Gi bed in the p d prosp ectus now r submitted to} pent poe continu sp ng 
. | of the de ocee: „D 
them, determine to g a téthele most zealous support.’ for the general pnblic.— Mr. 
ster sae aed Compa at their ecting pathy with bei Duncombe on the subject Ph o op 
be Manche npa : p 
jast week declared a dividend of four per cent. for the | letters by nnn prs ie aia = ae _ 
| us Oras 
half-ycar, subject come-tax. The increase of the} Paving» va g 
K 3 ing 
passenger traffic w 125117. for the half-year, and the | this had 
16,9632., making a total of 29,4747. The gross | pec Fay that, sey’s time nd, his 
rking expenses td ath | letters had been © tters written ben his private | that 
$ 
mas! expenses appear to 
324 pe r 
t was announced phobe the mee ting, that the | 
Sianenester pats Bolton had ae to the terms of the 
Manchester and Leeds Com 
Trarric anD Prices, by pericission, from the List of Messrs. 
Cand H. Arn, inthe Railway Chronicle of this day. 
Gross | 
Recetrrs oF -| 
Name or Rarwary, Ww Erama E| Biy Price, 
| =|) den 
‘Those marked tine? are Roos ing |Cor mre ži eee Tai 
` tween pon ias A are. 
not yet opene, | Mar is rasa 
|a Mar | 
ee — |__| m 
£ | € j|4 £ 4 
Birmingham, Glo’s .. 2,067 |100 j 133-18; 
Brits birmlogeam $ .. aaa | } pot Ms 
Bristol, Exeter . t 100 | 70} $2.4 
Bristol,Glo’ster . 60 | 30|1 7 6| 6860 
Chester, Holyhead =. - i 50 i's a} 
Eastern Con lata . 8,578 3,232 avr.) 14 |0 8 0| 219-2 
ster Uain = > w 1 tt 
. he a 
wanvore Gi re pi -| 2,160 1,985 rH jallit 5 0f 61-23 
Grand Junction (Div 3 mo) | 7,989 | 6,338 [109 {all |2 10 0 
|| —|— peat 
Great No lan: 1,602 | 1,335 |100 | 3 0 0| 190-5 
Great V Wene Sie ro 11,251 |100 | te 3 4 0 |.17%181 
Gt. South. & Case (1.) wo} 5) o 12- 
Do. r ge $ w| B| o 8} 
ull, S é so | all | 95-7 
| ae Yearlisie * flisje 83-7 
Liverpoo), Manchester 4,945) 3,782 100 | all |410 0 
Tondon, Birmingham .| 15,753 | 13,284 |sık. 100 |5 0 0 
London, rare ne CBE 639 619 lavr-| 1630 3 0 nt 
London, $ 2,558 | so |45 |110 o| 63%s 
London, Croydo: lavr. 1330 8 0 tid 
London, Gr ch 79#lave.| 123) 10$- 11 
London, South-West 4,03] 4681| so | 4142 0 of 79-80 
Manchester, Birmingham 672| 70 | 40 D 0 0 -8 
ester, Bolt, Bury 864 723 |1254}. 93 |2 J4 0 
Mancheste ban €619| 5,245100 | 73 |2 9 0| 146- 
Mid 9,672 90 stk. 100 |2 2 6 |7138-40 
Do. Birmi ingham, Derby athe. |100 | 106-8 
Rercacle, Carlisle ee 1,817; 1215 = pa 400 
Neweast ton 1 }25 | 4 |4 0 0) 4 
th Britis! ae * -a 5i) e | 17-4 
jorthern, Eastern . . 50 | 45 |1 2 6| 64-5 
ich, Brandon . . 2 | 10 | 17-4 
Preston, Wyre . | asa! 222| 50 | all | 
Sheseid, i, Manchester r 601} 464 |100 | 8745p. Cent! 
. y .- | 50 | 10 19-2 
ee Dover . 2,661 axr] 23}l0 10 6| 43)-4 
‘armouth, Norwich, . 188 feo} all io i0 o| 27- 
fet, a Midland . 2,6us{ 1,670 | £0 | all |210 0 | 2101-3 
Scarboro’ Branch « * ° p 20 | 41-3 
de Selby eka 50 | 20 jon -8 
Aerobie Pi re a TN 
Boulogne, Amiens . . 20| 2 114. 
Orleans, Vierzon 9. . be he 20; 2 g is 
(Sear “7 20} s 10-11 
Eoee: o S aaea e 
5 <a 3, 2 |ailjio 9 2 
Ronen, Havre . ._. dee Eai iat 
Dublin.—St. Patrick’s Diy ee was celebrated on Mon- 
with the u festivities. great PENE of 
Lieutenant 
esent. The Hon. idd Very Rev. Dean Pakenbam io 
ficially erate that th r 5 oe 
naw e application as ney to be ex- 
the repairs of | St. Patrick’ s Cathedral, i in anti- 
pation of Her Pan ons s visit. It appears that _the 
—le 
ear to ink in Ee gonia. He might | 
ad strong reaso. thi g that such | p 
t in 
588 
TRE 
oe 
ned to the care o ssi 
O pro sand ewe it presented. 
Prougat, Alnis ‘the ‘first ropes of the committee aaa arih b tò 
take consideration the R spori of the hes Lana a ES 
It consisted chiefly of long extracts fr om, a 
dence viki by the Land Coniaaaie oners “eo ing a 
show that the tenant-right ssa Fg ~ some go Be of ppr 
ea a safeguard against o utrage t 
that its entire abstracti ald a p sigaal for universal 
discontent if not disturbance; and that in those places wher 
it did not exist at present, improvement had ceased, and ill 
will between landlord and tenant was created. He pr 
mised that when Repeal was ied, an Irish Parliament 
should grant the tenant-right t yp of Ireland. They 
ught of no revolutionary spoliation, but beg of si ng their 
to also, an 
roprietors of land Shoah be vastly in- 
po 
In the nash cr 
the 
| bie ~~ highly conne ie Ma 
s for thinkir ese 
Se ates seconded the nigel D, gpm said | ite donb, 
and 
a 
he aig gave 
da 
the m 
TE were ‘ard mg D Mr. tea E 
n th parale Reuter = 
nail 
othe 
he trial er è 
Baarin ner is vane ‘reapects 
of his ni 
time membe 
man were “othe 
againn ‘the ne Ph enn s Tor obtal aining money and 
checks of the descript alluded tc a 
aige 
fi st indictment He , th 
ry to proceed with th 
then called up, asd cae 
OXFORD ils ga: 
Murder.—Jose, Turvey, ag Pee ancis 
re È Si Ge ge Brant, 1 ; Thomas Heoper, 19, an ha G 
25, J aie “42, Thaw ca Cell ins, 20, William ‘Cosneti = 
Wii lian. "Bromis id, 19, were indic ae ed for the wilful m ` 
in this e 
peaa Aea A n Raped cml ot Abs 
oft unfor! ca! 
n Stoke, 
i ave 
J 
sentence ngley, the eys, d 
for the term OF their eras ives tho supa rc 
mber small d Bro 
creased, for every country prospered in proportio: n to the multi- | for ten years ; Brant for seven years, and Collins “and C 
plication of small proprietorships. He invited every one to aid | be imprisoned and kept to hard labour for two years. ari: 
him in carrying out those objects by assisting him t gain | — Fratricide. Hein ugh, aged 39, 
Repeal, and he con. men of the north not to sacrifice | with the wilful murder of his br other, Thomas Brough, att i 
to miserable fi he ha mapa of their aire sad the parlah of Biddulph, i in ‘this oup on the 3d January last. 
welfare of their families. He con iai ed by contrasting the | particulars of th which were stated at the time, were 
past and present wretched state of „as desoribed by him | distressing. The ý mena rable was ne bette 
tted by the Land Com sanitanares with a paradise of | than the rest of his pai and the hous 
agricultural and. commercial prosperity for the * Poca brave, | lived with his mother belonged to Thomas, from w 
religious, and temperate ” inhabit oe of this country to be | rented. Dieser a described as piren overbearing i 
created TRE the F inecruisiveist tality domestic palei zx sionate man, and the rent being overdue, he Tmined to 
robe the Repeal of the Union. The ‘ren t for the week w train, and took away some boxes, the every oe the pi 
el: 58, ae Ane pts were made by the orem aouo deceased to 
nt, butin vain E BO the e prisoner ep xcited. Ita 
is that the brothers met ina field, fed a the sane ci the pri 
nue, struck deceased a blow on the head with a han 
Rots’ Count.—The Duke of St. Albans v. Skipa th.—The itha t he afterwards threw the 
ject ofthe present application wih to'obtein tio uis- | tee nen ean afier he had committed the 
ér 
been granted re eise: n the 
solve an injunction ee had 
hers loughing or breakin g up three 
Re v, Aho os. Skipwo 
fields, containin 16 2 
of Pickworth, in the pent 
Albans is the present patro. e living of Pic oti wi ch 
chased of a former ae pe in 1814 resented ue 
Rey. Thomas Skipworth. ane rag in question are a 
tothe house an kite hen kai had become yii me 
of jee es hic was therefore o deemed — le to 
them 
s: 
g them to gras 
the “fields kae r been 
they had been pinaghed S 
apap were ey pom ‘on the surf: 
=I lei he land in its pre: tate, and afte: sulting s 
lle: in husbandt, ni the ainne hada determined t rad 
teak up the land and sow it—Lord Langdale said he had oc- 
casion to obtain agricultural advi ‘ately and he conia say that, 
mye — it, he had ed it most advantageous. 
ae ane 
rip 
veekly meeting of t epeal pasiema tok place on 
rome pe in keepen aeee Mr. Geerey, 
chair. T. 
any. 
week the Repeal 
y to Kilkepny, to attend the 
ing day. Beis 
eer prong nen 
should | 
tended exert them- 
aaa. 
selves to advan in Par ent 
es in the Conciliation-hall, If they they dia sg do so, they 
im cng nonentities, who ste constituents should call 
aon resi had betrayed 
the: gn the ey and 
eommittees i: that Association would soon supply their 
ow ve 
syst They were go- 
ing to make an increased grant to Maynooth, po “at ‘would 
ee effect in weaning them from Repea 
poe 
of his pn pe 
ion path ‘choad the 
uld receive Her 
y.—Mr. 0’Co 
stance i the country v me “ father 
incarcerat: altered 
d psd prie he wo 
people were me ” 
The 2 acknowledgment of 
r denied that the ould n oy an whe- 
zle abe begs ancient fe that w 
© determine. nthe plaintiff anid the land 
had never been perth fo and there was no proof that it ever 
bro 
had. If the ground was ken up its peue peal ig inated! 
and if the defendan barr what remedy was ther conn pel 
his executors to restore it to grass land? He ketal ite na, t e- 
fore, that ya inmi. shouid be continued until tha SE 
pea Kindersley replied.— Lord Langdale said the case in itself 
s trifling, but it involved in it a question of the gr hangs m 
portance. If the law was as allege uld prevent a 
O! a chi u 
ek gave On ay his dshi vi 
judgment, and observed “hat the diebe consisted of about 20 
How art of — = of or 
three, he five, and a a aiey 
plough ‘the fre, and the pone acres, a be no 
were the marks of the ee oh in ser ram and pe he b 
ed wi intiff 
sev 
ient oie eng 
mental to the land, and inconsis with The 
of the rectory a Defendant stated that the grass 
intermix phery and weeds, and that it would be benefici: 
inte: it 
to cl it, tha rhe nded to lay 
due pe of bubandry with grass, according 
course of husbandry, and that he ~ consulted several p 
skilled in husbandry, who state it would be bioedeial, 
and would not deteriorate the ite nothing to 
show that the 
alleged that the land had not been 
and ought to be op grea tobe acai, which it waste 
convert into tillage. After referring to two ene Pa eaten 
observed that Lord Coke said that a parson was seised mabe fee 
simple qualified, and that he could do nothing ‘the pre: ice 
of his successor, as in some Sry he was to be motea as 
a tenant Jae v life; yet ke oe t be aces idered in the same 
light as ant for life un 01 lement. 
at sett e had 
anie tofind any cit manos y, and thinking that 
the lating to tenants for life did not apply, he should 
dissolve the denny 
Ass LI 
ghee cna 
ELLIGENCE.— Hom a — MArpsTo 
m Sle Eastern ttle y Ci se es Taylor gh 
Same.—in these two cases the plaintiffs were farmers he 
ing farms fied bo line of railway, who hai z had their stacks 
and bu n fire by sparks from the engines. There 
ildi 
was = doubt t that the fires had been caused in that anpi 
and used d 
oqp be prevented by a wire-gai 
‘hat such obstructions dea sel the apie lpn of air through the 
farate, soa and made it o employ engines of greater 
of the a | 
e Duk f St. | PE 
ith the grea 
saet tk heir verdict,and remained in 
fore they returned their verdict, which 
der, bc a recommendation to mercy. 
en nten of dea th. 
TANTED 
garden, in Lancashire, 
PRENTICE for three years, ah 
pore Pagan wit all the h 
tie ertis “i Lei 
D IMMEDIATELY, i in a gent 
n active TOE age 
question sma 
Eltham, Kent, rand We 
WANT PLACES —All gaa, n 
ha: i 
noblem 
man is 
DENER,- E Young Man, 
yey has had considerable e experience i 
of Horticulture, i is atra of — 
ae above capacity. ved phn 
from pieri h he will receiv 
G. W.. Mr. AYRES La B 
ARDENER.—A m marries 
age 36, who perfectly. wines 
Hothouse Greenhouse, 1 itchen- 
His Wife can take charge of a ‘ts ar vou 3 
Se Stone-house, 
in pi si 
on bea o F.C. 
Man 
NER.—Am rried 
An PEOS ofhis “business in the 
s of Frui! its and ad: B aia 
de 
to man: of lan sone > 
from the n 7 a 
ham Post a Ren a E nOA 
A S PARK, PARK an d GAME, Sram 
A young Man, a6 peo 25, pres nr precdilt 
ment “of a sae wk reed “p «sd 
the 
= randfather having ve served som yes pat = 
k cellent character AD Aoi caasa X 
> Pi cadilly, or by 
NG BAILIFF. —A res} 
eho perfectly ands een Draining, 
FARMI 
a Dairy. 
H. W. Powys: 
tion to the lra a p. Feilding, Stapler” 
