On the 14th ult. Richard Hearsay, of Ambersham South, near Midhurst, a labourer universally well spoken of by his neighbours, was, with his wife and young children, ejected from the cottage and garden which, it is said, had been occupied without payment of rate or other acknowledgement by his father and himself from the year 1758. The warrant was obtained under the 59th George III., at the instance of the churchwarden, who on the day mentioned, with his coadjutors, literally carried the poor fellow from the floor of his dwelling, upon which he had thrown himself with the view of opposing all the passive resistance in his power, and then proceeded to cast out his few articles of furniture upon the adjoining heath. On the third day following the churchwarden caused the cottage to be dismantled of its roof, and the doors, &c., to be conveyed to his own habitation. The warrant was granted by Messrs. Samuel George Pechell, James Lyon, Joseph Martineau, and Jervoise Clarke Jervoise four of the justices of the peace for Hampshire, acting at Petersfield, who, at the same time, and on the same individual's application, also granted another warrant of ejectment against Sarah Osbourne, widow, who had occupied the adjoining tenement for the last 21 years without payment of rent or other acknowledgement, as she alleges, and who was turned out on the same day. The justices and all concerned will speedily have the opportunity of justifying their conduct before the country, Mr. Rodgers, of Devonshire-square, the solicitor of the parties ejected, having on Thursday and Friday last served the preliminary notices of action as well upon the four above named magistrates as the churchwarden, constable, and other persons engaged in the transaction— Brighton Herald.