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  • Oct. 12, 1861
  • Page 18
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 12, 1861: Page 18

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    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 18

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

The Week.

has failed , and that the men have been invited to return to thenwork on their old terms . It is said , too , by the workmen ' s committee , that the smaller masters in various parts of the metropolis are coming in , one by one , to these terms , and it is only a few of the leviathan contractors who refuse to yield them themselves , and who encourage the others to resist . The masters have not , as far

as we are aware , put forward any fresh manifesto . Not only is the short time movement spreading in Lancashire , but we regret to see that one mill has entirely succumbed , throwin g 700 people out of employment . The chemists and druggists of Manchester and the surrounding towns decided , at a meeting held in this citto form themselves into a distinct association . The

y , society contemplates , among other objects , the establishment of a benevolent fund for the assistance of members , "in sickness , old age , and death ; " the carrying out of any improvement that may be deemed necessary for the welfare of the trade , such as " early and Sunday closing ; " and the formation of a reading-room ancl library of reference . It is also intended , at some future period , to

establish a school for the education of members' children , and to adopt measures for facilitating anlytical inquiry . At the Metropolitan Board of AA'orks , ou Friday , Mr . Bazalgette made a report as to the progress of the main-drainage scheme . It will be remembered that the sewers are to run in three different levels on each side of the river . The engineer reports that the two upper levels

on each side are making rapid progress , the lowest levels appear to be stationary , probably waiting the decision of the Legislature on the main-drainage scheme . The works are expected to be completed in the course of the next two years . As usual , the estimates are to be exceeded . The engineer already prepares us for an excess

of half-a-million . The members of the Board of AVorks , on AVednesday , inspected the works . About 60 gentlemen were present , and examined the most important portion of the system from Bow to Barking on tbe north side of the river , and from Plumstead to Deptford on the south side . The manner in which the contractors have done their work appeared to give very general satisfaction . OnThursday thernetropolitanvestries went overthe same ground .

We regret that tbe intelligence from the west of Ireland justifies grave apprehensions of the speedy approach of a famine . There has been a most serious failure of crops , and already , to quote the language of a Dublin contemporary , " the sharp cry of distress begins to reach us . " A meeting was held at Kilmoree on Sunday last , from the report of which it appears that in that parish

fivesixths of the potato crop have been destroyed by blight and recent floods ; and that , if the corn there were converted into meal , it would not provide the people with food sufficient to last them for two months . An appeal is made to the Government , who are called upon to provide public works by which the poor may earn the means of subsistence . Mr . Lindsay , M . P ., addressed his

constituents at Sunderland last week . The hon . gentleman reviewed the proceedings of the late session , and denounced at considerable length our heavy expenditure for naval and military puiposes . He ridiculed the fear of a French invasion , and , alluding to the rivalry of England and France in the construction of iron-cased ships , expressed a wish to " put a stop to that tomfoolery . " Speaking of the cotton supply question , he contended that it was " the duty of

our Government to endeavour to induce the Federal Government iu the cause of humanity to remove the blockade . " He also argued that it was " almost time that the governments of England and France thought of recognising the independence of so numerous a body of people , " as that represented by the Confederate States , Mr . Clay , M . P ., delivered a spirited speech at a volunteer banquet

given at Hull . The hon . gentleman warmly defended the means which had been taken by the country for the protection of the vast interests of the British empire . He saw no reason to doubt that the Emperor Napoleon is sincere in his professions of friendship to England . His Majesty had repeatedly given us proofs of his desire to cultivate a close alliance with us . But though this was true , he was surrounded by an immense army , whose vain ambition he could

not always control , and it was , therefore , our duty to see that we were as fully prepared as possible for any emergency which might arise . He enlarged upon the signal service which had been rendered to the country by the sudden creation of our great force of volunteers , and denounced in the strongest terms the conduct of those London firms which had placed before their emploges the

alternative of doffing the volunteer uniform or quitting their establishments . A number of daring burglaries have been committed in the North Riding , apparently by a single gang pf desperadoes . In another column will be found the particulars of one of these outrages . The ruffians displayed a boldness seldom evinced by the wary " cracksmen" of the present clay , ancl we regret to

have to state that one of the inmates of the house— lady who was in a weak state of health—died next day , from the effects , itis stated , of the alarm excitedby the presence and violent proceedings , of the burglars . The police have now secured all the men supposed to have been concerned in the murder of Mr . Bagott , at Bilston , and-Clark , who assassinatedMr . Frater , the tax-cellector , at

Newcastle-on-Tyne , has been committed for trial on the charge of wilful murdeiv The Secretary of State has determined to grant a reprieve to Malony , In a case of this peculiar kind , the Royal prerogative could not have been more righteously exorcised . At the Westminster police-court on Wednesday , Mr . Bury Hutchinson laid before the magistrate written informations , upon which a charge -of perjury

against Saunders , who swore that he saw the murder committed is to be based . An extraordinary affair is under investigation at Sheffield . Some time ago—according to the case for the prosecution—a boy , named Frudd , was proceeding along the high road ona pony , when he encountered three soldiers who were in

chargeof a baggage waggon driven by a man named Mason . The sergeantofthe party forced Frudd from the pony , and the lad rad to . inform , his father of what had taken place , Mr . Frudd came up , with a number of neighbours , when the sergeant and Mason fired several shots at them , luckily without doing any of them harm . The sergeant is in custody at the barracks , but Mason has been brought before the magistrates at Sheffield . The evidence seems to establish

the fact that Mason and the sergeant at least were in a state of intoxication ; and the presiding magistrate , taking a very lenient view of the matter , expressed an opinion that the whole affair was . a " drunken lark . " Mason was remanded . AVe are once morereminded of the dreadful railway accident at Kentish Town by the announcement of the death of another of the sufferers .

Joseph Cox , a signal man , who was in the brake next the engine of the passenger train , died yesterday morning . ¦ On Sunday morning , Peter Hill , a pointsman on the North Staffordshire Railway , was found laying across the metals in a cutting , a short distance from Macclesfield . The man was frightfully bruised , and his statement , when restored to consciousness , was , that he had

encountered a body of poachers , who had attacked him with savage ferocity . He died on Monday , ancl a suspicion arose that his story was incorrect—that , in fact , he had fallen upon the rails while in a state of intoxication , and had been run over by a trian . Tho medical evidence at the inquest , however , conclusively disposes of this theory ; ancl it seems to be tolerably clear that he was , as he

stated in his dying deposition , assailed , by a body of poachers , who , after rendering him unconscious , placed him across the line , with , the horrible intention of leaving to the first train which might pass the spot , the completion of their murderous design . A murder was committed last week by a mulatto cook , named Hawkins , on an American captain , on board an American ship , the

Lammergier . The captain was found murdered in his bed , but the cook had been heard to mutter threats against him ; and the chief mate put him in irons and brought the ship back to the Thames . Thecase was under investigation , but was stopjied , he having been under the Extradition Act , and after a very strong prima facie case was established against him , he was detained in order that he might be delivered over to the United States authorities to be tried there for his crime . Mr . AVilliam Bunvood Balclry , the captain

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-10-12, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12101861/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASTERS, WARDENS, AND PAST MASTERS. Article 1
FRANCE. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 2
FROM WESTMINSTER TO LONDON BRIDGE. Article 4
THE EXHIBITION OF 1862. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
FREEMASON'S WIFE. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
TURKEY. Article 13
INDIA. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 17
Untitled Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

has failed , and that the men have been invited to return to thenwork on their old terms . It is said , too , by the workmen ' s committee , that the smaller masters in various parts of the metropolis are coming in , one by one , to these terms , and it is only a few of the leviathan contractors who refuse to yield them themselves , and who encourage the others to resist . The masters have not , as far

as we are aware , put forward any fresh manifesto . Not only is the short time movement spreading in Lancashire , but we regret to see that one mill has entirely succumbed , throwin g 700 people out of employment . The chemists and druggists of Manchester and the surrounding towns decided , at a meeting held in this citto form themselves into a distinct association . The

y , society contemplates , among other objects , the establishment of a benevolent fund for the assistance of members , "in sickness , old age , and death ; " the carrying out of any improvement that may be deemed necessary for the welfare of the trade , such as " early and Sunday closing ; " and the formation of a reading-room ancl library of reference . It is also intended , at some future period , to

establish a school for the education of members' children , and to adopt measures for facilitating anlytical inquiry . At the Metropolitan Board of AA'orks , ou Friday , Mr . Bazalgette made a report as to the progress of the main-drainage scheme . It will be remembered that the sewers are to run in three different levels on each side of the river . The engineer reports that the two upper levels

on each side are making rapid progress , the lowest levels appear to be stationary , probably waiting the decision of the Legislature on the main-drainage scheme . The works are expected to be completed in the course of the next two years . As usual , the estimates are to be exceeded . The engineer already prepares us for an excess

of half-a-million . The members of the Board of AVorks , on AVednesday , inspected the works . About 60 gentlemen were present , and examined the most important portion of the system from Bow to Barking on tbe north side of the river , and from Plumstead to Deptford on the south side . The manner in which the contractors have done their work appeared to give very general satisfaction . OnThursday thernetropolitanvestries went overthe same ground .

We regret that tbe intelligence from the west of Ireland justifies grave apprehensions of the speedy approach of a famine . There has been a most serious failure of crops , and already , to quote the language of a Dublin contemporary , " the sharp cry of distress begins to reach us . " A meeting was held at Kilmoree on Sunday last , from the report of which it appears that in that parish

fivesixths of the potato crop have been destroyed by blight and recent floods ; and that , if the corn there were converted into meal , it would not provide the people with food sufficient to last them for two months . An appeal is made to the Government , who are called upon to provide public works by which the poor may earn the means of subsistence . Mr . Lindsay , M . P ., addressed his

constituents at Sunderland last week . The hon . gentleman reviewed the proceedings of the late session , and denounced at considerable length our heavy expenditure for naval and military puiposes . He ridiculed the fear of a French invasion , and , alluding to the rivalry of England and France in the construction of iron-cased ships , expressed a wish to " put a stop to that tomfoolery . " Speaking of the cotton supply question , he contended that it was " the duty of

our Government to endeavour to induce the Federal Government iu the cause of humanity to remove the blockade . " He also argued that it was " almost time that the governments of England and France thought of recognising the independence of so numerous a body of people , " as that represented by the Confederate States , Mr . Clay , M . P ., delivered a spirited speech at a volunteer banquet

given at Hull . The hon . gentleman warmly defended the means which had been taken by the country for the protection of the vast interests of the British empire . He saw no reason to doubt that the Emperor Napoleon is sincere in his professions of friendship to England . His Majesty had repeatedly given us proofs of his desire to cultivate a close alliance with us . But though this was true , he was surrounded by an immense army , whose vain ambition he could

not always control , and it was , therefore , our duty to see that we were as fully prepared as possible for any emergency which might arise . He enlarged upon the signal service which had been rendered to the country by the sudden creation of our great force of volunteers , and denounced in the strongest terms the conduct of those London firms which had placed before their emploges the

alternative of doffing the volunteer uniform or quitting their establishments . A number of daring burglaries have been committed in the North Riding , apparently by a single gang pf desperadoes . In another column will be found the particulars of one of these outrages . The ruffians displayed a boldness seldom evinced by the wary " cracksmen" of the present clay , ancl we regret to

have to state that one of the inmates of the house— lady who was in a weak state of health—died next day , from the effects , itis stated , of the alarm excitedby the presence and violent proceedings , of the burglars . The police have now secured all the men supposed to have been concerned in the murder of Mr . Bagott , at Bilston , and-Clark , who assassinatedMr . Frater , the tax-cellector , at

Newcastle-on-Tyne , has been committed for trial on the charge of wilful murdeiv The Secretary of State has determined to grant a reprieve to Malony , In a case of this peculiar kind , the Royal prerogative could not have been more righteously exorcised . At the Westminster police-court on Wednesday , Mr . Bury Hutchinson laid before the magistrate written informations , upon which a charge -of perjury

against Saunders , who swore that he saw the murder committed is to be based . An extraordinary affair is under investigation at Sheffield . Some time ago—according to the case for the prosecution—a boy , named Frudd , was proceeding along the high road ona pony , when he encountered three soldiers who were in

chargeof a baggage waggon driven by a man named Mason . The sergeantofthe party forced Frudd from the pony , and the lad rad to . inform , his father of what had taken place , Mr . Frudd came up , with a number of neighbours , when the sergeant and Mason fired several shots at them , luckily without doing any of them harm . The sergeant is in custody at the barracks , but Mason has been brought before the magistrates at Sheffield . The evidence seems to establish

the fact that Mason and the sergeant at least were in a state of intoxication ; and the presiding magistrate , taking a very lenient view of the matter , expressed an opinion that the whole affair was . a " drunken lark . " Mason was remanded . AVe are once morereminded of the dreadful railway accident at Kentish Town by the announcement of the death of another of the sufferers .

Joseph Cox , a signal man , who was in the brake next the engine of the passenger train , died yesterday morning . ¦ On Sunday morning , Peter Hill , a pointsman on the North Staffordshire Railway , was found laying across the metals in a cutting , a short distance from Macclesfield . The man was frightfully bruised , and his statement , when restored to consciousness , was , that he had

encountered a body of poachers , who had attacked him with savage ferocity . He died on Monday , ancl a suspicion arose that his story was incorrect—that , in fact , he had fallen upon the rails while in a state of intoxication , and had been run over by a trian . Tho medical evidence at the inquest , however , conclusively disposes of this theory ; ancl it seems to be tolerably clear that he was , as he

stated in his dying deposition , assailed , by a body of poachers , who , after rendering him unconscious , placed him across the line , with , the horrible intention of leaving to the first train which might pass the spot , the completion of their murderous design . A murder was committed last week by a mulatto cook , named Hawkins , on an American captain , on board an American ship , the

Lammergier . The captain was found murdered in his bed , but the cook had been heard to mutter threats against him ; and the chief mate put him in irons and brought the ship back to the Thames . Thecase was under investigation , but was stopjied , he having been under the Extradition Act , and after a very strong prima facie case was established against him , he was detained in order that he might be delivered over to the United States authorities to be tried there for his crime . Mr . AVilliam Bunvood Balclry , the captain

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