THE ees CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL _GAZETTF, 
ral forces of 
йө 
—_ тинт Еро ult to believe that uld | 
o the е kno wledge o of t | No diffieu d 
h Y statement he еен, оп Tuesday і fent. T 
talal not "remember w a i Aone b had ma EU day. 
i 3 dibilik of itne 
5 М lace aforesaid, On ро nts all turned on the cre y 
ue kil ES E te piao the inquest | T hereto, hei excursion tr: эш бы EN e cam hen 
кима ус e е ы күч ay d 28 Bs nt prr NY. m the like aine "by law 
The Coroner int intimated that t the verdict w was, in effect, Ba uU responsi Tor having caused the deaths of these 
the assistant | people, and uch n neglige Tg mte : x de ue €— : 
eedings | slaughter е was on MET p 
dm master, with a | special dtp us The pos И АИ E Patter z rds jury. : геу bend bon О ЗА s 
en terminated, ок occupie e attention the, salt МЕ Rosie aA ovas which өйө o theo 
coroner anc шу ps nine days. pr] any contr d then they would retu Pu à Verdi t of | fu 
Тнк Famar.A casta ON THE NORTH LONDON.— n йодеш! деш h. 
The _ adjourned QUE. on n the } persons killed in the 16 
netior te rminated | | irs Dit a written verdict, of ar the piee is a 
zi The sday. сору 
bad been Considera laxity s ammgement о the m regret that there is no alternative from the 
art of the thre mpanies a return of the weight of €— - to return a verdict of Gw iniy SIE 
excursion trains. ‘h, rs а уз nego d office | Rayner. e tim e 7 оге ur e withou 
at- th Канар 2 erc opinion ire 
m Lu E 25 ыа А Bde MM» 
у м |time in his tructions from the secretary of his railway. 
cursionists to return by the ordinary trains, which | | That n ш er is obstructed by шш or otherwise the 
Of course, created a considerable pressure on the | іше deside e blocked both by telegraph as wellas by out- 
t ign 
it is highl 
uld be clear T ЧЕ ovo "had been given to the ex- | to bep any special eraik either е чы, о бе ег the aire ciel 
et 
ew station. Тһе station master at Kew was | door ві s lord, through you, 
also allowed so much latitude as to ie starting eti Cor - TIEN 2 Ыы. the Меен ри to a nn vhat СЯ ihe, Chri hri tian, ma 4 | 
of excursion trains that he did nob think ап verdict o tud iu fuir ayner. The Foreman | Ameri y wat госта | 
hour эчене z later made any differen nce, а said it did, but the jury desired to recommend him to Mun the AE doing te. лс | 
“Тһе Drum and Fife Band, ” the originators ' of | mercy on account A his youth. The Coroner said that | united. OEA the anti-slavery people ef Beo | 
excursion, were permitted to put on the excursionists |that wasa matter fora jury elsewhere. Тһе Coroner | America. it | 
tick rds, *To leave Kew at 7," though it was | then directed his warrant to issue for th ttal of | slavery questio 
eged that the companies do поб hol mselves | Rayner on the charge of manslaug | 
responsi for whatis put on a exeursionist’s ticket E hen present, and was therefore not apprehended, but | ing th. | 
The natural result of these arrangem was, that it i з understo d that bail for his appearance to stand |s ex Seeds 
before 7 o'clock the station- ra Loir having rial will be tendered, and the Coroner ences the Хоа ampia 
despatched as many exeursionists as he could find room | t list ће should be prepire favourably to consider an g for T 
for іп the ordinary 6:30 passenger train, found himself Van es ei him to bail when he was aree Ш. E t еў have bee - n оС to ^" 
besieged by an impatient crowd who were anxious to| Асо CHARLTON TUNNEL OF THE NORTH | D eT dq ын asthe пайа ДЖЕЛ AEN 
et home, and who actually saw in the station t On v ccurred | aor ety лей: mo in fict; 
empty train sent to take them back, and had on their | in the Charlton Tunnel, between Woolwich and Black- mation, but in the P 
tickets the words, * To leave Kew at 7. s therefore | heath. In the place where a shaft had been cutin|each of the contending pem Ee stil 1 à 
his own line was clear at that hour, the station | making the tunnel, the timber roofing placed over it eatable overruling indication M 
master, under the pressure of the excurs ts, though | had rotted, and while the 6.50 р.м. train from London CAO IHOFECE d E o 
in the very face of his only direct order, started the | to Dartford was passing through the earth above fell, | North and South, and, what р die =: 
8 o'clock excursion train a little before 7. The train letting down about two truck ecd d sand upon the ш: he South нашу considerat pet адет 
proceeded along the ы lines of three com- | carr riages, but without injury to them or the passengers. b & ken of as the om 
panies, through numerous stations and junctions, and | The ш riv е ише what ha d happened, pushed on {о 
with unusually sharp gradients ut curves, at а үс | ш oolw ati 
nr estimated by competent witnesses at 30 o d down = Чор all trains. The express | which 
40 miles an hour, and finally hee throngh Kentish | followed was detained an hour and a qu се - cere 
Town station, while the erem train was slo wly hea th, DEN Е y of labourers had removed 
b e lin of danger at 
s ion в 
eline without any sig a 3 n the regular trafic was r 
The dri ез орны ннан 
oler pe ly, an s the and | | 
ler persons, that the — раш anxiliary and f 
ain, were pia signifying that all е s right. The Obituary, 
driver of the ballast train believed t t the line was TE sidence in Albemarle | Villae, St карасын smee, at bis 
clear, inasmuch as a regular Quiet ne had | tro sno е ak M 
army in 1799, Ra became captain in 1804. He served 
just passed, the next , passenger „train „was not дие with the Tth. Fusiliers in the expedition against Copenhagen i s 
for an hour, and t wa kat due | 1807 ; with ns т battalion of the 14th, under Sir David 
Ш some time . „Не signalled however | and vas in the retreat an "with ono d iis a ij у кета 
to the in charge at Kentish Town for permission | the battalion to Waichéfeu аба ее s реони at the siege of 
to shunt, and receive permission to so. Thes l- ше He Ue ete ie lennik dolcnel d n 1837. He had 
шап, whose name is Rayner, gave the permission by | reached t anced age of 85. 
: CAPTAIN WILLIAM D late o e 84th н ас 
i p his hands, ‚Не is: Іза young man only 19 years | died at Brighton on the Sth inst., at the a ч of 86 years. 
Ti 
since January ab а salary of 14s. a а week, his 
ан о ki € being 151 hours end day, and 10 hours 
е next, "us was allowed for his meals, which he 
hem 
unable to recollect whether" Ne had given leave to the 
үн of ааа ballast train to come out of the siding ; 
nf 
м founded on the right of the 
in sp E the y dem e d piter 
governors of St. Bartholomew's Hospital to the rectory of St. Fre authority е Gov 
sma 
m 
pee Mei 
"le rie up to He a Fellow of the Les А ary ated and pt Uni 
У bad al Society, and served in due course the овое of МА н 
a They Me the он X тане. the guard, ыле = them of Sion College. Не was the author of ** Reflections Sover 
Pu e ce ала реп or эш the Expediency of a Hara bann o England a nd the 
th еса Church of Rome being. holden with a view moda 
s time, ya Re Differences," published in 1819, e oT fi many other 
clear | "TES On the essential characteristics of the Church of En gland. 
i ugh t the Kentish io ithout 
ын opping. 5 as чту н gius ейнег Ње епрї 
sponsible for running through when the danzger-si nals ji f 
d bi , or з si Mun was eder c for not basi ü se 15 HORIS 
als up. e evidence of the last n Mrs. S Г 
Rayner gave them the si nal to e out; th ae QU "os 
Ve evidence of x disintere Ml нанын Who. I "e following letter from je ey Harriet Basher Stowe to 
ie grass smok his pipe he time, as to he he | Lord Shaftesbury on t Ae ished :— | Government is the dicm 
Sated that the aguas posted je но ыр men ы ут Тһе тегу pleasant acquaintance which 1 жааз ot tho Nonb АНА 
At the time the shunti g commenced, their ü er business ad ыйа It remembr cial yon iit t hio d 
occupying their attention. „they did not afterwards notice 
and philanthropic MÀ and espettallo the part which ES 
in originating t 
not al the | took in originatin at address of the women of En gland to 
^ du m: hi b dence of the driver of the excursion the women of A н ica on the subject of slavery, hh first 
train, у ре guard and two railway servants travelled in | reached this eountry gh me, have moved me to addre | 
A : o n g most positively that „the dà he fit representative of that portion of the Christian ; 
ы, а ч My and the main when t publie in England on e have most relied for moral sup- ; 
i M QN up. It reall resolved itself into this— | port during our long a perate conflict with slaver t is 
а Pew Ao give € ? He must say th not to be di d that one unfortunate result o our American : 
н Aai MA eye ^x remarkably, evi crisis h en à weakening of national confidence in England і 
jar тое » - ET e time. He e to | and a feeling of great sensitiveness and soreness in our relations r 
тера thà pha А ore, the responsibility was either with | with the cou Did this exist alone in the m f 4 
еса эр ne ion t ow, Rayner had | cians, it wou Ges to be regretted, but I am sorry to be і 
oa павы ш at ПЕН Кач mann со ined to say that it probably lies deepest in the minds of 
orig p et t. He said he did not give | that Christian sud philanthropic class who have hitherto been | 
és up. -O e ou d that the danger- | the closest M g bond between the two countries, In this d 
3 contradicted by four | class the Tes x the intensity of wounded friendshi 1 
admitted | bemus disappoin confidence, that they were little pr 
the accident which he repeated on Tuesda: PEUT] 
y, and 0 act the part they have for years pu f 
made а oe uu ML and Bees А could | peacemakers. е M nor "be disguised that they regard | mi 
on the- asior, m: the very crisis of a 
