1845.) 
tg e poeemi for 
alm unanimously. 
e prepared and n 
found 
ie 
1) 
meeting at considerable length, and _ resolutions affirm- 
Hr 
F= 
ad ions, 
cognise and to inculcate. The very v 
THE NEWSPAPER. 
akak aa that I deemed it necessary public! 
were agreed on es of Charch authority which it is al 
yt ose en 
ike the: ty ofan all to | 
Petitions to the Kapila an the vehe | Bisho 
menci 
en of them ioe been resisted proves, if proo 
necessity of their being asserted, a 
ever r suffering pa a a into oblivion. In 
ospect of those peinje being, 
by our rey. primate; 
21 
t case (if such there be) has been created by the 
as priva ately encou- 
prin- | pre: 
th p of the diocese himself, who has 
with which 
‘were | raged several of his clergy holding Tractarian doctrines 
nd of our | to introduce obsolete and long-forgotten observances, 
nelasion, I | with the intention of furnishing himself with an excuse 
te | for interposing his authority. An i 
$ 9 ya iia ini enforced f that 
T us of his effecting, if it be *s good pleasure, | moreover of opinion tha e ware 
the "utmost consternation b: the apprehension "Be ien oe questions which (inconmnersns ib such i kea tions were not acceptable either to 
wom by poison ost part, are the subjects of them) must be se aa ; 
veral of her nearest relatives, inclading her children Miche ti clipe. rape E med Along anything better | fr e ciy aes ponsiblity 
; mother, and brother ale i re , the an an empty name. I am, ge ar brethren, you rom introducing them on his own respo sibility 
the eee of Hawk E is affectionate friend and brother, H. EXETER,” | l he could furnish himself with t for 
ree mga to for ae ry F coman, “the son of a| Thi s le tter has excited mu os conversation and com- | interfering in the character of a mediator.’” 
H nyoa ome l on the business | erage dea nage it for-| Haswell.—lIt ma red that, at the time of 
azie i : . 
lp any “ ‘attempt to approa ach r exact | the e pone in the rang colliery, in September last 
: he char: = before her marriage, and had some | observance of the rubric,” unless the rosy à ‘shall ascer- when jd of lives were sacrifice . Mr. : 
age se ba mea of whom, tig sai r mtg a prens that the wish of their congregations d Mr. Lyell, hes geologist, were commis- 
e facts were brought to | fuvour of su uch an n advance ” which it is conclud d fro 
a as’ hey ‘te hes hone he a à ed from joie y Gover age i x Boy: end the inque est, an nd to 
pees eae win aie which led to. in- Acting apparently upon impression, some of ‘the | disasters in future. The report of ‘these gentlemen 
appears that t clergy o which has been recently presented to Sir J. ratam, is 
miry 
u ddenly ill with vomiting a ndo 
er symptoms attendant | n | 
noxious forms, Eager: 
used to 
efu: 
and of the parishioners. 
this 
ren y: who’ te bag 7a the ob- 
aban them at 
The or gor eches 
e more ot cee 
, of St s for th 
d; after which his sister, the accused, having taken Sidwell’s and St. Jam mes "sy 0 had bee n held up as lation of dangerous mines. The hs stg of Te pran = 
furniture, removed suddenly to ter. Ti i 
i tances attendant upon his death led b J hes arrive 
e peeecn 2 the neighbourhood to infer that it r f the lait e Rev. Mr. Cariyon of St. me cere at that Ad = an = was iS dean for Geta 
wobable that deceased had been poisoned magis on bite ci He las i yield to the | beds of coal, of ‘terior barm which ij is : wae 
rates were made acquainted withthe matter, and the age of the parishioners. | The Rev. Mr. Courtenay, able seam isexhausted. This 
ach and intestines of the deceased, together ver, curate of St. Sidw f working th th d first vis considered to be 
ontents, taken from the body and hi d o f the g tity of 
. Herepath, the analytical chemist, for his inspection, in the E for som pm which has n A been a lt fi l f of tt sted 
om tity of a tended with very MARADT results. } e mine falls in in, the upper 
an 
pprehended, and 
in 
abitants last week addr ess 
ed a se to their 
of th 
a sturbed ad rast and which t cause the qcomation 
di qas 
the ng know 
: pe reolectl by py inhabitants ter with 
od s of the Pati 2 family, | 
rm 
ery 
the Puseyite practices of their 
tion with thea accompanying notice e from ‘the warden 
of gas which is f 
b 
working the coal it 
This 
at 
te support the iain 
n, wal as | | customary to grein large masses 
are allowed to remain till a 
n legitimate. child, he h band, her mother, adjoining the | These * pillars” sme oe g 
hree or four other persons wi she was con- principal street. The Rev. F. pk Aa who isa pae of the works is obtained, and the 
ected, had all died suddenly, and had been affected upne of the Earl of Devon ing the ck jade.” 
ptoms of a similar character county | prayers, d } 1 | led jer | Finally these jud e take y l u 
g i dof tl ordered | his Te et. Phe, outrag I bjec! f stre I | in, leavi 1 ity above. Ti fl t 
hich met on Thursday, and the necessary | at a meeting of the s ti i 
g been taken for the exhumation of some which, however, pel ey its aaka toa mart ase 4 ‘and it is from these gon, or piis gfe the 
o i m t was adjourned. 
i Benestay the prisoner wa 
s 
gain brought “or oh se 
request that the obn: 
carat aon d adjourned fi 
ight b 
oxious practices m mig 
ht be discon: 
the answer. |t the workings or renders them eh mre As 
h 
uantity of pet psa 
bout 150 persons, and was heidi in Beed church, 
it 
| barometer, hice gas expands and is pth from the caverns 
into the mine by ea own elasticity. At such times the 
gistrates, and after r sey eral ‘mines es had bee The r of Mr. C y dj bly lighter than com 
of her brother, incl t ith Hect the top of f the mine, „and krepi = 
é ys the meeting were not “ oaan ten. =a the cavities fi À by the | 
Cont n -x prisoner that now was T time for | ants at church, 4 _or at all ‘interested it ordinary modes of il 
r statement. The prisoner, in a firm i f If, however, the gas remaived 
3 aiden i A not guilty ; my brother ought to be tionable forms, aging ‘that because ah had lot pone | in those ee cavern: the 
d well as me. ant prisoner regula ar qual iniia es, tne d tt 
pe amia to Taunton Gaol for the murder of her | discontinue t He other reasons, saying that | by the ventilating currents of 
eer, Charles Dimond. The asec was then | if he yiee p "should feel unworthy « r Er 4 ane: and mine; but the e qua ntity of gas varies with e ery c 
3 1th f her mother, Mary I Dimond, that | he considered their request “m ing, ntly of ether ccchaetences.. 
: evidence For instance, when the pressure oft the atmo: osphere i is 
3 strengthening his arguments. The meeting, which diminished, 
Eseter.—The Bishop of Exeter has ithd 
oe from the Archbishop of Canterbury, « calling | 
determined re the congregati on 
ioh shali be sanctioned by the whole Church. This 
wing let 
s EBishops to ie , 1845.— 
f the diocese, in the 
here. 
th 
roars 
first stone of which, 
Bre 
Trai ‘Gra 
ce | from 
people and hooted and hisse 
church, he was vat on ie a 
tng gh thong 
it is said, a = be lai w in n 
has 
large concourée at 
od eo the aaron streets 
ne ows va ntilation is insufficien 
aa impregnated with the gas to the pe nh 
my © — 
Barnfield in three weeks. or e matte point and a indiscretion on the pa art of the 
When Mr. Courtenay, on Sania a last, 
e pulpit oe Saal z om Faaa n at once sphe re, pipka an explosion. The remedy recom- 
in vening, upon his ret mended by Messrs. Far: and Lyell is to jioiie 
y aday 
seer for the ventilation of the goaf caverns. They 
Parga that a lar ge iron pipe, about t 12i inc ches i in äia- 
t 
é sneer keng of the Saori Pe 
ese the excitement is nae 
foe ot 'piepiom iat 
nhay ben the maine). & o the oe a shaft, none 
ent 
ich shall of Tyee aren Shots Che eS “ruth, |W eek, gegen depre change e Church | moveable branch pipe might ascend to the top ey the 
ore effectually labour he great ervice, an d advising jipe till the soutien is settled a goaf vault. The draught of air through the pipe, pro- 
at heart—the restoration of certainty and | authority, were adopted by {5 to 12 2, after a very angry | duced by the ventilating fires, would, it is supposed, be 
ow e atine y Jn pode oa Ae discussion ; but the minority, consisting almost entirely | in general sufficient to draw the gas into it from the 
them in that common effort which his | of you g clergymen, embodie = whic h they averns, and it would be expelled by the upcast shaft 5 
Bonou ce ue intention taproot wie oe a y bat at if that did Te . =. the current of air 
nal settlement, Meany ee ene e Bishop. The amenda! he effect “ that e pipe might be increased, employing a re- 
d k th the views so panty a o> nce th p: 3 + ag far P “i by any pe r ie. nen. O 
ing pt | Bist ith tl Haswell, and inquiring in 
tof the ; determination of the Sa to render apla ol obe- | the exten ay ‘the ieies of what the miners call 
zE di Ishi * choke di +” or “after ccurred to Messrs. 
though I po the , dissatisfaction of the eg ergy at the course taken by day and Lyell that the quantity of gas expl 
arish at oest preza the laity during the recen t agitation.” The cl ergy of | insufficient to produce, by its ignition, the large volume 
ofthe | the dea of Hartland, including Bideford a arbonic gas which constitutes the “ mp” t 
important places in the North of Devon, have agreed to | it appeared must have be nerated by the explosion. 
n address to the bishop, expressing their eaten They inferred, therefore, that the coal-dust in a mine 
that his lordship will not be dete by any “ unconsti- | must be ignited as it is driven along by the force of the 
ional resistance,” and declaring that, while they dis- | explosion, and that the nic acid gas r the 
avow any leaning to the practices of the Charch of| most part, result from the combustion o! those s 
| Rome, they will disregard all ‘‘ unauthorise interfe- a of coal. This supposition was co firmed i 
rence,” and follow his lordship’s admonitions. The ea the Haswell colliery ; tities of parti 
laity of Slapton, Alphington, and other places, on the of charred coal or coke were "found on the pillars an 
other hand, have adopted very sti mt resoluti p onis oi mine near Aar e poin nt of explosion. “a 
opposition these views. One of the resolutions most accidents in PEER 
adopted at the latter place eclares “ That this a ret ogen, the “ ter an pro ces far more 
wholly repudiates the doctrine o assive ra dioi fata! the e yiia. In 
and non-resistance laid down prs inculca! 7 the oar their report, which is likely to lead to im- 
Bishop of Exeter’s ne to the parishes of AS dwell | portant practical conseque Messrs. aday and 
and St. Jam = — from its tself that the Lyell notice the fact that a ajority of the miners who 
sacred ‘name.of r is bei his prelat ined at an inquest were unable to sign their 
n of priate rand the bjug s, thoug f th 7 ee ae 
| of the laity.” This feeli least the 
hout p diocese, and among others first gerbes of Sar ety Coated beans, are 
lia that district of Cornwall o of which Helston, the soene | strongly enforced. 
| of th lunt, Ipswich.—Mary Sheming, w t 
| appears hat the neces A of the several parishes late assizes n Bury St. E ands s, for the eee of he 
all | of the anaes of Kirrier, at hi Martlesham, near Woodbridge, expited 
eie TA these lon the 23d of last month, amongst others ado opted the her ome nce on the drop in front of the County Gaol, 
they hencefon forth be eh Boe t harassin Bo b what: following resolution :—* That, i E opinion of this | Saturday, in the presence of about 10,000 persons, 
? y had nev arber! ey meeting, the necessity for episcopa terference in the | From the time of her condemnation up to the period of 
