December 10, 1859.) 
d, but considerable suspicion, of course, hangs 
the € a it is — much his interest to get believed. 
vit ulla. LThe ＋ harged Europeans who volunteered foi 
t back as Mon Tm characters. The 
e 15th No 
* the 29th 
ao aro 
A part 
ber, by which 
100,000 dollars - ut The ‘J ames Hartley steamer 
on the. rocks 80 miles from Hong Kong; 
saian were saved. The ship Inker- 
u, of London, had also been lost. 
— ed " 
Hong Kong f Jap was to leave for 
Washington by ‘the Pow! hattan on the 22d . 
— T Ther 
isa ir ctm ity of labo 
Java.—The qu “expeditionary force for Boni left 
Eve 
on the 
id the natives z pio ava would ri 
armed. M 
— natives, owing M their — g forced o — 
—— fot Bon A pirae ey to mu 
Datoo Putingi , Gapoor had been 
d for 1 with — 9 
uropean | bayon: 
uch — e reo t 
2 ti 
an 
Europeans. The to be banished to Singapore, 
Tranquillity was restored o on the 17th Oct. 
"USTRALIA.— arp shi p 1a iu: was open 
on the 13th of Oct tobe er, and Mr. Murphy was elected 
Spedker without opposition. 
debate was to commence on the of October, and a 
iste The great 
The quarter’s 
. and the capital of the 
Hk of Now South a been increased 50 
The Ba the arrival of a 
donkey i in that district. . ineident seems to have 
1 ion, 
EW CALEDONIA.— Three Eng lishmen have been sho 
m Caledonia for having — the die wth 
against nch Government. These men were 
thea agents of a Mr. Padden, the owner of large tracts of 
land in the island, who secured his safety by escaping 
In gre the Trient was eh ed i his 
hich may be expeeted next week. ' 
omar tan Scott's arrival 
y retired from his pioa: with undis- 
2 
disgus anger. 
the exception of the Sate 
m from San Juan. It E died at Washington that 
een the it 
of the ulw 
through the agency o! 
meee 8 24 23 
THOILE 
eS 
—— 
E 
me so got 
LET 
: ie accounts 1 from the Carson Valley (Walker River) Mines 
? E attention. The mines promise to be 
; Men River. These mi . — are Nod 
ol AN AM and are suj om 
7 Tne distance 
"a the 
2000 wide, 
sins vot — of 
m first tt d satiny: ing of an engine 
carri toria bridge at 
1 
E on ws 24th ult. ON pen ra 5 m 
urs ef New Orleans by means of the | prop. 
carried to Europe vid the Grand Trunk Railway and 
= Line, have been brought over in 
of 3 eei pide po 
cm nounced for Sonta rre 
f 
'The Want of Confidence 
h naval force, 
1 pe: Ue Hs ent oi 
Public ee 
ecent meeting of Somer- 
u at Taunton, ign the — | a 
National = 
T * s 
Lorp Ta AUNTON, 
seine agricultur: 
arks on the 
vwd emt — peaco— they enter- 
conquest st 
ghbour b pat Tn ey RE gre disguise p 2 admini any | 
ountry 
ni 
-" 
Engl: duty on their r pa 
pared for all MED He, the ore, E. one, v berti re- 
joiced and heartily sym athised with the 
is countrymen from d's En 
bidding Le to b 
of then fe 
applied. 
untry were nally — 
h the eee of their ; situation. He must 
say that a -— avs respo ye —— lie Mes — 
dt 0 ment, if, when the people 
ey 
i 
E 
& 
Siis 
B 
F 
y of and rei ed 
igen ^ he must $a; iy 2 1 —— 
nt were fu lly die Y r duties on 
subject, and 8 to ae the poh A and navy of this itum 
m in the most efficient — 9 nation had * 
dure was a duty to be perform A by the d large 
p institutions, habits, ti 
well as — the Governmen 
wishes were altogether opposed to the existence of a large 
standing. 3 adit — ee of tis c the Lm of 2m is 1 
"er — 45 —to 
— its * — 22 va Roa ecessary. 
What v — the ae was p y military force we might have 
m uld be of the best possible 9 and be man in 
e best IE ma — ie — the rt pee of this country 
p 
ot to look 
—.— 
pont — and wi ea — cem d 
their co —1 » y a volup "rm ‘Vol —— m ha ad 
Soa i a field in which En lish activity ad veg po 
larly conspicuous. Englishmen 
ad been a ar em 
to the Government to bee — efforts, t to 
selves when they felt occasions required — to net. He 
ite sisted, mui * the movement latel; snd 
be jem qd 
act for 
transi 
im erg edu VACUA Rui fe SOME 
secure against any 
4 
d — e of vod cupa safety that she would be secure 
hostile at 
ACLAND at the Taunton meeting made the 
t| Mm. T. D. 
following appeal to the farmers on the subject of the 
o | yeo pidas valry :— 
js 
r 
CIE island moored c 
Gr e oi Meu ou es Biol B 
the other day, — tho! an 
: Soe anc n 
lington said that steam ye ie Channe 
MB din im 3 the Duke's life was w, and he asked tl 
farmers of England, as men of of facts. indi eh of Array t» loot 
ur neighbours the Gauls, or 
E fier ore awere that the admiral who 
8 the British o forces in the Crimea had given. it as * 
inion that Le 000 men could be landed on the south coast of 
nce they V" — to Exeter, —_ -— 
thence Would an 
say that at td pem ‘thay could amg on | the 
t oi FE half or even a jene of that — 
stop the French advance Picture, then 
2 the coast. Either the Pret h army 
re stan 
south coas 
ey wani 
ch in e 
of a trcep of m of which 
Nori opinion; bat he said 5 vx inthe cr of —.— 
that u had better vere rn and more opportt — 
— 
ot fit for 
LEICA volunteered to go m3 for six yos 
between this and their 
been ia iment 
followed up. If the 
useful body. A plan had been 
the full sanction of the Lord-Lieut hich 
‘by which the farmers of the West 3 
: 2 of busi- 
iom men to al but — 
. ef m 
pe 8 Tenge, stead s igs 
EU stood. : 
i day & o: in the 
intended that every new 
ofthe body. The 
—— selection of fd | 
with practical so : 
pep pep" E 1 that the 
e had met was a proposal 
155 te iet t horseback. — was said a farmer could not 
i 
nis 
& 
d 
A 
A 
ler his musket and wal 
ees "s labour, when he wanted to 
had seen quite 
— — do. Heknew they were as 
of business in the towns were 
he 
Lived 
could prem for r their — 
tim 
4 — oft the 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRIOULTURAL GAZETTE. 
ap — —— 
join the rife o 
E ms P4 do the E If [Sn uds — toli. 
salves te the nex months — 0 Seth 
^ v from wh 
at quarter th — 2 . 
me some movement "The tom 
in the north t eh 
k Ni E ke d at a meeting at Rugby on 
th u pok e as follows on public affairs 
National Defi A Wide ya 
owards de a d of the sessi 
— an anomalous — — a.a * 
of the pro; of y ain 
t the 
acks ot Cardi r an Catholic laity ute 
certain endowments fortheadministration of theirreligion, whieh 
ws of England they themselves administer ; 
ie in a menm the weal ain parties, 
— what has 
knoss I2 iue 
not but be 
utions rr country. 
as loyal as our- 
er jer — 
y at the fag end of the session, 
a 0 
2 an Cat bolle i in county 
Vas gainst the i! ire — 
that 1 "defended the Catholic liity a action 
ae $ y succeeded, th 
t there is » fear be otan there is a 
possibility that an upon the 
authority of the i Dake of 1 Wanne In E tbe Duke 
P mo — , in which he told Sir John Bu: "oe uer 
upon successive governments the d s 
Rate of our * he iuda » these TOME 
terms—em ming from a man — sia undoubtod 
Jod — may Y live to with 
A rs wh ich I haw Ae tailed 
he protect of England, 
etter in the p^ of — 4 in — -— 
A: the — 7 upon —— Militia Bill, and to the hor 
mme the patriotic s spirit 
, But 
militia — tho minimum 
— necessary, and we bave 
had 800 We ave, in point of fact, never had half. 
to the mat of the avy it has — observed that 
is scarcely superior to the of Fran 21 
unable to resist any com — Such — tbe length whi 
— . of this M — the economical mania of some, 
€ uated by the desigming at 
never 
Look 
E Arr —2 in such a defen: 
1 who in some evil h 
ws Roky — in remem ice of fi 
make an inroad bores, 
—.— corps, As to depo though i generally 
believed that as the principal arsenal of our navy, mds the — 
which €—— the Channel, it is defended, the truth is that 
the — a beter ed are utterly worthless, and 306 
not devise r schemi the destructh 
than the — — of its 
imd 
50.0 
L erage h, took it 
—— that arsenal, they would hav jost basis they 
— dow inte the course of 
ould beat them back ; member that the ex- 
Crimea bas shown Aas the sea is the best basis 
to 1 
Cents., 281 ; Dite for Acct., — to 284 
Bank of bann. 
{ISSUE Di — ENT. 
Notes issued os se e» 430,743,5) Is Government Debt 
3 
