1842.} 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
359 
vented for i the cinder out of the pala eet 
ich Me: will di. o further. us 
of the m called chinglers.. 
rt.—The reportof t the Gidataat poor-law commis- 
sioners appointed | to inquire into the na ature and causes of 
town, 
per also into the extent to which the distress has Been re- 
lieved, = 9 arse been published. It ¢ 
un 
3 givin acco wor fe) n of the bo- 
a ugh orevis sly Se the existing depression of trade; 
i shows that the wuges derived from labour by a large por- 
® tion of those employed in the cotton manufacture w 
ie such as to place them and their families above the neces- 
ea sity of resorting to parochial relief. also acquits them 
a eed charge of improvidence, - ‘ “ must be 
g population of the 
morthe zr counties, that they exhibit a if Mages of bitathood 
@ in the endurance of distress, and a spirit of pride and inde- 
5 to the receipt of p 
WwW es of the prevailing dis. 
g ond several of the Semin ch mill-own ners 
all of whom stated that the want of 
e mills havin ng 
were exami ined, 
, owin to a 
number of 
: that th 
subjects, an at the interests of that br 
hich has d them with employment will be hel 
entitled to peculiar attention from the Legislat 
ay WwW ned as far 
whic left ‘that oon ne a 
ew minutes before 
the 
unbridge; and t train, 
piatss before eights it reached tow 
The dow 
the 
mission of the wspapers, ich the Sleee wil be 
Sey at Tunbridge Wells, cad other places, between 
three and f four hou 
ie 
IRELAND. 
—His Excelle ency the Lord Licnsgnent am ne 
m Lond 
Dublin. 
Ghantess: s de Grey arrived at the Castle 
4 onda n "Tuceds there 
s 
In the even- 
attended, was given a 
—Th 
wy his recent accident: 
as numerously 
mportant topics e. 
Association pledge tel 
uous exertion in tered ofr rey 
2vils of the Unio. 
a 
rospect of relief—they were a 
Mien say Cicatieg ritich Parlin 
ttacking them. 
ie patent not to 
‘Ireland There was ni 
there an 
ethene 
ing ex 
th 
we = een! 
cise. Having arrived at he top of one of the cliffs, the 
young gentlemen’ 4 hat eo blown off; anid either in en- 
deavouring to in it, or from his foot having sli : 
he fell down the face of the cliff, and was killedon the 
spot. He was 16 years of age, and is said to have’been a 
youth of great Saat 
iperary.—The distu turbance i in this county still 
tinue ; and the local papers, a numerous other out- 
rages, contain a long account ya a murder committed ona 
» who was 
hmeadle, in the barony of U 
Government “i offered 100/. 
ning bev igtegrwadh in his capac 
on the. lands of. Kilgurtin, ion 
beh respect to the disturbed state of this county, to which 
ve re it bra in several previ ous Numbers, Lord Eliot, 
Becectaty wot Ireland,s 
oan it was unhappily true that eee serious 
nr im committed in the th 
ts) 
Tis ad also heen ordered to hold 
himself in ‘readiness to assist at a mom 
trusted that those 
necessary the Hou 
new powers. ,Ihere was only one other point to which he 
ould allude. He believed the atrocious crimes now c 
ne 
then pronounce any opinion upon that point ; he shou 
merely say sc ~ was the pec subject on which he thought 
would bec 
it ee the Honse alled upon t 
legislate 
SCOTLAND. 
Edinburgh.—The Marquess of Bute, the Lord High 
—a held. his first levee, which was ee 
ered throne-room alace on the 19th 
of 
me “About noon his Lordship went to the High Church 
oad : - 
id befo 
ee letter it was his duty in the 
mmission and 
first place to assure them of ajesty’s resolution to 
maintain the Presbyterian Government of their church; 
d this being the first occasion on which he had had the 
nour to merge the Crown in a embly, he 
hoped he m ight be _ permitted to say tl ve them 
18 AS e 
mself, 
had farther the canoes of her Majesty to sinounie to 
them that she had directed her annual grant of 2,000/. to 
ve placed in their hands, for the propagation of the gospe el 
an Seo 
'|.in the High d Islands of tland.. .After some 
remarks on the distress existing throughout the co 
his Lordship concluded by expressing a hope that the de- 
liberations of the psc might, under the divine 
sing, conducted to those happy e which her 
ajesty so anxiously desired. The Moderator ad. 
dressed the Commissioner, tulating his Lordship on 
the interest he had al soften in the Church of Seot 
land ; assuring him of earnest desire of the. bly 
duct their deliberations in the spirit recommended 
by her Majesty ; and assuri m that the recommend- 
tions.of her Majes f e poor working classes 
would have a prominent place in their deliberations. A 
committee was named to answer. her Majesty’s letter; and 
t proceeded to business, when the Strath- 
ie se to a warm debate. Two par anges 
were i the one ee the 
from m arareare at the 
nly be on 
the civil or eccles on. 
pooree n. Mr. Dunlop moved, That the 
e Rev. James Dewar, the Her. Harry 
Leigh snd Major Stewart, be and their names 
ua that the commission ‘Purporting to 
ret in favour or} Messrs. Walk mond, 
be rejected. Dr, Cook objected to this cae, considera: 
ton of so importan nt a question, and moved as an amend- 
ment, That rae G Assembl not suteine the 
commissions of either of the After a long and 
Mage debate, Se vote was en 
or Mr. Dunlop’s motion, 215 ; 3; for 
asu 
again gave 
ommissioners from the presbytery of Strathbogie were 
heard ihe se tho They stated at 
not obe: 
Strathbogie ; and — their resolution not to’ obey 
the decision of a civil court in opposition to the duty whi 
they considered they owed to the church. Dr. ndlish then 
the pres was one unexampled 2 nthe be hietry- ef 
the Church of. Scotland. bere were ich 
es med if the Assembly ket shrink from 
na 
sop the 5 a of patronage, goes ges was finally 
fia 68; the numbers being—for 
motion, 215; sia ae 47. 
tv. 
Vic&-CHANCELLOR’s CourT.—Garrett ¥. 
nour, in giving judgment, sai d that the questi 
to maa rose ed the will of the testator in the 
, con limitatio whee of 
nat his will, dated Sept. 1809, t 
ual sh 
; saaeean 
h the Moone sree 
mete Bos 
and the longest aver ore their heirs ; and the 
wing wo “Sho 
oe ‘operty od case to be div 
between the children of my eine v9 sisters alive 
“4 my last surviving child.” _ Upon 
e turned t wi 
ese last words the dispute 
n the caus see that the children of the 
re ae all de ad, and that neither of them had left issue. 
me t the death of the survivor of the testator’s childr , there were 
ehikive living of wig of the testator's brothers and sisters, and 
it was in right of Mrs. Garrett, as one of those children, that the 
word ** heirs,’ ee in the will, m 
aye the timitation 
a 
ing a irrespective deaths; that the ii- 
nm was therefore Valid, no that if valid, it t bed upon — 
edtattted facts, mes effect. His Honoar said should hold that 
the word“ heirs” meant either children’ or idsue. 
we the © questio n, whether the testator 1 meant 
“a bes event oi the is 
his impression was, t 
in ryt ose il 
the testator m 
0) RepSlan learned | 
pring the bar, however, 
whisk 
ve evidence ina bb nd op vase at the Gloucester as- 
forecrdcnee nueaieaae Lhe thestatement . 
comeaarters which the ‘was obtained, the 
tg to give evidence 
tance on the ground that Bes absenting himself he ; 
mig ahee some pecuniary liability, bee cotetiteat’s attorney offered 
to indemnify him against the con: 
him a w 
irmin 
sap sates 8 by on other witnesses on 
- Cause sho a 
was submi 
isch harge the Fa eae 
thai 
