sept. 18.] 
THE GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
SS 
such occasions, objected by the commissioner. There 
iJ 
4 
rived i in I 
were nd proctors pre: 
prong 
en so a na preres ome | 
one 
y should repose in the same liberties, and flourish 
from the same sources, and that they should be more and 
he th 
his ‘own carriage, followed by a im 
the archdeacons and clergy 0 of the 
within the province pepe 
tine character, and going of sama interest occurred. 
+ 
Oth Hus 
task o 
d th nf 
ytog An i gentemen, whatever ‘may 
Balls Bridge = was met by the Lord 4 
s Excellency sa Toft his carriage on 
nd w t upon which 
the energies: of the 
ie Railroad t f tl de int tows “accompa anied _ by h his sta ff and a host of | whether it is to plant of 
: id tl fe andahar, or under the esa bad Pek ae the 
water. The de ap Bagg passengers from the n- | wards of 150 private equipages. bes eets were lined f Acre; whether it is to o n the Eup to our 
trains have to cross the rails, and the Exquisite “while with ‘idtitag - At twelve o'clock the procession reached | merchants, and the —* whether it 
crossing, was met by the engine eding the Castle, where th eae es assembled. The | is to consolidate depend: a tl 
ici and came with such force against it that the coach Councillors i in rt et oe fe der seen ow Ss se seas with free tact he _ hota Christian 
» as Tre eland has through all pas 
rs 
wn to a considerable distance, and s everely_ injured. | F. e Chie 2f ony as let bl 
bt of them, Mr. Burford of = fh ina ses! was pac in, a pa fired v4 Pa battery in n the ect Bs ree upon the crest of the billow and upon the 
state. The engine was turned o yes the when e of | Phoenix Park, and le joie the military drawn bone of the foeman, so I trust that she is determined 
the nue pet 7 fell upon a es woman age sell- up in College Gre: Immediately after the ceremony a ough many an age to share those we er triumphs 
ing fruit ; 1 b ] was held, which was attende Prince George of wh ich will | impart ie the ha ants of barbari m all es bee 
afterwards, The. Ans escaped, and it is “horde: Cambridge, and a large nu f the nobili At the 
traordinary that all the Magen were not killed, as the presen meeting of the Repeal Association, Mr. O’Con- af we be cat the ‘shee of the Cross. And now tea 
carcely a piece a foot square | nell sai d tha at | several letters hi ad _been received from vari- bee thus mu uch iby t the circumstances of the 
could be fou a seams has been held on the Rev. 
on T any week, uston | doni one Connor and joining the vee | bers | bp poticheal party—of those amongst whom I 
vy, aes 
sation of the 
rth Uni lw 
of Sy trains with the Sou uthport coach. The parti- 
culary it 
Ass ould h 
and by whom I have been supported, I can onl 
Bowl Leg 
a ia 
with tks Society if the Coarse on into it. He sed 
the Chartists of b: up all Liberal mectings in 
express bs speeds aken reliance . avr strength and e _— 
this accident appeared in our last number ; ance of the many links re chy and cement our - 
ill said that pc ae the Cha: rtists w e to be pa athies. T believe that m sapien bees sy an a rdent 
sidueed it spertrae that the gates of the turnpike road found, t the decided ies of tk re and religious — 
were open and unattended in fact derate Liberal p i * the empire in the cold letter, but in living spirit—not in the 
the whistle on approaching the station, and spore em- | Th formal language of the lips, but in the dee m of 
bankment prevented carts and ae on the road bein be as gohesrensden as ae could desire epwaras the heart. Viewed as such our pon 
seen from the line. The solicito the c companys stal ted obtaining their views. He concluded this portion of his immortal pripsiple, and Joe may all rest it 
that the gee hs great dificulty i in ee ms ech by moving resolutions that the Secretary write to | it will bring to its adherents no shame. As for m myself 
gates closed, as ral persons, howe din ng gen ntlem whos the Re epealers i in Birm ingha am and other places in England, indiv vidually, | it is my pa in’ fal _ although at the same time 
names appeared i : comm of the peace for ti n wit 
county, had threatened to pull t them down, alleging that Chartists, The Chartists had affected to be reformers i in | and active zeal has lightened the load of oes usiness and 
the pan) fe no Ba i) ft shared and smoothed the responsibilities o to 
pies bcataid s had been examined, the of de-| friends whose warm and steady kindness Aes i eladdcned 
sar 4 * Accidental pay ”_On Toedia? the | stroying the cause of ‘haba - in fact, ‘her’ wanted to put for years the recreations, and enriched heed ee ged od 
permsarboby dieting of the Great North of England Rail- | down a Ah sop demonstrations » except t thos 
way was he ld at Darlington, being the first meeting sin harti J my ful 
the cpenin, line. After a dividend, at the rate petition t to P. t fe r the repeal of the Datos He | ment. sympathy g titud 1 wh Ih h 
five per cent., had been carried, the directors laid before | sai I b i- | to ser Ih mber.” 
the proprie’ € proceedings of a meeting of railway | tions, andin the present one he had confined himself to a Fermanagh. —On Sat rd a mee ng of t 
deputies, held at York on the preceding day, at which de- consideration = the means which had been adopted to mogistracy was convened b: y Col, Cri eee: the cat Tew 
putations were present from the Great North of England, rry the Uni the fated of conveying to Sir Robert Pee! 
the York and North ag i the North atten and the 
epdlend bs soaeie the Lee and Manches the New- | the two countries, and that Englind was bound to abide with the removal ree rN y i 
castle a i Bee ling Ju une- by | it. But i in this petition he ted th was A re cument was rear ora wrk up and 
tions, } f their liberties car- | signe y 37 reo expressive of their er 
line to ee ora "Hesolations were yaa that a new ried bh force, frand, da bribe ns. It tion i real ‘Giany offre to the feelings of the Roman Ca- 
company be fori 3 tha pulatio a direct oppres e Irish people, and tholies by the act allu = Ang heey concluding with the 
of 500,0002. ; that interest at si6 rate of 6 per cent. per | le lovee yey fact to fester in rv Boplish mind, hon would | fi ke the earliest opportu- 
annum for ten » yea ears be guaranteed in certain propor- bring forward the nex t day of meeting another p tition on nity of entering our 1 ty 
tions by th eo the holders of shares, | a different topic. hi b 
that original proprietors in these undertakings | of — for Ireland was to be expected from the present | as pane ettn by our late abi sheriff, fla we “otaly wie 
k 
and the 
ia ave the offer of the ee The intention was to take 
Adm istration, tha t there was no hope | for Ireland “ 
t which could impair the kindly feelings 
“up the Grea it Nort rth o Baca eek line at its junction 
the Sto Dp. 
way, to follow rlia e franchise, the : shorten | peg 8 i Be ‘ the = proce pried have so happily existed in 
entary ae ine of the ion mer, ah ions, |. ing of Parliament, pee the abolition had the ‘remainder Ferman classes of her ory subjects ; 
to Shincliffe, a aistiocs of 1 Savi tS ‘ion to state, that in no part of the empire 
cation would be obtained fi Bartha ead ty ns bd 1 e marked obedience to the 
aabipe, the Durham and Brandling Juncti ail n the country, assembled at the TRevall rete fa the | i: “ sary oe in our sk and ited gee Bh ve 
Was pro; Morpeth the Address of | le gi e receipt of this protest, a 
and ms Trposed hat es ee: Tse be chained, purpose = rian 7 aa iv? vt Ss bel ief rthat the sentiments it conveys are calculatedto 
ar’ 
Pockoteed of En ngland Com 
The 
‘life 
r 
The 
. f Leinster, r, who 
and 
a retirement from uke 
on de ele the Ad- 
prival 
office. The 
—— on the occasion, "stated, 
tions of party feeling, and to remove the causes of — 
sion and ill will; <— that the pi hich th 
dopted is calculated to give strength 
mson, the engineer. tat “ f these parti: #, that tit was sizned by two hundred and fifty thou- | gistrates have a ; 
culars was reecived with Heeger: es tion by Ul F meetlig: Chick + fifty-fo re of hom are’ peers, twenty-nine cern 4 > Gove rrr g BEd agp ag "a 
was ad en it is expected 1 ‘that th bl Boas -five baronets, ninety-seven deputy ri n. Baronet, * that co which I have 
beige schem WY ri l undred an wo mag istrates, to the administra- 
bt ived on th Roman Casholies bishops, wee with a sensiersbie tion of Trish affairs will meet with: the cordial support o of 
hi gee, lish ber of Pr otestan and D 
It includes the ti x Ratios Bogan mag peg ra ig success sd firm persuasion also is, that it will be fol- 
es, h , Mails, and merchandise. The returns were | were still coming _up ra ‘the country. gh Hon peth | | el 
Rot made up on the same day, but they all include a| in replying ‘ id: : 1 nf me eo by setting 
Week’s traffic, out afford therefore a fair comparison F t y ne Da pa. tae lyse the agitatio se aban es ur 
teeny. | and Derby Junction, 1,344. 19s. 1d.; Bi higt 1 4 ppended to it, Be | ee ee ee pee ees 
Ase ot Gloucester, 2,102. 1és. 8d. ; Handles 1 | he believed t and t cae he oe nat 
: 7 . 3. Eastern Counties , 918 8. 10d. ; H mee), 
Ghseow and Ayr, 1,6912. 9s. Sd. ; Glasgow, Palsy. and eee risa the time that h “a been amonget the penn a of intcraal peace and impro’ ss 
e Rock, 1.0497. Os. Qa. ; Gra nd “Pia ction, PIE aud | them. He had fou ae amongst chai — thing tha’ SCOTLAND. 
rst 9,791. 3s. 4d. > Great North of Englan Bloom could excite and rivet attachment. fot hout the whole Invern nehaly accident oceurred in = 
Sel 5d.; Great Western. Be 8442, o s. 2d. ; ul and | course of his life rd sho ald. seize every opportunity of neighbourhood i week, Bin has carried distress 
1 yee . T,0911, 6s. ; ieee and Pres Petri ee 5847 ae the attachment they had cilia’ ¢ 3 and he should = hee espectable circle. On Monday afternoon, 
bon Od. ; iverpool and “Manchester, rs 7862. 15s. 7. treas e tha at address as the richest heirloom whi ich he Basil Tytler, son of the Sate Rhoke Fever. Friant Fag, 
don and Birmingham, 19,2177. 3s. 2d. ; and nephe as ip @:hoston th 
Blackwall, 9537. 9s, place on Tuesday evening, im | river Ness, in company with Mr. W. Fraser, of Culda- - 
7s. 9d. 3 Di the T Theatre Royale "The Maries of of Claaricerde pre- thel. The boat had got intoa strong current, and Mr. 
Dayeroydon sided. , feeling that he onal pet not hold on, called to Dr. 
9357. 18s parts of Ireland. In reply to his “bealth being drank, Tytler to come to bis assi On the latter repairing 
hol licy of the late Ad » Tre 
et present state with ath = ‘which 
it to the level of the water, od when they began to pall 
rand, and ie mr, its it immediately filled. r. Fraser contrived to 
they fou und it. rdship was p im 
by loud bursts of 3 ‘applause, and concluded “by ‘saying— encumbered with a heavy pair cha r-boots. 
“When I look’ d, and | a third attempt the boat upset, ary oe unfortunate gen- 
upon her present eapabilities—u ~apan ‘all that she has suf-| tleman Jost his hold, whilst the beat floated rapidly down 
fered, and all that she has done, and all that ai may be-| the stream. An alarm ~ Steg but the strength and 
come—when I perce ceive how much she has contributed rapidity of Lane stream frustrated every effort to 
inoue telligence of the accident soon reached this 
of England—how her own exhaustion and te town, and Sas 3 of 7 Id b 5 
rolled back that ey et fearfal retri the water was dragged and several — 
joann she has shed frome ws the le omg entered the ree in various dire mee ons. 
f I pre i ct: d unavailing. 
dy wi 
ag that. “the 
tler was only 26 years —— 
| under Sir Charles eee and was 
