

Jan.'C,] 





THE NEWSPAPER. 



1 18*4. 



tt-tfttomach.ftnft tested them with var ut testa. Every one clearly 

 iiidi-* te<1 arsenic. Me « «, independently, detect »mUI grains 

 <»r arnenteby the eye. With nitrate of silver he obtained the yel- 

 1 w pr« »te. He oaed the black flux on charcoal, and repro- 

 duced met a' lie araenic and all the oth tttts and re-agent*. Aa 

 he wa* going to IHrrninsrham he took the stomach and contenta 

 to Mrnra. Bnuthall, analytical chemUta there, and tbey perfectly 

 Btti-Aed tLi«maetvc»of the pretence of a quantity of arsenic, of 

 nearly half an oaoce. The Jury found the prisoner Guilty, and 

 ahc was aeot< need to death. 



$ ,mael Fellow, UobsM Purtlsw, Jotm Per nd Dmiel Webb* 



•were charged with having murdered a girl, named Mary Lane 

 Wild, by tl wing her down a coal-pit near WolverhampM; 

 The girl had been brought up from the pit shortly after the vio- 

 cehad been coraw itted ; and before her death, which soon en- 

 ■ued.abe identified the prisoners aa the perpetratora of the out- 

 lage. The Jury returned a verdict of Ai ilttal on the cap 

 charge. The prisoners were then indicted for the assault, con- 

 victed, and sentenced to 18 mouth** imjjriaonuient, with hard 

 labour. 



Thomas Morjrtm and Thomas Lewis were indicted for having on 

 the 7th Oct. other person?, assembled at Dolauhmoo- 



gate, in the parish of Ua ndlngad, and destroyed the toll-house. 

 After several s\ esses had beeu examined, the case was sud- 



i 



amid there wee other cases against the prisoners ; and it was for- 

 tunate that*" the pretest instance they had used no personal 

 violence towards Mrs. Wddcrs and her servant, for In all cases 

 where rarf* of burglar* went to commit a robbery wuh their 

 faces blac*ened, and us«d personal violence, he considered it his 

 dutv to o** the heaviest sentence of the law— transportation for 

 life- int* present cam* he would not go to that extreme, but 

 would sdtence them co transportation for 18 years. 



CaWTAl- CsmiSMf. CocaT.— Isabella Bnjnnt, who pleaded 



Guilty fc tne November Session to an indictment charging her 



with k-*alintr some articles of dress and drapery belonging to the 



Trust*'* o( me Infant Orphan Asylnm at Wanstead, was brought 



np fo Judgment. It will be r :!ectcd that the prisoner was 



matrn of the asylum and was on the occasion of her convic- 



tion»'roBgly recommended to mercy. Mr. Commissioner Bnl- 



locaddressed bar, and sentenced her to six weeks" irapri«on- 



m ^ in Newgate, to be computed from the date of her conviction. 



1 i imprisonment consequently will expire on Monday next. 



James Green, described as a labourer, but generally known as 



$tp*ain Hamilton, was placed at the bar charged with unlaw- 



dly conspiring with other persons named Arthur Hodges and 



Jb arte* Parker, not in custody, to represent himself with them 





__ persons carrying on business as bankers and merchants in 

 Au>tin-lriar», and also preter. ding that he was a gentleman cf 

 pi rty and respectability and worthy of credit, for the purpose 



denlybr a close, the Judge being of opinion that the ( defrauding James Finden and several other persons, and 



charge had not been Hupportcd, there being no evidence that th' . rB tly obt;- ng goods of the prosecutors by means of 



>*e had been i -wn by a " riotous and tumultuous" a?- \^ Me j a i gc pretences. Mr. Price stated the case for the pro3ccu- 



aemblage of i t prlaooera were consequently Acquitt* 



John Jones, I vies, I i Walters, and Thomas Morns, 



were charged with a riot at Spudders Bridge on the hth ot Sept 

 last, and with felm. aaly dcrr . gatoli-: ise. The Atton. 

 General stated that, for the mis 'emianor he should enter a»»«- 

 prosr I as to John Jones, David Davies, and William Walte*- 

 •1 i, the other prisoner, was then charged with ' ' 



n emcanor, and pleaded Gudt>. The Attorney-General •'"• 

 ■n what he had heard, the prisoner was in part cow**."™ 

 in In the riot, and he should be satisfied if he wen- »• ■""" 

 hit own recefoisancea to appear and receive the Ju« 

 , • • Court wh< rei called upon, and be of good hehi 

 the mean c. He was bound over iu the sum of 60/, ' "PP*-* » 

 and was thcu discharged. 



CitKSTaa Ciik it.— CnitsTKa.-!TAe Normnnit, r JffflZ 

 J> , ■>,.)-Jnhathan Poftmoa a bUrksnuth.and 7" m J " ' J 



wrifht blacksmith, were Indicted fof the mantlaug* r ' * 

 Cartwright the wife of the last-named < raff. ^ V,.,, riipr 

 In the h k at Modka Coppe « this county. * J *" h "' I ' 



General i the Palatinate of < st. I the ffSiSiSSl 



.i _ -f -i .-U..I... M ... .!•.,. m ihu Ptfr sttiic lime , 



Mention. To© par l*rs were giver. In 'Ms Pa ^ ... 



». it will be recoil* l that the pihumers, he« ^ r ™'"! 1 ™' 

 •were In the act of baptizing the deceased ... thrive MB) J" m «- 

 aion. when they let her fall and she was drowj*. ™ [££™2 

 r entleman had J»ut stated the case, and w" »' »« « n PJ n '«* 



Lb. to prove . when it ™ «^*% ( £, "resent 

 » ey nor the witnesses for the proae^OoilWtW P"™"* 



. It was well known in Chest r the prartao 



evening that this case would come «... **? » *• J?™!"*' 

 This discovery filled the Judge and theentlP COO ft WUBtU r 



prise, such a thing having scarcely ever >«" R^ the^MtiJa 



justice, eapecmlly when due notice had->een ,i*en to the parties 



to attend." AltcJ wailing a long t.m to ^J^t* < £ 

 directed that the pris> rs should be*™"!* upon UwCora< 

 Tier's Inquisition, when no evidence ,ein,-;f red JiU Lortib > 



in direet'ing an acquittal, observed ^^Sff£ftTiSA 

 exerc.sed a very proper discretion /or «er the way in wn.cn 





the parties C ltd with the pr-^^jgj 1?*^ a whs a 



^ot be fair to try them again f « I \\t sa»c offence This was a 

 failure of Justice owing to the oilpobft . "Htect of th© portfw 



ad. 



.th 



Burclaru at Iliah T *-A — ^nmas Riley, Richard Holbrooke, 

 ^ll^o^X, n^ted for a burglary ;eomniirted In 

 railing house of Utitia 'triers at High Legh on the night 



who ought to have attended on Vehal** Jj». c . W°™" " n - \ 

 Jury acquitted the prisoners. His ^^152 1 T J 

 dressed them, informing the. hat ¥ **« *»M»* to « wi 

 their religious tenets, but from the n»»^Of the ■ ever ,t ^"^ had 

 happened, and the Step distrtia wK" one at least if Mtboth 



must feel he hoped they woulh cxr-^ «»'> J? «« £"»* J ^' r .f ' 

 It was generally rumoured iu the t*'" that MvttMNH in h© 



case had pun -ly absented thei^^«^ » om0 o( thcm ™ D * 

 " Latter Day Suuta. M 



The 



nnd JtMep/i 



^ihrj^oS^r^i^t the case, U Pjoved by ^ the evl 

 dencc for the ; <ccu\i>n $ wrc ** fol!ow:-Mrs. Wuldcn* is a 

 farmer at High Legh. the or/ inmatca of herhou ^^»|f h"^ 1 ' 

 and man-servant. Tkey w^ to bed about 10 o clock ^oa ijh* 

 ni^ht in question, a.ri in -e c .Mine of about two hours were 

 disturbed by a noi^ of r "on» breaking: Into the ^use. Mr 

 Viddera immediately av>ke her servant, who upon looking 

 through a trap-docr in -c floor, Ssiw four men in the butter y 

 Tlie men had the.- face blackened and immediately upon seem- 

 the servant near tHevptnted their pistols at Mm. One of the -bur. 

 Clara called out tc his omraries « Get your pistols ready. Upon 

 hearing this Mrs Winers got her cash -box, and having placed it 

 in a trunk pushed it^uder the bed. The box contained *2 sovs. 

 and about 5i\ It sUitf. She and her servant then ran down stairs 

 tjthe front dior^nd endeavoured to makr their escape, bat 

 they found th*t t>e thieve* had fastened the door on the outside. 

 In the mcanc.av 'he burglars forced open the pantry door, and 

 in hinp in h><m Mra, Widders and the servant presented their 

 DiatolB at tlvir yeasts and asked whether they knew them. Upon 

 Jlr< WidfnAjias that *he did not the fellows demanded her 

 tnoney |b'^len»ea thnr *** had any: but the men replied thar 

 they knew ™ of old and they must have her money or they 

 wmld bL^ licrl >ruinaout. One of the wen took up a ckle, 

 ^'hich tV \" rvil lu thc lire - aml having made it vt r y hot flourished 

 it over hrf b ads, which so alarmed the servant that he said he 

 h«d cir>^ 0verei K na which he would give them, and he went up 

 attirsfc the purpose of procuring the money when two of the 

 b r*ttr followed him, leaving the other two to guard Mrs. Wld- 

 der^ rii e men then came down stairs and broke open several 

 <tr»vr c . and not finding any monev they again threatened to take 

 thdr.iv.8 «nd f rred Mrs. Widd»rsandherservantto accompany 

 tl i- up stairs. One of the burglurs saw a box under the bed, 

 ^ffthev immediately broke it oocn ami ransioted it of its con- 

 pits. O W of them told Mrs. Widders and her servant that if 

 UT dared to make an alarm or go outside the door for two 

 h>urs. they would leave two men at the door who would come 

 ji and blow their brains out, wu ci Injunction Mrs. Widders and 

 he servant obeyed. At the expiration of the two hours the 

 nervant-man procured a mess^ nirer and sent information to the 

 special high constable of the Buckton Hundred, who immediately 

 hastened to thc spot and examined the premises. Mr. Irwin 

 found that the front dnor had beta tied by a strong piece of cord 

 to a cart Ie~, which was put acr< the doorframe. The door of the 

 mtjoininir house wa- cd in a similar way. He found that the burg- 

 ltrshad rtfec ed an entrance at thc back of the preu ises by taking 

 out a leaden window. framo, and they had left behind them an iron 

 Chi-el and a tcry formidable weapon like a hammer, of which he 

 too'c Ion. From certain drew ranees Mr. Irwin was led 



t ) believe :hat some steam-loom weavers had committed the bur- 

 ylary, and he apprehended Richard and Jos. Holbrooke, and Ralph 

 Kerfoet, and the latter making a confession to another officer, 

 14u* led to the apprehension of Thomas Riley. The principal 

 witness was Kerf oot the approver, whose testimony was conro- 

 torated in almost every particular by a number of other wit- 

 nr sses. Mr. Temple addressed the Jury on behalf of thr prisoners, 

 and Mr. Yardlcy addressed the Jury on behulf of Riley, coin- 

 meriting with much severity upon the conduct of Mr. Jones, the 

 deputy c instable of Warrington, who had placed two of the pri- 

 soners In the same cell, and had employed himself in listening to 

 their conversation. The Jury returned a verdict of Guilty 



tion« He said that the mode adopted by the prisoner to obtain 

 thc goods of the various prosecutors was the same as that 

 adapted by him In thc firat case, which would be presented to 

 the notice of the jury, namely, that of Mr. Finden. In this case 

 the secutor, who carries on business in High Holborn, had a 

 cab et for sale, which he advertised. The prisoner called on 

 him to purchase ir, and having agreed upon the price, he referred 

 him to Messrs. Hodges and Parker, whom he represented as 

 bankers and merchant*, in Austin-friars. The prosecutor called 

 On H idgea and Parker, who gave such a character as was 

 calculated to satisfy any one. Hodges and Parker had been 

 In custody, but unfortunately thc magistrates had liberated 



them on their recognizances, and they had not surren- 



ed. One of them did appear in this Court last session, 

 and was then let out again, having surrendered, and it now 

 appeared he was not furthcoming. The offence was fully proved by 

 nomeroQS witnesses. The prisoner then addressed the Jury for 

 his defence, and contended with considerable ingenuity that 

 there was BO proof whatever of conspiracy between him and the 

 '.her person* mentioned. He then went into a history of the 

 transact! uis between himscll and Bodges and Parker. He said 

 he had been engaged as a Parliamentary agent, and had his 

 office iu E-isex street. He had an account open with the Joint- 

 stock Bank v a»d another with the bank of Messrs. Harriett, Hoare, 

 and O In I ibaid-strcet. He met Parker with whom he had 

 been previously acquainted, and Parker told him he was in 

 business with Hodges; and offered him such advantages that 

 he was induced to remove his account from the other banks 

 and open an account with them. He then proceeded to 

 speak of the affairs of Parker and Hodges, by whose failure he 

 said he had lost c iderably. He said that Hodges had come in 

 for a property of sooo/. since the failure, and arrangements were 

 ow in progress and partly completed for the paying off ail the 

 debts of the firm which scarcely amounted to looo/. As to him- 

 self he said he always intended to pay his debts, and would do 

 so as soon as he was able. It was well known to all the world 

 tlrnthewas the son of a banker in Yorkshire, and that he had 

 married a lady who was an heiress, and brought him a very large 

 f'Mf one of lo,00n/. He concluded by asserting his innocence of 

 the fraudulent transaction. The Recorder summed up and the 

 Jury found him Ooilty, He was then sentenced to imprison- 

 ment in thc county gaol for one year. 



Polk «.— Curiknwki-l.- Edward Armstrong, who had been 

 rrmande 1 last week OB a charge of threatening to shoot the 

 Queen, wan br o ugh t up on Monday for final examination. It 

 appeared that the prisoner had been apprenticed to a gardener, 

 and had been In thc employment of Lady Crotton, sister to the 

 Tiuke of Richmond. Her Ladyship, he said, lived at €l Mote 

 Park/ 1 near Capeltowa« Four years ago he lelt Lady Croltou's 

 employment. When he came to England he was employed as 

 gardener to the Duke of Richmond at Goodwood. He was in 

 the Duke's employment a year and a half. He then went back 

 to Capcltown, but returned to Liverpool, and got into the service 

 of Mr. Woods, in whose employment he remained for two 

 months. He was subsequently employed by two booksellers in 

 Liverpool, and by a chymist. He had been taken to the Middle- 

 sex Hospital, where he was examined by the house surgeon, and 

 other medical gentlemen, and they were of opinion tliut he was 

 not insane, thoueh they saw a vacancy about him. Mr. Wakefield 

 irgeon to the House of Correction, said he had examined the pri- 

 soner and saw no ground whatever for thinking him insane. His 

 answers to him were rational, and he believed him to be of souud 

 mind. Dr. Taylor was ot a similar opinion, having examined the 

 prisoner carefully. A police constable stated that he accompanied 

 the prisoner from the House of Correction to the Court. Among 

 other things he said his friend3 were in America and that his 

 object was to get there himself. Prisoner.— I deny that. Dr. 

 Taylor had asked me about my companions at Liverpool, and if 

 they were Irish. 1 should be sorry your Honour should think I 

 have any dislike to thc En u people. I felt inclined to do 

 Burnetii i . and thought I would be driven to it by destitution. 

 My head is affected and I have had tits. I felt I would not have 

 proper control over myself.— Mr. Combe said he saw no reason 

 whatever to think the prisoner was a person of unsound mind. 

 He thought his real I >jcct was to get to America, and tnat he had 

 trumped up this story for that purpose. He would hold thc pri- 

 soner to bail in two sureties of 20/. each for one month, and in 

 default thereof send him to the House of Correction. The requi- 

 site bail not being forthcoming, the prisoner, who .evinced no 

 surprise at the result, was sent to prison. 



LAMBSTn-sTRBKT.— Sfhcmiah Shaktpeare, a middle-aged man 

 who had been upwards of seven years resident engineer at the 

 Lambeth Waterworks and who while in that situation enjoyed 

 a handsome salary, was charged by Mr. Johnston the principal 

 in the firm of Johnston and Co., Gloucester-street, Commercial- 

 road East, with having wilfully and maliciously caused the burst- 

 ing of a steam-boiler on his premises ou Tuesday morning last, 

 by Which the lives of 70 individuals were placed in the most 

 imminent danger and property to a considerable amount de- 

 stroyed. Mr. Johnston deposed that prisoner had been employed 

 in setting up and preparing a steam-engiue on the premises, 

 which was completed about two months ago. When it was set 

 up prisoner applied for thc situation of engineer, and he at once 

 engn I him at the wages of 28*. a week, to superintend end 

 work the engine, and between three and four weeks* he took 

 charge of the engine and works. On Saturday la&t he spoke to 

 the prisoner about a slide which he was preparing for the engine, 

 and believing that lie was longer in executing the job than was 

 necessary, told him that if he did not wish to do it to say so at 

 once and he would find somebody else to finish it. The prisoner 

 made no particular observation at thc time, but it was evident 

 that hi* observations were an\ thing but pleasing to him. They 

 however had the effect of urging him on iu the completion of the 

 work, which he finished on the Monday. On T day morning 

 witness went into the engine-room, where the prisoner was at the 

 time, and from what he had observed thought all things were 

 right. The boiler of thc engine was supplied from a well and the 

 pump which supplied it was worked by the engine itself, so that 

 with the most ordinary care there could not be any deficiency *, 

 -nnd on the morning in question the prisoner himself acknow - 

 ledgedthat the supply was net only regular but abundant. After 

 leaving the engine-house he entered the warchuse immediately, 



soot, and other matter rushed through the aoor separatum th* 

 warehouse from the engine-house and enveloped the pl*« 1 

 perfect darkness. As soon as witness was able he groped ftS 

 way to the door leading to thc yard, and on getting oat htni 

 violent screams from a loft over the warehouse in which then 

 were 50 boys employed. Some of the young men empioyedS 

 thc loft which was enveloped in darkness in the same way astS 

 warehouse, had got out of the windows and let themselves dii 

 down to the ground. As soon as all the persons on the premis? 

 upwards of 70, were out, witness went to the eugiiie-roooi2 

 found that the boiler, which weighed upwards of three toM 

 and a half, had been blown completely from its setting to * 

 distance of about thirty feet into the yard and rested on an eleti. 

 tioa of six feet from the position from which it had been blows. 

 In reply to questions from the magistrate, Mr. Johnston *i< 

 that the loss sustained would amount to over 250/.; that his 

 brother was injured on his head by the falling of a part of the 

 engine-house, that two young men were also injured by fallis* 

 from the windows, but neither of them very seriously. Jojl 

 Williams said he had been employed in assisting the prisoners 

 finishing the slide for the engine, and on Monday night he h^ 

 occasion to get upon the top of the boiler, and findintcthatttieis 

 was no water in it, he addressed the prisoner, saying 4i There's a* 

 water in the boiler/' upon which he replied, ••No, I shotdd 

 think not." On Tuesday morning witness was in the saw. 

 house, when thc prisoner came in there and went past him, and 

 was returning when thc explosion took place. At the timers 

 prisoner exclaimed, " What's that ! " and witness replied, " It 1 * 

 the boiler that's burst, and you must know it is." In reply to 

 Mr. Johnston, witness said that on Monday the stoker tried tha 

 cocks in front of the boiler, and found there was no water on. 

 The prisoner declared he could not account in any way for the 

 accident, but was satisfied it was not for want of a good supply 

 of water. He said that he was perfectly innocent of the charje, 

 and that it was quite impossible he could have thought of any- 

 thing so wicked, as he endangered his own life as much, if no) 

 more, than auy other y and for his character's sake as anenp. 

 neer, would not have wished the thing for 1,000/. Mr. Norton 

 observed the case should undergo a much more minute inveifi. 

 gatton, and remanded the accused to a future day, consenting 

 however iu the meantime to take bail for his future appearance 



SPORTING. 



TATTERSALT/S.— Tuuhsdav.— Dk'iby.— 1000 to40agstLord 

 Maidstone's Cockamaroo (taken) ; 300 to 10 agst Colonel Peer* 

 Ionian (taken) ; 1000 to 25 agst Mr. Bowcs's Saddle-Bow 

 (taken^ ; 2250 to 50 agst Mr. Quiu names Foig-a-ballah (taken 

 400 to 10 agst Mr. Watt's Voltri (taken) j 2000 to 30 agat Mr. 

 Osbome'b Mdmsel Otz colt (taken). 





GAZETTE OF THE WEEK. 



BANKRUPTS. — J. Wh«.\tlbt, Kennington-crose, Lambeth. Hrery 

 keeper— K. .Stkvkns, New Cut, Lambeth, dealer in China — H- P- Tu«>o, 

 Mrddleton-strret, rierkenwell, painted baize manufacturer — I). Nicnoua*, 

 Liverpool, hatter — W. \Vooi> and II. Port, Burton- upon-Ti ent, Statfordrtiift, 



■vre w manutacturar* — J. Haym*, Deri tend, Warwickshire, victualler-!. 

 ^mitii, Tipton, Staffordshire, tfrocer— G. Hori*woRrw, Ni-rthowram, T« 

 •hire, worsted npinner. — W. Kim.hr, coal merchant, Cotton-street, Poplar— 

 J. M. E. Stork?, cnalinercbant, St. Alban's, Hertfordshire.— T. SA*aus 

 shoemaker. Kent — W. P. M. Croft, victualler, Great Windmill-street 



SCUTCH HEQUKSTRATION8— R Ewi.su, Largs. Ayrshire, wrigbt mi 

 joiner-- T. PtNLATSMr, Tain, malster and brewer — W. Patrrson and I K-. ? 

 Uleachneld, Arbirlot.biejuhera— \V\ D. Lapaaik, Glasgow, wrigbt andkmik* 

 — K. and D. Ferguson, Dundee, sail-makers. 



BIRTHS.— On the 20th ult., In Hariey-street, the ladjr of Sir D«ii« W 

 Mar-chant. Hart., of a son— On the 17th lilt., at Rome, the lady of A- Bats* 

 Km , jun , of a son — At Corfu, 25th Nov., the wife of Capt. Fitz-Herbert.rflfcs 

 Kino Brigade, of a daughter— On the 3d inst., in Arlington-street, the U4f 

 Mary Stkhienson, of a son — Oa the 31st ult., the lady of J. YatAJtsLir, £**, 

 Saville-row, of a son. 



M iRRlKl) On the 2d inst., at St. John's, Paddinpton, Thomas Earhuj 



Wumt, eldest son ot Sir T. W. Bi^MFFian.n, Bart., to Ubokoika Louisa, lhW 

 daughter ot Sir Prrsorinr and Lady Sakak M aitlawd— At Axminster, 00 »** 

 28th alt-, the Rev. IV. Bri-cr, rector of St- Nicholas, third son of J. Bava 

 raves, Keq.gOi Duffryn, GlRmorganshire, to Mary Elizabeth, only daufiu« 

 of th* Rev. W. I) Cow bkarr, vicar of Axminstsr. 



DIED.— On Monday, the 1st inst , at his seat, Calke Abbey, DerbrsWrs- w 

 1'rmwe, Bart., in the 49th year of his age — At Hasting*, on the *9tb "j"-" 

 the Ki^ht Hon- Lady KR*-isaroR— On the 30th ult. at Lindfield, Su»*ex.^ter 

 a life devoted to tr.e be#t interests of mankind, \V\ Alien, F-R-S , in h •"«■ 

 year— On the 30th ulu, W. S. Clarkr, Esq., an Emt India Director, Elm Bm* 

 LeatherheH'i, in the 76th year of his age— On Thursday, the 28th uH.,*™* 

 giving birth to a son, the wife of Mr. EuwasU) Cookk, and daughter w »* 

 Gborub Loddiuks, of Hackney. 



TTTANTED, to take the Management of a Nursery it 



» * the Isle of Man, a steady, industrious Man, of busioe* 

 habits, who has served a regular apprenticeship, aud his 1 

 thorough knowledge not only of the Forest-Tree and Grcenhoi* 

 department, but a taste for and been accustomed to Ornament* 

 and Landscape Gardening— forming out and planting New P»£ 

 tations, &c. As there is a Seed-business connected with t» 

 concern, a person with a knowledge of that department will* 

 preferred, aa his services may be in part required at the Shop.- 

 None need apply unless he can produce good and sufficient lev 

 timonials of Character and Ability for the work. Applf »| 

 Ai.kxandkr S pitta LL, Whitehaven. Cumb erland. 



W^ANTED— An Active Man, as Shopman, who p* 



V v fectly understands the London Seed Trade ; he will hjj 

 to assist in the correspondence, and will not suit unless he MJ 

 been in a London House. Unexceptionable references tf" 

 ability and integrity will be required. — Apply to Mr. J. G. V »» 

 Seedsman, &c, 1 and 4, Eyre-strcct-hill, Hatton*Garden, Lod4»- 



VACANCY for a MEDICAL APPRENTICE exj»» 



at a Public Institution, in one of our largest commerce 

 cities. The advantages afforded are— residence in the f* m J**irf 

 one of the Medical Officers, with liberty to attend the repj 

 course of study preparatory to examination, and ample opp* 

 tunities for practice.— Apply at the Office of this Paper. 





I 



WANT PLACES.— All Letters to be post-paid. 



TO LANDED PROPRIETORS.— A young person^ 

 the highest respectability is desirous of obtaining a * ^ 

 on as Agent to a Nobleman or Landed Proprietor, w ^ 

 been four years with a gentleman who has extensive ^ 

 under his management, and is, therefore, well qualified to ^ 

 take the duties of such a situation. Apply to J. C. M-» 

 Agricultural Gazette Office. 



AS GARDENER, where one or more men are ke 

 A young Man, aged 35, who perfectly understands *^^ 

 Kitchen, Fruit, and Flower Gardening, and has a rr tQt # 

 knowledge ' * '" '" * * ^ ** 



charge of la 

 thc Gentleman 

 Mr. Pampi.ix's Nursery, Hornsey-foad, Islington ^^^^ 



A 



S UNDER GARDENER. 



Wanted by a 



Gardener » 



Man, 18 years of age, a Situation as Under oarci < > 

 ifspectable family. H« can have a three years' ^^p ^ q#c* 

 his present employer.— Letters addressed to M. T., "o 8 

 Gainsborough, will have immediate attention. 



against all the prisoners. His Lordship in pasting sentence, adjoining it, and about ten minutes an immense volume of steam, 



A S BAILIFF.— A middle-aged married Man, wijjj; 



-^- children, who is thoroughly acquainted with the \^ms\ 

 system of farming, is desirous of an engagement to suy -f 

 or take thc management of a farm. Satisfactory reterc ^ 

 be given as to character, and his ability to manage ^'^V.^ 

 or pasture land, and the rearing and feeding of •J* >< j*' 

 Mr. LAwauNCE STiraSKBOir, 13, Mason-street* Hull. 



