a ee 
4b THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [N° 27, 
effect the liquidation of the Sulphur | on the Bosphorus, and the Vessel was sent to the island’ of | hrc nom failed, and a rising throughout the country 
Com - The “the. Nespitn yoga iat however, had Prati, in the sea of Marmora, and the Chief of the Qua- | was expec ected to be the Tesult ; in the Bales re affairs 
found, in its own resotin, = the mane re con "The my was still —- 
liquidation. Advantageous fers, geen were made | tagion extending to y the city. The bettee heap class | open revolt, and Shere Sing completly in their po 
Fe rg mgr tert Mae ape No loan has | of Turks are said to be as much alarm ed. 
been taken, but the Government ias consented to give at | the plague as the Franks; and those pee F then who a | The Persians had evacuated Ghori are Was 
* 44 per cent. the sum of 800,000 duc:ts in Royal Bonds. | few years ago r egarded quarantine regulations with con hands of pi King. or Tokkeet 
This negotiation, it is said, was effected with the house of | tempt, l Everything was quiet, and supplies abui ndan t, i in pre 
prs eae —The Diario i di Roma anncinces the death ecanDtA—The news from this island is somewhat con- ery distur 
aged 112 years, ictory. of the 9th ult., re cise but there’ appears to be no probability of the British 
fig agar two years ago, wee she began to feel the in- uct a battle had taken place, to the _advantage 0 entering it. The eryrord tape are considered as very 
firmities of age, she enjoyed perfect health, and all her | insurgents; the Turks losing 175 , in order to influence the public mind 
intellectual ties were in full vigour.—A letter from | 35 men. bibiegel fing from Constantinople also sta ate | in favour of that invasion. coer Ventura had arrived 
Leghorn mentions the total loss of the Marseilles and | that the news received by the Porte bt own epee ; | at Kurachee, from which he ex d to proceed to Bom. 
Naples steamer Pollux, which formerly plied between | other sichenios on the contrary, assert that the advices bay. The policy of Lord Auckland i is described as being 
Rye and St. Valory, by a collision with another steamer. | Were favourable to the gong: pete Pache had an- | now decidedly pacific. 
There were forty-six passengers on board, all of whom | nounced his intention to a general oF agate on the | invasion of Affghanistan by the Schah has subsided, both 
saved, wil of insurgents on the 30th alee. it appears that m 
+ Greece.—The intelligence from Athens comes-down d th s well as the willingness of its Monarch : to 
to the 9th ult. The National Bank had not yet com- | the insurgent force in the field amounted to 15,000 well Pa En i nd.—Two small forts have been taken i 
menced o) tions. The King of Bavaria had offered to | ar med n men. Private correspon ndeni nce, dated the 8th ult., ey meme - deguit one of them, Chirgong, ersten | 
take 150 shares, of 100 drachmas each ; and four or five he 4th have bee very gallant affair, and the Indian papers 
ther capitalists had volunteered to vest funds in the es- phi pected and | Russian Consuls, expressing their | give long eet | of the operations of our troops,— 
i chari <ing his |. gratitude ith Tal hir Pacha, and their coon received at Bombay state that the Dutch were 
tending thei uests on the wes! 
resignation ‘Of inistry of the Interior, of Ecclesias- offer 4 cong t coast of Sumatra, 
tical Affairs, and Public Instruction. His Majesty had | to Greece ce, but announcing at the same time that it was se possession of Pulo Nias, and about to occupy the | 
accepted it, but requested him to continue to direct those | resolved at a meeting of all the chiefs to die rather than | port urmoon. Great financial oie prevailed in | 
two departments until his s sors were appointed. | abandon their native por Batavia, the result of the 1 misconduct 0 f the Java Bank, 
M. Mavrocordato, whose return had been expected with Siestes vase t was reported that the Colonel of an y does | 
much anxiety, had arrived, but had resigned the task of | Albani i had and was almost en 
forming a ministry. It was the general opinion in Athens, | gents, wh f Sphaki&, wh irely confined to ea Bent frrtnork e has been much dis- 
that the Turks would not be able t the Can- | they were secure from a surprise. It was said that a| cussion as to the causes of the late mortali among the 
dian insurrection. | A report reached that city on the 8th, steam- haree was Mag ra d from Suda to Preveza for a troops at Chusan, which seems generally attributed to 
" i li ‘wire. reinfor nt of Albanians. mismanagement. The dates pr China are not later 
it was said, the Turks had massacred the Christian popu- Santos: The senate of this island has delivered judg: d in the previous despatches ; but it 
lation. ment in the case of the prisoners a es with having | is stated that the acta ger of goods outside Canton 
+ TurKEY AND Syrra.—Th i Eight were sentenced s immense, and that they ere expected to be thrown 
supplies us with intelligence from Con bette ma tg > hard labour le, six to exile, two to two upon the eareg The cet contain the proclamation 
7th ult. The Sultan’s health was improving. There onths’ eaprlsouian we the tw sages were acquitted. of the the Chi en, declaring that all foreign 
were rumours of changes in the Turkish Ministry, the Mata Bey, to whose exertions , 
influence of Riza Pacha being om the decline. Hafiz be mainly indebted for ‘the. pacification of the island, onftted itted to cakes th Wham , and promising that no 
Pack ioned as likely to reph Mustapha Pacha | hii foes or obetructon shall bé inal to commerce. The 
in the office of Seraskier. The affairs of Candi ti Baver.—Our letters bose nd Levant bes ee ee “* Canto: states that: the English ships of war 
to give great uneasiness at Constantinople; and the from Alexandria to the 7thu dt 
vent had sent fresh supplies and raiaire cements to} 25th May. h t i led d 
Private letters inform us that the ‘accounts of the acceptance of the firman by Mehemet An It was | the evening of the Doth March, the guard Bert ipher 
ig every mein g pacar) fick aed 10th w pethegh soxtser of the the ee 8 has never since been hoisted. The further de- | 
in Bulgaria were not vires it is said, h settled bya te firman government are stated to be that all | 
0 sition. The Porte, as well as the | and so modifies etic wae Eo ected t o be made fa it— the English ships of war are to leave the river, the fort | 
envoys, nestly engaged in considering the | The P. fe nd island of North Wangtung to be evacuated and surrend- 
ving repose and security to the Syrians. and to pay his tribute in foreign specie, which he was evel to the Chinese, before any trade as usual can be re- 
It is proposed to separate the financial, civil, and military current at low fixed rates in Egypt, with | commenced. 
authority—to mod taxes and customs—to confirm | the intention, it was supposed, of m for the Raye RS uymaN Gece 
past religious se ndimmunities—and to declare | payment of his tribute, and profiting by the great differ- | 
Jerusalem a free city peor ata, arm wsais The | ence of exchange, when calculated in the depreciated) fon rie eontow Priligee idle for the opening 
iffic appears to consist, howev: the separate | currency of Constantinople.—The promised freedom - claged at 89% buyers; Three per Cents. ba ne 895 5 
government of Mount Lebanon, independently of the trade had come to nothing, and ers were carried Three-and-a-Half per Cents. uced, 99 ae Bank 
Syrian Pachas The. Fellahs were accused ‘of Stock 1684 to 94; Exchequer Bills, 10s. to 2s. prem. 
Emir Besehir "s family, with a written Taw and z an agent ar secreting their gMrventns “fren the Pacha’s collectors, and — 
representat ; t cruelties were practised to’ bring them to light. 
__- from Beyrout, received through Alexandria, confirm the | They were forbidden to oll ipeabip's boationd Ot iaanek = HMetropolis and its Vicinity. 
eding accounts of the anarehy: reigning in Syria. The | except for secon 9 a ‘cha; ators of d The City” Election —On Monday 7 Tuesday the City pre- 
state of affairs in the mowntains‘of Leb daily be- | Franks’ boats hi emptied of their purchased pro- pro- | sented an appearance Pair t is said, has not been 
coming more serious. The Turkish authorities had not | duce into Lad Pacha’ s stores, and their boats d, with- | witnessed since the days oi f Mr. ‘Wilkes, Bg ori Monat 
pr dig 7 we ae Sam of the new tariff, but an y ey the grain required by the Govern- | the day fixed for the a of the candi 
illegal in Beside ment Abana, The > had diminished to seven | the Guildhall was crowded, at an early hour, by ani fas 
gine! goods € cases daily i n the latter city, isen again in Cairo, s¢ num!  biciuls We ess the procee ; 
varying from eighty-five to one hundred per day. In| ings. The gallery was filled w So great, how- 
a twenty-five cases were the daily number, and at | ever, was the noise and tumult th prevailed, that the : 
sO tta a regiment of infant several candidates and other persons who address ed the 
Unirep States. — By the arrival at at Liverpool, is said, t in 
Tuesday, of the Acadia rere from Halifax, in a the consequence, howe of or goat ini tebe by th 
extreueibiart short space of experience ced than might fins 
papers to the 15th ult. aaa: fly fill page <n of 
with the proceedings ments he Caceres! The | classes. On Dives the day fixed for the election, the 
state of the'relations between the United Si iG it t that prevailed thecaghout ithe Cit ity was still 
000 were th Britain had been brought under the consideration of the greater ; business ap) to be entirely a: a stop to, 
: jf this rate of imp Senate by Mr. Buchanan, who, in prdposing to refer th ni in thn afer pat of he sy more partic ularly, ~ 
becca he “pp the silk harvest, part of the President "s message tha’ t related to f 
— about t middle of August, that a general affairs to the committee cwhich had the charge of thew ing th i the election ; 
erection wil take pce, and the Terk rule most | entered at phoma 1 examination of fn, tok which, he sage tone h Snenean uke 
flowers had, on their return, c id conflagration of gprs ae a 
occurrence. . c e 
hae their “enemies ad great fouls Newsiot [aid vee astae ek the condition of the U: bore P aimee popesepersroong Br was not officially an- 
putation from the Lebanon was preparing to repre- sould be over alarming inthe event ofa war Auer erica | nounced until the following day. The result will be seen 
i. No other 
but th tion could attack her without suffering as much from Altempt to Destroy the Pictures in the Royal Academy 
Eleni ct nd i woul only petition the bedi, she woul e did not, however, deem that there ee wanton outrage, which has created much 
Sultan.. arcl ieanvas on the 2nd | was any risk of war; but on the event of its coming, he | excitement, has been discovered at the Royal Academy 
uit., a firman, presence of the pri- | wished the law of nations to be so as to put | Exhibition. Upon the porters of the institution going 
mates pecadlioay — reo esd = ‘air nant Minaag Po rte | them rig right in the @ eyes of the world. The debate ended round the rooms, as it is their custom at dusk, to racer 
i t h heir attention was at- 
Affairs. The President had submitted his plan for the | tracted by the appearance of dust upon the picture, by 
vag’ in person to presente to the welfare appointment of ‘a fiscal agent,” which Congress Me = Mr. resin of ** Mary Queen of ait poilat Hawking,” 
| take ~~ cons found | to be caused 
, and use their spiritual powe consideration without which, u el i i 
3, pon a closer inspection, was 
good order.—The © Terk | Ixpta ano Curva.—The Overland Mail, which lef havi j out th xy Sgere 
os uae! greene Bombay, " May 23rd, arrived on Monday at Marse illes. portrayed —— canvass. This discovery created am 
ee the new rabbi Telian pe 
5 pro- | Gordon Bremer was still at —— on the 8th bby Ma Se 
. where he —— = but it contains no new m China. —The ne ews from | at destruction were found ah, EE the so 
from 
sants of M. 
making in the three Bare an for further reinforce- net,” by Mi. Corbett. - A picture by Mr. M‘Clise. comp 
% ments to China ; the Queen and ey of “Hunt the Slipper,” in illustration of the Vicar of 
ah PS gr 
