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  • Dec. 23, 1865
  • Page 19
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 23, 1865: 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.

Windsor , to visit it and testify their respect for the memory of the lamented Prince Consort . The Queen , Princess Helena , Princess Louise , Prince Leopold , Princess Beatrice , and Princess Hohenlohe , and the ladies and gentlemen in-waiting , attended Divine service ou Sunday morning in the Private Chapel . The Very Rev . the Dean of Westminster preached the sermon . Her Majesty the Queen , with their Royal Highnesses Princess

Helena , Princess Louise , Princess Beatrice , Prince Leopold , and Princess Hohenlohe left for Windsor Castle on Monday morning at a quarter past ten o ' clock , for Osborne , and arrived at a little before two o ' clock , having crossed over from Gospoit in " tho Royal yacht Alberta . GEUEBAII HOME NEWS . —The health of the country continues

on the whole good . ¦ The weekly return for the principal towns shows a mortality of 3 , 090 , or at the rate of 28 in the thousand . London this week figures as the healthiest town in the wholehealthier even than Bristol , for its death rate is 25 , while Bristol is 26 . Liverpool has also lost for the nonce its character as the deadliest place in England ; that disgrace is this week reserved

for Salford , whose death rate is 45 , while Liverpool is 43 . Of tbe whole number of number of deaths , 1 , 440 belong to London , which is ten below the average . The births were 4 , 130 for all the towns , of which 2 , 098 were in London . This is slightly above the average . The Smithfield Club Cattle Show was brought to a close on the evening of the 14 th inst . It has been as

successful as any of its predecessors , notwithstanding the forebodings respecting it . Not less than 130 , 000 persons have , it is said , paid for admission to this building during the show . A deputation of farmers and country gentlemen waited upon Sir George Grey on the 14 th inst ., to ask that Government would put a stop to all transit of cattle in the kingdom . Not unnaturally , Sir George expressed doubts whether such a thing

would be either wise or practicable . This official opposition only emboldened the deputation to demand more extravagant things . They absolutely wished that the Government should prohibit the removal of cattle from one part of a man's farm to another . Sir George Grey said he would communicate to the Lords of the Council the wishes of the deputation . A Liberal banquet was held at Dewsbury on Wednesday night

the 13 th inst . There was a large attendance of members of Parliament and of well-known public men . Lord De Grey more than hinted at a Reform Bill when he asked that the county would give its confidence to Lord Russell . Lord Houghton also delivered a speech in the same sense . The meeting proved that the old Reform spirit of Yorkshire has

been thoroughly revivified . A melancholy accident happened to the Dover and Calais mail steamer Samphire on Wednesday night the 13 th inst . She was on her voyage to Calais when she was run into by the American barque Fanny Doclc . The forward compartments of the steamer were filled with water . She was , however , towed to Dover . There , in her fore cabin ,

the bodies of one gentleman and two ladies were found . The mails were all saved . In the Court of Queen ' s Bench a cornchandler named , Oddy brought an action for slander against Admiral Lord George Paulet . An apology and a verdict for 40 s . was accepted by mutual consent . An extraordinary charge of burglary was preferred at the

Westminster Police-court on the 15 th inst . against a young man named Swyer . On the Tuesday evening previous a Mrs . Barrington , Walton Villas , Brompton , went to a theatre , taking with her the housemaid . The cook was left in charge of tho house , but she , too , went out , and in her absence the front door was opened , and a large quantity of jewels belonging to Mrs . Barrington , and wearing apparel belonging to Lord Seaford , were stolen from the house . Suspicion fell upon a young man

named Pettis , who lodged in a house near , and at which the cook had called when she went out . On the following Thursday he was accused of the offence . He admitted his guilt , and made a statement implicating Swyer . Pettis then went into the washhouse and committed suicide hy cutting his throat . Swyer was arrested the same day . He is remanded for further examination . The first Fenian prisoner put upon his trial at

Cork was a Captain M'Afferty , who had served in the Confederate army , and who was a subject of the United States . He was , it seems , arrested while on board a steamship from America , and was brought ashore in custody . His counsel objected that he was an alien , who in his own country eould not commit the offence with which he was charged , and who had not set foot

on our land so as to become guilty when he was arrested . The judge held that this objection was fatal to the indictment , and the jury under their direction returned a verdict of not guilty . In the Court of Exchequer on Saturday Sir R . J . Clifton , M . P ., sued Mr . Howatt , the publisher of the Patriot , for damages for libel . Au article had been written in the Patriot

just after the election at Nottingham , which article contained some very strong expressions relative to Sir R . Clifton . This was tbe cause of action . The judge held that the action was libellous , and the jury awarded the baronet £ 50 damages . The inspectors of prisons who raa . de inquiries into the escape of Stephens from Richmond Gaol have given in a report

recommending the dismissal of Mr . Marquess , the governor . Their decision dissatisfied the Board of Superintendence—a committee of the corporation—and they memorialised Lord Wodehouse to appoint a special commission to make a new investigation . The Lord Lieutenant refuses to do so , is satisfied with the report of the inspectors , in accordance with whose recommendations he has has dismissed the governor ,

and intimates , in conclusion , that henceforth he shall keep the appointments to the City gaols in his own hands . The board is very dissatisfied , and talk of instituting an inquiry of their own . The December Sessions of the Central Criminal Court began on Monday , and one of the first cases brought forward was the trial of the two young men Jones andMerrick for the assault on Dr . Hunter . It will be

remembered that Merrick was the husband and Jones the brother of the young woman who charged Dr . Hunter with assaultingher , and that they went to Dr . Hunter's honse and inflicted on him personal chastisement for the alleged outrage . The circumstances of the assault were fully proved , and Dr . Hunter again denied on his oath the truth of the charge brought

against him . The jury returned a verdict of a common assault against both . Sentence was deferred . A man was brought before tbe Bow-street police magistrate on the charge of being a Fenian Centre . The warrant for his apprehension came from Cork and he was sent there ; but he stated iu his defence that he had not been in Ireland for the last eighteen years .

If this be so it is the first case of London Fenianism that has yet occurred . At a meeting of the Court of Common Council held ou Tuesday , it was resolved to add fifty more men to the City police force . The object of this is that there maybe a sufficient number of constables to regulate the traffic in the City . At the same meeting a report recommending

plan for a dead meat market at Smithfield was adopted . The third performance of the " Trinummus" of Plautus by the Westminster scholars took place on Tuesday evening . There was a brilliant gathering of old Westminsterians and others . The performance went off very well . The Thames Policecourt was invaded on Tuesday by an army of indignant ratepayers . They sought to induce the magistrate to grant them summonses against a Mr . Fleck , who it seems collects the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-12-23, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23121865/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
ANCIENT MASONIC HIEROGLYPHS. Article 1
THE LATE KING OF THE BELGIANS. Article 2
FREEMASONRY AND THE POPE. Article 2
THE PROVINCIAL MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 3
ROYAL ARCH. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
CHARITY STEWARDS. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
MARK MASONRY. Article 13
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 14
BRITISH BURMAH. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. 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.

Windsor , to visit it and testify their respect for the memory of the lamented Prince Consort . The Queen , Princess Helena , Princess Louise , Prince Leopold , Princess Beatrice , and Princess Hohenlohe , and the ladies and gentlemen in-waiting , attended Divine service ou Sunday morning in the Private Chapel . The Very Rev . the Dean of Westminster preached the sermon . Her Majesty the Queen , with their Royal Highnesses Princess

Helena , Princess Louise , Princess Beatrice , Prince Leopold , and Princess Hohenlohe left for Windsor Castle on Monday morning at a quarter past ten o ' clock , for Osborne , and arrived at a little before two o ' clock , having crossed over from Gospoit in " tho Royal yacht Alberta . GEUEBAII HOME NEWS . —The health of the country continues

on the whole good . ¦ The weekly return for the principal towns shows a mortality of 3 , 090 , or at the rate of 28 in the thousand . London this week figures as the healthiest town in the wholehealthier even than Bristol , for its death rate is 25 , while Bristol is 26 . Liverpool has also lost for the nonce its character as the deadliest place in England ; that disgrace is this week reserved

for Salford , whose death rate is 45 , while Liverpool is 43 . Of tbe whole number of number of deaths , 1 , 440 belong to London , which is ten below the average . The births were 4 , 130 for all the towns , of which 2 , 098 were in London . This is slightly above the average . The Smithfield Club Cattle Show was brought to a close on the evening of the 14 th inst . It has been as

successful as any of its predecessors , notwithstanding the forebodings respecting it . Not less than 130 , 000 persons have , it is said , paid for admission to this building during the show . A deputation of farmers and country gentlemen waited upon Sir George Grey on the 14 th inst ., to ask that Government would put a stop to all transit of cattle in the kingdom . Not unnaturally , Sir George expressed doubts whether such a thing

would be either wise or practicable . This official opposition only emboldened the deputation to demand more extravagant things . They absolutely wished that the Government should prohibit the removal of cattle from one part of a man's farm to another . Sir George Grey said he would communicate to the Lords of the Council the wishes of the deputation . A Liberal banquet was held at Dewsbury on Wednesday night

the 13 th inst . There was a large attendance of members of Parliament and of well-known public men . Lord De Grey more than hinted at a Reform Bill when he asked that the county would give its confidence to Lord Russell . Lord Houghton also delivered a speech in the same sense . The meeting proved that the old Reform spirit of Yorkshire has

been thoroughly revivified . A melancholy accident happened to the Dover and Calais mail steamer Samphire on Wednesday night the 13 th inst . She was on her voyage to Calais when she was run into by the American barque Fanny Doclc . The forward compartments of the steamer were filled with water . She was , however , towed to Dover . There , in her fore cabin ,

the bodies of one gentleman and two ladies were found . The mails were all saved . In the Court of Queen ' s Bench a cornchandler named , Oddy brought an action for slander against Admiral Lord George Paulet . An apology and a verdict for 40 s . was accepted by mutual consent . An extraordinary charge of burglary was preferred at the

Westminster Police-court on the 15 th inst . against a young man named Swyer . On the Tuesday evening previous a Mrs . Barrington , Walton Villas , Brompton , went to a theatre , taking with her the housemaid . The cook was left in charge of tho house , but she , too , went out , and in her absence the front door was opened , and a large quantity of jewels belonging to Mrs . Barrington , and wearing apparel belonging to Lord Seaford , were stolen from the house . Suspicion fell upon a young man

named Pettis , who lodged in a house near , and at which the cook had called when she went out . On the following Thursday he was accused of the offence . He admitted his guilt , and made a statement implicating Swyer . Pettis then went into the washhouse and committed suicide hy cutting his throat . Swyer was arrested the same day . He is remanded for further examination . The first Fenian prisoner put upon his trial at

Cork was a Captain M'Afferty , who had served in the Confederate army , and who was a subject of the United States . He was , it seems , arrested while on board a steamship from America , and was brought ashore in custody . His counsel objected that he was an alien , who in his own country eould not commit the offence with which he was charged , and who had not set foot

on our land so as to become guilty when he was arrested . The judge held that this objection was fatal to the indictment , and the jury under their direction returned a verdict of not guilty . In the Court of Exchequer on Saturday Sir R . J . Clifton , M . P ., sued Mr . Howatt , the publisher of the Patriot , for damages for libel . Au article had been written in the Patriot

just after the election at Nottingham , which article contained some very strong expressions relative to Sir R . Clifton . This was tbe cause of action . The judge held that the action was libellous , and the jury awarded the baronet £ 50 damages . The inspectors of prisons who raa . de inquiries into the escape of Stephens from Richmond Gaol have given in a report

recommending the dismissal of Mr . Marquess , the governor . Their decision dissatisfied the Board of Superintendence—a committee of the corporation—and they memorialised Lord Wodehouse to appoint a special commission to make a new investigation . The Lord Lieutenant refuses to do so , is satisfied with the report of the inspectors , in accordance with whose recommendations he has has dismissed the governor ,

and intimates , in conclusion , that henceforth he shall keep the appointments to the City gaols in his own hands . The board is very dissatisfied , and talk of instituting an inquiry of their own . The December Sessions of the Central Criminal Court began on Monday , and one of the first cases brought forward was the trial of the two young men Jones andMerrick for the assault on Dr . Hunter . It will be

remembered that Merrick was the husband and Jones the brother of the young woman who charged Dr . Hunter with assaultingher , and that they went to Dr . Hunter's honse and inflicted on him personal chastisement for the alleged outrage . The circumstances of the assault were fully proved , and Dr . Hunter again denied on his oath the truth of the charge brought

against him . The jury returned a verdict of a common assault against both . Sentence was deferred . A man was brought before tbe Bow-street police magistrate on the charge of being a Fenian Centre . The warrant for his apprehension came from Cork and he was sent there ; but he stated iu his defence that he had not been in Ireland for the last eighteen years .

If this be so it is the first case of London Fenianism that has yet occurred . At a meeting of the Court of Common Council held ou Tuesday , it was resolved to add fifty more men to the City police force . The object of this is that there maybe a sufficient number of constables to regulate the traffic in the City . At the same meeting a report recommending

plan for a dead meat market at Smithfield was adopted . The third performance of the " Trinummus" of Plautus by the Westminster scholars took place on Tuesday evening . There was a brilliant gathering of old Westminsterians and others . The performance went off very well . The Thames Policecourt was invaded on Tuesday by an army of indignant ratepayers . They sought to induce the magistrate to grant them summonses against a Mr . Fleck , who it seems collects the

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