- THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
"| He confined himself, therefore, to refuting the observations of 
Mee rincess of Wales ales M. Favre upon the conduct of France until the TA of ne 
took £ a à drive. The Prince “visited lon Gran Conference, and pointed out that the Treaty of 1852 di : 
Sue James's Palace. In the lige France to make war to defend the resolution of t ^w 
eveni ` Prince and Princess of W Wales aa Prince | Conference and the integrity of the Danish Mona y o 
5 
ian : 
a 8 Weh i 
concert en b t Philharmonie Society at n give peace. «e Wh ua to eed the qnin is ^ 
opean one. d 
" Hanover, Ege verc nt ad hime! Poland and Galicia, but we did not wish to disturb the peace 
he Princo rode on horseback. a har afternoon of Europe. We understood that collective m" on the part of 
he Prince and Princess took a iage drive.|the Powers being no longer capable of rea : m, 1 
On We oe, eee the Pri nce rods d m m horseback. should no longer make vain protes e 
d 
: r Ro oyal Lite "s Eur 
»onoured Her Majesty's Bode wit er presence. 
Thursday mera e Prince rode on horseback. The xefusakof tho Cop 
Prince and Princess ienris went to the bazaar |In the sitting on Saturday a discussion took place 
in St. James's. Hall, in aid of the French Protestant | the propriety a and the legality of the publication of the 
Free Schools. in the afternoon their Royal Highnesses | Evening ‘onitewr. he publication was warmly con- 
took a carriage d drive. In any evening the Prince and | demned by M. Gueroult, Me defended by M. Forcade la 
ner part Roquette. A debate then took nM on the law of 
Tr E PRI Princess Louis or HESSE are [ec safety. M. Pelletan, the author of * La Nou- 
shortly pin to Visit in "Gees at Balmoral, The le Babylone,” attacked the law with so much power 
Fairy is ordered to be in readiness at Dordrecht to | as = draw down the censures of the President of the 
ce her de 
r|conclusive resu ulis. The Procureur Gei 
n 
ests at St. D 
should leave to God and to time pe sm care of judging on which | has since appealed - the Court of Cassa 
ic 
injury. ence bind not less da rious ind powerful after the Thursday ga 
ES n 
[Max 21, 1864. - 
| mother-in-law, Mdme. Dubizy, was not s & > 
stantial. It — hodie that ghe ; dp drm 
circumstances very similar to those of Mime, Under 
decease ; that her son-in-law had a greal inten 
she 8 ould di ie, in order to i Sh e of her at 
owever, more than wo years havi 
os 
p 
“ The journ: ids, in in eir eue ting sm 
ficatio mmen: , 
been write y M. Rouher to tho m 
necessity of d eorgan isation of eed 
letter does not doe and there is no question of any changeh 
the Ministry." 
M. Von Beust was expected to, arrive in Paris 1 
I The Princess Clotilde be Aur the oa 
h of her pregnancy. 
th fe yes of the greater pa " "Plittas, € 
division of Mostaganem. On 1 
Lipasset, 
e 
convey their Royal a Reape eat to Fl rg where hc Council of State, and when M. Pelletan pei 
i r ya 
Mi 
waiting to convey them he nglan tremendous uproar, and a of great t excitemen 
Eg Ex-Roy, 
bo 
AL FAMILY OF FRANCE. — - The whole ensued. The Corps "Legisatit hae singe je v ral Mir 
of the Orl although they reach the high 
the appro: kicks marriage of the Count d de Paris "y figure of 126 milli ions, owing to the general desire to 
to th 
cousin Hus Infanta Mas Isabella, eldest. daughter of | have France raised to the rank of a first- — naval | st. 
the Duk chess 
and Du e Montpensier. On Wednesday the | pédglónt was prolonged 
Marie Ameli ie returne xi o Claremont on Saturday, | until May 25. A cause celèbre, which has created 
from a short — at St. Leonard's, in order to quite as il sensation as the great Lafarge case, 
t hess de Montpensier and family, | commenced last week before the Court of Assizes 
who arrived at aoe ont on ae Vig ro from | of the Seine. The prisoner was a gentleman E 
Spain. The Duke de “Nemours and the Prince and} one of the most honoured names in the French | phr eer quantity of incense on the fire 
Princess de Joinville have returned to Cl tfi bL Count de Pommerais, who Lee for xd wae the ceremony, Th 
a visit to Belgium on family affairs, The betrothal | time practised as a onde He was arraigned o 300f. to the Prince Imperial Asylum. A 
Count de Paris and the Infanta took | double — for the mur rder by poison "of the rou f the pa 
of the —Firs 
place at the Palace of St. Tele, in the early part | Mdme. Pau wa dude 
of last month, and the marriage is ut with tis heis a alleged te have kept | 
the Roman Catholic Chapel at Kingston, on the ee secondly, for the murder of his mo! ther-i in- 
+ 
a 
31st inst., the anniversary of the marriage of the late | wh Lap Dubizy. The cause ass the first 
Duke of Orleans with the Princess Helena of Mecklen- | murder was that he had insured Mdme: Pio life 
burg-Schwerin. The Duke and oo hess d'Aumale, the | for a su of 20,0001. 5 ; the motive of the poisoning o of Ls 
Duke Augustus and the Duc! ementina 
Duke and Duchess de Chartres, sow : present at T as stated in the indictment, as usual 
marriage. e marriage of the Princess Adelaide and |a French acte d'accusation, partook of the chara 
the Archduke Joseph, brother-in-law Pk e Duchess of | of a - M novel. Madame Pauw was six 
Brabant, has just been celebrated at Coburg, and was | years ago left a widow with three me children in 
m amily. The|a de 
f Saxe- | dea | 
urg Gotha, and the Princess Mary Clementis, she became his mistress. This intrigue continued for 
L 
mbassy h 
iive jeweler. T 
—]t is asserted vx Ny Queen will this 
Eia. make a journey info vlc s 
The Congress discussed the p of pne ad 
i e e enning on Tharsday. 
= Tie Government is n gt AA rent to the comp! 
which M dun - — the se Tt is prep. 
ground for n dip lomatio a action with Catho l 
Cob mistress, 
daughter of axi ene Rer — Philippe. two years. Atthe expiration of that time La Pommerais 
Tuz Cox sserted that at the|marrieda Mdlle. Dubizy, and broke off his intercourse 
sitting of em ces. on Th ursday week, Prussia | with REPES Pauw. M une last he called upon her, | A 
and Austria declared that, in consequence of the events | and made a roposal for making her fortune and that 
of the war, they considered themselves released from | of her children by Pul sing a fraud on six French 
he engagements of the Treaties of 1851 and 1852. — wo English insuranee = anies. He proposed to 
Russia and England maintain the principle of those — life, and ee en told her that he would give 
i Tuesday Pleni gain S e drug to M epe illness, and thus 
at the official residence of the € Lord o "t Meine "the piscine as to annul the life policies, and |o 
Treasury, and sat three hours, when it adjourned to|grant in exchange an annuity of 6000 francs a year, 
raria the 28th inst. All the members of the which p would 2 with ge Sree Pauw 
Confer: were present. eagerly accepted the proposal. on vod 
oi nero A Cabinet Council was held on | life was effected for the sum of More fenes, payabl 
se at Cambridge House. Summonses have been|at her death. The policies were transterable m 
not ya ndorse dame 
m n 
Palmerstona fi residence in Downing Street, e premium. Count de la Pommerais did so, 
_ THE CHANNEL SQUADRON. — Five of the ships | taking care to have the policies transferred to 
himself, and i hi 
g 
Sound from he. (mem - Went afternoon. The | widow to make her sign deeds and make a will in his 
Ed, mira. to Brio, h i 
fY 
pu eréabudliues of the future." 
difference of opinion on the grin c 
-— exist ene Senor Olozaga, 
Ge Pri Pa 
ner: iffere 
| had separately applied for concessions 
|them to establish pe institutions, 
ffected a fusion, 
a * 
of iia com a states g^ Spain will : 
representative Mexico so : 
Maxi milian shall i hare notified to the Spanish 
t hi access 
ih aram. — 
| row be Au rdi bur t 
of Tangievics now a prisoner at e 
citizen Lien m nese Embassy W il 
een were opened i e Ue 
—The „Nor 
noon. inan 
dm 
econd in at, the Black Prince, 41, | i 
passed the fag. and anchored well to the ee companies,” “She muttered severely ; Cot om- 
She was followed b y "gre War arrio r, 40; _ Defi » 16; merais attended her; Dr. Gaudinot was oy called in, 
vith implicit confidence the story told 
were discharged imme fully from the iron “this him by Madame Pauw, that she had fallen down 
does and aa and they were to be docked on | stairs, and when he found that his prescriptions were 
aturday— at Keyham, a wit A 
nt Devoni. e Black Prince will placed in| Pommerais, Madame Pauw, who seems to the last 
the dock at Devonport Mh she was repaired last | to have believed nd was only practising a trick | Auro 
October, and the Prince Consort will be placed in dock | to defraud the insurance companies, died. An 
^ Keyham. The officers of the — do not MET: was set on "foot, a ene t de "Wim — 
expect to c ^ Jonger r than eight o days at | was ested. The = — eeded 
Plymou screw steam frigate poen 26, | to Make at he oa are That the 
left Paese on Yi iday for Portland, | poison he administered “digitalis, ^: "fosglove), leaves 
bled. 
and was greatly cheer dry by the e assem 
Wu ent € board the ships, and w 
by'the ajilo: 
ustri: ian Rea 
se aaa m several te that i yi 
ut th separ oquadron pi The 
| mud rom the alli 
eR os x off pc until the close 
bi e 
H DUCHIES 
at Veile me prohibited, The 
E 
ships from that 
t curious ex; perim ents were resorted to. The ex- | day says that notwithstanding, fs 13th pi 
oreign, generi of the pennis and the AY A of the | Prussians continued um gi TO 7i 
FnaNCE.—In the nimia à of the Corps Legislatif on ~~ tents of the Meme tube, were administered to|in Aarhuus, and he J2 - 
"Thursday, M. Ro rin eplying to a previous speech of mals, and they died with the same symptoms as|the 14th they peer their por 
Barre, spoke scapes gs bcnc Daa tals s hong manifeste t was then ascertained that | horses. Large uantities € < the 
iid Count de » Pommerais had yc digitalis, a AST telegraph e e Bomstedi, ab 
the invasion of the Duchies. He could | 50e e of tha t poison was found in his possession w - 3th the Pruss 5 General ost real 
ns, because the Conference had met he was arrested. The case as een the death of t ‘moped a Contato ation in kind. 
