I 
: 
i 
May 1.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
for 23 florins, or about 2/, ado From Ratisbon steamer 
th d 
beautiful town of L T 
plishe to hg Sodas pu for — le more 
ae — spe motive 
lish the j d 
Mexico.—The Pan 
mouth on Saturday, 
Comanche Indians were committi 
all who fe iW in their ina Rang 
eM 
dora packet, which arrived at Fal- 
brings very distressing news. The 
ing acts of murder - 
had appeared as far a 
ican ti 
any per: 
poate, we 
epee me sola scenery of the Danube and Rhine 
a as 
every day looked ‘ore Bustam i e Con 
vent St. ry. per ee over the ¢ gateway had peRind: two 
ol and in less than the same number of days. 
‘inh abita ‘of the Rhen ish provinces | has cannons to ibe There e ap ppeared to be a gene 
sokiars wad comple the building - ium sntbedeal. 
any criptions fo tlia mt. 
this p HOUSE OF LO 
SwITzeER t recent accounts state that Dex nday.— Pw ag ig Soe was ead asecond md time,—Viscount 
a battalion ot Zesich t pag when they marched into the | Duncannon laid on the table, by command of her Majesty, a 
Argovian territory to aid the local government during the | COPY Of the despatches of the Governor of New South Wales 
TE . during the year 1840, which were ordered to be printed. 
te troubles, were quartered in the abbey of Wettington, | The noble Viscount then gave his promised answer to the ques- 
one of the suppressed convents ; and that they re- oe aa bos bye Boy de ae A ) on an- 
wi oO the eC cers machy 01 ‘orn 
tired, they took with them the} dew painted Sennen: sant had tteeatiioa te ay the Shee of tvs Crogm, ter sa oe 
adorned the chapel. nerals, and Marigg st ordered the notice alluded to to be 
Government has de iste dan soleil eater oe ot 000 served. Sul ently, dn an observation by the noble Earl that 
florins from Zurich, or else threatens to deduct that eg the first parties selected to ‘to be proceeded against wer e two ladies, 
from the amount claime ed by the latter canton for the 
a.—Letters from Warsaw speak of orders given 
n Poland, whose number is no 
k upon the Russian frontie er, and 
omens ofa Lp —the min 
ce—Lord DuncaNNon said h 9 pein under the circum- 
enenk forego pi th 
of Falmouth himself in 
said that he had no objection to this arran; coment. thoug! 
tested against the present attempt to shake the rite a 
perty, the right to which had hitherto been unchallei 
upon Tthe Dnieper, after which the Emperor will visit 
Germany. An ukase ordains the Tegulation of an a 
schools, 
oe Tae a hs bec tgs rents Bill Wed Wien ted & secon 
reply to estion from es Earl s ee Lord 
canna said | that it was iio col to throw wees to the 
pabile Sa. whole of the gents parse park, ase eee 
‘Christian institutions for education, to the Crown. 
recs ea King has addressed — ript, dated 
the 13th inst., to the finance commission is kingdom 
atin that all the surplus revenues of the state should 
thought 
lic debt ; that the taxes should be diminished as much as the precinc ity, and the Bishop of 
eae ; and rap the hate sho pa ae abolished. wee trout aim Rierlig erg | Al adage Aor ge Lgenbe ghee oe 
Turxrey.—By the Levant mail, at Marseilles | late, to sug; a aire ould not deprive the clergy of 
aor inst., as learn at the “hinlis of the Sultan | the fees usually paid at funerals. He was not one who would 
was improving, ‘al a vemonry hs i t of | creat Oaks user but oe ae lately ro 
his being poisoned. aed Pustiwetions had been sent to ed to him, he believed! the interests of the public might 
= we = —_ to consult the London Conference as to a | reconciled with those of the clergy. He felt very much dis 
the a Scheriff. The Divan a dj to ghey 2s in a bill for the attainment of this object. 
a Mehemet the S "3 power The Marquis of Norma.ney said he should be ready to give 
2 miter ¥ sage ges = every assistance in his power tothe right rev. Prelate, if he would 
ga st the sons of Mehemet, or amidst the | take the matter into his hands. 
other grandees of the empire, shall be his successor A committee was nomi of the Marquis of 
i caTgEee? r il 
1 
veyed on canals, and na le a on Sundays, He 
y the Por object to hereditary right | had no intention, he said, pe 3 interfere with the conveyance of 
| ens pens to the payed son ; Bic law of pri- yvellers, but the transport of goods on Sundays led to scenes 
S 4 P highly detrimental to publi: rals.—Lord C. 
ir e. Private ental to i¢ morals.—. OLCHESTER agg 
sagenitare act existing in the Ott ts 0 it would be impossible to put a stop to Sunday trading “on 
navigable ri 
of reform, i in consequence of the | fall of Reschid Pach; st 0 Earl of Faumours presented a petition from 
but th Trur praying om inquiry ont m the subj eee: veh contemplated 
mission of Public Utility would appear o be at variance ill ph the West India mails from F: ith. e petitioners, 
he said, would have rested satisfied if Southampton had been 
with this statement. The removal of Resehid Pacha, it omen experinient wpqn completion of the ay to 
is said, has lon g been the object o of th # Ane etyien nd Rus ondon; and all that they. now desired was to be made aec- 
sian Cabinets. ‘onsi sa ‘00 quainted with the reasons which led to the transfer of the packets 
Na ne lich j a to Dartmouth—a port which ne'ver had been dreamt of before for 
such a purpose. 
would have been riveree to have serra cnodifi- Viueirane MeLnounne said, 
an ge 
— je rs agp — Scheriff, so long as he con- 
nued i The troubles in Samos were stated to 
nd. 
p> Syrra,—Syria is now finally evacuated by 
Nine Eeyptian grea oh last awed having embarked for 
Gaza, on yor’ a Pere frigate, on the 
i cupie 
27th Feb. Gaza is now two battalions of 
Turkish —- d 500 ie “atts is entirely eva- 
cua tish ; Colquhoun and the - 
y the B 1. 
ment of artillery and sappers 
under 
for png bey in wey Vesuvius steamer on the 16th Feb. 
 B wit! 
er, 
iat b he was devoting meyer to seaceera pursuits and 
the mses of his estates at Cairo. 
oe ED Srares ties Ae ee ea of the British Queen 
ednesday verpool ave received the melan- 
chal tidings tr re deat if the President, Ng ae ier 
at Washington, on the The immedia 
of his d ath an attac kof pI plearisy, that Pafed 
ie died wi! 
pial one idbates 
o has di 
le 
ional Cemetery. The order of proces 
mted as having been very noe ere ; se Te over 
longest ev tnessed in Wash- 
- lors and 
capital. It 
and ‘affection which 
rican peop ently m 
peg ces clothed him in the aber dignity, and en- 
ost ii important | functions in the 
toy 
2 
o 
° 
& 
e 
i=] 
3 
=] 
4 gentleman whose political principles are said to 
tirely in unison with th ¢ General Harrison, and who 
is descri eminently qualified for the station to 
Which he unexpectedl .. We have no 
other politi ms by this arrival, the, United 
journals eprening to to be entirely en: with the sub- 
» Jeet of the President's death. Nothing further has 
curred in the case of Mr. M‘Leod. 
that unquestionably 
was felt on this subject in the oth ie of Cornwall, sone o 
the noble Lord said, he was not.actuated by a county feeling in 
bringing it { 
of the packet-station that the Government 
on. Now, that was not isely true.. It was in the breast of 
the company who furnished the, packets to decide which should 
the packet-station. They had decided 
the mails were put on best 
for the country ? And in order to assist in inquiring into sub- 
ject the Admiralty had appointed three gentlemen very competent 
to investigate and apt upon such a pop, They had considered 
the matter; they had gi en their opinion. The noble Lord found 
fault — iat they said di — ee 
to its ane es 
reference te means of co: 
best port Me tick in et the eee 
—eo 
munication with it, was 
m board. stated thus distinctly, Government 
and continual menage ces td and 
pre eee age xl inexpedient to meddie with the 
which had been made for the sake of some small ad 
as h 
Government were perfectly right in following the decision 
gentlemen who had been referred to. —The Earl pean cere PP 
each.—On a aivbion, the motion was cone 
hy Sen hs the motion of Viscount Dencannown, the In- 
ements Bill were read a 
come to any conclusion upon 
Tas habe of Wank imteen eel tijeation to the warning he 
had given in the year 1937, of the danger likely to ensue from 
ity. 
“The Earl of Gt GLEncaxt laid on the table a resolution, which he 
move on Monday next, to the effect that Mr. Stanley, 
ae to the Irish poor -law commissioners, had been guilty 
of ral mato of privilege, in furnishing a falsified return to an order 
e 
The Marquis of NonMANsy said that Government had felt so 
prea nad the impropriety of Mr. Stanley’s ae that they had 
d him from his office; and that he had simultaneous 
pear his appointment ay a fi 
seuners he had no alterna’ 
Stanley’s previous ch: 
oe hoped vam Noble ag 
as made 
that 
tive. es Fae Sate Marquis us ence that 
No ans e Earl of Glen; and 
then ee az cal, en ect 
Earl FiIrzwiLiiaM pri 
laws, and said, that with eialine reven if ent re- 
solved to k up the Fue haat they scone at las! bli 
to have recourse to a property-tax. if 
ent went on repealing taxes, a decli reyenue must be 
consequi —Lord AsHBURTON sider the reve- 
nue tobe adeclining one. The reduction of the postage 
led to ious fall; but that did not im hat the 
the cor in a flourishi > aaang Pe 
that i 
e that ‘it be read a pias plese 
motion of Viscount Dexcanwon, the ~ 
Bill for a Grant to } the i oa of Australia was read a second 
ittee fixed for Friday. 
Panel passed after some observations from the DuKE oF 
WELLINGTON in favour of abolishing the Australian commission. 
HOUSE OF COMMONS, 
Monday.—The House, on = motion of Lord Morrern, went 
into committee on the Parliam: “emir Be Voters! pica Bill, where. 
upon Lord Howick rose to mov endment upon the first 
clause. He laid it down a petechahe, that the 
county franc! isnot occupation, but property ; the 50d. 
ranchise in England being no real exceptinn from that principe, 
since a 50/. renting is i. an evidence of b Seg gear oo i 
The best franchise for an Irish county v thought, 
bea org — a amount ba rent 
certain beyond Pian 
specified in the lease. ” tem: mptatio m to put their 
values unreasonably high fig ine oa ake of their votes real he 
yuntervailed by their desire to avoid paying too heavya 
= pose cauien ' a 
member prof to allow, would not be ly by 
this 5/, be ere some persons, not inclnded the 
82. I ‘3 tl i, ratms would ose, 
for instance, w a very low rent for a property not rateable 
in all at so much as 3/., but yet yielding to the holders a pri 
more £. low ut as he was aware that 
on thi there would be iy ers whom the 8. 
proper amount would be he was not yet prepared to 
state ; but he wee that it should be an yer. which would 
give a constituen tt least as numerous as that which 
ediatel rm Act. All he should now ask of the 
consent to the principle. Tt would be 
leases would ay — in oo 
think it was found to make moe difference 
most dependent 
. 
pai 
i 
at Mid B22 irs oatiat ca ant Heap ames ee 
laid no ground for altering the Reform Act. e was, 
that the people of rel: were entitled to a sufficient ita- 
tion, which at present they di: it possess. ere hi a 
great reduction in the number of the Irish voters, chie me 
the lower classes. A fair ttlement of this question would, he con- 
sidered, be a tt boon to In id, and one which the Conserva- 
tive = aca Pp nt to concede 
fer the ituency to pale on it otherwise must, 
berihes toomit ethose ahah, at th of the first clause w! - 
meficial inte: Asedeeed created by the Reform Act, 
se of enabling him, in ad 
beneficial interest by the 5/. ded in the 
peech. — 
it appeared to include. He read a variety of ¢ the 
recently-printed returns, to show the frequenc ice 
of rating property below its rent or real the very small 
propor of yoters who, under such , would be left 
upon register. The noble Lord concluded by saying that he 
peri gg the test appanage Len 5 ragga ag he most 
visable, and by it he was —Mr. C, oo 
2°9 
that the amendments of How rok uld 
oot ami Vieoars sowie would no 
the disfranchisement so far as the bill would do if left Satucitage 
ition in 
ee the counstituenc 
had gone on.at of sand a y , and as th Se. 
ingness leases continued, this diminution would go on, 
even if the ichise were given to an 8/., or even to a 5/. rating, 
so long as the fi bar based on a leasehold quali 
He said that ittle importanee to the const 
attached bi t 
supposed. to be exercised i landlords over their occupying te- 
nants, for he believed coercion had seldc om — exercised to any 
endment, which he 
great extent.—Sir C. Grr 
said was h e than a verbal matt oy 
Lord STANLEY said that am ent WAS no 
which ed the question whether the whole existing law and 
principle of ase = — t. rep be be ee away. The coun- 
try would a trivial matter. 
He with L ad Howic peg repr + pao nl di- 
tivation = Irish cai fron Cae eens eas by 
Reform Bill, se not to to be permitted. It was assumed that 
such a diminution had alreadytaken place. Mr. O’Connell, how- 
