Fes. 6.] TH 
E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 91 
oe 
take 
is place in the peera of which the conqueror 
of Tafalear bag —— = re 
d the banks ereign to 
ene p sere nono and the « couerk had ari ty | oe 
gard to him 
i by oe aeoe esa rm two mg ven re restoration 
of th 
These important events are regar rded a 
the e sen The D distinguished an ornament. 
heth | _ The Duke of We.iine’ ay yet of the high deserts of 
whether, if the aired = Bank should be unable to | sir R. Siopiord, remarked that till the cpture of the Castle of 
ecie, the — banks of Phila- | Sau Juan d’Uloa, two or three years ag, by the French squa- 
a would deem it praient to do et an her. The | @ron, his Goa e never recollected an ins, ance in wyich s\ ips: 
bank i ; it is now said to | D&eR Successful against +tone walls. In the case of Acre the gal- 
lavt Admiral had -o -kilfully brought ‘he attacking force to bear 
on ti sea faces ¢f the tortress, that every niased 
og id off My. several millions of dollar ars nikon it was this 
me las st year —The papers contain an account of the 
hi whi ch sailed from Li 
iver- 
rs 
7 sidered th hieve " 
has been center ceaeateh ere yy the eat interest.— goal for New Yor in Dec th times, bul .= ht it his — to warn their outage that shay 
By the same express, we learn fr manu ufactured g: ds. On ca hight of the ah she got | must not lways expect that ships, however weil comm , or 
der in the Desert w ere on ey increase, and t il aye aetaerd When first borgares ae their bey ie : t be, were le m- 
S y dangerous in eoncequnce of the | seen, she lay about a quarter of a mil SRO Eee ee ee ar cnocierenics Mas one tick ode 
Bedouins taking adva ei dk a the absence of the army in sea was Pitatt a breach over her sidsbipe ; str the crew | Rill, the resolutivns were unanimously agreed he 
Syria, to plunder passenge Every t were collected on the quarter-deck. In- oe fi ben yee cee am pyholds was brought in by 
by a troop of Bedouin “itn in the Pacha’s pay; but caltiponte wat this accident soon reached New York ; ke . a oF Fp in NJ ag eS in a further report fro 
it is said that they find plunder more profitable herigh a steamers were sent to render assistance, and ‘all hen the committee appointed to inspect the journals of the Tieace 
obedience to his service. e ue has broken were ee to be saved. —The > New York papers eaten upon former trials «f Peers in criminal case~, which stated the 
the city, and measures have been taken to prev vied n account from Buffalo, yA apt tal eumber ne. oeere. A mS Swe Mee a spe ge re 
spreading. e arrival of the Oriental steamer since the | bad spirit t existed on the west border. A British Weiia «gate allie, ele antties cheattag marten; -aeacal oa fy 
date of the ego ate ig “Bi rings our news down | officer, named M‘Leod, a it is ape as arrested an Lord Baovanam in presenting a petition from Leicester against 
to the 23rd ult. apier had so successfully | imprisoned at Loc ockport ; 3; @ demand for his release rom church-rates, inquired whether Mwisters enero’ to bring tor- 
ranged matters with ie oi that the whole Turkish | been made by the British Minister upon the Am worn Pe measure inti odue ord Neen peers ne? 
fleet left the harbour under the orders of Admiral Walker Government, but the Executive had r efused to deliver In answer to a question respecting tue : ill for the Reform of 
within ten d fter. the firman for its restoration was | him. A Buffalo respect- | Ecclesiastical Comrie, the Lt nd Cha: 
« ‘. 7 . Pret 
read. the 21st po Cairo telegraph anno ed to the | ing the ome of the steamer Careline, and a series of | of jntrouucing it asain sa Sesion, ge og at 
Pacha at Alexandria that Ibrahim and ne ha * inflamma tory r resolution s had ~ m pa seg Peasy tion of duties on the importation of East and West India loge 
rived at Gaza, having returned by forc hes fi added, In the course of his remarks the Duke of Weiliogton 
Syria - Pas e troops were s aid to be in evant disorder and | take advantage of the prevalent ie Ai den], ill, which suspended bas me tice. 
rd Brougham then presented petitions piaying for universal 
suffrage, and for the release of Frost, Jones, «en W: a: 
Commodor re Napier s still remains at Alex upplemental r 
for ae relief 
andria 
to ba chee the settlement of affairs, and i is aid 
h the ]acha, that it was believed they 
ccounts from Beyrout state that 
1 
spattinment. 
HOUSE OF LO 
—Lord ELLENBOROUGH ree aman on from the 
ae a and China A » pra’ fraying fer Teller from the 
now what 
Lord Duncannon vegnens upas 
the trial of Lord Cardiga: 
OUSE OF COMMONS. 
Monday.—The ‘ues adjourned immediately after its meeting 
a four o'clock, in consequence of there being only twenty-nine 
ar 
The toa were engage ed in repairing the ramparts of St. 
Jean d’A The inhabitants of Jerusalem, and par- 
ticularly th severely from the 
excesses of the _and the whole country is over- 
run with rob! whis| apetd, amid the echoes of 
bers. 
banon, that the ion in-law of Commodvre Napier is 
about to be **spliced’” af one of the houris of the Ea’ — a 
poste yo she of the Prince ebanon. From Smyrna w 
of the Armenin id ose gein and the los: 
pet t of Lord Canning, wrecked in the eed Ta 
storm ; the greater part of the tects s on board were 
and ne ie s lost. 
—An express has reached town this mornin, 
bringing news from China down a the 2th Oct. +: appear 
on nged s 
Pekin. 
the Chi 
beige Beer nd by every artifice comm nu Chinese 
i ——— 
Marquis of Lusiiaeulenei uesduy.—Mx. Ferguson took the oaths and his seat for the 
The was of y 
que-tion ca led loudly for attention ; 4 d that, — =~ S| Kasai bu barehs, gmat mags ny bps antes Pin vase = 
yearend noun: mange concerned, th = was ps by ay + RUSSELL, that he monies on ‘priday 
Lord B vote of thanks to Admiral Stopford, and the other officers 
ieee gave notice that he would, on Tuesday, move employe ved i ith siexe ie J ea 
~~ tte wale a ee pes peer eee geet gare. ae e motion of Lord G. nyt eye returns were ordered of 
wel age prere ‘ Seed, Phi of parishes, with the popalatian, in each county of 
Earl Rreon gave nvtice on day t, he would call England and Wales, not comprised in Seat the Pear 
attention relations between Great Britain and Fer-ia. Tan y pine Sedeg of (Sider ae gat 9g ‘eae i) ts 
noe buRY Sronent th the Yeport Of +86 ittee @p- | levied in each during 1838, 1839, 1840. 
pointed to precedents in the case of the Earl of Cardi I wer to. & 4) dsour hie. Bik id oine 
gan. report mended that the trial should be held on thai cacremees . 10d. ..in, the. po t of 
Tuesday, the 16th, and that oh oo eS h.. tes ace of tithe, due from tenants to the Irish clergy, could be paid. As 
= oa h aotaes elf anda maa da to the unt owing by the landlords, the most nou 
sophe rs resolved hes ane ertions had made by the law «fficers of the Crown to recover 
M omacticahs eee bet gt it, and aco portion. was alr y in course of pa eee 
ide mee Let ders wach aspen St > praying Captain PoLHiL. “¥t a question as to a letter signed “ G. E. 
a gs Pa ras a en ward’ ry firtmgs-up of the Anson,’’ conv “the sincere thanks of His soe Highness 
ee ee oes teen eee Leth ope eg hehe Prince Albert to the Loy National Kepeal Association of Lreland 
Tw 2 Suarrespcry moved that the Earl of | for ae sideens on the birth of a Princess.” 
Cardigan be tak ashen = 4 baer f by the Usher of the Black Rod. Nope hea not thought it necessary to make any in- 
e Br 
Me bi Lord 
a few Cardigan appeared at the bar in | gniry pic ee 
vdstody, and hai ing i fai Loy tow leva sie rae ns from Mr. Hume, his Lordshij 
ything to say, was ve 
In answer to a 
Senay. his Lordship if he ved in | that Admiral pods. ‘disapproving the convention en ‘ 
s mod bad subsequen ly con- 
Lord SHAPTESBU RY then moved that Lord Cardigan be by Coma ney poles * by the pate A 
mi cage bd we The motion was agreed to, and his Lords Ship's S| communication ps been forwarded by the Sultan to Me- 
two s ere bound in 5000/. each, and himself in 10,000/. | pemet Ali assurin 
to shear girly ordered. The sureties were his brothers-in-law, ance 
ori ee jects of the pres The Admiral was still at 
Chusan, which had been ft fouod elves unhealthy. Out 
of 3,650 men landed there, only 2,036 were fit for duty, 
chiefly owing to bad diet and want of fresh neat. The 
23.1 
aated 
and the Turkish fleet ne immediately r a 
In answer to leg tape from Sir R. ga the noble Lord stated, 
been the intention of the or-General of ad 
Mr. H. 8. Baring and Mr. H. C. Sturt. The usual arrangements 
for state trials were then agreed to, in conformity with previous 
precedents 
Tt was then ordered, on the suggestion of Lord Duncannon, 
that the House fesene adjourn from Friday to Tuesday, to give 
time chi 
‘The British naval force consis sted o 
Cc 
vember. 
en deprive i 
peror, pleading his good intentio itt 
his inability. He declares that he is unjustly se hari of 
bbing the English of opium, since he ain i # 
Hiott’s petition entreating him to patchy it. € a 
bes Apannns’ 4 of the British in war, but a that 
a d time, 
Thursday —The Earl of Minto moved the thanks of the 
to ‘Adsaiyat Sor Robert Stopford and the officers and men ne = 
Paprd ery 4 on the mon] tors 
encomium On the gallantry and con- 
the E the Engli } wo 
would 
the: ereupon increase their demands ; ‘ea he expresses an | and, without the loss of a single hour, launched Commodore once: the safer course would be 10 make the e 
opinion, that our hey saa gy ‘blockade will draw on N«pier on that career of victory and success which he had - | of one atatime. He then expounded his own views rs 
us ag hosti ility of other tion: tinued to ue undiminished to last. On the same day | the best mode of keepi ywn arrears of equity business, and 
of Cl Commodore Napier landed at Djuni, eded in taking the | res; ine the best i of a tribunal for disposing of ap- 
place in spite of a much superior force, and on the 3rd of Novem- | peals before louse of Lo and the Judicial Committee of 
Ix. ber the contest was brought toa glorious keg org ghd the redus Privy Council; he d Lavage to bring in ae to 
i e the mi pegen: 
eens is 7 pes and no event has pion i | Hon of the for ‘ aie! gazines 522% , readiness, and by rage a ons teed Seamare a eral. F 
since the last sates: of me i political importance. Aff- | every town thrvughout the Lewd line of coa-t, from Tripoli 16 Mr. Lyxc the con-promises to which parties were 
ghani emains The news from Khiva and | the extremity of at ae reduced by cne or other br hee detach- | frequently forced by the hopelessness of getting their causes 
is of a pate ory character ; and although | Ments of our na Commodore his purely | heard. It was admitted on all sides that »he present judges were 
naval services, wwice marched on. shore to oppose the Eeyp- worked to the »:mos'; so that further assis ‘ance was ind.sp:n- 
is the scene of intrigues, the force stattheed ay on both of which occasions he had defe.ted and dis- | sable. The Viee-Chance! sometimes, for long peri-ds, 
cee fronton is expected to able to protect British | persed the enemy; and between these actions he suc- | ynable to hear a je canse, from the enormous amount of 
interests, from signs of either‘ of the cas ers to | ceeded in landing at Sidon, at the head of scarcely a a ions. If it was in Lord ; 's 
the tion occurred in Scinde, on the Ist } ™&2,Austianand B z opposed by about 20.000 men, two judges, when the property in court amounted 
December. at Kotriah ee ig and took the place by sterm, bringing away in his train about | 2,900,000. ste:ling, at least four judges mist. : 
= » between 4,000 Be cOm- | 3090 prisoners. . He trusted that their lordships and the country | when amounts to j. The learned gentle- 
manded by Nusseer Khan, 900 Sepoys, 60 irreg r | would receive what done on this occasinn as an | man concluded by some suggestions fur the constitution of a 
horse, i 0 field-pieces, com d by Lient.-Colonel earnest of what could be d by our fleet d it uo- | Court of Ap sis ae 
arshall. The Sepoys attacked the positio = dex fe y y occasion be called upon to enter| The ArrorNzy. eae aera ae bill was a gr pm 
pate defence waa came post eSpe- | into ti with tormidahle opvor ; and he Mr. Lasoucuwere moved, that the e should next Monday 
: bas 2 the Beloochees til fee “of their | thought the bravery and energy of our nad given the | resolve itself into. a committee for the reise n East 
chiefs and men were slain, Six other chiefs and 132 | be-t answer to all those com of zeneracy Indian and West Indian rum. Last year, on the petition of the 
ollowers were taken ian se r Khan escaped decay of the British navy which had been made in many quarters | Court of d@eglared his assent to the principle 
on-foot, but all th Ag during the last year. On that head be would not aiu one word the East Indies. as favourable a co . 
andl. ensaenition were cap- | more; all must feel that men in the had given a : of. An « pinion had bee» ex- 
cap ; the gis tion as any other of | . 
tured by or “British hove aah lost eee as. sltrre and ten | better answer to t-e calumny, originating, he believed, in jea- | pressed by acommitt-e of the House of Lords, that the eq-alising 
"privates : en were ices. from Madras | l-t-y, than any which be could do. His lordship then propo-e:t | principle, y just in itself, could not fitly be applid in the 
state that Maoce eneral. § or ene addition to the ing i : meate of t » that opini nm he did 
to China in Her Majest nes C was to proceed | ; ices of C pir Charles Napier, of Major-General | net ; and if, by giving encourage « sale of rum, 
y’s ship ruiser, to as the com- | Sir Charles Smith, with tue officers and men of the engineers and | the e evul make it worth while for planters to imcrease 
mand of the land forces on thet Soars illery, of the Austrian Admiral ira, and of the their supply of , that advantage onght to be afforde: to the 
+ ical’ Walker, be made the subjects of separate votes of thanks. {British people. I: an error to suppose that West Indian 
UnerenSr Peng ao : , be made se; t 5 W rt) 
brid, , tothe th ul ae Lord CoLeuzster the-ser vices of Sir &.S'opferd,and ‘| interests would be injured by the proposed « At prs sent, 
weshgt ‘tant, | stated thathe had received the thavks of the from the inadequate supply of West indian sugar, its 
part the affairs. o: It | as ca of afrizate in Lord Howe’s vietory onthe Ist June. 1794, | very high. But the supply of West rum was $) Mm 
appears th: ae panic cana by the publication a. the phe bis gallantry at Copenbazen and at the: capture of te | greater than the demand, that it was oblig ‘a. 
Bank hoes is so great as to have caused doubts om the | p, of Java; and yet, though prewerds 4 the Gontinent ;-ant: thus its governed: by that, wi 
pce at chad been lavished on the -of the fleet, vo distinc. | the $ would fetch ma ket. The effect, 
ee ion ; and that, u “0 ie iakenmaee tion bat bee enaterved om. Sir Re ss pea therefore, of the proposed « q ee cen he ped 2 
shares | esta —— declin 12 | chief on the statim. ‘The noble lord expre-sed his hope that no t price» f rum im England. At the same time h- ad: itted, 
per cent. The op . nit So wag i en ne 3 omg ren pr that theold meme — as oe ee nag a 
spent best pact of: mow extended to 73 years, ) there would be no great gai : the East Indian; : _synem 
weak to resume payments on the 15th ult., the | the active service of his country, would at once be called by his | of restriction hadinit inconvenience, which this mea- 
