662 
THE GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
Sects 1; 
a 
: y now be considered certain that the Frenchmen all 
daily papers have given jong ac- 
a 
im. These sta 
citement, and an vincredlity n the 
ormity of ths 
formation as may | the 
$i of papers call ma 
nest, while others doubt the credibility of the principal 
witness, and c er the whole proceeding as a politic 
fabrication.—The local papers, in py to soe 
late robbery at le’s, alluded to in a previow 
t La 
tect state that Barnes, the ou has Sark bse 8s 
on the ge of robbing her Ladyship of jewellery, — 
and cash, of the value of between Hea and 3000/. Fro 
r, gardener, and fe a 
The butler, 
Lay here on 
Ife. On nl 
apened, but on the peccendling day there w 
Courts open. The p tions will be eg ne by the | mated nature and man himself should be fed. culti- 
Solicitor-General, Sir WwW. "Follett, Sergeant Ludlow, Ser- | vating this art, he crusted that the er? relations whieh 
geant Talfourd, &c. r. Maule, the = — ie the ve now been ratifie d lead t e of 
Treasury, osecutes for the C own. ards | thoughts, a instruction, and an ecaine ‘i pret! sre 
of 250 ners in the county jail, fouidea. ibone hs are England’a and Ame’ They would remember, however, 
out on bail. that, as compared with Britain, ‘his was buta new country, 
The deity papers announce that the Wood- | to a vast extent unsettled, and in a state of nature; the 
ly fine estates of | Government were +4 a of domains, and much 
the market early. j in the | of the land was so: no more than 5s. per acre for the 
that has been | fee simple. It was, therefore, in We nature of things, that’ 
le of Lord | young and enterprisin, mers, instead if emaining long 
estates were sold by | on one spot as beat went ae t = west eee and 
said he expects | became proprietors of plantations themse hence 
DOR 2 a: there was not tha it Enished venmplateness in vein ultural 
plies ho pet been | rehenege which might erved on the s in this 
> en the climate me America naifte oe er from 
k that of Tagiad the summer there w as hot, and a great 
tators, but it | breadth of Indian corn aiz seit ormed the staple 
upwards of 110 feet, | food of the pene was rapidly brought to maturity ; th 
afterwards rose | winters were m nger and colde 1 in England ; 
r ~ ing | and hence the ates and other culture formed in 
rttg. try e he was seized with onereian* nit | Britain the basis of much agricultural ‘thrift could not be 
was found prado. to bleed him. At first the tind conducted in the United States. There were notwith- 
bias slowly, a and ~ vi phere 2 that t congestion ha nding many points connected with the use of imple- 
taken place in the | suffered for e time | ments and the general care and tillage of the soil on which 
pon nervous uae sone ‘but ultimately allied. iti *s now | much useful information might used and discuss 
believed that a third atte empt will L.. On ndred as the two nations of E. d and America were 
Friday evening, a tailo. town, i an re origin ach other more t any two n 
declared that he would rival Smith, the diver, by jumping | tions in the history of the world ever did—he trusted that 
off the | ridge. € was followed by pe who had friendly uld always exist, and he was assur 
heard him sary - © eg who en ured to per- | that great _benefit would be derived by a free communi 
suade him no ¢ time, considering th ~ cation of ideas from one side of the Atlantic to the other. 
le would not Pr Soaring its In this, pets ere was one topic to which, ev sire to avoid 
ken pull she political discussion, he wished to refer; he alluded to the 
ecent modifications of the duties +4 se Nopeesiee. ¥ 
i i ect on cial in 
eat Britain and the United States. Ye 
the (Me Everett) “concur in o ' th wh 
ht that it was much too early to eee what effect 
le _ scale of duties would produce o America 
arkets. e did not A might be the case 
with other s that America would be t 
we benefits from those modifications * 
te, he considered, to take advan Pega of those pohanges: 
be i 
to my yo : 
Pea be- | countr gh 
bsg Take this as S ealight testimony of ot your son gah a ee it were ure 
duct.’? The iy pares , where, but in Eesland, ere ain So ages te 4 
societies of nite Skis hc a a ci th 
gentle ing [or sucks © seen ae States, the manufactures o pri the aabel 
such candidates for ‘their B hon English towns eu h : ; 
= 15.88 towns would pay for the produce of the Ame ith 7 till t letion of the 
ane Soci “oe meting of the the Waltham Agri. | fields. He » Rot practically engaged in. the culture, of takthg: siigald SE be hates voeeded in. One of the new 
l at we. itl par ee ft 5 Bite h We the soil; but it was I zie sive fe cultivate te a good under- | Directors has taken his seat Board, and itis now = 
lp i owns within 10 miles tham—viz. standing bet he | stated, should the other two be @ apenily brought in, there 
ap of Leicester, 20 ii se 13 in Nottingham | must age of course, was to his | te ha th of the company — 
and 11 in Rutland—was held on Monday, and was at- | own Goyernmen pe own country ; pede. the rad fescrat csmad diag: wr held on the 20th: — 
d by a most numerous and influential company. The | was oy t fee eal that ; duty b deavourian $0. pro- | uft.. when a got! ete m : fe for thé renewal 
show of stock on this occasion w: pomeerkebly good, and} mote a good un and an amicable feeling be- a ib ee ion ou was ronatt rs of the Cheltenham 
ited much and in t from the numer tween the two nations, and fy alg now that an honour- woh Radioay to € to the Board of the ig A Western Com- 
classes agriculturists who were assembled at the gather- | able adjustment of those differences which at a br ay te chase the finished por ic é line, as their 
ing ;. but the feature of the meeting to which we would | partial interruption of that harmony had been effected Hite See at ata very low ebb, By Nh tial ce-shect it 
ya ar allude, was the speech of Mr. a= = 
n Minister, at the dinner oe = llow 
about soca were 
inowleging the honour 
h; Mr. Everett alluded to 
meen 
He mu- 
tation; and n , but i th a of 
peace which yg the gretet slory on states, and 
human natur what was 
a 
on chieftain %~ er; and 
the characteristic yet: ad excited ne 
admiration of the mandarin of a and importan 
haa ai ing at. the time under the Siow’: of the British 
Gove nt? ters it ae heey pe of their coun- 
trymen : eam-vess war 
ing coasts in debsuice of is des collage simoom 
t their arms—their artillery—their skill i Poti 
which civilised nations now brought to the strategy of 
it this, or any of sariewe _— had struck with 
awe, and admiration he ned arians of 
itish oe 
e ge- 
with astonishment ae, ex y n 
s of — which ex- 
These were some of fee 
torted the edasration of an enemy, bt w other states 
would do well to imitate. With ronan to that art 
assembled to pro he peace- 
whi ich they were 9 
ful art of agriculture—it was the 4g iene of an 
ruling Providence, heen ed by him 
three ridines a-day a nee at which all the tribes “ ani- 
Ne ither ne he think, from a studious 
averages, that any great injur need be ‘ r Br 3 d a 
the rs itish farmers fro hag ae fepiohenses te 
as, perhaps, possible. sien a a su So at 
ary thls countie, y tat th th € spaly rs res yb 
the trade i 
me share 
gh 
, aS it were, a 
n the ceo os of estates, 
‘tie tine vo the Norm 
Inbouret—between the sidblete o lived wers, 
and the lowly = of the elearthoa roof which apreais 
eat thai elter. 
Windso ~On Friday last the 2d Life Guards were r 
viewed i e Great Park b y the Archduke oe a 
Austria, Sonata ied by Prince Albert and a numerow 
staff. On their Royal Dighibsbés — their stilthe in 
t afterwards wen ries of evol 
tions, after which the Archduke and Prince Albert compli- 
oii - M‘Douall on t ne appear of the 
regim iew of the 15th regiment was appointed 
to take lac on Tuesday, but was eat omg Sov = 
of the heavy r rain.—The oyal me 
y jesty’s stud at 
he end of the present w week, hen the horses will be im. 
mediately conv eyed to their new quarters.—Four beautiful 
Spanish horses arrived at Windsor on Thursday, as pre- 
sents from Queen Isabella II. of Spain to her Majesty. 
They reached this country shortly after her Majesty had 
extreme ma 
long, flowing to the length a a ches over either side 
their n heads a ecks are peculiarly large 
nd full, much resembling the “horne of Flanders and 
those bred in the Low Countvies. 
orcester.—' annual celebration, usually known 
as “ The Meeting of the Three Choirs of Worcester, 
loucester, and I e present year, t 
The selections 
nt 
vice was per 
ions of the service ecokipal e 5 
Deum ” and his ‘‘ Jubilate,’ Drs Croft’s anthem ‘* Sing 
to God,’’ and Handel’ roa anth ‘ Zadok 
the Priest.” The second morning’s gaa was the 
sthe ‘Judas Mac- 
cabeus,”’ at of the f was w adaptation of 
ethoven’s ‘‘ Mount of Olives,” called “ ngedi, oF 
David in the Wilderness,’’—an alteration which was ma ad 
ances = Sonal, on a ies first evening, 0 
ander ast,’’ and a miscellaneous 
evening, = Hg ardy n’s Seqont and on 
Romberg’s ‘‘ Song of the Bell,’’ and a ‘short mi 
dectin sele cick High ehels of the paedictas went tof 
successfully, and the i 
Charity of the wi 
h 
1839, ore. than n 1836. The expenses, not- 
withsta beara the ead of the abot ne ee less than 
they were when three ur forei reign s ptagaa he 
on egy pias, ahs ernie | coer were re] 
able concert: = pear fai 
to sitreeh tien to Tera ble a iia Ge : 
emp plo: ployi were} ent only 
ois oe: vfatr acted dpa 
Clggeeeist. a followin, ar rect teh of Faliwai 
ast week: Bi a Rog 
"Huil'ana Selby, 1.10003 
Edinburgh and Glas 
a ay eee a 
