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LONDON NEWS.

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LONDON NEWS. "PROVIDENTIAL ESCAPE OF EARL GREY.—Saturday a.f- ternoon, the Right Honourable Earl Grey had a very nar- row escape of losing his life. The noble Earl had just left his residence in Dovvning-strcet, and was in the act of crossing the road, near Little Charles-street, when a waggon horse that had escaped from a boy who was leading him, and gallopping along the road with great fury, rushed within an inch of his Lordship, who must inevitably have been killed on the spot, had not a gentleman, who happened to be passing at the moment, run towards the animal and struck him on the head, which caused him to take another direction. The noble Earl appeared much alarmed, but proceeded along Parliament-street, scarcely an individual recognizing him. PROGRESS OF ('RIME IN LONDON.- Edward Gibbon Wakefield in his facts relating to the punishment of death says—" I had the opportunity of strictly examining more than 100 thieves, of between eight and fourteen years, as to the immediate cause of their becoming thieves and in nineteen cases out of twenty it appeared that the boy had not committed his first crime spontaneously, but had been persuaded to commence the career of thieving by persons whose business is to practise this kind of seduction. The most numerous class of such seducers consists of experienced thieves, both men and boys, who look out for boys not cri- minal, to whom they represent the life of a thief as abound- ing in pleasure." 11 A great number of paupers were brought before the Lord Mayor, charged with having annoyed the attendants at Moorfields Catholic chapel. It appears that hundreds of Irish beggars assemble every Sunday morning at the chapel door, and make a most offensive display of their poverty and infirmities. The officers stated that the nuisance had become most horrible, and that decent people were con- stantly put to the blush by the naked misery of the crowds. Some of the most sturdy and insolent of the beggars were sent by his lordship to Bridewell for a month, and a multi- tude of their comrades who were waiting outside scampered off the moment their doom was fixed. Mr. Strahan, the King's printer, who died on Thursday se'nnight, has left, we understand, property to the amount of more than a inillioif among his friends and relatives. To the son of a banker, in St. Clement's Danes, who married one of his daughters, he has left an estate worth about £ 80,000, and to his wife £ "20,000 in money. To his part- ners and their relatives (seven in number) he has bequeathed £ 15,000 each. DEATH OF A. DAWSON, M.P.—Mr. A. Dawson, M.P. for Louth, died at half-past one o'clock on Sunday morn- ing at his lodgings in Downing-street. He took an active part in the debate on the grant to Ireland on Wednesday week. He has positively been a victim to the excitement and fatigue of'the Reform Bill. On Sunday last a melancholy occurrence took place at the residence of Lady Mary Lake, No. 11, Earl's-terrace, Kensington. It appears that a female domestic to her ladyship, named Martha Williams, about 25 years of age, was seduced, a short time since, by a tradesman, who is father of a family, living in the same neighbourhood. The young woman was pregnant, and, a few days before Sun- day, proceeded to town, and returned with a phial full of tincture of colchicum, for the purpose, as it is supposed, of causing abortion. On Sunday morning the family was much alarmed by the sudden manner in which the young woman was seized with a violent fit of retching, and a cor- responding relaxation of the bowels, which was mistaken for an attack of the cholera. Her ladyship's medical at- tendant, Mr. Garrick, was called in, when, on searching the bed-room, an empty phial was found, in which were disco- vered the dregs of the tincture alluded to. The young woman died in the course of that day. On a post mortem examination, it was ascertained that the unfortunate creature was six weeks enceinte, and that her death was occasioned by a large dose of the tincture. An inquest was held at the Kensington Arms, when the above facts were elicited, and a verdict in accordance with them was returned. An awful instance of sudden death occurred in the family of Mr. Newman Coote, at Havant. On Sunday last, as Sarah Long, the housemaid, was sitting at supper with her fellow-servant, in apparent good health, she was stung by a, wasp, which alarmed her so much that she immediately became extremely ill, and complained of a fullness upon her chest. Mr. Coote, on being called, and thinking she was fainting, carried her to the outer door to give her air, when clinging round him she feebly exclaimed I shall die! I shall die!" and almost immedietely expired in his arms. It was supposed that some vessel or abscess near the heart had burst, and was the cause of her death. HATTON GARDEN.—ARSON.—Elizabeth Holder, a young woman, servant to Mr. Geoige Titterton, brush maker, of 57, Exmouth-street, Clerkenwell, was remanded on the fol- lowing charge of setting fire to her master's house. Three weeks since she was taken into the service of the prosecutor, but her conduct was so bad that he was compelled to give her notice to quit on Tuesday se'nnight. Since that she had behaved herself worse than before and on Friday evening last, about eight o'clock, she procured a quantity of turpentine and grease and threw it upon the fire, which set the chimney in a blaze. The engipes arrived, and the fire- men on going down stairs found the prisoner nearly naked, and pretending to be in hysterics, at the same time crying out, Save my mistress—I have set the house on fire." When the fire in the chimney had been extinguished, flames were observed to burst forth from the window of one of the bed-chambers, in which the bed and furniture were disco- vered to be on fire, and indeed nearly consumed. The pri- soner had, the same afternoon, procured a quantity of shavings from Mr. Titterton's shop, and told two boys in his employ that they would see a fine sight very soon, add- ing, that her mistress would not care about her chimney being on fire, "but she would make her care by setting some- thing else on fire. Mr. Titterton estimates his loss at £50, He is insured in the Sun and Phoenix Fire Offices. The prisoner was remanded. THE CHU RCH.—"It is confidently asserted that Earl Grey is consulting with the Episcopal Bench, for the pur- pose of curtailing the immense revenues of some of the Bishoprics. In future the income of a Bishop is not to exceed £ 5000 a-year, the surplus of his revenues is to be a fund in aid of the building and repairing churches and chapels. The two Irish mitres, now vacant, are at once to come under the new arra n,ement." I-laTripslili,e Telegraph. On Monday last, during the absence of the family, some thieves entered the house of Mr. Cockrell, of No. 125, Tot- tenham-court-road. It appears that Mr. Cockrell and family left town a few days since, leaving his house and property in the care of a female servant, who, on the above day, absented herself to visit some friends. She returned home about eight o'clock in the evening, afid, proceeding to the kitchen, she ate her supper, after which she went up stairs to fasten the windows, &c. On entering the second floor apartment she got a chair to pull down the blinds, when she was seized by a ruffianly-looking fellow, who drag- ged her on the fioor, and, holding a large cook-shop knife over her, threatened to cut her throat if she made the least alnrm. She begged for mercy, and promised not to make a noise, on which her assailant took possession of a bundle, which he had previously packed up, and left the room, threatening to murder her if she made any alarm. On his leaving the room, however, the girl proceeded to the window, and watched until she saw him in the street, when she screamed and called out "stop thief!" when the fellow ran off, and. dropped the bundle in the road. He made his escape. She hastened down stairs until she arrived at the hall, when she fell down in hysterics, in which state she was discovered by several of the neighbours. On searching the.place they found that all the drawers were rifled, and the whole of the silver plate and other property packed up ,in bundles, ready to have been removed from the premises. Information of the transaction was immediately forwarded to the police. Tuesday forenoon, the cash box, which, besides money, contained a watch and other valuables, was stolen from the Black Lion public house, Spitalfields, by a party of four men who had watched an opportunity to possess themselves of it during the temporary absence of Mrs. Bovine, the land- lady, from the bar. Luckily, however, their close whisper- ing, and other conduct, had excited the suspicion of a young man, who was employed at work at an opposite house. He watched their departure, and observing that one of them had a tin box partly concealed under his arm, attempted to stop them. The fellow who carried the cash box threw it down and escaped, but two of the party were secured, and proved to be well-known thieves, named Richard Goulee and Charles Daff. The cash box was picked up and re- turned it was locked and all the property safe. Little more than a week since, Mrs. Cooper, of the Nag's Head, in the Hackney-road, was robbed of a cash box, containing X35 in gold and silver, a £300 bill af Exchange, and other property. Two men had been in the house from seven in the morning till between one and two in the afternoon, watching the opportunity. Unfortunately the property was not missed for two hours after their departure, and has not since been heard of,

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