Sert. 4.] THE GARDENERS cetee. : j 587 
i ht that tk ing of the D Id the success of his mission. i Larissa, whither he imagined all the di 
‘a good deal of t ap ork, he the Pope intended to a to yon baa Ali, | spirits of th mding ee tok tj 
Y Gn wp this week i: of = a return for some alabaster we my 7 he After waiti iting her in ight hours, 
fora ahine. and commercial affairs are Testoaian Pacha had presented his holiness ted t e tot 
to assum at Vie ona, & less alarming aspect. The fi funds beauty oe that has been ‘done « of the kin ur ae oo attack i of baa, where the Tarkish fom resides. 
I N: 
of the population of Naples, made ha had. however. in 
of 
as an the a naen ated, w 
East, and were waiting to en ate r ne Dyes extensive 
siubabitent th — amounted, on | veral reser of Albanians, ain marched forward to 
the ist Jan., a 337,865. The births had been Bah. meet pd insurgents. oa they totally routed after a 
speculations until all the serious questio! 
ag uarter of on Pacha 
i LE aul pean armaments inn occasioned a ch 
ths 13,465 Among the latter was that of a wom short resistance ; and thus ended an ao ee whi 
at 103, and ‘those of ee betwee n 90 and 100. t b t 
ithou with 
but which ay is F shague may 
ge 
League has at leng di 
laws, published in that city. It states that the t 
en the breach previously existing between the two 
and it is added “that they will be on an extensive scale. * waren 
Negotiations have commenced already with — view for| Turkey anp Sy A 
concluded between Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony, W iokee tae 
Baden, the Grand Duchy and Electorate of Hesse, the 
Sta ingi on 
so soon | mention the anbahs in x thet city ay an agent of a aa 
as these purchases have been completed the works will be | Sh Sheriff of Mecea, Moham med Ebn Aun, This rrince has 
commenced. A commission of ill 
te will 
es of T' a, Nassau, and Frankfort- he-Maine, | is to be > appointed by the Minister of the Interior and | the | confirm him in his Government. The Env voy of the Porte 
for twelve years from the Ist Jan. 1842, to the 31st Dec. | Roya Selim ffendi, had been well received in Arabia, but the 
1853 ; subject however to certain modifications and addi- | of = work men; and many interesting discoveries will no | Div van still appeared desirous ha leaving the arrangement 
i specified at ee le ength, but which wo uld be of | doubt be made.—Letters from Turin state that t the King of | with Beng 5 ed Ebn Aun to the Pacha of Egypt. In 
little interest ti ided Sardinia still ‘entertains the br oje ect of cutting a tunnel | the n time the Sheriff was going 
Lar the Bl a had already got together 60,000 Bedouin 
made by the former government of W si in the between France a and Ital e necessity for ow Arabs. Subsequent mans of the Pith vait., in- 
oh 1808, 1810, and 1812, and which has long been a the _ Pre road over ee Cente is allowed; the new | form us that the an has p ding Tahir 
I pass by Oulx followin ng the course a Pacha, on his return pion Conds with an expedition 
th y d, as as nothing be | the 3c Deir, and ing a narrow valley in a north- | against Tunis.—The Supreme Council has resolved to 
done until there ‘i pesvcarg dh » leading directly to the foot of an ele- eecept a tribute from the popu ila tions of the Lebanon, ia- 
governments. A Tetter from Baden states that the railwa ‘ay | vated peak, th can be readily cut, as | stead lin other parts of the 
left b g with activity. | its pas will not be more than 25,000 feet. This tunnel | Ottoman empire. It is hoped that thi: ‘angement may 
At Carlsruhe the works have _been commenced o nm the | will come out in a valley which joins the pass of Mau. d i 
| rienne and the pe road below St. Michel. Canpta.—Intelli ligence received through Athens, of the 
gate. On the 16th ult. a contract was accepted for fur- Ruse14.— Intelligence received from rom Bessarabia, dated | 12th ult. —_— new details relative to the termination of 
nishin 6 80,000 q uintals of rails. . The section from Ke! bl the6th ult that notwitl nsurrection in this island. From this statement 
ate to Carlsruhe, it is thought, will 
to subdue the sapapte of the ep the news from | it Gotlib appear that the rebels were betrayed by a Certain 
da 
end of 1843. The railw ser etree Cols and Aix-la. 
Roussot Bo urdoumbani, <i paceman 
ogne 
d atrial was made on the 
I s 
22k ult., which was in e espect satisfactory. The 
Aix. the Russian arms. of the Sphakiotes, and bribed by the 
Swzpen. —The g t ding toa] from | Turks, and opened to them into the interior. 
Stockholm has, in conformity with kl y published Upon this, a ‘portion of the the Looper took refuge on 
ceremony of opening was tak for the Ist inst., and t 
line will be o opened for the use of the p ublic on th e 6th 
1 and the rest divided themselves 
mais erection “of two vast cellular prisons, one _at the into small bands, i in the hope of still being-able to resist 
f that city, an and the other at Oerebo, | the Turks. The chief of the late provisional Government 
wards and forwards, and no goods are baer] the chief town of the province of Neri wn It is also de- has declared that his intention and that of his colleagues 
The Ba on 1 rallmay between Aix- “e-Chapell and clared | fe ihe the i ntention of the King to abandon ndon the Candiotes, and that the English 
oe Sware and it i: i t against their will, after 
that tl se ill be comp! pad in \ eighteen | months. | mn harika oe several similar come aman tooatag at several places to spread the news of their de- 
Thet third portion of the railroad from Berlin Grerece,— Advices received em Athens of the 12th 
on the Oder, by Dessau and Karttig, b has also been opened ult. were not satisfactory, an and a ip de m main was feared | EoGypt.—We learn by accounts received from Constan- 
lo the public, and the King of Prussia has authorised Th | Gazette of | tinople, that Mel hemet Ali, in addition to his other mili- 
he construction of a railway from Breslau to the the: 27th ult. publishes a Becpatsh f the French Cabi y pre eparations, fleet, and 
tiers of Saxony, passing through i country, addressed to the | is bui 1 ssel of the line, six frigates, and as 
Goertletz.—The Frankfort Papers publish the text of riba Powers, on the llth of August, 1841, which many sloo} ops of war, which he intends _ mounting wi. 
commercial treaty, concluded on the 22d Oct. 1840, | seems to have produced great sensation. After enumera- | French cannon.—The Overland M ail intelligence 
; between Prussia and the States of the German Customs’ sn cage hipea rifices m ade by Grea t Br ritain, France, and to the 16t h ult., perves that the Sultan has Tedu ced the 
Union on one part, and the Ottoman Porte on the ot ssia, i Mae 
This treaty, which is the same in effe that between ae to pe the increase in the posters oa a —— to half that. amount, The Consuls of of 
reat and the Porte, nlnsane ce being made for Gree, ire reign of agriculture, and the augm rer a a, England, and Russia, bad arrived. 
certain necessary modifications, is ased on a footing of | of the p revenues, which, it says, no we anp Cutna.—The 
reciprocity, and relieves German I in which it sees the indi 
: charges exacted in Turkey, power, which might be paralysed or compromised 
Ste ae eeeomats received through Hambu arg, lt weakness or neglect of the administration. Altbough 
the 19 itting that King Otho and his people have alone the 
19th ult., mention a rumour that Lord Palmerston 
gov 
9g energetic note to the Hanoverian govern- | right to an dangers, 
ment against the vers the negotiations respect [sak . but nevertheless real toa eee 
duties | Stade, and declaring that the lish } French Government deems it expedient that aig 
Sy, would only consent to pay a duty of I-1Gth | Powers, parties to the t treaty of the ath July, If 
cent. cc s add that it was believed that | those wh b 1 
the Ei uld send. Sai vessel | 
of war to the Elbe to protect the rights of British subjects. | giving it advice, s, calculated to ward off an impending cata- 
. f il of | Thi 
Ss, 
eel of the express this morning has put 
of the detai Is of this iaeligesee The accounts 
a) on oe 
relations with the Greek Govern vernment, should unite in 
ind ppos' truce allowed to 
Argau, and other de uties, have lished rival influences, whose opposition might be cause of | the British, and state that the allo red 4 
Setting forth that car the ei ; ee ? discor rd in _the country ; it should vag ‘matured, Elliot, fee which a large re of tea had been 
nad gia 5% except those connected with th d at tow | t ecte > other obj vik 
vents ; t t] ents. far the third ti spe Ce 
twenty years, had ue ee TS t ¥ continues te proclamations, not only anieg 
acre Suppressed. At t the invitation’ of the Diet, tower rity, without which cs ons heap to o be pease | the in odd ot Diopent y, but also — toot of Poe 
Tents and devoted almost the whole of ther e pinion of F ieegnimnrtrg mort eeventiy- _ & Jengh wine tet mas collecting. in the 
; ee cinaton 0 ste Gos tholi but more than thi ick eid yal prt, Sse ch » beta’ 
not cede, ev violence. In the meeting of chG prepa Gos one Se , 
ae Diet on the 23 23rd, ie teges fot Legos foun ee cease Oe oR owen their own soldiery as m 
F anguage. Th gau, the Canton adjoining | G imparting to tl Greek Governmen 
Areas, were also brought under discussion by a a7 the activity, regalarity, gud cvpmounes ween 5 needs, 
Thargauian convents had, it seems, gone beyond their obvii abuses and preparing the way 1 nea 
and got into debt, and the state took the adminis- | ous times. For that purpose it might sui 
Means 
tration of their Property. The monks, however, complained | the attributes of the Council acy State, by aly ee ta to ayer! 
that enouch 2 +t. 
: Were prevented from join joining them. Gi saga Raat, nad Bi stalds comech ie heoweeioe ee noe | 
| tion 
admitted the latter fact, but said'that the monks were 
i ay eg 8 
: et one oak te reception here, 
# -ward with his small force mats aceon heper: 
by ——— Are 
of the gpa These are the reforms which France 
invites the other} plans for a 
of the district. 
‘alengza moved for- 
