_ 1842,] 
THE GARDENER®S’ Mtb BR ks 
sith reference to the management.—A special general 
peeting of the North Midland COMPA has been pee at 
, to consider the report of the committee appoi 
e company. It pew = 
og Stes 4. 
m eeing to effec 
11,335/. directors expressed their + gongs aa it is 
impracticable to carr ry t the reductions of the 
mmittee 
to operation safety of 
ine. — se ort of the committee was adopted almost 
usly by shareholders, and a resolution was 
it yontd Peat tend to restore the confidence 
if the whole o 
b ntleme 
of the 
i 
to the directors to borrow from the Exchequer-bill Loan 
io 000 at the rate o Tr 
e shareholders expressed their hope that th 
ll be applied to the progress of 
works, and not to the payment of interest, as is said to 
se when money was borrowed on a pre- 
appe at the directors will require 
out 200,000/., including the present 50,000/., om- 
who this amount they propose 
ame » rate below 5 per 
nt., if possible, on the security of their works.—Surveys 
in progress, and application to Parliament is 
in the ensuing for leave 
i 
Lo 
and Rimer, to 
accommodate the i iereegitte tra 
os 
ublin.—The acancy ¢ d by the death of Lord 
Ger; in the seihesaaeaties peerage is kel to be filled up 
O’Neill.—Sir hes obtained a 
conditional rule for a wri sm mus ov be directed to 
the corporation of this ci itp; "eqiring vies to grant him 
compensation for hee loss of his at Mig bs 2 
Treasurer.—A ort is nth gies 
O'Connell i is eed to wi ithdra w from the werd hoger, 
and 
a letter from Poonah, 4 
of his day 
dated Se ept tener 29, received te: the 
Overland mail, it is stated that t a private in one of the East 
India artillery regiments has confessed os he was 
murderer of Lord Norbury. He was attacked by a violent 
q 
sequently recovered, and to have Soe pated 
under arrest by the authorities 
reen.—A fat confit f took place in the neigh- 
is 
who resides in this county, placed themselves in 
order to enforce the collection. Having met with some 
resistance fr eople, who were rahe ouring under 
great excitement, they returned to town to augment their 
force,*gnd then proceeded once more to the ne of action. 
people were now pressing on them in ber about 
, ep 
two men were sh , and f rs wounded. 
; excitement produced by this event has rendered it 
_ necessary to call out the troops have been 
e military, and tr 
sent from Cork and other peeerrine stations. 
. SCOTLAND. . e 
Edinburgh.—The quarterly meeting of the Commission 
of the General Assembl 
| There was comparatively little diseussion, th y bus 
4 s of i nee being a resolution to memorialise 
' Government for redress, in refere to the collision be- 
: the civil and ecc al jurisdictions—as mor 
especially illust “ge by the nt decision of the House 
_ of Lords B pery sae case, and the sti 
sss 
ut 
attend were ba ay ; ‘be served with ti ches in order 
to obtain admission. _ The Con vocation remained n de all 
met 
cours 
again in the course of the forenoon, adjourned in the 
P of the aye until Monday. 
nronn 
, setting forth the te terms on 
eer ‘go pe can continue ministers of the church of 
land. Nearl 
200 clergymen ifferent parts of t 
country have Rast easen their inability to attend in conse- 
quence é mency of the weather, and other causes ; 
but it is expected they will agree to Sn gar ag the 
Conyo¢ation. It is also ru 
made to allow Messr 
on, sider 
that Ly assemblage should be bask sis to clergy- 
men, as origina a intende 
yr.—Seriou 
va the goles eB 
ounded. The yeo lied o 
aie pee with the local euthories Bis suc- 
ceeded in ring tra polity, br ge grea tement 
still preva in the neighbourh f the f 4 
ald.—The local 
ots a) again taken place in Ayrshire 
many individuals ha a ae sev re 
23 
<< 
pers pete: 
M‘Adum, late J rrrident of tng "Medical Awe} e Hominy, 
be e minister and heritors o Ao 
native, sum 0 of 1000, 
ublic fonts and roceeds ‘. be 
annually hagermegll in blankets and fae ee amongst the 
poor during w 
HEATRICALS, 
Saturday, Congreve’s comedy of 
was revived, with all that attention to 
ish e 
Several sieration ns pave been 
taste and notions of a modern audience ; many of the 
coarser dialogues were ‘omitted, and nothing | was allowed 
to remain 
This process naturally ores the ‘play | of much of that 
smartness of dialogue for 
& 
3 
oO 
success of the experiment was com 
Mrs. Frail fe perhaps the and aud most § i 
racter of the evening; she seemed to feel all the enjoy 
ment of t aes an Paeecloitel tor lively humou 
o her audience. Mrs. Stirling's ate. Powteht <a ved 
me reyflerer ; .the di ialogue of the three ladies was ad- 
mirabl an ome wledged b 
distinct nom of 
F 
ees 
OVENT GAR —A rm s been current for 
some days that Mr. ‘Ke rable I 2 rate from the 
ment of this wrecty and that 
until after Christm A me 
° 
an nce 
rast ee but at present patie appears to hav 
decided o 
SSS 
#iiscrlanegus. 
Di — One er Majesty’s naval offi- 
writes to the fo slowing a, from aay Fendt 
Bist of August i“ Thr e hi andari Em 
gh m ins—th 
ror’s uncle, 3 the nor of two covane: 
Elepoo; and the peg General Isaphen, agg 
Chief—came off on ae attended by a numerous 
train of mandarins of: ses, to pay their respects 
coal General. The Cornwallis 
meeting. steamer was in 
em, to take them from the shore to the 
a 
flag- 
they were saluted with three guns from the Cornwallis, 
the number they Fie themselves on such occasions. When 
yo 
he poop, or rather 
oop, on the guarter-deck, where the Plen 
andiGeneral stood as sti crutches, in the Pall 
togg 
ur people went a few days aber ta poten the 
se Celectials, a joss-house out. 
ce 
A good deal of ceremony. Cal gs give you som idea 
of the meeting.” —Bombay Cou 
urt or Cuancery.—And. Wallis.—The Lord Chan- 
oir gave cere vd = s matter, wh ch was argued before the 
nD. ed by Mrs 
e leases wer e in 
8 
of in d g with weet 
0 justice between the parties, why ys that the in- 
erests of one party might not be p 
d be best co’ ted by uit 
ha d the pitt, objects to be Prosecuted, and dima that which 
was clearly irregular. Pe order of the rt of Exchequer was 
therefore confirmed, and the saneee bf dis: oot 
Lhe ai png or'’s Cov. -- Sores . rien. —The circum. 
stances of t were Vv oer ox rdinary. The subject of the 
‘suit was not or BS avuature to call for notice, but the unusual sensa- 
tion which the e Aectomecn ent, 
pet 
ae itself to the cone rast ayes proceeded, nat oy it n 
make some m of the matter. The suit is A among 
pha ya's f to otic the attention of the Court 
psig call 
cke 
Py 
gene eyed 
the Engle took off the nd bowed, and when both 
parties were sufficiently a. they shook hands 
most cordially, and then retired to the cabin to rest after 
ch - The marines were P on 
quarter-deck as a guard of honour, the seamen disper 
ound t pper deck, and the ship was full of naval 
cers, all in their full uniforms, which gave everything 
a brillia pearance. en i 
“ate ee their bewilderment 
e 
the ship, w 
time to a a fee of-battle ship. They had 
ne 
J 
which s e mandarins got drunk on cherry cordial 
and biaatly, ay all then left highly delighted and pleased. 
and 
ries. The} ciate alone 
ust e cost each of the 4S g defendants aie ll 100/., and there 
as not a single charge in s any one of them could 
nswer. He was py to fea hig bill Oh ot b the name of 
dra. 
n this or any o , the bar, 
defended mpi pb the eithck of Mi Wakefield, an 
that the bill set forth a chain of syst esa fraud, which entitled 
the plaintiff e relief | in a court of Bag Vice- veo llor 
po as far as he wierd judge of th is matter, there was nothin; 
with suffici d eg hy 
had done 
tances of the 
His opinion was, that there wa: cor against Col- 
lins on the bill to cnnbie the Court 6 3 ve ps aes 
st e demurrer must 4 allowed.—Mr, 
pe iat applied for leave to pe the bill.— His Honour carge it 
im the case, i rare on = Rs arg 2. mo: 
fendan e@ was 0 
jong oi ponderous ‘record, and found, o 
ext nothing but vague and ge eneral 
allegations against him, which it was Foal cy for any man to 
m sod mt, was not a case in which the Court would give leave 
+ —Case of Cops. ain: ipiaboeta our af -General on 
o the a 
saturday moved that Capt. Douglas 
- am rshal of the Les ‘shale, ag el endant hav ving just 
sly bee “4 charged e Cou the info rma. 
renin on which he had be 
towhich henow pleaded “No eae. Mr.M. Exambern tipo 
‘apt. Douglas, goth that me motion * the pp 
Socral was one whic self was about to make upon 
of his client. ithout ma om ing any 
- 
The 
ress application to the Court, originated a up 
he amount of bail which was to be required coon mesg part 
A ent of a motion pe Ba sap nghhreny por- 
ody. 
coin nc mans dh page 
lease from actual c 
mately de cide d that 
cation was to 
Or 5 ; aaa 
a with the East India Company, for the 
what whi ch they 
would consent to. ‘accept The defendant w: ke in the mean time 
directed, according to the motion of _— Attorney-General, te be 
transferred from Whitecross-street of the Queen’s 
pps 
. On Thursday the Att apney-Geuaee applied to the Court 
for a writ of wae damus directed to the Chief Justice of Madras, 
im to hold t the purpose 
ouse, am pto 
October, and was signed “H. shrapnel.” The letter, after 
