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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 14, 1864
  • Page 19
  • THE WEEK.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 14, 1864: Page 19

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The Week.

with the Royal Dramatic College . The pupils are not to be educated for the stage or a musical career exclusively ; but it is wisely designed to fit them for entering into any of the liberal professions . The Court of Queen ' s Bench has unanimously made absolute the rule for the writ of habeas corpus in the case of the men forming part of the crew of the John L . Geritz ,

now iu custody at Liverpool on a charge of piracy . Our readers will recollect that some time ago Mr . Pater , the barrister , had an altercation with a juryman at the Middlesex Sessions , which ended in a quarrel with the judge and his being fined £ 20 for contempt of court . A rule was applied for to bring the case before tbe Queen's Bench , and on the case being

¦ argued tho Lord Chief Justice gave judgment , with the concurrence of the other judges , that the case was not one for their interference , and the rule nisi was discharged . At the Central Criminal Court the case of Maria Read and Henry , her son , charged with stealing a considerable sum of money , the property of Joseph Hankin , deceased , was tried .

It will be remembered that Hankin lodged , up to the time of his | death , in the house of the female prisoner at Dalston . The sou was acquitted , and tbe mother found guilty . Sentence was postponed , to give the prisoner an opportunity of furnishing information concerning the stolen property . Henry Powell and William Finch were charged with stealing a sum of money

from John Mansell Chambers . The case was one of the ordinary skittle-sharping description , to which dupes are apparently always to be found , notwithstanding the warnings continually given . The prisoners were both acquitted . James Ansel ] , William Beaumont , and Giovanni Pedrolli were convicted of burglary and robbery at the warehouse of a looking-glass manufacturer in the City , and sentenced to five years' penal servitude , ten months' imprisonment , and nine months' imprisonment

respectively . An inquest has been held at Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum , on the body of an inmate , who was killed by a blow with a piece of gas-piping , inflicted by another inmate The extraordinary part appeared to be the putting in the same ward of the deceased , who was described as imbecile , his assailant , who was described as a violent raving madman . The inquiry was adjourned to allow of further investigation on the

point . At the last meeting of the Common Council a discussion arose on the fees paid by suitors in the Lord Mayor ' s Court , out of which it was proposed to increase the salary of the registrar . Mr . Lowman Taylor suggested that it would be better if the fees were reduced , but on its being explained that at present the surplus was trifling , the original motion was

agreed to . Several sums were voted to public charities , and also a hundred guineas was unanimously voted to the Society for the Breeding of Fish in the Thames , as it was considered that the society was of the utmost importance to the health and recreation of the metropolis . The two men , Brice and Scott , who recently committed a

murderous assault on a Dr . Rowe , at Liverpool , have been committed for trial—bail being refused . It seems that Dr . Rowe was at one time the accepted suitor of a lady who subsequently jilted him and married Brice , and that the object of Brice and Scott in going to the prosecutor ' s house on the ni ght they attacked him was to obtain possession of some letters

which had passed between Dr . Eowe and Mrs . Brice , and which the former had refused to give up on tbe plea that they mi ght be required to refute aspersions which had been cast upon his character . A man named Eames , who was stabbed as far back as the 19 th of last month , died on Saturday , in St . Mary ' s Hospital , Paddington . He was in a public-house in Lisson-street , where a man named Murphy was also drinking , but there does not appear to have been any quarrel between them . When

they got m the street , however , Murphy opened a clasp knife , stabbed him and then ran away , but was secured and is now in custody . Eames was conveyed to the hospital , where he lingered in great agony , till his death on Saturday last . A tragic occurrence is reported from Huddersfield . Early on Saturday morning a man named Haigb , residing at Bradley , near that town , commenced a furious attack upon his wife .

Her cries were heard by her uncle , an old man who lived with her , and , upon his coming to her assistance , Haigh knocked him down , and literally trampled him to death . Haigh is supposed to be insane . A shocking domestic tragedy was brough t to light in the course of an inquest , which took place before the Middlesex coroner at Tottenham , on Monday last . A civil

engineer of the name of Tregear married about ten months ago , after a short acquaintance with his wife , who was little over sixteen at the time of the marriage . They lived happily together for some time , till the husband suspected , and as he says from a paper left behind him , ascertained , that his wife had been debauched by a lodger in their house . This so preyed on

his mind that on Wednesday he shot himself in his wife ' s presence , and died almost immediately . But the case is rendered more painful still from the circumstances that some days before he and his wife agreed together to take poison ; that he swallowed it , but was saved by a doctor being called in , while his wife is charged by his relatives with having only pretended to

agree iu order to get rid of him . It is fair to say , however , that this is denied by the widow , but her conduct in the matter was such as toelicitfrom thejurya strong censure in their verdict . A sad accident occurred on board the steamer Leinster Lass , while on the voyage from Drogheda to Liverpool , on Thursday morning . The nature of the accident is not very clearly stated , and the accounts of the loss of life vary widely . It would

seem that , through some derangement of the machinery , a hole was made in tbe bottom of the ship , and that the greatest confusion arose among the passengers , who feared that the vessel could not be kept afloat . A singular accident , accompanied unfortunately by great loss of life , has occurred at Saddleworth . About midnight on Tuesday the chimney of the Eoyal George Mills fell . In its descent it crushed three

cottages , in one of whicli no less than ten persons were sleeping . They were killed , and it is feared the loss of life is even greater than this . The accident is attributed to an uneven settling of the materials of the chimney and to the high wind blowing at the time . A disastrous explosion of the boiler of one of the locomotives on the Metropolitan railway took place on

Monday , fortunately not attended with immediate loss of life , although several persons are seriously injured . The catastrophe occurred at the Bishop ' s-road station , the roof of which was blown off and much other damage done . A locomotive engine boiler burst at Colne station on Monday morning , causing the death of tho driver and some injury to the stoker . The Eev .

Uriah Tonkin , a Cornish magistrate , writes to the Times to correct " an erroneous statement" that he had committed seven gipsies to twenty-one days' hard labour for " sleeping under tents , as their only offence . " Their " offence " was of a much more serious nature—namely , " sleeping under tents , having no visible means of subsistence , and not giving a good accounts

of themselves . " FOKEION INTELLIGENCE—Such accounts as have yet reached us respecting the victory won hy the Danish squadron off Heligoland add a few particulars to the statement made by Sir George Grey in the House of Commons on Monday night . The Austrian frigate set on fire was the Sehwarzenberg , which had 100 men killed and wounded , lost her foremast and bowsprit , and sustained other serious damage : but the flames wore ex-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-05-14, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14051864/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
NEWSPAPER PRESS FUND. Article 1
THE MASONIC PROPERTIES OP NUMBERS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
Untitled Article 8
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 8
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
ROYAL ARCH. Article 11
Untitled Article 11
SCOTLAND. Article 12
CANADA. Article 12
INDIA. Article 14
LET'S WELCOME THE HOUR. Article 14
AUSTRALIA. Article 14
THE WEEK. Article 16
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

with the Royal Dramatic College . The pupils are not to be educated for the stage or a musical career exclusively ; but it is wisely designed to fit them for entering into any of the liberal professions . The Court of Queen ' s Bench has unanimously made absolute the rule for the writ of habeas corpus in the case of the men forming part of the crew of the John L . Geritz ,

now iu custody at Liverpool on a charge of piracy . Our readers will recollect that some time ago Mr . Pater , the barrister , had an altercation with a juryman at the Middlesex Sessions , which ended in a quarrel with the judge and his being fined £ 20 for contempt of court . A rule was applied for to bring the case before tbe Queen's Bench , and on the case being

¦ argued tho Lord Chief Justice gave judgment , with the concurrence of the other judges , that the case was not one for their interference , and the rule nisi was discharged . At the Central Criminal Court the case of Maria Read and Henry , her son , charged with stealing a considerable sum of money , the property of Joseph Hankin , deceased , was tried .

It will be remembered that Hankin lodged , up to the time of his | death , in the house of the female prisoner at Dalston . The sou was acquitted , and tbe mother found guilty . Sentence was postponed , to give the prisoner an opportunity of furnishing information concerning the stolen property . Henry Powell and William Finch were charged with stealing a sum of money

from John Mansell Chambers . The case was one of the ordinary skittle-sharping description , to which dupes are apparently always to be found , notwithstanding the warnings continually given . The prisoners were both acquitted . James Ansel ] , William Beaumont , and Giovanni Pedrolli were convicted of burglary and robbery at the warehouse of a looking-glass manufacturer in the City , and sentenced to five years' penal servitude , ten months' imprisonment , and nine months' imprisonment

respectively . An inquest has been held at Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum , on the body of an inmate , who was killed by a blow with a piece of gas-piping , inflicted by another inmate The extraordinary part appeared to be the putting in the same ward of the deceased , who was described as imbecile , his assailant , who was described as a violent raving madman . The inquiry was adjourned to allow of further investigation on the

point . At the last meeting of the Common Council a discussion arose on the fees paid by suitors in the Lord Mayor ' s Court , out of which it was proposed to increase the salary of the registrar . Mr . Lowman Taylor suggested that it would be better if the fees were reduced , but on its being explained that at present the surplus was trifling , the original motion was

agreed to . Several sums were voted to public charities , and also a hundred guineas was unanimously voted to the Society for the Breeding of Fish in the Thames , as it was considered that the society was of the utmost importance to the health and recreation of the metropolis . The two men , Brice and Scott , who recently committed a

murderous assault on a Dr . Rowe , at Liverpool , have been committed for trial—bail being refused . It seems that Dr . Rowe was at one time the accepted suitor of a lady who subsequently jilted him and married Brice , and that the object of Brice and Scott in going to the prosecutor ' s house on the ni ght they attacked him was to obtain possession of some letters

which had passed between Dr . Eowe and Mrs . Brice , and which the former had refused to give up on tbe plea that they mi ght be required to refute aspersions which had been cast upon his character . A man named Eames , who was stabbed as far back as the 19 th of last month , died on Saturday , in St . Mary ' s Hospital , Paddington . He was in a public-house in Lisson-street , where a man named Murphy was also drinking , but there does not appear to have been any quarrel between them . When

they got m the street , however , Murphy opened a clasp knife , stabbed him and then ran away , but was secured and is now in custody . Eames was conveyed to the hospital , where he lingered in great agony , till his death on Saturday last . A tragic occurrence is reported from Huddersfield . Early on Saturday morning a man named Haigb , residing at Bradley , near that town , commenced a furious attack upon his wife .

Her cries were heard by her uncle , an old man who lived with her , and , upon his coming to her assistance , Haigh knocked him down , and literally trampled him to death . Haigh is supposed to be insane . A shocking domestic tragedy was brough t to light in the course of an inquest , which took place before the Middlesex coroner at Tottenham , on Monday last . A civil

engineer of the name of Tregear married about ten months ago , after a short acquaintance with his wife , who was little over sixteen at the time of the marriage . They lived happily together for some time , till the husband suspected , and as he says from a paper left behind him , ascertained , that his wife had been debauched by a lodger in their house . This so preyed on

his mind that on Wednesday he shot himself in his wife ' s presence , and died almost immediately . But the case is rendered more painful still from the circumstances that some days before he and his wife agreed together to take poison ; that he swallowed it , but was saved by a doctor being called in , while his wife is charged by his relatives with having only pretended to

agree iu order to get rid of him . It is fair to say , however , that this is denied by the widow , but her conduct in the matter was such as toelicitfrom thejurya strong censure in their verdict . A sad accident occurred on board the steamer Leinster Lass , while on the voyage from Drogheda to Liverpool , on Thursday morning . The nature of the accident is not very clearly stated , and the accounts of the loss of life vary widely . It would

seem that , through some derangement of the machinery , a hole was made in tbe bottom of the ship , and that the greatest confusion arose among the passengers , who feared that the vessel could not be kept afloat . A singular accident , accompanied unfortunately by great loss of life , has occurred at Saddleworth . About midnight on Tuesday the chimney of the Eoyal George Mills fell . In its descent it crushed three

cottages , in one of whicli no less than ten persons were sleeping . They were killed , and it is feared the loss of life is even greater than this . The accident is attributed to an uneven settling of the materials of the chimney and to the high wind blowing at the time . A disastrous explosion of the boiler of one of the locomotives on the Metropolitan railway took place on

Monday , fortunately not attended with immediate loss of life , although several persons are seriously injured . The catastrophe occurred at the Bishop ' s-road station , the roof of which was blown off and much other damage done . A locomotive engine boiler burst at Colne station on Monday morning , causing the death of tho driver and some injury to the stoker . The Eev .

Uriah Tonkin , a Cornish magistrate , writes to the Times to correct " an erroneous statement" that he had committed seven gipsies to twenty-one days' hard labour for " sleeping under tents , as their only offence . " Their " offence " was of a much more serious nature—namely , " sleeping under tents , having no visible means of subsistence , and not giving a good accounts

of themselves . " FOKEION INTELLIGENCE—Such accounts as have yet reached us respecting the victory won hy the Danish squadron off Heligoland add a few particulars to the statement made by Sir George Grey in the House of Commons on Monday night . The Austrian frigate set on fire was the Sehwarzenberg , which had 100 men killed and wounded , lost her foremast and bowsprit , and sustained other serious damage : but the flames wore ex-

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