Ee 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE NEWSPAPER. 387 _ 
meng of England? - If the scheme advocated by Mr. Bright | and Sloane Street, Chel 
sea, Printer—G. Lr 
yself | should become law, it would be the establishment of fr sage | Wood, Leather Cutter and’ Selier—H. Mone: Feng Res] ny 
true ps and those who contributed most to the prosperity of | Ox Caroline Place, City Road, Middlesex, Victualler and Tavern Ke L. 
ces | the country would have the least voice. Paavin, Oxford Stren, Be aiana? ond "Tein ay men = m 
Okehampton, Devonshire, Wate æ 1 À 
Mr. Cox, M.P., attended a meeting of his con Clerkenal Taber Meghan W, Sperr urn, Bxanith Devos, Sp 
e | stituents at ipoear last week, and spoke as s flows lives sien ee 
on the Reform question and the nat tional defen pace TCH | SEQUESTRATIONSG. M'Kaxetx, Glasgow, Painter ani 
per Hanger—. ENS h E or—J, 
t A Conservative Government had come into power, ad the | Rexton, Glasgow, Plasterer — a. Howe oe he “intent 
ical pa i al - Tow eneral 
= t ir 
f: ad oy + 
now got what they never had before, a Radical Government. FRIDAY — IK RUPTS— 
Ie was not, for him to defend the political morality of the | Has Kidder aster, Currier- W Berea nS, Bache wash 
Government. ontended that the people of this co and "Cotton Manufacturer—W. Mancnant, Solicstens — Co” Men 
Bri cared very hite. ae, ‘iter Whig or Tory, and that wit rind oy a |e hae ere W: Tar mi See Ropvock, Reading § 
Mia ieh hé wanted was good measures tending to the ben efit of the = He Brighton, Plumber—J, S. Wanna rao Mach m Wane 
acta ity ont Sant | © ommunity, The Radical party HAA wasdcuvcteted all lun Manches ERUPT A os s EAr Ue 
mi pe ord Derby's 5 Government ay lay, jan whiek he ta RL sad Tro PTCY Nal eet ee R. Unwis, Newcastle-upon Tyne, 
tended “it was entitled; and t ical party had gained} "score aon Tt on RA TIONS—J. Cu Blairgowrie, Drapar—W. 
something by “ oing, for et had got rid of the property | Henpxason, Dunfermline, Fiese P. Macponarm Sleat, "Teland of Skye, 
qualification of members and of the vert sta of the admission | Fish te Porn, Edinburgh Commission Xe nt—J. Rovorn, Barr- 
of Jews to Parliament. And now they were going to give the | "h Ajrak armer—T. Wrst, Colebrae, near F Farmer 
Reform Bi i 
peer a —_ e iare h were’ in the secrets a_l 
the | of any party. e was a member of the Parliamentary Reform z 
Committee, but yet he assured the meeting he did not know fr f 
a | what their policy was to be; that for the present had been exp and tts Vicinity. 
confided to re. care of Mr. Bright ; but his conv: was that 
toe Pepe ure from without,’ and that alone, which would NING SERVICES on Sr. Pavi’s.—For the 
the proper R Reform Bill. He had heard it was hig tine in n the history of the cree church of 
the intention of ¢ the Co tive Government to bid very largely n the largest portion of its interior space was 
for popular applause, and that they meant to give a greater d pr d ges’ P } 
amount of reform than rai ever be expec’ a from the Whigs. | V564 On Sunday eve ening for the paira. of Divine 
If that were so, they, the Radical party would take such a worship. The arrangements as tested by this first 
taaa Ba of reform quite as ae. from the hands of ag experiment have proved very suco vessful. The whole 
bes ath trom those of Lord sy j ussell. It Heine: th h 
sidered that the Radic: bers arliament, in del space beneath the 
to Mr. Bright the duty of drawin vei a. new Refornk Bi ting |s as on lh occasion of the funeral of the Duke of 
become members of the peace-at-any-price party. He ht jj oras ngto ran round the 
f y. 
he could for the e Soa knew he could do so for hi f— <i cession of minute boada of ight, 80 close 
give that statement a t tive contradiction. ee we 
AE a l vee he respected Mr. Bright, and much as he admired his talents that ‘they peared to the eye one luminous ring. 
j population and ability, he would never:be the man to hold the hrima of | There was no dazzle or glare, naw ste light descended 
Yet Mr. Bri ight’s | Peace at any ole was in favour ae pot vier obs of regis- vere ed by distance, the effo ct was very pleasing, The 
tered manhood saige but he did n revious bti: fk I 
ing of kamptulicon, on 
speaker that Parliament should be Ae eks to ri year, a 
and ho would tell them why.’ During the whole of the which the feet yik h silence, and the wae ame within 
result: then. woul first session in which he sat Yin Parliament he considered the nave and transepts was filled with 
ger E, a county | himself a mere schoolboy learning u pemr i Tina it pulpit was place = t the eastern corner 4 the south 
utterly impossible for a man to make himse aes or 
e arliam: woe pel one against ir posie House of Commons until, he had first transe aot ; a it were the seats of the Dean and 
* hi cn 
oristers 
Ier 
maste its ani c 
He did not go to Cherbourg. He thought it was as well left —_ in ‘ent Me the organ 
n was in 
alone ; but, as he had been conning over vane samen oe ad 0 dobita directly o 
the session, and perceived that very large sums of m adva ach the p e 3000 ireo y cen _. 
been voted from time to time for the construction of curtain weste: that ore present, 
English fortifications, he took the per contra side and went to tak iti is epost that at least “10,000 were unable 
Bi rney, which ve open ce ad am pegina to adr e the doors having been closed 
e went there simply as an individual, not as a member o 
w| Parliament ; and he went over the fortifications with a most | 33 890 sall the seats were occupied. The congregation 
intelligent Guernse, the Guernsey people generally | 4 
i — s 
were—who made use of this remarkable exprendenis of t the service, ber consisted almost meaner a the 
who have represen: boro ‘When Alderney is finished—and it. won't ong— | male sex, very few females being he men 
ed by large constituencies feve | Jobn Bull will be like a terrier dog rar greta Pe met flay were mostly of the middle class, only a small proportion 
could be made and as soon a a rat comes out that terrier wi m, bei nge The Marore, Aldermen, wal 
i Upon the question of foreign po! he had Migs Pe owed 2 eing working men, TI ee yor, c i 
His opinions on noaie subject lay in a nutshe! i. contended | Sheriffs were present in oe — choir, greatly 
we had en! to a to mong oe and toattend to ourown | juomented for the Bones Anis ved icon 
fi nati ayes . 
the a ta ta t paoms bad ka Fr Mi with er our | divided into 200 trebles alpo tos, ‘180 tenors, and 150 
sented ie ae it we would—and he gas never so immense is the pace that ev ven this 
odes Tedslve Bo Yasue from any foreign country, | body of sound | was no dave Son sufficient to 
eRe abi an a Dogliani; standing up and epet tiarren it. m “nas 
e | Nothing cou! uld well be more fearful than war; but there was 
hing worse, than war, and that was ve: wes a 
his nation was to ein oe its S 
"aad care the principles of the opens a 
which was “sung after the third collect 
grandest and most t effective piece of 
of the s ` The 
He beli the time was coming aa tr ths Coes 
Se tis el pra course las' lasted nearly a, 
s, M.P.; at a meeting of t 
the 
ore E vod made ed eerie: re- | 
j = Ms. Bright’ Addita at Bih ce get rid = 
retèni 
the community that stai 
00! 
Cadman, Rector of St. 
~-Barmns Foxe: ‘Tre STATE OF SARAWAK.—A deputation, cons consisting 
iat demi we 98 to + for Money and the 7th Dees | of Mr, Crawford, M.P. ich, MP. Mr. 
best | and 98% to $ ye {he 1ith Jan.; Three per Cents. Re: | Gregson, M.P. Mr. Horsfall, M.P., Mr. Ewart, MP. 
à ; New Three per Cents, 968 to 23| Mr, Drummond, M.P., Sir Dalrymple Elphinstone ‘ 
Ditto Five per Gents, 115}; India Bonds, 11s. to 14s. | M.P., the Mayor of Manchester, Mr. William Fairbairn, 
prem. ; Exchequer Bills, 39. prem; rp pepsi . Tho iba, Mi, Pos : ‘ 
„to 36s. pm.—ForEten: Brazilian Four and a Simpson, from Manchester; Mr. 
Conte, 1858, 95} ex div.; Dutch Two and a Halfs, 664) ypMicking, and Mr Ase Gindstone from n Liverpool ; 
(ex. 12f1.); Equador New Consolidated Bonds, 163) Mr, Nicol, from Glasgow Eo coe 
to 17; Anglo Peruvian Threes, for Acct., 74% to 744; , and Mr. John ohn Smithy an interview with 
Portuguese Threes, 1853, 47% ; Ditto for Acct 485 | the Earl of Derby on Tuesday, pro 
por fives, 114 to 113} ; Ditto Four and a Halfs | prioty of retaining the State of Sarawatt nade “the 
103}; Sardinian Fives, 92 ex div. Spanish New De- te of the + ay mae ent. Mr. Crawford 
i 31; Committes’s Certifs. for es introduced the deputation in a prege v mm = 
Coupons, ; Turkish Sixes, 1854, jin which he showed t ial value ra 
n his Boa Ditto r 1858 (scrip of first series) for Acct., to #| to this country, and the importance of its g 
i $ ies, for Acct, 4 prem. a varpen situation toour acy in the China seas. Mr. 
had read | gis, Nitto second series, supremacy in the Chi 
Fives, for Acct, 43 to 428; Ditto Deferred Two per | then explained the : pon ho anjos 
Cents., 164 to 1 the mercantile community of Liverpool, and Mr. T. Fair- 
; n bairnstated iewsof the of 3 
Mr. Cou descri ition and extent of the 
ant ot Sie ] mines in Sarawak, and Lard >s ie mgm 
v. £13,015,100 iments consti 
r apa a ae ina = Mt shire Impressed upa Tord Derby that the period 
Gold cginand Baton n S| had arrived at which some change in the mode 
iy ust be made, because the only alternati 
Mr. Bright, who was one of the best speakers BARKING DEPARTMENT if the Government did not agree to give him 
Commons, but be sapentted deepiy that that Proprietors” Capital. =: £14 008088 Government p See or to take to themselves the 
ioe c mobocracy. Rest. ieposite (includ- Yan s+ + 1 MlORES | Sip James Brooke would be cig to give it up to the 
to have uttered AAi è h in Public u Oe Securities.. se ++ 18324040 h o other foreign ie ¢ a 
and he was com ing Excheaverssioners eS Gon e Gl Dutch or som N vais tke à 
the Saat. Debt, Gold saa ment were really in a position e 
terade fendAcets) ee = o. RES that colony, they were to give some kind òf 
Other Deposits pills 7983% — to our own subjects, who, on the faith ott 
i d had a very| eee anA | nat been done, had embarked their capital, an 
at unbashingly eo pa ‘chines the = era certain e extant their lives à ore district. The Earl of 
stated that the coi 
B 
‘He listened with aes tention—the attention to 
RUPT! which the tation was entitled—to the statements made 
fel a pon this subject, which was one of e im 
x, Saint cot 4 What had fallen from Lord 
Ee, Sal Puinter-W. Grepa, | Goderich had only strengthen be owe bich he had always 
felt of the extreme inconvenience, to say the very least of it, of 
d and Chee = Beto Ss Square, ‘Giazier—R. Gatrrin, Sewer, 
Hacking, tc Fister, Gt Jaane, N Jouns, New Street Square, 
