THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
[APRIL 16, 
et-ship North America, 
The pack 
par ig i: nanan nthe 19th 
which sailed from New York 0 
rday. Sheh 
r 
Sishaey” is oe acific privet 
s had taken ee in Ne 
ess the necess 
rd Morpeth and Mr. Dickens conti 
in all parts of the States with distinguished honours 
Parliament. 
or ee F 
Monday.—The Earl of Rirow = ie the second reading of 
the Corn portation Bill te m Fi or mnae 
Cam d the second gto 
he ooved t 3 rauater tot the Hous 
S noo 
pinion w 
after which Lord » eran plied, per was followed by the 
/SLLIN that he would not occupy their 
dships’ atten’ subject which had been satisfactorily 
isp of by the of his noble and learned friend on the 
woolsack ; but h to say a on one poi ing on 
the great office of the . ee f vern- 
ment of this great empire, and not merely from the judicial busi- 
_hess des ed holder in the Court of Chancery 
that That most important from its station in 
the = _ ne the law, the Lord dit 
over th tes of that Honse, and holding a high in 
Majesty’ 's soma should take care, then, that 
Their! 
there pe 3 not — Scthat onan a@ person 
laws of this country, and of the daily practice of them 
Chancery. If this question, then, were bréught os 
the House in a future — — ge ne" ent, he hoped the noble 
and } ald take o provide that the Chancellor 
should be Etaitter of 15 pirate dtaittiog’ —The second reading 
of the ne was then | negativ ed without a division. 
gave no tic e that, on go ing i 
tion Bill, he would move that a fixed sme ese “4 more tg a 
‘Wonks than a graduated one 
bi : of Weut LIN SGTON | 
moved the second reading of the 
Bill. necessity 3 
suc ch. a ‘atep arose from the frauds which had been practised with 
regard to Exchequer Bills. ra con- 
siderable time a suspicion te he existence of those frauds, and 
that numbers were engaged in them, it was deemed 5 ent in 
place the matter clearly before the public, that m- 
mission should be appointed, with a view of making i pened eos 
ery point which could me, - og elucidation of these transac- 
pr b Jide holders 
ns. This proceedin eh Ne 
pret securities from 
act; and, as ly a 
i say it is is not an, and that 
plained. He did not say ( that Pies 
lords, I a 
=o po a ied has stated it, 
—Lor 
n, on their part, "bat eo 
easures now before the 
tion against any further grant 
of WICK oo and Lord 
e en- 
he hum 
e E el of ‘Rivon, ee Merchan s and Fac- 
as re ead asecond time, with awh understanding that the 
rar reserved for the committee. 
of the Duke of WeLuincron, ¢ the Exchequer- 
. It was renrees without amendments, 
On the m 
bills Bill wa 
and ordered 
The Iri ve! be. 
somg obse s 
EAGLE, ie" eiseaiée 
lead to the increase oft ile P dist 
ord Du» arene! eek with a view to the 
provement of the management of the “ val yea ceueed + to 
port phame Hospital. The resolutions were oppos by the Earl 
of Hat NG ron, and cag without a division 
The Excheque s Bill was read a third time and 
of Mopsowwee presented a petition from 
en - of “ae number of commissions of the peace 
e Governme mt, de oo ng that Sir J. Graham had 
] 364 s ommissions to. Conserva- 
ee oe ed 
aes committee, #fter 
and Lord pee 
Marq u 
Hull, ‘coms 
iss ued by 
anid 
rege 1 
tive The Cc that the 
pi had ac red fro vung in their appoi intments, and 
a the present Gov peranaee ere whe tempering an evil by 
oring the balance of political par 
HOUSE OF COMM 
_— Stanhope and Tyne Railroad Bill was" read a 
e Bills were read a second time, and 
paviation Bill, 
Life Assurance and 
© 
Mo 
third ti 
and Cro: 
reception of a petition from Finsbury presented by Mr. Duncombe 
t the Income tax. ject, it 
0 djourned till this day. 
no posed the reception of the petition on the ground of the 
ancient usage excluding petitions against pending taxes. If 
that usage should be rescinded, great obstruction to public 
usiness might be the consequence. as true that a resolution 
now éxisted a: st the debating of petitions, but that resolution 
ad raised a usage of only five years, whereas the oth as 0 
that difference of opinion existed on 
prac 
Bases upon it.— 
petitions was removed by 
upon them. Sir R. Peel, he 
urge against the c snenet ee that it was a a 
a ene practice, because he thonght “that i 
use, by a Borgen’ majority, should org age a tax, while 
patie g against it, an opinion ine 
grow up that Metions: did oF nly represent the people.—Mr. 
PF, Mr, Duncombe; an 
EGERTON 
Peg 
thought the ae 
wide as possible to the people’s 
though Fernctant to Soeaveen a Sreceice which had esi vailed™ 
for 150 years, eh aged igen since the departure fro 
oO “eee ve itions, to gonial the aotion of 
not posal to m: 
pl ‘antiquity only poh “the side of restriction 
if they sho’ “a now shut out these Gettticik against 
n hey could not shut apd petitions 
othe " peti- 
peas eon ae 
should papbert ¢ the m erin ‘that this 
e had originated soon afte ater he Revolution, ae aperiod highly 
facontatie to the right ee tinued unin- 
terrupted for a centuly can Pal 7 heey exclusion of 
eraprswer pret s beres t should happen, 
perhap: 
De por ay that the supply ight te ‘etetualy obstructed, an 
e Cro -phenct yithout a r tok Aft be Neiew dibewsager from 
Lor oor s, Capt. Hamilto , and Lord t Sando wal 
BURN seeuted “it highly important that the practice Me ee 
and above all et Rather 
should not be render 
a Poor g aigeal have received them in due co’ e of law, as the Bank | should not be left jerk ny ae Looks 3 and daily violated de bers prac- 
es : aed so vo coe , and might do again; but Government | tice ought to be changed, it should be done by a motion to re- 
pam upon to institute this inquiry for the purpose of seeing | scind the amcient resolution establishing it.—M "puske 1BE 
ane oe apr transactions were conducted. The nobl said, his object was to break down a practice which he regarded 
— este pee the pera reading of the bill. as an unconstitutional, pores _ mi ht be an ancient, one. 
reading of this bill no obj rhatever to the second | No antiquity could san justice. If this petition 
on a a bel enonimggtl speaking, t etails. should d, another woula b be presented next day; so 
ib as to mittee, SNS. tage a clause be protect per- | that Ministers would not be much advanced by their resistance. 
shogpenigrs equi n their ex- . th spe pk ge ude petitions, he thought the manly way 
es, by their evid + to action ; og as an in- ould order to that effe e concluded 
use 
| for all Voluntary answ 
tanding o 
ty. ve | ing that ¢ the ie disliked the pending tax, and that the 
em. The House then divided, and = 
petition, 222; for 
motion e give: d the order of the 
ig was ae moved for a ‘esamption “ot the be Ree 4 
m the Income-tax mNG declared, Lage — bound 
oe vote against t the a nce the Incom d not 
te paren expressed a =e aon nd a of the ie a 
bg of the whole evidence.—The Duke of Weriiverox eiehdgnt 
e ed the expe poe of consideration.—The Lorp CnaNnceLLor 
urged tha eas a of suspending the Pb Mictlon of cular 
aie said that all he he desea th ag 
or other eee evidence should bistisle The Mal fas 
= ead a second ome bchte git toad 
ur. STERN, in presentin pa 
m0 gainst th nro Page 
he petitioners complained of being 
ing whic oe had bein 
ope (Weste ern) if he 
eaerecatces| in pac oe a tin. I say again, 
that the noble lord should haye waited for fy, aca, ay 
sin 
vote for uss mo veeplaiicen: Stout uatificatic i. 
deci ney preferred gt Nias exe ct taxatio: i 4 d ho : Sir. 
Peel would sh ge is attac acking the eae mon 
es ney r- porta 
undar 
ca reprobated th i f taxes for the sa vie of 
ity, arid their resort to the pear tend of loans, 
t had b luring fhe debat 
fiona ee ads 
at the 
cial 
lan.—M objected to an Income- 
of its Matias aacute but admitted A. 
i ought to apply - all incom es, from iver - 
moreov' 
reform, retren 
onid, thep Send carried ; bout what Se boar thet retren 
They h retrenched inco e, and increased expenditure. And as 
to the peace they had procured for their pans, tg he had only to 
tefer to that expedition into Affghanistan against which the 
‘Duke of tro gree, hegre ba 0 eer aseon and so early warned. tied 
With respect to the w proposed for the repair of those 
evils, <4 fie it his parr a} hacen seig 
Mr. n admitted the necessity of a Property. tax, but by 
jected y 
After some observations frou Mr. Cc. W.' Wynn, } 
ndaustr 
ai meas 
Bir Macaveay sald thet an Tacome-tax cot ibe jenaneat 
Le West there ever, Sir R. Pee d asked, such a disaster, 
s the recent destruction of our Indian army ? In one sense’ 
cartaaniy, he adm itted that Fersyip tint was deeply disastrous 
cag Honour 
the present 
The fact 
w C0) 
ward the p 
ely to eeantre any ereli tly expens 
thousand troops, he thought, would be an 
uld a perbatiy ® mt short of 400,000/.a 
and firmness w 
c) 
our 
our dimiculties, but 
Mr. Macaulay conc helt ded ong 
at nothing but the greatest coereniit Fe 
of this kind; that the country was no by ‘a ay ~y e tat as 
bige it, Boa he first formed the plan of the * ite de ome-tax; add 
o those her aged yague hints of Ae cad expenses hereater to 
sio ty for supporting the c of the 
plain, simple, and obyious mode of rep Oe that deficit, one that 
wou uld be _of the | he reee penefit to the c y, Ww he had at 
ser cies at deficit by throwing away 
a distinct source of xin —he meant the duties on 
timbe er. Under “ Shek pent mstances Mg should cordially vote 
Russell’s resolutio 
hat wha’ mihi might be the difference be- 
n their conclusions, there was 
ss of the d 
there 
no! “ en am the ‘Opposition 
Some said, ‘* Tax property, but or incom — 
or him self, raat eat 4 ou tax roman ya 
pers d Mr. Macaslay 
-_ are tax income too.’ 
ar reserve—n0 eres t complim 7 he 
which, it me iach of peace, had ag oy me! finance 
thos ar. 
Se cRSi ers a 
F o 
4 o 
under uimenities © equ When, ould ask 
had itbeen necessary bet sie hold a 
could tell what cost would b be a eeitatiod on pike de by the 
war which the late Ministry had stirred up in.China? Talk of 
ce! Look a dia.- The Duke of peta cap had prophet- 
t In 
ically” told — what would oa the conseque 
in that qua disaster certainly, ‘gs Mr. “Macaulay od ad 
mitted, ‘* put, ” ie had adde: Whe 
vi ag hon. M Nad dine estimated the lives of nat 
oe i ch they 
insurgency against the bards ed of En 
likely to f follow such an overthrow? 
f 
ments 
ns Cee oo but to meet present anr 
hers he believed i 
would admit of to raise paired er credit, 
embarrassments of the foe try, arid one of its.hi eet 
mendations, to use the words of a strong political opponent of 
the present Government, cg that it was ‘‘ short, hones t, direct, 
and straightforward.’ 
r. Lanovcwns, one Macaulay from what he 
Long 
ta m b Lord wo aye ra ae 
nue he 
that the Income-tax w 
gar oth 
‘h overnmen oni 
. admitted the sponta of the 
regret that the most yaluable Sod nage of 
sir. t oppositio atte 
-Ece ERTON con ndemned, as bein no longer a mere excl 
which 
ead pass 
rants signed, path ng the 
os from lrermmege aod the course of M 
t the estimate of Englan 
isa: 
avoided by pursuing a : different line er 
with censure and distrust those who d be pre 
co entelonted such grave and votes 6 thane results, € 
understanding or any other cau The vote which 
ve on this occasion ae be in co — 
sear He would give it, because the p! 
ed the advantage of ‘the counsels or an 
ig himset and his kindr ed, _ was un! unite ed 
| ee oa) ae - mals, a 
ich in thie 
bust: pi a ite setae ms the M 
tent of mg —_ sw aioe f which 
with u aired v 
still burn: 
that phd’ 
tne os ba ope e his su 
ue attention, and u n that round he oud give 
as = which the A shoes ent proposed £* for execs 
ts present s' — e of embarrassm 
autre adjo 
+ RusseEtu i = ba ntenie the delays complained of t gt i 
Creme who had thought it mo re material i as ry thee 
t than to discuss <7 mand We 
ae 
