PENRITH HERALD and East Cumberland and Westmorland News. NO. 446 - First Week in Quarter Registered for Transmission Abroad./Price 1D. NEWS ITEMS. IT HAS BEEN DECIDED by the committee on the liquidation of NAPOLEON III's Civil List, that the Chinese collection at Fontainebleau and the armoury at Pierrefond are the property of the State, and ought not to be restored to the Empress. THE ADMIRALTY have sanctioned the following additions being made to the medical comforts supplied to sea-going vessels, viz. : Preserved carrots, 4 oz. for every individual of the complement of all rates; also a certain proportion of egg-powder, in quantities ranging from 10lb. for first rates to 3lb. for gunboats, &c.; for vessels proceeding to the West Coast of Africa, East Indies, and China double these quantities is to be supplied. DAMAGES £1205, WERE GIVEN at Wicklow Assizes against the Dublin and Wicklow Railway Company, at the suit of MRS. SLATTERY, widow of a law clerk, who was killed on the line at Lansdowne railway-crossing on the night of the 9th May last. Four children are to share the sum. This is the second trial; on the first £1400 damages were given. A SINGULAR FATALITY has happened at Calstock, Cornwall. A youth named JOSEPH PERKINS and another lad, wishing to amuse themselves by using an old pump as a cannon, took a quantity of gunpowder from the Cornwall Mineral Railway Works, where the father of PERKINS is employed, and filled their pockets with it. While entertaining themselves as described, a flash ignited the powder in PERKIN's pocket, and he was so fearfully burnt that he died soon afterwards. BREACHES OF THE MASTERS' AND SERVANTS' ACT. - CATHARINE HOWARD, a corset-maker, and FERDINAND BATTAGHIERINI, a toilet-glass framer, have appeared at Clerkenwell Police-court for a breach of the Masters' and Servants' Act, in leaving their employment without notice. The former pleaded that she had stayed away on account of a sick child, and, as her master only wished her to be warned, she was warned accordingly, besides having to pay the costs. The frame-maker, who had been paid 15s. in advance, was allowed fourteen days to finish his work, if he did not prefer going to prison.