THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGk CULTURAL GAZ ET TE [Dcus i 
dene the Hon. F. Brace those Uberties and that religion which bas been handed dow wn | force. A fo = a 
l al Hope arrived at Hong to us by our predecessors. 1 giant and Seo DA — = of 20,000, which could be done ESI D 
ai wishes, and the interest of Ren i Hi 7 
n her Majesty's np beef eake on the 9th. at peace. No defensive preparations, no elicitin ry ni- the rear, for the French, if ther © mo iy by Yo 
ite recovered from his wounds. A — . pesna in se genial of the rdi can ever give a | Channel, could throw as Wan 
Oc as quite A a pre - "a = t we are actuated by aggres- | brought to fight at Solferino. Iz men ‘or Tics 
story is i irculation oM derived from a os . Ahab w 8 2 areal . t 
Chinese 8 translated in the Northern A 0 s oe mts em asentially a pacifo isi piers is no altogether invincible. I do not pu. ES, wem, 
1 n an idea o. in any par e wor ich not | however brave a i 10 m , 
eb à Dus o the Cabinet of Pekin xo moe ecd, diss and ther 3 brave and skilful they m Y that voltae 
invadir R. b rselves tha spud hok. ia , if it t xi 
Sers ms mne Harpers Pery nor mer. YAPA TT TTT 
th — v Lee an | which ni is painfal” 10 A: nt Ampia te. sigala s a th ali ou 
tha tes on the aftern of t ay. * ex- | pacific papa am if we pot show a was ‘warlike Redes be London or Toone idi poin 
à * ‘if we now show that we are determined to — would. orobably b. , 
citement in Virginia arising out of. t is affair has dependence of the country and its honour vy ‘the hor only hav ve 1 great 1 — pe attacked, “Woes 
revived with augmented energy. On the 17th a the and reputation ofthe State, it is not because we area ctm dr parts, bet iet in Scotland and © mae 
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b: ras and aed had been fired by his con h from the licy of any f i p male : rai t hou wha the 
s arns an sh 8 ee ns - | muc e aggressive policy of any foreign Power by which its means the vol i Country, 
3 e were er — — pla aced we may — immediately threatened—but partly from a feeling ud regulars from. Ph ti and AAA T 
d Ea Ai ——— N of unbounded weit me. ond dene which has arisen from | support them as light troops in eve er places, 
— 2 at Rich 8 and à ex — L nitude of our for trium 2 partly from the | way M pe Qu & able the blo way, nee 
orders to move nex morning upon of 3 iy of other nations, which have ealth which army. Wit ese e Ptrength PEEN 
the tie tak Soret 178 Mene Mong: | | they bad moti Pw astry ec —— a t liberty whi which — bo country Great Pri itai: xin. Sou " Keri. in 117 
e stability to bear, a glor ich the a 
out the St - s * "tial. ich has been the effect of. the —— I have In. Berain, yas P., was present at the md 
stage. ag sm — were I ; the pedlars, | . — exhibition of envy on the one hand, and a | Li iverpool Financia i Befo orm Associati 
who a o be found in every village and upon remissn prepara on the other. v = the effect of | evening, anc bib MN addr È 
every road, were imprisoned i in large numbers ; and the “ately eng the TR ia at our aa pA — 8 have — — low ing is an 8 ess, of Which the 
pursuit of them appeared to be universal. In the mean- o Proth and kd preperto ion meam War “He shoulda — = fealty to come and i 
time all the parties supposed to have been implica: E — "immediately a afterwards it led to a dre: adf ul revolt con — out the great and egentes 
have secured their safety by flight. Dr. Howe, of i — — " — engaged in in hostilities lakee aet it ‘was founded. Those prin ciples he defined v 
entan E 
28 has fled from Boston to Canada. Mr. F. Douglass appros — eae: patie uon ey; and, secondly, thao are 
as i r, 
ree de 
left for England, an „Gerrit Smith has been — ten othe very 3 In that whatever money the Government might 
sent to a lunatic asylum, the rebellion having over- that. mA — — have not been r oo On the E keiadi p pi. ming aos property Which every ng 
i i in nd teh says that, in | trary, so far from eing secure, our dan, Hes rises fro bert - on ot e security which 
poston sent state ag ne ation with En la tid coti | circumstances, — 1 we bave not made — gps ne fe a 5 —— ju , contende Goverment 
e presen eg. gla parations to maintain our position. E = en especial =, Gee, s by a system of direct taxation, for 
cerning t the n Juan affair ny? espondence cannot | care in these remarks to ay nothing i Sea that great there might an equal 2 of V arida r 
be submi „ or fi em dii utet of com- Power, recently ue A ~~ it may ièa ee vendi er food A all lasses, that w. res dem 
ment i in the ‘Presidents messa B » viich will refer to it —from which an attack is more immediately apprehended. — P d prope 5. m 
F b. n of taxed articles was no Ns cH 
ly s still pending. I admire the talent and I kno xA 8 — the French of "Particular individuals or families, and therefore deem 
~ CAN — The Reform ae on at onto | Emnporor. It is beg 1 kaw of Fra ra ne a Baad tones as : rule or measure sy E by the 
use now the rinciple that taxation sho 
Mw ‘on the i ult., after passing ras ons | — numm: a of F ru and becau i by ar — Sager Touching t ds 
almost unanimously declaring the existing union b p y of the  Binperor it is just € pon 
M g ing union be- for this reason that I say th e prolunteer ovement js | free eet piopi 2 far, he observed that teles ice as much clie 
tween Upper and Lower Canada to have resulted in a indiepensably called: for by Ges "There any | had come into the country since the . en 
heavy public debt and burdensome taxation; also | circ gre independently of what T I Fate said which — = iner rease value rof nearly 20,000,0001. Meo per annum, 
the lution of rese ion be. | call this movement. It is said by people in this When the ped of — corn laws was agi! most of the 
P — that we need not be — of the Mesh. for we tes - landed interest were dreadfully alarmed. One noble dile 
great mercant 290, i went so far as to — ; that if the repeal was carried hewali — 
h leave the coun: enerally um 
very few yea! 
ppe iod 
fer each section, and a central power for daling n ios be added to our regular navy, and therefore we — perfectly 
matters affectin: ng eg sections. About 600 del secure. Now in the present state of matters grea 
were in attenda — a 
BRITISH he mos ious s 
of Victoria x held i in the rea Hall on the that we 3 5 e wages of the seamen in the ithe Reva |? 
es a e 
st Oc be 
tions defining the qualifications | of voters and te mere navy And —— » — -— that —— 
Aha fh 
nena hase lli n fightin dente The answer to 
me —À be aer of the House of Assembly to DT EN e T wonder vem herd 
WO yen 
tands as regards our 
the day of election were unanimously | m Then, again, consider the state of the -— 
io Whon t tho vilia was. ums rand re January Jast there w 
lar army than had Been 
oam bat zoe a — — A i] » | voted by the Parliament of last y: It was just an affair of 
za an rdova S proved a disastrous fai ure, | money, like the mages v ayot "the soldiers is 1«. 14, a day, 
General I Mejia * without fring a gun, losing and the same . — — 7 at — d = 
600 h 1000 
ou see — — 
an r seizing a conducta with 120,0007. of — og A other ek in pe, s — to wein 
in an imm. S n India and in the coloni 
casa: “belonging chiefly to French and Spanish At this moment there are 90 90, 000 men in India, and 3 30, 000 or 
hants, of which h d 
merchants, o ieh he norem 600, dollars 0004s the —— es, making a total of 130, 000 veterans who 
to himself, and detained the al najuato. out of the country. The e only other State which has 
The British and French Ministers. had energetically | to. r 4 — ofthe v 
protested against this conduct. The same General —— ht 5 m in a few days io be of service 5^ th their servants, y not what Was pr 
Marquez, on ia kin M eg of Tepic, bor in — But there is another most important consideration— | Taking the calculations of Professor 
the tiba. any pe were suspected of we have for — — iecit subject to so serious a drain — om Au stated ed 3 Pec 
n the way of em on. Parliamenta Mmm rove that ingdom who 
Morse with the deen eee and im a during that time about 3,000,000 person e emigrated, value of 102, ad 0,000,000 only in 
very heavy contribution upon the population. An aver ng about 250, 008 a-year; and you ill — ees to form | value of 10L Was it not fair to me that 
American citizen called Chase Ped been ordered to |some idea of the drain that has bee n made on the military — Mates more of the taxed articles than the 6,00 
w oe, when Isay that the annual drain by emi - Las been | lived in houses of the — —— he 
0 ro 
^ - 0 the loss sustai 
an example to all foreigners who o posed the Govern- dou 10 fro 
ment, Mr. Matt — the M Mi ees in d ber ca that the e eris" 1 
Ue d 2 0 4. r we ied y he Briti u 
M at one — and without the 1 — — to i 
trial A . 5 — of the duties ex exacted by Mara the soldiers and sailors and — militia from Is. 1d. to 1s. Sd. or the association bad in view. 
having been demanded, the Bri m ish Mesh — es 2s. a day. If you do this you will find that the ships o of os of the country approached se 
j EUM be th Sai d that the ra e advoca 
defeated 
his artillery, and - to question of pounds, e and = a A of that ve Ty platform th he : 
General Woll was at Legros, and General Degollado bein — 22 — epus I will — give you one or They d the v . — is way i in thei a ; 
was pushing on 3 attack him. A portion of the band of | to facte tolet y what you mayexpect if the French ever | thrust fro eo , for their utter inattention Ther 12 
omega — attacked the city of Rio Grande, pillaging mme thi county in J i X Mderiog “the. ^ em 
rl ha e ock 150 
ou i 
nds of Cxrtinas numbered 700 m * The E Mp ded In 180 n Napoleo; to Portugal as a | anxious for the * of the working eer 
Brownsville were in the greatest distress. P An ihe ibarat he levied atontribntion af A 000, "000K, equal to at — pledges with which a majority W kes de 
had were ie — by the outlaws, em pice as | liberator, and levied 300,000, upon the - rated city. which the present had to con os 
threatened to d estroy the town — e He next wentto Venice, and — there 2,500, 000%. in| colleagues who were not rac" hd comment 
Pru 
$04 t contribution 000, 000“. sterling, and actually squeezed the —— net, but he only hoped and pray: 
he relief of the terror-stricken money out out ofthe people in in five years by een upation. rage enough to Wom eee the 
í resse city of Hamburgh, which at that contained only 80,000 | party, depended upon the honesty and COM. He 0 
Public Z Attice — You < at what pric "the — price ü “is * at and unavoidable q dig so be . 
t ag : 
Qm ARCHIBALD ALISON at at the ire a Volunteer cr we may by increasing the Pay increase our regular | attacked by rs masked conspirators whe the a 
f forces, and of course our militia a, yet it is qm Apre that -— monwealth in the leading y weekly in the J fo te 
yo 
1 I hope that the time i turday reviler. Ther 
This great Boema is felt from the Land’s End to the — 2 or the line aie —— 100,000 regular t a — a | E ie ET X ri 
united British e empire to show a E to every h sure the — ct pss it we 
— ai —— force be gained if the Government would adopt the — which I — — * ust pass awa. 
ch ma ance, and | . — Iam — no one would ſe eli a burdo en. That t| tr ue interest and edens itself to the . 
ople. 
10,000,0007. in Scotlan In — — went to Milan Government of Lord Derby, and be 
urder all the reinforcements pan pu — t 1806 he one i russia, and leviea upon n that country a courageous in the cause. He ipee that. they mi Borer, 
future of CPU of 
In Davoust to s bout 2, ,000,0001. upon the edt. and for a long come the E 
they de alt with greai 
ntlemen would poem their falvation. I would say that | desired to state what were 
— — ef n addition, have — support ofa great body of volun genial slanders were vomited these f n ernment | m 
dishonour of our country. rmt b 
furthest extremity of eh and AA will, I trust, enable the | Great Bri Sery and 80, ne militia. 1 am sur could | authority insecure, for thor ty of very d Kind Dr 
make us maintain that high position — De — ons, and done, all that we require is the assistance of a great volunteer ! peo metà then, that Parliamen 
