i i a 
ee Te ee 
a a 
Jan, 1.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
15 
ple ple shoul Id be taken out of the hands of those who were 
willing voluntarily to superintend it.” 
Windsor.—On Wednesday, the Queen, accompanied 
ince Albert, several members of the R: 
by Pri te: ae and 
a select party of sixty, proceeded to the Great P » about 
a mile from the Castle, to be By : . ata he of the 
Royal buck unds, to a stag-hunt. 
“Majesty was in a carriage ey oe aeodee by outriders. 
he Dinbam stag, which had been hunted during the past 
two seasons, and let out to rove at liberty during the sum- 
mer, was selected from th : hounds laid on 
a 
hour, taken e to Cpebesend lodge he Queen, 
in her carriage, rch: the Park in various directions, 
and had a good view of the whale the run, with wh 
5S 
FS 
e the Fou 
shantrey, nine feet high, is, it is said, 
likely to Bis Placed i in be as Bie. Ik. 
Wore —The peer sep sm pees 
lhave manifested itst on the borders of this c 
abou 
stline at Studley Holt. 
of each other, and in 8 case, but for great 
sire tito. other stacks, it is thought, must have been 
consumed. 
Railways -—An accident, which produced considerable 
alarm at the time and has si = ace d much exci 
ey 
+» O 
S 
3 
is] 
~ 
or 
whereby. eight persons 
and many others seriously ane 
lu lige — -train, with a number of passen- 
ouring class, left the Paddington terminus 
had proceeded as far a 
lip of earth that had fallen from the e 
ment, and covered the rails. § quite dark at the 
time, and the immediate consequence wa 
was forced off the line, and th heavily-laden luggage- 
Rone wonuiias twelve others. erers “te A y 
mechanics, and among the killed were weet asons 
from the ouses of Parliain ere acne 
_ down into the country to spend t stmas_ holiday 
with their friends, o da 
ee 
Se I Ee ee ee ae ae ee ee eT eS a ea 
SS ee Oe aS eee a ee See aE mt! Oe a wee ee. 
e 
_Of persons living in the 
‘€xpressed their i sbccumeinas to servants 
= sli 
of their cig 
a, which 
Railw 
aken place some short 
a eters under ue po 2 
rs, Mr. Berthra 
re was b 
and he, not aes aware 
he signal of safety fo train 
ue e jury apr a a verdict of Accidental death 
n all the eight cases, with a 
place, were no 
wad y, that due serene had 
for ag pabasity of the embankment, after 
the recent slips that had occurred near the s a 
ng Infi e proceeding 
nd that they are all likely to recover.—A 
fatal accident has occurred on the line m4 the Gr . ped 
tion Railway, to o 
i at = 
a 
iJ 
ning, walking towards bo 
hom me, and shortly fer he learned ee he — noms un 
_— “by one of the t had bee biking a 
little beer, but was ‘ot “tntodiéa a. "The gine diver of 
the train which ran over dethased deposed that 
saw him, and not being aware of the accident, ‘did not 
stop the train. Deceased was picked a fe inu 
fter by a railway labourer, but though he not die for 
h ‘ 
accident 
was a ieneads cite a 
ae any part of him, or he must linte ha killed on the 
he only ee ae a could come to was 
that deceased lay dow 
proprietors of the 
ies Railway bh 5; been held 
injure ed, 
rs that the men were 
rom 
: gunpowder, i oa 
in ing up ae prea had bee 
pee for safety in a neighbouring shed, u 
mith’s sh 
the Bris 
dangerou 
d m 
nia rmary, : wise four of them continue in a 
IRELAND. 
began his speech by stating that the 
Corn-laws was act 
the Corn-law was grossly unequ The quantity of bread 
consumed by the wealthier classes, he said, was insignifi- 
cant compared with r wealth, while that consumed by 
b 
the poor man amounted to nine-tenths of the value of his 
pr © powers. The Corn-law tax was unjust in that 
respect, but it was also ly unjust that = Bn ass of 
the € people should derive an income from the aaa 
f r. After some farther + rem 
aeit int ‘thee 
strain, Mr. O’Connell added that ike he looked at the 
recent accounts of the mantfacturing interests of ngland 
he found the quantity of man senuieovered good: 
day by roe the number of wn sek likewi 
mercantile men failing, ban 
progress, its gradual gre ee tecopn as its fall; and 
he confessed it struck bi ething—he hoped of 
superstition—which led hi oa thin the pri 
England's greatness had aes" a and that ere 
and fall we e ted upon the subject 
with georcee, although he felt ong England ro "inflicted 
much bitt a greater 
e, and he w on i. struggle 
maintain that supe riosity which he feared 
y were losing. His whole antes was “ngrocse in 
Lae se F, the ngland, es he 
ut 
‘its 
Hun was said, would break through stone tilts; ‘ind 
no pelitical institution wa d against 
the clamourin 
holic re at and of the 
egro Emancipat snare “4 et to co aoe that 
the objections to the re e Corn-laws w 
0 e 
nglan n ensequene of- the 
ruinous operation of ies desizcneies Wi After some 
further eoaeerbbtiotiy; Mr. Bright was succeeded by Mr. 
» Thom 8, who addressed 
se ry f 
ure, and that it is sdpeniedt that all 
dee should petilice for their ars — repeal, and 
s be n rein r doing so.— 
epeal plete was 
ef 
ee 
the woprewes to Dr. Cantwell, his ¢ sletay, and 
unty 
| ewer gd tae ar anf oe | 
the A so = the co Meath, for the noble demonstra- 
f he 
5 
SP 
ati He wished it to n that he could take no 
part in the approaching election ; the law had m im 
rnin er, an igned his office he could 
conscientiously take part one way. or another. 
ort, he was determined that his year of office he 
would act with strict y; and, according to his 
an 
ue ieee with equal j rae to all. 
Belfast.—A public meeting o f persons interested in the 
linen trade of Ireland has been held in this tow 
purpose of adopting 
sion it was ously _ That a memorial be 
forwarded to the Board of Tr " ing ment 
of the present position of the linen manufacture.” Thig 
document was signed by all the banking companies of thig 
town, and by a large portion of t hants and capital 
ists of the neighbo ; the whole of the signatures- 
representing, it is said, n ly th millions of capi 
The memorial, whi tended to some length, stated that 
nome ep or indirectly, to 
That fro on the improvement < of 
countrie 2 
tive 
measures ately isdepted on the continent with respect to 
tish goods, d a suf- 
ritis orialists are unable to fin 
some market for their ibitétions: and 
i ately be annihilate Th : 
sues ae it would not be the interest of the coun’ 
enerally, as it would be their ; 
gs 
f the matter to S38 
rely upon ps redial to 
practicable means of mere to: 
of the case. 
