THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
i m Chu urch.” He said there were things | but in the neighbourhood, Th ie aaa 
Monge CUTS n LM hr Mss p d. any | in Yum ord as important as erg ome at first small, but was at diferte i 
views or principle wherein they differ froth Christian | which pin M Brother heer ae "ot enlarged, until at length, in 1545 it 
brethren who agree with them e truths, the | exist after him, whether he had a e thront or not. | destroyed by fire. The present edifice wae 
members of this Alliance will aim tly, b 2 omg s A orem that sein “of © of those | and escaped the great fire of Lo 
estly, by 
help of the Holy Spirit, to avoid all an per groundless | 
anh oe emi imputations, or irritating allu- 
intain the meekness and po. 
ey 
that 
of | on 
na 
| —w which was quite tr 
ks 
E 
onu 
of. rper pues with E 
of nest bells, 
chimes, sh a play e vds tid 
day. Tt as been recently deco 
EE 
© 
ue. 
Ch 
finite answe 
of the 
r, 
t Him do as Seemeth Hie n good.” thi Z 
asked wha 
ether any distinct | | 
uld be e giv t questi 
EN thought St. Paul paeem the question whe 
said that the Church was the "d of Christ, 
public,” for the purpose of showing that the reso he 
has brought against the Eva 
To d 
angelical cler, bes esie 
8, 11 te 
: ramebu "t 
when prosec Wee 
n | dre rfe om the anes and the prisoner’s sli 
ra 
ts of old 
e. fine remains d 
Pa t bastion, 
Our 
the adjace ent e emetery are 8 
old wall of London and part AN 
THE DR Cas 
& 
Mr. Sigism 
sold t 
country, Pi was dp by dà 
in Hungary, but th 
rather the victim than the wron 
pioban was therefore at an end, the 
discharged, 
TED voir d s A 
novel nor singular. t his ie quotes passage rm “Roman only applied to them by persons | 
th who were op ies iiam in fai e word | Association :—“ A large 
of the Vae and Rev. Baptist W. Neal the Rev. Ww. Roman," however, occurred in the canons of the | raa ti on Satiri; ‘vith Pren 
Robinson, the Rev. W. Thorn, the Rev. . S. Minton, of | Church as settle by the indi of Trent, and to repu pilot. A boat went out a 
Le Collez, Oxford, the Rev. Thomas pe m diate that d was a lie their part the same | poke tt ma then came out u 
e Society f Te Revision A the Lit targy.. = time he saw no use in employing the language of invec- | on reaching Bremerhaven again changed colour, a 
pe by sa —Dear friends.— tive against the Roman Catholics or in calling them | ae the Confederate flag. The ines b. 
n Sm and Leo confidently ted T tho idolators. It would be far better if every Bremerhaven believes she still remains 
abou 
Nene , Buch a thing might not take “place i in 
to 
O 
& 
QF E 
r own day, 
bir 10 knots at half speed, and is prt 
under the ne eg. of Captain vim. Re 
Alabama), w men on 
pursue 
the Dune which costumi and hatred en o ict.” 
PROMISED VIS o LONDO; 
—AÀn advaita that “ Brother gnis Vidt 
proceedings at Claydon and Norwich have recentl 
| sentations u^ difficulties, that if eqni — could 
ot be restored, no blame should rest w em. At 
| the close of the sermon, Mr. Stuart Aen ve to the 
altar, where he resumed the Eucharistic vestment, and 
pr 
M 
excited much attention, was iech ta the “church of 
St. Mary Magdalene, Wester Square, drew an over- 
whelming congregation on Sunday mor rnin ng The 
administration of the Holy Commu- 
nion, the r A 
. 
IN BAR 
This interesting zelio, of the poet Milton has just ae m 
iconem. .in the chancel, followed by two priests, Metropolita: Ra iiy om the Victoria Streak 
ae green stoles, but no univ sis hoods. Then | Sta E. to Finsbury T Sie Of late years such 
e e Rev. Edward Stuart, the ineumbent, wearing | p as remained intact—namely, 
mei ved embroidered, the orn: der at the|the "eed, oa, and kitchen—have been 
ck forming a rich yellow d cross. The | u sed for mercantile Vig k and the part be m 
two eco ( mes greet "D^ : "o d Barbian had long been a dyer's shop. It was known | 
cross) on ar had been prviot ei ted. : 
tees duh e ad he s as No. 17 in the Frenne ta and was situated a i few tih 
young boy, i en 
what is called a “ boat," made apparently of silver, 
containing the incense, then the thurible or censer in 
which the incense in which it was 
e for the extension of t 
cretary to Cromwell, ue about the M of his recon- 
eiliation with his first wife, Mary P: He was 
eorge's, 
n| om 8d. ; county, i) y Komni management, 
vé" M 
ino 
guns, S ded 
Bordeaux, w! wh er e there a 
pones a en i Vh statement i 
Weser Zei 
eroe rem Borden, Ss p" purchased by the 
Gov 
1 Mar 
the poii seal d levied dung ird YT 
relief of 
| metropolitan, 2s. 
6d, 
tery; 
D 
; provided with lon: “ 
élisius, Me. Bt took the © Thurifer” the | des i c^ 37 fae ^? a ira — this time m ngon oor, 1s. 
attendant, and creen in the air, until the altar | «he had ta’ ene” i large Bieta. fa Bastien n litan, lx 8i 
nin white cloud. While these pro-| the reception of pri but the numerous | metropolitan, 1s 
7 Dea amie going “es — choristers chanted the ar of his wi he generously | 4s. 2d.; metropolitan 
" € on vitem miei mospel of | gra p qm refuge for a while, coipied his rooms. In | poor and ¢ enna E xor "met 
. | time, pete! they went away, and the house again,| Ms on 
During the — € ‘the Nicene Creed, most of - said his nephe v Philips, n now iv load like a house pen R iv: TOi [^ ioe night a a fatal < 
ve um "xe ihe w orda, "an Muses only, though the accession of scholars was not| which for some days was the st 
ae dg Basin Me At the he close of the great,” lroom and study were a mystery, took place at the Port 
ins on rm MNT hi stood with his | back e present line of the street, and were|of the Metropolitan Railway. 
cope, leaving on the “ alb,” a long white -— € of his Leere Seeed by Milton on that account, as he had | by falling en the lin 
reaching a à yr a long diff me + |p chosen a in Aldersgate Street, as|one of the carriages w 
ordinary Mitis teal ni iei veia from the Polisi tells us at the upper end of a that he| It was at first supposed to 
waist, the-giding af Wie p : Toini t a he noise. 1t likely to have been a afterwards circulated that 
memory of our Lord's admoni: inm Se o house situa garden, of which there were many | herself on the rails with 
wore also an embroidered green stole, crossed over Wis |j Dare E, co qe T of Cripplegate, | it was subsequently 
breast. “In this TEM = went m the pal to h hich it stood. The - vm were|the train by n m 
amazement of those who had- come to js — ^ : lined with oak pan elling, rx the windows were’ the staircase of the station. It a 
Ignatius. Het sage " ear Brother | latticed, F taking down the building a pnt coffin noe m eign | om: 
* Brother Ignatius tells me ss ook E R a was found embedded in one of the walls, containing ag accompanied by a man 
cannot preach here to-day. I rry for it, because so ane | What is said i e be the skeleton of a monkey in perfect Road "nin lion, ai that they 
vestem nde ei trie e the purpose of hearing him tis | preservation, an agreeable coincidence, while the|tickets for the Ed, Roa 
a T a gne ru you notice E NE DRE morning | house of the poet of * Paradise Lost” has been destroyed | these tickets was ret 
m him that not Ede Tw eri him nam | in a utilitarian age, the venerable church of St. Giles, | Edgware 
— here. Perhaps Brother Ignatius thinks a promise is | CTipplegate, hari by, d in which his remains are in ,|given up 
Yukon ] E pu about his so re throat. When|is under, ergoing a rtial restorati on. It is a very|from this 
him what m be preseb hero last sommer. end about KAHT venerable fabric, being upwards of | from 
he had ; but as the offerto a | 790 years erm 2 been founded in 1090 by Alfrane, | train and t on 
to day was to beon behalf of the Church of St. Mary the master of St. Bartholomew's oe ag os | conduct in leaving 
avo ino doubt Come to hem acto groat Now, as some | dedicated to S Giles, Abbot of Nimes, in with the authorities 
minute or two to allow those who like to I leave the charges hto Besig bein he burial-place of Milton, T pw the woma 
iens womb to romain E shall be of course, glad tosee | A historic int the church in which the| quently, tended to k 
pies rmon, 1 f Oliver Cromwell was solemnised, and |The woman had 
rer three minutes e elapsed, and seemed jin which the remains of Fox, tho martyrologist, | her dress, which ti 
M move, Mr Stuart proceeded tak king g for his text | Speed, and many other a ‘are interred. There, | much mended. She was not iden 
Es wipe caca damit aap Eo tbe Ephesians, | too, the burial of Defoe red, although ote when Mr. C. Pritchard, up 
23, “ And gave him to be the head over not interred in the church or the adjacent cem Crescent Street, Euston 
