THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
Em by loud cries of 
the 
No Popery,” and continued | 
hissing from ngre 
then me 
gation. The disturbance 
eral and alarmin ng that rs 
+ 43 
furn re the Rev. 
Matthew’ s ON e offered to conduct — 
was introduced by the — * 
who declined the offer. The — at this — 
t d i 
rvice, d 
proceed 
the vestry, and sho et afterwards left t 
retu the rectory a 
ied 
s 
— renew y 1 
and hisses. 
e 
similar demonstration s 
through — cont Aa without interruption ; 
hissi soon as the 
ascended th the "polit dl was epit at intervals unt 
over, w. — hd rector retired with his 
br followed t by — — = Popery,” * No 
Puse 8 80 the moment of 
his — — "anil "that a — pc of police 
— rried u — — ard him, or he might have been 
s again groaned and hissed into the 
rectory, af after which the poa e di: 
—— — — 
P rear e adjourn: — — on the bodies of the 
seven — Gnawa: rn ee gom b the | m 
fatal accident in Victori med on 
reme th when thej ote ther an absence of th two hours 
T "-——— — m the cause of the late 
. accident at the — Palace Hotel, which 
resulted in the deaths of seven persons, are of opinion that 
such de — was entirely Badin 4 2 the acci- 
— ntal loaded scaffold these unfor- 
unate m vro at 
—.— is — Suf nte 
of — 88 on any T0! 
that some — — z eman 
t the orders see h 
ente ld, n 
W. ur y 
expressing their strong di ro 
end enel factory t Mannerin which the evidence ein this s case has 
been col and put befo; 
he Registrar-General's 
tes that 1 the deaths i - London in the 
benc that "ndi Saturday, June 4, w n the cor- 
ing 
average number was 1485. 
Provincial. 
CHELTENH. Two public meetings 
this town on the 20 inst., for the purpose 
Mr. Richardson, of St. | 
church and i 
of “No 
were held in T 
[Jose 11, 184. 
and it had been the desire of his whole public life cn: his | — F. C 
. — 0 strongl * M the — of Austra à herself haviti made a ex — d - Col D 
than reation r^r 8 Power in Italy. examination 
| He * Xt the — n ba — of an 'esult wes any | Soon as taken from the wa ater. There was 
| interference on — of France. "The e p es tof aam — ted t side, ina line wate — 
| to transfer to he that su acy in whicl 
| — 74 watts. — 1814. Austria bad held it for defen ch = long, which in ‘hia opi: [om 
| sive purposes; France would hold it for the purposes of offence, 1ved just be -— or immediate tely T Be 
— her hands it would be « um step towards making | since made a post-mortem examination, bat ; 
editerranean * French They were told, and the other injury. H scarcely thought that F 
French were told that this war n Italy as in obedience to the would of n havo anii the vow 
tradition cy of France. — about three centuries and ‘ ea! The corone, 
a half o Italy was really ind: dent, and was then divided | summing up, urged upon the jury the necessity, i 
into a number of different ere was one kingdom, | doubt r * on their minds, to 
several principalities, duchies, and repu Ys Eve ne of verdict. The j jury, after bok retum 
these different State: governed by a native, to the ex- Haaa E ot Found D * 
clusion of the forei; The country was represented as r c zoun o , there not 
having been thoroughly cultivated, and as distinguishe evidence to implicate any fri The 
than any other country in — ^e , scienc ^ saae ** in diately interred, and will 
evi hing that eleva! the character of man. na 
pened ten? in P French King; he overturned all reward offered for ow discovery, the 
independence me to the present there had | Government being limited to the proof of 
been no instance ots which French sov oe cem * bese to 0 rede inqu has been 
had not, — the e opportunity, struck a blow ai > 
the independence of Tealy for — own advantage. That was am s child Lu up out of the 
the traditional policy of France, and that the species of inde- late explosion oi the rn M. 
pendence which would in reality give to Italy. He was | suffocated by mes on the Mua 
not going to defend zx civil p of Austria. He dec k. Alter a s 
p por ie we 
suited to the “people, 8 were 
devoted to their Government. I 
di 
olu they would 
lantry Austria came forward, and what advantage we 
ed actions. In 1805 Austria, at her own 
ven 
809 she 
€ defeats, cilitated 
of the Duke - Wellington on Madri, 
of S th- 
— eakn 
their hands 
ust not, eda allow ourselves 
— ection of past times in dealing with the — He 
vania not go into another poin 1 t importance, and well 
eie the attention of the public ; he meant the understand- 
evident tly exis sted between Russia and — an un 
existing between tw t 
suspec 
s both parties; but this they might — 
by bringing 150, hen men on the frontiers of Po e 
— AIT ACC nts of 
our fleet, were Me not yet chec 
. E 
—— 
wha ipm isting — n Fra — contrary 
interest “and they . chat — If the ovde 
at wi n understanding between Russia and 
their deliveran: 
not bee Rr es o the time of King 
John the foot of one one singe a armed foreigner. * other nations 
disgrace w 
as of 
* br c explosion, a woi and a soldier wh 
— being in the — and o 
s me eei fro urn 
fleet of 30 other 
co! 
v dls Le — Ce this country to » 
larg 
9 
from E —— by the inhalation 
t of a combustion, the origin 
no — to show. It has ree 
— that the total m of life was 
four childr 
soon after | 
reaching Fo Fro of 
child who 
considerable light on — . of. the i 
the Roman city of Uriconium. continu 
has been traced, bordering what was evidently! 
cem N the Watling Street Road), and 
e 
I he ground, was foun 
— as though it had been ach 
or for the of the more im 
the. Mire the level of which hri 
had suffered the and the ich 
evening. The evening meeting was called in favour of attend succ [s invasion, 8 "the only n rg Stave S A naa S 
" [o e S ears seen 
‘thos en, shop assistants, and others who could | an invadi my in its capital. They could h S no Vide of esteps. The ston 
not resent in the middle of the e day. The. Earl of che extent of the horrors of foreign invasion, and whatever it i — The bac 
l foll might be in other countries, here they would be worse, since er d erai 
ject of —— wur in . to the — — defences:— | the N Nr tiy opd 8 stie pint — 
If there present, and he supposed there | of the he people of of — me ae force which would | hy tat res already op 
wd ap Sai th an e pir di 3. yd d PAR d 
Being likely to suffr m. Tick an ee TAL Marron. The dy t "Me Jennings, who has been | results may be 
monetary of the country would be altogether im mineral el in the: 
"paired rA the €— dës Lee an in the Derwent, is though far advanced n deco mpo- | been met with. 
at P PE sition, the features were suffici -— — to be easily 
-could be the mode app conducting monetary transactions with | recognised. The papera rate books were found in his 
- at pem nication i feol sate € ? And what must pockets, but no money of any kind. An inquest was 
landed we should be owe must be ep | held on Friday, 
nce an — — to the 
m: years would 
many ami 
3 58 
that wwe should not be in TE eg 
i — SS although it 
if wei 
ti 
ina 
with us; if 
ld 
— a force 
disadvan 
ts forces, 
—— Le our 
think it to 
e other day, 
d himself 
Houseof Commons, 
it 
fou 
ong | and — 
wman, a nm eun 
a 
nd, o y, some pa rate 
two handkerchiefs, and a pair of 2 bat no money ; 
h the front part of and 
"rh could no 
m Jennings, nephew of d 
uncle had been in the habit of —.— from home 
inte eade time; that t he often had large su 
money 
he | embodying all th 
- 
said that his t 
for | Solicitor 
he trong 
eee of the manner 
rights of the 9 — of ] 
ents, in 
| Lord — ve petitions 
0 spect 
that since 
| they had ge 5 o th 
| First Registrar. 
3 
counties 
PO NTS.— 
e Treasury inim 
ned r ns, has been 
Y Mr. Thomas Mostyn, Clerk of 
r. Edward Scriven, 
