28 AUGUST 1852, Page 7

Greenhalgh, a boy who suffered in the collision at the

Bolton station, has since died. On Thursday afternoon an inquest was held on the bodies of Bancroft the pointsman and Greenhidgh. The facts deposed in evidence sub- stantially corroborate our report elsewhere. The Jury returned the following verdici- In the case of the boy Greenhalgh, 'Manslaughter' against Bancroft; in the case of Bancroft, Temporary insanity.' And the Jury cannot separate without express- ing their opinion that the servants employed on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Rail- way from Liverpool to Bolton, on Monday the 23d of August, were totally inadequate to meet the extraordinary demands upon them consequent upon running several ex- cursion-trains, and permitting excursionists to travel in ordinary trains. They also desire to deprecate, in the strongest terms, the running of trains of such unusual lengths, and with a deficiency of locomotive power to work the same. And further, they desire to state, that there was great irregularity in the starting and arrival of trains on the day before named; no less than seven trains, (two of them numbering upwards of thirty carriages each,) and extending nearly a mile in length, accumulating on one line of rails at the Bolton station, rendering an increase of servants indispensable to the safe and effectual working of the line.'

By the explosion of a boiler at West Bromwich, yesterday, three persons were killed and seven wounded.

A serious fire broke out at Hamburg on the 225, whioh it took fifty en- gines three hours to que ,oh. Had it not been for the great exertions made by the firemen, there would have been a "great fire," as the warehouses in the neighbourhood were full of oil and cotton stores.

There was a fire this morning, in Budge Row, in the warehouse of Messrs. Leblond, copper-plate printers. A great deal of property was destroyed, but the exertions of the firemen confined the flames to the upper floors.

John Arone, a foreigner, was convicted today before Mr. Henry at Bow Street, for sending a threatening letter to Lord Malmesbury. He pleaded that he had Buffered many wrongs at the hands of British Consuls abroad, notably in Syria, and he seemed to hold the actual Foreign Minister respon- sible. The threat was that "the names of Bellingham and Percent should not be forgotten, and that a Secretary of State should die in the lobby of the

House of Commons." He was ordered to find bail to keep the peace fd twelve months towards Lord Malmesbury.