THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAGETER, 
[Jour 2, 1864. E 
nas | sion of the ve Trade. That m 
he 26th of May. Th Orestes had brought ; down to | the French Consul, who | hes i a demanded, in | the name | of adr vans poded re i vt ndis Mes Xs a 
^» Bay Mr. Allington, —€ appo , and the | his Slem . fee esac ist, and there was no reason to apprehend its fic ha coe He 
: of the Church Mission from the greg ME Em mper of Mexico suggested that t e Act, which y in its enact- 
— i e Shah | landed et Vie era at on the 28th of m and nme ments, and intended as a temporar. nly, might be 
Psxsta.—Advices fro ds rsia et that ah | lande the 22d ult, | safely repealed.—Earl Russet, admitted that the slave trade 
had lved upon despatching 20,000 men phn the oe started for the opi ital. On A Basil had been abolished à the empife feeit : 
Turcomans in gear Cou in Courcy defeated the united bands of but he did not aseribe tha abolition wholly to a change of 
i miles from | policy on the part of the Brazilian Government. The Aberde 
UxirED STATES.— ral Grant has again chan ged fetal and Cadanina at Valparaiso, 30 ig 1 - yor cap ehh Yide pee i ng Me We rg 
the whole plan of his "pts. He has mov is | St. Zacatecas. The Mexicans had = killed, and lost i E ada al the ; perge de Mee eed 
entire army to south side of the James e vi to 800 prisoners x uns, an entire park of nge of A : in, Brazil E: slave trade migh bo reviv a. 
i — OUGHTON ug id ni 
and has ae J wu — xe poder pos xe th ise it had received. It had abandoned the slave 
The mo nt commen on the night o the |. Cen A.—Advices from the m elnd friget state that the Rea tar Val DAT TRAE AS DUREE 
12th vlt. General Smith's corps steps towards emancipation. The Valuation of Rateable Pro- 
at White House for Bermuda Hun ; he Spanish squad in Peru m cee AA e Cathedral Minor Corporation Bill, and 
ind f t l to Charles City Orders Confirmation Bill Á— i a 
P ame ` = pos m second, | time, e Count y Constabulary Superannuation Bill 
bg landing on the James River. The army crossed lia nt itto Mio nj. Prize (Share and 
the J mes River. on the 14th at Powhattan Point. The War ment. Ael Dut ‘and F P y Free Grammar School Bill w 
C =i PA tn SE OF LORDS. re 
del vem sai of the 14th Gen. = Smith with 15, uos Ri ay.—Royal —The Earl SrANHoPE called atten- uis of CLANR:CARDE moved the second 
anced towards Petersburg, and opened a 
- m on the . Fightiog, continued sce 
the day, but with no decided advantage to Smith until 
the evening. when he carried a strong Confederate 
work 8 from the city, capturing 13 cannon 4 
400 the 16th and 17th the — 
denuo] joined Baldy Smith and Hancock, 
di e greater n9 
their outer — aptari g 450 prisoners and four 
ence to i 
Com of 
objected, and contended that no site for a new b elang for the 
Academy ht to be given by the Crown till an ers i 
should be easto an amendment of the rul ud 
€ t some of the u! 
pat Kitar 
e Air of 
of the 
indirectly ste Be some assistance from 
would be better for 
The 
Bieren of the € oysters Fishery C pce and Scotland) Ced and 
a that to provide for the further pre- 
nebo Mn which of late Verve peces 
off in their pro- 
Bill, on the 
iring 
apaa 
f the opt 
the Lama d jaca: had very much fallen 
ductiveness.—The Duke of d DO 
ae h 
Xpress: ope 
pressed further at present.—The Ma 
withdrew the Bill.—The Government A 
second time. 
drawn. Th 
third time and pas: g 
= of aes MORE m 
onsidering the extent to which agrarian outrages aile 
certain counties i ot Sea ang and to the difficulties which existed 
ing con 
I 
at noon an ‘oul te the institution if the | in obtain tions for offences of this description, 
farther attempt to carry the Wo rks has been made, | Academy gerber | “ovenso and oat UY on ae the the Lor rd Lenenént ol Ireland to remit 2 
Gen t he is int hed | ?"n. 8. — LIO! ve whole or a part of the sentences passed u Av vim convic' 
one mile and a half from the city. The Federal loss on as ege of the m dern nt. ur ev Sele. of edens peace = oy eka rook wee rd py Brow rien 
the l7th and 18th » aie ke? ast age? ve t is | hoped that in the erection of a new picture gallery some atten- | ordered ease tain prisoners under sentence for an 
believed to have be cock's | tion would be given to its architectural effect.—Lord HARDINGE ian offence in the county of Westmeath, upon grounds 
corps alone lost 4200. "The Confederate puer keia M cendi eere my abus 4 Ese kc poa ed ether | Which appeared to be insufficient. 1 GRANVILLE opposed 
f Petersburg, th ti gti Ree Bn ue o expense. But, on the oti the motion, considering that it i terfered with the royal pre- 
4 g e nk ri ing on ben. id, it was right the pire pi ont — some Con- | rogative, and ought not to be agre unless it was clu- 
the Appo General Lee's whole MAY is supposed | ditions from the Academy in re TONE was of sively established that the Lord Lieutenant had been influenced 
e r - "Petersburg. Confederate cas sao report | Pinion that the less the Government. Tad. to o do h the | by corrupt motives. As to the cases referred to by the noble 
T of General Sheridan at Gordonsvill cademy the better it would be for both. The institution | carl, there was no doubt that Lord Carlisle had acted to the 
donsville on | should be left to its own a oem rr eS tthe 1 cised the royal 
e Lee and Hampton, with | report of the commissione d been d to the Academy, best o A flee” rh that ther motion would not be pressed 
the loss of 500 prisoners, » and leaving his Sond and | which had, in reply, ritas an eeu to her Majesty, yo [to a ogee —Th rl of Ler Donoughmore 
— on the field. Sheridan has since officially | hàd le eft the ques t AA Se gone js e Governm: to persist in his motion, and to take the ce E aso had been 
nounced his return north of the North Anna River. | jeave the Academy in Trafalgar figere with enlatyed space, | upon it. Lord Cmerasro s ik f censure 
ne says that he achieved some unimportant success on and hat decision ernment bow Nothing, he the Irish ingen The m cee ultimately withdrawn, 
the fugio —— diva, but thoug ‘ould be more unwise than for - h^ gp to| - Fripay.—Japan.- ~ Karl OKEY 
Gordoasvil he loss of 505 killed the regulation of the Fine Arts; but, without j ^ 
and wounded. 
Much ev dt eris ah for the safety of Hanter, in ra 
quence of Au "sai failure to reinforce him, It i 
reported that Gencrals pad a and Pickett bere 
left Richmond to a unter, rea is reported by 
Lynchburg on the 18th. Gen. Morgan has retired 
oan EE with the spoils 
General 5 
of recent raid. 
n has bee pm ae to risk a 
outside of his ent en 
and Gen For is marching to attack 
A Federal expedition under S 
left Memphis to check Gen. Forrest's eden 
has been defea 
w by 
join tion Wok “or 
Senate, for the constitutional aboli tion 
failed to receive the 
House of Repr 
cent. 
0e e Gove wt sLould energetically support | 2 
Chil were uent advices re x pu 
Fen - m. bre. joined 1 Peru against Spa 
Bici has been ordered. w the 
]|at th 
pad of the world. 
t 
i: able 
de dere regula- 
take upon itself t 
going that € it might usefully insist u 
o popularise the Academy, a oa make it more 
b 8 calculated t 
for public purposes in return for the facilities Dus 
it escis Government had not had time to consider thes: 
details, and he could not giv tem “yd as 2 a 
oy In VENSWORTH, 
Y of ALDERLEY scribed unie zn perfect working of 
the Act x ‘the Suppression of Nuisances caused by Roasts 
a emi. Lame € manufactories to the short time the law 
a re ad DAY. ES The Conference .—Earl a. od laid on the table 
protocols o! ‘onference, loing so he said that he 
followed the course Lord 
aot me by Liverpool in 18 
EEE E E 
vernm not to make it the 
ground of —: be France. The various questions to 
which the docum: produced ref were very intri 
skamt too complicated t to excite pos pal Leap attention. They 
the —— 
e last 
hostiliti ‘set th f ob 
on es for the pu of obtain; 
reu ES tbe Duchies of Schles swig and CET. but E 
s Government could no declaration as 
EE 
given that we intended to to give material nid sid to 
n m nnn colined taking an 
alone our mercanti 
be exposed to great deprédiations; and sant | he w 
ish MEET mi Meo rid assistance, our inter- 
ould be in vain. In dering the question we had 
in mind the positos a e rei Aen of this country, 
with ial its complicated m: vltipiied EEG in every 
e ci vi war in) which o ight cease, = 
VW 
dt: a powerful na might atany time be 
ware rupe are, nier these clrousestanios aari Govern. 
ment considered it to = their duty still to preserve a neutral 1 
anak ee na he not mean to imply that contingencies 
Pen Etpa h tl 
T ; 5 peng gu T ad ide ender 4 M 6 er SE .—The 
"reca ure discussi. 
ole markets are in bil dioo. The steamer abd, EE remarked gr Bo a Conference had terminated. mes 
Pevensey, ‘a UN have Lee Pres sent he AUS dnd i ated. — — it commenced its sittings 
Lincol In, n |] visit Philad " oom ly, and it ho to pose 
Which he stated - pin, ma E peech in |it that the ever t fom its Puce] 
he could never be- "until Rich see (eee ee s their policy had 
wan at ca taken. | to r.sintain the peace of Polly had 
io. the 15th - t speel at ap canal rati 2 te ie MY oF of Parliament and ir 00 Grant alcatiy cc decida 
Convention in Hamilton, in w he declared that he nd. aod Wootten t ‘the Continental athe ji whee hie 
n 
Would hereafter yi fend his ier with his life, unless dine were not in great part owing to thet eek eye 
deprived « of it by due p He subsequently | ting Lm — Fat G) Gna RANVILLE said that whenever the dis: 
pn Mo donee aine, - -— -— efe sd cr e hoped it would not be partial 
dir UGHAM n dre th 
— Paciric.—Intelligence from : Cape Ha iod we celia. the frontier had been lost. The opportunity 
t tha e e 9 Spauish vessels f | (Union Conte, Bilt, the Civil Courts (Ireland) Bill, the Serv € 
war and in the Bay of M d Hiring (Scotland) Bill, and the Coventry Free Gra mar School 
Christo, cows of the Spanish hostilities ren oy igin tnd Kincardias DU passea iron et 
j rod Peru h eated great excitement in Chili, | The Beerhous (irent) Bi varte rd nd pessoa 
etings ime seen held, at which resolutions demand —— = Y 
= l Benet read a tes i E and p 
Lord 
moved the | cond readin t this Bil Bn ET E 
Lord CRsLMEFORD sa v ó opposed t n 
ae the Mm gece of London or ang indous i 
eo i a tor ge 
UNTOR 
prion 
Fit hi ^d 
nme described it we 
ui repeal public A Th Apes 
rine ge without a visione Ae Pee 
tion to the effect of the Aberdeen Act of 1845 for for 
E 
destructi of the Japanese Gover 8 ing 
anarchy throughout the beige? Kd Fn that ‘the fronty with Japan 
should be curried out and yea as to place the future 
intercourse of the two nations o Med er "foot ing ; "aud that an 
address be presented to her Majesty, praying her to ssriously 
take these matters into c Pratt sittin 
ier elat tee tee 
woud now be sim a 
Excise 
Supply, M: "MonnrTT moved a 
od modification of the indirect bem 
nsideration.—The Cuan 
occupiers t 
and the organ kr di lightness of t 
en rem to aber nad of consideration in any 
r. NEW: 
eerie 
he would lay upon fe de 
Y-GENERAL for eem 
tee o Rev 
Duties) Lr — on the motion of the nig LOS of the 
ExcHEQ clause was — for the payment of taxes in 
otland. ey "ipsam of oat Office orders "he House then 
went into n Beer on ge^ ile Sweepers & Regulation Bill. 
-— clauses of whic UM — The Cranbourne Street Bill 
a second ti The Weighin ing of Grain (Port of 
Town) Bil passed iai Committee. On the order for 
ing into committee on the Court of gen aw Bill, 
Str. LONGFI moved that the Bill be referred to a Select 
» E 
Tag 
paf 
patronage, an 
Ea iewe eo eine al DRE A 
withdraw the 
into committee pro formá, 
would me y cone what co 
Op 
t e would adopt in reference 
to the The D toy declining to agree to the 
tion, rs House again divi hen the motion to 
the debate was negatived 56 to 51.—Mr. Co next 
oved the adjournment House, said he 
at, under the pec Is! of case, 
Opposition would be justified in occupying the whole night in 
ww ouse, O: division the motion was again 
by 56 to 53.—Mr. Lycon then moved the adjournment 
T the edebete, and and Lord P. it was 
