May 4,] 



THE NEWSPAPER. 



| J.O-T**. 



Z\)t 0Sfa$BM&- 



^TURDAT^JUYJ, 1844. 



Kdition, price 25s. each vol. 



rt LADIES' BOTANY, 



or 



price 



~ ltt 5, W"» •J.Y.g splEN'DID WORK on URtmiiAi-w 



• DR- LI* sDLL1 s ,J t Vin Ten Parts, price 25s. each. 

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C^a: ^°II ,a „ n nTANlcAL CULTIVATOR. Price lot., bound 

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*r-?ES ' By C [ W.Johnson, Esq., F.R.S.,&c. 



ANL S' n to the present time, and giving the fullest 



■^hJntte information on every kind. Also, by the 



- T"* TRACTS for the Use of AGRICULTURAL 



mm Author, T RA ti» Qn A icultural chemistry-The 



^mS Calendar , and the Cottage Farmer's Assistant, 



I^udi Cottage Cookery, &c. 



M^iinmr w,u 6 jAMES Ridowav, Piccadilly. 



, a Fourth Edition of MORTON on SOILS ; with tne 

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inred plates. . — — 



— NOW READY, price is. 



PERUVIAN an d BOLIVIAN GUANO, with Full 

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 fro^Xi Resslts.-JAS. Ridoway, Piccadilly, and every 



^^^Miuon^nlarged, of Morton on Soils, price 1 Os. 

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^S^A New' Edition of" Sinclair on Grasses. 



■Ice 



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NOW BEING PUBLISHED. 



Laici U 6d.: Small, is.; Gardeners' Edition. &f. THE 



UOTANIC GARDEN; or, MAGAZINE of 



AJ FLOWERING PLANTS. 



With many important and useful additions. 



By B. MAUND, F.L.S. 

 ; itch Number contains Beautifully-coloured Figures of 

 Ornamental Plants, both herbaceous and shrubby, suitable 

 for the Flower-Garden or Pleasure-Ground. With the deriva- 

 tions of names, classes, orders, height of the plants, time of 

 towering, native country, history, qualities, most approved 

 ■odtt of propagation and culture; and other information, in- 

 teresting to every lover of a Garden. Annexed to each Number 

 Is the 



FLORAL REGISTER, 



with Woodcuts of admired Flowering Plants, mostly such as 

 have been newly imported into this country ; with the necessary 

 Information respecting them. Also, 



THE AUCTARIUM, 



in which are given, improved methods of cultivation of vegeta- 

 bles, fruits, and flowers; new discoveries connected with garden- 

 ing, and the power of new manures; and miscellaneous inform- 

 ation. Also, iu each Number, till complete, a portion of Prof. 

 Henslow's 



BOTANICAL DICTIONARY, 



With numerous Explanatory Woodcuts, and Explanations of the 

 English and Latin words in use, written expressly for the 

 Author. Thus the " Botanic Garden " contains Four distinct 

 works, proceeding together, at a trifling cost, once a month. 



PRICES. large small 



Vols., Drab boards, each . . Il.l7s.0d. 11. 5s. Od. 



., Cloth gilt, beautifully embel. 2 



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ISo. XVI. of THE GARDENER'S EDITION, at 



■a., with partially. coloured plates, was published on 1st April, 

 •i I P° rtl °ns of the Floral Register and Auctarium 

 already published contain nearly Twelve Hundred Engravings, 

 lorrningone handsome volume, which will be delivered Gratis 

 m> ine purchasers of four volumes of the Botanic Garden. 

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SDprMT^ ust J? ublisned » Part th e Second, price 10«. 

 ™ ES F1LICUM, or a Synopsis of all known 



Mrtin,, h , This Se cond Part contains POLYPODIACE^E 



film Vi? d , Plates XXI - to XL - B Y Sir William Jackson 

 Hooi,R K H M , i .L. D ., F . R . s . t&c 



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1 vol »vn U tJ l P L EY'S ELEMENTS OF BOTANY. 



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*aiti..nQMSI C n , ' , ,? YSTKMAT,CAL t and Medical; beingaFourth 

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*o. io| G w. AGRIC ULTURAL CHEMISTRY. Third Edition. 



WEBlfj's S CHEMISTRY. Second Edit. 8vo. 9*- °d- 

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'BRITISH FFR\s 1U(iin6Part ' of Mr. NEWMANS HISTORY 



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No. 1 of the ENLARGED NEW SERIES, commencing with 



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PART I. of the MONTHLY PARTS was published May 1. 



THE LANCET in its greatly enlarged form (enlarged more 

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ON THE BREEDING AND DISEASES OF SHEEP. 

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THE HISTORY, STRUCTURE, ECONOMY, and 

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 various Breeds of Sheep.-Part II., in Thirteen Sections, gives the 

 Structure and Economy of Sheep.-Part III. the Diseases and their 

 Management. By W. C. Spooner, M.R.V.C, Honorary Associate 

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PROVIDENT LIFE OFFICE. 50 Rboknt Street, Feb. 15, 1844. 



BONUSES DECLARED, 529,306/. 17*. Id. 



NOTICE is hereby given, that all Persons who hold 

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 may receive the present value of the Bonuses which have been 

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 io me «g a GEORGE BEAUMONT. Actuary. 



Nctos Of the 



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London : Charles Knight & Co., 22, Lndgate-street. 



Published this daj-, 8vo, 6d., sewed. „ TTT , 



HINTS to FARMERS, on the NATURE, PUR- 

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London: Longman, Brown, Green, an d Longmans. 



Just published, in one volume, royal octavo, 



THE VALUE OF LANDED PROPERTY demon- 

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XIATIONAL MERCANTILE~LIFE ASSURANCE 



IN SOCIETY. Arthur-street West, London Bridge. (Es- 

 tablished in 1837.) Directors. 



Chairman.— Robert Currey, Esq. 



The recall of Lord Ellenborough from the office of 

 Governor-General of India, which was announced in our 

 Parliamentary news last week, has been again a leading 

 topic of discussion. In the Commons, Sir R. Peel has 

 declined to state the precise grounds of the recall, but he 

 admits that the East India Directors have full power by 

 law to take such a step ; that they had given the Govern- 

 ment ample notice of their views, and that the question 

 was at length decided by an unanimous vote. In the 

 Lords, the Duke of Wellington expressed his disapproba- 

 tion of the measure in very decided terms, and condemned 

 it as an act of indiscretion the most remarkable which he 

 had ever experienced. Lord Ripon also has confirmed 

 the impression produced by the Duke's speech, by the - 

 announcement that Lord Ellenborough's recall has not 

 met with the approbation or sanction of the Government. 

 The Court of Directors therefore, for the first time m the 

 history of India, have placed themselves in direct collision 

 with the Ministers of the Crown. The great majority of 

 the Court are not only Conservatives, but very decided 

 supporters of the present Cabinet. It is consequently 

 manifest that they have not taken this extreme step on 

 merely political grounds, but beyond this nothing whatever 

 has transpired. The recall, however, is undoubtedly valid, 

 and Lord Wharncline and Sir James Graham have already 

 been announced as candidates for the vacant office.— On 

 Monday the Chancellor of the Exchequer brought before 

 Parliament his annual budget, and showed that the actual 

 receipts of the past year had exceeded his calculations by 

 the sum of 2,700,000/., or in other words that the national 

 income, which he had last year expected to produce 

 50,150,000/. had realised 52,835,124/. The actual ex- 

 penditure had also fallen considerably within the estimate, 

 so that instead of the 700,000/. surplus which he predicted 

 12 months ago, the actual surplus of receipts over disburse- 

 ments for the year ending 5th April, was 4,160,000/. From 

 this gross surplus on the past year, 2,749,000/. the defi- 

 ciency of last year being deducted, the net surplus available 

 was 1 ,400,000/. For the current year he calculated on a 

 surplus of 3,146,000/., and therefore proposed a reduction 

 of duties on glass, vinegar, currants, coffee, and marine 

 insurances, amounting to nearly 400,000/. In regard to 

 the Income Tax, he proposed to defer the consideration 

 of its continuance until next year, when the three years, 

 for which it was enacted, will expire ; but from the dis- 

 cussion which followed, there is little doubt that the Tax 

 will then be continued for two years longer. The Chan- - 

 cellor of the Exchequer has also brought in a Bill 

 regulating the Savings Banks, and Lord Cottenham has 

 also introduced an important measure, altering the law of 

 Debtor and Creditor, and abolishing imprisonment for 

 debt For the details of these and other measures we 

 musi refer to our report. The lri*h State Trials stilb 

 make but slow progress, and as there is little doubt that 

 the present motion will be prolonged to the end of term, 

 it is rumoured in Dublin that Government will very pro- 

 bably be unable to obtain judgment until Michaelmas. 



The arrival of the Overland Mail has put us in possession 

 of recent news from India and China. The mutiny of 

 the troops was more extensive than was at first announced,- 

 but it is said to have ceased on the payment of extra 

 batta. The Governor-General had returned to Calcutta, 

 and India generally is tranquil. 



Edward Baker, E>q. 

 Jasper Capper, Esq. 

 Thomas Dakeyne, Esq. 

 Giles Redmayne, Esq. 

 James Spicer, Esq. 

 Henry Sterry, Esq. 



Thomas Bax, Esq. 

 Joseph Cooper, Esq. 

 Russell Jeffrey, Esq. 

 William R. Spicer, Esq. 

 Joseph Sterry, jun., Esq. 

 Robert Wilcoxon, Esq. 





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Iconic Neoos. 



Court.— Her Majesty and Prince Albert, and the 

 King and Queen of the Belgian,, left Buckingham Palace 

 on Saturday for Claremonr. The Roya party returned 

 to town in the afternoon, with the exception of the King 

 of the Belgians, who remained at Ciaremont until Monday. 

 The Queen held a Court at Buckingham Palace on Mon- 

 day at which two special ambassadors from Sweden and 

 Bavaria had audience of her Maj sty. The King and 

 Queen of the Belgians left town on Tuesday on their 

 return to Brussels, and embarked at Woolwich under the 

 customary salutes. After the departure of their Majes- 

 ties, the Queen and Prince Albert visited the gardens of 

 the' Royal Botanic Society in the Regent's Park. Her 

 Majesty's tenancy of Osborne-house, in the Isle of Wight, 

 commenced on Wednesday, but at present it is uncertain 

 when her Majesty will visit that place. The residence 

 will be the private property of the Queen, and no public 

 money whatever will be expended upon it— The Emperor 

 of Russia is expected to arrive in tins country a few weeks 

 hence, on a visit to the Que % en. Him Majesty will occupy 

 a portion of St. James's Palace, where pivpsrationa «re 

 already making for his reception.— CoL Wyide has suc- 

 ceeded Col. Bouverie as Equerry in Waiting on Prince 



X %Te Queen Dou,a ff er Us been suffering ^**£ 

 sition for the last few day,, arising from an extensive 



