THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL ызы. 
"he abdomen and out аб the back, but little blood | relieving officer stated that a fortnight ago the v eed 
escaped from the wounds. On the discovery of the e | ma ade e an —Q ны а гир that her hus 
F 
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to the commanding-officer of the garrison, Colonel Шы of 15 years. R^ St Es was Ханг, to appear 
Wright, ye immediately « sent е а body of Eqs ers in | before the guardians, but when he o he refused to 
search , of t irderer, хө ied well known that a | support his wife, on the ground het she in Мз 
euni in the ніг? ession| deceased wife's sister, and that by law be 
" his rifle а ball 4 зна д "The grounds of Mr. | bound to support her. The dd ipee reli ef Б 
Freeland, M.P., were ете ded and scoured Ъу | ће extent of 6s. to be afforded to wife, and the 
detached. parties without avail; every house of bad | present proceedings were taken to p^ Stead to 
repute in the city was reme without effect. The|refund the money. 16 appeared that the wife was not 
number of mne was now increased to 200 men, with | the sister of his de ecense ed wife, he er maiden name pie 
a dozen cavalry, who were sent to scour the woods | Bolton, whilst t} 1 wife was Greenwood. In 
at] Goodwood, Captain „Valentine, the stewa rd of the | fact, the women were the children of the same mother, 
estate, 1 h, | but not the same father. The solicitor for the husband eed Mem ge. i 
which continued without avail until 12 o'clock, when | contended that according to the decision in (he now СК qns Mas 
Mr.Henry peni йш Koir mpnett, found Cleary’s rifle | celebrated case of Brock v. Brock, Stead could not be Government, when w 
loaded, Edge on, which he had evidently | held to have married this woman. Тһе solicitor for the T which Иштеш оц 
thrown away pe zb dt clear of the city. This was | guardians did not dispute the decision in the case of етлер в анг 
found in the ditch of a water meadow, through which а | Brock, but he wished the Bench to decide as to whether |} 
i th ndel 
-— 
happy | A ва; е 
athway runs to join пе ma in road leading to Aru the law applied na r half-sister as well as to a sister in | countries people side 
and Littlehampton. till y sense of the term. The magistrates? clerk Government to fottor a 
are entertained of his speedy capture. e is the | said that a Brice dis e with a deceased wife's sister was | 
son of a tradesman at Rowlands Castle, near Havant. шайылу void i in law, 197 initio, and that, „ће refore, 
Cleary, the soldier who shot him, is 21 years of age, and | ber husband could not 1 her. 
is a native of Ireland. He „pear rs a bad character in the |. There was a eid of settlement lately ar, gued, in which 
th Regiment, to the depót of which he was Изен it was settled that the law applied с бна to the half- 
In October, 1860, he deserted, and was afterwards tried | sister as to the proper sister, e discussi 
and convicted for stealing property belonging to the magistrates decided that the summons again 
Very recently h days' extra drill | St 
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he long-expected demon- 
tration in honour of Tal Russell took place in “ the 
metropolis of the north ? on Mon His lordship, who 
М t Gib ived i 
.—4A meeting of landowners and anglers | 
interested in securing to the river Tees the full benefit | 
of the Salmon Fishery Act, 1861, was convened by he tow 
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t, о air, when wa d 
to circulate and placard very extensively along the " í i оп n the E ved 
; the river, hand-bills setting forth the pro sei 2 i i or hi t ians cag ing о 
visions and penalties comprised in the ДЫК It was also печати ү ун ыны c E him fr bis past | of government for theme 
e quarter sessions, at p 
urham and Northallerton, to ap point the police- 
officers and others special conservators; and a sub- Russell in reply said 
scription was opened to meet the ex Д IE wo 
d 
ken part were necessarily slow. e natur ur 
mentioned that in the event of Ше. lan bei VIDE | institutions and tl nius of our people, while they 
e ent for parties belonging to an association | są d an moted the utmost freedom of 
to fish on their property, ап angling association would | discussion, ve adverse to noton change, and there- 
be peli Those anglers, the chairman remarked, fore it behoved every frien progress to wait 
would be the best conservators they could obtain and, | with patie an б in with calmness 
as one of ш лышы he should gladly concede the al publie opinion was full ineed, and the national 
e of fishing on his property to such persons. d p t d 
From what he had gathered of the sentiments of other min m б iio ancMeres intro us 
| Legis ные rom this maturity of d агана it 
ndowners, he believed all, or most of them, would be йа Же dirak 
але Lo such. m шй. А VUE pct “2 wed as a consequence that our steps in the direc 
: ivi n re- 
ü аб. traced, and that раф, which ha Wen and 
"Gn e A a SEE in the ascent, was easy and — on the 
es — The inquest on Lord Forth was con- | summi the evening there was a grand banquet in 
cluded « дә Tousday week, e. the surgeon who at-|the new г Town Hall under the residency of the Earl of 
te puo d him was examine ed abs some e len ngth. He said that b rd e Right Hon 
Darha азд; supported by Lo: "eps d 
Hutt, M.P. ; the Right H 
he andann aud wasapparently asleep. He Ду Пин, him, Ms. Beaumont, M.P. ; Sir W. Atherion, ra ы. à 
"уһеп he said, «І h eni say. т General; Mr. Pease, M.P.; Mr. W. D. Seymour, М.Р.; 
He then became drowsy, and did mcn again, а, Shafto, M.P.; Mr. Adams, M.P.; Sir Hedworth 
fter surgeon was sent ж апа they. applied the Williamson, M.P. ; G 1 Beckwith, Gene tt, &c 
After the "usual lo al toasts, the chairma: 
Perros to the nerves, gem e bd the deceased 1 never | | health g Earl Russell, к == 
recovered consciousness, and died in the evening. The | enthus 
which was мајр with ien of Ita 
asm. In returnin thanks his lordship spoke as terest—the 
laudanum he had taken had. xd ordered fr Ai aiy follows :— - ЯС m тей w Сы у ш that И would a 
asa fomentation, The deceased was ve mperate| s: tune to the word i "that unio 
in his its. This doubtl h Ir has be y fate to have taken par t in many political hich, нобро 
NÀ " 6 i bais is : ou. - - a mue LM u pon eek. ringa а tolerably long political D and I ОЕ this |р оде of vim im чре "eet Mmm 
nind, partieularly as he 'did no is usua ation а set of men so enlightened, as a ib 
exercise. During the lady's — A ics d — testimony that T hav not dishonoared those my principles— | 16У recede К were to hi 
al wholly to her тоо Ire ted ш ht that I have done nothing to i impelr the honour or injure the | MÌS to say ti 2t d so events have 
d d, гм Hy m, sen upon nig in Pt Mx C country. If I have been successful in any of | $9!Ty =- 
and day. His brain p na his excesses | th s that I have proposed it has been that I have pro- 
and confinement, ME the witness d he posed i n more fortunate times measures which had the appro- 
would go to London, v aire ran а on be eing to join his tion of men who have gone before me, that I have endea- £6 
voured to fellow du the $ tsteps of Lord G 
father at Brussels. Не said he was afraid he should | Sir Samnel Romy na red of Lord Grey, Lord Holland, 
e m 
oer teo 398, ҮК T for empire 
t one 
y, and ш It was my happiness | hàve тоет a 
iege in London, as he was much in debt. Th ^r been M eg in the work of Б with Earl rey, atis, i Far be ідш bx 
witn hen ibed the result of а pos? mortem | 19 urham, Lord Dungannon, and a statesman who t 
inati i h the to w. 
examination, and said that the cerebellum was much Pres лы E шша È ж a. o “baen health ha IA bes contest t endid, by the 
, and thereby self-control was lost. Не never service to this —I Sir J. dnas, the South should agree 
Saw so much attention lavished upon a lad by a gentle- — the scheme. of p^ , and that Reform as you 
man in his life i 
all 
s |i n m по +, m e ed, but has x mi d years 
^ m on ; that i operate neficial ot doubt. 
during the whole of the three weeks the dy was that T has led the way нк y other great nicam nueasures whiti 
- The jury returned a verdict that Lord Forth died |n d have been carried їп an unTeformed Parliam ts 
poison, taken vh labouring ünder temporary | w ad, » me say, when I Фата ри mem life I н АД we nos 
e view of anyi ent meast: and e ction carri 
irs ps er enfe, bu у Жыр t public objects before me. n "appears tomo hat | tD 
" е Y publie life is g^ honowrabo when t is to such 
disease induced y her лаба псе. measures, and that pedlar who sells his pins and pin- 
Mrs. Llo oyd. She was р only Ei il gp emm a ® MES cushions for 66. has V be бет, -— an honester, "arde than 
Lr upon de in H erefor кыште and us arri ried when n | sak s kin sente A uus А. v merely E 
in her ear C. of | which, perhaps, I m ipe 
Her Majes sty’s regiments. e: qc der bim to live | which I бар һго ough 
with e. e qu “of an pios h marquis, and only left| ү АП опг mensuros inf 
him w in his turn t his attentions to |1 tl 
5 оше wife, wh "s а Won f the Divorce | regard to Free 
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Ke) m со ] 
conduct of the suit with his father-in-law; and the | Gove 
lady soon afterw h 
Lod и afterwards formed арна. mainta wit relations ich should p 
F has been ry t 
shire to be int y oved to Herelord. 
erred in the family таш i her father's 
"epe - the -— ^а Perth has & orders -— Lo 
the body of his son should be pakansi terred at | fa 
њад, 
ЕЕ" the Town Hall on the 10th inst. Mr. | had 
bad 
EW еі 
ы that of rs — stru necessary 
ing Оп for nearly 40 years in ег to enable | 18 all nationality, 
Stead was summoned to cause why h ели te ya that Wito is реу innocent е itself, to extend | assertions Арн flicts and disturbi 
refused у Һе | the producta jo other side, by con as wellasi 
Ned to support his wife, Christiana Stead. The e ind dustry of others mer e mer s he products wii me partsof Europe 3$ : 
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