366 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE bah i A [November 15, 1856. 
ae, ; AnA of the prisoner on the charges | thing else, contribute to maintain between them that harmony | ` A 
preferred against him by Eliza Croft, but the court was Which acquaintance and personal intercourse form the est | 48 by adding oF feet to its length inland. This 
i nteres ich merce | ið i 
lery was thron wi 5 nti 
k abe oP hae E 
tional Government and from the e: example ol of that cou ntry, wi e orders for peaceful commerce, the cution of w t ful “oT 
ually but surely spread over the misgoverned but hr he bony B ‘the mutual Benefit of the nations inhabiting gthe Pai sid colt libs “fog eoe 30 as mr ln books i a 
tates of Italy, and though I cannot, at my age, hold out to of the broad Atlantic. I was sure that the poltey. y which we the li rary on S ept 0 was 935 wing tage of books re- 
myself the prospect of seeing this result, yet I do believe that it recently adopted in our difference with the ted Sintos | ceived towards E a lending library, 189°; 
is allotted to the younger men among you to j that Ita pid must meet with your approbation. We felt that white o on ne | number of „Specii ifica tions received, about 12,500 - 
yet acknowledge and appreciate the advanta a free Gov nd it was necessary t nrain the dignity of the Giit}, | isi 407: averag i bi 
ment, ve the still greater blessing of a pure ac igion.” | and that while it was equally necessary not to show that ven | 2 my Macchi EAA, Sra t 
y Henry Harrison, the Lee Je calamities of war with a kindred race would prevent us from | Of daily book readers, 74 ; averag teh of Sunday 
brought up in custody Aaa orau “ doing what was right and just to ourselves, that we should still evening visitors, 66 ; total number of books read during 
> was 8" | waive all minor and petty considerations—that we ought not to | the 1 h, 2 f which 1226 
be d p 1 j: g | the last month, 2208, of which 1226 were novels and 
gon iss eel par acorn trates on two charges take advantage of circumstances which might perhaps have | tales, 491 A d 7 d i ll li 
of bigamy; fi Ann Brown Justified the expression of angry feelings—that it was more dig- | 5 k poe: vE ee” hee niscellaneous iterature, 
on the 14th - Aries ete, thé We chtiveh of Roth- nified to look to what we believed to be the friendly feeling of | 256 history, biography, A alloy: &e., 305 theo eology, 
wea, his ficss wits; 5 ce the paris baM then alive; = feat mass of the people of the United States than to Tike | ae ut pine Sih 
ell, 5 , Ive; too notice of circumstances in å narrower sphere t 
ey a ny 2s vai hi v married Maria Steel on tho pigh heparin hari Josia vege bles yong The re: $ sul p PEMBRO — Thet o ia at Pone ER Ebai A 
of oe er. at St. John’. ink, has fully borne out the wisdom of the course, am 
The e tient y Hd m apih api nir persuaded that those opportunities of frequent intercourse whic | pre ved by A giving greater length to the dry ‘dock. by 
; 1% was eans great are afforded to the people of the two countries will, beyond ay. | extending it considerably more into the è haven, as well 
addin 
ies c friendship ‘and good pi Mage exist, and ou; pi Pe | pat Dub i an “ag ae 
| perpetuated, een the people on the two shores.” LYMO Court appointed by the Admiralt 
; mkta poest dlead a agree Pal merston, | ANCHESTER.—Lord Palmerston’s visit to this city | to hake fiquiry i o the ohn arges by dis Adm by 4 
aa Goan wos io they sae yy ’ taas a has been followed by that’ of M. Kossuth, who arrived | Tri Royal Willia 
> port. A receiv © | on Monday, and was loudly cheered by a Jarge concourse | against Captain Nias, superintendent of the ard, hiaviis 
fo eg on ening nit i of the of citizens. He was receive aie Mr. noes Henry, of fade their a ‘heir pian have de cided that 
ia whom they were conduc has e Town Hall. eee Cheetham Hill, at whose honse he is to ae Nias is to be superseded ; and Mr. Triscoit 
had in “ea al i aa yW dc Rg his lords E ra sojour rn during his stay in the neighbourhood. On | hi an has not astani without an ailimouition. 
tind ERR yal bnili He ay pře. | eee eH cei dates feoti M. k y } TSMOUTH.—Some serious disturbances have taken 
‘ree T: ti 
Sented himself at the Exchange baleony ead $ vis s Tondiy the wh cd it Ttäly. Mr er nes ae “of pace = in at ep? pa gh Si he Baat 
‘eheered eyelet assembled, | Sse vapiti i rmly | Lane cashire, presided, and introduced M. K siih as “a/ German Legion, stationed at Browndown camp, five 
g | oii in exile for , and as such ‘te miles from Gos ort. uarrels with the regular a s 
lat aak — ge, hero aiii: Pai tied of every true Briton.” M. Kossuth then pro ~ ighil adi ing ith 
5} x : : 3 begifining On Frid day night the fati ue | ait 
anon and there eaten tn few words of thank s| by reminding them that on that day five years he ~ ad Me the Les egion, who were place | ak n bo: he tana A 
aaa in d ‘all on the river i aa paid his first visit to Man estai, atid Beale n | and Culloden for conveyance to he Cape, endeavoured 
bsequen thay on river in a | exile still, The Leven is an abstract of hi S stitead aa. | to for ĉe their Way out of the dockyard, and à violent 
th nd thë police. 
eei: ki 
somie of the ft the fi gs for th m paN sage a the 
: ments on thè Cheshire shore. He pou sinter | butcheries of Milan, the fusillades of Bol vat, shbTbombardiesnt yes ae op eee” AE er een ler be he 
“Visited the Albert Dock warehouses a the nse yb | of Josie, dungeons, lingering tortures, the Inquisition, and the | Security of the dockyard to double the military guard 
Home. His lordshi d Lady Pal more deadly concessions of perfidions Sovereigns, all had failed | all day on Saturday. At night however the troops were 
{soap by the ptm a A ag The hen O | te Spal sd What nationality Italy—of the country. Italy | allowed out of the dockyard, and thus could boast os 
ernoon train. e to awin | is | woul t, he asked, w fis Seah die Hark abel ; A s ` fa A 
Pi Py AaLrriso) 
eh deli paneeriabanls life ? Tt was, tet Shen a community arrived aving i a gi 
ae tean m Hall: ery agora mintaan an the consciousness of possessing the parE of oooi numbering upwards of 4000 men of different Tranches 
ats ARR: st stence, it would never test at it took its stand as an | of th rvice. During the whole night their pro ‘oceed- 
apn mei rae en ng | inde ndent member of the fam nations, and became the |; ois A T d 
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n the minds of the bonaidtoli 6 ERA matter what might be said to the contrary, he was ready to con- | | 
chatty ‘ot this country, all considerations of private interest, and | | tend that the Italian movement was essentially a tre move- | Poista bie Siite df ik 4 AN ida Pie ten Ki 
„called forth from them that i a of stigtastio ps patriotism | ment, and that none of the nostrums preseribed by foreign | €PSued between some of the men of the Legion who 
S en contributed so greatly to the success of th est, and Governments for her amelioration were worthy of a moment's | Were drinking at a beer house and a scuffle and fight 
; ae han the mek ! ,000. | was the re: i 
pris nog n d finally one man 
| upi e fines un . he | + i 
“means which the commercial marine of this country placed | most dibaan recollections ot om people in Europe; and was it | OF the Legion was so severely stabbed tliat he died 
jhe disposal of Government contributed essentially to to be viewed, in the language of Prince Metternich, as merely a |#lmost instantly. The e mba rkation | of 1200 men of 
a Successful operations in which we were engaged. ‘ geographical denomination?’ Hatred of foreign donttaton | the Legion was fixed for } d f 
theans of transport Which the commercial ma- | was the abrevinhg sentiment in Italy. Shë wanted to) Saturday evening were o fe šo riotous a character as to 
in the hands of Government had this effoct— become and it was vain and pre- e Aaen -1 
at our Ppa ai a I speak o rmies I mean the e _ fer. tributed the Drent anoma- | render Ka a ates of the greatest danger to flew the 
„armies of tage pene Gtk were te “eae on at ta dosttton of Italy in on art to the ie Papal pecan A men tor n on shore another night. The authori- 
oceasion— armies a ba our | ment—the worst of all human i t 
Tes. fiid aie eaa grias (ot in te iais nw a$ uman aon ties therefore marched them a the dbekyard from 
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own) wêre 3000 mi rminents, which, Te tiay sooner bad, 
Sources, were in truth nearer to those resource anrai ninta among civilised ‘Sta States Thise kana heredi! the moment the; 
e facil a 7 ) hting government, government by me t, and governm H "ty were embarked the ships were towed out to Spithead, 
pe ee na OES pe age) Rate on Rai rare Hew but the Pay away = Government ina no late to en in yan they sailed on Monday for the Cape. The 
= t of tles—it ruled by the sole ney of that which was 
Vere all the pj and zeal of her Majesty's in greet part a foreign pries eatoadd, A conetitat tional Pose, could | the Legion were taken from them before they 
. Government — that and zeal uniform | not by pug pote ibility exist, and the bare idea a 4 sda Sove- | einbarkėd. and when they get to the Cape the patent 
ae eet the Tend I am “bound to say “that off the manner | reign was inconsistent with the form of government w a free | Enfield rifle will be served o to them. The wives of 
ch nin member of the Administration co-operated people would bayeta in the 19th npn Having den ounced | th go out to gether in the sailing- 
in the com cause at energy and zeal was felt | the Governments of $ 
A Spain, Germany, and France, as "ineombtstent | 
“throughout « every department—that all the energy and zeal, | with political prety he proceeded in the same strain to declare | ship Stamboul. 
hovarna the DaT which we were honea by our | there never would be true peace on the co ontinent, free trade, | pase an ent s been commenced 
i rm an | abs ign inter i J o op- | erec 
the cordial co-operation of our allies would have been| ment of national Pana and power, so long as Russia kept | omong samo oft the working me ah net oat ae = $» 
t ng if it had not been for that glorious spirit ah | Poland, and Austria H Hunga i i hat Ital ngary, Monu ument in the town, to the of their country- 
„gras Saol by the people of this country, which n ton nly | and Poland would yet be ‘the watchword of freedom and th | men They e 
neg A i ebir Europe. 1 g a a with Miss Nightingale, through her relative, Miss Shore, 
y contending, h A ; sked of Meersbrook Hall, cote laa her to lay the foundation 
k were growing with the duration of f the cont: tead | Englishmen whether there was a fair prospect of Success, as | gio one; Miss Nigh tingale has declined this invitation, 
of being ex d by the first serra tia gH | otherwise the English peoplé would never sanction, by word o re l. towards the object, cae 
in of T idée aiffeut edie A deed, a mere wanton effusion of blood, He believed therè was from poy} her 
‘ 
bd ` onal | fair pros] of success. The whole story of the Italian struggle ting o of s seriptio ns. of 5l. each 
- exertion by occasional impediments ben the bation ardour | ae ban designedly falsified and tuatverbeqnted. The I ugele | 5y fahe and e uncle and aunt, Mr. and M: uel 
bye es erg ae: o in proportion to the duration of | m of 1848 did not owe its impulse to_the French ates Smith, accompanied by following letter : 
ed with tie a Hurst, t, Ma tlock, Oct. t: 23; 1 
A r ? e tak 
of countries that arë at war: I cannot help hoping ston himself had gone the length ots saying that fè con- | T shall best honoür the cause of those brave dead by abstaining 
‘that these relaxations of former doctrities, which were established i i i Ak megia to court that gone oe! which a ka ni to have 
"am the beginning of the war, practised during its continuance, and | pa pene 2 ~~ betes poh tio — rhad ph a ta irap eatest impediment in the kare I» e been engaged 
Oe a ee hiite tatiea d by formal engagements, may perhaps | and strengthened this declaration when he told ae y in nort thair epee impeding it by arou pete minds s 
be still farther extended; and, in the Ne ae Sg those | that no change could be made in the gee arrangement worldly dist Twill ask you to kive bis bce bhi ; 
of war which are applied to hostilities by land may|of the Italian peninsula without hax sent of all = Seeuna d, aud T anula. be glad that Mr. Overend should oa 
i - Without ion, to hostilities by fo so tome | Powers who had subscribed the of Vien enna: He # pare t Se hae daa eap aes hi. desire that I should ipy A0 
| Private property shall no longer be the object of D | tho roughly persuaded that Spe 35-7 his ne ungary chos first si w for not doing ire 
On either side. If we look at the example of former rise, no British Minister a, matter how fe he might. ‘Ke should say also that T feel an especial regret n ‘om neple with 
- we shall not find that aay powerful country was ever vàn anned |Z | would dare to resist the burst of British sympathy which woutd amperes: from old and dear family recullections 
“By losses sustained by individuals; it is the conflict of armies | ie. sure’ to ollow—or hse Rive’ tad route eatioct viz a cy to | the I must ewoligton se or Lg late an answer, mated 
_ by land and of fleets by sea that decides the great con ests | despotism. He then dwelt at considerable length on what he | just returned home.—Pray believe me, my y dear Lp ever et 
a and it if, , tò be desired that those conflicts | termed the perfidy of the house of Hapsburg; and hay ing ex- | Yours, b “Fro s 
Pea i confined to the bodies acting utider the orders and | plained in detail the clreumstances whicli led him personally fo o Miss Shore, Meersbrook. it 
i ons of the respective States. Gentlemen, you have, if I| lt ustria, expressed his čotivietion aià bli he ld tly in this town, 1 
Say 80, the Atlantic. You ha ected, by estab- piv mit Be ais At a public meeting recently in i 
d A ey ind t pe inert ae itet eould pont age her ee me | viigi r wittiods a ad ‘aoe was determined to provecite cūtè the scheme for the pagers 
io : ; řapid ereourse, i tween ~, | mense standin; and that the hour would inevitably come tgom 
3 =e two nations they ate not, but two branches of the he, when her o ie orani Wo uld tene up the black and yelo flag, | of d monument t to the late James Mon at ‘ae & Proa 
` “oe wa Boag Ane of the great page It A. Talian battalions had already done, and follow the | t ipti a 
cE of. - 5 e, when discussing the opera- | tri The conduct of King Ce lo Alberto in the Lombar- | of Mr. Bell, airat submitted to thé pub 
ön A Pheer kes eta es si was diffienlt to carry | Gian le one regulated, not by a desire for Italian | Genii vs” Banat Catholies have Foritatiy bath 
Fad ene and mont! SB ey med Lan ead the | liberty, but by the hope of preventing the establishment of a fhi h, A large 
| republic in his own neighbourhood. He concluded Lamia ta aes seni duckie in this borough. a 
sae. ra ey declaring thar all hie had stated was astery, inhabited by some 30 aah ee ee 
of Aene | nia rien} facts, a E tyna ispao | m that a a Buro: ante eye which is crowed every Sun ies oat of te of Se 
> se br days, But | in Pee poe od would do well to avail thettisalvéa of to promote W oodcheste: out three Brave i tit ie 
; rs which | revolution, on, and, through revolution, restore nationa wari, dd a sects is in Cotitee pe ei 
oe e OXFORD. fhe Oxford Free Lib oa Seong Reading- town. Various bag have at times taen e 
‘the ocean in your toom, which was opetied on the Ist of 1854, has | against Romanism, Some Roman Catholic gentlemen 
ee 
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m erene e aon ë ë RT unuu "eega Fg ne reg ee ae Rutt ke 
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