COLLIERY EXPLOSION AND LOSS OF LIFE

... COLLIBRY EXPLOSION AN LOSS OF LIPE. O n Tuesday, aboutorano o'clock, _ tesos~eii oI &.damp, eital ?? its consequences to a number of persons, took place 'at the. colliery, known sometimes as tbe Hfgher Patrieroft'Colliery, but more properly as the Ktrkleis Hall Colliery, near the boundary line oa the townships of Inca on the banks of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, about two miles fronm Wigan. ...

Published: Sunday 04 July 1847
Newspaper: Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 923 | Page: Page 12 | Tags: News 

LOCAL AND PROVINCIAL NEWS

... LO¢> l. AND PRlOVINCIA'l NEWS. DIRSS1kS9-TIon OF PATR11A.MEX;T.-W.31.}8.n -AI1 I eprl- . . . ?? rOF o PAcnIAAs1E¶.T-.We~iiavc good reso,,s for I ey1believing-thet the ~)tOj intl. will beqjj, hy'on whiclf the dis- lim0u- 0o~i~ifyriiinwl aeplc.il as heeffvumozurod eCS ju *tlatcthe (Elosions would be postpleoi'd till after iarv'rAt; bill 'Ut (i C bef lfet~ t is no foundation foi-rthe ...

Published: Saturday 03 July 1847
Newspaper: Manchester Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 6360 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: News 

COUNTRY VERSUS PARTY

... COUNTRY ?? PARTY. Since last we noticed the movements of the Irish Confederates in London. they have put forth a manly. declaration of their principles and their objects, and in another part of this paper we re- cord a correspondence which has taken place be.- itween themselves and the Irish Confederation in Dublin. We were right, then, when we hailed, amid her expatriatedsons,, ahope for ...

Correspondence

... ?? carropalmenfl. ?? -- LANDl) ANID TH J CHA aTZR. TH t D I ltA ?? xeS anomo or ins, poSTOiSN _HA,. S1a,-lith few honourable scePtioOA the eonduaotors of ie pres D haveted dishonestly towards the geopise Otheas, eds thae ?? imoportant and flagrant abuses been ontiStnuillY hold up to public gaze, they col no t by any possibility bale groevlled until the profsen momeer- but these qeostions bal e ...

Foreign Movements

... oreign Atmetas 'Aud I will war, t Mlesitl weords, b gma&-b*vhd say ans so hspo eade]d5,) Withi a whe war w1tX Thougshtil k tlk E ? a llittle bIr, who sitgs peepis br-snd-by wiillbo the 01ronsr .-ESION. The following important commiunication from our o own correspondent in the French capital unveils the itottoring position of the Guisot Ministry, and fore- i ohadowa the tremendous chinges of ...

THE EXPEDITION TO CANTON

... A supplement to the Loandon Gazelle -ns published i on Friday evening, containing tlsa offficio despatches an 1eMnCing the expedition from Hong Kong to Canton, the destruction otthe Bogue forte and the other Chi,5ese defences on the river, and the operotiocs befora Canton, all of' which wcvro fully described in our last. A few passages from the despatches, however, seem to throw additional ...

Published: Friday 02 July 1847
Newspaper: Newcastle Courant
County: Northumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 709 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: News 

LETTER FROM A RAILWAY WITNESS IN LONDON

... IETTE' PROMI A RA, W.AY WITESS t LO15D1 (roMn B~lackwood's Magazine.) j i Mv ?? ,.g the w'ords of the venerable Joe Grim- j 04 aldi_- Here I am againU' swearing away before the committees Idi at no allowance. The trade is not quite so good a, one as it -was to of traffic commanded his own, price, andtberefore invariably stood trn at anexorbitant premiumr. 'Still it would be very wrongi10me to ...

Published: Monday 05 July 1847
Newspaper: Glasgow Herald
County: Lanarkshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 4861 | Page: Page 4 | Tags: News 

[No title]

... A case of adultery was lately brought before the Tri. bunal of Correctional Police, wiiicn wis reoiirkible for the manner in which tiie husband male the discovery of his dishonour. B)th he and his wife had been con- demned to different, peiiods of imprisonment tor some offence. Tiie wife completed her term tne iiest, and on being set at liberty consoled herself with the society of a young ...

LOCAL & GENERAL NEWS

... I y do LEssONS FOR SUNDAY, JULY 4.-Fifth Sunday I, In after Trinity.-1klorning1. Samuel xv. and Luke Xvi. Evening lent -1 Samuel xvii. and Plollppians iv, eard REPrEcSENTATION OF THE EAST-RIDING. ManS Henry lBroadley, Esq., and Lord Hotham, the sitting members vhalt fortho REast-Riding, announce in our advertising columns their 'WaS intention of again soliciting the sfrgso hi osiuns A The ...

Published: Friday 02 July 1847
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 3892 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: News 

AMERICA

... I ARRIVAL Of THE HIBERNIA. re- The royal mail steam ship Hibernia, Captain Ryrie, )re arrived in the Mersey, on Monday morning at nine of o'clock, having made the passage from Boston in less than twelve days, and from Halifax in less than ten. 6s The aspect of the war has not been changed since the '1y last advices. The American army was advancing and concentrating at Puebla, whence, as soon ...

Published: Friday 02 July 1847
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1557 | Page: Page 7 | Tags: News 

An Ingenious Fbaud.—About a since Miss Dowd, in Shop-street, received hand a letter, enclosing first half a ..

... for £1, and requesting that one pound's worth of tobacco should be given to the bearer, and the second half would, of course, be forwarded same day post. The pretended danger of carrying whole notes, when the bearer had to travelling before day coming town, offered a very plausible excuse for cutting the note, and the tobacco was given. The letter was dated front Dunaney, and signed Peter ...

Published: Friday 02 July 1847
Newspaper: Manchester Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 616 | Page: Page 7 | Tags: News 

WRECK OF FOUR SHIPS

... The Miracle, Captain Elliott, sailed fitm the pot of Liverpool in the latter part of March, Jst for Quebec; besides her crew she had on board no fewet r than 400 emigrants. In a gale of wind, on the 9UI f, May. this unfortunate vessel was dhiven ashore so as a reef of rocks off the Magdalen glaade', where in X at few hoers she became a complete wreek rhoe me. It ment she struck her masts tell ...