THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
eddrepael ae meeting i in commendation of po oeii corruption, and thai 
ices, | Mr. Leathe had an 
t b efor e the E “money: ys were pr rovided | 
a Be aN fisipata eda pgn “pected, by reason of his 
P “a PA, | observation of what had previously tak ce at elections for | 
sig Ge ones ay TRE East. Re The Rey. T. “Richard. | the said bee gh, that corrupt pra pices want probably be had 
| recourse to in order to defeat him, te that he intended to 
he nee ev. Hu ugh Allen. The votes were for +4 | kes UAA oga the Ns Tiar ord ecure his own Te, 
fie anon 17, for Mi, o -5 ter detailing t genious method in which Mr. ne res: 
) The C Pte ag 7, and for Mr. East- | wor ae pgs was eee out, they, nes speaking m par- 
bree Sunday last sane of 
i liceme: 
[FEBRUARY 25, 1860. 
———————— 
| oblation of _ Christ finished on the « cross, he & 
| perfect 
the H oly Eucharist bej ing £ a memorial or paciai 
tion of His death and sacrifice on the cross; (2) of the 
non-adoration of vam sacramental bread and wine, aad 
non-corp oral presence of Christ’s natural flesh and 
+i ee Rotter 
[election from inquiring as t 
s being Sa UBS having before the aruon the means 
eki and good grounds to sus spect 
. The senate pamtindce aa pipon 
ectors, to the 
we . Ro: . George Seel A Rat- Gea 
cliff H ighway, who h s been cited i by the n | kn 
King, the rector, t ayes A lead 
of Dravling a appeare y in that, court on Paes ay, WAED | 
“articles”? put in by the rector in soppor 
the charge were read and admitted. M 
a We find that larg y 
Qansıstory 
ig i 
ntin. ing mproper ee Mines by 
i i opposing Candidates gees 
Pak pinion not eally for vE purpose, 
| but fo the. Da partly of 
taa upon the election, 
ea, s Ay Doeg in the ? 
j themselves, 
d to b 
writing, rion k; the 
icles”? in 
case, 
on.—The experi- 
ments with a ‘Whitworth’ nR, pannon have Beg n | 
inued this wee ek o the Southport coast. The 
exercisin imp 
pie FR renditur rm of 
at ong range EA 
and pa: rtly also ar i purpose “of ede ee ARAA 
tonishing petista those recorded in. our last ae | mont hda aN vassers and voters of the opposin 
Pedy t Shots wre a ba a9 elevation y parties respectively. of actual abduction was pro 
the fol owing range byehe us, which will be ET evidence of the witness 
2: ‘Sl shot ssir; ath shot, ont 5th ak AN that S informe byte wimp 
there for re, that | 
nt of non-elec rd 
is an established practice ‘a the Wakefield Slectiohs: We find 
pes at it is without any necessity or legitimate object, that it 
pede and: intenforog yeh the at amoyance of er the’ vot bere a 
tio Ai, Oyen 
gh thi 
> above 5} ‘miles, ple, “than ge (oe recorded of | i 
} it. eran mida! 
any H PO- ik Werponpdar, oh an elevation | both aiden: TR Arniston na g ae hed Fa 
f 3107 yards; and the) ele ways. The fact ee be as that Saher of the candi 
an 
Ve es “of several hundreds o Sa p 
ar 
partakers of Chia,” 
Several pa 
cited as 
‘were contradicted and id ah he 
es in the presentment were 
the 
ead, He 
fe 
i sel of 230 pA rinted pages, the major part of wtih Wy 
r eade: g 
d that hh was not ae h forthe 
peti to be tha assages complained of Some re 
PANS to the teaching p certain PREGA schools of 
theology in the English or Scottish Churches, that they 
divines, or, could this be done, even that they were 
without sanction Gen the formularies of the. Church, 
oan in a penal proceeding like the pr resent, to show 
that the passages complained of 
subversive, not of this or that interpretation of the 
of the articles, formularies, or offices of the 
urch themselves; and in the consideration of thi 
presi the respondent was entitled to. g the weight 
whi ch was due to the deliberate avermeni in ‘his 
formularies, 
q 
bd ange 
Bae oy p ‘the rn at more o 2500 yards, | 4 
and then ricochetted and struck again at 5000 yas 
n 
thought proper to pay the non-electors through 
| the election eer bak s adopted. Xe alternative of paying 
vages 
À, stata and declared illegal by 
e extreme range of the ponnde r was not t d, statuto i “md is Miet. can on Bec. 18, sati: oa us 
bat it is shortly to be tri ed ona 4-inch iron ae | See hat > plo eh ae u the han cent in tne ns AR 
Whit a: escri to essary and illegal, 
h Me worth: is confident of penetrating ab | but erie i amd a 3 that statute ng To the pamini E 
penses t hredet the appear to } been 
strar- enea Ps m no raie whatever by eit of the ca didates. | We 
e; ie 
| si id rse 
sk a ina AS weeks of th the ese pel | Faen ie m ek E aea oy Ei p as poctive and k 
e fa a 
1850:59 the average ig was a ae ha if raised | ence ga bale ie ere a meee of com na notoriety 
porti Aen out the borough, and excite a scanty measure o: 
pr ae 1y, to Thi he Ingepa of the lp as vag isapprobation even on the part of those who did not actually TA 
P.f % y oth T OSREN. 1 prepro | jom in the work of corruption. Lastly, we find, havi 
irths of 950 | 
regard to the length of time before noel Sorian a which on 
a0 oh ate were a rege ption 
pondi 
yi06. 
istered | preparations for the bend =“ ced— 
of the | argo proportion (142, Q 866) of The ahale, 35 NAN 
ed in corrupt E ae and guilty of bribery—to the 
aaar: of of persons Gncluding 56, themselves electors 
| 
| 
j 
| 
paraging pay oi in any | 
Having made a =e expos 
tion o arist, “ne an eaborat sr a on the 
urse of his con- 
r wpnngr whatever. 
es- 
sequenc 
e pkt 
ea Freh rch and 
di is Sa A an a FE isan eae 
he tag of the 
} 
ee ot 
pee hold. high and re- 
nsible positi ons. in the Chu rel h. No attem ag what- 
vith 
on that 
e ith 
account ; no attempt ever has been 1 made, except one, 
ho 
them 
rs 1850-59 the average Sumber 8 
(ee 
seats ntarily en in ance work of re ing and giving bribes—to 
eè readiness 
= the zeal and skill they exhibited— with which 
— services were piere and a = s adopted—to the 
robincial. n iay in which bribery was carried o: te 5 the need 
“M di and al scussed amongst all classes—and sip tie manner manh 
-ON-TyyE.—The Ste wozi the voters ane Dargaine sox pas i 
ere opened a few days since avens- | Sides, that fetora ot for the 
first time A in in the like operations ag gross EN iption,’ * 
phenson 
by Lord 
worth, in er the peene of the Mayors of the Apaapa 
boroug ghsa ndal arge concourse of spectators, The schoo ols. 
E 
Krelani. 
| he may fre old and teac land, it is clear that, 
so far at l as the cl meerned, rent 
of manion exist in the two 
churches erson, incumbent of 
The Rev. Mr. Hende 
t, Mary’ s, Arbroath, was heard at great Jength for the 
the accusation had been made ont, and 
that 
Stephenson aad his first wife occupied a tenement, and that the bishop’s teaching was literally, gramme tically, 
in which the late a to poort me phenson bi Bags po tl and substanti sed to the doctrine of the Church’s 
building is said y appreciate e held on ote in To rincipal paris ke: of | articles and formul ei iad that in ealling on the 
working men of the sank ted aap, is little toa Dablin. i adopt stopi to to sou on nga pari for the | a to ud express condemn: of t Bis p of 
that the schools and mec chanics’ institute will do m Pope, on Sunday next, as successful as possible. One of tee s s teaching the presenters were not seeking to 
SA speaker TS announced that Dr. Cullen had already | narrow which the Church 
t to the Holy See. Another accused | in ey tolera finn allowed to her teachers, but claiming 
P eigas “A non-r rodent ae of theii the Kuxperor.of the French as the “eldest son of the from a me the vindication of t neiples 
anes je attached to her intere ats” th hurch ” of preparing a “chalice of sorrows” for Pio whi ch co mld not be eran of inva alidated, 
ono drain. du the See lists was truth 
ti “The life, chara ded by the name Cogn >» M:P., for 502. ; of 
fW. but, 
© | generally speaking, ‘tn ost subscribed were of | 
Ourr WES — An extraordinary 
ai ongari gaat A raae age the mopeds of Mr. 
a rge Allen, at Dru nty of Wi 
| meath 
e nam: 
compositions bei 
Vice-Chancellor, T 
re cage —In Silage eae ieve: 
t offers 
to 
be trg “ee Burdett Rage 
rship,” cepted. It 
affix the pict Py ng cing to a letter of th ny of bh e 
eet “lady far her great and beneficial gifts to the 
Scott tish. Tm 
intin against Dr. Forbes, 
+ eect —The report,of the Wakefield Election 
Commissioners has been Peon ser Parliam ent. The 
is an abstract g its conten the Eucharist, 
com ers fi 
The hearing lasted three days. The 
gan 
Bibop of Brechin, for. heretical doctrine on the subject | 
ai c 
he Eucharis ead amount 
ness in A $gaching which the Church, by their prescribing 
£ sohni tion to it; 
t train which leaves — 
nd others oes the | 
Station at the rate of between 35 and 40 an hour 
the tire of one of i Sing eae en threw 
he engine off t The wheels then: potery A 
contact w t i ghey hich threw the engine 
| against the edge of the brick platform, when it tarned — 
over with great eee Fortunately, the 
ke the coupling iron of the third vanieles and left 
the remainder of the trai ind. rriages— 
and t teaching, in a charge delivered to his clergy on 
À D? 
= sch San in some 
he keton | 
Pvc the ` w. 
their Pr Bi es a ot 
where ae gone doctrines (1) of the Gide of the 
about eight i 
august 5, 1857, p loss of life must haye been fearful. As it was, 4 
and ri ant to, unsanctioned | second-class a first-class carri hich 
ie and taba of, certain icles of ion, | nearest the engine with the a were 
and in p e formularies for public worship each other, while ~~ 
in the saga Episcopal ou in so far as he tied “prague everything i ina dense mist, 
taught a gl “ the Eucharistie Sacrifice is the same | diate assistance ed from the station, and the 
substanti » (2) that ae pater 
cally doration Š a to the body and ‘blood. of Christ poral me a se ‘eri for the carriages had es ; 
een | is due not to the gifts, but to Christ i in rd gifts” Several of the injured were poor en to o e p 
Jadders, boards, 
taverns, 
