1842. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 861 
to toget insane arhepe of condition into Bethlehem, with an | the centre of a yard containi of other Cheltenham.—The rs state that a 
offer of 3007. or 400/.a year. Ther e was wanted a kind | ricks, which would have been SG Sicticuaaies bat f a the arrival | named Coldwell died rie ther toete on Retiseliig lack Seam from 
of 1a sp pobeling institution for the insane, which should | of several engines from the metropolis and the surround. tual destitution. From the evidence on the inquest, it 
be got up by public subscripti the present day, | ing villa e total loss is expected to exceed 2000/. | appeared that deceased been long ont of work 
nwell was the only place where the poor were better off | Ab week since two ricks were fired in a nei and subsisted by the kindness o uw almost 
han the rich ad examined the system practised | farm pm o Mr. pin. unday night, $ poor as hi On Saturday he attended Becerra 
there, and all his former prejudices again were en- ine at Newnham, near Baldock, in Hert- | the Catholic chapel. mere was >ng we kn 
tirely removed. Several other magistrates bore testimony | fo ordshire, was fired, and the rick-yard destroyed, containing immediately afte r the se corpse. At the paren 
to the complete success of the Ha rea system, and the | corn y Goa t2 ,000/., nari 400 quarters of wheat, and a | on Monday, shear returned a “tordiet 9? he ‘* Died 
resolution was unanimously adopte arge quantity of clover-seed, which, with other corn, | from — of the common necessaries of li 
Youthwark.—A long statement se been published by | would have found eiployadhnt for thirty men through the hester—_On We aliohig week, a cating was held in 
the managers of the parochial schools in this borough in | whole winter. his any ‘for the purpose of presenting Lady Anne Wil- 
reference to a performance of sacred music.which had been Barnstaple.—The annual emg et took sw in this | braham with a portrait of her husband Mr. rge Wil- 
advertised to take place in St. Saviour’s Church. It | town on Friday last. At the dinner which followed, Lord | br. raham, late Member for South Cheshire. The portrait 
appears that it was the intention of certain inhabitants of | Ebrington sew supported by his father, maatenates, was painted by Sir M. A. Shee, President of the Royal 
the parish to give a performance of sacred music in that | who addre the meeting as Lord Lieutenant of the | Aca emy ; and the inscription stated that it was presen 
cburch for the benefit of the parochial and national schools. | count ly need, he said, upon this occasion, re- the supporters and friends of Mr. Wilbraham, “as a 
at intention having communicated to ee Bishop of | peat the opinions which ad always adv , that, in | memorial o} ir gratitude for the zeal and ability with 
Winchester, his Lordshi; commande o such | the great xed community of which this er a which he advocated their interests, and in admiration of 
performance shall take place. The Bishop’s eter oe was composed, the ae ed of every ee depend e integrity and manly independence which characterised 
_ that the annual rehearsal and performanc upon a union of the whole. It was no of his duty, | his political conduct during the ten years he represented 
for the ber he sons of the clergy are very differe t | and foreign to the o hese saat either i ouse of Parliament.’’ The meeting was 
from the proposed concert, and that ‘‘ with the minister | praise or condemn the principles by which such measures very numerously attended, the picture being presented 
alone, subject of course to his responsibility to the ordi- | were carried out—it was sufficient for us to know that by Lord Rober Peper iener In the evening a dinner took 
nary, i right of exercising his discretion as to the | they had now become the f the land, and by them | place, i i am reviewed the different 
allowing the use of the church for any meetings, except | our relations with other countries aaa be directed. But | topics which had meen the public attention while he 
the customary meetings for vestry for parochial business. | he would boldly state, with respect o their mingling poli- | was their representative. It appears that the i re- 
The minister has a perfect right to refuse the use of the | tical with agric cultural discussion, aa we ought, as wise | senting the portrait originated with the yeomanry in the 
church for such a pares as advertised ; and has not | and prudent men, to hold ourselves ready for further regu- | neighbourhood of Sandbach, and that a large proportion 
only aright so to do, but itis his bounden dut The | lations for the admission of foreign corn. He did not take | of the mica received were from persons in a humble 
hurch € rant the use of th is opinion on this subject simply from the distress that | station who we ous to contribute to the testi ; 
church.” consequence of this prohibition oe managers | prevailed among the manufacturing population of the por: yt onservative dinner t place in this 
have refused to give the performance in any of the taverns | kingdom ; but he thought they must look in the next ses- | town on Tuesday, the Mayor, Mr. J. Smith, 
in the borough, and have consequently abandoned it | sion of Parliament for further relaxation in the laws for | The meeting was attended Sir J. Y. Buller and Lord 
altogether. admission of forei ; and he ask those | Courtenay, f the count mbers, and tle- 
Ha ii —On Zaneae sy a meeting was held in a who were in the habit bo the political horizon, | men. Sir J. Buller in his speech lt on the revival of 
make a rate for the ensuing year. After whether they were not selves prepared for further | trade, and conside that commerce would not fail to 
’ Waiy-cleik had read the nae ice of the rate, from Shia, changes? His s Lordship slled to the late agricultural | derive benefit from the recent measures of the Govern- 
it appeared that the proposed repairs amounted to 65/., | meetings which we have ced in ee eding Numbers, | ment. Lord Courtenay said that financial schemes 
and the amount to be collected 288/., the churchwarden, | and particularly dwelt ied rite speech of Mr. sheers d at of the present eee Sane be useful to all the interests 
Mr. Gillespy, moved, ‘‘ That a rate of 23d. in the pound be i e sed the coe ee the country, and do as little injury as i 
Sati “s dressed t eting at some | finding that those sound and just principles which he had done to interests affect y them. Mr. C. B. Baldwin, 
He complained of the Piepropricty of fixing upon | always advocated were supporte a m . P. also stated his belief that the measures of the 
7H rode of the xfs for the agitation of a church-rate | Whose opinions he not only cmcatten ween respect, | Government in regard to the corn-laws and the tariff were 
question, and moved that the estim yer be not received, | but who, not twelve hs ago, ifferent | wholesome and beneficial to the country, and that they 
_ The churchwarden neat that in asking for a rate he was | opinion—a gentleman, from the part he had t ate in agri- | would bring about a proper state of things. The wars, he 
ly paying allegiance to the la had no doubt | cultural questions, to whose opinions he would attach | said, in which the country was engaged having ceased, 
of the legality of asking for it—the legality of Met more weight than to his own. V e saw such intelli- al finances have been reliev m e degree of 
ae was another question. He hoped to see n of ee se | gent persons as this throwing aside their former opinions, | oppression, and he hoped that the income-tax would not be 
appy differences which all apepe oavelted thik might h fi the probability that greater | comtinued longer than the specified time. He considered 
6 
fra rom the excitement qrecingey by them, The pisceeAtAiA alterations would take place in the introduction of foreign | it probable, that it might be removed before, for he was 
of the meeting vrowek that a kindly feeling ha had supplanted | produce? It was their duty, at least, to be prepared for | assured that Sir Robert Peel would take the earliest oppor- 
much of the E hitlettinsa of former years; and he should | further changes in this respect. In regard to rents, his | tunity of repealing it. Several other ge n addre seed 
not prevent an increase of that feeling when he stated Lordship said he was the last person to deny that it was | the Meeting at some length, but the interest of their 
that he was not desirous of exacting the rate from any | the duty as well as the intere at of the landlord to appor- | speeches was chiefly local. 
one whose conscientious scruples forbad the payment of | tion the rents to the circumstances of the times. He - Isle of Wight.—The annual cattle-show took place at 
it. This announcement received with satisfaction, | Satisfied that the exaction of eaarbitaalt rents was both Newport on Thursday the 15th, and was followed by the 
on upon the motion for a rate being declared carried, injustice to the landholder,‘and-ruinous to the cniahpion, customary dinner, at which the Earl of Yarborough pre- 
Offor declined to demand a poll, expressing his the same time, f h bo 
epiion that after the explanation of the churchwarden, | not me, that a general reduction of rents, to any great € 
ate was virtually a voluntary one tent 
x- | Lordship’s speech consisted chiefly of a comparison be- 
we i e of Linco 
he peo ateatie vessel, which has foreigner. It had been sete by experience, that the | England, and that of the southern counties: He 
been for some ti 1 i j d | the length of time stock was kept, ~ Bred og with 
me eroployed sn the survey of the eras uly low rents, he fea kfi } tth reference to fattening that the motto should be, * * Short 
stimulus to exertion ‘i re was S ebay perm a time and quick returns.’’ In regar necessity of 
e ar. 
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Blazer or the Flamer, to carry on t uties of the rae - : : : 
next season. The Wilberforce seam: -vessel has been | best consult his rote interest by going Mea in hand w rough concurred in 
taken into dock, to have the i injur which she anette 
In her bottom, y striking on ae ing up the pa pe sh 
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Sea, she will be permeunous by Capt. Wm. Allen, who | Wo she : 
_ 38 anxious to proceed a o Africa, and that her cite giving additional employment to abourer, and his 
3 eeeupation on that Pa ig in “fature will be as a surveying | !abour being m - 
Prchclon = om any com 0 
Belstead’s rw a aeattmes Ue, hate car rats cpa produced by changes of the law.—Lord Ebrington then | that they were improving, they did not advance so much 
ichmond Savings-bank, amounts to no js ‘than ,500/.; | 24 i ay SNe pee - apidly wife: bours. 
°D f A> | us qcastians ah Tasty; wa aMMURCAyTenES gis | guetoemn tierm apcken, pom idbaae onmeees oe 
“Up, so that i 4 : F e question, he thought, was w y were to give m in q +i 
: ste ed, in reference gg Hs “a Net Oy nada Sind _— up Pareatag altogether, or whether they would follow the | faster, they won’t let them; they want horses that w 
_ instead of “ the Manager's book’? being an effective Pant new lights that were rising up for the Cree of the | step out, and the men should keep up with them. In the 
upon that gg Secretary, the former was copied from soil. If they follow = Ae rules pointed out for their | north there was scarcely such a thing as a day labourer, 
‘the pm thus prev venting the possibility of detection by guidance by the Agricultural Society, re did not | most of the work there is done by the piece. Here 
' the most direct m nd .also see that they need conn of successfully competing with | labourer sauntered with his hands behind him; but in 
investigation, if any apparent pla g arose aa the foreigner—he did not say that we should be enabled | the north their very elbows went before name and they 
_ €xamining any other documents or books of account. The | t® og foreign produce from our m —— but we should | say ‘ We shall begin an wie earlier an and work two hours 
King of Hanover and the Duke of Cambridge, who have | *Y to make our own produce the bes later, for we shall be paid for it.’ Bat heey a young fel- 
th been patrons of the bank, have subsoribed, the former | 2@th.—The trustees of the Bath a —. had the | low says, who is on the day-labour system, ‘1 don’t see 
( ; : tolls in their own hands for more than a - nce the | why I should _ myself oes cas an man, for I 
M i : completion of the Great Western Railway, saan. get no more.’ It was not by discharging t 
i #8 me > Sas sib tte a ger ee re a mined on again lettingthem. The funds a toe the tr eit itis | that farmers would save money. Let Joun be em- 
9; females, 406. Weekly avitee 1838-9-40-1—Males, se have not suffered so much by the loss of travelling | ployed, and you will get something from his labour. He 
See tel ne ee ee) | see ths Gestenl camelguich abhenaradie Gapmpaltaia |so.meceerery.t0 radace wegen dais vat do set to it de 
Wa or the gradua. on 0 ng @ e a ; oO n 
3 151 sap sentry paren He ara eee ex es of the roads. ae a hurry, lest you fall into the same evil as the manufac- 
Brighiton.—An experiment is mec in progress at the | turers did. They did it suddenly, and the men rose up 
head of the chute yo for the purpose of raising fresh | against them. Landlords and tenants must put their 
qprobincial Neos. water from below the sea by eas oa an Artesian well. | shoulders to the wheel, and then they had nothing to fear.”’ 
___ Agricultural Districts.—On the 8th inst. the barns, | It is intended to bore to the extent of 70 feet, at which Leicester.—On Tuesday, the 13th, a hundred deer were 
Stabling, and outhouses on the estate of Mr. Denison, | depth it is expected — the chalk formation will be pe- | caught in one Ryndam Pasko the seat of Mr. C.M. Phillips, 
MP., at Dorking, in Surrey, were fired and destroyed, | netrated, and ve h wate en ed, which will be applied vd the purp 
of a foun 
together with a number of wheat om hayricks, several | to the rmatio Phich is considered a fine one. The park 
_ Naluable horses ee a wnt of poultry. Mr. Denison Carnarvon.— nl a erence ies the eens union of the | crowded with ‘visitors, who had collected from the wane 
has offered a reward of 1002, the Siaidinats of the town os pon of North Wales, which we noticed under | and villages in the neighbourhood to witness the sport. 
_ 8nd neighbourhood A Dorking 2702., and the Govern- | this head last week, we er ede by the Oxfo nF if erald, that | A large space, between 400 and 500 yards in circumfe- 
Ment 100/., for the apprehension of the incendiary.—On | in a pede commu oe with his Archdeacon, the | rence, had been enclosed by high netting attached to the 
ay evening two wheat-stacks in the rick-yard of Mr. | Bishop of Oxford has strongly urged the on of | trees; the deer being driven into the enclosure, were 
ork, at stp Farm, at Lower Morden, in the sa represe nting the serious er which will be inflicted on the | frightened by the shouts - the men employed to catch 
em, and pl into a view to break 
through, when were a by the legs or neck, 
me 
unty, were fired and burnt to the ground. The stacks | Church in Wa Vales, if the co seme union of the sees of 
Contained ci 12 to 20 loads each, and were standing in | Bangor an Asaph al 
