Jan. 27,] 



THE NEWSPAPER. 



[1844. 



Criurtt and the question now was, whether the computation of | pected on business in the month of June, to be a 

 the eight months was to begin denovo from the time when the Little Guilford-street. Mrs. Dorey, who was then Mi 

 sentence was affirmed (or from the first day of this term;, or 

 whether the period of actual suspension or cessation from duty 

 intervening between the publication of the sentence and the in- 

 hibition, should be reck* d as part of the eight months. Dr. 

 Phillimorc on behalf of the promoter, contended that the object 

 of the suspension was that it should be continuous, and that, as 

 it had been interrupted by the party's own act, It should begin 

 de I >. Sir H. Jenner Fust (without hearing Mr. Langley who 

 appeared in person) was of opinion that he had no authority to 

 alter his sentence, which he had directed should be computed 

 from a certain time j that the present application was premature 

 for the question would properly be raised when Mr. Langley 

 thought fit to resume his clerical duties, when if he attempted to 

 do so before the legal period of suspension had elapsed, he might 

 be proceeded against for contempt. 



MtDDlBSU Sessions.— John Bruce, James Gray, John Han- 

 cock, Charles Pitcher, John Burt, and Francis Chapman, were 

 indicted for illegally keeping and maintaining a common gaming- 

 house at a tobacconist's shop in King-street, St. James's. Mr. 

 Ryland in opening the case observed that thi3 was a special case 

 and a <!ay had been appointed for taking it. Every endeavour 

 had b. d i ade on the part of the defendants to remove the case 

 from the jurisdiction of this Court for the purpose of defeating 

 the ends of justice, but such attempts had been frustrated, and 

 it was necessary for the interests of society that such houses as 

 the defendants were accused of participating In the profits of 

 shouM be suppressed. Mr. John Kelly of Northampton-place 

 Old Krnt-road and a merchant of Lead nhall and Borough mar- 

 kets, was the pr o ttuto r in this case, who was a sporting man 

 and had been made the victim of in the present instance. The 

 learned counsel here detailed the circumstances as they altar 

 wards appeared in evidence and said he should be able to 

 show that the premises No. 11 King-street St. James's were 

 opened as a tobacc Itt't in order to decoy parties, who were 

 defrauded by the defendants into upper rooms, and that on seve- 

 ral occasions the whole ( .ing apparatus was removed by order 

 of the defendants to Epsom races, Barnet fair, and other places, 

 where they could pursue with success their illegal and ruinous 

 practices. Mr. Kelly was then called and deposed to the 

 main facts of the case. Other witnesses proved that the defend- 

 ants were m\ the habit of visiting the house from time to time 

 and that there was a door leading to the upper rooms which 

 were barred unci fastened for the purpose of preventing per- 

 sona gaining entrance thereto unless sanctioned by the de- 

 fendant Hancock, who carried 00 the business of a poulterer 

 elsewhere and performed the duties of shopnwa at the tobac- 

 co shop* It was also shown that Iiruce rented and 

 paid the rates of Hie house up to the last two months, when the 

 nam f the tenant was substituted for that of Home. A num- 

 ber of policemen proved tha* the defendants were in the habit 

 of going to the home, and that certain Marquises, Earls, and 

 other noblemen frequented it, whose names did not transpire. 

 The Jury returned a verdict of Guilty agninnt Bruce, Chapman, 

 Pitcher, and Hancock, and of Acquittal for Gray and Burt. The 

 Chairman sentenced Bruce to pay a fine of 100/., and to be im- 

 prisoned and kept to hard labour in the House of Correction for 

 six months; Hancock to pay a fine of 50/. and six months' im- 

 prisonment j Chapman to pay a fine of 50/. and four months' im- 

 prisonment ; and Pitcher to pay a fine of 50/., and to suffer four 

 mouths' imprisonment— each, in addition, to be kept to hard 

 labour. The Council for the prisoners then moved an arrest of 

 judgment on the ground that the indictment did not aver and 

 set forth the parish and place where the house in question was 

 situate. The Chairman, Mr. Serjeant Adams, said he would con- 

 sult the Judges on the point. On Monday he announced that 

 lit had consulted the superior Courts, and the Judges were of 

 opinion that the objection raised to the validity of the indictment 



addressed to 

 Iss Richards, 

 at that time kept a stall in the Pantheon for the sale of china, 

 and resided with her mother in Rathbone-place. In June, 1840, 

 the stall was given up, and they left Rathbone-place, and no 

 account could be obtained as to their place of residence until 

 November following. In July, 1840, Fletcher took lodgings at 

 1, Southampton-terrace, Camberwell, for an old lady named 

 Elizabeth Stuart, and there was every reason to believe that the 

 supposed Elizabeth Stuart was the mother of the female prisoner. 

 Mrs. Dorey frequently visited the supposed Elizabeth Stuart, as 

 did Fletcher, his wife and daughter. She remained there three 

 months, during the whole of which time she appeared to be 

 labouring under great anxiety and depression of spirits. In 

 June, ifi-io, a woman between 40 and 50 years of age went to the 

 office of Mr. Pott, a proctor carrying on business in Godliraan- 

 street, Doctors'-commons. She was accompanied by some one 

 else, aad stated that she wished to procure letters of administra- 

 tion to the personal estate of her brother, John Stuart, deceased. 

 He asked who had recommended her, and she said Mr. Fletcher. 

 Mr. Pott knew a gentleman named Fletcher, but was unac- 

 quainted with the prisoner; and believing it to be that Mr. 

 Fletcher, he took the transaction into his office. Finding that on 

 account of the length of time which had elapsed the registrar 

 was likely to oppose the granting of letters of administration, an 

 affidavit was made by Elizabeth Stuart and Thomas Griffin. The 

 affidavit of Elizabeth Stuart, of 4, Duke street, Grosvenor-square, 

 was read. It set forth that Elizabeth Stuart had in 1836 met her 

 with John at the Bank of England, when he informed her that 

 he had invested certain moneys in the stocks, but he did not 

 state what ; that at his decease Stuart had left a chest in the 

 care of the Vicar of Marlow, to whom application had been 

 made, and who stated that he had never heard anything of any 

 will; that at the last interview the deceased had told her that he 

 intended to sell his property and go and join her in America; 

 that she had gone to America expecting him to follow, but that 

 she had never seen or heard anything from him, although she 

 had written frequently to him, and that on her return to England 

 in May, 1840, she had" first received information of her brother's 

 decease from a friend of her aunt, a gentleman named Jones, 

 who had come over from New York with her, and had gone 

 down to Great Marlow to make inquiries, when he learned 

 that he had died in 1827, and had left property to the amount 

 of 700/. The affidavit of Griffin corroborated the account 

 given by Elizabeth Stuart of the last interview between 

 her brother and herself. On the 28th August, 1810, letters 

 of administration were applied for, and the application was 

 accompanied by affidavits of the marriage of Robert and 

 Janet Stuart, at Callcnder, in 1 756 ; of the baptism of John 

 the son of Robeit and Jane Stuart, born in 1761"; and of Eliza- 

 beth Stuart, the daughter of Robert and Jane Stuart. There was 

 a discrepancy between Janet and Jane, which as no suspicion 

 was excited at the Prerogative-office, did not attract attention. 

 These documents had been engrossed in Pott's office; and it is 

 presumed that they had been prepared by Barber, who had gone 

 to Marlow in the June preceding. These certificates had been 

 prepared most adroitly. Immediately after this, Barber had gone 

 to the Hank accompanied by a woman apparently about forty 

 years of age, who therefore could not possibly have been the 

 deceased, supposed, as she must have been, upwards of eighty. 

 Mr. Barber was identified by a gentleman named Hill, and the 

 woman received 700/. back dividends. The stock was then sold 

 out] by Mr. Hill, who gave a cheque on Sir John Lubbock for the 

 amount, which cheque was immediately changed into gold ; and 

 so quickly had this been done that when Mr. Hill sent to have a 

 small error corrected almost immediately afterwards, he disco- 

 vered that the cheque had been changed for gold. Witnesses 

 were called to prove these facts, and the man Griffin who had 

 been apprehended put in a statement that he had been requested 



Harriet Ricbv, sixth daughter of Capt. T. E. Cole Rv — 

 inst., at Springvale, near Glasgow, Mr. J. Johnston h^I? 

 Engineer on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway — iithS* 

 at Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, An- va Maria, wife of t 85? 

 ing, Esq., aged 49.— 15th inst., at the residence of his iSS" 

 Baron von Seckendorf, Obeonzeun, near Ansbach c^ 

 Hevryvov Lang, M.D., aged 33, eldest son of Dr Lan 4 * 

 Newman-st.— 16th inst., at 22, Warner-st., Dover-road s. * 

 tian Adolf, the eldest child of Adolf Heilbronn, Great To U 

 st. f aged 3 years and 9 months— 16th inst., aged 80 o» 

 Owexs, Esq., of Nelson-st., Chorlton-upon-Medlock ~i6thil? 

 at Broughton-hall, Oxon, the Rev. Wm. Colstov, second in*b 

 the late E. F.Colston, Esq.— 16th inst., Mary, wife of th#£? 



Miss Eliz. Foster, aged 61.— 17th inst., at Gouroc?Jh^ 

 Renfrewshire, Margaret, relict of the late Charles Stem* 

 Parker, Esq., of Fairlie, aged 70. —1/th inst., at Broad way-hoS. 

 Hammersmith, Mary Clavey, second daughter of the Utej 

 Hall, Esq., of the Elms, Derby.— 17th inst., at his house, 4 Hrdi 

 park-place west, aged 70, the Rev. Hkvry Smith, second *ooJ 

 the late Dr. Smith, prebendary of Westminster.— 17th inst. m 

 70, Rev. C Hobart, M.A., Master of Ledbury Hospital uJ 

 Canon Residentiary of Hereford Cathedral. — 18th inst., at VeZ 

 nor, Isle of Wight, Chartotte Elizabeth, eldest daughter* 

 Major G. A. Ramsay, of Hill Lodge, Enfield, Middlesex.- 

 inst., at Bath, Alice, wife of J. Whiting, Esq., of 26, Duke-W«t 

 Westminster, and Carshalton, Surrey.— 19th inst., in Una* 

 Montagu-st, Mary, wife of Sir J. D. King, Bart., of West Wt. 

 combe Park, and Halton House, Bucks.— 19th inst., atherhoni 

 l,Parkst., Notting-hill, Mrs. Houslby, relict of the late* 

 Housley, of Wakefield, Yorkshire.— 19th inst., at WeymottL 

 aged 84, Mrs. Eliz. Fo.vblanque.— 20th inst., at No. 43, W00J 

 St., Cheapside; Mr. Edward Daviks, chemist, aged 69.— 114 

 inst., at Muddiford, near Christchurch, Hants, the Hon. Ciui. 

 Robert St. John, youngest son of the late Viscount BoUstw 

 broke.— 2lst inst., at his house, at Pentonville, Francis Hot. 

 lkr, Esq, late chief clerk to the Lord Mayor for 50 years, ajjedlfc 

 —23d inst., at his residence in St. James's-place, Sir Fran 

 Burdktt, late M.P. for North Wilts, aged 74.— 23d lint,* 

 Llanyblodwel Vicarage, Oswestry, the Rev. J. Dovnb, D D., 

 Vicar of that parish, and late Head Master of Oswestry Grama* 

 School, aged 80. 



GAZETTE OF THE WEEK. 



BANKRUPTCY. ANNULLED. — J. France, Mancheiter, cottcn*m> 

 facturer. 



BANKRUPTS — F. B. Courtknay, Great Marlborough-ttreet, booktdkf- 

 F. Shaw, London-wall, builder— W. Emmwb, Montpellier-row, Brocnptit, 

 builder — C. Wu M M mow. Regent-street, hosier — R. Martov, Chigirell, Bsm, 

 blacksmith— H. Ci.uvk, Rettendon, Essex, cowkeeper — T. Parr, Lircrt*sl 

 plumber— J. Robinson, Arnold, Nottinghamshire, wharfinger— C. S. Jk 



Leeds, cloth-merchant — R. Tkray, Cheesehill-st-, Winchester, plumber— >f 

 Brswick, Norwich, wine and porter-merchant" — J. Rolfs. Oxbridge, rtsi* 



merchant — W. Evans, Borthwen, Merionethshire, miller — J. Rosiituv, j 

 Nottingham, liverv-stable keeper — G. Morgan, Gloucester, currier—.!. Wruw, 

 Newcastle-upon-Tyne, draper— J. Fothrr(;ilM', sen., Selby, Yorkshire, is+» 

 thecary — H. Hitchin, Halifax, Yorkshire, ironmonger. 



SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS.— J. Pearson, Muirhall by Perth, 

 banker — W. Crawford, Dundee, ironmonger — T. C. SMiTH,"£dinburgh, 

 ranee broker— J. Smith, Glasgow, grocer— I. Mkrcer, Dunse, currier. 



by the old woman, the supposed mother of the female prisoner, 

 - - ^ - # w _ .. r—m » j to sigr 



WANTED immediately, a steady active YouneMan,n 

 a general NURSERY FOREMAN, a good Propagator 

 and Salesman would be indispensable. For particulars apply* 

 Mr. W. White, Nurseryman, Swansea, 



they com ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 



had the power of applying to the Attorney-Gcneral for a writ of 

 error. The defendants now, therefore, would at once, with the 

 other persons in the priaon, he put to hard labour. The Solicitor 

 for the defendants afterwards applied to the Court to suspend 

 judgment, and to admit hi* clients to bail, on the ground of their 

 intention to apply for a writ of error. Any amount of hail the 

 Court might think proper to name shonld be forthcoming. The 

 Chairman said he could not suspend the judgment of the Court, 

 mnd the sentence should be strictly enforced. The Solicitor said 

 he should immediately wait upon the Secretary of State, and en- 

 deavour to < tin redress. 



Pomck. — Mansion Housb.— The Wills Forgeries.— On Mon- 

 day and yes'e day the prisoners in custody, viz., W. //. Barber 

 the Attorney, Joshua Fletcher, and Mrs. Dorey, were brought up 

 for re- examination. Mr Clarksou stated that the inquiries which 

 had be?n instituted for the purposes of forwarding the ends of 

 justice had enabled the prosecutors to bring forward a fourth 

 charge against Barber and the unfortunate woman at the bar as 

 principals, and against Fletcher as an accessary both before and 

 after the fact, of having procureda person to personate the sister 

 of John Stuart, deceased, for the purpose of feloniously obtaining 

 certain sums standing in his name in the Bank of England. It 

 appeared that in 1826 there was standing in the books of the 

 Hank a sum of 51/. Longr Annuities, in the name of John Stuart. 

 Nothing was heard of Stuart until 1840, and in 1836 the sum in 

 question had be-n transferred to the Commissioners for reducing 

 the National Debt. Stuart, it appeared, had died in 1827, at 

 Great Marlow, in Buckinghamshire, where he had live i f r some 

 years before in the service of Mr. strode of that place, as steward 

 and gardener. Mr. Strode had defrayed the funeral expenses of 

 Stuart, and out of respect to him had caused a tablet to be 

 erected to his memory in the parish church of Great Marlow. A 

 grave-stone had lik< iebeen erected over his grave. Nothing 

 had been heard of any representative of Stuart, or of any 

 property of his until May, isio, when the prisoner Fletcher 

 went down to Great Marlow, to the house of a person 

 named Hyatt, who kept an inn there, and made inquiries 

 of Hyatt as to the relatives of Stuart. Hyatt, who had 

 only rccenly come to Marlow, took Fletcher to several old 

 persons who recollected Stuart, and who gave him h formation. 

 Fletcher before he went away told Hyatt that his name WM 

 Jones, and that he had come down by order of Government to 

 make inquiries as to Stuart, and he requested Hyatt, if he pro- 

 cured any additional information, to forward the same to him, 

 addressed to Mr. R. Jones, 24, Little Guilford-street, Russell- 

 f quare. About a month afterwards Barber went to Marlow to 

 make inquiries about Stuart. He asked if Mr. Jones had been 

 there, and stated that they were partners in the same concern. 

 He stated himself to be < larence Packham, Esq., 63, Nelsou- 

 square ; and told Hyatt if he came to town he should be glad to 

 see him to dinner. Hyatt came to town shortly afterwards, and 

 called at Nelson square where he saw Barber, who however 



instead of asking him to dinner, seemed most anx 1 got rid 



of him. On the 25th June, Hjatt received a letter from Fletcher 

 signed in the name of Jones, and dated U, Little GuiHori-strcet. 

 It stated that the writer desired Hyatt should make further in- 

 quiries on the subject of Stuart, on the understanding that he 

 should be paid for his trouble. The writer stated he wished to 

 ascertain where Stuart had lived before he came to Mr. Strode, 

 ana also what place in Scotland he had come from ; facts which 

 he stated could be ascertained from an old fellow-servant of 

 Stuart's. The letter then concluded as follows: — M I have been 

 able to ascertain that 12 years' since, Stuart had a sister residing 

 In America, and if you will take an early opportunity of making 

 these inquiries you will greatly oblige your obedient servant, G. 

 Jones. Please to direct to me, Mr. G. Jones, Miss Hawkes, 24, 

 Little Guilford-street, Russell square." This was the preparation 

 for Introducing the supposed sister on the scene. It would appear 

 that Miss Hawkes was a personal friend of the female prisoner, 

 who had applied to her to permit certain letters which she exl 



sign the affidavit, and had been paid for his trouble. The four 

 prisoners were then again remanded. 



Lamhktu strbbt.— Nehemiah Shakspeare, late an engineer 

 in the employment of Mr. Johnston, cigar manufacturer of 

 1. Ioucestrr street, Commercial-road East, who was admitted to 

 bail a fortnight since, on a charge of having wilfully and mail- 



oosty caused the explosion of a steam-boiler, by which the 

 lives of upwards of seventy individuals were placed in jeopardy, 

 has been fully acquitted of the criminal charge; and with regard 

 to the alleged negligence in allowing the boiler to explode, nu- 

 merous witnesses proved that the boiler was defective, and that 

 no attention could have prevented the accident. 



WANTED, a young or middle-aged Man, as PROPA- 

 GATOR in an Establishment in the neighbourhood^ I 

 London where nothing but pot plants are grown. He mrf I 

 thoroughly understand his business in all its branches.— Apply, 

 by letter (post paid), to A. B., 19, Milk-street, City, staunfwfcnr 

 he has lived in that capacity. 



W 



PLACES.— All Letters to be post-paid. 



the Etri 





SPORTING. 



TATTERSALL'S, Thursday.— DERBY.— 13 to 2 agst Mr. 

 John Day's The Ugly Buck (taken 7 to 1); 18 to 1 agst Mr. 

 Lichtwald's Lcander (taken to 200/.) ; 23 to 1 agst Mr. A. Wood's 

 Running Rein (taken to 25/. and afterwards offered) ; 25 to 1 

 agst Mr. Bowes's T' Auld Squire j 40 to 1 agst Mr. Watt's Voltri 

 (taken to 10/.); 45 to 1 agst Sir G. Heathcote's Campanero 

 (taken to 30/.); 1000 to 20 agst Mr. ThornhiU's Apprentice 



aken); 1000 to 15 agst Mr. J. Osborne's Mount Charles (taken) ; 

 1000 to 15 agst Lord W. Powlett's Nell Gwynne colt (taken); 

 2000 to 20 agst Mr. Sadler's Johnny Broome (taken). 



TO NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN. 



AS GARDENER.— S. Snow, Gardener to 

 I)e Grey, having a single Young Man under him, aged* 

 who has served him for three years and upwards, is des ! rol ?J? 

 obtain for him a Situation as above, having proved him W 

 competent to undertake a good situation.— Direct to S. Svow, , 

 Wrest Park, Silsoe, Beds, where testimonials as to character** 1 

 abilities will be given. 



A ifr 



AS UNDER-GARDENER and FLORIST.- 

 spectable young Man under an experienced Gardeners* 

 Florist, would not object giving a moderate Premium to w In- 

 structed in the above line, in all its Branches. For further p»' 

 ticulars, direct to W. T. H., Post-office, Sutton, Surrey. 





BIRTHS.— On the 13th inst, in Chester, the lady of H. Raikks, 

 Esq., of a daughter.— 15th inst., at Stockland, Bristol, Somerset, 

 the lady of C. G. Pridkavx, Esq., of Lincoln's Inn, of a daughter. 

 — l6th inst., at the Vicarage, Egham, Surrey, the lady of the Rev. 

 \Y. II. Birdbrmann, of a son, still-born.— 20th inst., at New- 

 port, Devon, the Hon. Mrs. Butlkr, of a son.— 20th inst., at No. 

 12, Belgrave-st., the lady Carolink Turnor, of a daughter.— 

 20th inst., at Castle Coole, Ireland, the Countess ofBelmork, of 

 r daughter.-22d tost., at Upper Tulse Hill, Brixton, the lady of 

 C. B. Rkkf.k, Esq., of a son.— 22d inst., the Hon. Mrs. Shaw, of a 

 son.- 22d inst., at Leytoustonc, E>sex, the lady of E. N. Buxton, 

 Esq., of a son.— 231 inst., the lady of W. Rollings, Esq., of 

 Upper Tooting, of a daughter.— 23d inst., in Golden-sq. f the wife 

 of J. Maplbsov, Esq., of a son. — A fesv days ago, at the Rectory, 

 Elton, Hunts, the wife of the Rev. T. M. Symovos, Rector of 

 Adwick-le-Street, near Doncaster, of a daughter.— Lately, at 

 Stratford upon- Avon, the lady of T. W. Whston, of New Hall, of 

 a daughter. 



MARRIED.— On the 5th August, 1843, at the Protestant 

 Church, Valparaiso, Her Majesty's Consul, J. C. Skarle, Esq., 

 to Joseph ink RosAnio Bunster, eldest daughter of Grosvenoi 

 Bunster, Esq., Lieutenant, Royal Navy.— llth inst., at Dart- 

 month, E. Hevi.bv, Esq., to Ann', daughter of the late Rev. T. 

 Mends, vicar of Holbeton, Devon.— 13th inst., at Chippenham, 

 W. KniM, Esq., of Corsham, to Sarah Frances, youngest 

 daughter of H. Golriney, Esq , of Chippenham.— l6th inst., at 

 Cockermouth, W. M'Lkav. Esq., Greenock, to Jane, daughter of 

 the late J. Henderson, Esq., of Shap, Westmorland.— 16th inst., 

 at Lymm, W. A. U.\wiv,only son of J. Unwin, Esq., of the island 

 of Madeira, to BtlSABBTB, second daughter of the Rev. John 

 Blythe, of Whitehaven.— l6th inst., at lngatestone-hall, Essex, 

 Bernard Johm Last, Esq., of Port land -terrace, St. John's- wood, 

 London, to Harriet Johanva Havers, third daughter of the 

 late Thomas Havers, Esq., of Thelror.-hall. Norfolk.— i;th inst., 

 at St. Luke's, Norwood, the Rev. J. Trbvitt, to Mart, daughter 

 of Mr. R. Simpson— 18th inst., at LI anrhos, Carnarvonshire, Mr. 

 J. E. Evavs, of New Bond-street, London, youngest son of 

 the late Mr. R. Evans, to Margaret Elizabeth, eldest daughter 

 of the late Mr. Jones, Whitford, Flintshire. 



DIED.— 6th inst., at Perth, Jas. Hosack, Esq., M.D., late 

 Surgeon to ff.lf/l Forces.— 9th inst., at Rome, Ha r vet Fergu- 

 son, aged 18, the eldest surviving son of J. Montgomery, Esq., 

 of Benvarden, country of Antrim.— llth inst., at Alphington, 

 near Exeter, the Lady Catherine C. Pabker, aged 27.— I2th 

 inst., Rt Aston Hall, Hawarden, Flintshire, aged 3, Sophia 



AS FARM BAILIFF, or BAILIFF & GARDEN!* 

 —A middle-aged single Man, who understands his busffljj 



in all its various improved departments. Can P roduCC o n _S 

 ceptionable ten years' character.— Address, Secretary. Re F 

 park Gardeners' Society for Mutual Instruction, 64, Hign-» 

 Marylebone. 



AGRICULTURE. 



AS ASSISTANT on a Nobleman or GentlejgJ 

 ■ Estate.— A Foreigner, aged 30, is desirous of en^apmr^ 

 self as above, or in any other capacity in which n . ec0U :JJ*i 

 serviceable. He has been engaged for many years in Agn ^^ 

 in Russia and Prussia, and is possessed of information 



VifK * 



would tend to the improvement of British soil. * le %~^/I 

 gain additional experience in English Agriculture. > ^ 

 expected for the first year ; speaks four languages ; can J^^ 

 ferences of the highest respectability, and eight years ^ 



Direct to A.B-. ** 



from his present employer in the city. 

 Cooper's, 22, New Bond-street. 



HPO LANDED PROPRIETORS.— A young per^ 



-L the highest respectability is desirous of obtaining ^ 

 tion as AGENT to a Nobleman or Landed **° P?^ ^ e s»* 

 been four years with 

 under his management 



take the duties of such .. 



Gardeners* Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette Olnce. 



A S STEWARD or STEWARD & GAMEKEE^ 



11 __a married man, about 40 years of age, If frecC 

 obtaining a Situation as above ; has been mthc nab,r „" cn1 ent:* 

 Rents, managing of Farms and Timber, with niea^ de d * 

 also a good judge of stock, and can be well recon " t ^#A 

 honestv and punctuality in accounts.— Direct to A. n-» 



honesty aad punctuality 

 Henley, Oxon 



VACANCY for a M 



EDICAL APPRENTICE f^J 



at a Public Institution, in one of our largos r {txa Qj* 

 cities. The advantages afforded are— residence in 1 ^^ 

 one of the Medical Officers, with liberty to "^"^pie a&* 

 course of study preparatory to examination, « nd .^^ 



tunities for practice.— Apply at the Gardeners 

 cultural Gazette Office. 



' Chronicle «** 



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