Saturday 20 Sep 1845 (p. 3, col. 4) INQUESTS. ----- (Before Mr. CARRICK, County Coroner.) An inquest was held at Eamont Bridge, near Penrith, on Tuesday evening, on the body of Samuel CRISP, railway labourer, aged 22 years. The deceased, on Monday afternoon, was driving one of HUTCHING and BROWN's carts, in which were two or three women and children,-deceased being seated on the fore-end of the cart on the far side. The horse had been trotting until it reached the ascent on the bridge, when it slackened its pace; and deceased, who was intoxicated, struck it sharply across its hind quarters, when it sprung forward, and deceased losing his balance fell over to the near side, and the wheel passed over his hip and bowels. He was immediately removed to a neighbouring public-house, where he lingered until the same night, when he died of rupture of the stomach. Verdict accordingly. The deceased was a stranger in the district. Shortly before death, he told one of the females who attended upon him that he was a native of Leighton Buzzard, in Bedfordshire, and requested her to communicate his fate to his father, who lives there. (Before Mr. THOMPSON, Coroner for Westmoreland.) A POACHER ACCIDENTALLY SHOT BY HIS OWN GUN. At Langdale, in the parish of Orton, on Monday last, on the body of Thomas SHEPHERD, of that place, labourer, aged 55, who came by his death under the following circumstances:-Deceased was much addicted to poaching, and had left his home on the Saturday previous to go in pursuit of game on Ellergill Common, taking with him a double-barreled gun, which he had taken in pieces to enable him to put it in his pocket. He was found by some shepherds about three o'clock in the afternoon, by the side of a wall, quite dead, with the different parts of the gun lying near him and his jacket and trowsers nearly burnt away. There was a large wound on his left breast, which apparently had been produced by the firing of the gun. One of the barrels of the gun had been discharged, and the other was loaded. Deceased was a weakly sort of person, and afflicted with an asthmatic complaint, and it is supposed, had gone to rest himself against the wall, and whilst there, the barrels had tumbled out of his pocket and struck against a stone, and one of them so discharged. The Jury being of that opinion, returned a verdict that deceased "accidentally shot himself." On the same day, at Winton, near Kirkby Stephen, on the body of the infant child of Matthew HODGSON, of that place, which had been playing on the road, and run over by some carts laden with lime, belonging to Messrs. POWLEY, of Kirkby Stephen, and killed on the spot. Verdict-"Accidental Death."