May 8.] 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
299 
from Lond don, had remitté 
notes. One was to reg the payment of the balance 
due to England by the terms of the loan, and in case of 
sequestration. e second note was to urge the Govern- 
ment to prevent Greek malcontents from passing int 
Candia; and the reply of the Government was, that it 
i ie . pie 
d ted to have put the ‘Cabinet 
state of great embarrassme mf: 
" Bias STA. —Intellige age received from hays ba in 
5th me the Nev s free fro 
ice down to the sea. On the 
a salute of artillery sabcenecd the opening of "the natige 
th 
tion of the ees an bridg has 
been reported th = the Princess Mary o f Darmstadt t, the: 
bride of the d Duke Alexander, had been attacked 
er face was so disfigured 
Gra 
with the small- eed and that 
It was further pre- 
that she was hard 'y to be recognised. 
ended 
dia was preparing a large force on the frontiers ; for it 
hin the Leoremeng should 
In 
dnt ed pga Be a oe. vd time whether the Br itish 
pee Hs — t coun’ 
wit 
te gov stor by their own law It was, 
wever, understood in s n 
o vacillatin: 
rovinces ; 
was . take the command of 
the army on yg } going into ‘eaiet The Ran nee, widow of 
advan oane S pro robable 
until roe dehiee: The Commander in ‘Chief of A "Bengal 
Presidency was abou g far ther 
eshen a 
seemed nectan’a to fulfil “nis engagements. 
orted, that an imperial edict Had avited from 
Pekin, in Sipe to th 
a Singh 
he coma and bag the oe of which was de- 
ily 
r 
She was wounded in gy mpt 
The ‘settlement of Affghanistan oe pons orb en 
standing various petty ee Schah Sooja eae ac ae 
to be lo oki ing out for future p ospec cts. While e- 
there were others who tne that he was desirous of 
again annexing tle Peshawur to his do Petrdoaapete Te is 
considered a highly pose pie in case the British 
authorities interfere in the concerns of the Sikhs. Pe- 
lia r 
= at hie er foros A Capt. 
the Affghan monarchy. 
» had been killed in on of the 
Douglas a’ and Lieut. _Pigo 
h Chi 
d che mortality is said to be alarmin 
JNITED he arrival, a Liverpool, of the 
royal mail staat ship Acadia, we 
m New York t = ee 
contain is not of pHs { importance. acts of the new 
Pr ne nt, Mr. Tyler, and his opinions, so oan ras they had 
n yet ascertained, ade Ate re i e given general eyed 
faction. A large m s had a he id at New York o 
hich a number ei routlotions were adop' ted, all 
tended that the i 
report, ney. has since been stated 
at foundatio 
n of the 
—The discoason on the p repos for a change 
m has The 
‘WEDEN. 
in the representative syst a close. 
a act itizens sa rejected the 
he chamber of peasants has 
ant of the committe ; 
a a de bate of three days, re chamber 
155 to 62. 
by o es 
ste reserved 
actions.—The Bombay army 
the sudden and afflicting 
movement into the provinces around Quetta. 5000 h 
Sein nde provinces. 
passed ands the Bolan, and 4000 Temained in the 
f Sebbee, 
death of sSuben Harrison 3 3 of unqualified ap — 7 on 
acts durin ng his brief official term, and att the 
belonging to the Kujjuks, three European officers and ited 
ana (T + Co) 
Wilso 
Notwithstanding this 
= 
uts. Shaw and Falc coner.) 
i or f the pew 
President, for personal in ntegrity and honour, and in full 
ssurance that he would carry out t the measures and pur- 
_— of his predecessor. i 
Presi 
was sdvanci 
in, ani 
and Lie 
eteke, the ae ay of Ne hill tribes of _Beloochistan 
The Murrees and other | 
dent Tyler ‘upon the chief _topies of political discus- 
sion ntaining 
der” the eare of Capt. 
will rae made “terms un 
f Ka hun, 
a 
a cmp exposition of his principles, and chicks 
ide entirely with rua ~ the late President. Noung 
the 
extraordinary diet s 
convoke re for even if the proposal should be er sa 
ward again in the next diet, the final decisi m could n 
| by “apron 
all th 
even his enemies. iis = services have ahi aasaionad 
The British authorities in the midst of 
struggle were not iron, preparations for the 
Attock w: ie 8 rtified, and also the 
ing die 
a revolutionary tone eet this event. 
papers aot in ia et | 
mountain passes of Kyher, the Bolan, and Gundawa. 
ms news from ete raion tte Capt. " Conolly, who 
new is site respecting 
Canapa.—The electii 
png only nig wim op public 
to te he going in favour of the 
Lo 
ions iin he united provinces, which 
renew mentioned, appear 
TuRKEY 
peas courier had brought to their panadtive ambassa~ 
as surprised to hear the Khan 
expedition against Chinn, had gone to to Kokhan, in order 
aaaree nm the Governments of Khiva 
conta of the Conference at Lond m the Turco- 
Egyptian question, and the wig h the he preliminaries relative 
to the Darda nelles. _The firs 
e peace 
Kokban Briti painen, it is thought, will thereby 
become coneesable in Central. Asia, and even from the 
been seriously ill on th 
the 7th his health was improving. 
Col. ‘Poster had been 
sits 
affairs of the East, although she has aceniest net to 
enter into any of the deliberations which may end in 
having a direct influence on Egypt. She is further - - 
sians.—In the interior of India tranqui tity prev: revailed: 
PThe late hostile movement at — in the Carnatic, 
ee ef par wn. In Bi irmel ay iinte — wan | 
Settage jeanne ad mi 
no 
“to dem and that two concessions (the nature of which 
1) kh 
r 
ted to the fi 
the sine qué non of t her ceasing to maintain lena bearcagpatcgy 
M. de Pontois, tl 
i The 
Nepatlese were eobing “the progress ce the British 
munication with the other ministers, but. pe him 
bigs —The state of ng is represented as alarm- 
in elicate health, and in- 
self with eae Teserve co neernin g the tre eaty of J uly. 
Taher Pacha, the new C anaging his troo in who were unruly from 
under Suite n Mahmoud, and was de epriv: sin one pa “9 Rassia, it is ated, had guaranteed the 
—. to the = 0 
visited the Grand Vizier and his s ceri ‘inet : Pacha, 
oth of ee en was received with much hon nour. The 
gained 
‘one ; and, Sy ianepe two 
chah’s s uncles e ready 
enemies however, were not idle; they 
a and the "echer on the Frontiers of Aflguanisten. 
ed him on pret rd th 
especi 
has frequently been mention e is an enemy to 
by! his reforms. —Admira 1 1 Walker, it is stated, has 
Eeyrr.—We have received no intelligence of impor 
ance sy Alexandria by the arrival of the Levant ns 
The Pac cha, it | was said, ‘still Strongly objecte d to that 
f Yar Mah omed at Herat. This Ties, who governs 
The determination of the Porte had not 
eer Hoies different European ne were 
in a few 
rangement of the ‘Fagan cme —The plague con- 
monopolies. 
reached een 
ays for the final ar- 
from 10 to . 5 per day. 7 panes ty force of nearly 3 0,000 
men was in the immediate vicinity.—The Pacha, itis ra 
had not relaxed in his Preps arations for defence, and th 
in the arsenal and forts aaa 
even "tee at work at taeht “secretly to complete the = 
fences of the existing fortifications. Ibrahim still con 
tinued ai aes 
Canp14.—Affairs in Crete, it is said, are going 
was well andl = four! Bays whole re having 
confi 
y sons nas Hgts 
, The | ion has a perfectly different cha- 
rhe pent 1821. 
s 
rst incitement given to 
Governor, Mustapha Pacha, and the ron aaa 
Hh not of a #4 
detctory nature. 
The trade had not bee th a 
the 
7 previou: month, Capt. Elliot, a 
y the deputy ruperitendet, the French Viee-C 
and Apes a and milita _— landed at the Se- 
d Bar P had a with the pe | 
was attended by rey foeerbet 
n When 
h 
the presentation of 
of his let 
partake of a banquet which h 
occasion, after ice her Majesty bg Bate tele 
his atten dants re-em| barked. On the 30th Jan. te 
= the island, are said to ha ve attacked 
each other in 
the exist ing s 
pare ses, and w 
Written hegre last om brought 
d. 
ape n 
Ist d Plenipo oteatnry pair 
i of 
visable for ‘British poheateng to wedi 
Feb. 
ly a proclamation to the inhabitants 
h the 
ment, ary ~~ pers. The 
by the Levant mail state ‘hat sme Turkish C, 
surgents, who are —— 
to have set up their ; goverament in w Greta 
prone to administer the c brs var Chita: 
hey 25 
5 ait 
dominions of aa of England, and that » re- 
siding on the island must consider cape sate of 
her Britannic Majesty. It also guaranteed to Chistes 
informing them that the place 
inio! eng 
tian population. nt phd wives aay children 
teirwas, « a carry on the 
the last. 
the preservation of their — property. ‘On the é of 
md are 
Tyota.—By the arrival of the overland mail, 
Resday, we have recent in telligence from cla “shih, 
although not of striking interest, is of bighi In 
y wes 
seal of the United Kingdom, ree Camu ter Majes esty’s 
ofthe g sot Shere are Sigh. The European officers 
Were there by force. 
The Governor-General of } 
ights, royalties, rivileges over the ines eee 
| the Governm: ola oe her Majesty’s pleasure the 
person the office of Chief Superin! roar lg and 
a. Arthur, who has been made a baronet for his services. 
tliament. 
HOUSE OF LORDS. 
—The Duke of Buckincuam availed himself of the 
Pr. pera Ha of 120 Ty ot had been entrust -s to him, 
against any alteration in the existing Corn Laws, to in 
Viscount MeLBovan suite io te he fails dhered, under existing 
circumstances, to the meena aot had formerly made on the 
The noble Duke then extract from the speech 
to. 
ant MELBOURNE admitted that unquestionably he had 
his opinion, though it should be recollected, he said, that 
fa had ar Leg himself as to the ee itself, but aay 4 as 
to Lgl 
yw come, when feves 
sipenicies of the irre & tp ade wdope wide {wide aud 
bv soar ey Pal maioname ae measures Ww! g hone Even ery other 
in the country, when, he cwaek i 
a ‘tin to —_ Pairs Se master griev: 
such circum: 
—eel se 
ded haniporary fon wh bali a wg. Bpsoeo time 
was grounded on e nigra sy ead oh e 
when it might be proper to bring forward 
opinion was entirely gpg eye e pareceii ani tee 
a ircumstances and not on the real meaning and bearing 
e measur 
of 
The Earl of "RIPON, after the declaration just made, wished 
kni ernm 
Viscount MsLpourne replied that most unquestionably the 
measure would proceed on the principle of pfctl 
The Earl of en aces commented in lan; 
the financial plan bro: fo: 
only as regarded the 
also to the colonial maateste of the country. He said 
bot cd 
pert so wage dpder wna Vianad that oe 
it that unabl 
aps 
them chan ene anne te eae dees ie the labouring classes ; 
let how ¢ tak the higher orders, if it must be so; but let them for- 
Leora m placing a tax upon bread, which formed the chief sub- 
ce of those classes. 
Lord 1 Dunream.ine then, pursuant to presented 
tition from the sche eae Minktens © get a pres’ eters of 
Strath ; that their lordships would aos such a 
obeyed t 
the General 
ied by RETR? for ac Opy of x charge) preferred by 
the Generali Assembly against the suspended M 
Viscount Mer RNE said that his noble and learned 
had rightly stated that this was not a question merely whether 
the rights of certain ons had bi infringed upen or net, bat 
e - os a collision between two great bedies im the state, 
ecclesiastical and the legal authorities of Scotland. 
pa nel teat apres ta when 
ft to , On the 
But when his noble and leamed friend him to stare dis- 
