Arar, 28, 1859.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
dia strength E. durabilit 
shown, I wou re e to sugges 
things, o of t well as other Coniferous 
ight, if d aal, affo d employm 
ty of the articles now 
est that the roots — 
tre 
n to profitab ble | 
account soils at presen nt who olly 2 — The . 2 
| gentlemen of t n the 
old and — name of New Caledonia 
now British Colombia, onis bs committed a diseredita 
i the existence of a well- 
ima ia 
, for 
he Colonial Office proposed to retain the 
what is 
ble 
whether he could account — ib 
W very g 
As one instance, if 1 remember ri 
orth, 
and Victo a nd i 
oria ; 
(Scotch h Fr m, — and Lare 
an) — — cut — for 
railway sleepers, and other economic purposes. The Fede 
f China or Australia, — or Van — "e j 
Tinited States. call the 
if ang at up, burned to get | them out of the way. ‘When 
If so gentleman wo 
Colonial Minister to account in e place in "Parliament 
for this outrage upon nd the gen s 
he wo 
American Indians, we are entitled to 2 that 
e don 
J ameson of 
is unen 
"i Victoria men are talking, — that | monstrous 
or the | it a good thing th 
mmas formerly n 
y thinking it tyres 
n the ey began to 
y, but would ae wrap them in flannel, of w 
they had ine learned the use from us, and leave t. 
lyi ying abou ee to cold draughts and everytl 
used to wash quie babies at al 
to do; ue er t W 
e must pro 'oduce er in 
iis subject :— 
uppose, in great measure 
dies Haand ng position. of New Zealand, cul be 
+ 
d dried spec imens ‘of thre 
to me by Pr. Jameso 
0 
alle st, G. cernua o 
e Gentians sent 
gher average, and the winds are 
n more violent; that of one coe of — colony 
E gr SHO - D0.— “One of the 
t and chief p i do be inculeated on emigrants 
— this countr y is "that of — T = 
go'out meaning to provide = themselves, tot 
of themselves, o ant their 4 3 — y to them, 
‘Don ^t look to us 12,000 m 
— 
often 
called Wellington, 10 is said that you may know a We ;- 
lin nc up man by hi s habit of holding his hat on with his | 
han * fow bene 8, rarely. serious ones, have | 
"ti oe one 
institutions.” In part 
—— to their own sinews for their 
En nglish wars, indeed, 
1 
| in - ole the climates are not 
about 1 inch high, flower 
ted Fellows. 
included.” Three e gen En were elec 
. J. E. Gray, F. R. S., 
insects 
as purple- in 
very — d T i s probable that anything, animate 
or Ina sn vhs ves in England would do as 
New Zeal 
Lan. AND Tır —. This right to the 5 e 
acquired by taking possession, is of course only good as 
against other civilised nations. Iti is not good, except | 
mies, as 
well | 
— i pu 
— protection 
y P 
st n a 
— [ene — on with a — that could no 
| tolerated now. All that can y — 
yt 
of the place themselves, who are — natural lords of it. 
ually occupy, an 
mely p 
hrase, to 
JB se - that. ons must oy "both to defend 
2 na m ids hr 
a fion v baw a Legends new genus of 
ifi æ oft 
are understood by their own usages ‘to dain and hol ja | 
There have been endless questi ons see disputes, some- 
cent 1 . 
wars and 
with uc matter in New Zealand + but i 
The: 
assacres, connected | 
into these I 
as i y have o for the most part done. 
They have, — * m our colonies been 
mber 
outh, ie L — with some er ni gp 
of 
Plymo 
| —.— that — were me 
wall 
s, and a singular gr: r. Mr. Janson exhibited 2 enter now. ey have been long since, it 
| numberof new British species of mim eetles of m: tied ho set at rest; and it is enough to observe 
| different genera, taken near Lon F NW. |t that e: "iei — né natural — — observed 
Saunders exhibited a large species o ti } by the eon 
et 3 nd alive ina "a chest of tea from China ; 1 1 ys with some "of. — — hieftains 
of t after our occupatio n ef i it, called 
8 taken in small ru s filled with water near 
oit but which in diii are dried up. This 
— from being the largest Brit 
and wi lly. ee oria defen: 
o doubt t es from the habits of yer e 
Landis, — as in all other adva 3 highly 
| civilised lands these things are e done "t " row 
1, +h 
men 1 
the cw of Waitangi: e a — the enge um ty of 
the land was made o over e Cro of. En ngland. 
4 
ges 
tomostraca. He also — some of | 0 
merous 
the possible a 
of using them in the 88 of ink, as 
unt of tan 
he street 
and call out for one of pes decorous and tightly- 
of England becomes . 
first mc Mer it would be the s 
for the Eng lish G 
h 
— mi might think, at 
sim n and best way 
to En nglis ish people, 
valk about for that purpose; or 
ifit anytl hing more serious, the magistrates besiege 
the ente Lord- n of the county for 
yeomanry, or soldiers of o e ki nd o or another. Bu 
your own — with — natives for 
any land e 
| ly been done, h the. nin | theirs which you may wish to Sie But that is i — . of the colony 1 w illo only say a word or t 
8 was much less atn the ink-| what it does not do. On the contrary, the law of Of course in all new countries vn is uie M cies 
| oeste da ais iei ciate some land is that no no qne an argus id. ra senis ani asd too Hrs m 1 5 
larvæ of a small moth jj- try, the natives. |: y be w to e t has 
i pennella), taken on Roses grown in pots in . | reserves to i f the right to deal with the natives. | hitherto d háite gg that they must often 
Mr. White read th iption of one of the new | The Crown — srar from them: the English learn to to be th their own servants. From causes like these 
species of Buprestidæ received from Mr. Wallace, — — get t land from the Crown. As soon. as the | a few, and but a few, have been disa aoib inted and left 
ing a new genus, “a which he gave the name of Demo new | the colon But I believe Tardly a va n settler from 
chroa carinata. Some new British Coleopterous insects — ay has. bargained 1 with the natives and got from | the first } Dais been compelled by distr ruin to do so 
of small size vus also exhibited by Mr. George R. . by purchase, as much of the land as it can, or as —a fact, perhaps, not to be lleled in Posen his- 
Waterhouse wanted for colonising, it disposes of it to its subjects, tory. And one striking fact may be stat 
| just -— t — cae of — or — lan portion between the public revenue and the 
y on such terms as it sees fit. e opp plan, that of population of the colon e revenue 
E X otices of Books. letting private persons deal direct with the natives for —— ain an A Ireland, E fip is in the gross some- 
1 their land, has been tried, and was given up because it ere nea: pego ,000,000, 
New Zealand and the Canterbury Co olony. By Lord |led to great abuses, as - easily be explained.” or about 27.1 head. w colonies the pro- 
| ü telton. NE (A pamphle — ee — —“ The main object in making colo- | | portion is E ut I esf no 3 has yet 
| nder this title we hav sts pay for — instead of t has been attain ed in 
and 
e great ‘English 
may become powerful 
trustworthy account of — of those 
settlements which. Uu AMAT i 
th 
ist 
| gies it to don, is to prevent what is called the land- 
| shank ia h system. Now what do Jou suppose a land- 
A 
Ao. > yeu 
parent. — — — v - — e M à fish, who is as fond of eating manki FC. 
ers is now a ey: question. | as our friends the New Zealanders used to be. But a Hort 3 for 1 1859, Part I. (Brussels, 
Tuere are few counties indeed between the 2 i end land. hark is not the i r 
ain Sch S Genet tee eee "shark is 1 refore re one of what some one called | Huyez), is w periodica A ees with 
Canterbury. 
There the vestis I think, is about 7000, and the 
annual public revenue 100,0007., being upwards o of 147. 
e| — head.” 
ta of emigrants, all the well-to- . — — on land? it means a . who 
iv to be doing well Any information therefore | bus possession of large tracts cao slant 
communi by one who is him th a landowner hat: uei tivate it, but to hold v and keep 
— — lder in the — t. Our own waste ti ini in the course of <ivination — him it — 
rthy no value; a he sells it. It 
2 light upon the subject, but the noble lord who W olivina that this is an utterly bud "thing, and con- 
* ley deliv the lec re us in January | trary to all the views with which any eivilised 
3 in a positi throw more is purpose was to Lee ars Pm like Englan s about th } 
show his eee what New Zealand i is, how it was ac- | of eim The object of that.great work is hot 
„ W. i Lj 
ublication 
is | of the numerous fine novelties i introduc $ 10 algen 
fm collectors of M. Linden of Bru: v the Veitch — 
of Belgium. Fach plate i 2 10 mpanied by hortieul- — 
tural $f forme tion and b Phe Bener 
by Mr. Linden himself, n ite we presume 
Planchon, dpt d a pable of ar 
ask. Sin 
Allthis is done, briefly but iin in one of f the 
most 2 Sion we m have 
Which y e ith pleasure even b 
Roh care nothing abou t New Zealand und its 
2 one point only do we differ from th 
a 
Lyttelton thinks it 
Zealand should have the na 
Zealand implies a 
noble lecturer. th 
ee that New 
bears: 
b oceupy, improv; 
for the ever-teeming ‘races 
pay a sum for it; whieh must not be 
ecuted, are sy 
The number 3 
amabili: 
from their becoming familiar with 
l Saree : 
Ras r 
that this decay. 383 — — 5 
the vices and excesses | 
de. 
— one 
be | figures of nine 
nd pa 
—* New | too too lange, Mt such as he will feel. He will of course 
š An w there is, in | want a rn for e money he has so spent, w. 
— what have we is do with that country ? | cau M — cultivating and stocking 
"e 8 Ls Paggo! : e Tus rt land-purel haser therefore in a eolony ‘takes eurer besitos 5 
going to a land o es | his purchase-money for the „land, toihave.sapitabenongli 
trowsers, inh ling 1 by men born w ne for Loses Do 
v nth i Way Native —" It may be 
for our taste. 
. veu Teaching — 
— — and 3 * 
cli e by Sir Ro deci d anne: Ee 
Ec on Lat, "whose eulogiums are duly se 
Wright). 
ninepence 
set 
