140 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° 9 
ernment ina one. He dwelt for some time constituency, and to substitute another in its place? Bice biome ere | place on Saturday, a few miles from town, in the presence 
hardships connected mal renewal of as le called on to establish a leasehold franchise of fourteen with- 
femmchines: h, tiring out the patience of the bona trugets fr out even an obligation to pay the rate which gave ‘unwed sy In — rd R. ie be rG.} Rega ’ lh H. Hardinge, Sir F, 
would induce him to don his right rather than subject him- | towns the franchise was at one stroke to be reduced from 10/. to | Burdett, Lord Ingestre, and other _gentlemen. A boat 
self to protracted li .. Both bills, he owned, would have | 5/. wished there was a more satisf mode of defining | 23 feet long and 7 broad, filled in with solid timber and 
the effect of the existing doubt; but while the Go- | the chise ; and the evil of a doubtful chise was greatly clampe ed together r with s spike nails, was placed in a la 
vernment in a straightforward manner, Lord Stanley’s | aggravated by the unfortunate difference among the judges. B: . Se eh he att 
bill would do so by as discreditable a trick as he ever saw intro- | were they to.be told that they were not to correct the acknow- 
duced into the business of legislati e real object of the | ledged al of the registration until Parliament had passed an | and struck abaft the ‘starboard ‘bow, and instantaneously 
was the distribution of political power in Ireland. But | act to define the hise> He (Sir R. Peel) had incurred obli- | seattered into a thousand fragments. At the moment ot 
that amatter not to be decided by the gain of an election, or | gation by the Catholic Relief «It otorious that in car- rg the water parted, a nd _ 
by the balance of influence on division. It by the | rying that bill thi to contend wit scruples of the ‘ me 
bearing of thei relations the question must be de- | Sovereign. Those scrup ere overcome only de: a huge appear on its a sa 
cided, and iy was no time to alienate from themselves | to abolish the forty-shilling freeh d without that abolition fa pacts ‘Tightning. | A ny column of wal 
the feelings Irish people. The Irish had ly | the Relief Bill — not - been ee rma 
changed by the success that had attended their | forty-shilling ids, however, n ‘or by tl 
pr setae a Tory amen would find them very different | Catholics themselves, who were examined at the time. Those feet the fragments of the at, which fell a conde 
antagonists from what they had formerly been. The temperance | Catholic witn described the forty-shilling freeholds as the | distance in the adjacent fields. How a effect was p; 
movement showed that great alteration had taken place in the | greatest of ccnp ‘oO spate: arsbicgt the hee rege Ha a blin | duced was not disclosed; but in answer t a question ros 
character and argu ishing influence on the | himself said t! were e live-stoc! estate. was r 
roe nates one could deny pr dpsmasc napa the Catholic per who abolished the fo chillin, Sir -H Har din e, the inventor stated ‘that wit tho: out a bat- 
our 
Sir J. Geamam censured the topics of which the learned gen- 
tleman had made use, than which none more exciting, he said, sews 
was determined to resist changes 
ust terminate ersal suffrage, and subject this great 
untry to a turbulent % 
Mr. Suett referred to several personal qu: arising out of 
the s; mse yt lactesnersenk einem ce erent ntially 
in the spirit of the Reform Act. Nogpeiaeereoesigheses ceclege agp 
i: Lord Si the heredit representative 
Poritaenst by tanley, itary ae 
against the solvent tenant use, arguing that it was quite 
enough if a tenant had t in his land. It was 
not till the noble lord had “ earteat his 
mind, and offered to destroy the ency, as roof of 
the sincerity of his conversion. Who eoke 4 doubt the ohjects of 
the noble lord, after hearing terms in which he had spoken of 
English tenants which, when they saw what sort of men 
then again adjourned. 
Thursday.—Lord Sanpon, after alluding to the late accident, 
Ses eecsernee es bad Same dont ow tho Ligh sone, socked whether 
Government intended to bring in ure to prevent similar 
misfortunes in future? 
Mr. Lasovucneere replied that it would not be advisable to in- 
troduce any bill for the regulation of the rule of the road with 
respect to steamers. ee 
FE gy. debate on the i resumed by 
. W. M. Gaskell, who complained language used by 
Mr. O’Connell in his letters on Ireland. Mr. V. Stuart considered 
that was nothing in the Reform Bill with the 
present mi Colonel Conolly and Mr. 
the second reading, and Mr. Howard and Mr. e 
was caused 
= Tenney 
support of it. Mr. 
easure 
second reading, and oche 
Shaw wished to know if a 5/. ecthive aes granted to Ireland, 
on what ground it could be ee from England, and c 
tended that the Irish people w us for repose from 
hao 
O’ConNELL said that the bill of Lord Stanley was 
ed i 
that 
gli: Lis was a state of things that 
ice, Spain, Russia, and erica would understand. id they 
suppose the people of Ireland were not aware the financial 
fo. 
suppose the Trelani 
were satisfied to pr Wink Caso, wk Geen tight ort the rn awn im- 
posed on them as the Church of the whole? And was it for the 
Church m between th 
Reform 
urged to make the noble lord an honorary member of the Repeal 
iati; baal, this bill,’’ he said, “‘ and yon will takeaway 
much of my power influence; I call on e by 
doing justice to my country.” 
+, 1 
sulted Ireland when they refused to re-establish such a franchise > | of destroying the strongest fortress i in n Europe. The i in- 
What security, however, had they st the re-establishment 18Ib, 
similar state of things by mi hise now pro- weight, and a ie Si ene ae oe 7 a a 
> oe rity that the subdivision of land would not preva! wend 
ted by the desire of acquiring political influence? 
Carey ae ae. say o- Le franchise I given to —— University Coley —On We oe aa poe ea al general 
would not be There lad: been: de eetin: e pr ile of the London epee 
— ae ufrages in Engl a na cy a 9 College was held, for the grea of ‘Teceiving the re Teport 
Conservatives had allied themselves to those demands? But he the council for the past ye f 
he P rei hf nnas  eiges “Fe laration ames pi year ensuing. Mr. is put j 
subject. e then read a series ex! ‘ious Ss} es < * 
f Lord J. Russell further concessions to popular encroach. | 2O™Mnation for the oe of Treasurer in o tion to 
ent, and intimated a belief that perhaps the noble Lord had re- | Mr. Tooke. Much interest was manifested in the pro- 
ceived in the early of this sessioi int his fo! ceedings. Lord Brougham was re-elected —_—— d 
policy had not given pleas his supporters, 5 esi t ani . 
Rat mighe have led him to enterinto a mpact. = tes of ae ae  Vice- Pre iden Ape 
Lord J. Russex. made a statement of the events that preeeded numbers were, for ME 
and acco i lic Emancipation, and added that by | 91, Mr. Taylor 89; majority for a 
grounding i — os = civi ok ; ‘ires.—On Saturday evening a yt rat ke out on the 
co’ as given to fature combination and agitation, 5 
thust ple of concilisting t patio! fee ares premises of "Mes srs. Myers, Hodes row, Cheapside. It 
ber fo: lin was set by a Tory Garernmeni He was accused reek Fe e 
franchise given by the Reform Bill—by bas re who had ed t 
menace, and would recall their concession when the Irish people 
were tranquil. When they e to consider mS question of re. 
ion, it became n to take the hrm likewise 
necessary 
into consideration; and he had felt the pecs ant adopting some 
test that might not depend wholly on the asseveration of the 
claimant. They had ado) id by 
be disfran th 
have prouap ee the back room on th 
which was an mmense quanti ty of pa 
pet ely gutted. The loss is considerable. 
The property 
insured to the extent of 5,000/. 
vi under 
roe firemen had 
= flames were s subdued. 
rigin: second floor, which d 
whlesle bower the premises were insure eg 
ight ured a 3 pe residence of Mrs. M mtg rd 
‘wiaeh a estroyed the en ntire furniture of 
rooms, and 
was swith wth ale Mrs. Maskell v was saved. 
i £1: . 
the Repeal of the Union, 
originate 
d 4 ES 
ied nag ride add to or retract from 
say tl 
wheth 
of the e 
occurred 
on the premises of Mr. ‘Mowe Hemesccaslais | which was 
1 
on the premises of Mr. 4 lg ditgion,  Highaweata Bor. 
The inmates. were rescued by means of ladders. The 
neath the oes P, eed ~~ led 
oe and pth sp The 
save % 
with 
| peer} 
les.—A few days ago the body of a young man 
was Getoret i in Hornsey Wood suspended from a tree. 
It hig ainie that he was a . of Mr. Castles, of Alders- 
gate e-stre and his e Alfred Croley. e did not 
riday, but in the morn- 
not believe there was any portion of the peopl in England that 
entertained tile to On down the 
House immediately proceeded to a division, pat there appeared 
—For the second = ig 299, for Lord Stanley’s it 204 
—majority for Ministers 5. 
ee on K ’s An- 
nuity, Mr. Ewart monet ion to life. Si Hos- 
HOUSE ance e grant, and made a rapid sketch of erm 
Keane’ sp eee gag He had served ii , in = Wes! 
peat erica, and at all the great battles di during a 
s' , from louse. LTON, 
. , and ALLACE supported the amendment. Sir 
this pension ought not to have been 
n F 
ing of as eke he Der his err and peers a dej 
state of mind, bidding them “ adie’ wrote a letter 
to Mr. Castles, s stating that defaleations would be 
in his 
that 
and they would 
ra d his corpse in Saray Wood. On exa amining his 
accounts, considerable defalcations were tra ced. ae 29m 
been held at Camberwell on a female of prepossessing ap- 
pearance, about twenty sea of age. J. pee a youth, 
th n he met 
hat 
at the charge o! of the East India Company; but A yet 
ae he 
notin the habit of being generous with other pester ‘3 money. 
It was not merely for the taking of ee but for a long series 
weviene . that onaeee as rewarded. 
of European rather than Indian 
views. After a brief conversation, in which several members 
joined, the amendment was ee by 117 against 74, and 
clauses 
The House then went page phn mmittee 0; ¢ East India Rum 
= and g long conversation ensued on the pats means of pre- 
other spirits being introduced into the country as 
after which the House adjourned. 
i 
Money Market, Friday. closing prices this even- 
ing were—Consols 883 (aie) oy money, and — ro 
pepe Exchequer Bills 6s. to “aes rem. ; 7 inden 
6s. t ids. dis.; Bank Stock 166 
— and its cere 
he E. Mansion-house to Ministers. 
—On Sa Sater urday, the Lord Mayor gave a Splendid enter- 
tai nment to her red pul s Ministers. Alch nough the party 
e church, 
a female who observed “ “that j it was a very maddy Lg 
She went in the direc tion of the canal; a few tes 
Fe, wa } 
he owards the canal and saw 
eroggling in the sh but she soon disappeared. 
obtained, when the body 
to the Kings: Arms. A owsetee Mental and endeavoured 
to restore ani ati 
hy. 
first floor, and = ¥ 
be the pavement in the stree Medical 
d, when it was “ee £3 that < eft arm aod 
+ were er and ae pore red. Her mained semse- 
less until half-pas' 
er 
any pm 
tuntion 
pired. The jury return 
| died from the effects of injuri by 
windo ow, but ‘whether accidentally or wilfully —_ 
Another inquest has been held at 
ction of Waterloo Bridge Foot-tolls—A meeting | 
Pancras Workhouse to —— the circumstances co! 
nected — the death of a ee was fi 
of ‘the ee tolls of 
the bridge, when a resolution was 
that after ae Ist of M 
half 
‘ee mount of ta, inate of «penny ax heretavore : 
- The New War Engine.—A trial of this invention took | 
 Ramara ; Canal, in 
pois cine ha floating on the water. 
—— were passing ; they came came and got deceased 
