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  • Sept. 5, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 5, 1863: Page 19

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    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 19

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

to have sold laudanum in mistake for tincture of rhubarb , and hence the death . It is an old old tale , but not the less sad . An extraordinary poisoning case is being investigated by the Hull stipendiary magistrate . A surgeon and an innkeeper are in custody on a charge of administering , or attempting to administer , poison to an illegitimate child ; and the evidence of the

principal witness for the prosecution details conversations between herself ancl the prisoners , in which that diabolical object is alleged to have been avowed in the clearest terms . The inquiry into the death of a little child , daughter of a family in ^ asy circumstances , at Eltham , has been brought to a close after a series of adjournments . The question was whether the

mother had ill-used the child or not , and on this point the evidence was very conflicting . The jury returned a verdict of manslaughter , but the mother was admitted to bail . An inquest has been held on the body of a man who was found lying in a horribly filthy state , much emaciated , and without a bed in his room . His character does not appear to have been good ,

and his son , a lad of IS , excused the neglect of himself and his mother by that circumstance . The jury returned a verdict of " Death from fever accelerated by neglect . " The inquest on the body of the man Cheenery , found in a house in Wolverhampton about three weeks ago , has been resumed . In order to facilitate the ends of justice one of the most important parts of

the evidence—the medical testimony—was withheld till a future day . Sufficient , however , transpired to show that the Coroner , ¦ who was no doubt fully aware of the nature of that evidence , considered the deceased had been the victim of a brutal murder , —a fact which was at one time involved in some doubt . As the case proceeds the certainty increases that the woman found dead in an empty house at Dudley was the deceased ' s murderer , and suspicion of complicity points to a aian , named Edwards , with

whom the deceased and the woman found at Dudley were acquainted . It will be remembered that some time ago a man named Gill was convicted of stealing the will of the late Mr . Powell , an extensive colliery proprietor . He was captured while attempting to make tonus for its restoration , and mysterious rumours were afloat at the time , as if some member of the family had instigated him to the theft . These rumours are now

set at rest . Gill sent for the eldest son of the deceased gentleman to the gaol where he is confined , and confessed that he had entered the house on his own account , with no other motive than plunder ; that he carried off some papers at a venture , and on subsequent examination , finding that one of them was the will , he tried to make a profit of its restoration . -An

• extraordinary trial respecting the burning of Campden House , and involving insurance policies to the extent of £ 30 , 000 , has terminated in favour of the plaintiff . The case presented some interesting and very peculiar features ; but its leading point was , of course , the charge brought by the insurance companies against the plaintiff , that he had been guilty of arson . Of

this charge , the verdict , which the jurors delivered without quitting their box for consultation , fully acquits him . A new fish market is at present being erected in Manchester , and on Saturday afternoon some of the scaffolding used in the erection of the river front gave way , killing one of the workmen , and seriously injuring several others . Intelligence has been

received of the loss or the Frankfort Hall , a fine Liverpool trader , in the Chinese seas . Unfortunately , the loss is not confined to the mere vessel and cargo , for telegrams announce that only one man of a crew of 33 has been saved . The vessel belonged to Mr . J . B . Moore , M . P ., and was on her way from Cardiff to Shanghai . A police constable , named Waddington , lias been very violently assaulted by three poachers , near Leeds .

His jaw was fractured , five or six of his teeth were broken , and he was rendered insensible . Two of the poachers were taken before the Leeds magistrates , and committed for trial . A very painful affair has occurred at Newcastle . Ensign M'Cree , a member of one of the local volunteer corps , and a man of good position in the town , has shot a woman . He seems

to have ordered her , and other persons with whom she was talking , to go away from his premises . As they did not immediately comply , he brought out his gun . Upon seeing it they .-moved off , but he shot at them and wounded the woman in the leg . He is in custody . The South Staffordshire colliers , and operatives engaged in iron works who have not been affected by

the late rise given to puddlers , have , during the past few days , agitated for an advance of wages . Before their demands could be made , or even before they could settle among themselves how much they should ask for , their employers have made concessions which it is hoped may bring the question to a settlement . The increased wages which the masters have determined to

offer may not probably be as liberal as some of the workpeople desire , but they are quite sufficient to raise the price of both iron and coal , and through this circumstance the trade of South Staffordshire is just now in a very fluctuating condition . The Manchester City Council have resolved to borrow £ 68 , 000 under tho provisions of the Public Works Act . This sum will be

spent in the following proportions : —Ardwick , for roads and sewerage , £ 30 , 000 ; formation of a new cemetery , £ 25 , 000 ; waterworks , £ 13 , 000 . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —A civil process with which her Majesty's name appears in curious conjunction has recently come before the Tribunal of the Seine . An English lady , having for her second husband a French nobleman named the Count de Sillv , made her will in October last , and amongst the bequests

was one to the Queen of 100 , 000 francs , to be employed for the London poor . Upon the death of the testatrix her Majesty , having been informed of the fact by Lord Cowley , decided to accept the legacy ; but the other legatees required the sign manual to a formal document to that effect , and they proceeded to summon the Queen to appear in person or by procuration . On the trial the question raised was whether the money could

be paid over to the ambassador , and it was contended on her Majesty ' s behalf that it could , as he was recognised by all legal authorities as the representative in everything of his Sovereign . On the other side it was argued that the Queen ought to put her signature at the foot of a special and authentic procuration as the only guarantee the legatees could have that the sum

bequeathed had passed into' her hands . The Court decided in favour of her Majesty , saying that an ambassador represented his Sovereign in a supreme degree , and that all he said ancl did was substantially said and done by the Sovereign . Several of the journals of Paris assert that the Emperor Alexander is about to convert Russia into a constitutional monarchy , with a

senate and an elected chamber of 150 deputies . At the same time , we are told , local diets are to be established in all the great provinces ; ancl the kingdom of Poland is to be accorded complete self-government , with the right of sending members to the Imperial Parliament at Moscow . These constitutional institutions will give the Poles even more than the Western

Powers have asked for them , and will be represented by the Russian Cabinet as a complete satisfaction of their demands . The Congress of German Sovereigns at Frankfort terminated on Tuesday ; and the final result of its deliberations , we are told , was that only six Princes voted against tbe Austrian Emperor ' s scheme of reform . The Sovereigns who declared themselves in favour of the Emperor Francis Joseph's proposals have resolved

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-09-05, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05091863/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
THE MYSTICAL PRINCIPLES OF ISLAMISM; OR, A LECTURE ON THE DERVICHES. Article 1
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD. Article 4
Untitled Article 5
MASONIC * NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 8
MASONIC HALLS. Article 8
REVIEWS. Article 8
PRESERVE YOUR CERTIFICATES. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SOUTH WALES (EASTERN DIVISION). Article 15
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
IRELAND. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 15
COLONIAL. Article 16
Untitled Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

to have sold laudanum in mistake for tincture of rhubarb , and hence the death . It is an old old tale , but not the less sad . An extraordinary poisoning case is being investigated by the Hull stipendiary magistrate . A surgeon and an innkeeper are in custody on a charge of administering , or attempting to administer , poison to an illegitimate child ; and the evidence of the

principal witness for the prosecution details conversations between herself ancl the prisoners , in which that diabolical object is alleged to have been avowed in the clearest terms . The inquiry into the death of a little child , daughter of a family in ^ asy circumstances , at Eltham , has been brought to a close after a series of adjournments . The question was whether the

mother had ill-used the child or not , and on this point the evidence was very conflicting . The jury returned a verdict of manslaughter , but the mother was admitted to bail . An inquest has been held on the body of a man who was found lying in a horribly filthy state , much emaciated , and without a bed in his room . His character does not appear to have been good ,

and his son , a lad of IS , excused the neglect of himself and his mother by that circumstance . The jury returned a verdict of " Death from fever accelerated by neglect . " The inquest on the body of the man Cheenery , found in a house in Wolverhampton about three weeks ago , has been resumed . In order to facilitate the ends of justice one of the most important parts of

the evidence—the medical testimony—was withheld till a future day . Sufficient , however , transpired to show that the Coroner , ¦ who was no doubt fully aware of the nature of that evidence , considered the deceased had been the victim of a brutal murder , —a fact which was at one time involved in some doubt . As the case proceeds the certainty increases that the woman found dead in an empty house at Dudley was the deceased ' s murderer , and suspicion of complicity points to a aian , named Edwards , with

whom the deceased and the woman found at Dudley were acquainted . It will be remembered that some time ago a man named Gill was convicted of stealing the will of the late Mr . Powell , an extensive colliery proprietor . He was captured while attempting to make tonus for its restoration , and mysterious rumours were afloat at the time , as if some member of the family had instigated him to the theft . These rumours are now

set at rest . Gill sent for the eldest son of the deceased gentleman to the gaol where he is confined , and confessed that he had entered the house on his own account , with no other motive than plunder ; that he carried off some papers at a venture , and on subsequent examination , finding that one of them was the will , he tried to make a profit of its restoration . -An

• extraordinary trial respecting the burning of Campden House , and involving insurance policies to the extent of £ 30 , 000 , has terminated in favour of the plaintiff . The case presented some interesting and very peculiar features ; but its leading point was , of course , the charge brought by the insurance companies against the plaintiff , that he had been guilty of arson . Of

this charge , the verdict , which the jurors delivered without quitting their box for consultation , fully acquits him . A new fish market is at present being erected in Manchester , and on Saturday afternoon some of the scaffolding used in the erection of the river front gave way , killing one of the workmen , and seriously injuring several others . Intelligence has been

received of the loss or the Frankfort Hall , a fine Liverpool trader , in the Chinese seas . Unfortunately , the loss is not confined to the mere vessel and cargo , for telegrams announce that only one man of a crew of 33 has been saved . The vessel belonged to Mr . J . B . Moore , M . P ., and was on her way from Cardiff to Shanghai . A police constable , named Waddington , lias been very violently assaulted by three poachers , near Leeds .

His jaw was fractured , five or six of his teeth were broken , and he was rendered insensible . Two of the poachers were taken before the Leeds magistrates , and committed for trial . A very painful affair has occurred at Newcastle . Ensign M'Cree , a member of one of the local volunteer corps , and a man of good position in the town , has shot a woman . He seems

to have ordered her , and other persons with whom she was talking , to go away from his premises . As they did not immediately comply , he brought out his gun . Upon seeing it they .-moved off , but he shot at them and wounded the woman in the leg . He is in custody . The South Staffordshire colliers , and operatives engaged in iron works who have not been affected by

the late rise given to puddlers , have , during the past few days , agitated for an advance of wages . Before their demands could be made , or even before they could settle among themselves how much they should ask for , their employers have made concessions which it is hoped may bring the question to a settlement . The increased wages which the masters have determined to

offer may not probably be as liberal as some of the workpeople desire , but they are quite sufficient to raise the price of both iron and coal , and through this circumstance the trade of South Staffordshire is just now in a very fluctuating condition . The Manchester City Council have resolved to borrow £ 68 , 000 under tho provisions of the Public Works Act . This sum will be

spent in the following proportions : —Ardwick , for roads and sewerage , £ 30 , 000 ; formation of a new cemetery , £ 25 , 000 ; waterworks , £ 13 , 000 . FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . —A civil process with which her Majesty's name appears in curious conjunction has recently come before the Tribunal of the Seine . An English lady , having for her second husband a French nobleman named the Count de Sillv , made her will in October last , and amongst the bequests

was one to the Queen of 100 , 000 francs , to be employed for the London poor . Upon the death of the testatrix her Majesty , having been informed of the fact by Lord Cowley , decided to accept the legacy ; but the other legatees required the sign manual to a formal document to that effect , and they proceeded to summon the Queen to appear in person or by procuration . On the trial the question raised was whether the money could

be paid over to the ambassador , and it was contended on her Majesty ' s behalf that it could , as he was recognised by all legal authorities as the representative in everything of his Sovereign . On the other side it was argued that the Queen ought to put her signature at the foot of a special and authentic procuration as the only guarantee the legatees could have that the sum

bequeathed had passed into' her hands . The Court decided in favour of her Majesty , saying that an ambassador represented his Sovereign in a supreme degree , and that all he said ancl did was substantially said and done by the Sovereign . Several of the journals of Paris assert that the Emperor Alexander is about to convert Russia into a constitutional monarchy , with a

senate and an elected chamber of 150 deputies . At the same time , we are told , local diets are to be established in all the great provinces ; ancl the kingdom of Poland is to be accorded complete self-government , with the right of sending members to the Imperial Parliament at Moscow . These constitutional institutions will give the Poles even more than the Western

Powers have asked for them , and will be represented by the Russian Cabinet as a complete satisfaction of their demands . The Congress of German Sovereigns at Frankfort terminated on Tuesday ; and the final result of its deliberations , we are told , was that only six Princes voted against tbe Austrian Emperor ' s scheme of reform . The Sovereigns who declared themselves in favour of the Emperor Francis Joseph's proposals have resolved

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