Call Now! 1-888-845-2887 Hablamos Español

You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Lloyds Weekly Newspaper

Show More

Other Editions of Lloyds Weekly Newspaper

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, January 14, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, January 14, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, January 21, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, February 04, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, February 11, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, February 18, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, February 25, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, March 04, 1849,
Middlesex

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper Sunday, March 11, 1849,
Middlesex

Other Editions from Sunday, May 24, 1868

Dubuque Daily Herald Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Iowa

Galveston Daily News Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Texas

Daily Milwaukee News Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Wisconsin

Burlington Daily Hawk Eye Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Iowa

London Reynolds Newspaper Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Middlesex

New Albany Daily Commercial Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Indiana

Evansville Demokrat Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Indiana

Galveston Flakes Daily Bulletin Sunday, May 24, 1868 ,
Texas

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1868-05-24 for page-1
Lloyds Weekly Newspaper
Lloyds Weekly Newspaper

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Lloyds Weekly Newspaper

   Lloyds Weekly Newspaper (Newspaper) - May 24, 1868, London, Middlesex                                EKLY NE EDITED BY BLANCHARD REGISTERED FOB TRANSMISSION LONDON MAY PRICE ONE STAMPED The process of has been conducted by Gladstone and his with the nicest regard for the interests and feelings of those who cling to that which is to be conquered the amenity of some of the thoroughgoing old The members of the Irish and those have vested or other interests in the main tenance of have not been able to play the losing game with or that surface suavity which the clerical dis putant usually even when he is driving darts the quivering flesh of his The meeting convened under the pre sidency of contrasts with that presided over by the Archbishop of Canter the credit of the We repeat the battle has been conducted by Bright and those who support with judg ment and They have never sought for one minute to envenom the But how has moderation been met Vituperation has been plentifully heaped upon the devoted head of the Liberal Orangeism has been and has in in constant In the denun of have flown from clerical and which have crowded the columns of the Tory is anger and not The stipend and the place are in the mind of the speaker He is not troubling himself as to whether or no an Irish Church saddled a Catholic is beneficial or The in his means so much wealth and at the command of a It is an old in which he and his have been wont to glean richly for Starveling hosts have surrounded and have grumbled to see the golden grain gathering into the baskets of the alien Presently the groaning be comes threatening he who murmured speaks loud he who lay quiet in his empty imid cabin gathers under the moonlight for sense of wrong always rankling will dis organise the most generous nature in the Pikes and sticks and guns show over the the hour has come tor a The gleaners are summoned to the and what is their answer hat it is they who are about to be wantonly Hid shamefully The field was not They could not show that they had done the least good while in the occupation of All that could be made out was in the midst of an ignorant and they had flourished and got That which is perceived in the tirades of Irish churchmen and their is an attempt at argument in favour of the Irish on the that it has either or or morally improved even a small section of the Irish The whole fight is over the wealth of the estab Disestablishment means the sup pression of so many places and so many sti This is why tongues have become so and men in coats of clerical found storming and lashing right and It is not that they have any fear that the Irish church the Irish people will suffer in body or They have nol the decency even to feign an anxiety on this little They have the merit of The leaders of the English establishment join issue with What next and next is the question that runs through the Anglican We are as prudent baving a care for our to stand up for out brethren of the Irish establishment for the enemies of the Irish church are ours When they shall have demolished the rich that has stood for centuries in the midst of an anc alien they surely as that pig is the fattest of the their pren tice hands on On no higher grounds is there 8 great stir and commotion in the church just The and the interests of the stand for very little in the it is strange to find that the very men who are laying their hands upon the treasures of the alien in are the friends of the and the friends in whom the people put their we have the a edifying one it a fight ing tooth and nail for its privileges and golden against a powerful and backed with the sympathy of the mass but against the men who may be truly said tc lead the The base hot is The Church party is unscrupulous in the use of and most violent in gesture and in for lack of argument acceptable to the majority of the We grant that the prize for they are contending is a splendid and that they who have lived in the and fed from hives of Mother may be excused somewhat of their that which we excuse in them not serve Their very temper is a new strength given to those with whom they are at It is very important that they who advocate the disestablishment of the Irish be cause they believe the measure will be con to the moral and spiritual elevation oi the Irish and who find that this is the opinion of the main body of the should take notice of the manner in which and his supporters have been and of the men who have over stepped the usual bounds of in and ont of It was of the first im portance that in this conflict which is going on between the people and the friends of the church that calmness of demeanour and of language should be and that the strict bounds oi decorum in parliament should not be over We have to deplore this that these rounds have been broken has been assailed as though he were in enemy of Christianity the very men who lave been loudest with ungovernable eing those who were the least able to show bat the continuance of a state protestant church in the midst of a poor catholic com had created anything bat or was likely ever to create anything but evil The conduct of Colonel Stuart Knox affords a very ood sample of the weapons which Irish church at loss for arguments palatable to the to i The charges he made against Gladstone were recklessly It is not the leader of he Opposition who is given to It is not his example that is likely to lower the ione of the debates in The squab the the strong and the disreputable have been promoted by a set of angry supporters of Mother whose intellect could not benefit her much in ihe shape of rational The Knox on the night when Gladstone first moved his Suspensory carries this lesson with the danger of a House of Com mons of degenerate manners does not proceed From the Liberalism of the Colonel Knox was wild and violent and The extract he read from a speech in which a recreant senate and an apostate nation was intended to convict Gladstone of reckless inconsistency whereas it proved how wild the member for Dungannon had got in his and how ready he was to snatch up the first weapon within his The speech that was to have withered the leader of the turned out to be the utterance of White and the colonel was compelled to ten der his humble apologies for bis blunder but the incident would have been incom without the interference of having no argument at his could only blurt out the unhand some that the leader of the Op position was and that his object was not to enforce an act of justice towards the Irish but to crash who had by bis own to his pre sent In the Suspensory was introduced with an unhandsome by Colonel Knox and his Not the smallest attempt was made to argue or the One blunder suc another and no stranger in the house gathered from the the shouts of the frequent of the House of Commons was initiating a policy destined to regenerate THE PEACE Tuesday the annual meeting of this society was held in Finsbury Pease in the absence of who was detained by busi ness in the House of Tte Kichard presented the which gave a summary of the societys operations during the past The in come was The MCree and in the opinion of this the enormous and everin creasing armaments with which the governments of Europe menace each other during and that at when the peoples of all countries are being daily drawn into closer and kinder relations with each are a reproach to the statesmanship and a scandal to the civilisation of the and that the people should be every where exhorted to use all legi timate means to induce their governments to of international jurisdiction for the settlement of disputes that may arise between and to come to a common agreement fora mutual and simultaneous reduction of their The ONeil aud Powell se That this aspect of the relations between Great Britain anc the United States of and desires to express its deep and grateful appreciation of the eminent services which Lord the Secretary of State for Foreign has rendered to the cause of peace by the generous and temper in which he has treated the differences between the two as as for the dignified and pacific spirit which has marked his general administration of the foreign affairs of this and that a copy of this reso lution be forwarded to Lord and Shipton That this meeting desires to express its deep sense of sorrow and loss at the death of for many years one of the vice presidents as well as one of the most steadfast anc valued friends of the Peace who so often ai these and similar meetings lias helped to guide its members by his wise and to strengthen them by his constancy and and both his personal service as well as by frequent anc generous has largely contributed to sustain the cause of The meeting earnestly hopes that in the face of the serious bereavements which the society has year after year to the hearts of many younger men may be inclined to offer their services in support of this sacred The resolutions were unanimously adopted and on the motion of the Richard a vote of thanks was accorded to the THE BANDS IN THE The Na tional Sunday league bands began to play for the first time this season on Sunday in Battersea anc Victoria The gave the numbers who entered the park on Sunday afternoon at a very large proportion of whom attended the performance of the Addresses to the public were in which it was remarked that since the bands had begun to years a single case calling for the interference of the police had The performance in Bat was the firs ton the new orchestra by the commissioner of public It is light anc elegant in and has been constructed with every attention to A considerable space around the orchestra hns been carefully pre pared and and enclosed in a double fence of galvanised Inside the enclosure are com seats for 800 leaving an ample space for The cost of the orchestra and en closure was The whole of the seats placet within the enclosure are provided by the Sunday the admission being one penny From these receipts and the profits on programmes the sale of which is undertaken gratuitously by members of the league the expenses of the twentyone in aie The present number is to be largely The address issued in the Vieto gave extracts from the Queens diary in re ference to the pleasure experienced by the roya family from the playing of the bands at Windsor ant other royal residences on the Sunday As a mark of respect to the memory of Lord Brougham the Dead March was performed by both LLOYDS WEEKLY NEWS SONDAT THIS MORNINGS THROUGH THE CUSTOMS Saturday In todays sitting of the customs parliament the Tariff came on for final On a division being taken the tax upon petroleum was again rejected by 149 votes against where upon Count Bismark withdrew the Tariff After the withdrawal of the Tariff the motions already passed for the reduction of the sugar duty and for the reform of the tax upon sugar were also withdrawn by the The motion for a tariff of one pfennig upon all raw materials came on for inal aud was In his closing speech the president said that one result had at any rate been established by the labours of the Every successive week of its sit ing had shown notwithstanding the variety of views that had been put forward by the lie feeling of warm by which all were animated had only been increased and The present session of the customs parliament was closed at four by the King of Prussia in per son with a speech from the His majesty look a retrospective glance of the labours of the par the favourable results of which he said did exclude the apprehension of a not un reduction in the customs revenue in the It to be hoped that at the next meeting of the parliament a reconciliation would be effected between financial and commercial the combined efforts of the allied and of the The speech trusted that the past session had served o strengthen mutual confidence between the Ger man races and and to dissipate many The king considered it to be a point of to testify that he regarded the rights en trusted to him as a sacred deposit placed in his keeping by the German nation and its and one that he should maintain and turn to account with conscientious respect for treaties entered as well as the historical privileges conferred upon His majesty closed his speech as Not the power which Providence has placed in my but the rights upon which I have agreed with my the constitutional representatives of their subjects in free will both now and in future serve as the guide of my Saturday In todays sitting of the senate the debate upon the interpellations relative to the materialistic teach ing of certain professions was After several speeches had been the order of the day was adopted votes against 33 over the question as to freedom of and by 80 votes against 43 over the question of materialistic teaching being given in medical The bourse has been Rentes closed at or the same as Saturday Measures have been taken to reduce the number of promotions in the general staff of the Count Girgenti arrived yesterday at THE MO ONT CENIS Saturday The experimental trains over Mount ordered by the French and Italian daily with great regularity and The Duke of the Count a member of the Italian and about fifty travelled over the line yesterday and The opening for public traffic is fixed for the 8th of Saturday The municipal council of Malta and the population have voted an address to the Queen on the escape of the Duke of Edingburgh from PER MALTA AND ALEXANDRIA TELE Saturday Advices from Yokohama to the 10th state that the opening of the ports of and to foreign which was fixed for the 1st of had not yet taken FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE Mondays sitting of the legislative a was providing for the insertion if an item of in the extraordinary budget if to be applied towards the completion of parochial In Tuesdays sitting the debate elative to free trade was who resumed his speech after reading a letter written by said he admitted that the of giving customs permits had given rise ome The government was still examining his Bouher then entered into statis ics to show the progress of French He stated that France exported to European markets to be amount of 700 million francs more than nd was only behind that country as regarded her He by means of energetic and by throwing off the shackles of timid the trade of France might rival that of England even in the To those who ask that the government should give notice of withdrawal from the treaty of we point No The emperor ias the constitutional right to conclude treaties of but the government inclines towards hav ng recourse to the legislative powers for the it becomes a question of reforming the customs it is resolved to hold firmly to he path of Jules Simon remarked political liberty should accompany freedom of The simple order of the day was passed over the interpellations by a large The and the empress on Saturday afternoon four arrived at the railway station in lie Rue Lozare without and ascended the staircase common to all A footman then went and took tickets for and their like the other persons about to passed through the and entered the When standing on the quay close to the they were and the managing being informed of their came in all haste to pay his The imperial travellers then entered a carriage and the train went At Germain their majesties visited the and afterwards walked on the terrace for about an and returned to Paris by the same mode of arriving about half past A plain carriage was in waiting in the courtyard and conveyed them to the The publishes the following news from Ja pan under date of 26th March satisfaction for the massacre of the French sailors at made minister the condemnation to death of 20 noncommissioned officers and who had ordered or executed the the payment of an indemnity of piastres to the families of the and the presentation of apologies by the re of the Mikado and Prince Eleven the culprits were executed on the 16th Captain then stopped the execution of the nine declaring that sufficient satisfac tion had been Mondays sitting of the academy of professor of delivered a eulogium upon the late Professor His discourse was much considerable deficit has been made known in the war budget of northern will not be had either to a loan or extraordinary It is not supposed that Count von Bismarck will be embarrassed by this being convinced that it will be easy for him The following which was brought by the was received last through Reuters NEW May Chief Justice Chase has directed that the vote of the senate court be taken on the impeachment articles each senator voting when The republican and Grimes have delivered opinions ad verse to the conviction of President The house has passed a removing the political disabilities of nearly 200 citizens of North including Governor and several members elect of congress and the state General Mcade officially announces that the new constitution of Georgia has been General Buchanan has suspended the collection of taxes in the inundated districts of Intelligence from via announces that the Cacos rebels hold the north part of the re CASE OF CHILD Isabella Davidson was at the Hammersmith with the wilful murder of her illegitimate aged eleven Serjeant Stacey said that on Friday morning he re information of the finding of the dead body of a male child iu the kitchen garden of and it was conveyed to the Fulham union He subsequently went to Caver where he arrested the She was dreadfully and repeatedly asked if she would Hee said he had made a postmortem ex amination ef the Death had resulted from He thought the child had been dead about two Mary Ann of said she had charge the deceased for which the prisoner paid her a She fetched it away on Monday the female at Walham green said the prisoner told her she had no thought of doing as she loved the but a feel ing came over She was FraE AT about three oclock on Friday a fire broke out at the East India the occupation of Lloyd and packing case and metallic cask and was not extinguished until a large amount property was THE FORTHCOMING VOLUNTEER REVIEW IN WIND Majesty having signified her inten holding a review of volunteers in end of June the secretary of state for war is prepared to receive applications fiom corps desirous of The applications must be made on a prescribed form through the tenants ofthe respective and delivered al the on ov before the 8th of June TERRIBLE EARTHQUAKE AND Advices received San Francisco announce the outbreak of a serious volcanic eruption on the island of one of the Sandwich During the twelve days preceding the 12th of which date of the advices sent from there had it is no less than shocks of earth followed by fearful tidal which des whole villages and caused the death of a hundred The volcano from which this eruption took place is the wellknown Mauna which has an elevation of At the earth opened in many and a tidal wave sixty feet high rose over the of the trees a quarter of a mile sweeping human and everything movable before A terrible shock prostrated churches and and in addition to the destruction of human a thou sand horses and cattle were The first stream of lava broke out from Mauna some two miles above the residence of Captain Robert and flowed directly towards The family escaped with their clothes The path which they toob was perfectly free from lava but ten minutes af tei they had left it and readied a point of safety the en tire road was covered with the fiery The craters vomited and and a river of redhot five or six miles flowed to the sea at the rate of ten miles per destroying every thing before and forming an island in the A new two miles and threw rocks and streams of fire a thousand feet into the and from it streams of lava rolled to the At one time the illumination was visible at night fifty miles The lava has pushed out from the shore one The greatest shock occurred on April a great shower of ashes and During the the earth was person could In the midst of this tremendous shock an eruption of red earth poured down the rushing across the plain three miles in three and then Then came the great tidal and then the streams of The villages on the shore were all destroyed by this The earth opened under the and reddened the The earth tion swallowed thirty and the sea many Dreadful suffering and terror prevailed in the and the whole region was When this intelligence left Honolulu the opinion prevailed that the eruption bad passed through its most violent and dangerous period but the discharge of lava and fragments of rock and the spectacle was wildly During the great shock the slope and part of the summit of a mountain fif teen hundred feet high were lifted up bodily by the earthquake and thrown over the tops of trees for a distance of over one thousand great shock the motion of so violent that no person c THE TOWNSHEND AND THE On Emma address re was charged at the police by the Marquis with The Marquis Townshend said that on the previous afternoon he saw the prisoner singing in the middle of having a child in her He asked her if she was in and she said she and wanted to pick up a few He asked the prisoner where she and on her telling he told her that he would go with her to see if her story was She objected to walking with and he therefore proposed that he should follow her and she walked but did not go in the proper direction of the place she had and walked into a with a man she and he them sent for a on whose approach she ran but was afterwards taken into He seven the for the abolition of capital punishment was rejected by twentytwo votes money every but he had since ascertained that to be The prisoner said that when sho had her child she was in and having lost her cba and the prince voted in favour of its The clause doing away with possessing a and seeing other persons going about she did the thinking there waa no in discharging the when the imperial sanction was gi lative to the position of the the charge of committing acts of incipient high trea Howald was condemned to be imprisoned for one year and three and the rest for one At Mondays sitting of the customs parliament Pre sident stated that reductions of duty had only been agreed upon by treaty with and The rate governments now intended to bring in a by which similar reductions would be extended toother excepting as regards the wine re ductions in which would only be allowed to countries which treated imports from the Zollverein upon an equal footing with those from the most favoured na The en tire treaty of the Zollverein with Austria passed the final stage of and was At Tuesdays the commercial treaty with the states of the church was adopted without The draft of a introducing modifications in the customs tariff of the and providing that the deficiencies thereby occasioned should be met by a tax upon came on for preliminary con The general debate closed after a warm in which nearly all the speakers opposed the petroleum On the was thrown out by 190 to 99 cabinet council was held at Vienna on Tuesday under the of the riven to the law re rerent religious de nominations in At Tuesdays sitting of the lower house of the the estimates for 1868 of the expenditure for the the the state the ministerial the ministries of the of public worship and of and of with were adopted letter from dated the says Count yesterday gave a ball at which the Em peror Francis Joseph was remaining more than two hours and seeming to enjoy being in Hun garian where an absence of constraint and a natural gaiety Perhaps no monarch ever passed an evening so at a party in which there were at least a dozen individuals whose death warrants he had himself signed at different times and never I must did a company show more deference to a The who was hanged in effigy in set the splendid nautical fete and regatta were held at Genoa on Sunday The king and the royal family proceeded round the port in a state and were enthusiastically There were magnificent followed by a grand illu Duke of Sutherland arrived at Flo rence on He crossed Mont Cenis by the Fell railway in a train consisting of twelve The time taken between Michel and Susa was four hours deducting stoppages for The was nine teen kilometres per Thursday evening the chamber of deputies passed the grist tax by 219 against 152 votes the registry stamp tax by 232 against 143 and the go concessions tax by 240 against the Princess and the Duke and arrived at Venice and passed up the Grand Canal in state galleys to the followed by many gaily decorated An immense number of spectators were present nnd the greatest cordiality and were manifested towards the prince and prin The weather was and the whole spectacle was very animated and There are a great number of foreign visitors in The marquis said that something should be done for the woman if she A SUFFERER FROM an Irishwoman came before at the Thames to complain of an astrologer in the mediate vicinity of the London who she said had annoyed her night aud sleeping and for a long time Benson What has he done He has shut me up in his glass in which people can see other people both night and In answer to further questions the woman said the astrologer could see her all the way from the London hospital to where she by means of his and that he was constantly look ing at Benson asked the woman if she could account for the astrologer persecuting her in the manner he had I dont he keeps me on the He looks up to A gentleman had my nativity and the astrologer keeps it in his Benson was surprised that any man or woman could place credence in the of and The applicant ought to be above such It is not all nonsense it really is Benson If you are not insane you ought to know Do you think if you were any where else you would be free from the arts of this wicked astrologer Applicant he has power over me all over the Benson Then I am afraid if I interfere with him he will have power over me and rule me with his rod He has no power over Benson I am very glad of Have you any priest who will advise you to be I Father Kelly Benson Go to Father Kelly he can give very good ad If Father Kelly will write to me I wiU attend to The cunning man has me in his How shall I get out of it Benson it roars of MELANCHOLY SUICIDE OF THE PAN Thursday evening Bedford held an inquest at the Salutation near Westminster relative to the death of Augustus the in his 59th died under very mysterious circum stances at M ap from the evidence that besides acting as a pan taloon during the pantomime the deceased had carried on the business of a He had been very low and despondent since the expiration of his engagement for last Christmas pantomime at owing to a dearth of business in photo On Sunday last deceased complained of a pain at his and said he was too ill He shortly afterwards A postmortem examination showed that poison was the cause of A verdict was consequently to the effect that deceased suicide while in a state of unsound COMMITTAL FOK THE MURDER op Thursday an inquest was held on the body of Mary Ann murdered by her as reported in another at their resi dence in on Wednesday morn It appeared from the evidence that the deceased and her husband led a quarrelsome chiefly owing to the dissolute habits On Wednesday in of and had been and after the sounds of a vio lent quarrel between him and his wife had been heard it was found had stabbed both deceased and the former The jury returned a verdict of Wilful murder against  

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!