a _THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AOP U2 GAZETTE. [Maxon 24, 1860. 
~ demonstration 
to me tee of the Vatican was 
f l 
2 
was started of a counter- manifestation on the 19th— 
fro Rom took | Pres esidency, upo upon the great i issue of the day. When the 
place on the Seimi a aen of ea ‘ope, who in pro- — order, the Kansas Admission Bi came up, Mr. 
eedin ing | met keas Seward d 
oard the í Great Tasmania troop-shi ip on her way fro 
aap With — to the supply of provisions for 
expeditio: hina, the utmost care had been taken, and, 
toi and presented a me qo from Bes; sing i tava force. was concerned, it was ampiy supplied 
Kansas Legislature, demandin sit and oe il December next. Provi Ky ions sufficient for three months 
eeded to speak on the general set ne pete: af T h ad also heen forwarded to Hong ps3 = the use of the land 
c 4 l force. The aoe: Holida; oe r the Earl of DERBY 
place in politics. Having rev l the history of the | the Duke of Neweastt ps tha he House would probably 
question as a conflict Letweent” Tina capital and | adjourn for t ante recess ions day week, until Tuesday, 
Northern labour, he gg to the coming Presidential the 17th of gy Penn EA ente rf moving the second 
blic oldin th 
and to ns o | exp e 
princ: iple of prevent ting ike territories by constitutional | Dissenters from the necessity of subscribing certain 
the yee of Garibaldi. a despatc ad coming focuses of slavery and polygamy. objected to a a qli goatig ion bia office aaa ng Eear 
to the troop: di Hees Bi o measure gro tha 
säe: o s. ee : my sal a in the stot si pei said the policy of the Republican pe ty was to stand oE Sor b Annag Shes n bogies A 
public order, n Pe a =, 7 é kiiin of ae and of the press, the speedy im- i macy chs heat! e outs: ke meved tent the 
students. On the 19th there | blic domain by wholesome laws and | Bill be et eg aad exe ten day six months. abe Duke of 
et a manifestation inst. y he ae’ tat Ae i WCASTLE and the LORD CHAN supported the Bill, as 
= z mediately rep mig ers p e neon with hing = sie Sie the At Se oe ae zy ORI a eat sb n> tard and 
. ee r a S .— The ERBY said that ill soug 
frontier of apies announce in sed agitation. antie a Pacific States. e sai real principles | repeal Acts of Parliament framed to require tha’ persons 
popular manitestation had taken place at Atri. ill were WinSAT He was no — of | who took office should look on the Established Church as the 
ners were displayed bearing the words “ Victor | States, Tt was well and wisely arranged that the | "atone extauishment ‘The rer, wie ofthe, Disenteng to 
Emmanue r ever!” but the police check the | States subject of Savery within la desire on their part to encroach on the Established Chureb, 
pice Eiglity Aig PE who were co eama fled | their own borders. He said that ai Brown and his | and - Psion objection to the Bull was that it was one of a 
a | series of measures for attacking the Church, and putting it on 
ove, the fron In consequence o of thes ents the Be acted on earnest oTa fatally aata th miia oting 3 the aren ing EA EE Glia ihe 
er co ik ons. 1t1ON | Bishop of CHICHESTER concurred with Lord Derby, and opposed 
paral Lenart Goneril Fliagiéri and Signor C um e sE criminal t ti cots that a te thi eames reading of of the Bill.—After a few Norge from 4 HR 
caigned. Prin e Cassa am been. appoint and HAM, the House divided, when the num- 
had coe the E hi te the pubi able = and, ne trv of hum iow 7 | bers we sass = Contents 21 Fe ba her sai 44 i Majority, — = 
Bill was according lost. e Medical Acts Amendment Bill, the 
entered the Cabinet without a portfolio. Lord John out of the oft ripeated thre eat to dissolv ve the Union, | Packet Service (Transfer of Contracts) Bill, and the Consolidated 
Russell has addressed a tch to Mr. Elliot, M‘Lean! ithf Fund (4,500,0001.) Bill were read a third time and passed. 
Majesty Minster SENAD dectiig iiin “to nk an N | to act in any emergency. The United States’ E pkan {Sas tate e Para EINS very tabustio-intorenatioe, MNA 
a , 
audience of with a view of doing all in his | in the Gulf had been materially increased, and t Cops | had boem supplied to to him by the Master of the Rolls and the 
power to save an "inexperienced Sovereign from im-| were under orders for Texas an Mexico. The b Vice-Chancellors, calculated to throw light upon the Bill Phen 
pending poin; to state that the commonest rules of| crew of the British ship Aramingo o had mutinied. One he had brought in for bore tegen law and e nity Divorce 
— are no! _ observe d by the King a his | of +} Court.—The LORD CHANCO laid upon the table ie a 
ich he had promised with eh retires to the Divorce Cou 
ects; oppression is | at Charleston. The e go oods saved fi the Hungarian [Left sitting. | 
the parent of | plots, assassinations, conspiracies, and | or <n by auction on the aa and the wreck 
insurrections ; and that her Majesty’s Governme ant will o — inst. for salva 
take to ward of the ee nce RE oP NRN 
he 
= hg state that the Ministers remain in office, the 
rand Vizier en the — mme eof his prede- 
wro iian iai h hi L pea also 
a 
ree COMMONS. 
ar wo war steamers had sailed from Havan-| parpay.—The French SAIO land.—In reply to Mr. Justice- 
nah inder ‘the Mexican fag, and were reported as being Hinte RTON, Lord J. Russert said there was ee doubt ee. 
engaged by Santa Anna to aid the Church pariy, | fortifications had been erected by the French on the Island o; 
Miramon’s whereabouts were unknown at the latest | St. Pierre in 1856, but that the law officers of the Crown tat 
a aE —Mr, Kin 
di i rri ask set dl Kier ell if there was any objection to lay = nthe: 
Zot anna ae eee aroe TE res n table Pt Lond BincthGal des spate of the 8A of 
of the 
Henry Aba das esenbled the tplomati sgn and 
e in defence of t m Eur 1 house rents’ 
seat 
and by his arguments convinced some of his colleagues. | te 
a era Ane the Lp on of Russian Pansla- 
1e people = Chios had Mareh, Tes 
=peetin the proposed annexation of 8: and Nice 
vited General Houston into reste mPa P that the noble lord ial “pe able to 
eat ly means by —— order could be Sot alee co thet, the sinister Arar of the last few days — aot 
BRITISH COLUMBIA.—A fresh violation of the British true, sod = as not t ai i ef that the Emperor of the 
French was proc odin er te te xation without consulting the 
erritory is re poet from British Colum a A detach- pal tw Bowers a. Europe, pies contrary to the promise which he: 
ment P ia n army had gone to Langley and | bad made.—Sir R. Pret said he had that day received a 
qa 
Se 
a 
“a z 
vši 
pike STEA d London to a pei od of six ¢ 
When a pia Tine of telegraph pines e ag been laid, 
the of communication will pe uced to two 
days. "The te STN TA referred to was a ws:—“ Cal- 
cutta, March 10 — Ship Redgauntlet, Anes to London, 
burnt and scuttled. Some cargo will be saved.” The 
a hie di tch from MRR assuring him that the 
ed on legrap ic despate O; Y, 
Wa hi tate ter pe inn RS carryin R “them off into untry was lespate d from one end to the other, and that the 
bontaenas nae err itor è municipalities were perfectly ready tos votai in favour of annexa- 
existed at Victoria, where grea! E Mat fa ad also | tion with France, for the simple that all kinds af 
| been created against Governor Douglas, on account of | terro: were beln ing resorted to, on it itke first French si 
5| the levying of a tax of ore Sellers on every mule load Tation, ito ae Si apprehensions een j bes 
of provisions sent up Fra Ata =e ~ meut to come forward in a a manly, an A sia’ 
d Sin 
in Washi Ragen Territory ee he” 23d January, a manner, and protest against the policy of annexation as laidi 
portion of the members of the Legislative Aeey down by phe me oa Para would be heard far beyond the 
nominated General Harney for the Presidency of the Secale ee alent 
United States, 
= o overrate the importance of the question, for the an- 
neron of Pore. te w Ras oe the future inte- 
followin E e the details: 
Calcutta. — k Wilson ’s Budget was submitt 
A of Piedm and the fut condit: of Switzerland, 
Parliament. bat. it was the. e pirne. which had 
ENE 
ed to the Legis- 
lative paki on the Irth Tebronry Its chief aa is an 
income-tax, from which neither indar nor landholder, 
soldier nor bei is to Bee a y ear e being 2 = 
bid joan tooo of fro A per an 34 pi andes 
shave pet Im pôr ait 
are to bem fade in the tari The ay on twist sid poet is to 
z c pei > 
| eply to Viscount DUNGANNON, the Duke of NEWCASTLE staied | from whom he had gathered Kany the Court of Berlin entirely 
rite Austri: 
that the Government had under consideration the propriety of | agreed in the opinions of her Majesty’s Government on the 
hitara tad] ev te Sc iiie Sg oh been” modio yay sien the See of Rochester, so as to establish a Bishopric of St. | subject of the opona annexation., i a to Ausi 
and the seale reduced to one rupee oaii Kaian a | Alban ut no decision had as eA and Russia, he had not as mation as to 
Hemp, jute, hides, wool, flax tea, peri eof |l Karine The Ballot. =e s EYNHA ae, in a long speech. | what steps they might feel a5 at to ado in Eere to- 
duty. $ nty per t d taoto pi 10 | moyed a resolution that it is expedient in the BR la of | the question. He owned that Be regarded it us extraordinary 
cent. The loans were all closed on the 13th February, when | shorts of E en: that the votes be taken by ballot. He | and cat eea that oe Cavour should declare in one 
mapie arnie see A epe 3 eroros stated that he neither wished for the vote by ballot of America t — ase ce that the King of Sardinia would neither sell, 
of rn equal to 5,000,0001. sterling, required for the nor of Victoria, which was not secret, but of the other colonies | cede, hee and ye in another part state that if 
$ | where asys am r FER TASAR: been aan re Baliol .—The Duke of z Sav ofan ats to attach Gemia ves to Fs = ce he one 
WCASTLE said he did not look upon th ot asa ve no objection. It looked as iť the King of Se inia was nol 
Aterea Initia. ee ee hea A kamen TA need a social and moral, and, i a nse, 28 a ities very ai ling to agree to the project OF sian xation. The 
the 30th ‘ani The report o of sey Singh's tie core is con- question. The ballot would never work without greater | position of country was, therefore, ery ch infi 
immed. Ram Wishes Singh, a brother of Hurkishen, and attendant evils than those ne A rectified, and those who | en this state of things. He had received y the 
other mutin ra avait thelintate' En: beled desired to introduce the ballot into this cou country a ol be copy of a despatch which been by M. Thouyenel 
‘Khan, the leader of Captain Mecham’s false a rt ay Aati this omnes ee oa colonies, re the | to Count Persigny, containing the whole case of the French 
pope rs into Bunnoo bound hand Maa foot. by state of society and the es labour was oi A to otally Government in favour of the annexation. It was couched im 
‘of his own cei 22d Ja Jañ., guhaving Seen: different Rng PEN The abolition of and intimidation eee lan; e, and sct out that the position of Italy 
bady of Waz , He | Was be ed by ere seawe Put y that which had | having been changed that of France had been deteriorated, and 
ASe an cffected so much—the moral tone ar cie the | that the proposed annexation had become a political necessity, 
hen rons le of this dounr: The vote ge eer. man was a trust | caused by an exceptional state of circumstances. Looking, 
him BS wot good, and it was not that he | however, at the des as aw and re; ing bad to 
K v à in its exercise, as he would | the fact that it described the annexation as necessary for the 
ae Ot of : of thi oe when = oe EE arene ein he could not SS s 
a thousand persons Speni to have rá nir e opinions of tho European’ Powers as w eee 
bees anieemerted fn wo days. chat morality and om. Their lordships tl divided wl wet the | pliance with the promise of the French Government to consult 
and the victims were two days. Neit the aE fen fearful pee npea numbers were—Contents, 4; Nun-contents, “393 majority, 35. those Powers, The despatch was one which required most 
quantity of plunder was carried off from the The motion was accordingly lost. ious consideration, and be had prepared a reply which, if 
plains. A wing of the Nursiporo Battalion from Deesaand t TuEspaY.—The Militia.—Earl DE GREY and N stated, i ved of by her Majesty, he wonld lay upon the table. 
clubmen, burkundauzes, and latteeals of the nei ighbouring| reply to a TOE put wet 2 Earl of SHAFTESBURY, tbat ‘it | The Chinese Expedition.—Sir D, L. Evans moved a series of 
Zewindars moved upon Sees a strict, but too late to do o | Was intende o disem of the 13 regiments of'militia | resolutions on the subject of our relations h China. 
a witness the desolation caused by the ráid: artillery, of which the Forfarshire the Edinburgh, and the | urged that the attempt to force a passage to Pekin by arms 
na sad epyan ie tek piadar ab asdsoe: WE aterford would be three. The Militia Act would expire next was for, man ndesirable and inexpedient y 
gapital of Holkar tnt: Sir Ric Richmond Shakespear, elie — eal Jem, sco it was not opdi wit. Annexation of. Savoy. | x that the employment of a large milital and 
stent, be had denounced i it as a hoax. — Marquis anger g nd Sedara ~~ of having haou iri aa E | Paval bend cone entail a enormous expenditure 
Canning continues hi answer fro e Governmen a question which he | country, without produc corresponding results. He 
having reached Lahore at the date of is progress northe fad K at the beginning of the session with yawa — the | approved of the a ponhent tot Lord Elgin = Ambassador 
that city. The Maharajah Rungbeer h, of Cashme annexation of red the Fore and Nice to France, of which ini on it | Extraordinary, ast ex’ ah that a wise and concilia- 
to meet him at Wuzeerabad on Feb. E ‘when bis lordabip now appeared rine 2 ong been aws eina He} ay policy woulé prevent the effusion of bloot in a war which, 
dawk to Peshawur, visiting Simlah about the | 847° e notice that hi d take an early opportunity of moving | whatever might be its termination, could not reflect much 
of April vid Kangra and Belas eae ag on the ml and asserting the necessity of deal- | honour upon the English arms.—Lord J. Russett thought it 
i id ng with ie ene maters by official communications, instead | wouid be unwise to give our Plenipotentiary instructions of too 
—ih : Persia is sai ma prio He of f private “Te the Foreign Secretary and | Strict a character, as ci ight arise whi ht 
only in et he and has about | reesei at forel Hes Co te of REAREA de x ma A is tion. it g not 
ol $ lt any such evasive en givi u at necessary for advance o: in; but if fair terms 
age. fe that grave events are | much an beer ee Ba a Re oa rd Gra: s} Pronos = not on balata without them, it would not be d — 
z answer given. e Pa ice a ‘ontract amper tions that the; 
Srates.— the 29th ult. the galleries of | Bil! and the Consolidated Fund Bills passed through committee. | not eai upon the The general i erati to the 
ber were aood to coe n 
, the Republican candiqate for 
ital. 
THURSDAY.— The Greet Tasmania.—The Duke of SOMERSET, in ae would be to require an apology for the — 
| reply to the Earl of ELLENBoROUGH, said that es Admiralty ca eons treaty of Tien-tsin ; and in zar oera 
: were in no way responsible for the disaster which had occurred a , to demand an indemnity, ami 
