216 
THE GARDENERS a 
-—[Marcu 26, 
Pagar 1 ra-4 37 £1 
circu “ne attracted a large number of persons, and it | 
fi png at the ancient oases of St. Clement 
$s once covered the spot in question. 
Dah. 
‘ House or Lorps.—Appeals. —Baird and ae ve en - 
he Court of 
others.— an appeal 
sion, given under the following ci ircumstances : —The dent, 
Mr. Neilson, claimed to be the inventor of a new app ition of 
to prodace heat in smelting-furnaces an th 3 an 
the appellants had taken him and the other respondents 
¢ in the patent) use the patent. The terms 
of payment became afterwards a 5 ject of dispute between t 
parties ; and the respondent, among other le eedings, ob- 
tained, he Court of Session a d interdicting the appel 
lants from the use of the said Lat until they had found securit 
rds 
agreement, the pola were bound to pay fo 
the patent poe before gt meee ta date of that agreement, an 
that the decree of the was right, rer ele Be 
» wit ts. 
Court or CHancery.—In re Yorke —This a petition to 
, discharge an order of Lord Cottenham, which chat Ree the estate 
of a deceased Soeehaiities of the roe ~ Fae ae diye aoe interes ards at 
t na 
- np ved ae pe year 
form as to chai ore, and the court, by charging 
5 per it. in the present case, es hed, without any warning 
or notice, entirely new principle. There were too many ex- 
tenuating mst: sin the case. e money was difficult to 
get in, more than the allo ce had been expended on the luna- 
tic’s main nce, and if the accounts had be ssed ly an 
expense of 20/. or 30/. a year would have been incurred, to the 
prejudice of a very ‘l income. The ancell 
expense not overrated. His lordship had of late 
looked at a number of gal eee < he ni nt of 
lanatics’ estates, an instan ‘ound a bill of costs 
and in o ce he 
containing full eleven hupdred items, es the date of the Zz 
‘© that of the fixing the amount of mainte- 
wiped wedteen shown to rr 
The was perhaps a hard one, but if 
i lneieed ta the public funds, 
“¥ 
would have early, and re- invested, that th 
rests half-yearly ones instead ‘of annu: 
, too, m pr th respect to the profit derived 
a the f the money by the committee. The ust 
be affirmed, but his ater 9 guarded himself against ming th 
principle of an Haphas of 6 per cent. in such ae 
Cockburn v psi is an appeal from the Vice-Chan- 
An oma merchant, named Ra el, bequeathed, in 
the year 1791, a considera’ for the purpose of founding 
support and i, decent manner, such a num- 
ber of Armenian children as fun ld allow ; but in 
the of Rollin to Ne 
age, for the benefit of h 
he directed the General H 
into the Armenian langu 
sens ne oe A aera and 
the been 
the master and by 
be berenpene, 5.93 5  ereter visitor, and 
pak grope oo but it corse a 
of ape educated 
penses fw! ineurred ee it y ie thought, the “court would bea 
pt incom: from the = jis now 
e@ boys pte eee 
pr a ae v ice, and that as it was the manifest intention 
f the ore i fluence to the charity, with 
a view to eaves cement in civilisation of the Armenian nation, 
through the ‘instrumentality < eed 
review No 
found n 
founder. 
boys, it is now expedient to 
such improvements as may Ss 
with the trusts of the will of the 
as of opinion that no maladmi- 
nm pro eA, and refused to inter- 
fere.—The Lord Chancellor postponed = further hearing = the 
next day of the sittings of the court, and rose sant gee hol liday: 
iene 
uit by a married woman by her next : irk 
tees for the transfer of a 
an ~4 caleaiieie 
“The Vice- “Chancellor be 
age ears, her se, 
e should die under 21, then the > fund t to fall into the 
residue of ope The plainti attained 
1835, but the the fund w was not then Giasameteed to her. 
ment 
were paid b by the 
her i period ro the pling of the bl 
was made by rats eth e p transfer of th 
Posy eee ener varus aete ed trustees declined to make the 
In 1688 = 
time of her povtar rm 
° 
upon a feigne di r the 1 
urpose of poet ert ee ile, but faite = the attempt. 
Ma arford was ig make va — Lise e plaintiff 
all eae ee tg Troneous, 
o right Ns tueerfere dates his pos- 
that the sth by - _ Sees 
e he case; and the bill prayed a unc- 
tion to restrain Mr. Watford th rom ma kit ng his award ‘until the 
seen ~— the ew a title should be determined in a 
er mann Am now made for the injunction, It 
session of the p 
3 
& 
a 
=| 
~| 
o 
s 
as attached to 
Neat the 
bainigadteo to “the esp HOMES, 
town rank, which 
agers in qu uestion, pal t the flocks 
used to aieners on the 
changed their ground daily, there was no particular 
number in the flocks, but that rand had equal venir of pasturage. 
The defendants, who were some of t the copyholders of a mane, 
denied the plaintiff’s ght to pasturage in = man he eee 
d an ‘ 
ight conclusion, and that the action which the [wee ca had ia. 
e que: ts) 
ri 
self brought had ee 2 ey the question. His Honour observed 
that the language 0 f the six er peng was not exactly applicable 
to this case, W nich wa ot to land, but to commonage. 
The plaintiff might give up th e, but it could not be 
recovered from him. He aught, however, the words ire 
‘ioemmoia 
tho 
tatute would be sufficiently satisfied if it should appear that 
: 9 i 
party could not s sustain his right, which in this case was In the 
nature of a b rey ‘ nee on without stint. ow, that the 
plaintiff had bee ssession of such aright, must be admitted. 
nd the section ‘attriba te s a certain value to possession. Stric 
speaking, upon a fair int erpretation of the section, the commis: 
sioners could not make any adjudication. The as no impu- 
tion on the conduct of Mr. Watford. The pa w said 
who 
a: cer! Seo jurisdiction, had mer amy thrust that jurisdiction 
There had been a 
hold partes bound by a itake, 
urse The injunction 
might és settled on a future day, 
ther the parties could agree ae testa sy 
“the matter must be put in a 
ust £0 he mode of trial 
deat a little consideration whe- 
urse to be adopted. 
eee ig was an 
orney-Gener inet vy. Cullu ~ be 
pipers on behalf of the relators ia this m: which came 
on upon the Master’s report an and for further acorns; and also 
upon a petition. e charity is renmed ‘the ae dhall Feoffment 
of Bury St. Edmund’s,” and was ©: iginally. established in the 
latter part of th or the beg g of the isth century. It 
continued to be increased by gifts, devises, and bequests, ade 
by a great variety of benefactors 00 years succeeding, 
— at the present day yiel enue of upwar 
i bequests w 
for what are termed superstitious uses, and were areoxe void ; 
other portions were for the repairs of the churches of Bury, and 
other parts for the aged 
n 1833 the information was filed by the Attorney- General at the 
f in which numerous 
nst the 
ny out of the pened we in. 
me—na oy. co) Selah ahd “a, for the instruction of 150 
$ oor boys’ pears for the instruction of 3 - 0 bo dei ; and 
a poor girls’ school, for the ins —s 
ter’s report left it to the tr pee 
awe with i 
150 gir as- 
mations ot ait oa" mis- 
ist ous persuasion they should 
and went on 
ies = = stated dnc 
i lessons prepared for the use of the Irish 
National Schools, and the authorised version f the Sc’ 
thereof as the trustees should think proper; and 
reine yen should be introduced into the 
of the 
masters an mibers 
Church of England, and that rane . Scriouear lessons. —— for} - 
use =i the Irish re Schools should not be fgg mi oa rt of | 
the scheme. His Hon Paap act: at if there w be any 
education, “it must aneates be accompanied by ins’ nlite in reli- 
yy-word and a 
ion, for without be educate would 
cke iia _ ew b 
be 
mere moc’ , i 
struction in what possible standard could the court 
have, or: with Propriety adopt, but the established religion of the 
countr po: me = maemo = to be a conscientious Ana- 
baptist, w inet ther s there to be no exposition of the Scrip- 
— f there then | the parties must 1 0 
ini hich at the difficulty. His Honour could- we 4 
derstan argum hat no part of the funds of the charity 
sho applied to the purposes Bs educati that would be 
d be po: 
plain, es ane — ten A 
e than 
on, that wo 
comprehension ; but it would 
be wo: be edu n 
=e tha Aeon should 
o be held that religious 
hehe bpd see no guide, no 
governed, ee by the cee mg 
sthe chan arieties eligions 
a 2 
I~ 
oO 
3 
a 
° 
5 
B. 
iz) 
Z 
aa 
oO 
3 
) 
iv] 
oO 
o 
ae 
fee 
8 
5 
n 
- 
had for ‘the Established Church, but 
of the c ur concluded 
e counsel d that both parties 
the prema icien ty of ‘the. collie clause :—They 
reh of ag 
ents are in Conero via with 
chal be required to repair twice 
-day to Church, “Oe see Sy in of public worship, ac- 
their several c — d those who attend Church 
shall go iace with, and aod anie a oy. the master.”’—His 
Honour — that the instruction on the 
esc! 
Lord’s- — must be spe- 
ribed as ‘instruction erste age to the Liturgy, Cai 
ila, Wie Articles cf the Church’"=10n vo said that they 
£3 renew agreed = insert heal p vines htevesistert any tw 
. by a note in writing, may excuse fro 
Church any of the scholars who ee e . a ate in 
a the Church of England.”’—His our said that 
the es had not agreed, he should have had considerable 
en 
be insurmountable diffical ig 
cept that 1 according to cots zee ach 7 i gs pea ex: 
Db orjohn Ww 
ASSIZE ‘ord Circuit. Williams and 
a 
with 
peared in this epee at the time. It will be remembe 
red tha . 
ceased was an old woman living by herself at a place called 
Br ry +; aA t she was dis. 
din the kitchen, with 
he r Sewat eut and the house robbed of everything valuable it be 
ail ers were traced by - testimony of n 
merous witnesses f deceased’s oes 
about the time the murder was keg scoiacgag articles belonging te to 
ong chain of rote ric evidence a 
fe) 
artaken 
sed render that to 
jury foun y the priso illi 
quitted Slawson. ual 
ties, then passed sentence of death upon Ww illiams: after whack 
pe tin who from the 
riginator of the pst for 
the robbe ~~ his confession being admitted in evi idence e a 
narsd Z. 
that he had 
TATTERSALL’S, Taurspay.—None of the Derby favourites 
were in forte, 2 or was the general bettin ng by any means brisk, 
stolw t ys soli ys oh ee peo feeling dis- 
played i al urther sidered pro- 
“Ne eit ar Avekland ~ “Chas ny ore in sage , the odd: 
quoted against each h aving secs omeres. currently ; Ballinkeele 
ont movement upw 
Holderness, i wh 
to 1. Very little money . 
si improved a ute, and 2,0) ral ti 
about Belcceur. othin ng fresh rahi in Chester Cup or Oaks, 
Closing prices :— 2,000 EAS STAKE 
6 to 1 agst M:. CBewers Meteor (taken) 
DERBY. 
16 to 1 agst Col. Peel’s} Ps to : agst Palinurus 
22 1 a lot (taken) Espartero 
ae | Mr. Goodman’s lot (ta-) i Moss Trooper (taken) 
gr 1 mele 1 Robert de Gorham (ta.) 
18 1 Auckland i The Artful ee 
2 3 Chatham 3000 30 Tripoli (tak 
20 4 The Lord of Holderness | 1000 10 Scalteen ree 
ee Ballinkeele 2000 15 Belcceur (taken) 
OAKS. 
16 to 1 agst Passion | 20 to 1 agst Amima filly (taken). 
Le erty 
INSOLVE NTS.—S. P. rapt 
Cheat aes ‘ins 
VS. Gooding, Osborne-street, Whitechapel, J. Radfo 44, pets F 
wars per—W. J. Nettleton, yey terraces Upper Grange-road, 
Bermondsey, corn- -dealer—W. P. Bothams, Tong, Shropshire, malts’ cast 
rete me geet ENLARGED iste 3 ba Lisle- pe SAS Westminster, 
eb Manning, High- — ates _ » drapers—C, Caswall, 
sell-square, lod "i haga e-keeper—J. M. Gipps, Duke- 
N stastey Coates Grange, Lincoln- 
shire, miller—J. Stevens, James- t, Limehouse, rickmaker—T. Berriman, 
Pe eae -grove, Surrey, build er. 
NKKUPTS.—J. W. Nevill, Bread-street, Cheapside, Manchester-ware- 
ster: 
ALY —— Chinbesivall- sham oe bookseller—J. Gale, sen., 
L e, Shadwell, J. 
da 
“a ales es 
hag ou =D n’s, C' 
iz ni Ww hb! a. 
HH. Wickham, Bristol, linendraper—W.Darlington, Liverpool, wine-merchant 
—R. Turvill, Kin -upon-Thames, baker— owe, Chester, shoemaker— 
= Turner, Oldham, Lancashire, flonridedler—E. Young, Birchio ’ ty 
emer rp Thomas, Leint seep 
» dleveturdshire, * miller—J» Benn' 
er—J. Cun J. Ing 
ett, 
Man , New Bond- street, mer- 
chan 
“ScorcH § SEQUESTRATIONS.—J, Hamilton, jun. Stonehouse , victualler 
¢, Broomielaw of Glas; 0 See a -merchant—D, Russell, Uddingstone, 
Lani wo Behe founder —H. Mithell, Ninians, Stirlingshire, groce ‘ocer—J. 
sae ee - ana, quatrier—W, Bell, Geshe, SR: ‘T. Saunders, Alloa, 
—W. Lees, Glasgow, merchan 
ester, calico-print 
at Coblentz-on-the-Rhine, the wife of D: 
a son—On the 17th inst., at Bedd ing ton, a 
_ 17 4 
RTHS.—On the 8th ult. 
Yonge, resident 1d oh ge of 
Mrs. G. E gow of a son—On 
> both inst, 
ug 
Dy. On the 19th inst., gerd Mary’s. 
of Peckham, Surrey, to — Anne, yr a Fic Poe 
Esq-, of Ludbam. oe Norfo: a e 19t inst., at Twickenham 
Brown, of Sloa: rid 
a the 20th io 4s 
J. Ayers, 
aed Bs g 
n 
— 
ED 20th i Lincoln's Ipn-fields, Lucretia 
Green, only daughter of ‘ies inte ‘Bellam cee the 20th inst, ite town 
lesfield—On the 12th inst at his 
of tr ggth year—At Rams- 
Over: 
=a ot Balhae 2-hill, in the 34th year 
, J. Harde: astle, eat Tal _— 
D 
INDEX OF THE NCA CUTE SUBJECTS IN 
Amateur’s Gard “ 1886 | Mesembryanthemum e uilaterale 1926 
Avauals, subcaien aa hardy . 1936 Moth, Honeycomb, is destruc- 
me cies a, its treatment. - 184 tion . 93 b 
eparagus, its waite remarked Nipheea oblonga - ist . 
+ 187 a | Nitrate of soda for Pine- “apples Lode 
190 4 | Peas, resined 109 ¢ 
Aguccession 193 b | Pear, Hacon’s Incompa: arable. 1894 
190 a | Plants, edible, of Tasmania + , 1924 
ce. woe] ene a 
. t bea * ; 
Chandier’s Nurs piwoter ¢ on. 1920 '| Potatoes, cota net 193 
Chatsworth iewart - 187¢ | Peonies, tree, chair traatinent 193.4 
Cloudberry, T. Se aspberry, the double-bearing 193 ¢ 
Columnea Bonioten a»  « 1915] Rhedodendrons, soilfor -  - 193 
onservatories, © f 89¢ ubarb grown in chimney-pots lol ¢ 
Coprosma microphylla 192 6 | Rivers’ Mt T * on bide 
Cyrtopodiums, their treatment 188 4 | Rookery, to establish + 188¢ 
Dahlia, fancy, in mis Root-pruning, remarks + Feat 
hg cat =. : 191 ¢ Rowen; a selection of . 18 6 
in Paris . 190 @ Ms 
Flower-stand describe wes betes Pee: toe ‘<met 
urze se uantity per acre . . hd $ 
Gaultheria os ida ote . re ioe ae seal, »a cure for Ot “8 1875 
Grape. — thes rivelling of, on b, 193 4 | Shale, a manure ye 
Oe my ay of reno mh 193 6 | Sorrel, snow ‘ . + ig 4 
Gua v9 on cles Sereek ctoae ; é 1935 
> et-briar he ss . 
Hothouses, the ‘ventilation of . 1884 | Tasmanian Eanes of Nepera} 
Ink for zinc labels Pi - 189¢ Science. rev. eo 
57 hace lobelie ides 91 a| Tulips, fancy, F ‘in Paris is 
anielis’, remarks on 189 2 | Water from iron tanks not in- ’ 
uM vie prepa suman ~ ye7b urious  . Leet 
amuresy th their preparation in Xanthorrhea arboren ine! ee 
. + 1915 | Zine labels, ink for ee 
Piinted in 
Brapsury and Evan rd-street, Fleet-street 
the Peactant, of Whitefriarsy in the gi of Tonsins pe hha amg 4 on them at 
the Orvics, 3, Prin BS-STREET, re S foer we ho og the 
maine e all A vercamacnas ae Cc het ws Shisensed dressed te 
hear He: wader, March 96, 1849, 
on their persons, - 
— 
