle of
..,_.-'40.o,10)
tended for the new line between this city nl-blv`eol9
been placed in the Exchange Newsroom feet icag,_4o
The steamer is to be three hundred and trcentoYf the nientY
feet broad, and thirty-one deep. A meetinfrill be held 3
and all others interested in the new line , •-eioi
PoTnC YbeChoaulfßTo,f Before uommis
Exchange in a few days.
Townsend,B-ucKRu trustees,
exaulinationc.ti,
Perry, J. P. Hall came up ' asked for a Po- rois
It' IEI eS TEI
'
il been very Wei
.J.s
the bankrupt's books, which, he said, ha-,A....00:de
An adjournment to the 30th instant was grantor' ment, to be enabled to test the accuracY
J. Newton, late of the Hibernia Hotel, Waterloo, ifi vsv,i;
up for last examination, and was also adjourned talgOalj
instant, to produce amended accounts. There vcss ja• clO6
journed audit meeting in the case of Samuel Highfl?,..lll°.4,
WIIO HAS LOST A BANK OF IRELAND NOTE rt, yt,'o,/,
Mahoney, a boy, was brought up at the Police-cea,xed af,
day, on suspicion of having stolen a Bank of Ire..„ci, tOP,4
It appeared that he went into the shop of Mr. Ban:l.rso3;;,
Tithebarn-street, and ordered a suit of clothes.
51_ „i,
_;,
he tendered a Bank of Ireland note for £2O, -tN_oa.r
al 'l,,
'police7t,
he seiif
Bamford's suspicions being aroused, said tliOjs:
and gave the boy into custody. Mahoney thenyears ,g On note had been left him by his father ten ~,on 0
gave his address as " James's-street, Birkenhead. June
A
mination it was found that the note was only. dated :ea fe„Zi
1851, and therefore could not have been in existeil ie2,,, li
ago, and that Mahoney had given a fictitious OS of
boy was remanded to give the police an oPlVrturil if
covering an owner for the note. ejoelti, 0,
LIFE ASSURANCE. —A meeting was held at V " Ail, tea,
terday, in the large room of the Adelphi Hotel, to 010,0
the local clergy and several other gentlemen had I'd tlefitie
by circular. It was summoned by the members;plX
ilofHNe-rat.saAlllcistalsyaulmreia:pinnttecovz;i:,re:7
iefil:
stateet p.l el
e oo ff Rev.HumeLm lc
secretary then entered upon an explanatioo,o,oo'' t
features of this society, and read a letter annovionfe.d
directors had adopted several suggestions madeii",pea„fivto
at a meeting held about a week since. The gear:ool'
expressed their great gratification with the state' en A
had been made, and with the replies which had w" or
their respective inquiries. is4ol
„ Itliftet.,,, 01
FATAL ACCIDENT AT A CORN WAILEIIOI7D,-- po' VA
was held yesterday on the body of Wm. M'Kennel,,,flat icor
died in the hospital, from the effects of an accede for 7 I
egasAbeutoescia:ratreuerldrt:
general
elrn:fstcefu'eerrgeSmtgnTioelcsiecestitteetihEtoolyetinle,
ptg‘ai,roll.ni English
b 3
.71
of r. i s
Hh 0
ot Churcho
n , °i':
work. On Tuesday afternoon last, he was workwAvio
Isaac Lowe and Co., at the warehouse of Messrs. i';‘,.'peilso ,
Co., Athol-street, loading corn, when the rope sPyirci OA
of the sheaves, and the block fell upon his head,Aa- to.,
contused it. Mr. Aspinall, barrister, appear'''t Ow,.A
Messrs. Connolly from any charge of neglect 03 dr/
brought against them, one of the witnesses having star
the tackle was worn out, and not fit for use. 111, mir
however, was unnecessary, for Hulse, the underLowtot,
man, admitted that his employers had given ciru; a 000,
was never to allow the tackle to get out of aue-600
The jury returned a verdict of accidental death. 3 adc:0111
by a verbal presentment imputing blame to Hie 0
named Wm. Gregory, who had tied the rope in such fr
manner that it slipped off and caused the acciden' ~ *ip,
AN UNFORTUNATE FAILING FOR A " SMASIOO V.;
William Maloney, who is well known to the police ,egi,
expert thief, was- brought up at the Police-court, i'oli,ooo
charged with burglary. A family were removing ti;t' the ti,
in Duke-street, Edge-hill, on Saturday, and le re to pill
locked up while they removed a cart load of furnitlif Age
new residence. During their absence the prisons,' isn"/,
by watching the removal, entered the front door god ";003,`,.cry
a skeleton key, ransacked the house and removeuatti,..,e'pfrt
able bed curtains and other property to the backjdo,rl;o 1,,e
venience of " removal," but not by the family. ---a 10' llviii
for himself, however, he found that the larder ha ifirefir
open, and he also discovered the way into the hen plot
Tempted by his good fortune, he sat and drank e° ki„s4t,,t{fr
as to become rather "oblivious." In this state 1".0wIr
ments in the yard and premises were so stral Prj.,lo
neighbours (who had previously thought he ~er)ilhecill
" assisting" at the removal in a legitimate inaom-e; f")
suspicions aroused, and gave information to the fk
f tili
took Mahoney into custody, and detained him 7-,
returned. He was sent to gaol for three month'. A ber°- Ar
he im, Iv
A DETERMINED SUICIDE.—An inquest was -0- 'beater
borough coroner, yesterday, on the body of Mal, Olit0a" 0
67, who lived in Bridgewater-street. Accordiliho 40
dente of her daughter (a girl nine years of age'llg %eel ;
turned away from her aunt's service for threatertlapewi,ille
herself), she was in great trouble on the 6th of "ico trovat-li
she had not money to pay the taxes. On the shag'
o.e 7-he
days she got drunk, and had fits, to which
..iie og., ,d,
..s'e
subject. About eight o'clock on Saturday oreL-fireee carso.,
of June, while the family breakfast was being 'a tnie '
went into the privy, cut her throat with a razor,,a ocisseol)
back into the kitchen. An alarm was ralag",,,' ther,%iere,ii°o
conveyed on a stretcher by the police, to the ',"` onen '
_co irio
tal. Bronchitis, from the wound, set in,!and sols NO ,
Friday. Her sister-in-law stated, that four ni_, cat ueaftefo
deceased hung herself, but was discovered, all" One at?
10a OO, ile
time, though she remained insensible for a A bad ~,0,4
wards. She was closely watched for some time, anu"t weinaLtP
quite right for some years. From being a Stf oteow-
had gradually worn away quite thin. A verdict of
stoat
h aO4,
insanity" was returned. Sivit'lxe
RATHER DOUBTFUL FRIENDSHIP.--jaineSthe police atiht'
seaman with a flowing beard, was charged a e 000,0 po,
yesterday, with assaulting and robbing Geea chain,. 'vie'',
diminutive son of Neptune, of a watch and about plia
.1
house-lane, off Duke-street, on Saturday r'little_f ;
a fair,
The complainant, who admitted that he was 4 the 3 ,ctoeleY,
at the time, gave a very confused account
_e_t a etat,clL 1
being too mysterious to be understood, fs %stoat it';cte;
at or
that the prisoner took his watch out of in
_lv _,
~...d ;
that ne . w_le
A young man, however, who said risoner -04-0
by the crowd, stated that he saw the po
_., 0, „0.0
at the complainant, and the latter refusing
.t over oner then .13e.,
that he was near his own house. The refusing
failing. t of 11,
him down, kicked him, and cursed him.lowatch out e e
complainant got up the prisoner took his yolo c tAi
olive officer, vjachi,
pocket, but he (witness) told a P
and the prisoner then gave up the watch..
client ve ~iiiiii
his c ariw-
attorney for the prisoner, argued that
had been ~.p
doing the complainant a kindness, as they
,s
...,4, borne welt
together, essay ith seeing- Clrnenst, _ Tad secii_iool_
female witn called, who said that she
that the coniPis_, Jo
drinking in the same public-house, and
_, bie a;00;
had agreed that the prisoner should takecarehiais of rrb Ao
elf. -.--nteniip
was quite incapable of taking care. of
k the PriolLer wi-raPthio
plainant then said that he did not thin
red to ii‘• - OP
to steal his watch, and as the case app after a $
some doubt, the magistrates idisalissed it,
admonition to bah parties seqaper,,e e...tn?it,jr4
55.
_
V'
Ali ea de
P.REACHING.
, being
gtupity
DR.
M`;
t
4th jIITEALLE AT THE EXCHANGE.
h.
s. ,5'ia,,,,,7_.,„, _
' Itev. br 17..,ra of last week we alluded to the fact that
,''! ill the o,„_ '4'Lleile had intimated his intention of preach-
e Ex I._-'lnoon of the preceding Sunday, on the Flags of
i cuange.
Major , but that, yielding to the apprehensions
t;„ lar,. ,_.
;'g ereated -5) le to the probability of a disturbance
ttettion
bell
had desisted from carrying this expressed
41the belief ftlr:tt at that time. By no Means sympathising
thlittdtai but die, head•constable, the reverend doctor merely
o?,c,,t'Llerdilallettege . s, not abandon his intention of preaching at
44d accordingly on Tuesday last he addressed
' twent rl° *Major Greig, in which he states that it is
kir, Y Years •
t 4 having do, since he first began to preach in the °pen-
t° ,listrict ae4. s° in the courts which then formed part of
iladi that i "igliett to St. Jude's Church, and goes on
tttoDteeii ,14,‘ the summers of 1852 and 1853 attempts
"thatB,4:l hee,' to revive this practice, but that these at-
-1 eti S'reet pre4 iinellecessful, chiefly on account of the notion
triPegatfritY att at,hing is not respectable, that there is a stigma
lowt -at in of to it, and that young clergymen, however
ki tafq have respects, who are not yet known in the
rk,tt,./0,41‘. their characters to establish, shrink from the tikil%tic tl cart by joining in what is not considered as cha-
ret,t.l"r,"tienzen. Several hints were gently, and I
kd ir,eter 1,--4 c'nbly and fairly, thrown out, that those who
Net 4!ttee °lvn should extend the shield of their names
rte
oPteNit 4.?ver the Practice, as both useful in itself and
i,e,„`,,, the„,.L.', others. Most cordially did I undertake to be
Ilya, I look upon street preaching, seriously and
fititlligit7T,acted, as highly respectable, and in every way
Ilk, kio i, the highest style of gentleman,. the Christian
„tr,,3:8 p0,8;/',11th and not in name only, anxious to imitate,
;te.kflodes'ule, the active usefulness of his Divine Master."
„Nd.i4ther,,uls letter by expressing his intention, should
1 ctill,?,Y4theisrlnt ith of appearing o,n, the Exchange Flags on
I Otititto utter' at three o'clock, no engage in contro-
, 44ttit,,Ze the one word calculated to wound the feelings
,N kely- 7raper of any human being, but simply and
Ntt,Z6ol in 4.`,.° Proclaim God's love to a perishing world,
riie, tteh `ue Person and gift and work and grace of his
ttglth the-pal:l)dr beloved Son Jesus Christ our Lord."
,41k 1,110 11,,, Ication of this last letter, it is understood
.11kt Nei. I,' 'tector Campbell wrote to Dr. M'Neile, asking
I, •t,s e't,sto he thought it quite consistent with ecclesiastical.
r A 4 thi, into the parish of Liverpool to preach in the
,'e,i'SZ'otiood of the Parish Church, at the very time
1 .ceettN,',Yas going on in that church. It is said that the
;4it,,, (',Neile, in a kind and courteous answer to the Rev.
;ile;PtilliF,t,Phiellio, admits that he sees theimpropriety of such
No 1,1,R, bee future abstain from it. S4ll the announce-
' tl :41tlie hal.tl_lll ade, Dr. M`Neile felt himself bound to
NI aovh
Atha 'Lete,d he would do.
t, k itl, Wl
i° 0 clock, on 'Sunday afternoon, several
1 mto•ail oieet assembled in the Exchange area sung a
1 ?ktter tstlllari,Bl4 Pram with Mr. E. Sumners, one of the
tO7-ioßiiitle Re •
St , apt,r,_t.s, he Radcliffe
unyk
kind
shouldoortunity gef
kle„4l',4a,'"lxeqlak,,,tttlecazetratioi; Of ;eie.
_u be ma
, b suggested
tteVAskd't,lYitathe„we'rereeiV ed withv Dr.
same degree. of orderly
vitseesd,.l by ',tee 7Gon, t to enter his own pulpit.
i'lltaiu' the ,B„?l'erteioek Dr. M`Neile made his appearance,
' '0 reps kid ;pie ~,, town missionaries. He immediately
t thygzaiLl 4, dish had been previously occupied by Mr.
/ I) ' PetfteCigeliffe. Having requested the assemblage
. v r 1.,
Nf`,eti .1. quiet, and prefaced his remarks with
. thera kzve
NI • ' 4th -e,,,, - °tit as' thetext for his discourse, that per-
-44 %It h.tert,,iti-apter of St. Luke, 16th and 'six "following
0, fahit.4iel);b.jr:zs,,,l:tth.6.'lllltll
thavie a great supper, and bade many:
/ 1 °Il e: a-'" et•run r time to .to them that were
ineseare now And they 'all
b 4 n 1,7 it: i "ss2Vati to make excuse. The first said unto
' it 17%4 Praitt,' PieCe of ground, and I must needs -go
1 ►lf', 'Ate Ipe . Qee hfre me excused. And another said, I
.Aor illt,t4
kree ,)°lte of cx dlgo to prove-them : 'l.pray
7, 01 114erefo;e11,?ed• Anden aannother said, I have worried a
4e ire a, lord iz -i, cannot come. So that servant came and
tr4l aer•a . gese ' things, Then the master of thehouse
y ';.,1,43*4e:0ft0. his -sirvant,. Go eat. quickly . into thed
)4 ~ 1,,, 2 and 4,, tilz City, and bring m hither the poor, an
f ^,',,'' ,It is d:ut halt, and the Mine- And the servant
itr I'tl'est:'it hlhis „,.'ne a 8 thou hest commanded and yet there
story that he vms come' to that
1,4 :'•1',...:?,1,,rt e1i,,,4 Yet room however great the number of
Pl'74 i1z.t,,,,.,,,tt 111)ott.' be at the gospel feast. The R. Doctor
ti - 1.44 itftaoni 14 subject for about an "hour, .carefully
9 rn•••.4,l,,N't .
v. , Matters of controversy. He ' earnestly
Viet
(e,i'lil,` ift.leitrers to place themselves under
jet Is. 41t aNeiZt, as Use 'only means of enabling
13(1 br Ilk! b itk";°l.lslY before 'God.; to-refrain from wicked-
'tt '11;;11, 'rota the atehouseavd ginshop, for no Chris-
; t'lil thiOa )01.,- ,lie tall, , 13‘ drunkard, and no drunkard..?.. 'Christian.
~,,, Y. i,,,, of Pie to`4lnon to close Ire :said--" I thulk we shall
~,hg Iv h .oh, a , . _.
I,' 41 'ett 'T'l ay to the whole lcmgdom. . MeV! talked of
1°09'0,! , e 4i„..t1^,4 421(I commotion. God Almighty •be praised,
t 04 kr, 44-N, I
~" nlore racstfulasseniblage on the whole face
; "JO qllkb,4l,„,rri't know how ;to estimate the. -number of
C1,•,-ty Iksajai, ii• 0, ere, bt therearc 'a good' man thousands,
13.%, ‘ 41e44,-e3°'lieduen:; and I hope I mayY say honest
s !.i 'l/4.114' Nrai „Soer men ! 'carryou hold your bands up to
's, k'l‘t4:4l ate Loonsand hands-were raised .in- response.) nse )If
stps. At kk, . 9,41 the hands of'hornest, sober men,..tryare the
It.lliolit country. I the
1 icq \till heartily that Re
~ I, k.ltii, . grant you continued health
j;404 1:1ti;ekl/e You constant and Profitable PraYYe'r aln bePgral
;16illIreafr°rththeis. '4la *e- d
sand strength, and
I, )*It,;(4IhaPPY homes and kind einployment ; that
~i 4 fic :it
4_ sou fr, , . friends ; :that He will
D u Z h ~,71'°nattat, fleTne—gentle to your children,
-' ',yes * * Give them time, get
~,i0 T''.,)let4i golf,
110,-,,, ....ntiiikli.li, ,nlm.
t. ~ run off to the public-house if is
yo-t,e"e, e the '41,1
Plato tilt ti,4leY -have been taking,' care of your
I 1',1",t. e : ~'j'aces pAt. c011,1°,11 hare been away, and. that they
tvt aii;i...-4817014,14,qy fo,keratim. And wives, you should
.1'.0,1i("! 4 li„,:varts ii,' tlare „Your husbands against they come
")' be' .arm
yob. Wint,letri clean and neat, as cool in sum-
j'e.eo,; iii.,...til!t yell Pe.tee; n6tireuristances will. arimit ; and, as
,ylt 14 14' 1 1,1 Inzel, , Yeu-shoul have home so coin-
ot, 4p.,, x..11e14,s t d Ynur .to
50e, , e,•l , p
41,.120. .satyp,
my
Tom shall haasisieth-noe caLoui!de
to
)11 0
10tteA to mkt'_ttly ( _. y arms, and . .
time .
se) it salt ZeZ, how €47 Iruntds, I think it is to say
011 f,O( ktN: Vied, 0,14 peorsZ, telk you this. We are an orderly
), 14=i icitie et therythi„.• . l'here is a great .deal of routine,
'ef (II 1;,,,0,,,,,,... eli tL
e tetaipn its place, and everything in' its
0.. '''7,t,.;.7,,,,i,e people hayed Chiu-ch have an ipder to oh-
-4 li,ll 10',,,,' i, i 414 verftlastical ~a',,e nooccasion to fell oSs; We have
id', iii 4ef'l,:4'4,:i--e.: .Th-Ner; and here lam out of my own
ot e.,11 „ssien.....,_ e .world'e your parish.") Aye, the
, ler! ' thittZ, 4:4 here I:: Preach 'e
Gospel to eve.ry creature ;
e;„0 60,411itt144p,`,,!, Perreis ..re divided into sections ;and without
o:h 4.4 titt • 'Polish,' sk'n, and :kind consent of the clergy-
, k, (it ml Rive "tad not ti
ii? ,4,1,1,4,. h4_ e his
co_ eon nue to meet:
. ou here ; but
irti. o:,,et f,llve 801,4p.sent, end if so, it wohld be a very
TV r•.l447atiorther 47ung ofthe hymnry Sunda.y."
.51 kNe 444 , 4 w„. ...ervations a was sung,
eel lqna St, 4een' conveyed te•Dr. M'Neile that:a number
during
tare N k.4,4.taihit4eter, ladustritto
fob k tlk istft tth Re th y distributing tracts of a ques-
(',est i t4,41e,. them llitde re, warned them :not to read
rerei; "ki-ii,j‘r,_, piql to teat, which might be put into their hands,
ivl3lto '144 t•tim,ioe e„,tetid,h„,• the/mute; not to listen to persons
01. tirt,' at,,,et4troniii,•-f to work miracles ; and to pay no heed
,t izistte„ ; 4s.t. a qtee OF4 „.of the Mormonites. He would•give
00v e S., t. IN e Atl -, specioushaits used to attract frail
.0 ~ii,;llt..Z.zni, Oiei.,,a„intic. An old woman whom, for some
~..lefsi N?•44C/R_ _'et, IN :". to enrol :among the number of emi-
vei ~a -;1 ii,-"ae 684 e i,'"Qtne time ago told that, if she went to
"1i ,00 ~,,,P a 0;,°111.4 grow young again ; the assertion
411,/ l':;tk, e4illait :;,1614,1?tation from Scripture that h"
they who
01f.)4 tt,h;i4l,,e• (,ent on",!retv their youth like eagles." And
`e` J' 40„)t1i.,.;,atiklit'n. the hope of renewing lieuouth
jejt ili 'ilrai,ttrel7lY on %el.') Having requested them to se-
jee it, aillk-a"e44„,ri.',Lape;terilltuation.of the roceedings, and
itro, "t 0 op;,„14ortil;00, anT ,tbe evening, the rev. doctorpro-
aof 4r-l',"iite tl4`i of el, ,toe assemblage broke up.
rek, 1;t i tr,„ k'ng.k4e of tite‘";le when Dr. 31`Neile was preach-
-0:elf)" tt.3, ratt4.,'N'i,with lo'zebange area was occupied by a
11',0" ~,eW poli'eAlkti,' i 4 10114 red beard and moustache, who
OV, ',au eld ,„r4taatttatic3'terions phraseology, but which
al 1,.5 eveB4, •hoii,'"' tese l'e 4,41'
C" , .., e?,,ilarg :,,,!,r, h'l%, itlth„e neighbourhood, but a large
4,,, 'lth-we 1111en.,-,_--, tesc,„,- ~Ile the event .of an emergency-
)l)" 0' * heti,,,,,-; tOf lati—Nbl-Ightest indication of commo-
,ephamreti,fruCtiOn haileak! (1:44.die,, lice,- : which included a
Oboll.Eid 14,,,,tleilairames aretned 'eel), -11',3, separating immediately
0 "e; 114 tt t,b.jeXcenew. , the 4'onounced. In the offices
(9 ~he tract Places tett a large number of
beth , , crowd a whif ek_
to ja,; ' 0,,,' lii '441 we Cl,•-•" Were d;"'nevation.
110 . 414•1;le b 4441.0 •re some lie,„rtt.., hated with great pro-
ner „0 , ie., y 1.„ Ils ,
siti, 'it etis! hay4ona44 ,e9MPlaizarLeu " Protestantism. not a
.;eOO, i, Lak,,,heet,
.vatholinn 4 nave been from time to
fo' ev, ', of`nlOtie t Seqed b 1,0 the effect that undue 3p-
,ooleri 114, kl 4411 0 th'eir 7 Protestants for disseminating
ii 'l,4ll' Of ,41`,
.oste_, faith ; yet here they syer.the.m-
ee jje
.y, the,,144,,,e tent
employed in distrrouting
Otis"AP g•efo,controversial character, impugning the
fr
-'4ecl Church, and insulting to Protestants
the
0" Of 1 b4.,_
'Mei( `4••• to
d t-p -cuo, REGISTRATIONS.
kilo N,, 1,
O it''' toBtatlt
the:7ll----.------
ii, 43..k114 Obtain ' he the last day for taking the
~r i 9, -e4ti
topen secure the elective franchise both
ag,' kkgki 4131 e Attention, therefore, to the follow-
e, het
, • . ,eli those who desire to vote at the next
:Ile vr 1/4,,t 4N:14
01 (0 ii,., 14 'lkee °l' he fore ',DO-, ‘N.I), kit , that e the 20th instant all poor rates
) Y-005' it five 1),,u0 iv, were Payable on or before the 6th of
befo, 441,iiesl'A,,-N to sZ These-are the only rates and taxes
11°Itile` ', 1.4„N , have 7.11 re the eleetive franchise.
r• 9tl) poo,Nebo Live emoved from one parish to another, as
tDe oe l'tkikikt 4 .44)001, Liverpool to of
-park, !,
c(1,00 ,t,N7 Ilibaki in‘,i,,lcate from the overseer of the parish
al ce4 '''kl,l4l,tte ""ge it with it . ~ •5 , firmed the overseer of the parish to
6be fr N tlate %I, •
Cher,los 4 (;,,,,,t. ri, , e eh__
i're v. ‘,kei4Pt 'it Oth "uged their residences, though their
00 'ic 10411114 y el. clualificar ,th
ie rli -a 44 11ov. b,, ions may be
.e same, or
agog , „.14,,,,1N•p tely to v Incorrect upon the list, should
doeafter
,),,,i„,..kt,er4,04,
_Ce overseers.
fool rtiotiltobotil oni:Yhe have qualifying property, and
330, so k 4 °li ;::_pree within ,r,egister, or who have changed
poor .I.zA b4,,sat reife last year, or are improperly
oot •,. ,vgl4l "re the lister, us send in a claim to be
5 stab it,.lli4f ki,!t,,,,,
veo •
hirk, ),..irpt,ll. instant.o,4,...
o'e '1,112i.°411 tlYs 'irge Brown has come down in the
ten 14 "T Nk' 141 enter h' •
ill 0, ekl,lit Itg .i, the , ut is slowly recovering. He
joige`' i• ~z4oViti,r,3.4, !anie ship.
go21)0 (411,114 t 1%, ike,balPE.—At the late commencement
or,
eo 1, 8 gi: 4 this 4, In, the Rev. W. F. Taylor, Incum-
htellisef,
~.ttelkele, 41 it.,,att,''...ovt'n, took the degree of LL.D.
r.,,,,ce--041 ik, the Aged jtilNi.l',...
.Alfp, A. 3. 1.) B. ITILDING SO-
-00 iji t r),(-,Locie, kbe4iej.,,,-neeting of this society was held a
raga he '''Y e'.9, i,, reh: Hotel, London, and W2B nume-
DeP it ,11101)44 4 ~,',' Kitt stated that since the establish-
tilree I% 3.(44, %eh the number of shares subscribed
wilie. ,.,,t1 pylte4
41?ttottR. 4 Theashoye R 82,000 has been received
of d, hl, 11,:lal„ the ~ke Of lull of £94,822 10s. 9d. had been
xoe td, titii,",ll,,ee`, aaetr.prroe:flrproperty, the deeds for which
,_a ~, ottm.tity 891 1 oom of the Law Institution,
40 Orti ktai biNeilt Of the. 58. 3d. had been advanced to
oil ;10, p_ky 4Cltlarb,:r shares. The report from Mr.
e,'' la ,kt kllo`e apt) 4 sec y, that the directors had
the t v, 141%1) .* 44 .l'opti , tenth t•
.00 kiN y , Net niter eats ten Portion of the prelimi-
al, lie +t v th 4 ed ii, est of o, Per cent. to the reserve
0" ,or ‘444te.,j'etii,i,hly sai-1-.Per cent, on shares. The
evad N„, ~,10,, to
trheectsors vvere reeleewt—ed, thaks
tok ,st• ..a di latactory and ~,, adopted
el, ar
apt he
IAI2 Nl4 to77t,Ed.
loveral officers of the society,
Il
ililet. payjefer our readers to our
Lenl4re as to the society,
COMMERCIAL and MONETARY NEWS.
MONDAY NIGHT.
WITH little of importance occurring during the
week to affect the probabilities of the question with
reference to the war, the Public Funds have experi-
enced very little change in value, although towards
the close of the week the tendency was rather down-
ward ; arising, it is said, from a belief that Sir E. B.
LYTTON'S motion would be successful, and lead to a
resignation of Ministers. The change, however, was
comparatively trifling ; the causes which would influ-
ence a rise or a fall being so evenly balanced. Money,
for commercial purposes, has been easy, there being
no change in the low rates of discount on first-class
paper which have recently prevailed. The Bank
returns of Friday show a decrease in the stock of
bullion of nearly half-a-million. This is, no doubt,
owing to the large shipments of bullion which took
place the week before last, as payments of the divi-
dends had not then commenced. The Foreign
Exchanges are now more favourable, and it is said
that shipments to Paris have ceased, but the French
loan will not be without its influence on monetary
affairs between the two countries. It will be seen by
the return that there is a large increase in the public
deposits, preparatory to the dividends being paid ;
but, private deposits have considerably diminished,
arising, doubtless, from the demand for gold, or the
payment of deposits on the loan.
The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER has announced
his intention of asking for more money, but as no
fresh loan can be contracted until the whole of the
instalments on the £16,000,000 have been paid, no fur-
ther operation of this kind will take place until
December.
The accounts from Manchester report continued
dulness, owing to the unwillingness to operate until
some more definite opinion can be entertained as to
the probable course of events ; but prices are on the
whole fairly maintained, as the short supply of the raw
material is not likely to be materially increased. The
Woollen trade is moderately active, and, notwithstand-
ing the large amount of wool offered at the recent
sales in London, the tendency of prices is raffle.- up-
ward than otherwise.
The return from the Bank of tngland for the week
ending 'the 7th of July gives 'the following 'results,
when compared with the previous week:—
Public beposits £'6.852,350; Increase ... £705,351
Other Deposits ... 12,586,891; Decrease ... 847,858
Rest ... 3,177,665 ; Increase ... 37,598
On'the other side of the amount
Government Securities £13;757,224, Increase ... £861,156
Other Securities .. 13,328,806; Decrease ... 168,637
Notes unemployed
`The amount of notes in 'circulation is £20,482,750,
'being an increase Of £317,205, 'and the stock of
'bullion
in both departments is T17;584,066, showing
-a decrease of £43'4,509, when compared with the
preceding return.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 631 | 0.4897 | 0.3116 | No'l 706.3
Alitt.,,
Ile o
Irai . 40YAL, WILLIAMSON-SQUARE.
Bement
4111, respectfully announces the Engagement of 011 if
ON o CHARLES
.1t SIX NIGHT. ONLY
tVthl 4 litrfti;,' e 23rd, TUESDAY, the 24111, WEDNESDAY,
(30! ?40,Z, 211th inl%.Y, the 36th, FRIDAY, the 27th, and SATUR -
hertQAy 411alint,
31.1illr.01; First ti INd. next, the 23rd in,stant, A COMICAL
4., RR. ties m.,71e in Liverpool,
.THOs E DEAR BLACKS.
Nil'ilt. Mathews. After which, A ROLAND FOR AN
th. 81'LAY, First Time in •
q. a% 'word Liverpool, DELICATE GROUND.
itit ~,s1 li , Mr. Charles Mathews. AGGRAVATING
hOtt pig, tiegins
ilk ,tbi WEniisrMr. Charles Mathews. And a DAY
,C)ii PAPI)AY 00.
,pd I,lttrt.- And .„, LAS A CUMBER.CU TAKE THAT
Op ippy, uVASI BINS THE WI
VERSUS
Otti 84144 t lAtts. USED UP. PATTER CLATTER.
Q,.111ZN141.)r,!!1e BENEFIT of Mr. CHARLES NIATHEWS.
rry.....druela Last Appearance this Season.
111,4f0,•_ 'the ~e 5 Boxes,. 45.; Upper Boxe.s, 35.; Pit, 25.;
t,' IH.Pearl,„ 'ox-office is open from Ten till chree o'clock,
Oti."lett ISeats in the Dress Circle and taking Private
ak. bel,!, be had under the direction of Mr. T. SHUT-
‘'''' It trolli.tren in arms will not be admitted. Doors to
li Past Six, to commence at Seven o'clock pre-
'
IN 41°Ibter AMPHITHEATRE.—SoIe Lessee and
N. . ....r. W. R. Corn LAND. 15, Great Charlotte-street.
c Nitin
4 of the Engagement of Mr. RANGER, of the
Ilk Theatre-Royal, Haymarket.
11414 HISS BLANCHE FA\E
1 her
!tl% appearance preparatory to her debit at the
kr Nie.. Theatre-Royal, Haymarket.
2' I . 51.r° (Tuesday). the 17th instant CORIOLANUS.
tkilo'liL(4,linEeitcolrenius. Mr. B. Baker; Volumnia,
tine, Miss BlancAhNeTF
IC WIDOW. St. Croix, Mr.
(1. itiul! (WednesdaY) a neane me ly, writt n bv Mr.
9eer4l4 red, THE AMERICAN'YINoENGi LAND. e Benjamin
,% °ea, ?dr R
(ITit„Reirt,„ :_ anger. THE SOLDIER'S DAUGHTER.
47, illleb4,",rirg Baker ; Frank Heartall, Mr. Villiers.
Il9e ptkr3O44oter ; Lagl.l.°9• FOR SCANDAL. Sir
Fan e. PLOT
itqitqlitrPLOT. PederW,' Irlaker.
40. riewht.h enENEFIT of' Mr. RANGER, and the Last
ouilhb irrd,.._ o.,,gagement THE CLANDESTINE MA R-
V' llie'euY, Mr. Ranger• And a favourite Comedy,
t Itkit4ity 4elle Pane' p e IN , 4 will appear.
keIl„ Im. • Tragedy. And THE SCHOOL FOR OLD
0 kiliiiitili
ikc with
Pety "g4„,lol:jl*ayst:werY Evening. a Ballet, in which the Lauri
1I! • g:2ii% Zleil PERPETUAL MOTION.
,I_ltox Price: Xs, 3s; Side Boxes, 2.s 6d; Pit, ls 6d;
he 1;14 th-e°ftlee is Dress Boxes, 2s; Side Boxes, Is 6d
ktial tlnd the
OPN
47, apt,,,,ettb. ire, from Ten till Three daily, for securing
c°11) "IliFt cdir2, and taking Private Boxes, which may
ine4,...ed --, lion of Mr. T. Sl,uttleworth. Children in
—at goville Door's will be opened at alf-past Six;
en o'clock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 60 | 0.9083 | 0.1558 | TO HOTEL-KEEPERS, HOLTBEHoLDF,Rs,
LAUNDRESSES, AND OTHERS.
A SAVING OF ONE-THIRD
,OY THS
..COST:OF SOAP
In every douse may be secured, besides a
LARGE SAVING OF LABOUR AND TIME,
By the use of
THE EMPIRE PATENT SOAP,
Which may be had of all respectable Grocers.
Ask for WILLIAM OK ELL and CO.'S EMPIRE
PATENT SOAP, solely manufactured in Liverpool.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 3,206 | 0.4922 | 0.3256 | 5,
1855.]
•AIR PREACHING.
____________.
bit WNEILE AT THE EXCHANGE.
thelltehyettandard of last week we alluded to the fact that
14gin the-r• VNeile had intimated his intention of preach-
%a
the I, -ernoon of the preceding Sunday, on the Flags of
,aelia
of No lite; but that, yielding to the apprehensions
ibbetillg ort teaCireig, , as to the probability of a disturbance
1 '"'esitienea.l„, he had desisted from carrying this expressed
'lithe belie eteat at that time. By no means sympathising
41,114)eadeae.1,„,.th,e head-constable, the reverend doctor merely
l'se idea, but
'll4 slot abandon his intention of preaching at
nothe` letbe; and accordingly on Tuesday last he addressed
, ter ,,,.
.;'''
"wellty ~ ." Major Greig, in which he states that it is
""g) barb, ;ears since he first began to preach in the open-
totte d".tri-setute, so in the courts which then formed part of
itdaY that '`':.. igned to St. Jude's Church, and goes on
441 been ai,,,-`a the summers of 1852 and 1853 attempts
th!),ts had Ce to revive this practice, but that these
on
„ill"' street neen Unsuccessful, chiefly on account of the n9tion
ettiug,aritY 4irteae,hing is not respectable, that there is a stigma
lth--tent in „akeued to it, and that young clergymen, however.
tisk- and ha "'tor respects, who are not yet known in the
kct tf. tofn ve their characters to establish, shrink from the
thail,,stiozorg,e,ca,,...Bte be joining in what. is not considered as cha-
Iteci!ery , •esenzen. Several hints were gently, and I
klcl i,ltter C„ (ably and fairly, thrown out, that those who
tie,(„lleaee'°wn should extend the shield of
.the.ir names
oae 11:see,„,over the practice, as both useful in itself and
stik," thZu3 others Most cordially did I undertake to be
(Nitee.tlY ''Z'd o upon street preaching, seriously and
Nee'Yle al' t,leted, as highly respectable, and in every
Christian
es f 4 Nail i 'le highest style of gentleman,. the
lot 1' as 4 truth and not in name only, anxious to imitate,
:hes Lctcl4l3°4B:iti, the active usefulness of his Divine M te .
ab,i,'alhet.,,..," °ls letter by expressing his intention, should
vts,mi, Oa' rerulit, of ring on the Exchange Flags on
~....v, or the 16th, at three o'clock, on not to engage in toutro-
act7tatatstter one word calculated to wound the feelings
Itise'l., Laster,: _raper of any human being, but simply and
~,-4 ch 4V Proclaim God's love to a perishing world,.
wel7tottili use Person and gift and work and grace of his
NZ the
Rev
beloved Son Jesus Christ our Lord."
'4O 'me tshheatiou of this last letter, it is understood
,4„ lt.
eel, Nether , Rector Campbell wrote to Dr..M'Neile,.asking.
c, te co he thought it quite consistent with -ecclesiastical
''llt,hiehLizle into the parish of Liverpool to preach in the
lkc,sa,4,,,7"arbood. of the Parish Church, at the very time
ta, u'e was going on in that church. It is said that the
410 .*'),‘Zeile, in a kind and courteous answer to theßev.
40,01abe11, admits that he sees the impropriety of such
PkeiaZ„will in future abstain from it. 'Still the announce-
,M,k;',,! been made, Dr. M`Neile felt himself bound to
t)''oetl ilslee had stated he would do.
GS,II 44 DaSt two o'clock, on Sunday afternoon, several
t, 414 '''llo h
41'4 h.,,M joi„
~a'l assembled in the Exchange area sung a
kee''ssicat'a"`i la Prayer with Mr. E. Sumners, one of the
stltttl this
„:iies,
tithe 'se tii'att lleginald Radcliffe took the opportunity of
i;,lt 4e'llroadtllo demonstration of-any kind should be made
fee ~'",oula Of the Rev. Dr. M`Neile ; but suggested
k,za,t-ivt Ile ,7, received with the same degree of orderly
aselll'l,
,tel" in
Leveeth-te about to enter his own pulpit.
' -'4'a ' ' l''',l-ock D 11`Neile made his appearance,
tob.t4,-I'ers and ta1:44.,,. town mr.is'sionaries. He immediately
k 'erllai -Ir b"4lch had been previously occupied by Mr.
• l'al)er, 11 Aette(4la•delitie. freeing requested the assemblage
eh
31)7 -41 quiet, and prefaced his remarks with
,-',. of a; eile E,
l'lt-t'r,es: .1 Iltri;Vbe oat as the.text for his discourse, that•por-
-14 ' sere oerteaPter of St. Luke, 16th and six following
41 his In ns
*hen, Come.eery 'an made-a great supper, and bade many :
14; 01)6 • erlt at supper time to say to them that were
nd, I Q,coase t‘','' all things are now ready. And they all
e 4; see re, 1:.4eg,. ,(gun to -make excuse. The first said unto
4,4.,,,t,;0 pro,,?„'',l: a Diem of ground, and I must needs go
wir, ha4,,,,e„, ~,,uee ha;e me -excused. And another said, I
i 4%. ' 444 tke muse, of oxen, and Igo to prove them : I
.pray
cl4l
1s lore' And another said, I have married a
str,, ah,,B,_ lora th k cannot come. So that servant -came and
lVts and s :"lese things. Then the master Of the house
slaai4elll(ll4lesal„4, to his servant, Go out. quickly into the
i%,,'' toi,ded, and rothe City, and bring in hither the poor, and
‘l'l tki.''',,,.it Is. eic, lirat, and the blind. And the servant
'oaf +Ng --Ile -as thou hest commanded.rand yet there
i114c7:44ta.-.4there" was the story that he was come to tell that
tek, lest eit,,,W,as. Yet room, however great the number of
the >n apottltlY, be at the gospel feast. The Rev. Doctor
thllscittll: ifrona" subject for about an -hour, carefully
tet„ Lie -, stagers of controversy, He earnestly
tg toli (4. et,4earers to place thmselves under
,:ia)t' ta°t‘el egigosti abs f the ''only
before God; t ? means
refrain ;rfo m w enablingclted-
-411 ta§tgpeePe. frOM the alehouse a giusbop, for no Chris-
t edat,lt4ll7,e drunkard, and no drunkard Christian.
the, ,Of , Pie t°,erinOTl to a close, he. said-".I think wle shall ~f the het,er.oe; 7alay to the whole kingdom: _ Theyeta
rkaeidsel
Ik"e N.J., Iva, q,c/ 'commotion. God Almighty b
Nhilhq• xel snore peaceful assemblage .on the whole face;
~ktif,k 4:0 are 'l.°n:t know how to estimate the number
_o
AI ~he,,--, able ',ere, but there are a good 'many thousands,
tlitltt (VII 1, -oodied men ; and I hope cI may say honest
ek li'4'eveerai,„,Bober men ! can you hold„your hands up to
N4de at l,oumnd hands were raised in response.) If
itti c'rth:'`ue hands of holiest, sober men, they are the
?It,' altallisst heeati,,ntry. I thank God for this day ; and pray
rile ' vsa. rulY that He will hear the prayer I began
f tzs4,-, nip , grant
K,' give you constant an
you continudepdrohnea4wth"..earond strength, and
Iti,',ey(3ve you happy homes
h,Nilo e affectionate at borne A Nse I.`2Aur ',wives. * . ' &lends • that He will
',l4,oslettele,,,..._and don't run off to"' your children,
fare N4,:,,''',tilt:". they have (`ire them
eiftoit"ist
been. taking care of your 11et ~1L-'e vtalc--s_ae yon have been..Fwa., and that the
Qr a„' Yjill Cy_..&l4::ollSlderation. And wives, you shoulde
gtlitle toPlYinent He
that
'4
WA -14•114,1 fq your husbands against they corn
141;aSisPes Lurill in wa,:71.! them clean and-neat, as cool in sum-
ts, vie that Sour pQvi7,l' 48 circumstances will admit ; and, as
iLes:l,;--1 ";it°ll 044,'`t,, You should have your home so com-
'elthi.o Ivi; Oa:rt.' say, " Tom shall have no cause to
ha h". / ',ols, ," 41/1 to my arms,and ask the Lord to
lei ites as a isles '-h`'l dear friends, I think it is time to say
14gel-13 ealf,4ealotL",,,..ewever tell you this. We are an orderly
;• e )Ve'ol.4„everet-o.,Ple:' T. here is a great deal.o.f ro.utin.,e,
Jet,,,,lll,hieh tithe p(g, in its place, and everything in its
"Valal "°e.pe ""°, ushed Church have an order to ob-
t4,(Aeeck,ias°__lhe have no occasionlo follow. We have
`iteat,,e a`t' voiee , have
order; and herel am out of my own
'ittig, 14,2 voice ' The world's your ,parish.") Aye, the
4141 ll'ittv'444 Cti--"t3 preach the .Gospel to every creature ;
'tl4')llf,tlik; lad ket„„_,e'e.are divided into sections ; and without
11%01, Pap 4., `laissin and kind consent of the clergy-
,t,,kkil 11,4"5-14h-1-al ,
d ),et,4k to ewe is, not continue to meet you here ; but
ot hie kk have
~is consent, and if so, it would be a very,
l4,eitie forth 'onsething of the sortevery fine Sunday.'
41,,45'11,,ti0il weasr .°loservations, a hymn was sung, during
PN ql,'"i ba..... • eenveyed to Dr. APNede that a'number
~tlt 4, aket'aetta." lu.austriously distributing tracts of a ques-
k'l:l,k(lt,Plth the %lift, e, th. erefore, warned them. not to read
toe Of tithe tor which might be put into their hands,
.404 , eltiBivPrekila:_ ear them up; not to listen to personaed
111,r1,51:1:4te
1,0444r:94: curer
wficlierkmmoriracol,eit; an. dto y
m es Hepwaould give
4'44 lhtZ'at2l:e•etts lite' specious baits used to attract frail
Siilkltt'lathh-- sle„kl- utie. An old woman •whom, for some.
Ilalhrirret3 Wkg ;`, to..!nrol among number of emi-
t& ,la Aw. ail, .._ lao--tnne ago told that,e..if she went to
lik's (4Q v.,4k LI'Y a ,Lv°4l,l grow young agam, the assertion
Gi,e, 44 ,°11,4-'4 rd th.„`ruutation from Scripture. that " they who
:te,•mile, Ireti7 renew their youth like eagles." And
1,0 ,111 e; 4„,_ inter,
in the hope of renewing her youth
"1/4e44 'ltel ""4ter ) Having requested them to se-
q 4 beeli Y '54
the . • * and
1 i,14 , o.l` tha
.terrunation of the proceedings,
se-
tl a 15:41etiollPea 1/1 tile.evening, the rev. doctor pro-
-4 1)1) - tti° ' ,rile
broke
v,e,(l z.,1,, qaite .4 of th . e assemblage up.
' 'tlrß..T°l(iti .1(le of tulle when Dr. M`Neile was.preach-
Nrt";:attrZ4l,4t, vvti xi•-riarage area was occupied by a
4%v ' 'ea, "'t th glue i 4.1`,4. red beard and moustache, who
lt w 4, kimiNtl,ll att-"llYsterious phraseology, but which
‘ZWas, 11'1 1144 Wee. tl,, °ll.
CCsit the L.,,,Ne0,,:'5%5.:14, the-neighbourhood, but a large
erabie-se atia' ot-'t,'z the event of an emergency.
the , be l'u,be,
f,t'f%),,t`: ;slightest indication of coidnendaoa-
varatol,ll!hetioil hire, a- e audience, which-included
!lilad,, onmeB aroub,l4 htZtlletly separating gamed
,1,14.-igi;t,tl,',excelle-n. th: Pronounced.
,In the officeos.
litttilt.il3 Me EraPt , plu, area a large number t
-lla.epord- S Which 1;',,5'..4 observation.
tion.
111'4 1411sa were soni - - 'list 'l3 ted with great pro-
,°
,e b erous c e 4, rxu.
•,,It 114 il 1 Roman n°24Plautned P_rotestantisni.tot to
-r.ss e,Na.,4 hee„ ''atholies ‘4", slave -been from tinl-o
"A Nrilistie " Seized b te the effect that wipe op-
1, ' c't lad t° the' ..Y the
for disseminating
1,,t1,4,,,441.„,zt.....-:
..A.,,i-nt:t.faltll; yet here they. w. ere. them-
-11,, (II 1411ge '°llBl3, em bt.
e Iter COntro ployed In distil. umg
zied rovers character, impugning the
Church, and insulting:to Protestants , ,
1 _
41,. —...............,......
'41,4 81,
^itti g' REGISTRATIONS.
,
Vti""ttD'44 --"--------
the
eil to 421 t will be the last day for taking
ktsik'. ; ,48 kilo hutain and secure the elective franchise both
Z' 1)11840.11,glis- Attention, therefore, to the follow-
,ttis,' ,%, " '4, those who desire to vote at the next
~),03.,..r,
1td1,,‘440b, tax4a„or before the 20th instant all poor rates
4,,N7 t:Ilt bn that were payable on or before the 6th of
v 0
Iv pkie..pailt
These are the only rates and taxes
tk,lklq',llo b.," secure the. lective franchise.
yQlt,tl to Lvi.c_eremoved from one parish tothanotterieas.
kisF,,, Lacertv Livered
1 Ifirover-PWe toovelirseeit;of-ithre parish
ok4illiti'N Nve i,- lodge it witnrathe overseer of the parish to
IZII, he.‘ruoved.
r t),„Os ,),`;ve changed their residences, though their
I.,t;lteree a °ther qualifications may be the same, or
`ll''')3lt ' lied. Y 210'w be incorrect upon the list, should
`',‘i,.'1,1:441'11 44* to the
!,, t 11,411 4.e ersons overseers.: ~,,, who have qualify Property, and
'..l`t''l,l.,4llq:of 1,--'''n,4 011. the register-, or who
4 °lt .: tkeattlin.the last year,improperly
or
are
to be
' I.tq rtiefo:u& register, must send in a claim
IVi, v 4,4,, Le the 20th instant.
1,,,',4t.)'t, iZtk4--------____________,
14;1 ,Nli'l,Atri r ,Teerg.e Brown has come down in thee
;.t rjti,,ll,llklaild i,,Te;latery, but
.is slowly recovering. H
1,"11,,Y1,t1,01\ltx„! the same ship.
`1 11 ,oVller, '44xxeld.—At the late commencement
t, \ •1! h' ..,e, l) blin
qa, 'l\kt is, el th.o , the Rev. W. F. Taylor, Incum-
Nlt qt,,,1t1,
~,, Is ton, took the degree of LL.D.
Ilt 0,t41,, ~1111:1NNT, LAND, AND BUILDING SO-
V,la: the ‘‘.N.t J 1,11,11,1141 meeting of this society was held a
„,09'nocie, N'lcY's Hotel, London, and was nume-
°C,„ stile °) ~'3; ih rePort stated that since the establish-
!: "N ~Da.st "4 t5,Z.1861, the number of shares subscribed
establish-
-!: 430ear:Iileili above £82,000 has been received
,1.,, 41)74 ttk, The sum of £94,822 10s. 9d. had been
IN 4 144 the p of real property, the deeds for which
t 4,04 sz,i'le,:proof room of the Law Institution,
tki3lettekll4lllity '4%2- 16s. 3d. had been advanced to
a,ttli to elit 4 glen. shares. The report from Mr-
N 4 tia et 't,t ,1 tee to off a uarY, stated that the directors had
'll,O
ta11,14, apt,,,o '•eeond tenth portion of the prelinii-
'‘,tNyehid 44 otl,ll4te ten per cent. to the reserve
ti cl , the ect h. est of 6i- per cent on shares. The
uy , . 'oat •
~ al, 0.,,_ etain Y. satisfactory, and was adopted
ttik`ttlrin,44Tuatio g directors were re-elected, thanks
tclo4lll4sepa,atetusti. the several officers Of th 4 society,
or fa,41.. e refer our readers to our
archer Particulars as to the oodety,
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 43 | 0.9686 | 0.0905 | COMMERCIAL HOTEL, DALE-STREET.
MISS STAGG (Manager), at the request of many
Gentlemen, begs leave to intimate that, on and after the
15th instant, she intends to establish an ORDINARY at Two
o'clock on each Sunday, in addition N that held at Four o'clock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 356 | 0.8632 | 0.1913 | 31thilbaap Notices.
WAST LANCASHIRE RAILWAY.
14. CHBAP EXCURSIONS
1
FOR
MILL HANDS, INSTITUTIONS,SCHOLARS, &c.
The Public are respectfully informed, that the above Company
are prepared to make arrangements, at very Low Fares, for the
conveyance of an unlimited number of Persons to the various
places of intereat.on the Line, including LIVERPOOL, SOUTH-
PORT, HOGH.TON (for Hoghton Tower),, SKIPTON (for Bolton
Abbey), RAMS-BOT'FOM (for Holcombe Hi►l), &c. Stc.—For par-
ticulars, apply to C. W. EBORALL,
General Manager.
General Manager's Office, Bury, June 18, 1855.
FAST LANCASHIRE RAILWAY.
NOTICE.
Persons intending to Build Houses of a suitable character, and
of the value of not less than .e5O annual rent, within two miles of
Maghull, Town Green, Ormakirk, and Buraceugh Stations, and
within half a-mile of Aintree Station, may obtain for the periods
mentioned below permission to nominate One Resident in each
year, to whom theConspany will grant, Free of• Charge, a FIRST-
CLASS PASS-between the following Stations and the Exchange
Station, Liverpool, subject to the same conditions, in all other
respects„as Ordinary or Contract Paoaengers.. Parties intending
to claim the privilege of a Free Pasa on the conditions stated must
give notice to the Company, and obtain their sanction to the
plans, &c., in writing, before commencing to build the Dwelling-.
house in respect of which the privilege is desired.
Tana OF YEARS.
AINTREE , 7
MAGHULL lO
TOWN GREEN ll
ORMSKIRK
BURSCOUGH IS
Forfurther particulars apply tothe Undersigned,
C. W. EBORALL, General Manager.
General Manager's Office, Bury, April 27.1835.
.ONDON & NORTHWESTERN AND
-61-4, LANCASTER AND CARLISLE RAILWAYS.
PILMWITS'S GRAND, P.LC-NIC EXCURSLON,:
RE,WINDsEitMR
TO-MORROW (WEDNESDAY), the 18th Instant
A; SP RCIAL T RA IN will leave tll2 LIME•STREET STAZION,
LIVERPOOL,
WINDERIZERE,
AT HALF-PAS (tiIX
TO-MORROW MORNINGEDNESDAY),
RETURNING the SAME EVENING at SEVEN O'CLOCK..
FARES.FOR THE DOUBLE JOURNEY :
Closed Carriages
Children under Twelve Years of Age, Half-price.
HENRY R. MARCUS, Manager and Conductor.
Office-19, Leig,h-strett,. Liverpool.
A Large Assortment of
LONDON BRONZED TEA URNS & SWING KETTLES,
FENDERS, FIRE IRONS, PAPER TRAYS,
HIP, SPONGING, SLIPPER, 4- OTHER BATHS,
8.c., i.e., at
WILLIAM BRIDS ON' S,
LIVERPOOL IRONMONGERY ESTABLISHMENT,
48, BOLD-STREET.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 0.97 | 0 | Hour
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 4,105 | 0.6657 | 0.3203 | DOUBLE SUICIDE AT NEW:YORK
tonsiderable sensation has been created in New York, by
&men of double suicide, in which the victims were discovered
sitting- locked in each other's arms in an; open balcony, and.
quite dead. The attulay Courier of New. York, in narrating
the eircumstances of the case, says :—" The female came to
New York in Oct.,. 1849, her age then being eighteen years.
She took board in, a respectable boarding-house, among the oc-
cupants of which was- a Mrs. Merritt, whose husband keeps: a
shoe store in the Bowery-, near Vauxhall Garden. Her true
name was Sarah Kirkland, and she then possessed some money,
and. was regarded: as a lady of irreproaehable character. Her
piece of nativityis-a little hamlet nine- miles from Liverpool,
England, on the-Chester road. In an evil hour she made the
acquaintance of ayouth about seventeen, residing in Brceklyn„
but who had the appearance of being much older, and this ac-
quaintance ripened into a close intimacy. She was delivered
of a male child, which lived only about twelve months, when
the seducer abandoning her and removing to the -West,
she was compelled to receive miscellaneous company for
her support. A portion of this- time she was- afflicted
with St. Vitne'. dance, and was under the treatment
of Dr. Robinson, at the Emigrant's Home, an Staten
Island. About, two years since, she either made the ac-
quaintance of young Gustin, or, if he was her seducer, he then
returned, and a compact was made by them w/aich unfortu-
nately exists.too frequently in large cities.. He - became her
lover, passed his leisure time with her, and was ..supported by
the wages of her shame. On Cue afternoon previous to the
commission of the fatal deed, according to the servant's state-
ment,Prmtin came to his father's house, and asked his mother
how_she wouldlike him to bring home -.a wife-with him that
night ? ' The reply was that he had better: not.. He then
returned.to 130, Duane-street, and had a long-interview with
the girl. They seemed cheerful, but evidently acting under
mentaLemeitement. At ten o'clock, p.m., she dressed herself
carefully, and, taking the key of the apartment, presented it to
Mrs. Harrison, remarking that she was. going home, and bad
come-to take a final leave.of her, adding that she wished her
landlady to take possession of her wardrobe and effects. The
woman, supposing • hen. to be joking, paid little attention;
to. the matter, and the. twain crossed that threshold for•
the. last time. they then crossed the Fulton Ferry,
to Brooklyn, and rode up nearly to old Mr. Gustin's.
house. Here it is said that they went' together to
the house and asked admittance. The reply was
that lee might enter, but the girl could not. .And then, appa-
rently, the resolva which had been, culminating became allied,
determination. They started down Myrtle-avenue, and pre-
sently struck into an obscure street. At half-past one o'clock
they were seen, returning, he having in his hand what proba-
bly was the IK.,ttle of prussic acid. ItAvas not labelled. Then
they must have entered the• yard gate, passed through, the
beautiful garden to the rose-covered piazza, and there, seating
themselves noiselessly on, a lounge covered with black leather,
they doubtlessly partook hastily of the fatal drug, and then,
locked in each other's arms, their spirits went hand-in-hand
to him who gave them." The parents of the young man hav-
ing sent his victim's body to the dead-house, the populace
Medea demonstration opposite their dwelling.,
THE STAR REVJBLIC BURNT AT SEA,—The Star Republic,
from New York to Galveston, was accidentally burnt when
three days out. All hands saved..
FIRE AT ST. PAUL'S, WALWORTEC.—At an early hour on
Friday morning a fire broke out at St. Paul's Church, Lori-
more-srare, Carter-street, Walworth. The fire was not
extinguished until considerable damage was done to the roof
of the vestry.
COLLISION ON THE GREAT NORTIEERN RAILWAY.-011
Friday morning, as the night mail train from Edinburgh was
'proceeding to London, at the rate of about forty miles an hour,
on the Great Northern Railway, about a mile north of Don-
caster, it came into collision with a coal 'train which was
running in the same direction, and a frightful concussion
ensued, although, providentially, only two or three persons
were hurt.
PRINCE DANILO AND ins BRIDE.—The Agrarn Gazette
contains a letter from Cattaro, which states that a disagree-
ment has arisen between Prince Danilo of Montenegro and
his newly-married bride, of. so serious a nature as to be likely
to lead to a divorce. It is only three months since the mar-
riage took place. The lady, whose union with the young.
savage caused much surprise at the time, is the daughter of a
merchant at Trieste.
EXTRAORDINARY OCCURRENCE.—A few days since, while
one of the ordinary passenger trains was travelling from
Bristol to Exeter, the guard, on returning to his box at one of
the stations, found a parcel directed "E. Weller, Culmstock,
to be left at the Cullompton Station till 4311 ed for." On his
way down a most offensive smell was emitted from it, and as
he threw it out at•the Cullompton Station, he remarked on
the unpleasantness of its odour. In compliance with the
directions, the bundle was placed in the office, but the smell
became so bad that it was deposited in a horse-box, near the
goods station. Here, however, it became worse, and at last it
was so bad that it was taken to the station master, and it was
opened, when it was found to contain the body of a full-grown
mail infant which was rapidly-approaching a state of putre-
faction. An inquest was held upon it, and the guard stated
that he was unable to give any explanation 'as•to how the
parcel came into his box. Under these circumstances, the
jury returned an open verdict,
FORE'
FRANCE.—The Senate met on Mond
sident, M. Troplong, presented a repo;
the Government to contract a loan of
and the Senate decided that the discte
be immediately proceeded to. This wa:
the Senate declared, by 114 unanimous
reason to oppose the promulgation. f
Allaid;Preeident of Section, and MM.
Councillors of State, appointed to act as
sioners on the bill to fix the contingent'
troduced, and General the Marquis d'
report on that bill. The Senate at once
cussion of the measure, and declared
votes, that it saw no reason to oppose if
The Memorial des Pyre'ne'es says
Empress has greatly improved since '
Bonnes, and the pure and bracing air
had a visible effect. The inhabitants al
have had the good sense to refrain from
of their feelings, so that Her Majesty is
unmolested, which she constantly does,
or two persons of her suite. A few day
took place, when Her Majesty graciousl
inhabitants of Aas, who executed some
of the country. The Empress convers
most gracious manner, and they retired,
of a banquet, highly delighted with the
been given to them.
The Paris correspondent of The Ti:
Ottoman Ambassador has not yet arril
probability he will not leave Constantin
mtsv
itel
aeinsat eetld.
court)
th
ovmla
etsi zRe
ai
tiwai e
r•ehebeld
se:
eorcnecahtghaneensi
ddndokotnrtpl
might
oihoai
owfsesfni
t)
Fhhatbiersiaeelmannitdencoxhssthe destination,
hreiGuesaccro 0
ott
instructions
aoecrillir ,
s
,
somenGrand
amicable time
hid - °l;4''
man of the immense influence of Redse .. oil e
there have been bickerings or misunderstandieesots e
points, no one of which, perhaps, was very illy ere'
but which, in the' aggregate, were sufficient C 4 ,
0 ,
unpleasant feeling, is unquestionable. The F'. ,efere. el
meat considered itself not treated with thieitelilterAi
believed itself entitled to; and whenever eq-eo njjelf-le`v
demanded on any point under discussion, e, ri, reeee,
that they were always accepted as satisfeeee'° dieOse.l
saying that there was actual hostility betel to eter;ej
matters were not on the footing they she- tlle ' col,
the latest causes of discord is, I "belielte ell' 51c;
canalizatson of the Nile and which ReesclOie tli Vlt
of contravening in an underhand manner. eeet, 1(i
nations asked for by M. Benedetti, the late direew4
denied that he had done ace- directly or i 3;, gOlife
I am not certain that M. Benedetti or aleeeeios,
was entirely satisfied. I may add that the Ott°t", 01,b
WU' generally regarded as offering systenelcee
to questions involving the interests of r',,l etcrlool';'t
justly or not I do not determine: To make -,,,t it'oe,t't
Lord Stratford de Redcliffe's name was alinee-deil,er
mixed up in those affairs, so that it was appre"'„-00,500:1
alliance between the French and English. &over' i K
doubts °I lig/
suffer. It is' in order to clear up all donh- el' 0 e
that M. Tliouvenel proceeds to Constantinoeiee off,
e-
the view of ascertaining whether Redsche` is et
tilt $
personally indisposed to France, anl whether fly
lact
tEtßifE:hmeinitseesodevripilsr
vgoidAedeyore
ahtiiolies.;ordielev.se:_nninr.bi
shiatmTaeeeoissriec,:ftttn.eotai
fitmuiirinapealrideciths:eiattftyeid tslhEyo,hreattpe that
aer
nerrnira,vdee3inr:stiedmhoibseihi.estcfißh believe,moo;
ernotnen
tare
dasathth';;4biilliviese‘i,ehet.
iintiesis;cladriv.:oosttoeost,teiotio:::vv,, ;
baesador, Mehemed Pasha, is allowed to quit C°;07.00
thweithSoitu.; h give,'"":ft life 'ol. ,litt
version of the disturbances at Barcelona • ins ite's
0
manufacturers of Barcelona have been cornelfie :OA
time about the diminution of their orders and A erler
increasing, contraband trade in English goods' pi eke,
tione consisting of nearly all the workmen,. fooferol`' v'
50,G00, in this, the second city of Spain, had ee.lllol,f4lF/t
object being to impose new conditions on the ~,,, ei
the end of July some menacing crowds havi-I,gdr''refl;l„;
orders to the chief thananeetureee, two of the let o:liee
_accept- them, and Were assassinated. One of -fact(
merly a, Deputy to the Cortes, M. Sully Padrißrs;o•ll,'",
ilailitiariuto which. the revolution, of July has fir oitleie
rmeamnayinmettenquioftoe,bpascsusrievestadtarelghitthhecto
enxoctestsresus.t- ?licoev,,L,i, f
General,. Zapatero, asked the officers if l'epee-I'7l,
pond oh: their men, bee': he did not rt n'f,'.o
tiSfactory answer. The leaders, protested the
steet,,,A,
merit was, not political; the. groups of men 441.re14
even "-Le/le:live Espartero !". adding to the cr):,;:er',Ori
dthepearMtuodreeroaedesthe!
cTidheevwero3rtkhreingpn's union or dee. gortiel
again, but the master mareefacseeturueedrs ti)laidia'!!..l3li'Left"PfreA
concealed themselves. The ringleaders
the resumption of work. The Captain
.o;'l,e'teeet;
contienf:ol,-„,iot
of bringing: about a collision vrith these blind i,fcr' tell
the re •see le
masses, and' not having _received yet aril iol)
he had demanded, withdrew with Ins gc en nnti`, to
into the citadel.. The city was ccusequentleleri eontin
The aceetints from -Barcelonaeof thsea Utttl. p,,,:,,,i
favourable.. The disturbanceS reael'e'„geoet 10:40.
pressed, for tranquillity prevailed se had resumed e
Carlistr
several of the-discontented op
ereattiailtate that the
ae ci
The Madrid.journals of the eeee,e.eu a large, see w•e,el
3ion in Spain had been preP"A`""e„e the Clue's ~.
Spanish refugees, among who '''''.-"- e guard of a
Sendros, and ,who formed the advanced g i_ee.. •
siderable baud, have been arrested in the ewe
Aside.h e
Cortzs -have passed the bill for a loan of •,,,
reels. , t\le
HANOVER4-The Constitution Committee 014., tlleese'
Chamber have- presented a report and address ',tinily'
praying him to preserve his Ilewel, prerogatiepolotelere
promote the independence of thetitingdeme ~.ilain ejaltte;
:present Conetttntion unaltered. A dPsPatc7. Ifie 00,01
Friday's. date, says:- " In consequence
report and the address voted to the
s;nis-- t' rs for an in
have been prorogued to-day by the Zee-- e i
A;ari 'etligil
period." t .---itu
AusreerA.,-According to the Pattie" grea .1 flu-i,
ns .., 3
fists at Milan Verona, Venice, and other, we, had ..9"tlli
Italy; so much so that Marshal llateLin-d I, statese
40,000 additional troops. A Viennee. donate -.,_, cone'
ea o
of
two Chicle,
force of this-extent, will leave immediately.
several rtievs te
raging: with the most fatal effects in: seve.-A roiareive f
Austrian empire, particularly in Hunger,' sil." prerefie
ITALY.—The little Italian Governments Are „ Ott/it 01
take their part in the expected FAISSO-Gerol_3'.o4rd.he
against Weeterneivßization, for we find in thte tee J.'il."'
Midi a full confirmation of the intelligence thl rr;°' pr/
Naples has resolved upon preventing- the Al ie;:o.
Crimea from drawing supplies from7leis doming 0 of,„,e
Russre,--Letters from Russia inform us tbt elley,. 'te* •
of trobps'is tehe made; twelve men being dralteel
one thousand:souls. Old soldiers, who have lee''`". ,'3fe
after twentpflye years' actual service, hall 07110 ,vere
called to hear,arras in the ranks of the Rusel'e4Peed eel
appeals have been. made, and in several cases '-eil- 1119
the ,
appeared in person, with the view of showing t tee,
unfit for service. All, however, hnof no avail e ills tile
authorities-remain inexorable. , 4°' eri 0
A private. letter, from St. Petersburg, of Llibefee' t,
~e 0
states that .the discovery of the " infernal Ing-etelerite ,`",V
- allied fleets,• had caused universal disaelleloreeintee
Russian government were, however, about to
.eee el ,
Tee 110,e0
of submarine warfare on a large scale. pee;%,,' ri
employed can be moved beneath the surface, °,r 01 i••.A 1
bottom_of the water, and they are to be emPlGt'e, eai,'i J
close to the keel of the line of battle ships, larg' el be 'Or
taining each a ton of powder. To- these fire sfr reee'
slow match, to give the submarine boat and he
escape,
- 7 j•
ZILE: /ND/A 0 VERLAND if 0
4,9erot
~,,bgY I, oetwor
Me Overland Mail has arrived, bringing """e of "0191
thelOth of June, and Calcutta papers-to tlio ,?,I'-'" 10 ; 0
~,,er 00 yr
it brings no intelligence from China. The tee,tic ~e ee
thy,Times says :--: ' There are no military oPer',, I:A';erK
eeind to record. In the Niiam's country tl!ele iseeteiK
several gang robberies. Our Peshawur i'ion!le,e vete et
sone 'el flee several cases of robbery have occurred in el le 1
rnarkable as indicative of the desperate characterlel, 1,0
daring of the Plunderers in these parts. Thepe: ,11 014 Y
'Captain Madigan in Burmah have been capture asi"teot,,,,
has succeeded in his search for the Peninstdavtio: et" el`
steamer Pasha, which in a collision with the Pitt '6,ool'er
years-ago went down in the China Seas ; she i 5 to in) t°lo.
water, and Mr. Lovey is in hopes of being ahlee,,e9Vell‘d
the treasure on board, £60,000. It is in centers' 1", t,i), ouro
tend the line of electric telegraph from 313,4: 14llet tilt
The Governor-General is enjoying better hea"beeig, se' A •
market is easy, but trade is. dull, little busines' helot:, per,
done at this season of the year. Freights are !, ter lis('
DO ' iet efeS
rate of exchange has advanced." •c - ere le- le.
The Calcutta-Englishman says :-We 10,1:it 01,05.(eie I
from China, but the purchases of rice for tliii-04,011,,,t °le
continued with unabated vigour, and the de"',.0o1";jo 1,15 bee'
for tonnage has given a lift to ourotherwisei","osoes, l'`,o6e!
The accounts from the up-country are fteeill-eell'eteelrere.
staple piece goods, in which considerable ~ eoe,i,e sta•t
done, at probably rather better prices; faerere'Sre`aecr ll,'/
continue generally to be dull, and at unrelen-t e'ast leetill!,*4
Our money-market is in a somorr:o P„ ail' 51iler
than it has been in for some
effected
„lore e 7:,
still clearances of goods sold are effecte r tic" t P tr,
Fneromese--After our last mail left one °rope 14.,„ fur fri
were taken up for the West Indies and gd. ken eTheete „
ta .itr: ei , sits
vions rates, and several vessels were g , 3r 0
rate Mauritius to load home with sugars at ~cli 3 slat, ,10 II
£5 lOse to £6 10s. per ton. There is '-opcilse.o clolgo
produce in our markets until the river
or'
te,,,,e, tit ,
heavy arrivals of ships from Europe
__!tighou'enes,
we hardly think rates can be maintained thr" of on, prole
in another month or six weeks the abundaneeeloon.,
,gip_
„; to eci".e,3 I°Pfe(
looked for may, enable owners again r, - r
quotations, which are for London :-Sugar' other
£3 15s. ; jute, £3 7s. 6d. ; seeds, £6 ; r nivereo. 4
proportion, with the usual deduction °,,eeds at ''
.lee ,
America sugar has been taken at $l2, anu'ieeteb3) pei7ifer;
The following vessels have arrived at Alblie7;001 1.4
lartu, ' aoo' 40'
pool
07:
vomt hle
e;
bsu,elatefn,r
from
-mt
the
ehEopei
aiadSrvloaiumGd i
eu.
Crockett,
o:Acikd,
jyeaatdmtniass,f,
eraßotnjn
ieedeo k
i,
ee. tofi-
roe,
il:li:its,
c_.. n 0
oc:
ep e
don'; ttopyii_
Salem, John Wood, and Queen of Eng
1,00 i.,,, 'Ol
the Hecla for Glasgow. ~__
s- coal
Adae ,:ro ~
The following vessels are loading sameal
_ie e_otf,
ofPate -Mermaid, Sarah and -Erritn.",tnereary, iljfi,,velo,6o"
Albuera. For Liverpool the James o,orlqueror,ild'"Jeeled'
(American) Jessica, Lotus, Tartar, u ) a eoo
--ie. 1! °I
Cursetjee. For Marseilles, La Mai t o',
fir."—--- f
~
i iirensf e
_ bea. 0 op -
the • oh; 2 pir
LIE Daily News mentions, under lv ehss -- ear . e
eols
rumours, that the conviction that anti growl"' nag beent at 41
liament is inevitable continues to gat
committee. _ever -lee,
Alarni, Tyfhon, David Crockett (An.Ler_ieGaneid,e, the
i,,
point OF TRADE.—The
towingfolloing
ire
into au ear,.......1 .„ ,
ed by the Board of Trade
o ..sed at se ee. jeeo 1
the subject of a Code of Signals t ne "
Captain C. 11. 1/. oi
,t,,, .
F. W. Beechy, F:R.S., Chairman;
~... captain G• it%,
_ii -0,,
R.N.; Captain Robert Fitzroy, it-i."' R. Bonlialo r capToP;
Denny , H.C3., General Shinow
men,
oRn.Ne .0,
fStehcereEtaldryertoßrLeltohyrde'ns ; •oef atpitatennTrhis,
Muaornndeetlt, LiverHarnett,
Lloyd's o lShi po
Committeew neri;
theel: eg.i Association;stra rle. n e rAI v
iStYocilielltYgles'se3%.lral:sifilpt;:r
‘.t
partlVet t
3.4exedd
rJuLY 17, 1555
GZi INTELLIGENCE.
mate met on Monday last, when
1
, presented a report on a bill atitl, Itl
,
contract
thea loan
iodisoeufa7asoa of millions bill ded
that ~
eeded to. This was accordinglid°s4';
,by 114 unanimous votes, that it: e
a promulgation. f the measure.„,ll, AT to
Section, and MM. Pelitet and „tl
appointed to act as Governineut qair
) fix the contingent of 1855, were fl 'oath
ral the Marquis d'Hautpool Pot, e
The Senate at once proceeded to 3') doe
sure, and declared unanimouslY, 'vis
reason to oppose its promulgaiti,fo! ionQi
'es Pyre'ne'es says :—The hen ,hm
y improved since her residencek'ieard
e and bracing air of the mot ,711 r: hich
The inhabitants and bathers oi
ense to refrain from any noil e?le ; 147 I
:hat Her Majesty is able to
he constantly does, only atteuk„d, Wl* of
r suite. A few days since a
r
e
ihdrhshe
soalMajestyledneFg
a axedi
r:sea et
ettenetildinid
French
at
hyegw
ohdr
ioaot retired,
on,
some
a,nao u
tahe
ts
niel
ndyaf receivedoprfunett
reception
until
ph
uitoali ,ioryeijo
ill:
9:
ir
a Empress conversed with tbe7oo,l oth,
h he
,00fndtehnetmot
most amicable
Times saYs
l lO
at
ilorgwhhnta stbielnaoteotxstpyheeeact
mtosoteavedir
(the'
roe
nnkeitenegivinti
ho,hteark
,4;41".
al
rms
of his instructions from t"- a
tue
fA fin.,,„. r':,;50:114
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 47 | 0.9466 | 0.0897 | OPENING OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE,
LONDON.
Ladies, Gentlemen, and Families are recommended to the
CLARENDON
PRIVATE BOARDING-HOUSE,
17 and 18,—ARUNDEL-STREET, STRAND,-17 and 18.
Coffee Room 40 feet long, with every homely comfort.
Close to Theatres, Parks, City, and Rail to Exhibition.
Bed and Breakfast, 3s. per day.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 170 | 0.9286 | 0.1399 | ZUrbntsball.
TO-M OR ROW (Wednesday), the 18th instant, at Twelve o'clock, at
the Public Sale-room, Exchange•buildings,
36 Casl:s TINCAL.
Apply to T. and H. LITTLEDALE and CO., Brokers.
TO-MORROW (Wednesday), the 18th instant, at Twelve o'clock, at
the Public Sale-room, Exchange-buildings,
182 Bales Bombay MADDER ROOTS.
Apply to T. and H. LITTLEDALE and CO., Brokers.
TO-MORROW (Wednesday), the 18th instant, at Twelve o'clock, on
the Quay east side Brunswick Dock, Liverpool,
4550 Pieces second quality t PINE DEALS,
2231 Pieces third quality
5 Cords HEMLOCK LATH WOOD,
Being the cargo now landing ex America, from Quebec.--Apply to
Messrs. DICKSONS, BOARDMAN, and Co., Merchants.
170 Pieces, measuring 11,536 feet, Yellow PINE TIMBER,
30 Pieces Red PINE TIMBER,
29 Pieces OAK TIMBER,
135 Pieces first quality
129 Pieces second quality Bright PINE DEALS,
105 Pieces third quality JJJ
3600 Merchantable W.O. W.I. STAVES,
Being the cargo just arrived per Tam O'Shanter, from Quebec.—
Apply to Messrs. C. and B. GRAY and Co., Merchants.
EDWARD CHALONER, Broker,
No. 6, East side Queen's Dock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 169 | 0.9347 | 0.1152 | LOADING BERTH, COBURG DUCK.
"BLACK BALL" LINE OF
BRITISH & AUSTRALIAN ROYAL MAILPACKETS.
Under contract with H.M. Government tc convey the Royal
Mails to and from Australia every month, and to make the
passa,te in 65 days under penalty.
SAILING ON THE FIFTH OF EVERY MONTH.
LIVERPOOL TO MELBOURNE.
PACKET of the 51/: AUGUST.
Gools received until Midnight of the 31st July.
The magnificent new Clipper Ship
JAMES BAINES,
CHARLES M`DONNELL, Commander;
2,515 tons register, 5,000 tons burihen.
This vessel has just completed her maiden voyage
from Liverpool to Melbourne in the unprecedented time of 63 days
out, being the shortest passage ever made by any sailing-ship or
steamer in the world, the Great Britain not excepted. She was
built expressly for this line, by the celebrated Donald M'Kay, of
Boston, builder of the Lightning, Champion of the Seas, Great
Republic, &c. Her accommodations far surpass in comfort and
splendour any other ship or steamer in the trade.—Apply to the
Owners,
JAMES BAINES and CO., 6, Cook-street.
Sept. 5.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,073 | 0.9112 | 0.1598 | PROVISIONS.
LIVERPOOL, JULY 13.—There is no improvement in the
demand for beef; the sales for the week are unusually light, but
holders do not press the market. Pork also remains dull and
lifeless, without change in value. In bacon the transactions are
on a very trifling scale; the dealers still hold off, but the light
stock prevents prices giving way. For lard there is less inquiry,
and the sales for the week do not reach 100 tons. The condition
of the cheese lately arrived is not satisfactory, hence sales are
difficult to effect. Grease butter is saleable in small quantities
only. Tallow early in the week was active, but is now dull.
ST. JOHN'S MARKET.—The following are the prices current
in this market :
Beet 1. 11 Os 6 to Os 8d Peas 13. peck is Od to ls 6d
Mutton
Veal
Lamb, per qr.__ 0 7 0 8 'Melons 0 0— 0 0
Fresh Pork 0 0— 0 0 'Asparagus 10,100.. 0 0— 0 0
Cod Fish 0 0— 0 0 Filberts 0 0— 0 0
Bret
Haddock ....
Soles 0 6 0 8 Pines, For... each 0 0— 0 0
Salmon 0 8 1 0 Do. Eng 6 0— 0 0
turbot 0 8— 0 10 Fowls .. vcouple 3 6 0 0
Fresh Butter 1 2 1 3 Ducks
Salt Ditto OlO 1 0 Geese each 0 0— 0 0
Lobsters .... each 1 3 0 0 Turkeys
Eggs lf, 124 5 7 5 8 Hares
Potatoes... peek 1 0-1 3 Rabbits .. vcple 1 9 2 0
New Ditto .. l► its 0 1— 0 2 Grouse 0 0— 0 0
Cucumbers., each 0 5 1 0 Partridges
LIVERPOOL AGRICULTURAL MARKET.—The latest quota-
tions in this market are as follows :
Ilay,old,est 0, 10 4is 2d Potatoes, 1. d. a. 1.
New 0 9—o 10 Kemps 0 0— 0 0
Clover
Ditto, Green 0 2i— 0 31 Cattle
Vetches
Straw, Wheat 0 7 0 8- Carrots 0 0— 0 0
_
Oat
Barley 0 6 —0 7,
.Mangelwurzel.... 0 0 0 0
Manure ...... . 5 0 7 0
HOLLOWAY'S PILLS.—Mrs. Mary Walters, of the Woodside,
near Dudley, had been a sufferer for several years from lowness of,
spirits and nervousness, together with settled pains in the head
and stomach, arising from bad digestion, and, notwithstanding
the various remedies tried, she obtained no relief. In a state of
mind bordering on despair, she embraced the opportunity of
taking Holloway's Pills, which were given to her by a benevolent
lady, and this excellent medicine had so good an effect that she
was induced to continue them for a short time, which resulted in
her being restored to health.
DIT ABBY'S DELICIOUS REVA.LENTA ABABICA. FOOD
invariably restores health, without medicine, inconvenience, or
expense, as it saves fifty times its cost in other remedies. We
extract a few out of 50,000 testimonials of cures, which had
resisted all medicines. Cure No. ISo_—"Twenty-five years' ner-
vousness, constipation, indigestion, and debility, from which I.
had suffered great misery, and which no medicine could remove
or relieve, have been effectually cured by Du Barry's Food in a
very short time.—W. R. REEVE, Pool Anthony,Tiverton." Cure
No. 4,208.—c. Eight years' dispepsia, nervousness, debility, with
cramps, spasms, and nausea, have been effectually removed by
Dußarry's delicious food in a very short time.—Rev. Jorm W.
FLA.VELL, Ridlington Rectory, Norfolk." Cure" No. 1,78.1.=-Not
expected to live six days longer, I was cured by Du Barry's
admirable Health-restoring Revalenta Arabica Food.—MAO-
DALENA. PURVIs." More ample details than our space permits
will be seen in Messrs. Du. Barry's advertisements.
offo
2000 is
articleser seudp ert r a
ton in epe rs on
following.)roTdhuecyiral:ge
patronised by Royalty and the most distinguished Families in
different parts of the world. During the last four years their ex-
traordinary efficacy has astonished thousands.,
The Hair Restored, Baldness and Greyness Prevented -by
BEETHAM'S CAPILLARY FLUID. The truly wonderful effi-
cacy of this unique preparation is the theme of admiration where-
ver introduced. It effectually prevents the hair falling off or
turning grey, promotes its growth on places that have been bald
for years, strengthens weak and fine hair, and gradually restores
its natural colour, without the use of dye. It cleanses the head
from scurf, and imparts a beautiful transparent, glossy appear•
ance, and keeps it in any desired form. In inducing the growth
of whiskers, eyebrows, mustachios, its effect is surprising.—
Bottles 2s. 6d.; double size 4s. 6d. ; 7s. 6d., equal to four small ;
its. to six small.
EASE AND COMFORT IN WALKING.— BEETHAM'S
CORN AND BUNION PLASTER.—This most important dis-
covery causes the greatest delight and astonishment wherever
it is introduced. Its effect, to use the words of numerous corres-
pondents, is truly miraculous ; the most inveterate Corns,
Bunium,...atuLthose _unsightly and painful enlargements of the
GREAT TOE JOINTS, which disfigure the beautiful symmetry of
the foot, have been immediately relieved from all pain and uneasi-
ness. and in a short time entirely disappeared, after twenty
yearrldifferilig.' • Unekceptioriable references are allowed to be
given to individuals in almost every part of the United Kingdom.
—Sold in packets, Is.; boxes, 2s. 6d. ; which will be sent free
to any part of the United Kingdom on the receipt of 14 or 34
postage stamps, by Mr. BEETHAM, Cheltenham, or any of his
Agents.
For removing Superfluous Hair, BERTRAM'S VEGETABLE
EXTRACT is the only article ever discovered which does not
cause pain or injury to the skin. Numerous worthless articles
are introduced, containing the most deadly poisons, and unfit to
be applied to the human body; many of them remove the skin,
and produce dangerous wounds. The effect of this extract is
unerring, and gives the greatest satisfaction.—Packets, 55., sent
free for 68., by Mr. BEETHAM, Cheltenham.
Sold by Mr. ASTLEY, perfumer, &c., 53, Bold-street; CLAY and
ABRAHAMS, chemists, Bold-street; THOMPSON and SON, che-
mists, Church street; and HOPKINS, 1, St. George's-crescent,
Liverpool; BLACKHURST,chemist, Preston; STANDRINO, 1, Pic-
cadilly, and GLAZIER, chemist, Shudehill, Manchester; Paorr,
229, Strand; SANGER, 150, Oxford-street; BARCLAY, SUTTON,
EDWARDS, RUMSEY, 2, Queen-street Place, London. Sold whole-
sale by Mr. HoPKINS, 1, St. George's-crescent, Liverpool. All
Chemists and Perfumers will procure them for you.—Proprietor :
Mr. BEETHAM, Chemist, Cheltenham.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 806 | 0.8986 | 0.1604 | THE AUSTRIAN .PROPO SA L.
TILE diplomatic papers laid on Thursday evening( on the
fable of the House of Commons, refer almost exclusively tathe
solution of the third point formally proposed by Austria (after
Russia had rejected the solution proposed by the Allies, and
consented to by Austria). Lord John Russell's letter to the
Earl of Clarendon, recommending the Austrian proposal, is,
of course, a leading feature of the co: respondence. The letter
in question is dated Vienna, April lsith, and his Lordship
says :
Yesterday,. after the Conference, the- Plenipotentiaries of
France, Great Britain, and Turkey, met lit Count Buol's apart
ment. There-had been an anxious feeling at the result of our
former meeting: The position on both sides appeared to be
uneasy, though• much more on the side of Austri'► than on
ours. The war wouldOndeed, in all probability continue to
be a glorious struggle'to•England and to France,-and calculated
to maintain the reputation of those two great; Powers. But
the waste of life anctruoney would be enormous: On the other
hand, the fact of Austria's, declining to join in the• war would
have roused a very _ angry feeling in France rind in Great
Britain. With the Western:Powers alienated, Prussia triumph-
ing over her in Germany,:and Russia bent on her humiliation,
hersituatiOn would have'been: almost intolerable.. These con-
siderations on both sides.led-to the prevalence of a conciliatory
spirit in the meeting of yesterday.
- -
After much discussionshiAordship'proceeds to state, Count
Buol proposed a genera' understanding, with the terius of
which the public are acquainted.- Lord John Russell, having
stated the propositions of Count Bitol, says : •
Freserved my opinion forfutther•consideration. Such_ was
the general result of this important meeting. M. Dranyn
deLlmys-called upon me in the evening, and we drew up
together a-rough outline of the-preposals to be made. It will
be seen,
.that supposing the imposition to be rejected as well
as the Erst,• the• value of the third ,depends on three things
1. Guarantee by all the contracting. Powers of the territory-
of Turkey.
2. A,syatem of counterpoise in the Black Sea.
3. The limitation of the Russian: force in the Black Sea to
the number•of ships maintained befOre-the war, under pain of
war with the Allies.
The value of this last article congits.in the maintenance of
the alliance- directed against Russia.- confess it appears to
me, that ifthis-third system can be made an ultimatum by
Austria, ft-04..1A to be accepted by the Western Powers. In,
saying this, I may appear to contradict' my former opinions.
But in fact Ido not retract those opinions,. The Systein of
limitation lr believe to be far better than that of coufiterpOise-
But the questionis between an imperfect security for Turkey
and for Europe,-and the continuance of the war. Should the
Government of her Majesty, in concert with that of France,
be of opinion that such a peace can be -accepted, they will
instruct Lord Westmoreland accordingly. - If not, I hope to
be allowed to be-heard personally before-- the final decision is
made.
In the Earl (4-Clarendon's despatches tO the Earl of West-
moreland, on this question, the absence of- any practical in-
ducement, on Austria's part, for the Allies- to concur in the
proposal, is dwelt upon. Lord Clarendon says- :---
If we had brought oar minds to despain•of• success in war,
and were ready therefore to make peace on any terms which
will at once put an end to hostilities, then. he proposal which
Austria offers t& make on our behalf to Massie, would be in-
expedient, because it contains the principle of limitation to
which Russia has already objected, and her objections to which
she has now publiclyunnounced in her circular of May 10 ;
and, if such were the,hopeless state of our affairs-, it would be
necessary to make some proposal that Russia would be likely
to accept, instead of one which, in the opinion.of Count Buol,
Russia is almost certain to reject.
That if, on the other hand, we still think thefuture prospects
of the war sufficiently favourable to entitle-us to persevere in
demanding the conditions which we have patforward as afford-
ing a foundation for future security, then the proposal of
Austria is open to serious• objections, because, though it con-
tains the principle of a limitation of the naval forces of Russia
in the Black Sea, the.principle is not applied in a manner that
would be effectual for its-purpose ; and it does not contain the
principle of consular.uppotntments and supervision which is
the beat security that the: limit which may be agreed upon.
might- not be exceeded without the knowledge. of the Sultan.
and his Allies.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 980 | 0.9538 | 0.1124 | MARRIAGES.
In Camden, New Jersey, U.S;, by the Rev. John Duncan,
at the residence of Thomas Rowe Searle, Esq., brother-in-law
of the bride, Walker Moore Tomlinson; Esq:; of Philadelphia,
to Frances Maria, youngest daughter of Thomas Hamill, Esq.,
Breck-road, Everton.
On the 28th Ult., at St. Paul's Church, by the Rev. G. Read,
James Orr, second son of Mr. David Marples, to Eliza, only
daughter of Mrs. J. H. Pardy, of this town.
On the 28th ult., at St. Michael's Church. Pitt-street,
by the Rev. William Ffolliott, 8.A., Mr. David Pearl. to Miss
Margaret Edwards. •
On the 30th ult., at St. Michael's Church, Pitt-street,
by the Rev. William Ffolliott, 8.A., Mr. James Yeomans to
Miss Mary Ann Routleff.
On the sth inst., Mr John Lyon, of this town, Ito Miss S.
Westrup Chaloner, niece of Mr. J. Westrup, Denston, Suffolk.
On the sth inst., at Littleham, Devon, the Rev. J. A. Atkin-
son, to the Hon. Charlotte Adelaide, daughter of Viscount
Chetwynd.
On the 6th inst., at Glasgow, by the Rev. M. Cochrane, Mr.
Joseph G. Collard, of this town, to Helen, youngest daughter
of Mr. A. Hilpert.
On the sth inst., at St. Oswald's Roman Catholic Chapel,
Old Swan, by the Rev. J. Maddocks, Mr. Peter Cavanagh, of
Dublin, to Miss _Elizabeth O'Neill, of Stanley. - - --
On the sth inst., at Neston, by the Rev. R. W. Gleadowe,
Mr. Joseph Cahry, engineer, Dublin, to Margaret Sennett,
eldest daughter -of Mr. Day, of this town, and niece of the
late' Mr. W. Meacock, of Parkgate.
On the 7th inst., at St. Paul's Church, Knightsbridge, by.
the Hon. and Rev. E. Stewart, assisted by the Hon. and Rev.
R. Liddell, Francis Hallowell Carew, Esq., (late 16th Lancers),
youngest son of the late Captain Hallowell Carew, R.N. of
Beddington-park, Surrey, to Mary Fanny, youngest daughter
of the late F. H. Cornewall, Esq., of Delbury-hall, Salop.
The bride was attired in a rich white glace silk dress, with
magnificent Brussels lace flounces ; body and sleeves trimmed
with the same, and large veil to correspond. Wreath of
orange flowers and bouquet to match; a superb pearl neck-
lace and diamonds. _ _
On the Bth inst., at St. John's Church, by the Rev. G. L.
Ireland, 8.A., Mr. Samuel Garner to Miss Susan Matthey.
On the 9th inst., at St. Peter's Church, Mr. Thomas Black-
burn Charnley, to Miss Caroline Roberts.
On the 9th inst., at St. Peter's Church, Eaton-square, Lon-
don, S. Whitbread, Esq., M.P., to Lady Isabella C. Pelham,
third daughter of the Earl of Chichester.
On the 9th inst., at Didsbury, near Manchester, by the Rev.
W. J. Kidd, rector, Mr. P. Fr. Bailey, of this town, to Sarah,
youngest . daughter of Mrs. Bennett, Didsbury.
On-the 10th inst., at Holy Trinity Church,-Birkenhead, by
the Rev. H. G. Rernon, Mr. John Reynolds to Miss Martha
Jackson.
On the 10th inst., at St. Silas's Church, by the Rev. T. W.
Jones, Mr. Edward Vaughan, warehouseman, to Sarah, daugh-
ter of Mr. John H. Buck, builder, Everton.
On the 10th inst., at St. George's Church, Hanover-square,
London, the Hon. A. Hay, lieut., R.N., son of the Earl of Kin-
noul, to Katherine Louisa, daughter of C. Derby, Esq., and
niece to Sir S. Fludyer, Bart.
On the 10th inst., by the Rev. R. Paton, D.D., minister of
St. David's parish, Glasgow, Mr. Henry Atherton, of Sutton-
heath, near Prescot, to Alice, sixth daughter of the late Bin-
ning Bell, Esq., of Threave, Ayrshire.
On the 10th inst., at St. John's Church, by the Rev. G. L.
Ireland, 8.A., Mr. William Green to Miss Henrietta Webster.
On the 10th inst., at St. Mary's Church, Edge Hill, by
the Rev. F. M—Harke, Elizabeth Hannah, only daughter of
Daniel Stubbs, Esq., Edge Vale, to Thomas, youngest son of
the late John Wheatley, Esq., of Edge Hill.
On the 10th inst., at St. Michael's Church, Pitt-street, by
the Rev. William Ffolliott, 8.A., Mr. John Guyton to Miss
Margaret Harding.
On the 10th inst., at St. Michael's Church, Pitt-street,
by the Rev. William Ffolliott, M.A., Mr. Charles Frederickson
to Miss Winifred Rowlands.
On the 10th inst., at St. Michael's Church, Pitt-street, by
the Rev. 'William Ffolliott, • 8.A., Mr. William Kissack to
Miss Catherine McKneale.
On the 11th inst., at St. Paul's Church, by the Rev. G
Read, Mr. Edward John Henscheldt to Miss Margaret Anne
Hughes.
On the 11th inst., at the Parish Church, Childwall, by the
Rev. E. A. P. Campbell, Captain Richard Corney, of the ship
Ardencraig, to Miss A. J. Wilson, Wavertree.
On the 11th inst., at the Roman Catholic Chapel, Woolton,
by the Rev. C. Kershaw, Signor Guiseppe Stagno, eldest son
of Signor Paolo Stagno, of Palermo, to Mary Catherine, eldest
daughter of Joseph Penlington, Esq., of Sunny Bank, Woolton.
1011- -L 0/ /I _
Pollock, M.A., Mr. William Relton, to Ann, second daughter
of Mr. Peter Bond, of Bickerstaffe, in this county.
On-the 12th inst.. at St. Mary's Church, Edge-hill, by the
Rev. F. M. Harke, Mr. John Wright Crosby, of West Derby,
to Margaret, second daughter of James Crellin, Esq., Belle-
field House.
On the 12th inst., at Woodchurch, Cheshire, by the Rev.
E. W. Cory, 8.A., curate of Peasmarsh, Sussex, Alexander
William Paterson, Esq., of Blackburn, to Elizabeth Melicent,
youngest daughter of the late-Mr. J. R. Harraden of Cam-
bridge.
On the 15th inst., at St. John's Church, by the Rev. G. L.
Ireland, 8.A.-,—Mr. Robert Byers to Miss Ann Griffiths.
On the 16th inst., at St. John's Church, by the Rev. G. L.
Ireland, 8.A., Mr. William Way to Miss Jane Samia Briscal.
On the 15th inst., at St. Peter's, Sackville-street, Everton,
by the Rev. George Augustus Todd, Mr. John Sharrock,
miller, to Mrs. Mary Ellen Higgins, both of Everton.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 729 | 0.9632 | 0.1121 | FRIDAY.
The Speaker took the chair at four o'clock, when the Lords'
amendments to several bills were considered and agreed to. A
petition was presented by Lord Hoririu from the Corporation
of the Trinity House, Hull, praying to be heard by counsel
against clauses in the Merchant Shipping Amendment Bill,
before a select committee. _ _ _
After some routine business had been disposed of, and
several questions answered relative to the provision for officers'
orphans, the retirement of officers on full pay, arrears of pay,
and as to the alleged failure of the Enfield rifles, the latter of
which was answered in the negative, the CHANCELLOR of
the EXCHEQUER, in answer to Sir H. WILLOUGHBY, said it
would be necessary to have a supplementary estimate for the
Naval Department, which would be laid on the table before
the end of the session.
Some conversation then ensued relative to the alleged
outrages by the police ; in the course of the remarks elicited,
Sir G. GREY said a commission, consisting of the Recorder
of London ; Mr. Armstrong, the Recorder of Manchester ;
and Mr. Henderson, the Recorder of Liverpool, had been
appointed to examine into the case.—Mr. T. DIINCOMBE,
who had instituted the present question, expressed his satis-
faction with the names which had bean mentioned.
THE DISTURBANCES IN BELGRAVIA.-Mr.WILSON having
moved that at its rising the House be adjourned till Monday,
in answer to a question from Lord H. VANE, Sir G. GREY
said no information had been received which could lead, with
any degree of certainty, to the conclusion that there would be
a repetition of outrages on Sunday. He expressed his opinion
that the frequent repetition of these questions had a tendency
to excite the public mind, and to lead to those excesses which
it was their object to avoid. . . .
SUPPLEMENTAL ESTIMATE.-Mr. DISRAELI wished to
know, as it had been stated that a large supplemental estimate
would be wanted before the end of the Session, whether the
CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER, when he contracted for the
last loan, had engaged that no further sum should be raised
this year in the same manner.—The CHANCELLOR of the
EXCHEQUER said he had entered into an engagement that no
further loan should be entered into till all the instalments
were paid. He did not wish to convey to the house that there
was any intention of resorting to a loan, at all events till the
end of December.—The motion.for adjournment was agreed to.
Lady Raglan and Lord Raglan's Annuity Bill was read a
third time and passed.
. .
The house then went into committee on the Tenants' Com-
pensation (Ireland) Bill. A protracted debate took place on
the clauses, which gave rise to several divisions. Some of the
clauses having been sustained, the chairman reported progress,
and obtained leave to sit again.
THE STAGE CABRIA.GES' BILL was opposed by Mr.
SCHOLEFIELD, who moved that it be read a second time that
day three months, because a clause had been introduced into
it which had been originally inserted in the Friendly Societies'
Act, and having been struck out of that measure, it was in-
serted in the present bill.—Mr. MASTERMAN seconded the
amendment.—Lord JOHN MANNERS considered the opposi-
tion was quite justifiable, and he should lend all his assistance
to it.—Sir HENRY WILLOUGHBY should like to know on
what principle the Board of Inland Revenue had made com-
positions for mileage duty,, by which, in certain cases, it was
reduced to a id., instead of lid. per mile? That was the
case with Horne's omnibuses from Charing-cross to Euston-
square, which paid id. a mile, while others running the same
road paid ltd., yet this was the proposal intended to be carried
out by the sixth clause.—Mr. HORSFALL hoped the hon.
member for Birmingham would not persevere with his motion,
as he (Mr. Horsfall) had given notice of a motion to omit the
sixth clause. It was his intention to proceed with that mo-
tion, that the country might see who those members were
that would pass such a clause as this.—Mr. WILsoN ex-
plained, Mr. SCHOLEFIELD withdrew his motion, and the
bill was read a second time. Some other bills were forwarded
a stage ; the orders of the day were disposed of, and the house
adjourned at half-past one o'clock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 600 | 0.9264 | 0.1453 | DEVONSHIRE.
MR. JOHN HOOPEiilas instructions to
SUBMIT for SALE, at the Globe Hotel, in Newton Abbot,
on THURSDAY, the 9th day of August next, at Two for Three
o'clock in the Afternoon punctually.
A VALUABLE FREEHOLD ESTATE,
suited to a Gentleman desirous of residing upon it, and admirably
adapted to a safe investment of capital. The property is advan-
tageously placed within an easy reach of excellent Markets, and
known as
" WRAY BARTON."
The whole is within a ring fence, and situate in the Parish of
3loretonhampstead, twelve miles from Exeter, and ten from the
Newton Abbot Station of the South Devon Railway, and comprises
TWO HUNDRED AND NINETY-FOUR ACRES,
principally of prime irrigated MEADOW and rich PASTURE LAND.
The House, which is a singularly neat, handsome, and most
substantial Residence of the Tudor style, was built by the Pro-
prietor about eight years since, on a bold and cheerful eminence
sloping to the south, in the centre of the Property, and overlooking
the far-famed Valley of the Wray. It comprises Breakfast,
Dining, and Drawing Rooms, ten Bed Rooms; with all convenien,
Offices, Stables, Coach-house, and every other building that a
Gentleman can require in order to become a good farmer, or
necessary for a Tenant; with walled and Kitchen Gardens. Its
beautiful Park-like Grounds, studded Timber and Rookeries, with
magnificent hanging Woods and jutting Rocks, as seen from the
House, impart at once to the spectator a most lively and enchant-
ing appearance. It is perfectly sheltered from the north•east and
west winds.
The Turnpike Road from the north to the south of Devon, and
its Watering Places, Torquay, Teignmouth, and Dawlisb, runs
through the Estate; Game is plentiful, and woodcocks numerous
in their season ; and the House may be constantly supplied at all
times, when required, with rare trout from the streams and Ponds
of the Estate; the Rivers Bovey and Teign, where fish abound,
are within two and four miles. A Pack of Hounds is kept within
three miles, which hunt regularly in the neighbourhood. The
Scenery upon and immediately adjoining this delightful spot is
very fine; it may be equalled, but not surpassed for beauty.
To any Gentleman seeking a nice compact Freehold Estate,
either for occupancy or investment, the present now about to be
offered only requires to be seen to be duly appreciated. The
crops of grass give positive proof of its quality, and its conge-
niality for turnips and corn (if so preferred) is most proverbial in
the district. The whole estate is in hand, and early possession
may be had, if required.
to the Owner, residing at the House, where
For viewing, apply
plans may be seen and particulars obtained. Plans may also be
seen and particulars obtained of Mr. ROBERTS, Bookseller, No.
197, High-street, Exeter; at the Place of Sale; at the Offices of
the Times, Law Times, and Journal of Auction:, Essex House,
Essex-street, Strand, London; of Messrs. H. and T. PROCTOR
Manure Works, Cathay, Bristol; of Messrs. PROCTOR and Ry..,
LAND, Manure Works, Great Lister street,
Birmingham,EandSolve,
aNnsd,
Elmacote, near Warminster; 3fessrs. it •
se
t Journal-office,anared-office
Agricultural Works, Saxmundham, Suffolk ;
at
the
Birmingham; the Mercury-office, Bristol; the
Liverpool; the courier-office Mancljester ; the 4lfercury-office,
Norwich ; the Heratd-office, 'Plymoulh ; the Royal
witbecombe, Hotel, Tor-
quay; and of Mr, Hooper, Land Agent, chagrord,
prron,
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 3 | 0.91 | 0.0566 | EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 0.56 | 0 | M
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 6,906 | 0.6153 | 0.3457 | FISCAL BURDENS OF THE CLE_RGr.
Crurnon property at this day is looked on with very
jealous eyes by many of our legislative bodies, and elsewhere.
It is needful, therefore, that its bearings should be understood,
that the analogies and distinctions between secular and eccle-
siastical property be well defined, that the various charges
that detract from the latter should be fully recognised before
others are imposed, or before the incomes of the clergy,
according to the vulgar estimate of their value, are dealt with
as available property by soi-disant Church-reformers. Too
many who talk on these subjects have never seen an incum-
bent's balance-sheet at the end of the year, nor have any
notion of the small amount which is often left for private ex-
penditure. They judge from a few isolated cases of wealth,
without any true comprehension of the large proportion of
the clergy, who, though in possession of a gross income,
which sounds well, yet really live on their private means ;
and, if dependent only on the Church's offerings, must present
to the world a very different figure to what they do.
It is time, however, that we appeal to facts and individual
instances, which may bear out our general remarks. A. few
such instances, by no means peculiar or selected ones, have
been kindly supplied for our use by incumbents whom we can
fully trust, and who, on public grounds, have aided our in-
quiries, with the fervent hope that some remedy may be found
for the hardships which they experience in themselves, and
see in others.
The many separate grievances, which form the aggregate
of fiscal and other burdens exclusively borne by the
clergy will, in the course of this article, be considered under
distinct heads ; but, in the first instance, we shall lay before
our readers two or three examples, as they have been forwarded
to us, of their total amount, the income being also stated out
of which they have to be paid. Persons who are not ac-
quainted with these charges will be rather startled at their
enormity, and wonder how it is that the rural clergy of our
Church get on as well as they do ; a wonder great indeed, if
not explained on grounds already stated.
The first case we bring forward is that of a living in the
diocese of Exeter, the tithes of which were commuted at
£620, and produced, therefore, in the year 1853 (after the
deduction on corn averages) £558, which, with glebe, &c.,
estimated at £5O, made the gross value of the benefice to be
£6OB. The payment, out of this living for the year in question,
the first of incumbency, were as follows, before any income
was left for private expenses :
C. s. d.
Stamp fees and charges in institution
First fruits
Tenths
Poor-rate (this item unusually small)
Highway rate
Income tax (7d. in the 2.)
Land and house tax ....-. ..
25 4 5
7 6 11
12 15 4
3 17 0
To Queen's Anne's bounty loan for building house... 38 0 0
Collection and losses
Repairs of parsonage, &c, .
Two curates (population over 6,000) l7O 0 0
£399 14 6
Assessed takes, schools, and parochial charities are not here
included, yet only £2OB ss. 6d. are left for these, and also
personal uses : and this was a living which appeared at first
sight to hold out the prospect of ease and abundance.
We now take the case of a vicarage, the income of which,
after deducting the corn averages, was last year (1854)
£3lO 9s. ld. The enormous amount of poor-rates in many
rural districts as well as in town, and the crying need of
some good system for their assessment even on grounds inde-
pendent of their unequal pressure on the olergy, are strikingly
illustrated in this case, which is taken from the diocese of
Rochester :
£ s. d.
Poor-rates for rent-charge and Vicarage
Land-tax on rent-charge .
Do. on Vicarage
Surveyor's-rate
Church-rate
1 4 6
Tenths
Bishops' Visitation fees
Archdeacons' do.
Queen Ann's Bounty for advance on House
Insurance
House tam
Income tax .
. 49 5 0
.3 6 0
.. 018 0
12 3 10}
£l7B 16 2-
A net income is now left of £l3l 12s. 10f d., without any
allowance being made for repairs, losses, expenses in collecting,
schools, and other parochial charities, incident to a population
of 1,400 persons.
Some other instances we put together in a tabular form, the
more readily to contrast the amount of rent-charge with the
necessary legal outgoings on it, without including curates :
Rent Charge) Compulsory)
No. Population. D 1 nese. 1854. Outgoings.
Ae
1. 670 Norwich... 233 ;:2
2. 3,200 Canterbury 84 25
3. 1,587 • Winchester 406 180
4. 386 Rochester.. 330 61
5. 869 Exeter .... 564 190
6. 500 Rochester.. 227 136
7. 1,509 Chichester 850 263
8. 6,801 Ripon..... 234 60
9. .... London.... 371 168
10. 777 Exeter .... 180 66
No. 1. Out of a total income of about £265 pays £6O a
year to Queen Ann's Bounty for his parsonage, £32 to
parochial rates, £5 for collections, besides income-tax and
other charges, amounting in all to above £142, to which may
be added £52 for a curate ; leaving £75 clear.
No. 5. Pays £95 to poor and highway-rates, and £4O to
land and income-tax. There is also a charge on his living of
£5O appropriated to a district church.
No. 7. Gross income £Bso—poor-rates, £152 ; highway-
rates, £67 ; land-tax, £l3 ; other taxes, £4l; curates, £2OO ;
schools, £80; district church, £80; and collecting rents, £45.
Leaving about £2OO for all general expenses.—Christian
Remembrancer.
Two of the five new daily newspapers in Manchester, the
Manchester Penny Express, and the Manchester Halfpenny
Express, have already ceased to exist.
A FIRE occurred, on Tuesday, in the Government dockyard,
Plymouth, which at one time threatened its destruction. It
was suppressed by the military after consuming a large store
full of pine timber.
THE Athenowi states, on tolerable authority, that a young
lady of the Kemble family may presently attempt to continue
the long career of serylee done to art by those of her name, as
a singer.
rJuLY 17, 1855.
AMERICA.
ARRIVAL OF THE ASIA.
sit 43 51,
By the British and North American RoYal Mail . - abo1
detained by fog for twelve hours outside the harbo_Fr, 21!
At 9.30,
a:fhiligt°is. the I:tp`LiteL'ef
e
fel
tenAsia,Bßoston
st
00 ,
co
.C 1 0
cat phktea, i4lnsi
4th, and
have eatnt
d, which Halifax
intelligence arrived
thefsrtoohnm i
nSsusent
awdoa:
_,J.
.u_e_ ;
too
shore, for hence for New York. The Asia brought 218 PaSBePl7 •
The President
frlitiae..
p.
ma
..
,mp.a
s, os
end Saturday;the
u ds she
Statesp a passed
$884,157 in specie on freiht.
of 1/sOo;Ptbel
Crampton, our Minister.to the United States, klrT,
e
have taken offence at the American government for r
la
bnnedeni
hisvefis t broughtwoiffwife had
il b
healthyl
left
ftth el
v Asia
ing the departure of recruits for the Crimea. ,ition. i
Shipbuilding continued in a very depressed een-Zriotit
The Hon. Abbott Lawrence, late American -'' 4
7
London, was dangerously ill.attended #
Upwards of ten thousand persons had 1,3 ,y
meeting, for opposing the new Prohibitory Lkounces 1
the Park, at New York. All the speakers delo Fro
law as fanatical, unconstitutional, and inadequatee ; 1,410')
the cause of temperance, or other useful purpos 1004,
the other hand, it would destroy Prolaertijoeib..Pii
millions, and blast the prospects of ,theil" utirrui
They passed resolutions in accordance with their siei of 72
The meeting of the Know-Nothing State CO3..nyea writ
chusetts, at Boston, on the 29th ult., was atwneders floe
three hundred delegates. The course of the se.
~e apA
Philadelphia Convention was approved of heartWrLo7.
form of principles identical with that reported hY t."" All
of the National Convention was adopted. , seisi'v
The Panama Railroad Company had declare" a i of/
dividend of six per cent. Le, 1311031
A shock, presumed to be that of an 'eartitclua ,A: .0
experienced at and many miles round Baltiniere.no p
Pa., the shock is said to have been very severe, s° ,iii
to rouse sleepers and create great consternabien'voll.q, tot
A gingham establishment, at South HadleY :fool ''.), 9
field, known as the Glasgow Mills, had been des Tire le' ~,
One man was killed, and two were injured. #l.
t Li r
ts,p sht thae
daaTTtmb
ehhteeeher
epnbLraoebeae
klxwtdiewaentnrg Lexington, oauiclnroat,
tirnmrgi
nueoeanorrlrneresien had betweenegehpaahn arrived
et
ns
f ort ,I i ell ad rile ye , , a
to, r
estimated at from $200,000 to $250,000. isville ootlie,/
utLuhpnoT ki
Louis,
the eo
n e disaster,hundred
who
htwenty e
onhboard. officers
a r adn. d
Tptohahtesai srlietoiyno;.gfir:: r:ire.:el rereotofTi:/:ittatelolacv.
The Illinois Central Railroad Company 110 4 gv•
harvestu
u Amdb veircsienswfserraoelmt l Utaheiiav kiiei
leaving
Valley.Vfoa rl l Valley speak
the
on its lands.
pen
04:,
ject of gold found on the Sweet Water was w' ,4,ta
AO
sMedailCsatYPeeara4l:ltls3'6,o
A movement in North Carolina is soon to 1i dye 101' OS
pdrigregaitngof e.e_xiceirtyeroPe,,ll:aif: :les ttbeed:
the Legislature of that State, to render legal rthe
epejesi tr
of marriage among slaves ; to preserve sacreu, to re
between parents and their young children; and alrd
laws prohibiting the education of slaves. ~ „ 1011 t, 0f..3
In the United States Circuit Court, at Beglot,d
tis had decided in the case of the brig Porpoise:a 11.0,, r.g
which had acted as a tender upon slavers, an Ore
merchandise which was used for the purchase ofttoyi
had otherwise aided in the slave transportationty got,
had not actually carried a single slave, was gltbe v
engaged in the slave trade within the meaning " Le"
The brig was, consequently, declared forfeited. vikite,
The Montreal Pilot says :—" We yesterdal,eott'A
barracks here for the purpose of seeing the 70, 07,
there, waiting to be forwarded to their destine ore °17,117,‘
part of the Foreign Legion in the Crimea. 111,„' fee. Ow
of thirty in number, and the majority of tilts IsnitsSt
under twenty years of age—young, thoughte ree'rmt,,,6
are enlisted for three years, at $8 a month. Tr-01°,:,00',1
chiefly Germans. There are two or three Iris'',olP'rtit;;;
was just as we always find him, when p0er,,,,ti°14.4„i0
brimful of humour. In the course of conc,,e-oln„, 0, 0
pressed his anxiety to be sent off before SebasiZjd'h'e is la.
for if it was taken before he got there, ' he a"0:.,," CP,,ce
glory.' There is but one Scotchmau in the rto ,',l)e,"`
Glasgow, and has been about sixteen uloV"
With him it was the old story—he joined the
'he was on the spree.' " ---- ,sl6. PO:ii
COMMERCIAL INTELLIG..,--,,0, , orl`,l
NEB ''' ipt 51051
MoNEY.—The money market was inactive; cre,A,
were offered on easier terms, and there was an.'llo MD2
of capital seeking investment. In all the leacut 011 #
of the banks for the last six months there s°4- be dd
aia elf,
The stock market was quite as active as co e o%
and prices were well supported. The rates ,°' slid ie ,A,
England were at 1091- to 110 and 1101- per cenils,ls, 0,1,1;4
extensive demand. Bills on France, §5,121 t° Doily, slocell
COTTON.—The market yesterday, though stetters,A
out animation, at the annexed quotations. _ faro or
yesterday from the Atlantic States are le? veil" .4
regard to the growing crop, complaints being
Sel om
f,
that too much rain is falling. od
NEW YORK CLASSITICATION.,,v. 11, 6
Upland. Florida. go`,/,'3;169 101'0
Total import since Ist instant ..
''' 101 11
Ordinary lob l 0 11 ill
Low Middling ll 11 ill 10
Middling 11* 111 12 1091.
Good Middling 111 111 „„ London,. 26tb
r Atian,tlF!ed llk
Freight to Liverpool 3.16 ; ExchanSejp,"
at 7,500 bales. On the 27th ult.:, fie Iv
We estimate the sales since our las ' ere auvlb
i aws :--
checked the demand which prev'°-
graph of 26th, from Mobile, as ()el clinille These
efor
middling 10-Ic. nominal ; market
; nsev existed both .
use and speculation, on the basis of
Uplands and Gulf cottons, and the receipt on I:n% ,d4'l'
" Rivers,"
disappointing accounts from Live
of the week 38,710 bales, prices barely snstaitlew(Ore V
fif 134 1
rpc,llo-1143p:rtOnal2ti,,Cci,',1/4f,150
010;,,
some quarters an anxiety to realise, followed ' e,
Altilr .61
at a reduction of ?ic. on the basis of lle. for miclw-t 0..,,t1
and low middling Florida and New Orleans. As offely
b
at once taken. Within the paSt two days
hasthei 1,417 db
offering, and an advance of iris tototreat 131i10'eS7
The tables of receipts and expo receipts in receipts at tli
tion the demand became active, and all that iNe'a..„, be .
decrease of 46,414 bales. The deficito bales.
made up to the latest mail dates,
pts Bi is 16
nC e 3 EXPO
Recei 2
Great 13
Sept. 1. 1855., b
1855. IS,' 31 162 1
Increase • .. 46,4,1,! 4/
Decrease
There was a material falling off this week The ioij
Great Britain, the deficit being 46,414 bales,' motes flirt
Total - $
receipts at the ports made up to the latest ra.,nurep,se Po
bales. In stocks in all the ports there is a neci 066 eiiel
bales, and in the export to France an excess 0 e tioliftiel
BREIDSTUFFS.—But little animation in th,, tbt it ,
with a reduction of 25c. to 50c. per barrel 0100" fl.
and for delivery in September sales have been ..1/0' 1 eri,
present quotations. n I ft
, , .. ! , 0 A
PROVISIONS.—Market steady, with moae"Org.,
mess pork sold at $19,44- to $19,50, and nei.(17,0 .I),
old mess pork $19,121- to $19,25. Beef re7:„Mo:t V a
to $15,50 for country mess ; prime,at $9,76n0l tOl
brings 15c. to 18c. for Ohio, and Tee. to 22e. tee'or
Cheese dull at 51c. to 91c. gO°Lfil 146 o°
NAVAL STORES.—Crude turpentine was in 0 .-, , v
a moderate demand. Spirits of turpentine Ass: alt; , I
without change of prices. Rosin in good (1,..e"" fr
at $2,50 to $2,621. t
fi o
stl#l9 i , e/
selling freely at $3 to $3,25 for good shipPly° ,T ~ I
was dull t I
r° ~,e
IsoN.—The market for Scotch pig was
and $29 to $3O six months. tfere,et4 0:
FREIGHTS.—About 20,000 bushels of cool - no,,
Liverpool, at 4d in bulk, and sd. in ship's bags'„reln tv,;
To Liverpool : Cotton, 5-32 d.: flour, per it. w, It', ,
ls. 6d.; heavy goods, cheese, &c., per ton? k.:90,n '
grain, per bushel, 4d. to sd. ; beef, is. 6d. to 1d...1/4004 ,
don : Rosin and turpentine, per 2801b5., 10*
~,,,,r tiih; ,
heavy goods, oil, &c., 15s. to 17s. 6d.; beef, rib, 4`,
.2s. 6d. To Havre : Cotton, square bales, per - ' dteit
goods, 2c. to fc. (By TELEGRAPII.) ,r., tg, jeg ~
NEW YORK, JULY 3, 6 P.M.—Ashes : •r,°,7-6,erejf
$0 75 ; pearls, $6 50. Flour, 121 c. better : saie'+D Arf
Upper Lake and common to good Ohio, $8 4* ' ' 71
ern steady ; sales 1,900 barrels. Corn .c. betterkoo' ii
to 92c.; white, $1 08 to $1 09; yellow, 96e,',6(0
$l2 371 for new. and $19122 for old ; prime, eo.'o, of
prime mess, $l6 to $l7 25. Beef : country 16; PICO I
prime, $9 75 to $lO 25 ; repacked Chicago, ?16,ie9 1
$24 to $26. • Linseed oil dull, at 86c. Iron: 010/0
Scotch pig, $29 50 to $3O 50, six months. , , gbOxo i
NEW ORLEA.NS, June 27.—N0 change; satt ; riee
dling at 101 c. to 11c. June 29.—Cotton clw' no'
only 100 bales at 10c. to 101-c. for middlinfieoty iL,
week about 2,500 bales. Receipts at this for" soeoArtir
of last year up to this date 201,000 bales' ones or 21
51,000 bales. July 2.—Cotton quiet ann pl'' ,teroi
prices are irregular; middling quoted at 10e• oefJ,
day 3,500 bales. 11°1,toff
CHARLESTON, June 29.—T0-day we cannot!' 4
grade of middling under 111 c., even after t,,114 iS 04
Baltic's advices, quoting an unchanged way' A I ~41J$
Freight id. Exchange 91d. a fe9ifei
MOBILE, June 28.—Rise in rivers doubt.--; P4g. 4el,
30,000. Baltic
dictory. Receipts of the week 11,000, mos"; Iv' „ ir,oc,,
unchanged. NNEW
Yc)B
3 c b
to Liverpool 7-16 d. (BY TELEGRAPiIfr,ACO
Satkrsatte 445°1: 'SI
' till Pli
reoEt7oenrtneiundngs'sealtstetllised.-8:00 ; middling
11131'4'
cP°l°
be given. Flour further advanced eligli' 0
V
corn unchanged. iOr
NEW ORLEANS, July 3, p.m.—The cotter'and declining.
-------!.-- trofi.
SPORTING INTELLIGO'
tog '
01 Ity 1
_....,,-.. ~ .
espood, d
LIVERPOOL JULY RACJr il_a° 4,.1., Clirj
These races commenced on 'WednesdaY Ms's:yr- tr.iti v•
the two following days. Compared with forneyo oPt froiOis
ance of company was thin in the extreme. tuber °Tif tOr4,
( Thursday), there were not half the nnearS• mallio .4`
seen assembled on the same day in fortner ~re ' 0 ,c,"
was of an average description, but the fielda 00-13, eigeo f
for the cup, a prize of some ~e5OO, bringink! Or 9, i'
the post. The following are the winners of ti"' eV!"
WEDNESDAY. , 42, Sin 1e• ,f
CROXTETH STAKES.—Rataplan 1
~ Acroo. Tow No rr4Viii
MERSEY STAKES.—The Heir of Lynne 1, -ganot iii,
BENTINCK TESTIMONIAL.—Early gird b
em- - •re Ws.
LANCASHIRE OAKS.—Lady Tatton 1, Ewilea-nzel li 1.01,
SELLING STAKES.—SaImon 1, Pera 2, .•----1,10, i
UNITED KINGDOM TRAINERS' STAKES'
Ild if
Rattler 2, Jupiter 3, Spencer 4.
THURSDAY.
org*
DERBY HANDICAP.—DerViSII 1, 51 -
Annie Sutherland 4, The Assayer 5. Belli'
R WOO Am
EGLINTON BIENNIAL STAKES.— 0 ,ing. A
rcebus 3. The best contested race of the tale7ot 2, •0004,#
LIVERPOOL Cur.—Seducer 1, Cock rlaGoorPend ;
Bianca, Domino, Joe Miller, Shoreham, an ___ ,AAC :to
and came to the winning-post in the orag4tvg, g
length—a head between second and third. 0`
Shoreham,7 to 1 against tote winner.
Rigby 'Mystic 1.1
SWEEPSTAKES.—Sister Mrs. Rig.,
, , 14aucebOS . _409
r
HER MAJESTY'S PLATE.—RatBPIan ~ - ° 5' "b
FRIDAY. •
AT on 2, )1/ii"A° 1
PRODUCE STA KES.—Simony 1 c. by • ems Fisher- rii
' Gandy 2, The Bs„, 04,0,
STANLEY STAKEs.—Ellermire 1, .-... O,l
LICENSED VICTUALLERS' HANDICAP..de filoOde €
Typee 2, Cherry Brandy 3. Elastic, Adele'
cliAdeitti•
Tom,and Dervish also started. Blossom al injor f
ce, and the rider of the former was sever:" orer• • pi pit
walk sails el
LIVERPOOL Sr. LEGER.--COPOSbUS .
. lAs 21
GREAT LANCASHIRE STAKES.--Oltelll.Ea v_abie 4
Quest Q.
SELLING STAKES.—Chere Petite 1,
•t J°?
Mrs ;Rigby 3, Fairy Queei..........14 OP Ile
ifildr
A A lr• al of the c'
ADMIRAL OMMANNEY.----nl war.,
t
Ackworth Ommauney, died at his sea .
_,„stip
weeg, "
Havant, near Portsmouth, on Sunday --n Rattler 2,
030 $,
CE(ESFEIRE AND WALES.
if
T 311,0
17
4irke,h: named Patrick O'Hare, was charged
,app 44 Police-court, on Thursday, with obtainine, 040 apparel 4rilood, 1, other articles from various houses in the"
; iiciibooe„.asn,sd Rolt-Hill. He was remanded.
4ellhe vveral owners of dogs were summoned before
; a nr,, ,
izsistrates, on Thursday, for permitting their
n be at
.ef-uLicee withge (luring the present hot weather, contrary
e 4,
3e.township commissioners. In each case a
!Ciao, 6d Costs Wait inflicted.
eNtY of thIs•R3EvOLENT, SOCIETY.—The twenty-eighth
rilen,c,,,""eaaess,nt3r was held in their club-room, at the
re ecs,,,`"to alet -,t,• At an early hour a large number of
407147tab1e seta7u Proceeded in procession to church,
1)1.took After thq Was preached by the Rev. Mr. Haines,
le th all e sermon us of oot th mem-
owl;n e cloths excellent dinnepr,ward provide2od by Mrs.e Ball.
th the were removed, the president Mr. Henry
e fin„,_ , seer
.p
Tao ti7ncial see v`4r3, Mr. Chadwick, read the accounts
,tbsi.'w a reie,r, which were most satisfactory, the society:
;14,1Peitis;:e,ruhd of over £l,OOO.
I)rptl.l''ted et "i'ltußcit.—ln consequence of the ruinous
14„.;deeraed a‘e of this ancient and picturesque edifice, it
ria the „necessary- with a view to its restoration, to
,th; !est!. nele of the church except the tower; and on
Wised Gr
w,` Rev. :41.edinagh was echurch, presided over
am, the incumbent, when resolutions
titilorising the churchwardens to apply for a
e aerjere°7ll ,and rebuild the church on the present
"alio the old materials, as far as they are
Used without dressing, so as to preserve the
J• , kaN r,„e_as much as possible.' Through the inde-
,, teroeworthy exertions of the churchwardens,
,and Mr. R. Hampson, they have collected a
o,?lkere•
v'ain asi,crieent for the complete restoration according
ents ,„ beetby Messrs. Hay, the architects. The
Iklaisittli he same as the present church,. with
tb° ~avin,g high pitched and open framed timber_
....iLek'Z'slittron, and vestry on the north side.
'lt APPLICATION OP " ROSCOE ON EVI-
Ors. Birkenhead Police-court, on Thursday,
M tt; eo Case, J. It. Shaw, J. S. Jackson, and the
hare'
Mr. Robert Grace, attorney, ablVelVnelliatom
t711,‘" zn iiit°efraso.esnatulto preferred a s
boy against
vluenmyelrs of ace.
441,feiro,with intelligent
father, gan engineer, at Lower Tran-
,,,aeiC 143 statement, it appeared that on the after-
L•
he • dof alongweek he was sitting, with three other
Nss-jstePs of a Mr. Clegg. The defendant hap-
the time, when one of the boys, named
ge,, called out, " Lord Derby's cocks and hens,"
„NO, n exclamation which seemed to irritate the
ItieffN,nree of the boys immediately
ran away, but the
Ga ,kuLGod his ground. Mr. Grace, after having made
4(lQttempt to seize the runaways, returned to the
▪ ,I?itietag caught the complainant by one side of the
)4;,146`;111),`;ed to him on the other side a violent blow
tte'LlO the (3r large book, which he (the defendant) was
e l'
rig- The effect of the blow was a severe cut,
l Profusely. Mr. Bretherton, for the defence,
'4lt re at some leng,th, remarking that no one
hOy elf het accident (for it was such) than Mr.
.441'-`4 he but Qe,re was no intention on his part to hurt
e-511'0' to stop a system of annoyance to
,',e,„.'4laally subject from the boys of the
`•411-1,,N tairjou in question he was passing the
l.a-;,"‘ok 10, WV', after him, and the defendant swung
orj'per) contained " Roscoe on Evidence,"
!as t;,etlied fke roi," given many bard hits in its time.—
qet 0.", e l'estipat ipe struck the boy, but h.e (Mr. Brether-
the Of client had seized him. The blow
; oh -olen, 'r; altogether to the con-
% anu owl g
,113N-obell Youtl sons of the defendant, an old
kre'srop,ald per:Oil of the name of Holden, spoke
'efhp/N.4lller in which the defendant was treated
,efVll4l4‘,.'or(ll3:-„The bench inquired the reason of the
,71ut1rerill'A'11,tuY's cocks and liens" being applied to
k‘l ,-„Woman Walker: You know that Mr.
pelf:'`oilliagei`,l3 himself Lord Derby when he goes
cd "4aughter.)-31r. Jackson: Well, hp may
voeid bein ethy.
r. (Renewed laughter.) —The witness
!t:t' the ibanroy 'Nss-examined, said that the Tranmere
4ilY one who came through the village
,1,4t4,214;1ts °f liquor. After the bench had conrlted
`4e,l,ieto sj; Case said they had heard very patiently
0.4 both sides, and taking all the cir9um-
• 4117(1 ia,ra,,tl°ll, the bench considered the justice of
I*"lin-41.4-e' by a nominal conviction of I.s. and costs.
pis' Voraton `On
,Thursday, at the Birkenhead police-
Arttol,e,, with ,r) ten years of age, was charged with
ot fr Ins brother (who had absconded), some
,Srealrlth 4eBe°l.‘,!l the landing-stage at Seacombe slip, the
tlt qllitit:,ll olilborn. The mother (who appeared in
I.l,lltelen7rl in her arms) had been sent from the
steetS,lirki, (I, her native place, some eight months ago,
4.'aM,vtliVeturned, and it was suspected she was in
t• beret ti,e4S, out her children to steal. The woman
Nic``.
.ehiNVeration, saying that she had paid poor
mi ,iret, the town for many years, and had to sup-
I,od,w°lll4lle felloY her own labour, her husband being a
IthePeth:S4-0- The records of the court showed that
' 14 "1:31,s were well known, but in consequence of
• °W, aid 'eel' found hid in an old bathing machine
• 14", e not in his possession, the prisoner was dis-
be
Ce 4 telling the mother that if she was seen
tow 4 she and her family would be sent back a
rei.
A 4, ....--_______........„..........,_____
! h.
ZOUTION OF PROTESTANT
N CONT'ER TS ABROAD.
tto
1.41, 4
T 4 .711 i!'.,,.ee of the Protestant Alliance has brought under
o I,,btraeZt,':' of the British Government three distinct
,i ': eet%,%",u by foreic>n -governments of parties their
[f (,?ci ilk, r liaviu '
,t th, 041.4,4 ft ..become converts to the Protestant
Or,b„ '''ltZ''.'et,.,.thc, iutorforanop of nnr ministers on
i olic-",,eet fi;rito,,,,ia:l3ke first is respecting the imprison-
Qoa n` e;llZion ''''e all:tt, I,aworkman in a cigar manufactory
bean-c.'i of p„' pe ea"eq crime of injury to the m n
lalllipti, `electnpa44aittee observe that the decree of
;tiqillelr--..-Oned °I. Florence under which Cecchetti
Pl,ll of ,ls ' recites l 'acts as proved against
'4l'4the Possess. on y two .
4, tioa , teat t 1,011 of Diodati's Bible, and his ex-
.:le 1 1.,°4 aati 0° nis children and friends. As to the
~‘ ph ',ti,-the ins-atliolic ideas "—the real offence in the
!'Ati)ose'''`e Irieet'cree rrierelyst states that "there is reason
4qe, yii,. If caP,' were held aat Cecchetti's house for .
itNtst,e.astee„..alt trieciaaerttys imprisonm.ent, therefore, be not
1,1.1'14, ttlit,;r,lo ~ -Clie seco'r aaB been strained to the out to
„) al4 years a tend isthat of John Evangelist 11_7:
the
ejit, in. t;),, !-, the Order of Mercy, and ph y-
' Nt P errors i - t
cs er y
,of Prague. Having 1?c om
Ji,N,:t4tio,, rotestaut- Teßoiiirsh cried;lie-determinedto
44'4 tlll''ttelf Ilrotestarnel;•
gum. The laws of Austria legalize
4 4tijliki:\A:spitaastical autt meritireosvaidnedd ?ear tt
id ue
ae
tneo t b e
fi beleoebtained
:litte p,orl'he ill Minister with whosea flock the convert
,L).)tiilttc,Psioti 78 also permit an Austrian subject to
,i'itil, 'el ee as jessii.i.a foreign country. I3orzinsky chose
vibot 4,..,4diti0„ likely to give offence. To comply with
4,4h„.`•4t ~',:. e•04.`8, Ile nude known his intentions to the
• • brNtieti lelat,a eut at Prague, and to the provincial of
1%,,v44 4 it; IlesMmediately went into Prussia, and
vii1„41ek,:..t4,, .eMof the Lutheran confession by the
eltAl% 141e3,11,11f,,the pans' h church o.f St. Peter, Peters-
iniftZie '„ltis,,, ..;°lll whom he obtained the preFribed
' 4.
'RS ' returned to his father's house in Mo.
1 ai°4llcl 44 of t, as l •
41,- rt.i; ills the lave had in every respect complied with
ate-,;(bjee,'vet i.raist„.he should enjoy its protection. He
,' 6N, this
t`ltb,,-4e• He was seized by the gendarmes
,S,N 6N, this° Ni,.. ecclesiastical authorities. By them he
:r4pAii t,,,, rep`4r3s confinement and a diet of bread and
'ilkitt4llk Otlsfe,,ed unavailin to secure his recantation,
tkib.ee 4 '44i4 'red to a g
;A:va , eci. es. r,,„_ dark subterranean cell adjoining
",'), are eil.es ti,ai'lle last information received by the
ni,i"tomfe caoaLet'taite'lle is more severely treated than ever, Ti„it,i Johltraittee ‘it that he must soon sink under the
,41,ia lette.rtilla,,zlat'c'e likewise been informed, that a
.„,t4ese e4,rease''a Pope 1,115', named Übaldus, also
.a monk,
It'l,l'aect'tt'til 1.4 hag
X. on the immoralities of. his
eased to t. e 14
,lon of embracing Protestantism.
'''r his bro°,_Leliti;ag‘te's ',een forcibly removed under a
te,,,ltharl.,erl ittiltitqls,9otz, in Illyria, where there is
',Vie as a"P,FeatlltlAt a.',l_s treatment will be similar to
he pew fulatieartietle authorities the committee are
,„.,lier „,,4,ed in a (latii,`',4ellim Zezulehas been confined
'O4 ,•'''''e, is that" PrOtti....°. a Period of 20 years,. solely
, q ne.iest L , of , ..,,,,,,, _
ktiti:: t , vut no, he iLuf Protestant convictions.
It tit 1 n , who h teeo •
'`4le. in -lizilli;laistder at r.:•aasii '''''‘'• Dr. Gomez, formerly a
pgbi, OWn h beeepizeed clergyman of the
...isoott (;r many years engaged asa
ecly MISe on t.h.e, pavi g 1 t lately announced
i, kt 'ee n:ccusecl • -- '°et 'n- a ism,
N ,Nti 1,- e AT. In the sen.rines of
kAl'Dlie,," takett L'lnlster of p
r4te by
the
eei t Marquisha everyof
kethim It, to the
Brit's)ent
or°
Punishpeith offence. Dr.
41)111,11141 Y the nc Embassy for protection, but
1 Oiti,t, ashe `;,,,ar(46 d'Affaires that nothing could be
,'N ,e 1.1.4 Of ti, '43 not a British subject. In reply to
;‘' 4'O,I•NY th
roll
committee, Lord Clarendon has inti-
'kti,ls`lee "baena; Ole immediate and best attention of the
' ez 4:1(1-4 Will be devoted to the matters brought
ItA,Preilii4iene'uat Lord Clarendon fully recognizes the
) tkekttillietter but emonstrance upon such rases with
ttl,, 131;°1,11 I.s' eats, says that in the mode of proceed-
,'t evi
.eil by:ired than may always be apparent to
,t 44 rtints
o °feelings of honest indignation, think
i/Vrlkk
010
~..:.,,...,t_......p.pession.
tlti tile , ticorT-------..—.........____em
tt IN ;:taliai,
~Awil is stated to be in treaty for the
,tl' op °ranch "Pera-house, with the view to make it
eye Iv? Morning Chronicle.
.:..4 , tlie It4,3TYLI,gBTER BRIDGE.—On Monday, in
,k,"•e,7 at ll,Mics in Progress for the construction of
?'lt' Pr Ares esttlin t
(, ht kit e./tlt.elit at s erhaving shaken the fonuda-
OA ioup , rUcture, orders were issued for the
Al Vt le: "D be taken to prevent the possibility of
' gaoti°4)) il,
tk All 4 • 44L4N —A letter from before Sebas-
‘,t /4 met,. ~ in th • ,
,I, %thll v., 118 of -,. e Semaphore, of Marseilles, gives
,N:44‘11,143 Beveralioird Raglan's illness and death :-
1.? 41,111 k ,t„ Inalaci :laYs.labouring under the influence
t1,.,t4t11i4,,.it the 3 which nearly resembles cholera
t,-,. „i,,sot hi!,39totias of it, but the physicians, on
10, ‘ 7j, 41,e,;1et, had given it as their opinion
t,,'40 tilre. liaatnat his state no longer caused un-
)1,,,C,1,11,1,,,t1,!•1tig i'l, l'egained its strength, he had been
r(ek`i ;l'i 11-I'4'lg.e of ;4;9 whole of the day hopes were enter-
. i 4,, , it, elf saides indisposition would soon disappear.
rv'ilM, ,t,l4s that h felt ea l ll btbo t
r ' ' wfllro'llotlivening he ewase sneizerdy wwietli ausuaddeun
e,',ll'4ll,„„honps stiffering the slightest pain, gradually
ytkisi,,,N%s Oiler this crisis resigned his soul to
','ll)it,s'tr 1,,'1 the' a tranquillity which it is impossible
I "e0te1.41441 L religious ceremonies have been per-
'
t „ 41,4111t14-1; 'ermoved from the head-quarters and
\c,,,; the etchtirmi a war-steamer, in charge of his aides-
'll ve.q b etlt ,I;
.e.B aj, x ek,, ieut.-Colonel Somerset, Major
stnst et,'..Ste's Are""ltt Calthorpe. The Bristol corres-
,,Na,,,D,reD„ 41 this goo 1.8, writing on Thursday evening,
4 tc':it I,,S.4iokiis eii,ooper and Stuckey, undertakers,
~kttClletilll he for Tt received instructions to make
71,e, ht haaurpilmilie arrival of Lord Raglan's re-
th_Lkee, 14-11114t0,,L to Bristol preparatory to their
itl,e ?qv ft thee:tDeet i', for interment in the ducal fa-
tit 11,!? tea J'dth e,l that the body will reach this
rt,s•l'),e4 i 491 he th'e4 Choth of the present month. As
t Ch: tenter,eimlae°'lveye4 telegraphic intelligence
IR. tooatte ,as oi. his lordship's family, and the
It , „,,,„ ief
1 tIN g the rnirner, will visit city,this' for
).„1.13,4 Of i Will lie .c to Badminton. tis
%II t1ifc,,.,...41reit1f,211 state for two or three days,
4 ,(„,. 114,,,,1i.
ilittozie":.(4wehallincri,otirste,f tahn
ae
ii seaty of his Grace
vault is in the
" imMediately adjoins the
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, and DEATHS.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,445 | 0.9549 | 0.1068 | _ MR. BERKELEY has been returned for Cheltenham by a
majority of 682 over Mr. Ridler.
ON Friday evening a lomotive engine, employed on the
North- London Railway, exploded; but though it destroyed
some property, no persons were injured.
Tax COLONIAL SECRETARYSHIP.—THE Advertiser says
Sir William Molesworth and Sir George Grey are spoken of
for the colonial vacancy. The Herald says Mr. Vernon Smith,
Sir Wm. Molesworth, and Lord Harrowby are mentioned.
' THE Qum, accompanied by Prince Albert, the King of
tha Belgians, the Count de Flanders, the Prince of Wales, and
Prince Alfred, attended by their suite, left Buckingham
Palace on Tuesday, for Osborne.
DURING a debate in the House of Lords last week, no little
sensation was caused by the entry into the house of Sir Au-
gustus Clifford, bearing on his arm the celebrated Miss
O'Neil, now Lady Wrixon Becher.
THE Advertiser states that a meeting of Conservative
members of the House of Commons took place on Saturday,
at Mr Disraeli's. The attendance was very numerous, and
never was the feeling of the party more cordial and unani-
mous as to the course to be pursued by it.
THE SPECIE arrivals during the week have been moderate,
and do not amount to £185,000. The exports of which we
have any notification are little more than £60,000, but the
shipments to the Continent by the bullion merchants have
been considerable.
Orr Tuesday morning the corning-house at Messrs. Curtis
and Harvey's Clyde Gunpowder Mills, Glenlean, about five
miles from Dunoon, blew up with a fearful explosion, by
which casualty the lives of not fewer than four men have
been lost.
COLONEL FLEURY, the colonel of the French Guides, has
married Mad'lle Calais St. Paul, a daughter of a rich homme
d'affaires of Paris. On this occasion the Emperor made the
colonej the munificent present of 500,000 franks from his
private purse, and also settled' a pension of 12,000 franks
a-year, to make things pleasant, to a lady who went down on
her knees to supplicate his Majesty to prevent the marriage.
MILITARY DISTURBINCE.—The town of Chatham, on
Thursday evening, exhibited a scene of military riot, between
the marines and sailors against the 27th regiment. Several
of the soldiers were wounded in the affray, and one man was
so severely injured that he was taken to the hospital, having
received three bayonet wounds.
SCARLATINA IN THE ROYAL HOUSEHOLD AT OSBORNE.—
Their Royal Highnesses Princess Louisa and Prince Arthur
have been attacked with scarlatina. Their Royal Highnesses
are going on very favourably. The same disease has declared
itself in his Royal Highness Prince Leopold, who was left at
Buckingham Palace in consequence of a slight accident.
THE PRESIDENCY OF THE UNITED STATES.—The work
for the next Presidental election has seriously commenced.
The political events have sharply defined the three great par-
ties of the campaign, and the champion of each for the suc-
cession. These three parties are—the American party, the
Seward anti-slavery coalition party, and the Democratic party;
and the candidate of each, as broadly foreshadowed by these
late events, is, of the American party, George Law, of New
York ; of the Seward coalition party, W. H. Seward, of New
York ; of the Democratic party, Henry A. Wise, of Virginia.
THE GRAND STAND AT AINTREE RACE-COURSE was,
during the late meeting, entrusted to the care of Mr. Morrish,
of the Merchants' Dining Rooms, Lancaster-buildings, Tithe-
barn-street. The care and judicious attention bestowed on
the cuisine and the cellar were such as called forth the warmest
encomiums from the numerous visitors ; while the orderly and
ready service bestowed on the guests reflected the highest
credit on the skill and assiduity of Mr. Morrish as a caterer
for even the most refined tastes. Every delicacy was to be
met with -in ready profusion, and the more substantial elements
of good cheer were served with equal alacrity and abundance.
The wines and liquors of all kinds were excellent, and met
general approval.
1 TRE DANUEE.—A letter from Bucharest of the 3d, in the
German Journal of Frankfort, says :—" The Ottoman troops
are still advancing into the Dobrudscha. From 1,200 to 1,500
Turks from Silistria have passed the Danube in boats, and
landed at Kalarasch. Although the Turkish corps now in the'
.Dobrudscha are sufficiently provided with bridge equipage,
and is supported by a flotilla, aud, although the coast of Bes-
sarabia is only defended by about 10,000 Russians, yet it is
not expected that the Muchir Ismail Pasha has any present
intention of attacking the Russians. He appears inclined to
wait for the fall of Sebastopol, in which case he would doubt-
, less be supported by some allied troops. The greatest com-
mercial activity prevails on the Lower Danube. It is calculated
that, since the opening of the navigation, more than 500.
vessels, of which 200 were Austrian, have taken on board
cargoes at Ibrail and at Galatz."
THE LATE CAPTAIN LYONS.—The enclosed extract from a
letter from one of the officers of the Miranda may be interest-
ing to our readers 1—" Therapia, June 25.—Our brave Captain
is no more. His wound was mortal, and he died on Saturday
night. C— was with him the whole time, and S— says
his death was worthy of his life. He forgot nothing, sending
messages to each of us individually, and arranging for the
smallest trifles. He said to C—, I die as a captain of a
man-of-war ought to die.' The navy has lost its greatest
ornament ; and we have lost one who, to us, was more than a
friend. He was so brave, so great, so good, and so amiable,
that we all loved him much more than we knew. We buried.
him on Monday evening, the 26th of June, with all naval
honours. Crowds of people of high rank attended his funeral.
The head of our figurehead, Miranda, was shot away almost at
the same moment that our dear captain received his death
wound.
FIRE IT HUNGERFORD-MAHRET.-011 Sunday evening
considerable alarm was caused in the vicinity of Hungerford-
market, London, in consequence of a fire breaking out on the
wharf of the market, occasioned by some boys accidentally
emptying their pipes on a waggon laden with straw. On the
sudden outbreak messengers were despatched for the Chandos-
street, Watling-street, West of England, and various other
engines, which promptly arrived, and speedily got to work,
with a good supply of water from the mains of the New River.
The, wind blowing strongly, the flames spread with amazing
rapidity, and five carts and one waggon belonging to Mr. Mil-
igan, hay and strawdealer, opposite the booking-office, on the
wharf, as well as Mr. T. Henderson's carts, speedily ignited.
The firemen worked most strenuously, and by of great
perseverance the flames were subdued, but not until the straw
and carts were nearly destroyed.
Loan Joitig RvssELL.—Lord John Russell is no longer a
member of the Administration. In consequence of repre-
sentations from some of the members of the Government in
the House of Commons as to the difficulty under which they
laboured with regard to the motion of Sir E. B. Lytton, his
Lordship came to the resolution of removing their embarrass-
ment by retiring from the Ministry. Accordingly, at his re-
quest, Lord Palmerston yesterday acquainted the Queen with
the resolution to which Lord John had come, and her Majesty
was pleased to accept his resignation. No successor to Lord
John Russell as Secretary of State for the Colonies has been
appointed, but it is not improbable that one will be desig-
nated for her Majesty's approval at the Cabinet Council to be
held this afternoon. We cannot, of course, speak with cer-
tainty upon the subject, but we believe it is not unlikely that
the new Colonial Secretary will be taken from amongst the
present members of the Cabinet, and we apprehend that his
fitness for the post will be at once recognized by the country
and the eolonies.—Globe, of Saturday.
THUNDERSTORM ON SATURDAY.—ShortIy after 6 o'clock
on Saturday morning, the metropolis was visited by a violent
thunderstorm, which continued for nearly an hour. The
lightning was of a vivid character. The rain fell in torrents,
and many of the small streets at the east end of London were
flooded for several hours. The market gardeners' grounds
were also inundated, and considerable damage was done by
the great fall of rain. At Bristol the storm took place an
hour or two previously. It commenced about half-past three
o'clock, and exceeded in violence anything of the kind that
has occurred in that city for the last 30 years. The thunder
was very violent, and the lightning so vivid that the Captains
of African and Indian ships in the port describe it as being
the nearest approach to a tropical tornado that they ever
witnessed in this country. Considerable damage was done by
the hail, which beat the wheat down in all the surrounding
country, and broke thousands of panes of glass; and at St.
George's,Gloucestershire,the electric fluid struck a house near
the Don John's-cross, destroyed the chimneys, and split the
house from the roof to the basement story.
SUNDAY DISTURBANCES IN LONDON. HYDE-PARK.—
The Sunday demonstrations in this park are unmistakably dying
out, and in another week or two there will be no trace left of
the commotion. On Sunday the number of people assembled
showed a decided falling off, and the more respectable classes
held themselves carefully apart from • the crowds of urchins
and thieves who had collected. Of course, they did all in their
power to get up a disturbance, rushing hither and thither,
making as much noise as possible, and scurrying away as
soon as they came in collision with the police. Beyond a con-
siderable amount of pocket-picking very little mischief was
done, and the number of offenders taken into custody tended
powerfully to check the disposition to riot. The police did not
show in the park itself, but at the different outlets and in the
neighbourhood they were mustered in ample force, while
a mounted patrol kept up with the quick movements of the
mob, and prevented any serious injury to property being at-
tempted. No carriages appeared in the drive, so that no fa-
cilities existed for getting up a disturbance, and we may fairly
hope that next Sunday afternoon the park will present its
usual peaceable aspect. Two attempts were made by the
rabble to penetrate into Belgravia from Albert-gate, but both
were promptly repulsed by the police, and the ringleaders ar-
rested.
STATE OP TEE MORMON COMMUNITY.—The Cambridge
Chronicle gives a letter from Salt Lake City by a woman who
had embraced the Mormon delusion, and left that neighbour-
hood. The expos 6 speaks for itself :—" Mormonism here
and Mormonism in the old country are two entirely distinct
systems. You know not whom to trust; in fact, you are sus-
picious of everybody, and everybody suspects you. Human
life is of no value here ; cutting throats is as carelessly talked
of from the stand as clipping your finger-nails ; indeed, if they
consider you becoming at all disaffected to their 'principles, it
is considered doing you a kindness to kill you, that your soul
may be saved. It is heresy to think of leaving the society ;
and should any make the attempt, every obstacle is thrown in
their way. Scandal and lies the people fatten on. I would
defy the smallest village in the world to propagate the same
with more avidity than this people. A woman's character is
taken away by the slightest breadth ; you are at everybody's
mercy, no matter how low, mean, or contemptible the party
may be ; and woe to you should your husband be on a mission!
They set husband against wife : try to get the husband into
plurality; and women's hearts are as ruthlessly broken as a
piece of straw by bending. Divorces can be readily obtained,
for from five to ten dollars; and there exists not, I verily be-
e' iiecvkee,na se d
sbpeilri etvl
ee
ssi n a
set Go of dw,
oam me
no reo n m
thei se
fraacbel e,
of
ebroken,
earth-hear
t ht eadn
those who drag out a miserable existence in this veritable
Utah. There isno employment by which a delicate woman
can support herself, though all are expected to do so; they
s
help
ak toe
osahpe,acrasiihweep:
es
unload
inhtahye,
clhotospawnodogda, rindeanske,
sphloaenst;tasoilwor,
raisebabi e
s cakes,(one hoein twenty-seven potatoes, cut
corn,m ol molasses, siersr, feed
irrigate i
months is the allotted time), besides attending to the no less
essential.points,in a house, viz., washing, scrubbing, and cook-
ing; the latter item is by no means an unimportant one in a
Yankee household, as Yankee Doodle must have tea three
times a day, and hot bread at each meal. The United States
sent out a detachment of men in the fall, ostensibly en route
to California, but' really to investigate the many crying atroci-
ties in this horrible place. There has been a slight intermix-
ture with the officers and our people in society ; but I think
Brigham was afraid of their influence, and at once, without any
preliminiaries, they were denounced from the stand in the
most bitter terms ; and so general was the insult that the
commanding officers ordered the United States flag to be taken
down. Happy as I should be to save others from the degrada-
tion and misery of this evil place, I dare not have my name
known, or my head would pay the forfeit; and they would
think they were doing God and me service. Although I have
lost all desire for life, I should dread falling into their hands ;
for verily the tortures of the Inquisition were nothing to those
they inflict here, and in the end I should be consigned to a
horrible decapitation."
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 50 | 0.9534 | 0.0832 | LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1855
PAPER-HANGINGS.
THE Largest and Best-selected STOCK of PAPER-HANGINGS and DECORATIONS, comprising every
variety, from the very cheapest manufactured to the most exquisite productions ever designed, is at
J. H. PYER'S, 27, ST. ANNE-STREET, OPPOSITE TRINITY CHURCH, LIVERPOOL.
A LIBERAL DISCOUNT TO EXPORTERS AN LARGE CONSUMERS.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 0.26 | 0 | .1'
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 461 | 0.9856 | 0.0458 | STATE OF THE WOUNDED.
In reference to this subject the correspondent of the
Daily News reports as follows
I am sorry to learn that a large proportion of the wounds
received by our men in the affair of the 18th are terminating
fatally. The awfully severe nature of grape-shot wounds, to
be sure, gave reason to expect this ; though hardly, perhaps,
to the extent in which the daily returns show it to be occur-
ring. Round shot and shell wounds, from their extent, are in
most cases fatal when received ; whilst those inflicted by grape
or canister—though sadly extensive too—more frequently leave
life in the sufferer, at least for a time. Still, a limb struck by
either of these last can seldom be saved from amputation, and
after the vast hemorrhage which must in the mean time have
taken place, few systems can survive the operation. So has it
proved in the cases of very many of those carried off the
field on the 18th—after lingering on doubtfully for days they
gradually sinking and dropping off one by one. Apropos
of this subject of the wounded, however, in remarkable
contrast to those who are daily succumbing, I may
mention particularly one case which is considered of singu-
larly great surgical interest—that of a young man named
Palmer, a private in the 7th Fusiliers, who was shot through
the left parietal bone by a Minie bullet on the morn-
ing of the attempted storming. When carried into the field
hospital, an hour or so after receiving the wound, the brain
was actually protruding through an orifice in the skull large
enough to admit of the entrance of the doctor's finger into the
interior of the head in search of the ball. The surgeon
assured me that he had to thrust his index finger to its full
length within the brain, to discover the bullet and the portion
of the skull which it had carried inwards with it. Neither,
however, could be found, nor has yet been extracted. In the
meantime the fractured bone is closing, and the patient con-
tinues "alive and alike like," eating his prescribed food regu-
larly, and displaying his wonted intelligence. By a large
number of doctors who have seen it the case is considered one
of the most remarkable in the history of modern surgery, and
it certainly strikes an unprofessional looker-on as subversive
of every preconceived notion of the brain—vulnerability. A
few somewhat similar cases are, I believe, on record ; but in
every one of them the sufferer died on or about the ninth day,
whilst the individual to whom I now refer has at present every
appearance of surviving, without at the same time sustaining
any lasting cerebral injury.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 177 | 0.9233 | 0.1578 | THE FUNDS.
The English market was inanimate all day at the lower
prices of Saturday ; the anticipation of a loan continued to
operate unfavourably. Railways, with the exception of Cale-
donians, which have improved, have not experienced much
alteration, but the market displayed heaviness of tone. In
Land and Bank Shares there is little feature. In Foreign
Securities, Turkish showed renewed buoyancy, and closed at
further considerable advance. Peruvian, owing to the pro-
posed increase of the sinking fund, have also improved.
CLOSING PRICES.
Consols, Account 902 i Bank Stock 213 14
Do. Money — Bxqr. Bills, L. & S .... 24 7 pm.
Three per Cents 92} f Omnium —
FOREIGN STOCKS.
Mexicans 2l* i Russian
Peruvian — Do.
Do.
SHARES.
London, Brighton, and
South Coast lOO 2
London &N. Western look
London &S. Western B2* 3*
Manchester, Shelf., and
Lincolnshire 2s*
Midland Stock
North British 3O 1
Do. Preference... lO2 4
North Staffordshire .... 5i *
S. Eastern and Dover.. 61 2
York, Newcastle, and
Berwick ... 73* 4*
York and N. Midland.. 51
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 4 | 0.9325 | 0.054 | FROM THE
LONDON SALES.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 904 | 0.9227 | 0.1596 | SEVERAL THOUSAND POUNDS VALUE OF GLASS,
CHINA, AND EARTHENWARE, &c.,
SELLING OFF AT REDUCED PRICES.
J
40, BOLD-STREET, Liverpool, with a
• a view to improvements in the interior of his Premises,
intends disposing of his valuable and well-selected Stock of
GLASS, CHINA, EARTHENWARE,
FRENCH CHINA ORNAMENTS, ALABASTER,
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HOT-WATER JUGS, WITH METAL COVERS, &c., &c.,
At prices that offer a very great advantage to parties Furnishing,
Fitting-out Ships, Hotel Keepers, and others.
OBSERVE.-J. WARD, 40, BOLD STREET, LIVERPOOL.
PAINLESS TOOTH EXTRACTION,
OVITHOUTCHLOROFORM,) BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.
Mr. ESKIILL is the only DENTIST privileged to sue the
Patent in LIVERPOOL.
A New and ELEGANT IMPROVEMENT connected with
DENTAL SURGERY, has been invented by
MR. ESKELL, SURGEON DENTIST,
Who may be personally consulted everyWEDNltsnAv, THURSDAY,
and FRIDAY, at
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. ANSAR ST. LUKE'S OHURCHO LIVERPOOL.
It is the ction of an entirely new description of ARTIFI-
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CIAL Ts fdp beautifully Enamelled and of the most exquisite
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are incorrodible, (will never change colour or decay,) and when
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Mr. ESKELL supplies ARTIFICIAL TEETH on his new sys-
tem of SELF-ADHESION, without extracting any Teeth or
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FILLING DECAYED TEETH with ESKELL'S celebrated
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becomes as hard as the Enamel of the Tooth itself.
A NEW MODE OF EXTRACTING TEETH, by a PATENT
FULCRUM, by which means the Gums cannot be lacerated, tke
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and almost PAINLESS, renders chloroform unnecessary.
"We can confidently direct attention to it as a boon to the pro-
fession and the public.”—Laneet.
"It allows of the extraction of teeth on the most scientific and
easy manner."—Medical Times.
• There is generally so much difficulty experienced in the intro-
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or surgery, and that difficulty is so much enhanced if the inven-
tion militates against preconceived ideas and old-established and
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some of the testimonali. received in favour of the Patent Appa-
ratus from some of the many persons wko have experienced its
benefits. The following are some of the most eminent medical
men to whom the Chair and Fulcrum have been shown, which have
met with their entire approbation; some of them have also been
patients, tend to them the reader can be more particularly referred.
Sir B, Brodie, T. Tatum, Esq.,
Dr. B. Cooper, Esq., J. Avery, Esq.,
Dr. Watson, S. Lane. Esq., Hyde-park
Dr. Rigby, Corner,
Dr. Holland, Dr. Taylor Smith,
Dr. Farr, T. Wakley, Esq., M.P.,
Cmstlf Hawkins, Esq.. T. Wakley, Esq., jun.
E. Stanley Esq., Editor of the Medical' Times,
E. Cock, Esq., J. Freeman, Esq., Spring-
H, '.1., Jphnion, ES/1, gardens,
. Athol Johnson, Esq., . Evans Raidore, M.D.
The Patent Idvention has also been exhibited at meetings of
the Council of
- The Royal College of Surgeons,
' The Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society,
The Royal Medico-Botanical Society,
. The Westminster Medical Society,
" The Society of Arts, &c.
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Sitz Baths, Japanned Oak 0 14 0
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Strong Wire Meat Safes 0 16 0
HIGGS AND JONES,
FURNISHING IRONMONGERS,
46, LORD-STREET.
NEST DOOR.HISLOW THIS MUMMY Qlngs.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 458 | 0.9664 | 0.0871 | DISCOVERY OF SAXON COINS.
THE discovery of coins and bars of silver at Scotby
is a very interesting circumstance. They were proba-
bly the property of the " moneyer," or mint-master of
this district, for there is no question that a mint
existed here shortly after the Conquest, and the pro-
bability is that it had existence before. In the 31st
year of the reign of Henry 1., the burgesses of Carlisle
rendered account of one hundred shillings for the
" Old Farm of the Silver Mine ;" and in the same year
William and Hildred accounted for £40., " For the
Farm of the Silver Mine for the year past." Again,
in the 4th year of the reign of Henry IL, William
the son of Erembald, accounted for one hundred marks
of silver for the"" Farm of the Mine ;" and in the first
year of Richard 1., under the heading of " The Mine
of Carlisle," Adan, the nephew of Rodin, accounted
for £249 16s. 11d., for the " Old Farm ;" " Alan the
Moneyer," for £lOO of the farm of that year ; and
William, son of Erembald, for £2,155 6s. Bd., of the
" Mine of Carlisle," for years past in which he held it.
These items clearly show that there were silver mines
in the neighbourhood of oldstanding, and. a "moneyer,"
or mint-master. Yet, although the freshness of the
coins now found, and the bars accompanying them,
would seem to indicate that they must have been
coins remaining in the hands of the moneyer, and not
in circulation, there is nothing to show that any of
them were actually coined at Carlisle—at least so far
as the superscriptions have been published. On the
contrary, one bears on it decisiVe evidence of its coin-
age at another place. A contemporary has published
the superscriptions of six of them, among which one
runs as follows :—Obverse—" }Ethelstan Rex Brle."
Reverse—" Abba Mon. Legec. F." The latter is
erroneously read by him, " Abba moneta Legec fait,"
—"The money of a place called Abba, coinedby Legec."
It is clearly Abba Monetarius Legecestrencis fecit ; in
English, "Abba the Moneyer of Chester made this."
It was, therefore coined at Chester ; and in all proba-
bility immediately after, perhaps on occasion of, the
successes of Athelstan over the Welsh and other petty
powers, which gave him the sovereignty of the whole
kingdom. The superscription on the obverse, if rightly
given, may perhaps be explained on this supposition :
—The word Brle may be an abbreviation of the words
"Britannw Longe ;" and if so, the superscription would
read, " Athelstan, King of all Britain." It is well
known that he so styled himself after subduing the
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 3,966 | 0.9538 | 0.11 | _ELEFT SITTING.]
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THE WAR.
THE SIEGE OF SEBASTOPOL.
ADDITIONAL details of the events connected with
the unfortunate attacks by the Allies, on Sebastopol,
on the 18th of last month, continue to be received.
They do not much alter the general complexion of
affairs in relation to those proceedings as they have
been already stated. Some misapprehension appears
to have prevailed in reference to a sortie made by the
Russian garrison on the morning of that day, at a very
early hour, and which, according to some reports, is
said to have precipitated the French attack on the
Malakhoff, and so to have led to the disasters which
attended that attack. The discussions on this subject
have not tended in any great degree to clear up the
point, which is now of less moment. According to
the latest accounts received, the progress of the Allies
in their measured advance upon the defences of the
town have not been materially retarded by the reverses
referred to. On the contrary, they seem to be pro-
ceeding with renewed energy ; and, if we may judge
from the accounts transmitted, with a degree of suc-
cess which augurs ultimate and not distant triumph.
On Saturday, the 23rd of June, the allied position and
its neighbourhood was visited by a thunderstorm of
great severity, accompanied by a very heavy fall of
ram, which did a great deal of injury. All reports
concur in representing the health of the Allies as good.
Concerning the thunderstorm and the general state
of affairs,the Times correspondent, writing on the 25th,
says:
- -
The storm which burst over the south-eastern portion of
the Chersonese on Saturday night has done more damage than
we could have anticipated. Men were drowned in ravines
converted by the tornado into watercourses, were carried off
roads by mountain torrents, and dashed against hill sides ;
beasts were swept away into the harbour and borne to sea ;
huts were broken up and floated into the ocean ; the burial-
grounds near Balaklava were swept bare, and disclosed their
grim army of the- dead in ghastly resurrection, washed into
strange shapes from out their shallow graves ; and, greatest
calamity of all, the railway was in various places decomposed,
ripped up and broken down, so as to be unserviceable at our
greatest need. Orders have been sent down to urge on the
necessary repairs, for the demands of the batteries for shot and
shell are pressing, and the electric telegraph has been repeatedly
in use to-day to force on the attention of the authorities at
Balaklava the necessity there is for their promptest exertions,
and to order them to send up supplies of materiel
for our fifth bombardment as speedily as possible The
French say they are quite ready, and they have
received from us 1,600 32-pound shot for their guns
to-day. The railway fails at a critical period, but even
if it were in its usual state we could not hope to be in a con-
dition to begin a heavy fire for some time to come, and I
believe it will be fully a fortnight or three weeks before the
necessary supplies will be brought up to the front. The
repairs to the railway will be effected in ten days. Mr. Beatty
and Mr. Campbell are away at Heraclea surveying the coal
district, but their representatives are men of energy, and the
only obstructions-to be dreaded will arise from the " navvies,"
some of whom have been behaving very badly lately. They
nearly all " struck work" a short time back, on the plea that
they were not properly rationed or paid, or that, in other words,
they were starved andcheated ; but the provost-marshal brought
some of them to a sense of their situation, and, indeed, the
office of that active and worthy person and of his myrmidon
sergeants has been by no means a sinecure between " navvies,"
Greeks; and scoundrels, of all sorts. The Croat insurrection is
suppressed, but the Croat idleness has not been by any means
stimulated into usefulness. No wonder Col. M'Murdo finds it
difficult to get men for the Land Transport Corps, although
even he is' obliged to pay 2s. 6d. and 3s. a-day to native surid-
jees, so completely have we ruined the market. The losses in
the Land Transport Corps by death would be extraordinary
did we not find a parallel to them in the Sardinian army of
Tchorgoun, which has lost in three weeks nearly 1,000 men by
cholera, dysentery, and diarrhoea. The Turks and French en-
camped in the valley suffer somewhat from the same diseases,
but it is observable that the men who die are recruits and old
men who are mostly unacclimatized. To understand the diffi-
culties in the way of what is called at home " taking the field,"
one must come out and stay out here. It would be much easier
to take Sebastopol than to take the field. There are only three ac-
cessible passes, up the precipitous wall of rock which rises on
the north side of the.Tchernaya, to the plateau on which the
Russians are encamped, and the precipice runs round to the
Belbek. These passes are so steep that an army would have
some difficulty in ascending them at its leisure, without re-
sistance from any enemy. But they are occupied wherever
engineering eyes detect the smallest weakness—they are com-
manded by batteries, intersected by positions threatened by
everhanging cliffs all ready for the lever. March round and
turn them ! Where and how ! We have no transport even
if we could march, and we cannot march, because Napoleon
himself would never lead an army into such defiles as guards
the Russian position. Whether we are not strong enough to
detach a great corps of 40,000 or 60,000 men to operate
against the Russians north of Sebastopol is not for me to
say; but it is certain that the base of operations for any such
corps must be the sea, till ample transport is provided. The
Crimea is to all intents and purports a desert—a Sahara,
waterless and foodless before an invading army. A long train
of provisions came into Sebastopol to-day, and the mirror tele-
graph, which works by flashes from a mound over the Belbeck,
was exceedingly busy all the forenoon. Troops were also ob-
served in motion on the hills opposite Inkerman. The weather
is warm, but there is a strong breeze of wind, which tempers
its heat. The rain has developed horrible effluvia in camp,
and sickness is rather on the increase. With great regret and
surprise we heard of Captain Lyons's death this evening.
THE ARMISTICE.
Concerning the armistice, the same correspondent,
writing on the 26th, says :
The sad history of the 19th, which 1 was obliged to inter-
rupt on the departure of the mail, is soon finished. The bodies
of many a brave officer whom I knew in old times—old times
of the war, for men's lives are short here, and the events of a
life are compressed into a few hours—were borne past us in
silence, and now and then, wonderful to relate, men with severe
wounds were still living, and able to give expression to their
sufferings by moans and sighs of pain. The spirit of some of
these noble fellows triumphed over all their bodily agonies.
" General !" exclaimed a sergeant of the 18th Royal Irish to
Brigadier Eyre, as he came near the place in the cemetery
where the poor fellow lay with both his legs broken by a round
shot, " thank God, we did our work, any way. Had I another
pair of legs, the country and you would be welcome to them !"
Many men in hospital, after losing leg or arm, said they "would
not have cared if they had only beaten the Russians:: The tor-
tures endured by the wounded were very great ; they lay in
holes made by shells, and were frequently fired at by the Rus-
sian riflemen when they rolled about in their misery. Some of
our men, however, report that the enemy treated them kindly,
and= even brought them water out of the embrasures. They
pulled all the bodies of our officers which lay within reach up
to the abattis, and took off their epaulettes, when they had
any, and their boots, but did not strip them. It was observed
that the ditch of the abattis was in excellent order—that the
chevaux-de-frise had been repaired, and were very strong, and
that every effort had been used up to the moment before we
assaulted to render it, as it was, a formidahle obstacle to our
advance. It is said that the bottom of the ditch was filled
with bayonets, fixed firmly in the earth; and there is a report
that the Russians were employed during the night of the 17th
in repairing the abattis itself where it was injured by our
cannon. I have already tried to describe the nature of the
ground in the front of the abattis. It was in itself a con-
siderable impediment to regularity of formation. A line of
sentries was formed by the Russians as our burying parties
came out, and they advanced so far in front of the abattis that
General Airey was obliged to :remonstrate with an aide-de-
camp of General Osten-Sacken, who ordered them to retire
nearer to the abattis. It was observed that these men were fine
tall, muscular, and soldierlike fellows. They were unusually
well dressed, in clean new uniforms, and were no doubt picked
out to impose upon us. Many of them wore medals, and seemed
veteran soldiers. Their officers had also turned out with unusal
care, and wore white kid gloves, patent leather boots, and white
linen. The mass of the Russians were gathered on the
towering parapets of the Redan and Malakhoff, and were not
permitted to come to the front. Their working parties
brought out all our dead, and laid them in front of their line
of sentries, whence our people carried them away. The
precautions which had been taken to prevent officers and men
getting through the lines sufficed to keep any crowd away,
but the officers on duty and the lucky men, and some
amateurs, who managed to get through the lines, formed
groups in front of the Redan, and entered into con-
versation with a few of the Russian officers. There was,
however, more reserve and gravity in the interview than has
been the case on former occasions of the kind. One stout
elderly Russian of rank asked one of our officers " How are
you off for food ?" " Oh ! we get everything we want ; our
fleet secures that." " Yes," remarked the Russian, with a
knowing wink, " yes ; but there's one thing you're not so
well off for, and your fleet can't supply you, and that's
sleep..'' " We're at least as well off for that as you are," was
the rejoinder. Another officer, in the course of conversation,
asked if we really thought, after our experience of the de-
fence they could make, that we could take Sebastopol. " We
must ; France and England are determined to take it." " Ah !
well," said the other, " Russia is determined France
and England , shall not have it, and we'll see who has
the strongest will, and can lose most men." In the
midst'. of these brief interviews, beginning and ending
with bows and salutes, and inaugurated by the concession
of favours relating to cigars and lights, the soldiers bore
dead bodies by, consigning the privates to the burial grounds
near the trenches, and carrying off the wounded and the
bodiesof the officers to the camp. Poor Forman's body was
one of the first found ; it was far in advance of where he came
out of the trench with his company of the Rifle Brigade, and
it was terribly torn with shot. It was generally observed by
some of the surgeons, however, that the wounds were cleaner
than they have been in previous engagements. This is some-
what remarkable, for the Russians fired all kinds of missiles—
bags of nails and fragments of bullets, shells, and balls, as
well as grape and canister. They were seen as we advanced
" shovelling" the shot into the muzzles of the guns. No
one can deny many of the officers the praise of extreme
bravery and devotion. In the midst of our fire they got up
on the top and on the outside of the parapets, and directed
the fire of theifi men upon us. Several of them were knocked
over by round shot; shell, and rifle balls, while exposing them-
selves in this manner, but it scarcely speaks well for their
soldiers that they felt it necessary to set them such examples.
Colonel Dickson succeeded in obtaining Lord Raglan's per-
mission to open on the Russians' from the 21-gun battery, and
swept them away in numbers as they crowded out to fire on
our broken columns and on our wounded men and fugitives.
The armistice lasted for upwards of two hours, and when it
was over we retired from the spot so moistened with our
blood.
RETENTION OF THE CEMETERY.
All the advantage we gained by the assault was the capture
of the Cemetery, and even that we had nearly abandoned,
owing to the timidity of one of our generals. As you have
already learnt, the men in the Cemetery and houses suffered
severely during the 18th from the enemy's fire, and the
soldiers in the latter were not able to withdraw till nightfall.
It was left to one of the Generals of Division to say what
should be done with the Cemetery, and he gave orders to
abandenit. On the following morning an officer of Engineers,
Lieutenant Donnelly, heard to his extreme surprise that the
position for which we had paid so dearly was not in our
possession. He appreciated its value-. 410 saw that the
Russians had not yet advanced to re-occupy it. With the
utmost zeal and energy he set to work among the officers in
the trenches, and begged and borrowed some 30 men with
whom he crept down into the Cemetery, just before the flag
of truce was hoisted. As soon as -the armistice began the •!I
Russians flocked down to the Cemetery, which they supposed
to be undefended, but to their great-surprise they found our 30
men posted there as sentries, who warned them back, and in the
evening the party was strengthened, and we are now construct-
ing most valuable works and batteries there, in spite of a heavy
fire, which occasions us considerable loss. Such is the storythat
is going the round of the camp. lord Raglan is said to have
found fault with General Eyre -for losing so many men, but
the latter observed, that he had done what he was ordered,
and that he had taken the Cemetery. There can be no doubt
but that our troops could have got into the town in the rear
of the Redan from the houses on the 18th, had they been
strong enough to advance from the Cemetery. Whether they
could have maintained themselves there under the fire of forts,
ships, and batteries, is another question. It is now shrewdly
suspected that inside the Redan, behind those outward and
visible walls of earth, there is another very strong work—a
kind of star fort of earth with sunken batteries—and it is
certain that inside the Malakoff works there are several lines
of battery which have never been unmasked. The enemy
have probably constructed large funnel-shaped pits behind
these works, into which shells roll and burst,as such a " dodge"
was found in the Mamelon. Inside the latter work were
splendid bombproofs for the men to retire into when our fire
became hot. They were large pits with 10 feet of earth, and
beams of wood across them, and were capable of holding a
strong body of men. In one some new sacks marked with
the broad arrow and B. 0. were found, in which were packets
of cartridges ready for use. Where did these sacks come
from ? It is almost as strange as the- English bread found at
Tchorgoun. There is talk of a spy being taken, or rather
discovered, in a sub-interpreter to the Commissariat, who
confesses he has been in communication with the Russians,
and revealed our attack to them. He will be shot, if this be
true.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ADVERT | 1,376 | 0.6354 | 0.3271 | IJ CIULK. upv
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‘thltit the 1-rItNING THE TABLES.
celebrated Contcrtionist, will give his sur-
-4ctOlo hi;rnt Every Evening. The Public Press have
eQE .the India-Rubber Man.
ki7orit riBRI and MARIE will give their
kteAlljeßs. every Evening' in' the Open Air, on the
Gt,
lt Atin
---ATTACK ON SEBkSTOPOL'
1)
if9t.s S R NV OItK S .
eltch, t`et, onOlonday, Tuesday, and Friday Evenings.
1 , 4,N)
splendid Brass Band will perform the whole
‘imi-701t4i01; ueetCeo_ro.Dancing on the great Platform, an extra
4 .b, Clu„ engaged for the Theatre.
Liqtanif),.iterr„,Shilling; Children, Sixpence. Sundays Ad-
entnye,nt Tick et s,tSoi satp, en_cr
eo-m the Exchange.
N:t4tlllllll.ElillTiaGsALA in the Gardens on MONDAY
Nt 41:4046. Admission, Is.
its-7 it)e'csetorcificea is.,:aotrs: 0273
1/44
r, 4E% A,,,„
rStlrtt MUSIC-HALL, BOLD -STREET.
oitt/ft,ESYPTIAN,
,'"-, ROMAN, BRITISH. and
AAN 'NGLO-SAXON ANTIQUITIES,
44,,1it.„ 8, COLQUITT-STREET,
tt,t_til
01P —l.; cl):11LY from TEN to FBOOULRD.-
qt
n... ildren, 4 Half-price. STREET,
WR E FOR D HUN T, (Successor to W. PENN SMITH'S GAS FITTING WORKS,)
• CHANDELIER AND LUSTRE MANUFACTURER,
28, HANOVER-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
The LARGEST STOCK of• REALLY USEFUL GAS FITTINGS, on view from 8 a.m., to 6 p.m.
GAS FITTERS SENT TO ANY PART OW THE KINGDOM.
28, HANOVER-STREEt
0 U S E H 0 L D C 0 A
sUPPLIND IN
LIVERPOOL,
BIRKENHEAD, .
SEACOMBE, NEW BRIGHTON,
HUYTON,
ROBY, RAINHILL,
ROCK FERRY,
To Order left or sent by Post to the Underaigned,
23, CASTLE-STREET, LIVERPOOL ;
Or to the following Yards and Offices, viz.:-3, CROWN-STREET, Liverpool; ,EOERTON DOCK QUAY, Birkenhead; DEMEAN-
STREET, Seacombe.
•
W. and A. LAIRD.
23, Castle-street, Liverpool.
LOADING BERTH, WELLINGTON DOCK.
THE " BLACK STAR" L-
INE OF PACKETS.
LIVERPOOL TO N-
EW YORK.
PACKET of the 2-
Bth JULY.
The fine American Capper Packet-ship
41*Ue%. OCEAN EXPRESS,
ifdi il
T. CurixixofiAst, Commander;
1,937 tons register; copper-fastened and coppered ; now on her
first voyage, and has proved herself a very fast sailer.—Apply to
C. GEDISHAW and CO.
Goods will be received till Midnight of the 27th instant.
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON
AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPAIsTY.
CAPITAL, TWO MILLIONS.
ESTABLISHED IN 11336.
Empowered by Acts of Parliament.
OFFICES. 1
P 0 °'
4
37, CASTLE-STREET, IVER-
20 4. 21, POULTRY, LONDON; •
61, KING-STREET,AND
MANCHESTER.
Persons whose Fire Policies with this C4mpanY ex,-; for
24th instant, are respectfully reminded that recelP
renewal of the same will be found at the Head
°lfle Al
pool, London, and Manchester, and in the hands of t-
oe
Agents. Ile
DAMAGE occasioned by EXPLOSION of GAS "owl
as a Loss under the Company's Fire Policies. a), re 0
SWINTON BOULT, Secretary to the Come 00.1,
AGENT FOR BIRKENHEAD.—Mr. Robert Hughes, Br°
Hamilton-square.
the 9th of J'aly next.
June 20, 1855.
tirr
0
I)EAFNESS AND, DISTI;TISSnA.-
IN THE EARS AND HgAvierieCo dig
This day published, by a:Physician of rifteelajr,
diseases of the Ear only, &Book, to he given lyereo,ol6.totev,
to any part of the world,. MODE of•aEL.Fl4o49,..tetitr
Patientztby means of hiosnew-and infallible v-„lll‘,bCcr.oll4'
covered within the last few• weeks by Dr.. MA'lO VlO ,f."
Aurist. Thousands in this short space of titne_.'"o r,4110.001,10
to perfeet hearing, without absence from, b'Toevot
least pain or inconvenience to the most aged o.'„ :010411,
although having been deaf for twenty or thir"0.6.07,f
enabled, almost instantaneously, to hear a;0 oal
covery. has been proclaimed .by all the head -1
geons of London, to bet on of the most miractletli,
ever rude in Aural Surgery; and the same /0%0 d
auricled Dr. MANFREDstO give publicity to ille10,30"
saving_the poor afflicted from the advertising Vo-40, ill'
titles, whose fraudulent-advertisements are a,"' stiltAr
theit,only desire beinto under the affttetel4oosl7l/
many hundreds are randered incurable for life.o9, for
ignorance of the treatment. Doctor MANFlutioPfe,in,
Physician and Consulting Surgeon to the InstlAttste
of Deafness, 84, Wimpole-street, Cavendit Vfeas,
receives Patients as above, and applies his Ne0
,001000
?Ronday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 11 jile „Pip% ft'
rtonday and Thursday, betweert and 8 ',erweeljei
MANFRED hopes they will not refrain fro'', ,; 0.'41
means of his recent discovery; and if confidence
MANFRED will he happy to show thousands 0: d
sons cured, both rich and poor.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 6 | 0.255 | 0.0896 | bsy
311.
on
li
°'&1;
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,217 | 0.8501 | 0.2285 | EW BRIGHTON COLLEGE
.L. 1 AND
PREPARATORY SCHOOL.
The Pupils of this Institution will REASSEMBLE (D.V.) on
the Ist of August next.
Prospectuses may be had on application to the Rev. Dr. Pooot,
New Brighton College, Cheshire.
EDUCATION IN A FIRST-CLASS SCHOOL.
CRAVEN LODGE, RAINHILL.—This Establish-
ment, under the immediate Superintendence of MRS. and
the MISSES MUSGROVE, assisted by eminent Masters, will be
RE-OPENED on the 24 August next. As the number of Pupils
is limited, Parents anxious to place their Children under Mrs.
Musgrove's care are respectfully requested to make early appli-
cation. Rainhill is delightfully situated on a dry, salubrious so►l,
nine miles from Liverpool, on the London and North-Western
Railway.—For Terms, &c., apply as above, or at 45, Seymour-
street, Liverpool.
LIVERPOOL GOVERNESSES' INSTITUTION,
No. 31, RODNEY-STREET.
CHAIRMAN OF THE COM MITTEN—The Ven. Arch. BROOKS.
'I he objects of this Society, now in operation, are-
-I.—A Home for Disengaged or Daily Governesses.
2.—A gratuitous system of Registration for Governesses.
3.—Elective Annuities to aged Governesses secured ou invested
capital.
4.—Deferred Annuities secured by Government to Ladies, by pay-
ment of annual instalments.
s.—Beneyolent Fund for affording temporary assistance.
JOHN LIGHTBODY, Hon. Sec.
For particulars, address the LADY SUPERINTENDENT, No. 31,
Rodney-street.
ROYAL INSTITUTION SCHOOL.
HEAD MASTER:
The Rev. D, W. TURNER, M.A., late Demy of Magdalen College,
Oxford.
ASSISTANT MASTERS:
The Rev. JAMES LONSDALE, M.A., Fellow of Balliol College,
Oxford; ALBERT GLYNN, 8.A., Fellow of St. Peter's College,
Cambridge; J. R. LITTLE., 8.A., St. John's College, Cam-
bridge ; D. GLASS, T.C.D.
Dill RE-OPEN on SATURDAY, the 25th inrtant.
Mr. TURNER receives into his House, in Lodge-lane, a limited
number of BOARDERS. His Terms are £lOO per annum.
Mr. GLYNN also receives BOARDERS into his House, 49, Seel-
street, opposite to the Royal Institution. His Terms are £lO per
Annum.
For farther information apply to the Keeper of the Royal
Inatithtion, or to Mr. GLYNN, 49, Seel-street.
COLLEGIATE INSTITUTION,
ABBOT'S GRANGE. CHESTER.
Principal,
JOHN BRINDLEY, LL.D.
Classical Master,
LAURENCE CRAVEN, 8.A., Scholar of Trinity College, Cam-
bridge; Bell Scholar, First Class Classic, Senior Optime, and
Senior Chancellor's Medallist, 1853.
Mathematical Master.
ARTHUR BEARD, 8.A., Wrangler and Goldsmith's Exhibitioner
of St. John's College, Cambridge.
French Masts•.
Monsieur ROUBIER, Member of the French University, Paris.
German Master.
Herr SCHUCK, from the Government School, Heidelberg.
Professor of Music.
Signor ANTONIO SAPIO, Graduate and Associate of the Royal
Academy of Music, London, and formerly Pupil of the Conser-
vatories of Paris and Naples.
School of Art, including Architectural and Engineering Drawing.
A. W. AYLING, of the Royal Academy, London.
Writing and Commercial Master—R. KEARY.
Medical Tutor and House Surgeon—Vacant.
Dancing—EDGAß WEBSTER. Drill Master—Vacant.
Secretary and Librarian—LEONAßD ADDISON.
The present VACATION will terminate on SATURDAY, the
28th instant.
THE LIVERPOOL MECHANICS' INSTITU-
TION SCHOOLS will RE-OPEN on MONDAY, the 30th
instant. Prospectuses may be obtained at the Institution.
Mount-street, July 2, 1855. ASTRUP CARESS, Secretary.
THE SCHOOLS in connection with the LIVER-
POOL MECHANICS' INSTITUTION will be RE-
OPENED as follows :—The and Infant Schools on FRIDAY,
the 27th, and the High, Lower, and Evening Schools on MONDAY,
the 30th instant.
The HIGH or CLASSICAL SCHOOL is intended to prepare the
Sons of Merchants, Professional Men, and others in similar posi-
tions of life, either for the Universities or for Business. The
Terms range from Six to Twelve Guineas per Annum.
The LOWER or COMMERCIAL SCHOOL affords a thoroughly
sound, comprehensive, and practical Education for the following
low Terms s Junior Classes. Senior Classes.
Sons of Members 16s. Ms. 6d. per Quarter.
Other Pupils l7s. 6d. 21s. PI
The subjects taught in this School are Reading, Spelling, the Mean-
ing, History, and Derivation of Words, English Grammar and
Composition, English Literature, Recitation, Ancient and Modern
History, Plain and Ornamental Writing, Drawing, Mapping,
Book-keeping, Commercial Arithmetic, Algebra, Geometry,
Astronomy, Ancient and MOdern Gepsranhir. Natural History,
Political Economy, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, a.. 5
Music. The French, German, and Latin Languages are also
taught, an Extra Fee of 7s. 6d. per Quarter being charged for each,
but the_karning of them is optional.
!'rtießLS' SCHOOL, Blackburne-house.-The course of in-
struction embraces Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, Grammar,
ch or German,
e r
follows ot lie:
ruepni
Geography, History, Nesdtework, Vocal and Instrumental Music,
Drawing, the Elements or-Waters! Philosophy saiaLf„tentistry,
French, German, Dancing, and Calisthenics. Terms-Daughters
Pupils, R 1 Bs. per
125. 6d. per Quarter; Drawing, 10s. 6d. ; Calisthenics, 58. ; Piano-
forte, Its. to 425. The French, German, Drawing, and Music
antes are open to Young Ladies not in regular attendance at the
School. Those who have been educated in the School are charged
Quarter.embeErsa,
tfalFseess. 6adre.
epeharrgQeudaarta
for French or German, I2s. 6d. per Quarter; for Dancing, 10s. 6d.
To others,fOr French or German, 15s. ; Drawing, 12s. 6d. ; Music,
21s. to 425.
The INFANT SCHOOL (attached to the Girls' School) is de-
signed to prepare Children of both Sexes, under Six Years of Age,
° hi
for entering the regular Day Schools. Terms--Children of Mem-
bers, 105. 6d. per Quarter ; others, 125. oar Quarter.
The EVENING SCHOOL comprises Classes in which are taught
Reading, Spelling, Grammar, Composition Geography, History,
Writing, Arithmetic, Book-keeping, Mathematics, Navigation ,
Drawing, Painting, Modelling, &c. Terms-Junior Classes,
3s. 6d., per Quarter; Senior Classes, 65. 6d. per Quarter. French,
German, Spanish, Latin, Chemistry, Dancing, Gymnastics, and
VotAl Music are also taught, at Extra Fees.
: Prospectuses, containing more detailed information, may be
obtained Gratis on application at the Institution, Mount-street.
ASTRUP CARISS Secretary.
,
A CARD.
MR. SAQUI has REMOVED to No. 12,
BEDFORD-STREET NORTH, where he will continue to
give INSTRUCTIONS on the PIANO-FORTE and SINGING.
N.B.—Schools attended.
ANALYTICAL SYSTEM OF PIANO-FORTE
TUITION.
Mr. GEORGE EYTON begs respectfully to announce to his
Friends and the Public generally, that the first part of his Work
`on the above NEW SYSTEM OF TEACHING THE PIANO-
FORTE is now• Published.' To be had at his Academy, 92,Falkner-
street ; or the Publisher, Mr. JAMES SMITH, 66, Lord-street, by
special appointment Musicseller to Her Majesty.
ERVOUS Mind ancr reNad sufferiterrom noble-
men to mechanics, having tried &lea iffir V' tele L
remedies without a cure, have, during Is yopestr!, P$
apply to the -.... e 4
•,, 4 s
Av°efiOchureserv_bn'tione—tib
Rev. Dr. WILLIS MOSELEY, I.BvRLDONISBV t -,--
STREET,'BEDFORD-SQUARE;zoidon, ,
:.:. 0,
andlp.,al
ti id spfoohrale,rteaonnndo
Ntakernmeolsowmeunsnt oepsrbseel,
frankeduncured.ent
edotro 1 i
ti
fAnely. e it tyt d d r e 5 8
if
one
stamp
is. l
sent;' or, for 36, Twelve Chapters ou the only me,s of caring ' I
Nervous or Mind Complaints ; '' the beat bOok on'”TOttenedstbrrn
cm tanguage.”—Professor SAYAO6. SurtgOkfr‘ \ • - '
H:iii Vci SAVA N
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 3 | 1 | 0 | 1855
$
•1
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 144 | 0.8562 | 0.2476 | grtbap.
On FRIDAY next, the 20th instant, at Twelve o'clock at Noon, on
the Quay, east side of the Brunswick Dock, Liverpool,
24,125 Pieces, 696,430 ft., Merchantable Bright SPRUCE DEALS
and BATTENS,
1,715 „ 61,774 ~ ~ PINE DEALS.
2,965 „ 55894 111 „ Spruce SCANTLING,
1,990 ~ 26,995 ft f, PP BOARDS,
•
13 Cords LATH WOOD,
33,000 SAWN LATHS,
11,500 „ PALINGS,
Being the cargo now landing ex Westmoreland, from
St. John, N.B.
3,468 Pieces Ist Quality Yellow PINE DEALS,
2,085 „ 2nd Of if
5,828 „ 3rd II ~
1,900 „ 2nd .. ~ DEAL ENDS,
Being the cargo now landing ex Toronto, from Quebec.
On account of the Importer.
1,482 Ash OARS, now landing ex Yorkshire, from New York.
Apply to Messrs. C. and B. GRAY and Co., Merchants • or to
EDWARD CIIALONER, Broker,
6, East Side Queen's Dock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 26 | 0.8815 | 0.1671 | T H OM A S B A LL,
56, WHITECHAPEL,
FAMILY TEA, COFFEE, SPICE,
AND
GENERAL ITALIAN WAREHOUSE.
Established 1795, by the late Thomas Chaffers, Esq.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 4 | 0.7525 | 0.0238 | AND GENERAL COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 55 | 0.8565 | 0.1727 | SUPPLIED IN
LIVER P O O L,
BIRKENHEAD,
SEACOMBE, NEW BRIGHTON,
HUYTON,
ROBY, RAINHILL,
ROCK FERRY,
To Order left or sent by Post to the Undeveigned,
23, CASTLE-STREET, LIVERPOOL ;
Or to the following Yards and Offices, viz.:-5, CROWN.
STREET, Liverpool ; EGERToN DOCK QUAY, Birkenhead
DEMEAN-STREET, Seacombe.
W. and H. LAIRD.
23, Castle-greet, Liverpool,
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 159 | 0.9387 | 0.1039 | VISITORS TO LIVERPOOL
WILL FIND COMFORT AND ECONOMY
WHITEMAN'S BRUNSWICK HOTEL,
AND RESTAURANT,
CLAYTON-SQUARE,
;In the Centre of Liverpool, near the North-western Station).
BED AND BREAKFAST, 2s. Gd.
A Night Porter in attendance.
COMMERCIAL HOTEL, DALE-STREET.
AiIISS STAGG (Manager), at the request of many
Gentlemen, begs leave to intimate that, on and after the
15th instant, she intends to establish an ORDINARY at Two
o'clock on each Sunday, in addition to that held at Four o'clock.
OPENING OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE,
LONDON.
Ladies, Gentlemen, and Families are recommended to the
CLARENDON
PRIVATE BOARDING-HOUSE,
17 and 18,—ARUNDEL-STREET, STRAND,-17 and 18.
Coffee Room 40 feet long, with every homely comfort.
Close to Theatres, Parks, City, and Rail to Exhibition.
Bed and Breakfast, 3s. per day.
ICES.
READY AT TEN O'CLOCK.
Lemon
Vanilla
Coffee
MORRISH'S MERCHANTS' DINING-ROOMS,
LANCASTER-BUILDINGA, TITHEBARN-STREET,
LIVERPOOL.
TURTLE SOUP , 10s. 6D. PER QUART.
Turtle Soup
Turtle Cutlets
MORRISH'S MERCHANTS' DINING-ROOMS,
LANCASTER-BUILDINGS,TIT HE BA RN-ST REET,
LIVERPOOL.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 270 | 0.9644 | 0.0821 | SELLING OFF. - RETIRING FROM BUSINESS, AND LEAVING LIVERPOOL
B. L. JOSEPH, 42, BOLD-STREET,
Returns his thanks to those Friends who have honoured him with their confidence for the TWENTY-FIVE YEARS he has been in
BUSINESS IN LIVERPOOL, and begs to inform them and the Public that he it RETIRING from TRADE, and that he is determined
to offer the whale of his SPLENDID and USEFUL STOCK, at any sacrifice, to enable him to CLOSE the BUSINESS at an early period.
Although the nature of the stock is so well known, he begs to submit the following p trticulars :-
500 GOLD and SILVER WATCHES, English and Geneva, with all the modern improvements.
100 ORNAMENTAL and other CLOCKS.
An immense Stock of MODERN GOLD JEWELLERY, in Chains, Rings, Brooches, Bracelets, Pins, Studs, &c., set with
diamonds and other precious stones.
Silver Goods of every description.
ELECTRO-PLATED Articles of superior quality, in WAITERS, DISHES. and COVERS, Tea and Coffee Services, Cruet and
Liqueur Frames, SPOONS, FORKS, &c.
PAPIER MACHE Tables, Desks, Caddies, Work Boxes, Dressing Cases, &c., Tea Trays.
CUTLERY, by Harrison and other approved makers, in Table Sets, with and without cases. ivory, silver. and pearl handles.
Pen and Pocket Knives, &c.
CABINET WORK. in DESKS, DRESSING CASES, fitted with silver and plated, Work Boxes, Tea Caddiesi Jewel Cases,
Bagatelle Boards, Race Games, &c.
Splendid Stock of ORNAMENTAL CHINA, BOHEMIAN GLASS, and ALABASTER, in Vases, FIGURES, &c., Glass Shades.
LEATHER DESKS, DRESSING CASES, Reticules, Pocket Books, and Portmonnaies.
Bronze Inkstands, Candlesticks, Figures, &c.
Barometers, THERMOMETERS, Telescopes, OPERA GLASSES, COMBS and BRUSHES, Perfumery, Walking Sticks, Um-
brellas, Carpet Bags, Toys, &c.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 608 | 0.9579 | 0.1073 | MRS. GRUNDY'S ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM.
OARD
39
MRS. GRUNDY is about to set her house in order. So, after
it has been properly cleaned, and painted, and papered from
top to bottom ( which, of course, Mrs. Grundy is to pay for,)
she is resolved, once and for all, upon having quite a new sys-
tem of things established and maintained in her establishment.
She will no longer allow her house to be the scandal of the
neighbourhood. The following are a few of the Reforms she
has set her heart upon :
I. The door to be closed every night at eleven.
11. The mistress of the house to have the exclusive hiring
of the servants.
111. Nothing but cheese for supper !
IV. No more breakfasting in the bed-room—whether a
person is ill or not !
V. No more soda-water to be sent for early in the morning t.
VI. The page to be exchanged for a footman.
VII. The footman to be not less than five feet six, and in
livery of course.
VIII. The children's dresses no longer to be paid for out of
the housekeeping-money.
IX. Nothing hot to be brought up from the' servants' dinner
for luncheon in the parlour—not for anybody ! no
matter who he may be !
X. The breakfast things to be taken away every morning
precisely as the clock strikes nine.
XI. The cook before going to bed to bring up, every night,
the key of the larder.
XII. The cribbage-board to be locked up on Sundays.
XIII. No whistling allowed in the drawing-room. -
XIV. No invitations to be henceforth accepted, unless the
name of Mrs. Grundy is included in them.
XV. Mr. Grundy, for the future, to pay for his own washing.
XVI. All letters to be opened by Mrs. G., for Mr. Grundy
should have, and moreover he says he has, no secrets
from his wife—and if there are secrets in those letters,
i
1
he cannot object to her sharing them with him.
As soon as the above reforms are carried, others of a still
more stringent nature are contemplated.
THE NEW PURCHA.SE.—BLANCHE (who dotes upon horses).
" There, Frank. Isn't she a pretty creature ? Papa gave her
to me this morning. She is so good tempered ! And what a
nice head and neck she has ! Hasn't she now ? She's quite
young too—and such a beautiful mouth ! Now, what do you
say, sir, eh ?"—FRANK (who is so absurd)-: " H'm ! let's
see. Pretty creature ! Good tempered! Nice head and
neck ! Young ! And a beautiful mouth ! Why, I say, you
make a capital pair !"
A LITTLE WHITE FLAG.—It was to be expected that the
Russian, officer in command at Hango Iyould justify the mur-
der and 'the capture of the men or the Coisacii. Therefore,
Missian, goverument: assured :time the' flag of truce
hoisted on the occasion was " only a little white flag on a
stick." Well, it was a white flag : even the Russian officer
does not deny that fact. The question would seem to be, in
the Russian mind, the dimensions of a flag of truce. How
many yards of white bunting or linen constitute the sanctity
of such a flag P " The crew of Lieutenant Geneste's boat"—
says the Russian poltroon—" was caught in their own trap."
Since the wolf in the fable devoured the lamb for muddying
the stream, there has never been put forth so atrocious an
excuse for atrocity committed, as by this Russian bear in com-
mand at Hango.
i
i
I
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 322 | 0.9744 | 0.0829 | MARKETS FOR MANUFACTURES.
MANCIIESTER.--This week we are without the slighest
show of animation, and any disposition of manufacturers and
spinners to accept reduced quotations is only met by an offer,
on the part of buyers, of still lower prices, The Greek houses
have been purchasing yarns rather more freely, and the Ger-
man houses who are exporters to the Mediterranean have also
been busier ; but this demand has no further effect than to
keep somewhat in check the too rapid accumulation of stocks.
For India there is very little doing. Goods are equally dull
with yarns, but prices are also so low that a further decline
is resolutely resisted, more so even than in yarns.—Manches-
ter Courier.
ROCILDALE.—The demand for pieces continues good, and
quite equal to the supply. There is little to report in the wool
market except that the prices are upwards.
LEEDS.—The markets at our Cloth Halls were fully as brisk
as of late. The stocks are reduced lower than usual at this
season, and prices are firm, with a tendency upwards. The
mills continue to be pretty well employed. About an average
quantity of goods has been sold in the warehouses, but the
foreign trade continues languid.
BEADFORD.—WOOI : Spinners having got into good work-
ing stock are less anxious to purchase, and the business doing
is only limited. Prices still rule firm.—Yarn : No alteration
in prices, and the demand continues steady. Pieces : The
beautiful weather gives a tone of confidence, and it is not
impossible that the autumn trade may be an average one.
NOTTINGHAM.—There is the usual lassitude in the condition
of business which is almost invariably the case with the
hosiery and lace trades at this season, and which generally
prevails till about the end of next month or beginning of
September, as there is generally very little shipping business,
and the home houses only buy small quantities to assist their
stock,
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 758 | 0.9134 | 0.159 | SUNDAYS.
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MEDICAL GALVANISM.-TO THE
AFFLICTED.—The most perfect Instrument ever made,
and the most easily applied, can be had, at a very Moderate
Price, from J. ATKINSON, 33, MANCHESTER-STREET. Every
instruction given for their application for the various Diseases
in which they are recommended.
Those who are suffering from bodily infirmities should make
trial of this mighty power, that has performed lasting benefits
to hundreds of thousands. It removes all pain, breaks down
all obstructions in the system, and enters into the very midst of
the disease. No Medical Man or Family should be without one.
J. A. manufactures every description of Electrical Machinery.
Repairs done, &c., &c.
PAINLESS TOOTH EXTRACTION,
(WITHOUT CHLOROFORM,) BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.
Mr. ESKELL is pate nly DENTIST privileged to sue the
t in LIVERPOOL.
A New and ELEGANT IMPROVEMENT connected with
DENTAL SURGERY, has been invented by
MR. ESKELL, SURGEON DENTIST
Who may be personally consulted everyWenarEsnAv, THURSDAY,
and FRIDAY, at
No. 85, RENSHAMSTREET,
(NEAR ST. LUKE'S CHURCH,) LIVERPOOL.
It lathe construction of an entirely new description of ARTIFI-
CIAL TEETH, beautifully Enamelled and of the most exquisite
Workmanship, from Part of a Tooth to a Complete Set, and is
composed of the finest Materials, which are afterwards Enamelled
to resemble the Natural Teeth, in every Shade and Colour. They
are incorrodible. (will never change colour or eloughl and when
adapted to the mouth are not .discernible from the-Natural
Teeth, They are constructed upon Metals of unexceptionable
tue!:xt Ulna for comfort in wearing and general appearance cannot
kr. IsBl[ir.LL supplies ARTIFWIAL TEETH on his new sys-
tem of SELF-ADHESION, without extracting any Teeth or
Stumps. Mr. EsEEll. has Specimens in every variety, and will
be happy to show them to those interested in the subject,
when t pre-eminence will be at once apparent, and this
*dement of their superiority over all others will be found to be
entirely_' and scrupulously correct. Incorrodible ARTIFICIAL
3'RETH as above, from TEN SHILLINGS EACH TOOTH.
FILLING DECAYED TEETH with Email. celebrated
WHIMMARA. PASTE. which never changes colour, and is
free &Om thoteinlitrionS properties found in °Minn, Stoppings.
It is applied in a soft state, like paste, to the cavity: of the
Tooth, without giving the slightest pain, and in a few minutes
becomes as hard as the Enamel of the Tooth itself.
A NEW MODE OF EXTRACTING TEETH,. by a PATENT
PULCRUM, by which means the GUMS cannot be lacerated, the
danger of breaking the Tooth prevented, and haemorrhage con-
siderably lessened ; and the Tooth being extracted perpendicularly
and almost PAINLESS, renders chloroform unnecessary.
"We can confidently direct attention to it as a boon to the pro-
fession and the public."—Lancet.
"It allows of the extraction of teeth on the most scientific and
easy manner."—Medical Times.
There is generally so much difficulty experienced in the intro-
duction of any novelty, however valuable, especially in medicine
or surgery, and that difficulty is so much enhanced if the inven-
tion militates against preconceived ideas and old-established and
cherished modes of practice, that it is thought desirable to publish
some of the testimonals received in favour of the Patent Appa-
ratus from some of the many persons who have experienced its
benefits. The following are some of the most eminent medical
men to Whom the Chair and Fulcrum have been shown, which have
met with their entire approbation; some of them have also been
patients, and to them the reader can be more particularly referred.
Sir B. Brodie, T. Tatum, Esq.,
Dr. B. Cooper, Esq., J. Avery, Esq.,
Dr. Watson, S. Lane. Esq., Hyde-park
D. Rigby, Corner,
Dr. Holland, Dr. Taylor Smith,
Dr. Farr, T. Wakley, Esq., M.P.,
Caesar Hawkins, Esq., T. Wakley, Esq., jun.
E. Stanley, Esq., - Editor of the Medical Times,
E. Cock, Esq., J. Freeman, Esq., Spring-
•i H. J. Johnson, Esq., gardens,
Athol Johnson, s(l., Evans Raidore, M.D.
The Patent Invention has e
Council oan f
exhibited at meetings of
th
_ . The Royal College of Surgeons,
The Royal Medical and Chirnrgical Society,
The Royal Medico-Botanical Society,
The Westminster Medical Society,
The Society of Arts, &c.
Mr. EsKELL's method combines all the modern Improvements
at Paris and Berlin.
Badly-applied Artificial Teeth remodelled. Children's Teeth
Regulated, &c.
Consultation Free, and CHARGES STRICTLY MODERATE.
Attendance every. WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, and FRIDAY,
85, RENSHAW-STREET,
(Near St. Luke's Church,) Liverpool.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 6,448 | 0.6199 | 0.3367 | £399 14 6
Assessed takes, schools, and parochial charities are not here
included, yet only £2OB ss. Gd. are left for these, and also
personal uses : and this was a living which appeared at first
sight to hold out the prospect of ease and abundance.
We now take the case of a vicarage, the income of which,
after deducting the corn averages, was last year (1864)
£3lO 9s. ld. The enormous amount of poor-rates in many
rural districts as well as in town, and the crying need of
some good system for their assessment even on grounds inde-
pendent of their unequal pressure on the clergy, are strikingly
illustrated in this case, which is taken from the diocese of
Rochester :
• s. d.
Poor-rates for rent-charge and Vicarage ...... 79 7 4f
Land-tax on rent-charge
Do. on Vicarage 2 0 0
•
Surveyor's-rate 9 7 3f
Church-rate
Tenths . 1 4 6
Bishops' Visitation fees
Archdeacons' do.
Queen Ann's Bounty for advance on H0u5e........ 49 5 0
Insurance
House tax
Income tax
£l7B 16 21
A net income is now left of £l3l 12s. 104 d., without any
allowance being made for repairs, losses, expenses in collecting,
schools, and other parochial charities, incident to a population
of 1,400 persons.
Some other instances we put together in a
more readily to contrast the amount of rent
necessary legal outgoings on it, without incl
tabular form, the
t-charge with the
luding curates :
No. Population.' Diocese. Rent Charge Compulsory
1854. Outgoings.
e e
1. 670 Norwich... 233 142
2. 3,200 Canterbury 84 25
3. 1,587 Winchester 406 180
4. 386 Rochester.. 330 61
5. 869 Exeter .... 564 190
6. 500 Rochester.. 227 136
7. 1,509 Chichester 850 263
8. 6,801 Ripon..... 234 60
9. .... London.... 371 168
10. 777 Exeter .... 180 66
No. 1. Out of a total income of about £265 pays £6O a
year to Queen Ann's Bounty for his parsonage, £32 to
parochial rates, £5 for collections, besides income-tax and
other charges, amounting in all to above £142, to which may
be added £52 for a curate ; leaving £75 clear.
No. 5. Pays £95 to poor and highway-rates, and £4O to
land and income-tax. There is also a charge on his living of
£5O appropriated to a district church.
No: 7. Gross income £Bso—poor-rates, £152 ; highway-
rates, £67 ; land-tax, £l3 ; other taxes, £4l; curates, £2OO ;
schools, £80; district church, £80; and collecting rents, £46.
Leaving about £2OO for all general expenses.—Christian
Remembrancer.
Two of the five new daily newspapers in Manchester, the
Manchester Penny Express, and the Manchester Halfpenny
Express, have already ceased to exist.
A FIRE occurred, on Tuesday, in the Government dockyard,
Plymouth, which at oue time threatened its destruction. It
was suppressed by the military after consuming a large store
full of pine timber.
Tun Atheneum states, on tolerable authority, that a young
lady of the Kemble family may presently attempt to continue
the long career of service done to art by those of her name, as
a singer.
FJuLY 17, 1855.
AMERICA.
ARRIVAL OF THE ASIA. t
Asia,B Captain
tßairnitLisohttr
ild,hiNchoratlii.riAvmederioncasnußjayyal ..TAI'l roariniis4,?°ls3:
ten o'clock, we have intelligence from New York totl
.1.
Boston the 4th, and Halifax the sth instant. The ,141
detained by fog for twelve hours outside the harbour of 411;
At 9.30, a.m., on Saturday, she passed Cape Clear ;, i'',,,o
10.54, p.m., passed the United States Mail steamship Al.lj
hence for New York. The Asia brought 218 passenger
$884,157 in specie on freight.
no i'lte'i
The political news brought by the Asia is of ~, _ to.
The President and his wife had left Washington for
shore, for the benefit of the health of the latteP er0.40
is r':
Crampton, our Minister to the United States,
have taken offence at the American government for F;ices
ing the departure of recruits for the Crimea. ~),;), ,
Shipbuilding continued in a very depressed con stet
-''
The Hon. Abbott Lawrence, late American '''' l
04,
London, was dangerously ill. q a 01
Upwards of ten thousand persons had attend- yolf,,
meeting, for opposing the new Prohibitory Licltwr,,cP,',
the Par, at New York. All the speakers denotw,".",,
law as fanatical, unconstitutional, and inadequate t(101
the cause of temperance, or other useful purpose ;.; 011!
the other hand, it would destroy property °,,,
millions, and blast the prospects of their follorintili,
They passed resolutions in accordance with their q,•of3lfd
The meeting of the Know-Nothing State Councn .
1 DI di
chusetts, at Boston, on the 29th ult., was attende( fron,
three hundred delegates. The course of the sececiers.,(lo",
Philadelphia Convention was approved of heartilY,af,
form of principles identical with that reported by tll' 0:
of the National Convention was adopted. 4e°,..0
The Panama Railroad Company had declared a -
dividend of six per cent. 31°'
It° 113 0
A shock, presumed to be that of an "earthqua -1 At 0
experienced at and many miles round Baltimore. ); 0
Pa., the shock is said to have been very severe, soOlc
to rouse sleepers and create great consternation., it, SP-g,4.
A gingham establishment, at South Hadley -3."-scl tit ;01
field, known as the Glasgow Mills, had been destroYe loss
tide
samt
ef from om
Essington,s2oO,ooo running t o $ 250,b0e00t
w.
One man was killed, and two were injured. Ille at.
tuute
hhspnteTiand"
: 're gOe
Louis, had been blown up near Stephensfort, Xerl.t.'4sello
between Loniscl,4o-,°-, of
tiaeTTtr, with twenty officers and passengerS,,,o4:i'eas
The
eh
ephiae,
ecaktweaetnr
were not
neoa Baltimoretrgmeowreehrtaehdaanatrteritiiavi
il.etdlyo.sffirs
iorai:
coti, b:et
e!P 0 ,i,
it,
onlitcliv
of one hundred who were on board. The ladies g`' I coal
The Illinois Central Railroad Company has (Ds 00
ifheenscifsr.om Utah Valley speak of every proser,rgeigsso4:i
harvest in Salt Lake Valley. Great excitement ().'l.e."
ject of gold found on the Sweet Water was mail' - _IP
numbers were leaving for the diggings. bra?
A movement in North Carolina is soon to be swill;
the Legislature of that State, to render legal the -1101
of marriage among slaves ; to preserve sacred acre]
between parents and their young children; and to de
laws prohibiting the education of slaves. tlr.i
la
In the United States Circuit Court, at Boston, :t ari
tis had decided in the case of the brig Porpoise, tii,l3 ,ti
which had acted as a tender upon slavers, and dad 4
merchandise which was used for the purchase ofi.to
hintmdhurkieiraepstt ea
disaster,
had otherwise aided in the slave trans r - tion a." of
. po „a ,
_ll,it;
had not actually carried a single slave, was gu'oesl'
engaged in the slave trade within the meaning of ''" ),.'t
The brig was, consequently, declared forfeited. 4.,irtf4
The Montreal Pilot says :—" We yesterday 'tijqt9
barracks here for the purpose of seeing the sect to 0
there, waiting to be forwarded to their destinatioAtlt
part of the Foreign Legion in the Crimea. They` ;500
of thirty in number, and the majority of those d,<,,„0
under twenty years of age—young, thoughtless 4‘rerlay
are enlisted for three years, at $8 a month. These rd Vtlf
chiefly Germans. There are two or three Irish ; '"(1. frie„llo/'
was just as we always find him, when poor 04.04
brimful of humour. In the course of conversa`,loso
pressed his anxiety to be sent off before Sebastola°,' log y
for if it was taken before he got there, ' he would Le i'll
glory.' There is but one Scotchman in the party ;)„ CV
Glasgow, and has been about sixteen months .0.013 e"
With him it was the old story—he joined the Leg'
' he was on the spree.'
COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE' Plilikil
NEW Y°°' lig °11)14
1,03 144 0
Mormr.—The money market was inactive. 3;04' el,
were offered on easier terms, and there was an inc,reiepartal,
of capital seeking investment. In all the leadinf, (1, ia,c.o!
of the banks for the last six months there W1193e10:4 e't
The stock market was quite as active as could 'reet°ole
to §si,/,:o.1,
and prices were well supported. The rates of c A 11'
1116 .tll.
eEmntgenlasnivdewdeemresantdl.o9Bl
itlolslolno
Fanradnlele,olsp,clr2icent., . • 0 1
COTTON.—The market yesterday, though steae(J t; table ia,
out animation, at the annexed quotations. L `,,,,„;a0,,001
yesterday from the Atlantic States are less 1,
very g,
regard to the growing crop, complaints being oe4
that too much rain is falling. Nov Tell4
NEW YORK CLASSIFICATION. .
Total import since Ist instant ...... 43,1"
10i 11
Ordinary l 0 10} 11 iii
Low Middling ll 11 111 121
Middling 11* Ili 12 102. 01!,
Good Middling 111 111 „ bongo„' 26th ,2eili
telt
Freight to Liverpool 3.10 ; Exchange °
Upland. Florida. Mobije.',. b:Cesioa
We estimate the sales since our lais,,,
ePwere advised ~,1,,,
at 7,500 bales. On the 27th ult.,llows ....."Rivers Op,
graph of 26th, from Mobile, as ''declining " These,„;i2or4
middling 10.1 c. nominal ; market
existed both ' iddiAfr t
checked the demand which previously 12e. forth°Pei
use and speculation, on the basis of 11.1 e. to
..__ j
Uplands and Gulf cottons, and the receipt 011 the o$
disappointing accounts from Liverpool per BaltiC,'rei'diP;
of the week 38,710 bales, prices barely sustainediV ~12,'
some quarters an anxiety to realise, followed I,l,,,etealc•
at a reduction of !c. on the basis of lie• for middilino4
and low middlino. Florida and New Orleans. P-uofferelei
tion the demand became active, and all that wea!:ts bee;ipek
at once taken.' Within the past two days eserbePen 0V,,'10141,
offering, and an advance of C. to
iedreat Britain; Patt'
The tables of receipts and exports to
epts at tile '
er Atian 1 , _ by
decrease of 46,414 bales. The deficit in ref Lies. ~
teux
made up to the latest mail dates, is 165;23u '4" ExPorria•
Receipts since Great 13 if
Sept. 1. 1855. 1,41
5
1855. 184. ~ 03
Total .... 2,619,257 2,784,487 1,'„", '--
Increase • _
46,414
aro
- -
Decrease
There was a material falling off this week in be 616,,a
Great Britain, the deficit being 46,414 hales: tes i 5
receipts at the ports made up to the latest mad '4330 of
bales. In stocks in all the ports there is a deer 66,°
bales, and in the export to France an excess of l'ilfor 'f'-1(4
BREADSTUFFS.—But little animation in the
bet
with a reduction of 25c. to 50c. per barrel since 'POI ,fo'
and for delivery in September sales hale been 133 '6O;
present quotations. egeo.
st`t*
Paovistows.—Market steady, with moderll,4o,3,,ttel
mess pork sold at $19,431 to $19,50, and new Eireti„Yr;
old mess pork $19,121 to $19,25. Beef regto'Cl.Or;eo-
- $15,50 for country mess ; prime at $9,75 te' P`
brings 15c. to 18c. for Ohio, and 18c. to 22c. I°t ' kol. 'V 0
Cheese dull at 51c. to 91c. req
NATAL STORES.—Crude turpentine was in q„ fsP 'lOOO
a moderate demand. Spirits of turpentine.„.„•-00.;;
without change of prices. Rosin in good dell" arv"
selling freely at $3 to $3,25 for good shipping c.O
was dull at $2,50 to $2,621. „, at'
Di
Inox.—The market for Scotch pig was '''. • trl
and $29 to $3O six months. 411
e; ea
FREIGHTS .—AbOut 20,000 bushels of corn scer e , 7?'
Liverpool, at 4d in bulk, and sd. in ship's bags.
To Liverpool: Cotton, 5-32 d.: flour, per Wl6d. to
ls. 6d.; heavy goods, cheese, &c., per ton, 135'0(1. is W
grain, per bushel, 4d. to 5d.; beef, ls. 6d. to 16;,1t0d
don : Rosin and turpentine, per 2801b5., is.
heavy goods, oil, &e., 15s. to 17s. • ,
6d • beef, Pe` lc" 0
2s. 6d. To Havre : Cotton, square bales, per otv:
goods, 2C. to C.
$ 6N757 pearls, YR it's6jl7soa.r F3lou6r,
(Br TELEGRAPH.)
Fl
.2.A bettershes sales P°."..84°910
Upper Lake and common to .good Ohio, $8 44 • If
ern steady ; sales 1,900 barrels. Corn le. better VoiPw'ebe:
to 92c. ; white, $1 08 to $1 09 ; yellow, 96c' 6 60;, to
$l2 372 for new. and $19122 for old ; prime, $l., iPe 001,
prime mess, $l6 to $l7 25. Beef : country roes
ci6
pt t
prime, $9 76 to $lO 25 ; repacked Chicago, .1' ,ies
$24 to $26. Linseed oil dull, at 86c. Iron : leo PAO
Scotch pig, $29 50 to $3O 50, six months. 860tqf
NEW ORLEANS, June 27.—N0 change; salt, 0,0
0 oive
dling at 101 c. to lle. June 29.—Cotton eltue" gPO ert,
only 100 bales at 10e. to 104 c. for middliolfies; iv io I)°'
week about 2,500 bales. Receipts at this port stoe'dizior
of last year up to this date 201,000 bales.tiolo r
51,000 bales. July 2.—Cotton quiet and sale' otticc
prices are irregular; middling quoted at 10e. se of.
day 3,500 bales. t
grade Cu A.o]; LE
middlingsro , June
und
under 112 c.,
Baltic's advices, quoting an unchanged marl° rt.4co!,.eciit
Freight id. Exchange Old. 4ole
MOBILE, June 28.—Rise in rivers doubtf°'
dictory. Receipts of the week 11,000, mos9'
30,000. Baltic reported sales 800; middling doll; 60'43
deavyenweafetaenrlicitlitctPWfjoeciceoptc
to Liverpool 7-16 d. (BY TELEGRAP&O tiOto:t
NEW YORK, Evening, 6th.—Stocks
unchanged. Cotton unsettled : acenratejv.
be given. Flour further advanced slig°' to`
ill
corn unchanged. °lide
NEW ORLEANS, July 3, p.m.—The coda'
and declining.
sitiis. sis
VI
crSoamPeepsOacnßoymwTma.rseNntcheGidn
oiTnltNlivleeTdeExnterised:ayellat;;e:o;
iocte,..ol
anTceheosfe
Atoil°tlld,'l
—...........—.0.--...--- .„_tteLf
LIVERPOOL JULY RACO;id eXPillopf;ro
the two following days. Compared-with forril,e'en Of 617-00,
(Thursday), there were not half the unn-ears- „oil, orse'/
seen assembled on the same day in former Y,ere s!',:ht baceo'
was of an average description, but the fields !,,i, ei.,t f
for the cup, a prize of some .800, bringingu'dffer'" 5, s.
the post. The following are the winners of the
cebo%,llr
WEDNESDAY• ,_ t 2 Sao IOW ~
CROXTETH STAKES.—Rataphin 1, ACcO"a 41y :If ~. /, ,i):
MERSEY STAKES.—The Heir of Lynne 1: lortoe`j3jan' 440
BENTINCK TEsTtmoNtAL.--Early Bird urniire 2,,,, ijOir
LANCASHIRE OAKS.—Lady Tatton 1, Elva ,eline
_.. 1, ,
SELLING STAKES,.-Salmon Pera 2,
_ouritai, S'
UNITED KINGDOM TRAINERS' STAIC:
n 1°C0",,,,
Rattler 2, Jupiter 3, Spencer 4. RP
THURSDAY• Rattler ,It
nIIV
Ben." il_A,
A DERBYEG iNT HANDICAP.—Dervish
eNAr
iNannni IdEcN4A
,NPTI. —Ah
feD,
Assayer
is Vora;._:_ 1t o
et a n
heranl" 00 ev#
rcebus 3. The best contested race of thpheasant " h silo', io'
LIVERPOOL CUP.—Seducer 1, Cock
nd Goorlo a. AgA
Bianca, Domino, Joe Miller, Shoreham,
°Order P.lBCe, to 2
and came to the winning-post in tlied. Betting,'
lengthnh—Ea
pines
,hT7eAatiidoEblse.a—tgwasei
iensisti secondetrt
ht
oe
i kiirausnn. deartilg
bi rr,s,
alvesbt
oi
cs
~,: . , ~f , 5
HER MAJESTY'S PLATE,--RalßPlan i OD"' 1,
SPTRAONDLUECYE
sSTTAAKKEEsS....:ESiiIieDrOmIFIV:I:GbI.YarVidein. iLs,°,rFniiel'e:\srviin'.sasioarlaY3iciiptri
tA
TToympe,ean2,dCvheerrvriysiß,
aralsioidsyta3r.
LICENSED VICTUALLERS'
to
ere y .
_. ~
et
GREAT STAKES:
LC eI,VREDR/IF tohoeLr
LANCASHIREid e. r
LoEf the R formformer gll,
iWalked,itzai o:lies.-0
ae 0 jr. I 0 i 0
SO 000
iairy Queen l•
the Ile ioP"'
Of
AD AL I EAL o.3.l3reroarv.---Admira.seat warblio,6
g w
Ackworth Ommanney, died at Ins _lc, ~4 --c,l
Sunday wee
Havant, near Portsmouth, on
Airs
swiirgNboy
3S,Tit—Cliere Petite9t,eQuestionabl : .
201;e5,
tedE.lll".l3ktrlco'Dsksocdrnelaain7:AiluelAit fe
"zil3ts T
**elaadigoi", named Patrick O'Hare, was charged
lice-court, on Thursday, with obtaining
urheed other articles from various houses in the
boele Holt-Hill. He was remanded.
leZtrizeahea, oeveral owners of dogs were summoned before.
Ctilfs to be a"ttagistrates, on. Thursday, for perm! ting
contrary a
lira 23 64, with o township commissioners. In each case
dive Ally $$
ed costs, was inflicted.
Likag•-1,,17,1 °LENT SOCIETY.—The twenty-eighth
be %,"I,ll.'vethi3ea"rt';;LetY was held in their club-room, at tne
„ts Met lc At an early hour a large number of
tßoeljat'tahlee,,,,,,,' and proceeded in procession to church,
era pa Aft "u°/1 was preached by the Rev. Mr. Haines,
$l2 rtoek „ er the
th ran e sermon, upwards o.f 200 of the mem-
clotha xeellent dinner, provided by Mrs. Ball.
,iktbe'atd the 'tere removed, the president, Mr. Henry
grin; 44404 secretary, Mr. Chadwick, read the accou.nts
I,l° lbw a rjear, which were most satisfactory, the society
).,i'TottP4i'vrve fund of over £l,OOO.
Cat)l4ated cßuucu.—ln consequence of the iuinos
%,14,1'a cleen„ltate of this ancient and picturesque edifice,
frida'wla the';necessary, with a view to its restoration, to
lea tegtr,,lV4Ole of the' church except the tower; and on
were' her• Teeting was held in the church, presided over
taktkssed a 41,.• Graham, the incumbent, when resolutions
pled'herising the churchwardens to apply for a
table atade own and rebuild the church on the present
14, elet,, atklrstand the old materials, as far as they are
tid4Ppenr,", used without dressing, so as to preserve the
llr j`e aliellee as much as possible. Through the inde-
late p,.4i,,t!iraiseworthy exertions of the churchwardens,
rate
e"." and Mr. R. Hampson, they have collected
,a
4.leient for the complete ding
riatjeltenta3 Pre tired by Messrs. Hay, the architects. the
"51,,,'11,(1aisiLWd1 be the same as the present church, with
th so haVing high pitched and open framed timber
Tko, Porch, and vestry on the north side.
APPLICATIO4 OP " ROSCOE oN Eve-
Parl,4esair- the Birkenhead -Police-court; on- Thursday,
'4.44. Cs' j• Case,J R. Shaw, J. S. Jackson, and the,'
11)4a ella°4n, 11Ir. ob'ert GraCe, attorney, appeared to
ktßto' 4.ge of as' sau'lt preferred against him by William ,
to 4;44 iatelligent-looking hoy of eleven years of age. '
his father, an engineer, at Lower Tran-
his statement, it appeared that on the after-
Y week he was sitting, along with three other
400 r -steps of a Mr. Clegg. The defendant hap-
\ik ‘;`°.!, at the time, when one of the boys, named
t•ektit;l4?,, called out, " Lord Derby's cocks and hens,"
t "-an exclamation which seemed to irritate the
kleN, Three of the boys immediately ran away, but the
stt,ffkt,' is his ground. Mr. Grace, after having made
alltqal attempt to seize the 'runaways, returned to the
trirehirs hag caught the complainant by one:side of the
rtai btered to him on the other side a violent blow
ktb ti,°l,Or large book, which he (the defendant) was
Neese bOy eag. The effect of the blow was a severe cut,
NfBed t4,1t1 Profusely, Mr Bretherton, for the defence,
te%eetr', some e lenoth remarking that no one
it!•dz,o37,
,There accident °(fo'r it was such) than Mr.
but e.:Z was no intention on his part to hurt
e to stop a system of annoyance to
to4Va'lit-the `nrally subject from the boys. of the
bey e4lon in question he was passing the
ea,,b°ken,hbN% e4willlN after him, and the defendant swung
toAcs 14te ) h 'eh contained Roscoe on
.Evid.ence,"
') I ad
kled e rel„ given many hard hits in its time.—
dot the result
,g,nle struck the bo3 ,
du h.Brether-
ka„ th„"LL tof „Ll'? client had seiz him. Thee blow
",„celdent, and owing altogether to the con-
he disuabolCwo youths, sons of the defendant, an old
tube viteefui _and a person of the name of Holden, spoke
Ves3h,„ P,•e boy. 'tanner in which the defendant was treated
defe"";4ol.,s•--The bench inquired the reason of the
tl;t10e hZet.4tierby's cocks and hens" being appheditor
"e Woman Walker : You know that .
61',,„lievini calls himself Lord Derby when he goes
44ez"`If (Lauo•hter. I—Mr. Jackson : Well, may
,b 4 a 1,0 04 be. Derby, (Renewed laughter.) —The witness
Ll'ttlaltiett. cross-examined, said that the Tranmere
Ctliarnot,ieftne4e
of ii
one who came through the village
t tts, At quor.. After the bench had consulted
tICN Car bee,
s''• Case said they had heard. very patiently
)attae ° cos • °id on both sides, and taking all the cirFum-tt.
iSideration the bench considered the justice o
401 81k ue
rnet by a' nominal conviction of is. and costs.
4L''''t,lltielillV—On Thursday, at the Birkenhead police-
!.. or n, a boy ten years of age, was charged with
e'tik.t3, tope'fwith his brother (who had absconded), some
14talitl,°1 °4l. the landing-stage at Seacombe slip, the
aa7,sre,, • Coulborn. The mother (who appeared in
th,e,`Ngiljt.e`ii[ant in her arms) had been sent from the
30, bit 1--aterd, her native place, some eight months ago,
tipka:,3; returned, and it was suspected she was in
Dort L'Atet 'e(lti:lng out her children to steal. The woman
444,4er ,2Ve3 .e allegation, saying that she had paid poor
tll, kcez ip,e,sl4 the town for many yeerarsi,mazdanhs.dbteoinsgupa-
the
tooe,a4:e reil'owby her own lasbo: h
bithePe3l34 hacitnwz
e.,0•11s Twheererwecord f 'the court showed that
well known, but in consequence of
Ls'ke4 °re, a„°_, oeen found hid in an old bathing machine
b"e4nenhot in. his possession, the prisoner was dis
Itithz the t 0 telling the mother thatback if she was seen a
eto Irevinansaille and her l• w
At 2
6'ECUTI°X OF PROTESTANT
CONVERTS AB R 0,11).
the 3,.
As?„1:
11P'
• aad
,ers
JULY 17, 1855.]
CZESEIRE AND WALES.
r tbto
!r• ;11
Pr°"
.-."--------.........-....----.. tt'2DecZta it te e of the Protestant Alliance has brought under
kL.'',li'4 ~,L'tice of the British Government three' distinct
14,11 ~°„L.`',Ftivin by foreign governments of parties their
of kll,-:,,,.'11a1irt,?, Decoine etnivert..,..u.L.s:r.;
'L Of b txxiT earl
for the interference of our ministers ilimisterrison.
kiFhiorenc°elakiZ'z, The first is respecting
t 4 .)lic r,!! !br tbA'e„„elletti,aworkman in a cigart mthaennlaocmtoarny
4,s,AitipYzion -,4Lieged crime of injury to
cchetti
117, been l'l' of Prpfl'-'" committee observe that the. decree of
proved against
~D'i•li•take.allyP.....ris, 9n-elet,llre. o lorence, under which Ce .
D, '0
4of ass po's'eeles only two acts, as
NsNat the text session of Diodatz s Bible,. and his ex-
tikof %A pii °f anti- to his children and friends. As to the
1:44744;0,w, -,tc.,1-Catholic ideas "-the real offence in the
kroas toe tie '!eeree merely states that "there is reason
/i,, Ititki e. ii, etings were held at Cecchetti's house for
1 tiii i11e,4,a eecclietti's imprisonment, therefore, be not
l'iti,kYifte.ase.---ibtile law has been strained to the utmost to
Nkto4ll9 yearrasecond is that of John Evangelist Bor-
cetei con.re monk of the Order of Mercy, and pity-
t,. of the at, hi the city r f Prague. Having become
•Nteltzo ge erro .
I`*, •e Dm' rots of the RoMish cree, he determined to
tt,,llNhi_ 4 cerant religion. The laws of Austria legalize
Illay thes'eeelesi 4.,Qtestant,providedt certificateddticebe firtf
tkli 44i,.Arate_astical authorities, and a be obtain
11,e 41,1. TZlaat minister with whose flock the convert
111, 'Attt,, Itilfes'e, laws also permit an Austrian subject to
1,41er., 4 zitions, he 'a'
Iliileairkocle s'nn Ina foreign country. Borzinsky chose
41 'n or ,:d ec,,,,,! less
likely to give offence.. To comply with
ncial of
made known his intentions. to the
Icitsi,a,t 171,,, °vent at Prague, and to the Pm" . and
4,lliitil4,ii.`etio.ailtake.,..ll,e immediately went into Prussia
Peter, Peters-
kttlf,.) near ~vitri, . ember of the Lutheran confession by the
;pia `Ate Aiesi't' In the parish church of St.
‘411),(11414. Oottil,, from whom he
.obtained the prescHbed
45',11"'•IVhit that's
returned to his father's house in Itlo-
-44i1„NSs 1 had
lie
it o, ll of the
he n every.respect complied with
Ler.
~t,11,14e
as vet ht, of law, he should enjoy its protection. Rh 341). °'i' raist 1, ' 'd b the gendarmes
4t Ject rto a -e• He was seize
authorities. By them he
ecclesiastical
l„ drat t,scltn:"`arY confinement and a diet of bread and
1 411 • ,rati'ved unavailing to secure his recantation,
kitaitt4k aha l'ell'etl
&feee ti tlaaes o a dark su erranean cell adjoining
All. 4r3 n,eelto, 4., The last information received by the
b,,t4, Tli-el,eattallat lie is more severely treated than ever,
L.‘41•1 of Jog "elTnitt ned that he must soon sink under the
Foeker'rq Lgetl at ee have likewise
~ma lette . to.ezi been informed, that a
ptr, ex rto p asky named Übaldus, also a monk,
ttl, tat Dress opo ,
r°! ~,,_ tittAe t'ki 14
~pins IX. on the immoralities of
t[e:y re-z:_a „,..!, he ;litention of embracing Protestantism. ittt't of hisrrtol74r.vx,4:,, been forcibly removed under a
traded that that, 9otz, in Illyria, where.tmh_earer
to
imtl:rague a a Prioss.Ytia,. lals treatment will be II
tet 43e he -s
ltinall'ati4Pe authorities the committeeben confined
Y a4oth Persisted iI;.Q clAlri'oachim Zezulehas e si
are
qiiliasl persists cast , a r,
'3 that prof,. a
years:
lotions.
period of 20
ii:l:ep gorPriest, but -- or tiion of Protestant cony
formerly a
solely
4.4t5t t; flei nil - 11°W a e Rev. Dr. Gomez,
)i,eB-lit . a--, who h l'eco • d clergyman of the
qrs. o.
Lis beengniz
encrand as
oes vin his .cr at . for many years i., . , a
uot
kNo.Dliblici,°4-11honse on #l. Having lately announesurn,
f .41 The " accaSed • - ,iie doctrines of Protestan.i
o_
vtjk`l'lllauld Pritne M. In the Senate by the Marquis f
ilkt i1it,%411 be take Mister of Portugal replied that every
omenll,lltls ed toti 11 tO prevent or punish the offeue. Dr.
~,e , h.eci bl, quite British Embassy for protection, but
'''‘' -11)1' hi by
- ""e Charge d'Affaires that nothing could be
tni,i, ~Le4trnaB Ile not a Britis subject. In reply to
t4‘t%`l k,,."4)1,- 5 thew as
committee, Lord Clarendon has inti-
tV 4fis.,vetsi,`'st ti,impdiat and best atfpntinn M' ilia
7)0,,,,` 411,j4ee :gellt will be devoted to the matters brought
,44t, Xh ; eie7Pd that Lord Clarendon fully recognizes the
'4s,°,)trverh,,getley of remonstrance upon such eases with
'NI' trkre,,ltiticZe!its, but says that in the mode of proceed-
°l tiZ rnov,l,lls,required than may always be apparent to
proceed-
s fled
°Y. feelings of honest indignation, think
},ilitil -' o, oppression.
‘l,' lie izig ~... 111.1".....M....."•-•--___....
,i;,ltelstr th'elttai7.GLAND is stated to be in treaty for the.
tNtirc;ed branch'a Opera-house, with the view to make it
V NeA 4 Iv.-Morning Chronicle.
t1'14,," Of th zeT3xxxsTnn BRIDGE.-On Monday, in
kAlf tilidge a,e works in progress for the construction of
',, I pre„; Westminster having shaken the fouda-
tt,l'::t4irecatirt structure, orders were issued form he
ttioq l„I'':1)lie °as to be taken to prevent the possibility of
01t1,‘14 T
/li4ill'e 30'4)b Rot 1 Ititi th, up. AGLAN.-A letter from before Sebas-
e thk14,03 details' in the Se'maphore, of Marseilles, gives
4itthr4 ii waoc
st Lord Raglan's illness and death i-
tigNk,l4::Nar- Several days labouring under the influence
t44h 111 k 4,, lhalady which nearly resembles cholera
11,4t4*;,Z110illg-4„trhie symptoms oft , but the physicians, on
lai,: to ' tour,teN" nit' death, had given it as their opinion
L .I,e,T t eh4t, Zi ,e e 4 tibd that his state no longer caused un-
flit ltkklit4'l (kr; had regained its strength, he had been
11,1 J,. a kivesti'ng the whole of the day hopes were enter-
-1,4'114
as illioseffe of his indisposition would soon disappear.
i'4' 'l4 hell
.the said . that he felt nearly well, but about
err, Lltltli 14 oltho evening lie was seized with a sudden
t'til,''tii‘ez,l% 40 at suffering the slightest pain, gradually
oiol7 4111 tirg after this crisis resigned his soul to
1(,e..e,4Y,q't,1i4V11,‘ :ass ,vid a tranquillity which it is impossible
1:::'VD, I.',Vviii Ile religious ceremonies have been per-
-0 tile`cete:'4l74,4, .',)e removed from the head-quarters and
tlt et a/11 litii 13Y a war-steamer, in charge of his aides-
i Icr\l, the 141 1-lersh, Lieut.-Colonel Somerset, Major
11 tae 0„, ./) .etitenant kited;•st,•qay ,Ql/y iv. Calthorpe. The Bristol corres-
ote•eet.i.ziess ems', writing on Thursday evening,
~orLitet,,,l4 thl!. !looper and Stuckey, undertakers,
cr t ell to spill:atioz::
for y, received instructions to make
iNt NI, 4,,e. ibe , /or the arrival of Lord Raglan's re-
tkhil ''Y bet 1.4% lia,r9ught to Bristol prepara to their
b''ltOs t/y,..,t is alanton, for interment i the ducal fa-
,lt ei'ple sfzie)a theeilyeeted that the body nwill reach this
0 `,4 fiord ,Areth, and 20th of the present month. As
tbk:AVO'f.:lllso.4l hencee tne Channel, telegraphicsamiliaitellait.ligee
t tle 0r`1144-°anveL3red to his lordship's 1. p hat th4ttelldiS chief InOurner, will!visit thiYs' for
1t h, lik, t ha,, hods, 4 the cortege to Badminton city,t
is
l'Ieeh„4.4111;10 13a4awititi_eni.n state for two or three days,
.314 p Of 1, rt. ri,,,, u... House, the seat of his Grace
*44, 154(141113,T0`nt fort family vault is in the
' Which immediately adjoins the
I
it
nib Sr
0 o
0,1
f
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, and DEATHS.
40-
BIRTHS.
On the Bth inst., the wife of Mr. John Lindsay, Upper Par-
liament-street, of a dal,ghter.
On the 9th inst., at I?3ane-strect, Fairfield, the wife of John
Morrow Esq., of a daughter.
On the 10th inst., at Highfield, Oxton, the wife-of Mr. George
R. Clover, of a daughter.
On the 10th insf., at Rudgrave-place, Egremont, the wife of
William Maddock, Esq., of a daughter.
On the 11th inst., in Everton-bow, Mrs Robert Tronson,
of a daughter.
On the 11th inst., at Higher Bebington, Cheshire, the wife
of Mr. William Corfe, of a son.
On the 12th inst., the wife of Mr. William F. Sim, Spring-
field, Clanghton, of a daughter.
On the 12th inst., at Bleak-cottage, Everton-road, the wife
of Mr. Thomas W. Hughes, of a son.
On the 13th inst., at Yonderton, Renfrewshire, Scotland,
the wife of Mr. Moses Buchanan, jun., Liverpool, of 'a
daughter.
On the 14th inst., in Bride-street, Mrs. J. Battersby, of a son.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 937 | 0.5306 | 0.3245 | jer'jl
~D.
feritil°l
England in het-comprehensive historic
yet to make. ill
From the sources above referred t° ;oerlTl
the present undertaking toprovdlw,
~
biographical sketches for general real', 1 fro"
.added a few nomes ofrecent times, ta7ii, of
of the church,_ as e.g. Nikon Fdtrio
founder of "The Christian Brothe'le`elia
treated without 'any leaning to the fro P-4
practice which- they may exhibit'diSeloolrl°!tis
the English Church, but simplY.,llo,e- terirk
holiness and self4lenial whichiS4ll3_, j
Ar`—•elpgii
saint in all ages and conntriesi.ancl"—AL
of the series toeommemorate, rather'''. 01
tical rank or-social station.
wad 11- Py'ff/1;
Sermons and treatises en:rep-e-,
pit
thing like the same manner as' „ `,-9).
person. Itio words can pourtrx,h'oe
bly the size, and beautp,. aooeat 111,.0t
Crystal Palace, as a picture. ge441.10,/oliii
goodness, piety, devotion, in vt
actual history of a real-fpersoo fe"
exercise:of these virtues:.
ought to do- such and' such. Ono',"
ready tn. say,
,it is very. true,, be-,.."0111/1t
of the-world, and-from our po_siv let lijeif,
ployment, it is impossible. Dieit'all t„,
some, persons have, in spite o', tAe"
actually done so, then excuse
encouragement to:try is. affOrdeu,,e;
The two men,.whose lives area
for- their likeness. in piety! en"by
their calling of life=showing, , 1
how possible it is. to exercise f„-ceodlol
position where men may be P,"" r„ir
adHsuoralidnmignaligtiitQheir-tr3,oiuffinbgelie° oliffekebNoincilht°aZttrgegril;#;'
times of the,' e
of James. 11., and the beginn'T•
every ono.who knows anything•t 641
land is those times, must
difficult position in which ft,‘ Vlory
Church, must have been in, t°,et !„/
the duties of his place, ard .7cre,)l ;4„
his'. loyalty ,to God. and 14°g
Jll 700
W4_,S the high character, ronn- tei ed 0",
men of the most eppositc
spirit -of partizanship, that
and the confidence of the ge,v,a.eies.4,jectjy,,/;
way compromising his relli'"-effid,4,o
biography is chiefly made "Por; 19AV
own meditations and, prayers,' 600,131',J1),,
of the Christian ; at the san'obets
the practice of Daniel the PlTylleg
minister of the empire of 133,404,Piavari,
retire for prayer and meditieteniovvenitil
his own chamber, without 11,T,tv, the ftoll7l
could be followed under six*, , Tove, of
Accountant-general of lire 17 f
of revolution and war, cotil', 116'4 ,010,
mune with his. God, without r 14icPutir
duties.
The leading facts in the coPil o`p
generally pretty well knovniv of 13,00",eit'.
ao 01, op-cee;
ability, and with the certain fore,' TIP tV,
to
employment he was contelt aoci• f
vote himself more entirelY t° FOC chit',
at Little Gidding, after th.e Lrodoii4
,e;
monastic life, before the ce 1)) as Ili,'
vows and the slavish obedien_oaesslo
Rome has destroyed the us,lit, is u
plicity of Christian retiree .oioo, 0004
claim the admiration of ;isterAecltAr,
aged, mother, his brother, n's:als, coor;, 0711
in number about fort T' Per,.religl„er
sneers and scoffs of the by 1'01)
expressed suspicion of P,0.1), toes 0.
pritaito e tf
• the,
of piety more like
tury. oco•• 0,"
A t wily I'4 ort
The following incident afa thikel''
the case, the root of piety
Their meeting was such as,Ttro so n 4,
though twenty-seven Y
mbeutleauenyaapirieocustiopuaarei.itia:
meetingsol(l,o'l3 heal' 'itivri
etportanceaucto #311,1
emnetmfbroermofthpaerimiaoradeeirint,of
thet,..o
fisilevoc
InThe gronil,d atred'lltJll
his mother, knelt upon
ms indic3‘e 10° 091
psecubutliicown
onfcethrnesporfugureeatand had coo Ad,.,
blessing. Modern custoerence thel; hoc 00
thenpe to the rev 0 i,to tpr
This she retiseul "
idtsarucuffhaparec:brootil
He besoughit htrjr, tshe had give
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 97 | 0.9091 | 0.1679 | ROSES, 'WALTON NURSERY.
SKIRVING begs to acquaint his Friends
• and the Public hat his extensive collection of DWARF
and STANDARD ROSES, now in full bloom, may be seen any
day, except Sunday, from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Purchasers will find this the most suitable season fur making a
proper selection.
JONATHAN BLUNDELL AND SON,
COAL PROPRIEToRS,
Have REMOVED their CROWN-STREET OFFICE to the Pre-
mises lately occupied by R. and W. Fula, Crown-street, near
Oxford-street, whose Business they will also carry on.
Liverpool, July 1, 1955.
[PRICE, WITH SUPPLEMENT f ,
1. STAMPED 41D
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,359 | 0.9576 | 0.1049 | PINNOCK, who murdered the old man at Rothwell, last
week, has been tried and convicted at Northampton, and sen-
tenced to death.
ONE hundred and two walking sticks were last week sold,
among the miscellaneous effects of a gtntleman, recently de-
ceased, at Lancaster.
Game TRADE IN THE DANUBE.—Letters from Constanti-
nople to the 28th of June report the arrival there, during the
preceding five days, from Brailow and Galatz of as many as
91 cargoes of grain, and the departure for those and other
Danubian ports, to load similar cargoes, of no less than 53
other vessels.
EVESHAM ELECTION: 1 UNIVERSAL REPRESENTATIVE.--
The nomination took place on Wednesday at the Town-hall ;
Mr. Holland was the only candidate, the two others having
previouslyretired. Mr. Holland was declared duly elected. In
returning thanks he said he was for a vigorous prosecution of
the war, and not only of the war, but of everything right and
just, whether at home or abroad. He was not a member for
any particular class of politicians, but for every class, for every
elector, and every non-elector,
DISTRESSING OCCURRENCE.—Two young ladies, the daugh-
ters of J. H. Rees, Esq., of Carmarthen, were bathing, on
Saturday, on the shore, near their father's house, when, having
ventured too far, they sank in a pool about ten feet in depth.
Their governess, who was with them, rushed to their rescue,
and, failing to save, died with them. Mr. Rees was hastily
summoned from a meeting which he was attending at the
church, and on coming out, the first objects which met his
gaze were the lifelessbodies of his children and governess, which
were being borne along to his house.
REPRESENTATION OF THE CITY.—We understand that a
movement is now being made, with the view of gettieg up a
requisition, calling on Lord John Russell and Baron Rothschild
to resign their seats for the city. The ground on which Lord
John is to be called on to resign is, that he grossly misrepre-
sents the sentiments of his constituents on the question of the
war ; while the reason which is to be urged for the resignation
of the Baron, is, that he does not represent them at all.
There is, we are assured, a large and influential party in the
city, who are determined that it shall be hereafter efficiently
represented in the House of Commons.—Advertiser.
EXTRAORDINARY ESCAPE OF THE CREW OF A STEAMTDG
AT SHIELDS.—The Welsh, a tug steamer belonging to Sun-
derland, brought a foreign schooner into Shields from sea on
Tuesday, and after seeing her moored, the master of the
steamer went on board the schooner to get his towage. He
had not been on board the schooner above a minute, and the
other two men belonging to her were standing forward in the
steamer, when her boiler exploded with fearful violence.
In an instant it blew everything in the cabin to pieces, and
forced out the stern and after deck. The boat immediately
sank, but, strange to say, the two men were rescued without
having sustained the least injury. The steamer hag since been
raised, and it is found that her engine is all twisted and de-
stroyed.
Tirosu who have implicit faith in the universal " honour
of the English Tradesman, and a fortiori of " the British
Banker," may be surprised to hear a story which is current in
commercial -circles, and is as well authenticated as it is gene-
rally
believed. A highly-respected London banker, on his
death-bed, called his chidren round him, and asked them if
they believed in his *reputed wealth ? They answered that
they shared the general opinion as to his large fortune, and
he then surprised them by the assurance that he had been
inse}'ent for the last thirty years. lie, however, entreated
them not to be depressed by the intelligence; but recom-
mended them to go 'to Doctor's Commons immediately after
his decease and swear his property under half a million. The
advice was taken. The customers of The house were agreeably
'edified on hearing of the enormous wealth of the late partner,
and the bank was firmer than ever, in the opinion of those
'who trusted their money to its keeping.
STOLEN' £5OO NOTE.-1 tommunication has been
Teceivedfromene of the jury who were supposed tohave given
a verdict for the plaintiff in the 'Court of Common Pleas, at
Guildhall, on Tuesday last, in an action brought on behalf of
M. St. Ilattl,,a money-changer inTaris, against 'the Bank of
England, tovecover a £5OO bank note, forming one of those
stolen from Messrs. Brown, Shipley, and Co., to the effect that
the jury dill not intend to express, and had by no means arrived
at a conclusion favourable te'the right of the plaintiff. The
feeling Of'a large portion of 'them, at Jeast, is stated to have
beenthnt M. St. Paul, having received notice of the robbery,
and having wilfully disregarded it, or, at all events, having
adopted 110 steps to give effect to it, could not be considered to
have taken the note boaNde. The question is one of so much
moment as to make it important that the aw should not be
-settled on a _misunderstanding of the intention of the jury,
and hence it is deemed essential that their views should be
ascertained on the point more clearly than appears to have
been possible in the hurried manner in which their verdict
vraataken.— Times.
POLICY OP Priussm.—According to the Berlin correspond-
. out of the Times, the opinion prevalent in that capital is
"that the Prussian Royal Family and the Court are bound
hand and foot, and sold body and soul to Russia." He adds :
"The before-mentioned view is based on the fact of a Prussian
Princess being theAconsort of the Emperor of Russia who was
reigning at the time of this conflict being brought about by
'him, on the very strong presumption of there being a power-
ful party at Court here imbued with Russian sympathies, and
'the patent fact that Prussia has not'openly and actively joined
ma in the struggle against Russia. The three facts are cor-
rect, but the imputed cause of Prussia's policy is incorrect;
there are so many perfectly valid reasons, military, financial,
political, and economical, to withhold Prussia from taking a
forward part in the war, however ,convinced King, Ministers,
and people may be of the necessity of profiting by the present
opportunity of asserting the independence of the country, that
we have no need to suppose feelings of brotherly affection on
the part of the King, or political sympathies for Russia on the
part of certain members of the Court, to have been more than
subordinate accessories in deterniining the course that Prussia
has hitherto taken."
ANECDOTE -•OP xnu QUEEN.—A few days ago, in the
beautiful little cemetery of Rose Bank, our attention was
directed to a handsome monument of Aberdeen granite,
having the following inscription in letters of gold:—" Sacred
to the memory of Miss Ida `Benanomi, the faithful and
esteemed dresser of Queen Victoria, who departed this life
October 15,:14, in the thirty-seventh year of her age, be-
loved and respected by all who knew her. This stone has
been placed by-Queen Victoria as a mark of her regard." On
inquiry we found that one day, whether in the autumn of
1854 or at a former period we were not told, when Miss Be-
nanomi -was accompanying Queen Victoria in her morning
walk on Arthur's Seat, she called her Majesty's attention to
the beautiful, cemetery in the distant valley, and expressed a
wish that when she died she might be buried there. Last
year, when 'her Majesty was _going north, Miss Benanomi,
who, as usual,-was attending her royal mistress, became in-
disposed in Holyrood Palace, and .was unable to proceed fur-
ther. By order of Her Majesty, Miss Benanomi was attended
by an eminent ;physician, but she never recovered, and died
in Holyrood Palace. Her Majesty -was deeply affected by the
death, and, remembering the vvishof Miss Benanomi, ordered
the remains to he buried in Rose Bank Cemetery, and the
monument with the inscription quoted to be erected to her
memory.—Caledsnian Mercury.--tßose Bank Cemetery is
in a suburb immediately to- the south of Edinburgh-1
A REMARICA.BLE MAN.—This city-is now the home of one
of the most remarkable men of the age—a man who has tra-
versed the civilized globe, and established in almost every
country which he has visited the sale of his medicines for the
relief of human suffering, and which are a certain cure for
disease in all its forms. We allude to Professor Thomas
Holloway, of London. It is now several years since this
!benefactor of the human race first proclaimed to the world,
•through the British press, that he had, after deep research, pre-
pared a remedy that was sure to eradicate disease. Years of
patient investigation irate-the laws of human physiology which
,control our bodies in health and when diseased, led to the in-
vention and preparation of the world-renowned Holloway's
,Pills and Ointment. Nearly, if not quite, one half of the
haman race have taken his medicines ! His name is as uni-
versely known over the globe as that of Alexander, Napoleon,
or Washington, when in the height of their ambitious career.
if they conquered nations on the field of battle, Professor
Holloway has, with no weapon but that of science, conquered
disease in all its forms. His meritorious career is bounded
by no imaginary lines of latitude and longitude short of those
marking the confines of civilization itself. No isolated country
or nation was sufficiently extensive for the operation of his
enterprising and gigantic intellect. Wherever disease has a
residence, there he has penetrated with his medicines, and left
an enviable and enduring reputation. After enlightening
Europe, his fame spread over Asia, and the civilized portions
of Africa, and finally appeared in America. He has translated
the cures he has performed, and the virtues of his medicines,
into as many languages as the missionaries have the Bible.
Governments, otherwise the most despotic, have been forced
by the great value of his medicines, and their popularity with
the people, to remove antiquated and time-honored restrictions
upon the introduction of foreign medicines, and open their
custom houses to a free introduction to the Pills and Oint-
ment, of this distuingished man. Empires and kingdoms
removed the barriers of ages against the introduction and sale
of proprietary or patent medicines, and freely permitted Hollo-
way's medicines to become the physician of the masses.—New
York Dispatch.
TRIAL FOR MOBBING AND RIOTING.-At the High Court of
Justiciary Edinburgh, on Monday last, four young men were
placed at the bar charged with mobbing and rioting, and with
assault and injury to property, at Greenock, on the 2d of April
last, on which occasion a large mob assembled in front of the
Roman Catholic Chapel there, beat in the doors with a large
beam, broke the windows with stones, and committed other
damage to the chapel, as well as to the school and the adjoin-
ing dwelling-houses of the priest and teacher. In sum-
ming up the evidence, the Lord Justice-General laid down
the law as to participating in or giving countenance to
riotous acts. He said,— All those who were in the
mob and who took an active part in it were guilty of
the whole proceedings of that mob generally. The jury
returned a verdict of guilty of mobbing and rioting against
the prisoners, but not of participating in the acts of
assault and injury libelled. The Lord-Justice-General, after
stating that the Court were disposed, from extenuating
circumstances in each case, to treat the prisoners with leniency,
said,—" You must not suppose that you are punished because
of the particular object you had in view, as being connected
with any following out of the religious opinions which you
yourselves entertain in opposition to those of the persons
whose property was to be sacrificed by these proceedings. It
is not because you entertain particular, opinions, or because
you maintain those opinions with zeal, that we are going to
pronounce a sentence upon you, neither is it because of any
particular favour to the religious opinions of those whose
property has been assailed. In this country all parties, all
subjects of the Queen, all who are residing within the range
of the laws, are amenable to the laws, and entitled to the
protection which they afford. We know no distinction
of religious parties in any question of this kind. In
this country all persons are entitled not only to enter-
tain what religious opinions they please, but to profess
those opinions, and to worship according to their own
faith, whatever it may be. Be they Jews or Gentiles,
Pagans or Christians, Papists or Protestants, Episcopalians or
Presbyterians, it is all the same. The law says that they have
a right to worship after their own fashion, and that law will
protect them in the exercise of this right. Therefore you must
not suppose, and no persons must suppose, that we enter into
the religious question here; but while we hear rumours of
persecutions for religious opinions in other countries, and are
inclined to sympathize with the sufferers, and to feel indigna-
tion at the conduct of the oppressors, it would be very wrong
indeed if in this country which boasts of being a land of liberty,
where persons are entitled to freedom of conscience without
any restraint, except that which conscience itself imposes, any
proceeding which involves violence against parties on account
of their religious opinions should be permitted to go unpunished.
While the law permits them to have liberty, those who
administer the law must take care that that liberty is pre-
served to them, and not abused by the strong. It is because
yot have violated that law, and for no other reason, that we
now pronounce sentence of imprisonment upon you." His
Lordship then sentenced three of the riotere to Oa, and one to
three menthe imprisonment,
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2 | 0.33 | 0 | klkk
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 80 | 0.9675 | 0.077 | PERPETUAL INVESTMENT, LAND, AND
BUILDING SOCIETY,
22, NEW BRIDGE-STREET, BLACKFRIARS.
Shares Issued.... 9,650.
Advanced on Mortgage, 4100,540 4s. 9d.
The above Society offers to all classes a most desirable medium
for the Investment of Money.
Loans can be had at any time upon the Security of Houses and
Lands.
A Copy of the FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT, with Balance Sheet
and Prospectus, will be forwarded on receipt of One Postage
Stamp. JOHN EDWARD TRESIDDER, Secretary.
AGENTS WANTED where none are appointed.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2,872 | 0.9627 | 0.0949 | alts by auction.
High-class PICTURES, by eminent Modern Artists, with
Written Guarantees of their Authenticity, HANOVER
GALLERY, HANOVER-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
MR. BRANCH begs to announce, that he has
received instructions from Mr. Louis Flatou, the eminent
London Collector, to SELL by AUCTION, on THURSDAY uext,
the 19th, and TerDAy, the 20th instant, at Tweve o'clock each
day, at the 'Gallery, in the Hanover-rooms, Liverpool,
A splendid Collection of High-class Modern PAINTINGS, from
the various public exhibitions and from the studios of the Artists,
selected with great care, the object of the Proprietor being to
secure the finest products of eminent Artists, the selection pre-
senting some of their important works, and the whole forming
one of the most interesting Collections ever offered for public sale
in Liverpool.
Amongst others may be named "The Interior of Roslyn
Castle, !bowing the Apprentices Pillar," by David Roberts, R.A. ;
a grand-specimen of Cattle and Sheep, by T. S. Cooper, R.A. ;
"Tell you your fortune, sir ?" a charming Gipsy Girl, all life, by
Charles Baxter; "Sporting in the Highlands," acknowledged by
Herring, sen., to be one of his finest productions; "The Larder,"
Groenland; "The Shooting Pony," by Richard Ansdell En-
graved; "The Dying Monarch," H. Bright and G. Armfield, an
incident at Glencoe, very grand; "The Bride of Venice,"
Pickersgill ; "The Sumptuous Dessert," a magnificent Picture,
by G. Lance; "The Mountain Spring," by H. Bright, Horlar,
and J. J. Hill; "Sunday Morning," A. Solomon; Landscape
and Cattle, a magnificent specimen of F. R. Lee, R.A., and T. S.
Cooper, A.K.A.; a small Gem, by F. R. Lee, R.A.. and T. S.
' Cooper,A.R.A. • " The Old Hall at Heigham, in Norfolk;" by H.
Bright and J. J. Hill; " The Fruit Stall," Goodall ; " The Mother "
and "Irish Cabin," by D. W. Deane, being fine specimens of this
very rising Artist; " Blackberry Gatherers," Witherington, R.A.
With several charming examples of pleasing and interesting
cbaracter by
Etty, Williams, Nichol),
Shayer, sen., Earle, Henzell,
Knell, Solomon, Bright, •
Vickers, Horlar, Woolmer,
Passmore, Knight, Miss Solomon,
Fraser, H. Bright, Blacklock,
Groenland, Witherington, Pyne,
And other Artists of celebrity.
Also a few beautiful WATER-COLOUR DRAWINGS, including
specimens of Hunt, David, Cox, Lewis, Nash, Lee, and others.
The whole forming a most attractive and beautiful display of
modern art, well deserving the attention of connoisseurs.
An undoubted warranty will be given with each Picture as to
its authenticity.
To be viewed in the Gallery THIS DAY (Tuesday), the 17th, and
TO-MORROW (Wednesday), the 18th instant, when Catalogues may
be had from Mr. BRANCH.
*** Mr. BRANCH earnestly solicits Admirers of the Fine Arts
to avail themselves of the opportunity of inspecting this im-
portant Collection, which, he is instructed to say, will be found
one of the finest ever offered to public competition in Liverpool.
Mr. Flatou will give a written warranty with each Lot, if re-
quired, endorsed by the Artist to whom the Picture is attributed.
VALUABLE ILLUSTRATED and MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS,
GOLD WATCH, JEWELLERY, &c., HANOVER-ROOMS.
By Mr. BRANCH,
On MONDAY next, the 23rd instant, at Eleven o'clock, at the
Hanover-rooms,
rlitHE following valuable ILLUSTRATED WORKS
1 —namely, a very choice Set of the Three Series of Haghe's
Sketches, brilliantly Coloured, and in Portfolios ; elegantly-
mounted Series of D. Roberts' Views in Egypt and Nubia, The
Prize Cartoons, Nash's Mansions of England in the Olden Time,
Beattie's Scotland, Muller's Sketches of the Age of Francis the
First, Landscapes by English Masters, Recollections of the Great
Exhibition of 1851, Boys' London As It Is, Belgium and Germany,
The Ducal Palaces, The Golden Regions of Australia, and others
of value; also, a number of Miscellaneous Books, a Share in the
Lyceum Newsroom, Gold Watch, Diamond Rings and Pins, Shirt
Studs, and other Jewellery.
To be viewed on SATURDAY next, the 21st instant, when Cata-
logues may be had from Mr. BRANCH.
SEAFORTH FARM, WATERLOO.
SALE of FARMING STOCK. GROWING CROPS, CARRIAGE
HORSES, CARRIAGES, &c.
By Mr. BRANCH,
On TUESDAY next,the 24th inst., at Twelve o'clock, on the Premises,
Seaforth Farm, Waterloo, on the main road from Seaforth to
Crosby, and within a few minutes' walk from the Waterloo and
Seaforth Stations, on the Southport Railway.
THE valuable FARMING STOCK, GROWING
CROPS, first-rate Team of Cart Horses, a Bull, several
Cows, Pair of capital Black Carriage Horses, an Entire Horse,
Whitechapel, Drag, Market Carta, Agricultural Implements, and
other Effects.
The FARMING STOCK includes Two valuable Brown Cart Horses,
a Bull, Two capital Cows, several Sterks, Two Rearing Calves,
Four Store Pigs, Two Broad-wheeled Carts, a Market Cart, nearly
new, sundry Harness, Iron and Wood Ploughs, Harrows, a Land
Roller, Winnowing Machine, Bean Crusher, Turnip Cutter, Hay
Cutter, Agricultural Implements of the usual varieties, quantity
of old Timber, about Forty-eight Pigeons, sundry Fowls, and
other Miscellanies.
The GROWING CROPS consist of about Three Acres of Oats, Four
and a half Acres of Wheat, Half an Acre of Turnips, a Quarter of
an Acre of Rye, Tw•o Acres and a Quarter of Potatoes, and sundry
Garden Produce.
Also, a Stack of newly-got Hay, sundry Threshed and Un-
threshed Rye in the Barn, &c.
To be viewed on MONDAY next, the 23rd instant, when Cata-
logues may be had at the Farm, in Waterloo; or at Mr. BRANCH'S
Offices, in Hanover-street, Liverpool.
MODERN FURNITURE, SEACOMBE,
By Mr. BRANCH,
On TUESDAY next, the 24th instant, at Eleven o'clock, on the
Premises, Poulton-cum-Seacombe (near the Pool Inn),
COMPRISING Sets of Mahogany Chairs, Rose-
wood Circular Centre Table, on pillar and claws, Mahogany
Chiffonier, Mahogany Lounge Chair, single Plate Chimney-glass,
in gilt frame, Tapestry and Brussels Carpets, Birch Tudor Bed-
steads, Hair Mattresses, Feather Beds, Birch Toilet Tables and
Basin Stands to match, Mahogany Chest of Drawers, Birch Dres-
sing-glasses, Kitchen Dresser, and other requisites.
To be viewed on the Morning of Sale, when Catalogues may be
had on the Premises, or at Mr. BRANCH'S Offices, in Liverpool.
By Mr. BRANCH,
On MONDAY, the 30th instant, at Six o'clock in the Evening, al
the house of Mr. Crane, the " Royal Oak," Park-road, subjecl
to the conditions to be then produced,
TWO DWELLING-HOUSES, situate on the east
side of, and numbered respectively 155 and 157,in Bedford.
street, in Toxteth-park, one being occupied by Leah Brandreth,
as a Beer-house, and the other by Mr. Charles Stevenson.
The Tenure is Freehold of Inheritance.
For further particulars apply to Messrs. JOHN and HENRY
GREGORY, Solicitors, 3, York-buildings, Sweetina-street.
By Mr. BRANCH,
On TUESDAY. the 31st instant, at Six o'clock in the evening, at
Gough's Woodside Hotel, subject to conditions to be then pro-
duced, and in the following or such other lots as may be agreed
on at the time of sale,
Lot LA lIIESSITAGE, with GARDEN attached,
situate on the west side of, and numbered 39, in
Church-street, in Birkenhead, in the occupation of Mr. Storey,
as tenant, at an annual rental of .4'65 per annum. This Lot
contains 1,890 Square Yards of Land, or thereabouts.
Lot 2. Six several SHOPS and MESSUAGES, situate respec-
tively on the south side of Ivy-street and in Grange-street. in
Birkenhead aforesaid. The Premises in Ivy-street consist of Two
Shops, in the respective occupations of Philip Kingham and
Ellen Johnson, and a BEERHOUSE, in the occupation of Francis
Armitage, having a frontage also to Grange-street.
The Premises in Grange-street consist of Three adjoining
Messuages, in the respective occupations of Robert Worthington,
Margaret Hopkins, and Thomas M`Gratli. This :ot produces an
aggregate yearly rental of .4'92. 10s.
The Tenure of Lots 1 and 2 is Freehold of Inheritance.
Lot 3. A MESSUAGE and Two COTTAGES, behind the same,
situate in Ivy-street aforesaid, in the respective occupations of
William Whitby and another. These Premises are held for the
residue of a term of 1,000 years, which commenced on the 7th of
June, 1830, and produces an aggregate yearly rental of .4'31. 4s.
per annum.
For further particulars apply to Messrs. JOHN and HENRY
GREGORY, Solicitors, :3, York-buildings, Sweeting-street, Liver-
pool.
BY ORDER OF THE TRUSTEES OF THE LATE CHARLES
TA YLEUR, ESQ.
IN a few weeks will be offered for PUBLIC SALE,
A. the WOODCROFT ESTATE, freehold of Inheritance, con-
taming about 50 acres, situate in the township of Wavertree, on
the north or north-east side of Smithdown-lane, and running
along Wellington-road towards Wavertree-lane, with which latter
it communicates by a new street lately made the whole length of
the property.
It is proposed to sell the estate in lots of from 10,000 to 18,000
yards, but, if required, it will be sold in such other quantities as
may suit purchasers.
Woodcroft House, which was built with every attention to con-
venience and comfort, with good outbuildings and offices, com-
prising about 18,000 yards, forms a very desirable lot.
The rapid increase in the population of Liverpool calls for the
erection of moderate-sized villas, with good gardens attached, and
this estate is particularly suited for this purpose, being within an
easy walking distance of Liverpool.
The great sewer now being constructed for the suburbs will af-
ford an excellent drainage.
Plans and further particulars may be had by application to P.
SERJEANTSON, Esq., 17,01dhall-street ; or Messrs. LACE, RIGOR,
and ROsCOE, Castle-street.
By Messrs. WALKER and ACKERLEY,
On THURSDAY next, the 19th instant, at Seven o'clock in the
Evening, at the Red Lion Inn, Garston, in lots,
FOUR SHOPS and Thirteen COTTAGES, situate
in the village of Garston, and several Plots of LAND
adjoining, adapted for Cottages. Tenure Freehold of Inheritance.
Also, a Vinery, Vines, and Two Cucumber Frames, Sheds, &c.
To treat apply to Mr. JOHN BELL, Garston ; or Mr. RICHARD
RADCLIFFE, Cook-street, Liverpool, who will produce a Plan of
the Property, showing the lots.
FREEHOLD HOUSES, EDGE-HILL, WEST DERBY.
By Messrs. WALKER and ACKERLEY,
On TUESDAY next, the 24th instant, at Half-past One o'clock in the
Afternoon, for Two o'clock precisely, at the Clarendon-rooms,
South John-street, Liverpool, subject to the conditions of sale
to be produced,
_ .
ALL those Five recently well-built DWELLING-
HOUSES, situate upon the Piece of Land lying on the
south side of Harbord-street, at Edge-hill, within West Derby,
and being numbered 12, 14, 16, 18, and 20, and occupied by Messrs.
Cullow, Miller, and others, which said Piece of Land contains in
front to Harbord-street 75 feet 6 inches, and extends in depth
backwards 45 feet. The Property is Freehold of Inheritance, and
is now let at the annual rental of ..t'BB 14s.
For further particulars, apply at the Office of Mr. WILLIAM
OWEN, Solicitor, 7, Clayton-square, Liverpool.
OLD PARKS.-ASHBY.DE.LA-ZOUCH, LEICESTERSHIRE
FREEHOLD ESTATE.
By Mr. CHUBB,
On FRIDAY, the 10th day of August next, at Four o'clock in the
Afternoon, at the Queen's Head Inn, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, subject
to conditions to be then produced,
AValuable Freehold and Tithe-free FARM, and
various Closes of LAND, all fronting to roads, in the fol-
lowing Lots : A. R. P.
Lot 1. A FARM, in the occupation of Mr. Mills, con-
sisting chiefly of Old Turf Land of the first
quality, with Plantations and Fishponds, and a
superior Residence, with suitable Farm Build-
ings, containing in the whole 160 0 0
Lot 2. A Close of TURF LAND, in the occupation of
Thomas Bosworth
Lot 3. A Close of TURF LAND, in the occupation of
George Nutt 3 1 21
Lot 4. A GARDEN, in the occupation of Mr. Bailey
Lot 5. A Close of TURF LAND, in the occupation of
George Nutt 1 232
Lot 6. Two Closes of LAND, in the occupation of Thos
Bosworth, containing together
Lot 7. Two Closes of LAND, in the occupation of Thos.
Bosworth and others, partly used as Garden
Ground, containing together 4 3 13
Lot 8. A MEADOW, in the occupation of George Nutt,
with small Plantation, containing together 4 033
Lot 9. A CLOSE, occupied as Garden Ground, with
small Plantation, containing together
Lot 10. A MEADOW, in the occupation of Thomas
Edwards, with small Plantation
Lot 11. PLANTATION 0 2 9
Lot 12. A MEADOW and Two Old TURF CLOSES, in
the occupation of Thomas Cheatle, subject to
right of road over the Meadow to Lot 13
Lot 13. A MEADOW and Close of Old TURF LAND, in
the occupation of Samuel Jackson and Thomas
Kirby, with right of road over the Meadow in
Lot 12 8 3 5
Lot 14. A MEADOW and Close of Old TURF LAND, in
the occupation of Samuel Jackson and Mrs
Sandlant
The Farm comprised in Lot 1 is of unusually good quality, in
high condition, and the Buildings and Fences in perfect repair.
The House is large, delightfully situate, and is approached from
the Derby and Ashby road, through a park-like field of 25 acres.
The other Lots all front the Ashby and Derby road and Smisby-
lane, and are eligible both for accommodation land and building
purposes, extending from the town of Ashby nearly to the village of
Smisby, and the situation of the whole is dry, healthy, and
picturesque, and from its locality is of continually increasing
value.
For further particulars and Plans of the Land, application to be
made to the AUCTIONEER; to Mr. HASSALL, Packington, near
Ashby; Mr. ELLIS, Glenfield Lodge, near Leicester; Mr. GER-
MAN, Measham Lodge, near Atherstone ; or Messrs. GREEN and
SMITH, SolicitorsiAshby-de-la-Zouch.
ASHBY-DE-LA-Zolmi has
a First-class Station on the Leicester
and Burton Railway.
3 0 37
5 1 36
*Files by auction.
OR FRIDAY next, the 20th instant, at Twelve o'clock, at Barton's
Shed. Hurst-street,
AQuantity of •valuable first-class ENGINEER'S
TOOLS, comprising Lathes, Foundry Cranes, Screwing
Machines, Crane Ladle, Boring Bar, Pipe-drawing Machines,
Pulley Blocks, and sundries.
For particulars and Catalogues apply to JAMES BREBNER, 20,
Water-street, 'Liverpool; or to S. BUTTON and NEPHEW, Ex-
change-buildings.
BY ORDER OF.THE DEVISEES IN TRUST OF THE WILL OF THE
LATE PHILIP COOMBES, ESQ.
By Messrs. HEALING and SON,
On MONDAY next, the 23d instant, at Seven o'clock in the Even-
ing, at the House of Mr. Edward Marshall, known by the name
of the Edge-hill Coffee-house, situate on the Wavertree-read,
Edge-hill, subject to such conditions of sale as will be then
produced (in one or two lots, as may be agreed upon),
ALL That Piece or Parcel of LAND, situate,
lying, and being on the north side of the Liverpool and
Prescot Tnrnpike road, containing in front thereto 130 feet 9
inches, on the east side 136 feet, on the west side 139 feet 7 inches,
and on the north side 137 feet 7 inches, containing in the whole
2054 square yards, a little more or less, together with the two
substantial DWELLING-HOUSES thereon erected, and known
as " Walpole Villas." in the several occupations of Captain Reed
and Mr. Thomas Varty. And also a SHOP and DWELLING-
HOUSE adjoining thereto, in the occupation of Mr. Thomas
Welsh, chemist. The tenure is freehold of inheritance.
For particulars apply to Messrs. CROSS and ANDREWS, Convey-
ancers, 8, North John-street ; or to Messrs. W. and C. E. EATON,
Solicitors, Clayton-square, Liverpool.
BY ORDER OF THE DEVISEES IN TRUST OF THE WILL OF THE
LATE PHILIP COOMERS, ESQ..
By Messrs. HEALING and SON,
On MONDAY, the 23rd instant, at :Seven o'clock in the evening,
at the house of Mr. Edward Marshall, known by the name of
the Edge-hill Coffeehouse, situate on the Wavertree-road, Edge-
hill, subject to such conditions of sale as will be then produced,
ALL that Piece or Parcel of LAND, with the
MESSUAGE or DWELLING HOUSE, Yard, Garden, and
other Land thereto belonging or occupied therewith, situate at
Edge-hill aforesaid, and on the west side of a street there called
Upper Mason-street, the site or grounds of which hereditaments
are bounded from north to south on the east end thereof fronting
Upper Mason-street 49 feet 2 inches, from east to west on the
south side 23 feet 9 inches, then from south to north 18 feet 6 inches,
then again from east to west 108 feet, then from south to north
4 feet 1 inch, and then from east to west to a street called Mason-
street 5 feet 6 inches, and then from south to north along that
street 24 feet 2 inches, and then from west to east in a bevelling
line 115 feet, then from north to south 2 feet 5 inches, then from
west to east home to Upper Mason-street 17 feet 6 inches, be the
several dimensions thereof a little more or less. The shove pre-
mises are in the occupation of Mr. Thomas Currie. The tenure
is freehold of inheritance.
For particulars apply to Messrs. Cstoss and ANDREWS, con
veyancers, 8, North John-street, Liverpool.
ant Eb.
TO GOVERNESSES.
WANTED, foi•alfoarciin,o.§Zool in the country,
a RESIDENT GOVERNESS, to teach Music, French,
and Drawing.—Apply to W. NICHOL, Mercantile, Professional,
Patent, and Insurance Agent, 7, Castle-street, Liverpool.
ELIGIBLE OPENING IN THE DRAPERY TRADE.
THE Proprietor of a thoroughly-established Busi-
ness, with a first-class Connexion, desires a PARTNER
with .41,000.—Apply to W. NICHOL, Mercantile, Professional,
Patent, and Insurance Agent, 7, Castle street, Liverpool.
THE LIVERPOOL STANDARD.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 697 | 0.9738 | 0.073 | THURSDAY.
At its early sitting, the house went into committee on the
Nuisances Removal Amendment Bill. After considerable dis-
cussion, the different clauses of the bill were disposed of, and on
the proposal of Sir B. HALL, some new clauses were agreed to
without discussion.—On the motion of Mr. HOMFALL, a clause
was adopted which provides that, on the certificate of the
medical officer to the local authority that any house was over-
crowded, proceedings might be taken to abate such overcrowd-
ing.—The house then resumed, and the Chairman reported the
bill to the house.
Mr. HOLLAND took the oaths and his seat for the borough
of Evesham, in the room of Mr. C. G. Berkeley, who had ac-
cepted the Chiltern Hundreds.
The house adjourned at four o'clock.
The evening sitting commenced at six o'clock. After the
discussion of some matters of routine, comprising a few re-
marks on the Turkish Loan, the subject of
THE AUSTRIAN PROPOSALS and Sir E. B. Lytton's motion
regarding Lord John Russell's share in the negotiations for
peace were introduced by Lord PALMERSTON, who brought up
papers connected with the late negotiations at Vienna, and in
moving that they be laid on the table observed that the go-
vernment could not consent to the motion of which notice bad
been given by Mr. Disraeli (to give precedence that day to Sir
E. B. Lytton's motion over the orders of the day), since the
papers he had then presented could not be in the hands of
members in time for the discussion.—Lord J. Russim, refer-
ring to an inquiry made by Mr. Disraeli in his absence on
Tuesday, explained what he did say did not require the sanc-
tion of Her Majesty, which had, however, since been given.—
Mr. DISRAELI did not see that the statement of Lord John
at all changed the state of things. What had disquieted
the country was, that it should have come out on his
part that he had returned to England with a project of pacifi-
cation of which he approved, and which he recommended
to his colleagues, and, on their refusal to adopt it, he had
come down to the house, and made a speech which conveyed
to the country that he was an uncompromising advocate of
the war, leaving an impression upon Parliament and the
nation utterly inconsistent with the facts. If he received an
assurance that there should be a full discussion of this im-
portant issue on Monday, he would not press his motion.—
Lord PALMERSTON said his object in deferring the discussion
was to give time for the papers to be read ; and, if it suited
the convenience of Sir B. Lytton, he should be prepared to
take the discussion, from which the government had no wish
to shrink, on Monday.—Sir E. B. LYTTON assented to this
proposal.
ROEZVCK'S MOTION.—In answer to a question, Mr.
ROEBUCK said he believed that he should meet the wishes of
the house by postponing his motion.
Lord PALMERSTON, in reply to Mr. Hutt, said the papers
did not include a copy of the circular of Count Buol, which was
not in the possession of the government. The motion was
agreed to.
The Education (Scotland) Bill was passed on a division by
a majority of 130 to 115.
vA protracted discussson ensued in regard to a deputation of
Irish members on the Tenants' Improvement Compensation
Bill.—Mr. DISRAELI complained of the way in which the busi-
ness of the house was conducted.—Lord PALMERSTON disputed
the accuracy of the charge.—This subject led to a long discus-
sion, in which no small degree of acrimony mingled, suggestions
being thrown out that the intercourse between the Irish depu-
tation and the Government was not altogether unconnected
with the impending motion of Sir B. Lytton.—At a quarter
to one o'clock, the Chairman was ordered to report progress,
though none whatever had been made in the bill.
Lady Raglan and Lord Raglan's Annuities Bill passed
through committee.
The Coal Mines Inspection Bill was read a third time, and
after some discussion passed.
The remaining business having been disposed of, the House
adjourned at a quarter to 2 o'clock.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 363 | 0.9655 | 0.0857 | IRELAND.
THERE is not a red coat in Athlone garrison, which has not
occurred since the days of Cromwell. The garrison is now oc-
cupied by the Westmeath and Longford, both'rifle corps.
MILITARY COLLEGE FOR IRELAND.—The Dublin Evening
Mail gives currency to a report which appeared in an Irish
provincial journal, that the Queen's College, Galway, being
found nearly useless for the purposes it was originally designed
for, is about to be-converted into an • institution of military
education.
CHIEF JUSTICE LEFROY.—A rumour has prevailed in
Dublin for the last few days, to the effect that Chief Justice
Lefroy is about to obtain a peerage, and to make way for the
elevation of the Attorney-General to the Chief Justiceship.
The Freeman's Journal throws some doubt upon the accuracy
of the report.
" THE PRESBYTERIAN REPRESENTATION SOCIETY."---All
important political movement has been set on foot among the
Irish Presbyterians, who took advantagepf the recent General
Assembly at Dublin to hold a meeting of ministers, elders,
and laymen, for the purpose of forming an association, to be
called "The Presbyterian Representation Society," having
for its object the election of members of the Presbyterian body
as parliamentary representatives.
FLOGGING IN THE MILITIA.—It was stated by the Galway
Express that a stripling soldier of the North Mayo Militia has
been flogged at Castlebar for drunkenness. It is added, that
the punishment was administered on a Sunday ? Who is the
officer in command of the North Mayo Militia at Castlebar
It behoves him to declare himself, and to deny at once this
latter statement, if he can deny it; for, of course, it is out of
the nature of things, in the present day, for any man to con-
tinue to hold a commission in Her Majesty's service who may
have been guilty of so flagrant and violent a profanation. It
is, indeed, difficult to believe that any officer, however fire-new
his dignity, could expect to brave public opinion by converting
the day of sacred rest into a day of infamy and torture, after
the well remembered explosion of popular indignation at a
similar outrage, some few years ago, in the Seventh Light
Dragoons.—Eveninq Mail.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 205 | 0.8575 | 0.175 | THE CHARITIES.—(ZreekIy Reports.)
INDUSTRIAL RAGGED SCHOOLS, SQHO-STREET, JULY 11.—
On the books, boys 102, girls 52; avere attendance. boys 92,
girls 42 ; sick list, boys 1, girls 6; obtained situations, boys, I,
girls 0.
SOUTHERN AND TOXTETH HOSPITAL, JULY ll.—ln-patients,
discharged : cured, 11 ;-relieved, andatown request, 5 ; made out.
patients, 0; irregular, o ; dead, .1 •, entered, 15; under treatment,
59. Out-patients :,:cure, 64; entered, 70; under treatment, 50.
NORTHERN HOSPITAL, JULY 14.—ADMITTED : Accidents.
57; medical and surgical oases, 17:; total, 74.—DIscirattoEo
Cured, 32 ; relieved at own request, 5::;. attending as out-patients,
33; irregular, 1 ; died, 2; remaining in the hospital, 85.
ROYAL INFIRMARY, JULY- 14.—ADMITTED: In-patients, 38,
ont-patients, 7; casuals, 10.—DISCHARGED: In-patients cured;
15; relieved; &c., 11 ; made out•patieats, 7; irregular, 2; dead,
3.—Remain in the house, 135.
LIVERPOOL DISPENSARIES) JULY 16.—New cases received
advice and medicine at the institution—North, 308; South, 201 •,
total, 509. New cases visited at their own houses and supplied
with medicine—North, 116; South, 69.; total, 185.
ST. ANNE'S DISPENSARY AND% EYE AND EAR INSTITUTION.
9, ROVE-HILL, JULY 14.—New patients, viz. :—Relieved at the
institution, 181; relieved at their own dwellings, 38; total, 219.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1 | 0.51 | 0 | lustralia.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 2 | 0.225 | 0.035 | Qrsminnitiai *nits.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 17 | 0.8353 | 0.1611 | ICES.
READY AT TEN O'CLOCK.
Lemon .
Vanilla .
Coffee .
MORRISH'S MERCHANTS' DINING-ROOMS,
LANCASTER-BUILDINGS, TITHEBARN-STREET,
LIVERPOOL.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 5,377 | 0.6946 | 0.3337 | atLy 17, 18.55.]
ZOCAL INTELLIGENCE.
---w— N----
'easter pilots held thei r annual dinner at the hotel,
e • li'o"'L si,‘l
~..
e d li
0Y Thursday.
many of their friends.
A large number attended, and they
named
NIPTED Suicine.—On Wednesday last, a clerk,
to
, ,ytlhlorris, Who resided at 39, Gill-street, attempted
'e; laterilnseir bY jumping into the river. After he got iLto.
i _, he would seem to have repented of his rashness,
and
eatu!;seetate struggle for his life. He was rescued
, 41,
t'bteeeNorthern Hospital. $ An' 't 'Salford Quarter Sessions, on Monday, Thomas
• ere and
took
a ,Joseph Peel, Esqrs., county magistrates,
' tille It it(Pialified as deputy-lieutenants for th ceosuntys
Y, acein TotalVasn ter ; and at the same sessions, onitjh
' liee as 1 SM Sibbert, Esq., of the Grange, rmston,
eesrro nlagistrate f the. county.
!ete„,6 Les To Tzr
hi or
E IP Mex.—We are told in tillisel
I'reter of „erVa, that Within° the last few days an unusual
east it Ise% have
..
, ilia assened visited the island. It says, we have
at
competent authority, that the number
f 4,46+°,the 4411ab!he
fi.r.st week of the present month exceeded
T - 3ear, tr which arrived in the corresponding week
lit n
Gte ,Lipp
Ell4f A • LYIOEr4 8)11P
DREADNOUGHT,'
line ' Captainof
packets, e e, in the river an Co.'s " Red Cross'.. hSaemts,nealrs.,
, lee on
Wednesday morning, in
.17 days from
r w'tds, `l,, aetwithstandin the prevalence of light easterly
',°thergembreneht 40,000 bushels of corn, besides cotton. '4',ers her -eteee and 23 cabin and about 200 steerage Pae
'te
4 ' -' sailed the extraordinary distance of 372 miles in
T.',,,
Nei leee
tad le'll re 1/118 DROWNED NEAR BRADFORD.—On the
''''''''' ' °tial week, a boy named Thomas
.Frith,_ who_r
h Atkin Peein '
eedt.so4 , g near a fish-pond on the premises of M .
eN.elle the neighbourhood of Manning-lane, near
nth
abotlC alseovered to have fallen into the water, 1 b.ya
e,tepein le, named Thomas Sutcliffe, who was r_ep
child
, 4e ,t'es s! e,iose, by. Sutcliffe plunged in to save hown
his
V°tli teulle to do so, and, in the attempt, lost
1t14444.441 g drowned.
etti,Y., tee :i...nrvey of the Pilots Committee took place on
eieee e„e'eani-tue Tartar conveying. t.he members ofTfithee
ki!titi:,..o their' friends to tire cruisn.fn ground.
tile Lithe fi'lral members of the Corporartei
4 1/4"'Vy, vii-'4 Committee, with several
Es
presanendtatthiveesCkfraoirm-
, !tty„,,,, ere present. John Ste vast, . was proposed as
.410 iN''' elect," and name received wth loud applause.
41 40w
tei /ten.—On Tuesday, the body. of a man was
'' it'Zi to bset,he river, off the Huskisson pier. The deceased
,khoe't4 fie "ellry Overton, who lodged at 136, Dale-street,
i Its "'al London a few weeks since with some friendse
tet ei. 143eing to Australia. He left his lodgings on Mon-
hbla ek, and was not seen afterwards until his body was
e;seriver.
(I.p Ajl,Xetrusroereses.—Several hundred excursionists,
krl '4.1.012a Birmingham and Chester, arrived on Thurs- '
hire
1,i,....C1iej at Birkenhead, by the Birkenhead, Laneas
to
andol-re Junction Railway. Most of tlini
crossed
in
qill'qVIII:, after viewing some of the attractive objectspleasures teettepereeeeeded to the race-course to enjoy. the _ tle„"„thee tele Chester • itors during a portion of the day,
Atic)geat sigh i,l the Zvooislogica, 1 Gardens, and, at half-past
, to I'Y lae.,_Sl were conveyed to Monk's Ferry Railway
I.eeF t 7„ PA, steamers
,tik •Ll se, kt".1,,,0 win, R. ~RE._ppom an advertisement.
1,01`11.41(1.' tzt'ttie-4,t41.1.e exertionsß of Mr. Marcus, that mense-
- tel4itiste'iajl-t;°.e public, in the‘way -of recreation,.
'''ll4rei, '''Ner. 414 to convey extursionisTtshefrtoraminLstaivertr.s ,
s,-4 it e.,,,rsteest '': and back the same day.
,-`tee e, ',,1, etse. hation to morrowernorning at half-past six,
;ao,le,e eigh'llte ere.a`ie°4 its-retn-rn. Tourney
1;14r en• The'l., ariving in Liverpool in good time the
from Windermere, at
eo - at ap donrney will be a delightful one l
exceedinglythe
~ "avowable, and-the fares are
%I e4IIT
St,la'llegq,7l' 1,,,,
IC, 43' ~-0..4 elest„,- a...SUNDAY SCHOOL SIIDERIBNedTEfNordDE-Nstrre.—et
he, a ee0o1,;„-"g last, the teachers of the
then teT,ParteTaTernlection with Great George-street Chapel.,.
eie affeetlPeria,wleirechoceroem, when they presented their
kijthe got ai,,letalent, Mr. Samuel Booth,ivith aAftkrenteuof,
k.bathrisaa ri),:: esteetn. Mr. Hunt presided..
CtiA 8410172 %Me observations on theimportantemorf.
e.,'N't b4ceept4t-'ehing, and, concluded by requestingE ys :and
et, eLY , ti.n,eer of five volumes of Roger's
S' 411,-'ech, '''''aeaulay. Mr. Booth replied in
N°vee man a'epro-
:ll,te:_ettleeeNTa • r, - RET-HALL.—Conal
-derable
NI NI -8 are b I•Vr TILE ''-'l% C.- popular hall. The-same
veleli. e.all be; elng made at this
N"kei''ea 'ng used foie gaining access to
.the WY" as to
s ~„., hitherto led to much crowding
t'4ll
18
W.ll 1) b • ted by the erection of a
1,4 tOity„,„) e o via and
new-incon-
le°',tl§e ri7emeating with the body from the present en-
i tr taktdoet4 ;Wsrooni,. The gallery at the back of the. plat-
'hovitla II oe
I 41. ..'4 -elll°ved, oak, while additional room will thus
eve ekeeeePertunity. will be afforded for the construction
h^ elaiiii:es en eacheide of the "stage." The hill will
N'clike4. 4•11,,,t"'" and decorated throughout.
flaee cl e!te lit Sure' SeHOMBERG.—This beautifulwessel,
n' forA4Nellarti. James Baines and Co.'s "Black Ball"
t., th -N eh - in the Mersey on Wednes-
tr s e bp„ 1, ti.z Packets arrived
iteePtezel fo;',e,. Aberdeen,r and will be immedia'
ote_lyp!aced
411,,Pile,get eetelbourne as the royal mail shi_p_esstrsti.-._
Albetxh.
te,e4 sell and Oee Schomberg was built by M
L hI'D • -i' Otis f _An and is dim larg!st merchant
'II m 0➢ 10 th - °- —Kingdom, her ensions beang
Igi‘, 20 :er kil ee I-Jo
) 'eet -, 488 feet • extreme breadth, 45 feet:; depth of
Po Pi
,tonnage_ is 2,400 new measuremen
.Shenad
Pi lot. Ca •, or: about 4,000 tons burthen. is
b A ,}' /11,rYing 1,000 passengers. The Schomberg was
etsh:i'kkk "Nino., put into the S don Dock.
ePtee " e 1r ae.ll Wolt.urf.— On Thursday
1/4141(fet, a police-officer discovered a woman lying in
e 14 loinine Church-road, who appeared
/ 014 k'et el, e, e egony. 'Upon being questioned, she exclaimed,
ket'oetitteish accent, that she was dying, having taken
eitilletee'4lle was induced to do in consuenc of jealousy
.e ~,I,tilaoti,A,'who had. deserted his "first-love" and eaketn. :;,").e,lZZ,telZentean. The officer removed her torgeon wtleas-e
sentco
,11:.e4,..t1a ,t,-,'-,t, in tEdgr.lane, and a
l' Irozil'ltnaco prime if possible,. tosusave the woman,
kit; Wilfole affai.th.e stokarlsi't4E'l); but no poisonous matter could be
111 °` Po - Was a r ,' kid at length it wastiougZsassedtot
the
qt she 111:34 site 11 Pilt' Upon being clues suicide replied
VII so, d sip,ry a- taken, the would-be
blue,
and had
414/3.B'e el'acee-ell'ed a quantity of stone pleasant.
'4.11,1t,1'h-L'
foßsPeotet.ilyirLia.ong with it to make the taste
cE The swing
14,01 t q„l.,the geeeltaxv CHAMLENGE RI - -- NI y
k. 40.11",, V4l/4:111,d Challenge Cup of the Royal - erse
i,!elile.;ll too -,'40, took place on Tuesday. The 'daFwas
otll It'Ad Per,,,,a for a race. Five boats started from
letcle.°ll the -J, at. 11 15 viz. the Coralie, 35. tons
a. 111., ,
kila N;e(le 8e,,41? Last Year) ; the Zilla, 21 tons ; the Mnsre,
eitle estlee cutae, 16 tons and the Windward, 16 teet •
keLettle lea„krelY between-the Coralie and the Surprise,.
l'lteei tireeeeeuvring between them excited great lute-
tee
: es, e got the lead in the early part of the race,
llloeilteN atit9lroughout. The Surprise arrived at the
ef0e22,11 Birk Ferry, at 7h. 50m. 165., the Co- else the other boats not being timed.
about
'ltee'ttiefe ei,,eneee of tonnage, the Surprise won by
tt, tr• terLee e;,e,* "onathan Grindrod, the rear ofcommodore
lo he coe'eletfe;Ze,nted the cur to the owner of the Surprise,
Ilt.e tf:Qteey.J‘Tistne hon. treasurer), amidst the acclamations
Ptx.4414 0-" e ePhas to be won two yearsaniennstnlycce. se
eeivliteeeoet "'viler before it can be held perm
eliareikeePitsjoietrlln Jeekiener.—On Wednesdat y, Samuel
the'(4t ',lFt„' the,,,,, was brought up on a warran
threateningbehfoisrewtifhee,
n e,,eettetirea•s eu With annoying and
dle -4tteati 4 rather intelligent-looking young woman.
144 tYllNk't.„l; bat Ilad one little pledge of her husbanheelt'swfeeorn-
'lll(l R€lll ti j%l . Whatever love might have existed Iles 'tiaty, t°-44t, bad been destroyed by jealousy, Iles 4141 a seq, then to abuse on the part of •
itl. the °lleq t Aeration Some months ago, the prisoner
~ e v ii t, or • ewhhuieshbahnadd,
and the
gatee h 'rite en assault upon the complainant, t
i 48bat listed
ally el
tt‘,N€`4 for 14 to r. Evans, of the parish.
_office,naneegen-f „ oiee herself w his wife a separate maintenance ee !ttaks, trails .'t aud child. On Wednesday the cause of
te4freetie°n'tlee oljfiZtl• Since his marriageethe. prisoner had
tlee Neriee lie bee servant girt, whose attracters
_blighted
kewie..3e.e,,
.ieaeiae, entertained for his wife. I went
This
mar-
itili: Port'ikaii,`,2it,4ll4eitiotr
kneotrttrhait in. thedposs.feessfiounof thethre
zi
Wife took
aer„._ aelt e injure wi
ktie nine tee p0,..,e0re, ed it in a box
ntea ,known to the prisoner,hst ac
i' 11;icireetet,rin.inetrtoit andtaiaPplied hem* lf to needlework, .
After the separation
Zeke,eee. eroee into settle, e girl. On Tuesday last, absence of
ed everytb,..• e her Illis souvenir, and in the a still
and
i:4104. °ll retur-riii,ah°,l4, I.,'Zizto, ransacked her trunks,thoefPahril: '44 t Itild /111),•• ,3,"4.11°111e ttfalled to find the object
in toll-
k 0 tep . 'mewately follow.."found everything ,
el, 'nand L. Wife.
cll..j'er and `"'"`311111 for his tn the prisoner into
began Lononto-
con-
k stand threatened
he. ecnduct. Here he
_fidd,
London-
`ad 11'° fed that deir
•••••• nie.----en reply to Mr. 1 ns
tk,N,y 4 le sake ti Ain destroyed andat
that of her unfaithful 11
r‘4;
tCl4ll°l'sr in ji 4u destroYed both the portrait 3 of. the
43' 444 etter tinge
1-7 Pen tlprisoner being taken into
t} NI, eral I Was foand • • le
, .
41t %, OV in his possession showing., that he
.iiolit ok er, au 4. ail i , Id was at present engaged in courting"
i4ti(l-11,1)alicin tile north of England.—Mr. Evans stated
to his
gad and
• he in arrears with the
_allo
he (Mr Evans) would
4. 4eiA 41, if u.a.e liberated, , • paid.-Mr.
eillikllee4ol.4mbY warrant unless the money was
tol -,lr. ter 40-e the prisoner to be bound in his own. recog-
e kee keep the peace
Ns to to his wife for six months,
1 14. e ei• ell, solicitor on the part of the offender, agreed
'tti,lll,ll';ll'Eltil 4r. Eva :
yee„4le eille,l'eot, DoeIisCOMMITTEE.—The weekly meeting
N,,le•sc,,lNll: 1104 Ong Thursday Mr F. Shand in the chair.
ykripelk. t'seresent were Messrs. Lockett, Palmer, Robin-
jiee‘e,''.`eere, vans, Mann, Barber, Anderson, Hubback,
t. 'ic by tt.'4,b-eommittee of works submitted a r.esolne
0r,,, - west - tlealth committee relative to the
.line of
le,,e eekitte end of the Custom Rouse, requesting the
1,.1,0 aagai to adhere to the plan originally agreed upon.
Ntek' }fan said he was not present at the interview
th M en place . - •
' teegketo the 1 e, but the difference was he understood
ll'e47,tee.'aittee Ying of the rails over the street. Th
ek:tee'eqee or tlvlshed them to put back their shed upon
I,,Vitlillt; in 1;e fact Dock, which would be very
Ith ltt ale, . act, it would detract materially from its
1' the h " un ,INtees• Tee, Portanee. It would cut off almost one
lithe teored, for it not encroaching in the slightest degree
r!illt:N,_4.eobe Alt was upon their own ground. In fact they
ttre4l,lieeehel er-e'elmeerably within their own space; and he trust-
teethptY e;',., t thcdc"„eolicede to them what the health corn-
ll tokt:4l4 be l'ilefcouldgive up.—Mr. Smith trusted the
.eZhet:lltll7 ela. fogat over To alter that shed would be one
V'le' re thatexeoet tad es that could happen. It was a model
iot 'stilted rade, and parties interested m that tra_de
eit‘ 1: ce isebee w about it, and any deviation from the
' t 4 cl)ttlqe rails rid be a misfortune.—Mr. Lockett said
ac
'Ztt4 ~,te. Ili extended beyond the boundary of the
eette Itseeeeee subject was referred back to the com-
glN'u'' Thade'*N -"f Wenders of Messrs. Den.t, for
.supplying
illetlet ti 4xt sob '''''Lr- Casson for supplying pitch were_
1,1r1.A Al. lite eieeninaittee also reported that a balance of
lotLlors .(h 144; essrs. W. M'Cormack and Co., for work
th ° Prase 41'1',,, docks and 't payment was recom-
)'aell'ekeTBe 44,litecipt. was 'ordereds to be paid.—The dock
y it 4 4 th het annual report as to the state of the
Illle,,are'l theareee elPenditure for the past year. From
N,, Nit e Year' tlle total expenditure uon new works
e'„(ette V at s?PeeTlding June 23, 1855, £271,131 38. ld. ;
tilttiati, Z, k1i..,1t1 repairs, &c., £45,920 135.. 2d. ;
k sh, es. n
,The '613 17s. 6d. ; total expenditure,
N.t- e,d. • yile stOOk on hand, in 1854, amounted
tS,,,,4ltelie drlapiAieti 1,855 it amounted to fe10,313 38. 7d.
Niki, Lithe 8;511 the°l•2 antboritY to allow the Huskisson
)\e'fteteeeetr ;Ate of the instant, for the purpose of
Vey,e re a eo„,,_ inner gates. Referred to the
, 4's totted trittee.--The haeeour masters' sub-
leo Nei , ek, and death of Isaac Hind a gateman at
bet
VII
1744 eTheregnested authority' to fill up the
--"LtO.---Tlie general business then
SAMUEL FRANKLIN, a boarding-house keeper, living in
Denison-street, suddenly dropped down dead in the street on
Thursday.
DR. DICKINSON, our respected townsman, has been chosen
President of the Lancashire and Cheshire Branch of the Pro-
vincial Medical and Surgical Association.
TICE SCREW STEAMER JOURDAIN.—This magnificent
screw steamer, which was built by Mr. John Laird for the
French mail service between Marseilles and Constantinople,
has made the quickest run on record between Liverpool and
Marseille&
SALE OF THE LIVERPOOL, CROSBY, AND SOUTHPORT
RAILWAY.—The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway proprie-
tors, at a meeting on Thursday, confirmed the agreement for
the purchase of the Liverpool, Crosby, and Southport line, by
a majority of 5,327 votes.
FATAL ACCIDENT ON BOARD SHIP.—On Thursday, a boy,
named Regan, was employed to store some coals on board a
ship in the Victoria Dock ; and when lifting up one of the
hatches, he by some means slipped and fell upon some casks
in the hold, receiving such injuries as caused his death in
little more than an hour.
CRICKET MATCH AT BIRKENHEAD.—On Thursday evening,
a cricket match was concluded between the second eleven of
the Olympus Club (Prince's-park), and the first eleven of the
Birkenhead Victoria. There was some "hard hitting" on
both sides. The Victoria won, with five wickets to spare.
FINE ARTS.—A very choice and valuable collection of about
three hundred oil and water colour paintings, the property of
Messrs. Agnew and Son, of Manchester, has been opened for
exhibition at the Old Police-office, High-street. The collec-
tion includes the productions of the first men in the English
and French schools of art.
CHANCE FOR THE LOVERS OP THE FINE ARTS.—A fine
collection of paintings, by well-known masters, both ancient
and modern, is at present on view at Mr. Morrish's, Mer-
chants' Dining Rooms, in Tithebarn-street, where they are to
be disposed of, on the 7th of next month, a l'Art Union,
amongst 300 subscribers, at a guinea each. The paintings
include several valuable works.
CRICKET MATCH AT 1100TLE.—On Thursday, a match came
off between the first eleven of the Oriental Club, and the first
eleven of the Derby Club. Special permission was obtained
to use the fine ground of the Bootle Club. The wickets were
pitched at half-past four o'clock, and the game terminated in
favour of the Derby Club, by six wickets to go down. The
playing on both sides was spirited, although the scoring did
not run very high.
THE TRIAL TRIP OF THE LABIIAN took place on Wed-
nesday, and was attended with highly satisfactory results, the
speed attained being about eight knots an hour. The Labuan
is an iron vessel of tubular construction, the sides curved round
so as to form the deck ; and her double bottom will permit her
to carry wader ballast. She is intended for the coal trade of
the Eastern Archipelago, and was built Messrs. W. and C.
Miller, of this town, from the designs of Mr. Hodgson, en-
gineer, for the coal trade of Borneo.
SALE ,OF FIRST-CLASS PAINTINGS.—On Thursday and
Fridaymett, Mr. Branch will sell at his rooms, in Hanover-
street, collection of paintings by modern artists, including
several first-class works by Herring, Ansdell, Etty, Bright,
David Roberts, T. S. Cooper, Greenland, Solomon, Lee, &c.
The paintings are the property of Mr. Flatou, the well-known
collector, of London, and are greatly superior to the average
collections offered for auction sale in the provinces.
STEALING MARKED MONKT.— At the Police-court, on
Friday, John Smith, a yard-keeper in the employ of Messrs.
'Humble, Grayson, and Co., Regent-road, was charged with
stealing various sums of money belonging to his employers.
The prisoner lived under the office, and the taah-keeper
having missed various sums of money, he marked several
pieces of gold coin on Thursday, and left them in 'his drawer.
He then went out, and on his return he found that several
sovereigns and half-sovereigns had been stolen. The prisoner
was taken into custody at his house, with several pieces of
marked money in his possession. He was committed for trial.
THE CORPORATION BATHS AND WASHOUSES—We learn.
that these establishments are in a most flourishing condition.
The great demand forthe accommodation they 'afford is a proof
that the public fully appreciate the benefits which the libera-
lity of the town council and the exertions of the baths com-
mittee have placed withinthe reach of all. During last week
the number of bathers at Cornwallis-street was 6,238, at the
Pier-head 3,521, and at Paul-street 2,657, being nearly double
the number of bathers for the corresponding week of last year.
At the wasbhouses • the number of persons who attended during
the week was 213-at Paul-street, and 290 a Frederick-street
All classes seem equally desirous of enjoying the baths.
DEATH OF MR,. 'JOHN NELSON WOOD.-This gentleman,
who for many years carried on business as -a merchant and
shipowner, in Liverpool, expired at four c'elqck on Thursday
morning, at his residence, Oaklands, Rook Ferry, Cheshire.
Mr. Wood was born in the town of Maryport, Cumberland,
and was 63 years- of age. For ten or eleven days preceding
his death he -was confined to his bed, ,and for some time
previous his health was declining. The deceased was for a
number of years v member of the Liverpool corporation, from
which he retired:in November, 1853, whentthe term for which
he could serve vs alderman without being re-elected expired
according to the Municipal Act. Up to the time of his death
he was chairman of the pilots' committee, .an office which he
held for a considerable period. He was also for some years a
member of the dock committee. Besides serving the public
in these capacities, Mr. Wood was a warm supporter of various
institutionne
cte charitabledwithiwninsttihr
merged
of the town. He'w's for 30 years con-
rugafdeminenttheofsathilor%Sall,
moorms'e,Haonsdpitdaul,rinagn
the latter portion of that time he held the office of chairman
of the committee.
AN OLD OEFENDER.—A young woman, named Elizabeth
Rimmer, about 23 years of age, of prepossessing appearance,
was charged at the Police-court, on Wednesday, under the
following circumstances :—She came out of Kirkdale Gaol
on Monday, after serving three months' imprisonment for
imposing upon parties in the neighbourhood of Bootle, by re-
presenting herself as a distressed daughter of more than one
celebrated deceased person. The police, having other charges
against her, she -was re-arrested. It appeared that, on the 7th
March, she called to consult Mr. J. P. Harris, surgeon,
Clarence-street, 'and was shown into the surgery. While
there she contrived to abstract a case of surgical instruments,
and also the contents of another, which she afterwards
managed to pawn with Mr. Little, of flrownlow-hill, by a
plausible story about a distressed father. A day or two after
that she obtained-a situation as servant with Mrs. Nicholson,
of Harford-street. There she stole a purse, containing
£4l7s 6d., inadvertently left on the kitehen table, and de-
camped. She was-remanded for a week in, order to complete
evidence in some other charges against her. There are some
singular circumstances connected with this young woman.
In 1852 a great sensation was created in this town by her
mother and aunt being tried on a charge- of attempting to
poison her, becausaehe would not consent to support them by
prostituting herself. They were convicted and sentenced to
death, but subsequent inquiries into the character of their
accuser led to a doubt of their guilt, and they, were pardoned.
WEST DERBY GUARDIANS.—The weekly meeting was
held on Wednesday, when the balance in hand was found to
be £629 12s. Bd. Cheques were drawn for out-door relief, &c.,
to the amount of £385.35. Bd. The report received from the
Visiting Committee upon the subject of the treatment of luna-
tics in the Workhouse, together with Dr. Nevins' report
thereon, were received and adopted, and copies were ordered
to be forwarded to the ,Poor-law Board. The clerk was re-
<quested to furnish a statement of the aggregate number of
rate-payers in the 22 townships comprising the West Derby
'Union, with the valuation of property, and total Amount of
assessments. Mr. R. B. Reid, surgeon, Bootle-cum-Linacre,
one of the medical officers of the union, having made a com-
plaint to the Poor-law Board-Viat, during the late visitation of
cholera, he had only been allowed 18s. 9d. per week for his
extra services, instead of three_guineas, which he considered a
very moderate charge for a professional gentleman at such a
dangerous time, and the Poor-law Board having written -to the
guardians of the union, inclosing a copy of Mr. Reid'ef-letter,
and -requesting to be furnished with any observations the
guardians might make upon it, -it was resolved that theelerk
do inform the Poor-law Board 'they consider the amounts
ample. The number of paupers relieved in the Workhouse
last week was 704, being an increase of 76 on the correspond-
ing week in last year. The number of paupers who received
out-door relief was as follows, namely :—Able-bodied, 776_;
not able-bodied, 890 ; children, 1,818:: total, 3,484, showing
an increase of 208 on the corresponding week in last half-
year. The amount expended in out-relief was £2ll 7s. 3d.
THE OE4IIO-EMEN AND THE TWELFTH OF JULY.—On
Thursday, the members of the different Orange lodges, in
Liverpool, walked in procession in honour ofthe 12th of July.
Having been forbidden to assemble within the precincts of
the borough, they, by previous arrangement, agreed upon
Wavertree being their head place of meeting. About half-
past eight o'clock in the morning the various lodges, accom-
panied by their bands of music, began to assemble at Waver-
tree-bridge. From-this point they took the route of Brook-
house, Smithdown-lane, where the met the different members
belonging to the southern division of the town. The various
lodges having been placed in order, they moved in procession
towards Gateacre, Woolton, and Childwall, and about half-past
one o'clock the entire body returned to "head-quarters," at
Wavertree. The procession was headed by a carriage contain-
ing S. Burton, Esq., high sheriff of the county of Shropshire
and grand master of the Orange lodges in England and
Ireland. There were also several flags and banners in
the procession, bearing appropriate devices, amongst
the most conspicuous of which was one containing a
portrait of the Rev. Dr. Mlcieile, bearing the following in-
scription :—" Our countryman, our Protestant defender in
Church and State." A beautiful flag of "Cranmer and
Latimer in prison" also attracted much attention. The
different clubs separated for their respective club-houses, on
arriving at the Coffee-house Hotel, in Wavertree; but pre-
parations had been made in the bowling green attached for an
unlimited number of visitors, and about three o'clock Mr.
Burton, the high sheriff of Shropshire, made his appearance
amongst the company, and was loudly cheered. The chair-
man having addressed a few words to the meeting, Mr.
Burton, the grand master, spoke at some length. He con-
gratulated them on the splendid display they -had that day
made. He spoke at considerable length in favour of the loyal
character of Orangemen, and concluded by an energetic
appeal on behalf of the order. After several other speeches
the company retired, but in other respects it was a great day
in Wavertree, and thousands of spectators were present to
witness the procession. At some twelve or fourteen houses
festive gatherings were held in the evening.
Cuarous QUESTION or OWNERSHIP.—A case, involving a
curious legal question as to ownership, was heard at the County
Court, on Friday. John Boyd and George Duncan, coopers,
were plaintiffs, and John Tyson, also a cooper, in Vulcan-
street, was defendant. The claim was for £l5 16s. 6d., for
the value of eleven water casks, of 200 gallons each. In No-
vember last, the plaintiffs supplied Messrs. Millers and Thomp-
son with thirteen water casks for the Australian ship Gold-
finder. There was an option on the part of Messrs. Millers
and Thompson, that they might either keep or send back so
many of the casks as should not be passed by the Government
emigrant officer. Eleven of the casks were allowed to remain
on the Prince's Dock quay until the 20th of December, when
Mr. Tyson, the defendant, went to Messrs. Millers and Thomp-
son, and asked if he could remove the casks in payment of a
previous account he had against them. Permission was given
to him and he removed them. Subsequently the plaintiffs
also applied to Messrs. Millers and Thompson for the casks,
having been inforned what had become of them. Mr. Thomp-
son said they had been given to Mr. Tyson in a mistake, and
wrote a letter asking him to deliver up the casks to the plain-
tiffs. Armed with this letter, Messrs. Boyd and Duncan ap-
plied to Mr. Tyson, but he refused to give up the casks, on
the ground that they had been given to him by the owners in
payment of an account. Messrs. Millers and Thompson be-
came insolvent, and could not pay the plaintiffs. The action
against the defendant was grounded on the argument, that
Messrs. Millers and Thompson never were the owners of the
casks, and had no right to give them to defendant. The
judge decided that Messrs. Millers and Thompson, not having
returned the casks in a reasonable time, had decided to keep
them, so became the owners, and could, therefore, dispose of
them as they thought a, He gave jadgment for the defen-
dant, with costs.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 20 | 0.949 | 0.0586 | MEETINGS IN BANKRUPTCY.
17, George Bateman (Ist)
18, H. H. Ross (Ist)
19, Joseph Jackson (2nd)
20, William Jones (2nd)
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,620 | 0.9751 | 0.0946 | ID
r 4,1 zi(N.....__-IND GENERAL COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER.
op i N___,....).L.. 17 or
v LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1855.
..,,01
Ore'l JULY. strength. His preceding works were less pretentious Queen, Charlotte, who, it
Ole
; f, ,
--- than the two volumes which he now presents to the mind, particularly as th?
Tifou
sreo4 art here, young lord of summer, public ; and, in these latter, having prescribed to him- with some of her pre&
fail, Beautiful July! self a more important task than any which he had imbued with many c
dd 4, th-Y golden sunlight tinges previously executed, he sets about its performance with feminine virtues to
All the eastern forest fringes ; y more stateliness of demeanour—more gravity of the moment she c
* 4" thou flingest, glad new comer,
we,purpose. From the books he has already published reader becomes
Glory o'er the sky.
e. welcome, lord of summer, . with such success, his name at once suggests to the morals and a
4 "nl public a writer whose mind is richly store with anec- George 111.
AI
Beautiful July 1 • dotes ,and all manner of scrap knowledge, along with a tentatious 1
e! ov, .
.'4 solid substratum of genuine erudition, clear and well- tication ;
/ r meadow, moor, or valley
1);
A Pour thy golden floods ;
,rl.l at noon, when heat is sorest, defined perceptions, good taste, and ready arrange-. evinced
ment ; while, as counterpoises to these, may not unfre- whose
w
0 ;latnae eis silence in the forest, qUently be suspected a love of display, and a rather but i'
1 t',.aving wind to sally
I .I,4rfe , rout the shadowy woods, over-intention of making the very most of his
.su.bject. thr
In other words, as Sheridan said of the playwrights, r
r_glade and breathless alley, . " He never knows* when he has too much of a good
/ 1,40A,4
thow:h.,:erirteehcdeloefueaprd coolness broods. thing." With these trifling drawbacks, Dr. Doran is ar
/ , a ilirr., _
ifti blueis drisftkiy7 author whose writings will always command descry
0
~Isl.uughout the twilight starless, approbation among the class best. qualified to for
s'litt elbt.sokiiff, care regardless, judgment of their value ; and in the wider rar
readers for mere amusement they will maintain
A_ yes t i leaven uplifting, tensive popularity. They generally consist of
ql IltiliZl• d I lie,
It_ 'thy . . . hit and richly-coloured sketches, in which it
ri;i 'pith -quit. glories shifting, of feature and characteristic touch are ma'
''9,,
f ' en ti, 4111 Jul !
~ trkb y
co •111,1';'4 green leaves are kissen for the higher excellences of generalisa+'
‘.,.4' Bl cO4tin breeze, and breadth of design. Like the woe
~,q masters, they are faithful represen+
0. -
... A:n7;irthe:vt'hit%e village maiden, can be overtaken by care and displr
01
f,liti sweet 4t roses laden, heightened,- here-and-thererdayAur
0 . 41;:-. ' LAY fride.. oftly glisten caricature to relipe,thei4fKorcittl--
iy "4
she stiyith. 41e-sees,'_ • .lii-hispreient-41Trk7lie. ': el)/
,ft/ ,Aron., e / Voice to listen
Vfoco_ 6 the rtiatling•Arees. and seeming resolurtiortnraoint,.o
f le
Be'me then, YOunglord
of summer, , . .
k t,
~, autiful July ! , platebut
still resi
f
0,,,14, • way awhile, 0 happy vagrant!
€ , fake the hills anti meadows fragrant : tableailubisxj°,grlianbaoPwuhihircalch leadi•
displayed, yet in whiti
i 0 We • media which shall bi
.), will hymn thee, gay new corner,
wry vt,_ As thou passest by. we find, as it were. •
,0 .
0,,..., Welcome, welcome, lord of summer, this spot we per
eV6e
'IeYP Beautiful July! dimpled chin-4.
tii'' k limb, and tb
ooti ' I.i R E VIE WS . apply in vai•
eo N ing these '
—_
ir .-tct,,°l the a correct
ev tPe hover, Queensßy of England of the House of th
iro, 14 .1v ~,,,, y Dr. Doran. London : Bentley. ' Mr
lie Otvllp 8 • ,ers
of thewieth
day have been. so really success- ' mo-
op t cuting
pop oft., asi 11,, „, the good opinion of the reading n-
no ni., tlielcu_ oran. His name ris comparatively
V.i 7 cliT 14 th erarY world ; and he has, as yet, done
10 ,',sl:(lwlliche wsaY of original invention—has strut'
Ott: ot, genew, nail vibrate through. the soul= of s-
efi :tiii'llOSe wi°43--has scarcely awakened an
‘',l,„'lltlithe
wide sympathies which guide the I
Ii( ki,,,,tg occurs,4li tof any good or great ent
e itty Aidy ea PoP.P.ar in a high degree. l
rcoto.t.' ! tvtlio:f tact
aarned his title to popularity
_,14 bed
rode kt_lst overres of small inf •
ry b.tiok r. ..„ . ormation,
• t-z!rili 41ceeeditri; might justly der
rfr) qmttv ,alid h eu. 111 worming hi,
of,,t , %tltltet kavourir Completely esta"
1p au_ti4,,'lll)o4 the
His success e
1a( . Vins T 1,,,'41kt e 'le His
and. r
4' tiNki (11111110 n
;I i .etcl al or fare. Ir
"0, 4
i.N.44
a, ommon-,
, • ra,.thai' 'sit', adroitiy_m,
Ati: poTtet. epu,' of the jewr
I/ .e,of 4 -,laient f
ete, ite t e resets
?
0;4 140 440 Ora IT sets t
) h 41 Nli 'terve-
'i' 144' 4i. t.ecHltr*
iti 1•44 104 e
th cit of a e)-
'`l,e atlectikore 111, '
Ot. It ii° th ot'
trii4. %le
V
AND GENERAL COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER.
strength. His preceding works were less pretentious
than the two volumes which he now presents to the
public ; and, in these latter, having prescribed to him-
self a more important task than any which he had
previously executed, he sets about its performance with
more stateliness of demeanour—more gravity of
purpose. From the books he has already published
with, such success, his name at once suggests to the
public a writer whose mind is richly stored with anec-
dotes and all manner of scrap lmowledge, along with a
solid substratum of genuine erudition, clear and well-
defined perceptions, good taste, and ready arrange-.
ment ; while, as counterpoises to these, may not unfre-
qUently be suspected a love of display, and a rather
over-intention of making the very most of his subject.
In other words, as Sheridan said of the play Wrights,
" He never knows when he has too much of a good
thing." With these trifling drawbacks, Dr. Doran is an
author whose writings will always command deserved
approbation among the class best qualified to form a
judgment of their value ; and in the wider range of
readers for mere amusement they will maintain an ex-
tensive popularity. They generally consist of cleverly-
hit and richly-coloured sketches, in which individuality
of feature and characteristic touch are made to do duty
for the higher excellences of generalisation of subject
and breadth of design. Like the works of the Dutch
masters, they are faithful representations of all that
can be overtaken by care and displayed by elaboration,
heightened,- here-and-thererj ust. a • suffieient.dash-of•
caricature torelip.N:e,thenl,,fsm*th'eellarg-e0f,,.—0-4nOt`olty..;
hi- presenf:Woile,whe': enters
and seeming resolutoiortnraoints..thtehn.ataskhasof-rbeenen his
dering;zt onm-; •
bplateut
fibisb
iogl:aopuhircal
ptill results in a series of animated
tableaux, in which leading characteristics are vividly
displayed, yet in which we desiderate the connecting
media which shall blend and unite them in a whole—
we find, as it were, here a head and there a hand—in
this spot we perceive a carbuncled nose, in that a
dimpled chin—the light flashes here upon a brawny
limb, and there displays a graceful torso ; but we
apply in vain to his canvass for the means of so assort-
ing these disjecta membra as would enable us to form
a correct idea of the completed figure or figures to which
the members respectively belong. We are furnished
with no guide to the composition—no -clue to the
' moral labyrinth which he presents to view, and are
unable to trace the design of the artist, or fully to
comprehend the purpose of his plan.
The Queens of England of the House of Hanover
have not been numerous, and, according to-the testi-
mony of contemporary history, the influence of some
of them has not been of a very salutary character. In
the two lively volumes which Dr. Doran has contrived
to cull out of the chequered incidents connected with
their lives, we have vivid, indeed strong, if not glow-
ing; pictures of the-licentiousness which, little better
than a century ago, pervaded, if it does not still per-
vade. the German Courts, of all degrees, small and
great. We learn also from these -pictures that the royal
ladies who were destined to perform so conspicuous a
part in our social polity, -had, in numerous instances,
their youthful ideas squared with the extravagances
referred to. In the course of his delineations, Dr.
Doran shows, that, at a comparatively early date, the
tone and colour of court life at Hanover were sweetened
and harmonized by milder influences than those pre-
valent at most of the other German Courts ; but still
he makes it plain enough, that the, manners of even
that comparatively pure court stood much in need of
refinement, that the prevalent sentiments might well
improve by elevation. After tracing the lives and
characters of the wives of George I. and George 11.,
as well as descanting pretty freely upon the coarse-
ness and questionable morality of those sovereigns 7—
tracing 'their antecedents and connections, and doing
the same by their royal consorts—he arrives, by a
natural sequence,_at the epoch of George 111. and his
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 34 | 0.945 | 0.1242 | VISITORS TO LIVERPOOL
WILL FIND COMFORT AND ECONOMY
WHITEMAN'S BRUNSWICK HOTEL,
AND RESTAURANT,
CLAYTON-SQUARE,
(In the Centre of Liverpool, near the North-western Station).
BED AND BREAKFAST, 25. 6d.
' A Night Porter in attendance.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 182 | 0.9157 | 0.1388 | lOublic Notices,
BOROUGH OF LIVERPOOL. —NOTICE IS
HEREBY GIVEN, that in pursuance of "'The Ninth and
Tenth Victoria, chapter one hundred and twenty-seven, Liverpool
Sanitary Act, 1846," the Mayor. Aldermen, and 31urgesses of the
Borough of Liverpool will. at the expiration of fourteen days from
th'e date hereof, taitepossession of the unoccupied or unproductive
Land, Quarry, and Premises mentioned in the schedulehereto;
and will fence oll'and let the same according to the provisions of
the said Act, for the impose of recovering payment of the surnsof
money mentioned in the said schedule for and in respect of the
costs and expenses which have been incurred by the Town Council
of the said borough, in and about the paving of so much of the
streets and places named in the said schedule whereon the said'
land, quarry, and premises abut, together with the expenses of
fencing off and letting the same land, quarry, and premise's; pur-
suant to the above notice.
Dated till's 11th day of July, one thousand eight hundred and
fifty-five. By order,
WM. SVUTTLEWORTH, Town•clerk.
Public Offices, Cornwallis-street.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 134 | 0.9258 | 0.1615 | GENUINE COFFEE.
QHARPE and COMPANY, 14, EXCHANGE-STREET
EAST, respectfully announce that, through the extensive and
increasing demand for their Coffee, they have appointed agents,
as under, for the convenience of families who do not reside in.
their immediate vicinity.
Mr. Richard Wearing, Chemist, 75, Upper Parliament-street.
Mr. John Brownrigg, Chemist, Post-office, Old Swan.
Mr. William Baxter, Chemist, 81, Kensington.
Mr. J. M. Buck, Chemist, 1, West Derby-street.
Mr. William Wilding, Chemist, 11, St. Anne-street. • ' • '
Mr. J. Gill, Chemist, Netherfield-road.
Mr. Thos. G. Fearon, Chemist, Walton-on-the-nill.
Mr. Thomas Kirk, Chemist, 109, Salisbury-street, Everton-
crescent.
Mr. H. S. Alpass, Chemist. 91, Park-road.
Mr. Jones, Chemist, Waterloo.
Mr. Thomas Welch, Chemist, Fairfield.
W. and H. Jackson, 97, Mount-pleasant, and 23, Netherfield-
road North.
Miss Makin, Confectioner, Southport. :•:.
Mr. James Fin&land, Chemist, Wavertree.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 11 | 0.5764 | 0.2789 | 1855
5 5-16 61
61 FS
-
5 3.16 6 3-16
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 132 | 0.9527 | 0.1238 | SPIRIT OF " DIOGENES."
THERE can be no difficulty in detecting spurious sovereigns,
since they generally bear traces of their maker's gilt upon
them.
TRAGIC POET (meditating on the construction of his Fifth
Act) loquitur : "I wish I saw my way clearly
I. " to the catas-
trophe
A "PRACTICAL REFORMER," writing to the Times on
Public Offices, states that the best sites for the Courts of Law
would be Great George-street. Chacun a son gozit. Our
idea is, that the best sight for the Courts of Law would be to
see them quite empty.
IT is now customary for persons who, from certain or un-
certain circumstances, are compelled to take up their quarters
in the peaceful neighbourhood of Aldgate, to say that they are
"going to the East."
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 123 | 0.904 | 0.146 | 'URNITURE
NOTICE.
REMOVAL TO No. 14, BASNETT-STREET,
(A FEW DOORS FROM CHURCH-STREET),
LIVER P O O L.
FURNITURE.
WILLIAM BAYES, UPHOLSTERER and CABINET-MAKER, returns sincere thanks to his Friends for their
liberal support durin,, the last ten years, and announces that, owing to the expiration of lease, he has REMOVED from
No. 20, CHURCH-STREET, to more spacious and convenient Premises, No. 14, BASNETT-STREET, where he hopes to secure
a continuance of their favours.
W. B.'s new Show Rooms are now ready for inspection, where may.,be seen every revisite for the Mauston or Cottage. Several
Suites of Drawing-room and Dining-room Furniture ready for delivery, at Ten per Cent. less than that usual Prices.
WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE, FACTORY, AND TINIBEIVICARD, WOOD-STREET AND FLEET-STREET:
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 285 | 0.9507 | 0.1062 | J. MACLENNAN
Begs to intimate that, owing to his present premises hawing
been purchased by Messrs. R. and H. Anderson, linen-
drapers, for the purposes of their own business, and being
obliged to give up early possession, he is now OFFERING
his large and valuable STOCK of SHAWL S,
MANTLES, &c., recently purchased, at such reduced
prices as will ensure an entire and immediate clearance, in
order to be in a position to open another establishment
with an entirely new assortment of goods.
P.S.—His removal being an unexpected event, he had
previously made all his preparations for the present season ;
and the stock is therefore unusually large, ;elegant, and
well assorted.
FLANAGAN'S EOLIAN HAT,
With Recent Improvements,
RI3OIIiITEMED 6 AND 7 VIC., CAP. 65.
" An easy, pleasant fitting Hat, ventilated on a new and
correct principle."—Practical .11eclbanics' Journal.
The only Flat known, which combines a light, gentle-
manly appearance, with thorough ventilation, advantages
obtained by forming an air chamber immediately around
the head, permitting a current of air to pass imperceptibly
or without draught, from thence through and out at the
top of the Flat; and the value of this principle is best ap-
preciated when walking, riding, and in all cases where
continued exercise renders the ordinary Hat both un-
healthy and cumbersome.
FLANAGAN AND CO.,
PATENTEES AND MANUFACTURERS,
74, LORD-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
WENHAM LAKE ICE.
THE GREATEST LUXURY OF THE SEASON.
The WENHAM LAKE ICE, celebrated for its purity, and
the present Stock never before equalled in transparency, being as
clear as glass, ON SALE, in large or small quantities, upon
reasonable terms I also, the PATENT REFRIGERATOR for pre-
serving Ice and Provisions.
ROPES AND CO.,
29, NORTH JOHN-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,777 | 0.981 | 0.0667 | legal Notices.
WHEREAS a Petition for adjudication in Bank-
ruptcy was filed on the Twenty-fifth day of June, 1855,
against HUGH HENRY ROSS, of Great George-street, in Li-
verpool;in the county of Lancaster Draper, Dealer and Chapman,
trading under the firm of Joseph Jackson and Company, and he
having been declared Bankrupt, is hereby required to surrender
himself to HENRY JAMES PERRY, Esq., one of Her Majesty's
Commisaioners of the said Court, on the Eighteenth day of July
instant, and on the Fifteenth day of August next, at Eleven o'clock
precisely in the Forenoon of each day, at the Court of Bankruptcy,
at Liverpool; at each of the said Meetings, the Creditors may
come prepared to prove their debts ; and at the first sitting the
said Bankrupt is required to submit himself to be examined
touching his Estate and Effects, and the Creditors may then and
there vote in the choice of Assignees; and at the second sitting
the said Bankrupt is required to make a full discovery and dis-
closure of all his Estate and Effects, and finish his examination.
NOTICE is hereby given to all persons indebted to the said
Bankrupt or to his Estate' or that have any of his Effects, not to
pay or deliver the same but to Mr. JAMES CAZENOVE, Eldon
Chambers, South John-street, Liverpool, Official Assignee, whom
the Commissioner has appointed, and give notice to Messrs.
SALE, WORTHINGTON, and SHIPMAN, Solicitors, Manchester,
and to Mr. GREATLEY, Solicitor,
48, Castle-street, Liverpool.
WHEREAS a•Petition for adjudication in Bank-
ruptcy was filed on the Tenth day of July, 1555, against
WILLIAM WALTERS, of the city of Chester, in the county of
Chester, Coal and Commission Agent, General Dealer, Dealer and
Chapman, and he having been declared a Bankrupt, is hereby re•
quired to surrender himself to HENRY JAMES PERRY, Esq.,
one of Her Majesty's Commissioners of the said Court, otl the
Thirty-first day of July instant, and the Twenty-first day of
August next, at Eleven of the clock in the Forenoon precisely of
each day, at the Court of Bankruptcy, at Liverpool; at each of
the said Meetings the Creditors may come prepared to prove their
debts; and at the first sitting the said Bankrupt is hereby re-
quired to submit himself to be examined touching his Estate and
Effects, and the Creditors may then and there vote in the choice
of Assignees ; and at the second sitting the said Bankrupt is re-
quired to make a full discovery and disclosure of all his Estate
and Effects, and finish his examination.
NOTICE is hereby given to all persons indebted to the said
Bankrupt or to his Estate, or that have any of his Effects, not to
pay or deliver the same but to Mr. GEORGE MORGAN, Cook-
street, Liverpool, the Official Assignee, whom the Commissioner
has appointed, and give notice to
Mr. GREATLEY, Solicitor,
No. 48, Castle-street, Liverpool.
TO MERCHANTS, TRADESMEN, TRUSTEES,
and OWNERS of PROPERTY.—The Subscriber under-
takes the SUPERINTENDENCE of Merchants', Tradesmen's,
and Bankrupts' BOOKS, either by contract or otherwise, together
with the examination of Accounts, and preparation of Balance
Sheets; also, the Charge of Trust Properties, Collection of Rents
and outstanding Accounts, negotiation of Mortgages, and the
disposal of Property.
_
R. S. EVERITT,
LEICESTER-BUILDINGS, KING-STREET.
NOTICE.
THE LIVERPOOL DEPOT
OF THE
EMSCOTE FOUNDRY COMPANY,
(NEAR LEAMINGTON,)
FOR THE SALE OF
HARRISON'S CELEBRATED PATENT
KITCHENER AND CRIMEAN RANGE,
WILL SHORTLY BE
REMOVED FROM 46, RENSHAW-STREET,
TO NEW AND MORE EXTENSIVE AND COMMODIOUS PREMISES,
THE WINDSOR FOUNDRY,
No. 62, IN THE SAME STREET.
Stamped or unstamped copies of the LIVERPOOL STANDARD will
be furnished according to order.
Stamped copies (price 4d.) will pass free by post during 15 days
after the day of publication, but the paper posted must be folded
so as to expose the stamp.
Unstamped copies (price 3id.) will pass by post at any time with
an ordinary penny postage stamp affixed.
The LIVERPOOL STANDARD having been registered at the Post
Office, in pursuance of the recent Act of Parliament, may be
transmitted through the post to the Colonies and other parts
beyond the United Kingdom.
THE
tiberpoof :'-'tailbarb+
TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1855.
THE VOICE OF PUBLIC OPINION.
IT was predicted, at the time of the discussions on
he Reform Bill, that the first attempts to alter it
would come from those who were most forward in
asserting its completeness ; that, indeed, the principle
of reform once admitted, it would know no end, but
become an interminable succession of changes in our
representative system. Nearly a quarter of a century
has elapsed, and though little change has really been
made in it, the immutability has not been from want
of attempts on the part of the author of the measure.
To such tampering with the principles of the Consti-
tution, every Conservative—by which we may include
every true lover of his country---is sincerely opposed.
If, however, circumstances could afford a justification,
and furnish a legitimate argument for another reform,
by showing the manifold imperfections of the existing
system, the present session of Parliament has been
most successful in pronouncing its own condemnation.
So far from the House of Commons being, as it is
professed to be, and ought to be, an expression of the
public intelligence---an echo of the aggregate of the
public mind---the voice, indeed, of its numerous con-
stituents, we might almost imagine that the majority
of its members acted upon the rule of contrary, like
froward children. If a proposal be made to bring forward
any measure, to the details of which there may be
fifty sound objections, but a few plausible reasons in
its favour, the mover obtains a large majority for the
first step, with, perhaps, as large a majority against
any further progress, as though the real object were
simply to discuss the schemes of ambitious legislators
without bringing them to any result. The consequence
of this love of discussion, irrespective of any fruits to
arise from it, has been, and will continue to be, so long
as such a course is persisted in, that the public interest
is not served ; that the time intended for important
concerns is positively wasted; that economy in the
public expenditure, which ought to receive consider-
able attention, is passed over, because the voting of
the estimates is delayed until there is no time nor
opportunity to discuss them ; and a session of Parlia-
ment is brought to a close without anything to show
as the fruits of its labours.
This condition of affairs, however, bad as it may
seem, is not the worst of the present House of Com-
mons. Not only has it failed to perform the duties
expected, but it has proved positively obstructive ; it
has not only disappointed hopes, but excited contrary
feelings. There can be no doubt that, from the
commencement of the present war, the public
feeling has largely predominated in favour of its
being carried on with the utmost vigour, in order
to ensure success ; that very great dissatisfaction
has prevailed as to the mode in which affairs
have been managed ; that Ministerial incapacity
has been daily growing more evident; and that public
indignation at the betrayal of its interests and disap-
pointment of its hopes required some legitimate safety-
valve through which it might receive expression.
Under such circumstances, the meeting of Parliament
was looked forward to with some anxiety, as being the
constitutional channel through which opinions so
widely entertained might be embodied in a declaration
of the national will ; but the disappointment of this ex-
pectation has been as signal as the desire was strong
for its gratification. When the demand was made for
an inquiry into the causes which had led to such
frightful havoc in the Army engaged in the siege
of Sebastopol, it was responded to by more than two-
thirds of the House of Commons. There could be no
mistake as to the necessity of such an inquiry, and the
readiness with which it was granted not only satisfied
the public for a time, but produced its immediate fruit
in the breaking-up of the Coalition Cabinet, the defeat
of its Peelite elements, which were supposed to con-
stitute its worst features, and its re-construction on a
Whig basis. So great an effort on the part of the
House of Commons appears to have weakened, if not
exhausted, its vitality for the rest of the session. In
vain is it shown, by indisputable testimony, that much
of the mismanagement for which the Peelites were over-
thrown, continues to prevail ; that no adequate provi-
sion is made for contingencies that are almost certain
to arise ; that personal interest, instead of merit, forms
the ground of promotion to offices of trust and respon-
sibility; and that, with more professions, the present
Government have shown themselves very little if any
better than their immediate predecessors. As any
vote of disapprobation might be supposed productive
of active results, the members have shrunk from the
exertion, and any discussion of the question, about
which the public at large take so deep an interest, is
is ended with no other result than the moral effect
which may be supposed to follow the many speeches
on the subject. That the Ministers do not enjoy the
confidence of the public, is almost universally admitted;
but any attempt to give expression to this feeling in
the House of Representatives, where alone such an
expression could have any weight, appears to be in
almost every instance vain.
We can readily understand that amongst a great
many members there is a strong disinclination to give
any vote which may eventuate in a general election.
We can also admit that to a certain extent a difficulty
would be created by a change of Ministers, particularly
when we bear in mind the little readiness which has
been shown by the Conservative party to assume the
' responsibility at this momentous crisis. Still these
are hardly legitimate reasons why the members of the
House of Commons should stultify themselves by
voting against their own convictions, and perpetuate
the abuses of which we complain, by allowing Lord
PALMERSTON and his colleagues to believe themselves
indispensable, and that we cannot do without them.
At any rate, they should not be allowed to go on with-
out some efficient check on their proceedings, and this
perhaps can best be effected by refusing further grants
of supplies until the Ministers enter into direct and
explicit statements of the course which they intend to
pursue.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 1,367 | 0.3999 | 0.2683 | tI'ItI?,B,,,II7IVELY THE LAST WEEK.
, tele, 10 PARIS AND BACK FOR 6D.
itlii,,,,Orated MODELS of PARIS and the
14.1.."'„„ERY of PERK LA CHAISE, now Exhibiting at the
rl'")....rna. Old Postoffice-place, Church•street.
tops Ten in the Morning till Nine in the Evening.
reduced to Sixpence.
kts,,
44kke.'ti„ MENSCHIKOFF'S CARRIAGE,
htletv.74tukx\4lll.l344ll4le4Af
vth,er Alma by our gallant troopvv—
lubLetore it e I ayes, NO
k4:4l;l4llMtkethil QUEEN's I-11.4(1PLII D-STREET, together
OPeil,4, IiZEC:t lid MODEL of '
1et414 041T—wAlk 4LAKLAVA, AND INKERMANN.
Igo Le Er ye t 411 v• tnken from the Bettie Field..
'Ad etrit cLening. ce, e
0 -.velinw'tbe Morning, and from Seven to
431411i0 qlfe to
n'
Ornj liee th . . Ig, , e Carriage.
kt ~.; Evening, 6d. Children, Half-price.
1 °IltA rt,
4840. ''' 1. SACRED DIORAMA.
ait tr
k'ttit,i (Fro ' AX D THE HOLY LAND,
t, 4ander ra St. Geor ,
44.:gat,.. the d,_ i ge s Gallery, London,)
drawings
11;:'°Iie°1111V:11:irtitrrillyt°1 fin"triteWianstevArilVirLfrZ H. Ba Bart-
1t - 14e14,4111t*tneent bout Jerusalem," • Forty Days in the
kINN
NtNI4 %_Pthe:ewnitlad nr:
i 'et 1,-anclerrCelebrated Views
ure oefumthperiSsece.nev:ef
INik. --..n0 j Mit—Land of Edom—Petra—Mount
If -13a,-- °rdan—Bethlebem—Tyre—Mount Ht er-
\\
Ilp • tit "61cUs—Galilee—Mount Tabor—NsFare h—_
,4, 141'001 .... tves—Garden of Gethsemane—N alley of
st ,e storsv, Siloam—Jerusalem with all its Great
Slt b.,Nolifb o.o%loTrion's Temple—The' Holy Sepulchre, &c.
14111,_ hibtkigkillit ~,. ~ IL MUSIC, accompanied on the Organ.
l'tilt4g,"paots-a`„iitlit o'clock, and Morning Representations
17: t.41.4.1-"4lP,'"lgis,fit;na: 11;7 Roecselorcvked. Seats, open
‘l4/R,
8 MUSIC-HALL, BOLD -STREET.
g Ott r
\N ot,
VI e 44 orkka,S„SEll3l CON C E R T - HALL,
Nilo thui,,,litwn-STREET, LIVERPOOL,
tlialtWiie 'RI tuth'inlisements OPEN EVERY E% EN
°lit:l/lnt °,,f Vocal*, nstrumental, Gym.nastic,
tem,' ‘,olnique Eccentric, Characteristique,
404%4 -111Ments. * Proprietor, Mr. HEATH.
th}NAlt
ikb_ktitr„...l)/10're
lense:kav,s‘ip, t kiNsfy„,GRAPHIC WAREHOUSE.
'AO t - ~Itl ripo'''''4, 33, MANCHESTER-STREET,
‹4III"' "IloPati‘alv,rler and Manufacturer of every Article
,pa Per it tif 41.1 i n Stock some of the most approved
I' • ' a'tPt'tal. 4/t.t:! various sizes ; Glass__ t
KA TERPRooartllasegtaPugatastefrePeaurtfouuntasigePY:servers,
tA, RIT/31,,,.,, A.llt„
''',-cjt, A`,,llOOF, VULCANIZED
144.1. 4' "k; PERCHA
boh, 14 bv, Quadra'n.34/3ZP, GUTTA
tat NW. ELL res tldit MEM',
Itllgithich if aenetall}l37lllY ti Li m e-streneiti Liverpool.
Lime-street,
Friends
I'S,. ttiti% Onelarntilrolvllainiat ile ) in
tr, .I°a's tsakheins the
NI .6e"lted to exe one commodious Establishment;
aii
sc, end 0 him , ritons, and prompt attentio
r\ 44 vittriellpport. i tO obtain an increased share of their
on ~.
Vit%44 "•, Usual during the Alteration.
%)QANtkit, Wnillt POULTRY NETTING,
•It rrall4-,A1.3,-A / D 011. VARNISHED ;
"qtle -.)t," WIRN ''F' WINDOW GUARDS. for Mills,
k t.'' -Aci, at sd. and 64d. per superficial foot ;
tld 5. p VANI S E D WOVE WIRE.
The Trade suPlAted•
gieet * 4ORTON AND CO.,
...i, _
414, ': JAMES-STREET (late Colebrookdale Com-
h ", laitra Premises), LIVERPOOL. ii. ult, * ' • ARY'S-GATE, MANCHESTER.
~%tN,. ilZ4' T.' •
11110::trally ii`I,9\VINTDES, BOOTMAKER, most re-
tzliti,XloUnces that, owing to unforeseen circum;
1N4,. orti,l°N, Bootmaker, being compelled to give up
Itl/41 lake:ln-street, he (Edward Lowndes, his late
-vs,. wisopo, 4,1 he Premises, No. 10, MOORFIELD6,
44474L1iii114 11 the near t.he Royal Hotel, where the business will be
t tkl!I 41kt, taosistance.of Mr. M`Gibbon
.; and every ex-
N Lk4i.'tri theirx:ve satisfaction to all Friends who may
dare all the erred
commands. He
itllFGlaoanitoadPthe
1 eft
_ oots for.
0 " To
~, oBsERvE THE ADDRESS :-
1 IVI .0
oVAYARD LOWNDES,
ktiA -..rIEDs, LIVERPOOL.
k IL ,tth
1:.,,. ,A., 1.1 'II y,
l4Vti'l/410 -1- tiOMPSON,
tit,h %4,1 4 silo, LADIES' and GEN-
tthi th kli, , .1' rind SHOE MAKER, 17, Islington, near
,or,,,„o.urns h;..
.5 grateful acknowledgments to his
ti4t1„110,`„:1444:',!t.e. for their liberal patronage to him during
te4.l.tileltvenig in Islington, and respectfully informs them
Illittls4tqltittShoiM of a respectable part of his customers, he
111 VII th' ,Tobiai). (), NORTH JOHN STREET, lately
L. „Ott, ersor, 'Gibbon, Bootmaker (having purchased
'Vall_4loo.-th"4,,..!1ts a Branch Establishment, which will be
-q•,7try ,
vzentlemen's Trade. SEWED or PEGGED
:sty rkshops, under his personal superintend-
ii.,9f style, of the best French. and English
1"t Y. and at the lowest remunerating prices;
,t_Well-known character of his goods will be a
141 ensure a more extensive patronage.
---
' R*
'•';' ' AMERICAN PORTRAIT
kkh t.
14 ,A, - NE Re
HI GALLERY,
Lieopb • • v, Musid" S CONCERT- Roo_sl
lilt' Of n t. azemov
_, -HALL, BOLD S'l RAT
%1441k.447ifiNtki ACI_RTRAAVrpn 50, Bold-street.) •
cannot be
4,,,,, „ti=k,o, tirtia-das Ivory namelled DAGUER.
rTitnnts. 6d: to .e 4 4s.
tiN4' h'''4 Prit:httabilit;:hll2cell surpassed for bril-
}lttte4:l:e4:ltlotiPelk, le
erlUre .i6na'
acquaintingfiteut his numerous
iS,...iii:rttoteblital'tisitell:; has
;_l,-; 41,!Se:egepstie...httt, i_o! produ.cing first-classup
ebove
spacious
Portraits.
1,41,1 ritti,,,Naject Zi_Of 43,,,%1:9d00ing a really
k‘ti;k"iii,',l4ll,,Z.heloern'rived" to
and favoufaobolde Deaguer-
0104f 1044 streirpjag Thilit to Whichthev the Art sinks ifocutniii
NI tt:tlinortrZtateyereete name 0 f Yhyo t many wretched dise-
ltr ko rt'''' asBo above
and are to
ett veq 4:t '4 Ttnuch ~,above Art has
' tt, 50,° !Il'e Strileeerrr to the orr
(7nulted in the pro,
ueld.istreettnitnoiature painarjrPhotograph
Himle's New mtviic.bo,
11!c4'it13 the
4461,1 (tWi?,l 11
t'Nt'44 t4tiel
‘ k„t,''ittlktCltl
th,
k x.."
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 154 | 0.9513 | 0.113 | Ml 4 J. CREASY, FURNISHING IRONMONGER,
II • 62, GREAT GEORGE-STREET, LIVERPOOL.
PURCHASERS OF FURNISHING IRONMONGERY, CUTLERY, ELECTRO-PLATE, &c.,
Are respectfully invited to visit
E. J. CREASY'S EXTENSIVE SHOW-ROOMS,
Where may be seen the Largest Assortment in Liverpool, at Prices Lower than any other House.
His system of business being to Buy and Sell J'or Ready Money only, every Article will be marked in plain figures, at the
lowest possible price, from which no abatement whatever can be made. The money returned for any article not approved of.
BELLS HUNG on the most improved principle, in Town and Country. All kinds of SMITH WORK done on the Premises.
Houses, Churches, Chapels, &c., fitted up with HEATING APPARATUS. REGISTER STOVE, and KITCHEN RANGES of
every description. Boilers and Fittings for supplying Baths with Warm Water. Experienced Workmen sent to all parts of
the country.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 178 | 0.9866 | 0.0511 | MORE RUSSIAN PREPARATIONS.
Writing with respect to the new preparations of the
Russians, a correspondent of the same journal, on the
25th, says :---
The night before last, I am informed, a party of our engi-
neers succeeded in approaching the mouth of the harbour
sufficiently near, in the Banshee, to enable them to discover a
star battery in the course of erection, in the immediate rear of
the Malakhoff—an addition to the strength of that position,
which, I need hardly say, would greatly enhance the difficulty
of its capture. There is reason to believe that similar
strengthening additions are also in preparation behind the
Redan ; but these are less important, as it is not likely that
that work will again be made a principal point of attack, its
abandonment following as a matter of course on the seizure
of the Malakhoff. Against the latter, the next combined
effort of the Allies will be directed, and they will merit defeat
if, after the experience of the last attempt, less uncertain mea-
sures of attack be not adopted.
|
British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 824 | 0.5256 | 0.3423 | xati
,atiA
te,g to the 4 of
oqe Saxe Weimar, and this
a ,ls th
"-rand Wham I had alreadyo
n taken
• tle,re airlati, Duchess Luise. These
amateurs around us are the
"ter, r4lana, 11137 court. We often amuse
tol4raly L.„`l. ilaring the summer season ;
'Ntie'lt the fore in the Residenz when we
04:rrestathe inhabitants are careful
~ti!ve4 'Mk Privacy. Thus we knew you
tOcitii to Iv
iYour appearance amongst us,.
:41111g• eße.°lll° You to our ludi sertict,
tpr;
~•iat pleasant incognito which is
`ilieges of a Sovereign.'
IctZtli conclusion of this little oration, I
~,zed,tiT,-sthead likewise uncovered, and
hltitikl sheepish and embarrassed
ro,l bself.
Lehe Isaid
Ett4,
.reply, will suffer
4, 1144' before. I retire. The.conv.er-
Lo aline the honour of listening
,a 5".411, so much delight that I am
1,:64' further extension of your
f'4
'e%l "°(; p hose imagination is so vivid—
ratisn, knowledge is so universal,
~,„14,1,'" and profound, whose language
-`1.)" rao eke hey be, for I feel that I
4 saia
.Y ey
'viva h," ',linkers to day ?'
NA4II: (hand Duke, with a courteous
.
ktleh, 18 Madame de Stael.' That
a 1;411,
' (le „,learr Duty,' interrupted the
rri. ft. Ile.. ,oth,lbt „e• lea • e his bright eyes, as he
!,441:4„"qq0,1,111g on his elbow, is one
4'444 alld iave already known under a
°
tlieLra You have heard abused,'
4q.4.2Vs -4e may be. lam Goethe.
%roe
•ths Years 0, a
~---"-Et0:11/BERLAND.
filade th.,ban txt
liceL - Atoka eluive series of ezplo-
Tueilter,qt,i.t.4l4 of Bremenium,
ttolat mitt Z.ection of the Duke
'llll.O e tegion abont497, City is situated in
tat'onth limit %an /411 to the north
ItWo'nfah has %Seen regarded
41C4Iti -I" bare P°Wer in Britain.
eilt
A pi, L. lords he streets, houses, and
11101% gistori_ the earth. Severalu altarse
iNtNefo e value Werf, alseo brought to
tef
rest at /preserved th
',4l,ss Of \`;g 41ViCk Castle. The iiccessf.
'els.,...,—eently induced the Society o
com -s Tyn to attempt the
ke upon- e
\`:l , qed . Portions of the castrum which
IA
ti:llll,lq4ae 'lle former search. Enjoying
N Abell: of their noble patron, the
ilthe Bnl4l, and the ready co-operation
I'4 Walfi" they commenced operations
tl,B. of the camp have been ascer-
VIV,,tYk D4iek, consisting of solid masonry,
oq'll4ll about two feet in the centre,
,4, e
, kllll4, qlg6 , The exposed position of the
ste,l
.1‘ eh thia:( the formation of walls of
)I'4 ,4,rtibct,'ess• In the substance of the
oro "stLeile,
_,,about eight feet square, and
,k,_‘tp of! unusual size, has been dis-
tel,t'fe;eihß.et,s.its doorway is much worn by
Its walls still stand, about
!1,111., The strength and gloominess
:ttiNINA.I•4OI,7 workmen to suppose that
ItieN I.tB iloo Three distinct layers of ashes
41/11•04,,r,, Possibly showing that it had
tit?.ol/4-a '" in destruction before it was
44 414 ruins
Qed eO, the • The chief point noticed
Neti'• 'kill wails which have y-et been
to ih and
G,l 15 clew are with which they have
'ett Ike pli* the western wall of the
liei4,ees exhibits masonry varying
rs
irtbpoFjrt, a tslab bearing an inscrip-
-1 k„
. et% Ntlihpanee has just been found.
e Nrcions discovered here, it was
b4t it' fac riot 16 e downwards. The early-
itkti Yet bee have inflicted further ven-
-4 tltio4leitOrog, it into three pieces, one of
to4/11,41 ‘o Wad. The inscription con-
ehe,,QN„, agabalus, on occasion of the
t tiro' "or tower, on which the in-
3etio4
it of stones and other mis-
th-°IIBIY enough, very many
%strum, of considerable
SUPP:
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 435 | 0.9309 | 0.1172 | OBSERVATORY.
There is an excellent Observatory on the Premises, furnished
with a powerful Achromatic Telescope. not only for Private Use,
tut for the Instruction of the Senior Classes in Practical Astro-
nomy. CARDS OF TERMS
for Boarders and Day Pupils. References to numerous Clergymen,
Merchants, and Professional Gentlemen, Printed Testimonials,
and Extracts from the Public Journals of Liverpool, may be
obtained at the ESTABLISHMENT. .
The SCHOOL, 39, GREAT GEOROE-STREET, will be RE-
OPENED, (D.V.) on TUESDAY, the 31st instant.
P.S. An ASSISTANT WANTED.
WANTED, a JUNIOR ASSISTANT, of Protestant Principles,
who has been accustomed to the general routine of Scholastis
Tuition. First-class Testimonials will be required.
BOARDING AND DAY ACADEMY, 5, PARLIA-
MENT-PLACE, UPPER PARLIAMENT-STREET,
Conducted by Mr. D. WRIGHT, with the assistance of experienced
Muter..
The principal object of this Atutilasiay is to Educate Young Gen-
tlemen for Commercial Pursuits. The course of instruction com-
prises English, French. Drawing, the Practical Branches of Mathe-
matics, the Elements of the Latin and Greek Classics, and the
Sacred Scriptures.
The BOARDERS, who consist of a limited number, are treated
as members of the family. Terms (including Board and Educa-
tion), from 25 to 30 Guineas per Annum.
The Scholastic Duties of this Establishment will be RESUMED
on TUESDAY next. the 24th instant.
Prospectuses, containing Terms and numerous References, may
be had on application.
___
EDUCATION.
INFANT AND JUVENILE ACADEMY,
22, MYRTLE-STREET. ABERCRONIBY-SQUARE.
Mr. and Mrs. W. PESCOD will RE-OPEN this Academy on
MONDAY next, the 23rd instant. Fees and routine of Education
as conducted by Mr. W. Clark, late Principal.
MR. T. GRAHAM will RESUME his LESSONS
on the Piano-forte, Organ, and in Singing, on and after
the 30th instant.
12, Lever-street, Manchester, and Marsden.place, Wigan.
CLIFTON PARK ACADEMY,
BIRKENHEAD,
Conducted by Mr. JOHN SORLEY, with the aid of efficient
Masters,
Will be RE-OPENED on TUESDAY, the 31st instant.
Prospectuses may be obtained at the Academy, or from Mr.
Rosa, 7, South Castle-street, Liverpool.
MULT UM IN PA EVO.
MESSRS. THOMPSON'S,
No. 8, CLAYTON-SQUARE,
Is the only Establishment in Liverpool where a good HAND-
WRITING, BOOK-KEEPING by DOUBLE ENTRY, ARITH-
METIC, MENTAL CALCULATIONS, & are taught thoroughly
and practically in a few Lessons. Classes every Day. Private
Lessons at any hour. Success guaranteed to every Pupil. Persons
who cannot write at all may become good writers in a few weeks,
so wonderful is the effect of the system invented by Messrs.
THOMPSON. Established Heal Teachers in Liverpool, 1827.
For Cards of Terms apply at 8, Clayton-square.
G. ROBERTS'S ACADEMY,
REMOVED from Russell-street
TO OLDHAM-STREET,
Second Door from Renshaw-street.
A LECTURE-ROOM TO BE LET.
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British Library Heritage Made Digital Newspapers | The Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. | Liverpool, Merseyside, England | 1855-07-17T00:00:00 | ARTICLE | 3 | 0.13 | 0 | (811:1
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