THE NEWSPAPER. 
Se e ccd yo the Sed 
could not be made absolute on two Linge gee s. a Xhe ause batt E on e 18th s se uld be en eee ha om wrk ae neg 426 Great Bri 
ry directing plaintiff’s plac e given to ers. is was an action of trover o olle 
Peier not poe: Bary or np sete to Sinia, ka his | jewels, worth about 40,0007., which was given by the late Mr. atte Tunis pre achers, averaging 2 to 3 to 
attorney —The attorney might have been guilty of contempt of | H P. Hope to his nephew, Mr. A. B. Hope, the — son of the | Cul here are 14,413 local preachers, averagi 
Court therefore, but plaintiff could not. ce Bee! anons order was | late Mr. T. Hope, of Duchess-street. The intention of Mr. = to each circuit. Tke maibee ir iey Tmons 
not made a rule of Court, and there was nee, as he con- | P. Hope to give this Meri sg Bees erm to Mr. Be Hope w. S | by itinerant and supernu 
tended, where an we as had been granted f ‘or roan ee pi expressed in a deed which he ted some considerable ti noes 205,452 in the 
a Judge’s order, until it was sanctioned by the and made Á before his death, and eo in aay frah iate contemplation of | “7,7 
ereof. T ie a uggeste hme = tances è f his € 3 11 6 » or 605 332 
which the Legislature had worse exclusive atthority to the Judges | no intimation having been give’ ng his life either | number of miles annually travell ed 
at chambers and elsewhere to make orders, If disobedience to | to Mr. B. Hope or to any of the aly "of the existence of the (exclusive of special j ournuya siid 
those orders could not be pur mished by attachment, what other | deed in question, The defendants in the action are the execu- mb f y 
a c tors of Mr. H. P. Hope, and the — is ve Chap of the er of miles waititity travelled th local 
tended that plaintiff was guilty « of a clear contempt of Court, by | jewels; and the question upon the trial of the was, whe- 29 ah. ee ; total, 3,261,140 pepe a di 
instructing his attorney to give a wilfu ully fa false statement, when | ther the deed in question was intend =e by Mr H. P. Hope to 130 t s the Per pea f the 
i is tru - | Op easa s ae e eloh 
There was abundant evidence that the lodgings referred to were | immediately to transfer the interest in them to Mr. B. Hope? BIRTHS.—ith inst.; at A: cog Lodge, Bute e, Lavy K. 
taken by plaintiff to evade compliance with the Baron’s order. They | or whether the instrament was only to operate after his death, | ray, of ma re, gi a ia ith ee = 33, Grosvenor 
submitted that a fraud of this description was sea be in the | and was therefore in the nature of a will? In one case the | the Hon. Mrs. CAPEL, of a son—1ith in 
same manner as a contempt with respect to the process of the Court. | collection would altogether belong to Mr. B. Hope; in the | Mrs. BRAND, of a son—13th inst., 
1f a writ was addressed to one person, and it fell into the handsof | other, it would become part of the residue of Mr. H. P. Hope’s | lady of Capt. Da 
another, who destroyed it, such person was guilty of a contempt of | estate, and me equally divisible among his three nephews. | inst., Mrs. T. C. METHLEY, of Frith-st: 
the Court. The Judge’s order in this case was similar to process, | The case came onto z tried at the — of the last term, | —14th inst., at Grove-end-road, St, arin 
and by rendering it unavailing, 4he plaintiff was guilty of a con- | and the Jury found a verdict for t plaintiff. Sir T. Wilde na TE å 
tempt of Court.—The Chief Baron did not think it necessary to | now, upon the part of the defendants, Bc fora np trial, S.—14th inst., at St. Pancras C reb, H, m 
decide in this case, if an attachment would lie against the plain- | upon the ground that fhe e which was given at the of York, to MARIA J. Far, ll, wee ri 
tiff, because the Court was unanimously of opinion that,'under the | trial showed that Mr. H. Pe Hop i dia not intend that Mr. B. 
peculiar nag mer of this Sige Pes atie a should not be | Hope should have any right tor the possession of the jewels 
ted.—T urt, however, cons: duet of plaintiff | during the life of Mr. H. P. Hope himself; and that the instru- 
grante dered con > , í a D NEWTON, d 
highly objectionable, fos theteiore directed that the ae for an | ment in question, notwithstanding some circumstances in the Newton—14th inst, at 
attachment should be discharged, plaintiff paying the costs, such eA of it, was in er snk ki is hig = ais and that the | George’s, Har square, T, Enis, Esq., to Sanaa H. 
costs to be s set off agair nst mae mes ment in the action only object of Mr. Hope ng ti e of proceeding | eldest surviving de uguter of the late Lieutenant-Colonel 
Dotar or Queen's Be In the Matter o Ca rus Wilso. was to evade the serene tof “he ey oF win which he consi- | Bombay Artillery. 
The Jersey Foriiootin. The, Solicitor- General, with whom are dered a most unjust andimpolitic imposition. The Court granted DEATHS. -8th inst., at Elton-hall, Herefordshire, J. C. 
sr Wortley and Qo 75 Deals seis ind ta the Court for a rule | the rule, KINS, Esq., eldest son of Sir J. C. Hawkins, Bart. „aged 99 
alling upon Mr. on to why a writ of habeas inst., ” at Beres‘o rd-sq., A. je wife of Mr. R. Rixos, 
poser which was issued | upon the order f Mr. Baron Rolfe, in lian yong er daughter o t, 
the vacation, at the ins of Mr. Wilson, should not be quashed. Mí se ra ent i 
eq afte afiliction, Su x Pi 
The writ was Nairected yn “the e viscount pe gaoler of the Island ads poorer: Clarke Pickering, Te of Earl 8 
of Jersey, and commanded that the body of Mr. Wilson should be Pe npes ie By le it ert Lice om jor Ran 3 inst, at Bru ick-square, Bright on Perey 
ht up into this Court upon the 15th of the present month, | Of Persia, dated the 8th Nov., we learn ASE SST relict a the late F ames Turner, Esq., of Stockwell, Suren 
‘is for the purpose of ascertaining the legality of his commitment and linson, the English Commissioner appointed to arran 10th inst., in New Ormond-street, W. Tayior, Esq 
detainer in the prison of St. paliee's The learned gentleman here | the differences between Turkey and Persia, had Sched of Goce’ s College, Conbesian. and formerly be Kin 
o! y w e e proceed i : * . S, S. Me 
address, to state that he didnot, upon the presentoccason, appear | tO Bagdad from his expedition to the frontiers. Major | Briton, surrey, sged 30- 10th inst 8. A. Leaks, Es 
in his oficial capacity as one of aw officers of the Crown, but | Rawlinson had also v visited Bisutum, wh re he spent | th Office, aged 63-1 ist., at her seat, Durringl 
merely en ponin — r of the bar, acting in the ordinary | some ee in Shs. and deciphering the important a use, Essex vos = Gen AaS * ae Gly: yo, oft 
ie of his profession in this case as in every other, He was i i ipti i ogiment of Foot Guards, age 75—l4th inst., at Ivy. 
the more desirous o: king this statement as it happened that E me Knep RAe foma 
h 
f š Woodford, eee Many J. Forster, wife of Edward 
upon a former occasion, when he made a similar application to | UP9® the grent rock at that place. It is well } that | gs Sq., aged 8 : : 
Justice Patteson, a most extraordinary mistake was made, | the ber ns ae ting here are believed to mark the site of f| = 
e his 
and publicly expressed upon the subject. The learned counsel | Ba TANTED—A Good Gardener about 36. He 
r reag pen baat oe eG tothe writ in ques- | A jan hi i edition of Semiramis well Menara Greenhouse, Frames, Flower, 
was, that being awarde a Baron of the Exck 3 all farm, 
issued under the seal of the Court of Queen’s Bench, 3 The jassino, ty e engra ved under a sculpture a ga a in ‘the Sige for 
therefore in a form which madeit absolutely e eng ofthe | of vast propor — ons, asie a triumphant king | sobriety, and = neral good conduct will be indispen: 
Exchequer having no power in vacation to issue a habeas corpus passing gene upon the conquered, are the sry Direct W., Messrs. or M‘ Muu LEN, 
iciendum under the seal of the Court of Queen’s Bench. k th : The Leadenhall- steet, 
The decision of this question would of course depend upon the | “ROWN to iat e WAN 
consideration of the statutes upon the subject; the first of which | divided ane — columns, and re espec vely repre ae post- -pid 
was the act of the a sf. Coates Il., cap. 2, which authorised | sent the Bab ylo , Median, and ancient pia làn- 
any Judge in S ENER.—A married Man, 
minal or supposed criminal matter, toaward thata writ of ‘Fina guages. Unfortunately be Babylonian phareclers, hich, A itho ut ineumbrance, v zoa poteten a good pr 
se 
corpus should issue under the seal of the particular Court of whic s s yts art an 
the Judge who awards the writ shall then be a member. The | and t Peris ins ipia tions on bricks and stones y sata 
56th of George IH., which was the next statute upon the subject, | bro site t fro of t > pon naat are | to Messrs. Wm. Woop and Sir N arserym 
enacted that the writ may issue in vacation, but under the re- l = ie e * ; Uckfield, Sussex, 
striction mentioned in the former act—that the writ shall issue | 3 most beep ite ete -Kd literate The others are nearly S DENER.—A respectable 
=e = sang a opera Sapa which the Judge himself | perfect. Major Raw n had ante some. yeasts S aes a who understands a Vini 
ember. The next statute to which it wa i i ! 
was the Ist and 2d of Victoria, cap. 45, which recitedthe preceding eke deciphern at “pon mon of the jnsceiption,.in. the Forcing, Kitchen, and Flower-Gard Has lived it 
act of the Ist of William IV., “ for the more effectual administra: simple cuneiform, and in a dialect of the Peblevi, Zend, Me eain families ; and a most satisfactory gae 
ee of justice.” The statute of William IV. extended to single Fer ient P : ian] ns Wag’ i had | eli d hei ip ars will be given. Lett ps Be situation on acconnt g 
udges the power to act in matters then pending in Courts to | tion to ti t ls of f Persian „history. His sapiy giving up his country 
which the Judges did not belong; and the act of Victoria gave | former ition aisn now DA aresti 
em jurisdiction over the issuing of writs of certiorari and habeas | + APES tie kit gd ae i Ei S an SECO ARD 
an : se to these two latter acts, the learned gentle- sacar rt 5i Ta ee ung f good character, in an ¢ 
tended that they did not, even in theirlanguage, give any Kyanian ava, ner > thie middle af the reign of | Shere ax ak more hands are kept. are irect to Groncn T. © 
Joyer ley Redlegs ot Fae a habeas me = ty Darius (qu., Hystaspes ?) whose effigy is represented in | Westmore-ga ke-road, Gosport: 
Be diitueed find tie constia ae ey Gt tha Laan t Tbr fia Ave the sculpture above as the conquering King, and who s active, single ™ 
acts, ithe Solicitor-General contended that they were altogether | bimsclf caused the sculptures and inscriptions to be pages knowledge 
inapplicable to the case, as the Channel Islands were not nahed made on his vast r ock. The inscriptions sots well known, nches, and ca! h -i piace 
in either of them; and Lord Coke and Mr. Jnstice Blackstone | but fr tk 1 = ee single: me 13, N 
pi fad ts pia be k eam red iat beart Lae ee a cet: one rep itherto succeeded in- copying th coemPy me | ae ore 
xpressly named in the act.—Lord Denm: ar- 
z observed that the difficulty which had arisen in otindyaen Frenc ir artists, Messrs. Coste and Mano, wi inat TO man, Chik Naren 
me ne e writ not having been made returnable in the Court of Ex panied the French embassy to Persi d Man, a 4.97. 
chequer was deserving of consideration.—The Solicitor-General renounce the undertaking after m he att t ae ar haise. 
nàs upon which he was 5 apel ee s, perse- | look after a w and cha 
desir was, that out of the | Vered in for several days. Sir R Dis . B., Mr. Atkins, G 
o w: was excepted | that it would take three aea to copy them with the S GARDENER, orto ta 
iiam slg d wh aid of a telescope.— Malia Tim Amiddle-aged a poo 
en committe: ea i me of the best gar 
hea enn decided by the The Cure o Ponsiapilie= ‘The Medical Gazet rears T ie apere CE years — a 
ekien Charlton. The | contains a long article from the pens of Dr. Has stings | ant the last eight years as out-doo pagato 3 
upon the inconve- and Mr. Rob bert Storks, surgeon, desecisini of a re = king an abi part in one of the principe Teena 
ion of the practice of the cure of consumption, by the | ments in Edinburgh. The a ertiser is a Se” re 
‘of the i sem and abo os 40 years of age.—Direct, 
ani 
and he (the Soli- the e hest. It consists in makin an opening betwee Ediabun BLEMEN AND GENTLEMI in th i 
i which forms in the lun RDEN D mus aia 
E 
N 
E 
branches of Horticulture, ha’ ving a 
exellent piace with aproepen er re 
sa — succeeded therein, 
or Gentleman 
tise to g dur ing 
1 Cow yW s e lat tages of consumption. The immediate effects 
stifying itself before the Cont of Queen’s Cok It was, oft se e operation (which requires only a fe w secor nds for 
r hand, well known tha : oe e de depend Be ormance, 
e Musen iy had case in question s the diminution of the freque ncy o ae res ge ied on. 
the patient’s pulse, which fell in 24 hours from 120 to 68; | | ETE in any way desir 
paar ste Paya pee which had been a very distre ge | —— No tingle panded, piace wi foris: 
; loss of cough a and expectoration, both. of | of Mess rs. Child, S aie oe fo 
Bind os n very severe. This operation, which i S FARM BAILIFF.—A J x experience 
opin 
ae ished the arrati er curing this bithe tto fata! a ge, baci ‘ong Prog saa 
disease, appears to have be! Ps 
report of the Tam x the paf ient a “month: after its e 
arable 
“pons yes: ee = 
eren ing 35, 
p t livi 
5 the Advertiser is rest Ess 
Parties by whom the writ was 7 i i mash 
of Mr. — to the bailiff, i e son er in France. “The ey Wi : Tag bern die Aged Man, 
fter the intense cold which we pre D in the S LIFF, an ET 
beginning of December; and whils t Italy, Spain, a nd 
d ard - nt oi 
as stated in h snow, and whilst the cold in several t fia amg pn questiona 
been ob tained, that Mr. Wilson had great dificul ; eve es _* d e ana adins 
vit, as the bailiff a nd jur R ifficulty in making an ae toon nga with extreme r e enjoy an | oui sobri ety; Sen ofice 
te (the Bolicitor-General) ha te 
er vit fto e Somera 3 
aes (u wen n ing that r ci ould ave JISTRICTS a P SCOT 
hat ey wi 
= oct onesies Mg s | already reach en March. Thi ou niall 
feelin: nly $ sues = a 
reation the ns to Homes effect. 
then took place abont 
pr a ra stead i w, as is generally ika emë 
fine t rule tieur, will be 
already fixed for! Statistics of Wesleyanism.—The Wesleyan says there | figh H 
