392 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° 24, 
———————— 
who had obtained the rule could sustain it upon the Court or CHanceny.—In Re Chambers.—This w: 
crm Pon forse sory about midsumines to Fs ti ovis <atnang either that the Archbis! y no jurisdiction | for a taxation of the bill of a solicitor, named Wilton, pA 
parous. is necessary midsummer to the vivi- at all, orthat, having jurisdiction the commencement of the | some years managed t affairs of Mr. Chambers in his contest 
t ast horizon. oo fara coos qroceedin , he had exceeded it in the course and t pedgress of the | with his creditors, and at the termination of his employment 
to twist a wire, or tie string, inquiry. He (the Attorney-General) would, how made a demand of 8,000/. for costs. It was contended on the 
pow A of atree: par ‘this will indace me bed ig oat show that there was no foundation foreither of these assumptions part of the petitioner that many of the charges were most anu- 
to show that the Archbishop had jurisdiction over the case at the | sual and extravagant. e offi assignee of Wilton, who is a 
oviparo Also, planting the trees he apple, in] commencement, and that in no stage of theprocecdings had such | bankrupt, urged, on the other hand, that the charges were not 
garden pots; or ona pig r of bricks ben eath the Boars and | jurisdiction been exceeded; and that_if the Court of Queen’s 
Bench was.competent toexamine into the course of the proceed- 
bearer ae aa cals sho Seager: temper 4 ings, their Lordships would find themselves obliged to come to | the part of Mr. Chambers, ti -open the matter, by directing a 
Sar es, scion upon the conclusion that the whole conduct of the case had been per- taxation.—The Lord Cha or was of opinion, on looking at th 
the stem or be. en mpressed by the pa “tetore the | fectly r inst the Dean; that he had ample notice of the | items of the bills, that the justice of the case re t 
Pp trial, andabundant op ity to rebut the charge ; and that the oe 5" ee ip therefore dit eae — a : m5 2 ry. 
i | offence imputed to him had not onl, been satisfactorily established 1cE CHANCELLOR’S orney-General v. Cuming. 
beautiful dwarfs. Likewise, wounding or breaking a vivi racic stonty but also been admi by the Dean himself; and | Mr. Wigram, with whom was Mr. ye noe bn part of 
parous branch, or cutting away a ring of the bark, as of | that if this court w ow sitting on an appeal upon the co the Bishop of Exeter to dissolve an in. estraining him 
ar-tre i-cyl the bark of other trees, | below, they would have no difficulty in confirming the judgment = — geet of o lapse of the liv ving of Chudleigh, in 
- i ich had been alr prono learned gentleman evonsbire. e living, it appe |, was vested in trustees in 
eo pe ted “sony te “the caik: - hen - an st nm went minutely through the dates of the eedings, for the | 1682, upon trust that they or the jor of them shouldon 
H ante way 4 in t a ransplan me. rees e of showing in general that the Dean had, in fact, ample | avoidance present uch fit, pious, and orthodox divine as the pa- 
DS | notice of all that happened, and ample opportunity to defend him- rishioners, who ald have a certain qu fication in land, or the 
which are but a few inches high be transplanted, p hag do | self ; and, having re: nb fall in ener senten ny o! Seen e ee ow eage ey a or edcege = 
beco of the previous proceedings, which have appeared ii em, m er al etin which notice shou! 
pe me so tall ; but they flower andr ripen their seeds Pape! ar mt at refer - the grounds u rt le be given by the or part of the trustees, should elec he las! 
‘ the same also with li ; in which case it | jag be obtained, adducing various puthootties = support of the | incumbent died in September last, at which time there were only 
multipli - i refore better to pluck up tiem of visitation by the Archbishop ; and coi by saying © s, of ir, Fortescu s abroad, bar- 
plants of broccoli, rather than dig them up, for transplant- t the whole church would receive wi any decision ces, and Lord Exmouth was yachting. Fiveof 
in at ‘oot-fibres may bes torn, rather than cut whch = go to the effect that any statute had abolished the jt rustees signed a notice convening a meetingto 
e authority, which was epee red to be essential to the | fillup the vacancy ; but one of them, Mr, Ne i e 
through. Bulbous-roote d plants will produce seeds, if} due stiles he: ent of the church, and which had been practised for | reason afterwards erased his name, and the notice was published 
covert itoeet ther in tr Parlay the lify of the val- | ageswithou prem troversy or oxersion: in that form. At the election there were two candidates, the 
ley; will the if the new roots, early in the The Solicitor-General followed upon the side, and c Rev. Messrs. Palk and Cuming, of whom the former obtained 85 
7 | e which bh: t tended that ifthe rule should be made cacenaee: for ‘issuing the votes, and the latter us f00r of the trustees voting for Mr. Palk, 
m, Sep napa se ich has put UP | writ of prohibition, there would be no means of —_ ig effect to | and one only for Mr. Cuming. Five, however, of the trustees 
the flowering stem. 7a confining the roots of cucum-| such a writ. The leamed gentleman having as ange co the concurred in presenti eM Palk to the bishop, who refused to in- 
and melons in garden-pots stops the too tuxuriant ress peg a ordin: of triennial visitations 0 Ones. Lome hc pane rn eircom a t — ml, = 
e bishops and sahoy allover the country, Mr. Justice Colerid; e I. an o of the voting ers. € bishop, 
wth of their leaf-buds, and r nders ore dich Ad ath ti Le ws ge his & , insisted on the technical point that, as the trustees 
i -buds, them s 
. asked if he had any’anthority for stating that at a triennial visita- 
rous 3—they should have a great deal of water, particularly tion sucha wea are iy pect take a as that wile had oc- 
in tral vivi mas | curred in the 
the drai pe of dun Cn. If the c paro e present instance—namely, that a clergyman having, | tion, and that the itself was void, ay the proper m d 
brani t away or shortened, lateral in an: toa question, madean ant statement cont: had not been given, nor had either party had a majority of trus~ 
Me r more completely, become oviparo a charge imputing an offence which to be punished with de- | t r him; and, besides, that it had been conducted na 
a Y> 1parous. | privation, it would be competent to the visitor to improper and unseemly manner, and th been 
Pp y pe 4 4 
The central b dof melons, as. soon as t ch | that to estion of guilt ,and even- | in the name of Palk, inviting the electors to a breakfast,. 1 4 
in diameter, should be pic icked out, whi ch will-cause the aes decree a sentence of ssenetotionr-Xhe Solicitor-General | thence to proceed to the poll. Itshould be stated that the agent) 
] I sk id he had no authority of the sort.—Mr. Justice Coleridge said | of Mr. Palk took the credit of that proceeding on himself, and 
sages fli The ends Of these lateral shoots alse | Sut nee Seneralycansiered that there wan the former | Cowmert sted wan atte iar that teal ape had tan 
e of the law m culty in brin, to justice, | counsel insi: vas qi 
should be stopped, in tke manner, as soon as the head which could not be the case if the bishop had the power ‘for t which | place, and that the bishop had a right, for the good of the churehy 
flower-buds a ed. Give additio nal moisture, ma the Solicitor-General was contending.—The ee General | to fill up the vacancy.—His Honour said, f argument 
Be Sacaae be, dusts the cent é said that, in his view of the matter, there was no difference be- | which had been used for the motion, its length and ingenuity, and 
ey de 7 P nights een any one sort of case and any ees as he: ee that | the multiplicity of points which had raised, were ee 
fruit. In Lancashire, where premiums are given od the bishop upon his visitation carried with him his full episcopal a him not ‘to a such questions upon am: 
gooseberies s, they suffer only two or three to remain on | as well as visitatorial authority, and could try in the visitatorial —_ the no gina ourt. He-should refuse the motion, =a 
h b ~_ Fee keh ~ = i he might have oe in the consistorial, all causes e the 
which he the power to try at all.—Dr. Phillimore, jun., came ag rE ye 
of these, Coa them for some weeks in so much F 8S] afterwards, and read some passages from Linwood and Ayliffe, | _ MARK LANE, Frimay, June i oWe have but little English 
to cover about a fourth gs - each berry, which nt pf for the gap of showing that a visitor, as such, possessed Wheat offering to-day, _ aes s cusses is fully faery ‘ 
a elegantly, “ suckling the | authority to deprive for the offence of simony, and contended for that as well as free Foreign. There is more inquity 
st a that such sees was not taken away by the statute of Victoria. , Le gee ge String advance A bee: a mae on, so pace 
; Mr. Justice Coleridge observed, that the ion to the ~ 
: ing ante dinner, at the City of Lon- | pishops in oeplicn statute is of the power which they possessed over | @#lities of Red.—Barley, Pease and Beans Lyre eats 
en n, ¢  steam-proprietors, on the 5th ‘ult. the such cases be carried on and without process value, and not much doing in either article.—Although; the sale 
managing director of the p in ec court 4 ip Rewer asked the leaned doctor whe. | Of Oats is slow, date. erect ene ; 
fa os , @ mean! conten: fore the passing of the late ‘ wand S Pat Red siti 
sa ioe bergen ene inch Great Waster $ | statute of the 2d and 3d Victoria, c. 86, it — legac been Goths (oe NOE, lanietie aed oka siaeas i bee & White 60 to 66 
machinery, which had carried her nearly 130,000 miles | petent to the Bishop to try a question of simony, and proceed to | Barley. =» -. = =.=... Malting and distilling 29 sos Grind. 24 to 30 
without a disappointment, or missing her advertised hour | decree a deprivation * fel ari cisacuistiog any process in | Oat Li sboiand and Such ~ Poland 23 to 35, Feed 20 to 2: 
of sailing, stated that he felt confident in | that | court?” ‘The learned doctor answered the question tothe effect, | —— frish ss ss IDL > Feed 16 tose Potat 
at half-past two o’clock, on the 14th, = hops and bishops could exercise jurisdiction over Sy oe? Sag Ma 3 to 42 
— 4 are subjects and to that extent before the eee Rees onc ee ~ 32 to40 Tick 93t042 Harrow 34to4$ 
arrive - King’s-road. At that very time, it is stated, qrigcom,Heligoland . . . a5 to Winds. —to— Longpod — to— 
her smoke w: n from the bills in see 
of King ei and she anehore! at seven o'clock. 
German Coins of the Middle Ages. ar German ‘paper 
in clearing ray tt eee of a honse, foun ae num- 
ber of coins of the middle re weighing together about 
5lbs. The Director of the Mint on pot found 
them to be coins of the 13th and 14th centuries. They 
the time of the Margrave of Ascania: the for- VENTS. —s. a 
0 ription, a! ing ~ | not to decide in the visitations. The visitations, he said, resem- mpt baci oa acer 
ecuted ; the latter are better executed 5 part of them bled an inquest, and the Bishop might appoint persons to give | Pa SRUPTCY 4 ANNULLED— - W Poo 1d. B. Johnsons 
pn — 1 of Bohemia, ‘ened ohn, son | tim information respecting the state of his diocese; but if he in- BANKRUPTS.-§ Wiha, Wooler, Se eee rohants—J- 
of tended to act on that information, ially in the way of depri- | Miller, ie cae Taylor, Speldhurst, Kent; Tainber as 
the Emperor Henry Vil. uxem| Bese a taal se; § aieuctomnesk sis lace; ’? in other | Davenport, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire, cabinet fnaker: =H. B. B, Bisel 
Caterpillars on ihe Continent.—The Industriel of Al- | words, in the proper ecclesiastical court, an 68 Dol te ene dan Tee ei age ares Combertant, 
sace states that such enormous numbers of caterpillars | Pef0" accused to answer the accusation. The learned counsel | ironfvunder—M eMtcrtan Greadord, Lincolnehire, miller—J. Porter, builders 
hans sees: bene amen in ¥ ood r aay ‘the haat proceeded to argue that the proceedings had not been accordi St. German’s, Norfolk—W. Henshall, silk~ ster, Newcastle. 
f ar P nt | to hers form babies in the statute of Victoria, so that, even if Staffordshire—W. hinson, wine an t ec ir ; 
All the fruit and fores are so completely the jarisdiction existed, the exercise of it in this instance was |-": eee eal cae ade ae? perder pena sk ocala 
pra 2 i aated, verdure, pg y a are as bare as in eon for irregularity. RF sa aoag he submitted that it was | T-Hend enderson, 3 Se cncninna inns amd. Pee kaldy and Lei Pace) 
winter. tis that where lear that the Archbis' no jurisdiction, or had wrongh -merchants-—J~ 
Ps the railway from _Mulhau- grereieed it, and therefore the prohibition must go.—Sir W. nely | Lincs” se 
on the same side, said that the is 
gregated i in such numbers on the rails as to impede the | whether, of their own Tight, individ Pactuet cin < te 
t and that as a remed the broo’ ogg aig were claimed by the archbishop in the pre- | | BERTHS.—Oa : a 8 jer. Wareesiety ay 
; y, the ng sah wd ace, the lay 
placed in winter fi sent c There certainly was nothing to show that the exist- — wagon cot ofa br sgegn: in I on Brixtom, the 
F Y ence oe such personal authority in the bishops had ever before Aline Copp Esq., of a son—On the 5th Tt Cottage,on the Gth of Lume, 
the caterpillars! ; been ; and the learned whose report iy Kinnaird, of a son. = 
Suicides i in France.—It : i seer 3 ‘hae eg eg had gg 4 been referred a S denied the existence of such a| | MARRIED.—At the house of the British Resident, ‘ane, ie church, 
ment r — the ap oe uicides’ in | POWeF- But even if such a po i the provisions of Perens and afterwards ac cording to the its a Bon M aioe in the 38th 
FE the statute 3d and 4th Vietoria y anok itaway. And tr was hard} eg eget ty Nery Oe tiza, only child of Signet 
rance increases bg: ry yea In Boe noes y of Mr. Serjeant to Eliza, only Bathe 
x Y | contested on the other side that the enactments of the statute | Guisi Milan, Consul de Sa Majeste !Empereur d’Autriche—" ty 
eae phe , being Yet more fy in 1838, _ were opposed to the existence of this power. Then it was said | %binst., at Trisity Church, Newington, T. Radcliffe, Psa» “varaninstes, Re 
more than nd 407 1836. that the proceedings here were at an end. But the answer to ee 3 mo = Greens Beg On ne oe tavghter of the jae, ; 
— ors =e" ‘cine figures for 486, nearly shi any a that was, that where a Court, as the court had done here, took vis, Esq-, of Portway-house, Warminster—On the 8th i ag ae Ee oe, 
he = proceedings in a matter in which it had no jurisdiction whatever, | Trinity Church, Hull, P. ght, Esq-, of Clapham -common. so Caroline “TS? 
t re. 688 females are returned amongst the suicides. | it never was too late to apply to this court for a prohibition. The | ‘4 ter of C » Bugsy of Searborongh—On the Ot er 
Each peaked of ie, from infancy to old age, has paid its | cases where the opposite rule seemed to have been held were SE ee eee nd Se pate, Tada Tects binst., ac rant, D- A 
tribute to this malady. There are 2 children of from 8 to | 2/1 cases where the jurisdiction had existed, but the court had | son. second aurviving a the jor-General al Alesandes ooo oe 
9 Jars of ae, bo i 12, two of 13; treoet | eet davies nk we Ppa wot tere wae | Zetia coetemardt eno ee eas 
a ps ¥ clear he > i “ ‘ 
* 14, nine of 15, 147 of 16 to 21, 335 of 60, 189 of 70, and | s ce, it ss 1 ase to carry that pose dha mi execu- | John Field, pre gai vr geFiachingheiy ihe 3 == aa eect oh at 
. of 8 3 most frequen! to destroy = Against that it _ that - for prohibi- | Rev. J. Westerman, “M ae arog eld, Fea ad eae * 
mersion and strangulation. 958 individuals | 4°: —Dr.Addams on the same side contended thatthe Archbishop ee oe Scar E 2 “5 
trowned ¢ ; had no right to proceed in the way adopted here. Even suppos- | “"Drep.—cn the 7 na viOUry, iental, inthe Bay of Gib 
Ac omen 816 hu ut Fai 189 suffocated ing that be had @ right to visit the Dean, he could not, ina visita. | oa his return from the £ pig aa in the 3 2och Some ot Soe 
sepa with the fumes coal which appears to Chapter, proceed against the Dean for an | *s¢—On the 2dinst-, at Lyrchett, near Poole, Annesley Marcus, US ile end, 
Principal mod uct. The as 5th inst., at tk At Piymant> 
of the Sane chee ates 
the Archhisholgn show 
hibit bis Grace from 
aon w. ley 
aft ber 
ction di: “On ce poomagpee im his 43th year, J. si aa Bee 
all its necessary and e. the oth inst., at New-sreet, se ca » and De 
_| formalities, and even ail its decencies, had been so sitherly es pte > ed Bi oe e eee garcons 
ten or disrezar@ed in this instance, that the Court would feel = 
@ duty to issue the prohibition, and prevent further 
4 * "Phe Cost took time to’ consider the question; and it is ex- 
that judgment im this important cause will not be given 
oy by Messrs. Brdbacry. and Evans, Lombard-st oe 
the ents ‘Whitefriars, in the Citref mB, and Publ Piast * 23 
pth ts and Communication: ae te be Couns Sree 12 
ghee oi Ate . 
cate ang, tak on chin pec ation was made 
