Fes.. 6.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
= a 
enga ee ed in devouring Newland’s 
the adjoining tenant, 
ated from the stable by a 
The pigst 
the , that the mt were overpowered and driven from 
their prey. pri was by | this time in $a a state 
agony, that hum shoot him. 
The Murder on whe G ager Railway.— mn hav 
_Tw 
been arrested $ in Ireland on the charge of stealing hay the 
apPe arance of ith the 
description give 
of Mr. Green, sh a person has been 
him, and it is expected, fr rom 0 other 
will p 
of Dennis Doolan, alleged phate: be 
nt over to identify 
« that he 
crime. 
pery of the 
aan us. 
Plan for detecting Theft—A gardener not 
far da Wapeg ist; % = much eri ed by frequent 
tubs. The pond having been emptied of ice, was in a 
short time ‘filed again by the heavy fall of snow. The 
snow, and the fish were 
ie; but such was the effect 
abod 
aoa oe pay snow-water, that every fis h went blind 
aware of the contents of the book. The real publishe d been 
prosecated for it; and, basin g plead ay har phew dis. 
arsed upon his own recogni Bon He trusted that he should 
receive the same leni tor General observed, that 
a. [) 
. and there 2 appears very little chance 
day morning 
‘oud, stationer, having occasion for a housekeeper, 
oder tied | in i Daren of Monday for a widow to pape 
tend his dom affairs. Before eleven the wi 
ues! 
Str 
fanpese- 
e namber potting towards the house, and in 
minutes Mr. Strou ds shop _and parlour w yl ies 
tt e adve 
ser, and clamorous! y setting ries their soaishcessin s for 
the situation. soon got wind bad i“ Stroud 
had advertised for a wee and pe ane floc from - 
quarters to see the ladies in search o 
widows—young, pe siaiadeg ty 
— an 
cham 
and olathe thin and stout, | 
depredations on his fences, and una ble to discover the 
enders, resorted t ti 
offenders sorte himself. 
He had some large hedge-stakes peireehs ted ~ an au 
and the holes filled with gunpowder, Like many belore, 
the stakes were stolen, and a little time et ng 
gence that a certa in person’ s chimney-piece had bee 
much 1% the ot 
of the inmates, Inquiry convinced the owner of the stakes 
who had stolen them, nor was the sche omer to the 
: e-u: 7 . a . h. + 
the room without effec 
A Hpoignen. sar * sehaotanstt who was as fond of the 
use of his grog as his ire was asked the difference be- 
i n? ‘ When I’ve drunk five 
e pedagogue my gravity 
Vanishes, and fhe  eainion pare to operate.’ 
th d ¢, > bs ted 
t, many y ished the art . hatching 
by the mob, who gave e free as “they 
arrived and departed. AS eehath. the confusion became so 
gre t for to preserve order. 
as ve e rou e 
up, which stepped a handso 
vidoe and her daughter, who bil ome from Essex to 
nswer dash apni om ; hee A gp sooeeene he the mob 
in ie amid lo you meseicts 
hus ile ma! “ He’s get a fe ohn ng ma 
got?” and other pai. anata 
“ What Rae jaan you 
widow and her daughter, seeing the position of af- 
ted. 
The 
ae  Seemnedistely retreat! 
ing to the spot, and the mob increased till about three 
0” laa at which time it oan calculated that upwards of 
600 females had applied for the situation 
ngli 
ducks, by the following piers _ method. a one seaso ecipe for aking trad servant girl in Edin- 
he raised near 500 ducklings ‘by means of an incons aaar- burgh, who ke t so broadly as at times 
able number of old pps hag 2 ay six or eight sets of | hardly to be comprehended even by her mistress, on being 
eggs. As they 78 s, he put aa er a hen, | asked how she contrived to make herself understood when 
which sat upon oa A ay he then | i= serv England, where she had previously been, re- 
we hill ‘ Sat ied, ‘* Oh, it’s quite eas yi yeve nothing to do but to 
them every t twelve oan — they were hatched, which pereres out a e e the words a bit chow in the 
th, ti f mi 
pied yemtben me Rai OTs a moni n some! imes in a ew Indiana Eloquence —The RSE gees 
h t sitting for tw i by a member of the Indiana 
or three mame 
eggs beforea 
care to 
Io rainy or cold sini he laid the 
n them every t e hours. e means 
he cy cnt sen thr: ao “the aid of ge or ve 
ducks only, between five and six hundred one 
“ iguiti i 
Antiguities—A curious discovery bas just beea made 
near Arnaval, in the Lae ue af a Meurthe, highly 
interesting to antiquaries. A ploughman hav g bro 
Legisla- 
ture, ona ee to encourage the killing af pies which in 
on has elie been surpassed :— rgd weak ae 
wolf is the ferocious anima al: that 
pce pra 1 
He creeps fro rom m bis | nN rking-place at the hou midnig 
when all nature is locked in the silent roe ala of Mor- 
| th 
out 
be sent fe rth to the world i persons could be protected on the 
ground of being ignorant cf the works they ished. Publishers 
were responsib e, and must take the co: ; for if authors 
ns DB 
of sedition and blasphemy could not procure persons to pave sh 
for them, there would soon be me end of such ae an sa 
=. The 
nee of the Court was, that defendant should be imprisoned 
four months. 
mapas Clerk, v. the of Norfolk.— Canse 
— Mor Duke 
was shown sellin a role obtained ies the part of defendant, the 
object of which was to an ord 
4 
notro 
bg rerrquse to theissne a d ane reference to his own ner ae so 
we e Mr pares ma which def: ndant 
ag sane 
to ys 
and als: 
ordered hi produce the parcels set 
insvection ak plaintiff, ¥ which it was pert d mizht di 
se his 
title to lands not owly i» the parish but elsewhere, as almost 
every deed in the duke’s possession was included in the order 
Ss stor sent. Counsel having been heard in support of the 
nai done befor 
judge at the original hearin er point, however, it 
bo Se the — of be hes that the rule paced to be yer ae 
pic plo i Baron not exceed his powers. Rule dischar, 
oo amt Court.—The —_ of th 
against Escott.—This was a pr weet = an inhabitant — a 
parish of » Lincolnshire, agains' ry gine » FB Esentt, 
vicar of that parish, for refusii ing to ae canpened: tie totes 
So erof Thomas yo It sppeared that ‘the Vicar had refused 
the rite of burial in this case, on the ground that the laws and 
constitutions of the Church required him to regard no person as 
a la minister who had net t episcop«lly ord: and 
that the child having been by by an anorda’ned mi-ister 
the Wesleyan M a the Church of Eng- 
details She eee of 
during subsequent periods. Counsel fr tie plain that 
the doctrines ot the Chi ch in all ages allowed lay b: pein < ibe 
val d; thet they were tolerated until the con'erence 
Court im 163; and that if ali 
clergymen. of the Church o 
beat oa eof Ager cher even of the highest rank, 
to the — as the people ot Ireland . 
of dissent Ts, must necessarily be 
pheus; and ere the portals of the east are unbarred, or 
h igt Din * ; Wh? g ld ij y whole litters 
prietor of the field was advised to make an excavation 
rou nd the “ one, a having done.so, discovered a deep 
hich w 
uss 
of France in the year 7 
sens, -< hes Arabian erty sacsiemes Moussa ineesadied: 
after having subdued Fra return to eg se scus, to 
the Calif Valid his mast = po poe 4 p Sete h Germany, 
the Dardanelles, and Asia Min nor, threatening to panes 
M wh ould serve a 
a mode of communication with the diffe 
his gigantic empire. Itis geet? that VAs 
of Aquitania, who in 724 op saad esigns. 
tombs, the coffins, and this g toning in: struck in the 
nape of Mous ssa, appear to countenance the idea that this 
ied ees we. mporta of this in- 
vention, by which steam a = = pecpeticn by the per- 
petua Se a instead of peeve has been so satis- 
factorily ved by hy f the raced a that 
Gov caseuee ed on adopting it in the 
navy. Measures ae poaee been taken on the Céhtinen t 
for p> fh cay var cg of several steamers on the paces 
nd in Breme ne. bere 
n a company b 
fees farsic on 83 ne purpose. A 
aa 
and New York, 
z Pa oo! i . 
65 iy peeeea of high re spestouny 
good bus iness, and t natile | pedigree, is in immediate want of 
a Wife, one who is. qualified to comport with = Sea nd 
man, it Sars "sda 
ee c possessed of at least one hun- 
ich he a gpd her to 
or aor arriage, and think 
in pane re of all ‘This ay 
Post- 
that she must bei in fi 
4 
pie a — 
take the libert: 
office. —N.B. 
age 
berty to tires a line to B. through t the 
As to 
Ry gh caktraatbairgas ce ocea- 
- frosts ‘induced Mr. ei of Gotha 
to put his gold and silver fish into 
dagt: Pe 
New Version.—A clergyman in the north, very 
homely in his address, hate for his text a passage in the 
pia: s—' 1 : * my has “Se mei are ars.” se Ay 
mised his by way of introduction, ‘* 
fei in your ests, ‘David, did we ?—gin ye ad | 
might have said it at your leisure, my mon.’ 
said 
apse 
Pics URT OF puta gre . Lockyer.—1u this care the tw: 
pit . Eémund Lockyer claim 
jo a of 5000. 
sums of ae and ‘0001. given on chek marriage. 
was of 0] n that the noe a peal 
the Sa gti placed hi 
decreed accordingly. 
wodes 
eo ay the ‘extent oe the 
other ng 
rul 
admitted that it had hitherto been sp et to 
of law, that an ademption in such cases satisfied the wh EACY 5 
bi Raed sears from the registrar’s books that the two 
the supposition rested were misrep rted, they relied face 
ples of equity for a decision, which wo s 
the law a rrect injustice. The Lord Chancellor ob- 
servi struck with the mees of his 
deci i nt case, as well asin others; as by that 
decision, to the su; le of law, rtion give: 
a person placing hi in ki is, ed a legacy, 
ver 
at . The two cases on which the rule mainly rested 
been found by an examination of the registrar’s book to be 
is , and what Lord Ek ied in milar case 
med ve iounded on , it ceased to be an au- 
thority e public and the fe reatly indebted to 
ec 
fow 
only cn the 
_ of equity, and the id t 
trary doctrine,the patina niece were enti ix nt to the dif- 
ference bet ween the portion and the amount given by the wi 
reed accordi 
ag 's Bencr.— Queen v. Hetheringt rs J 
General prayed for judement aon iH. Hevheri 
in the Strand, icted as 
poten 
tures. Mr. Thomas j 
canse ane there should not be a new ‘trial. on the ground that 
this was offence punishable at common law, there being 
la perro 
bei zed Ww: 
ou see full ‘right of Christi-n burial. In defence of the Viear it it 
contended that although the Cattolic Church at one one time 
Er 
~ 
the fact that the person who performed alleged b ape ad- 
Mnitted not ap that he bad. never been ont in ‘ined, bot that he had 
en from his o' ter baptis: 
no authority ev own sect to admin’ m; and 
hence infe i were valid, 
there was nothing '0 prevent pers»ns in dition of life from 
bay g their own children. Althou: Vicar had refused te 
es by a uasio! 
~ the body, and the beil of the church was t 
ended that this proceeding on the part of the Vicar prov 
that he had not a from intolerance, b 
of a church ; ne that by allowing the 
his is churchyard, while 
rae own within the 
mo ol 
en eerny act 
ef a Perera ae eens 
gas a satisfact 
was xiven. The co the 9 ban! 
ing in re t» what are ny deposits, ney kept 
by custon ers ata banker's. He stated that sums of m ney pad 
to the credit Of with a tanker are, both in fact and in 
of. een 
ems d the general 
pt Ber a Teceived in Sag course of one pe ay may ro presented 
t:me during banking-rours of the next. If the pecagy 4 
pony are to show that a commentary on the (ld Testament pees fail to Sage it with po able diligence, the debt in 
Was indicta le. The Court of opin’ ou: teak Uke nes eed respect of which the check is given is discharged by his lach-: 
apon Christianity it-elf, and that the Old and etc ange Seiugh mg to a sat Sion of such dett. ‘Im the 
Mere dot i ee a eon prevent «se a Mr. cm ra having a large sum to his credit with 
The Comt dd Ee aha ace ‘was any ground for grant- | Messrs. W: right, lsth of November drew a check in 
bs se Pe hf og © Faerie ee “is by defendant in mti- favonr of sal boxsey = 251. This check mizht have been pre- 
re oaghg ‘ bpp freon ie nara sented before the bankrujtcy; and had it been so presente, it 
qhainted with the affidavi nology 1, he woul¢ | wo uid hay be id. The holder, however, kept the check, and 
 eihlertibtioe-Co aust ——— : or, as he should hope, | Omitted to present mnoies to the bankers that be be: a it. 
pres ox einen oes i poe | ‘The holder, against the drawer of the 
ra total remission of pur bad not known that bis | check, not agaist tne bankers, for want of privity bern between them. 
SS ao : debtors of the customer, and at 
name had been : im was he | The bankers were 
