482 THE 
ee wate 
GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
[JoLy 16, 
onerous and important ; a Regency Bill will necessarily 
be one of their first acts, and the issue of their delibera- 
tions may be looked for with great t.—From 
there is little news the prospect of an approaching | ¥ 
pro: i e Session is drawing to a e, and the 
Opposition appears to reserve its strength until the com- 
mencement of a new campaign.—From Portugal we have 
gratifying intelligence that the yee 
and Slave-trade treaties have wee signed by th ste 
tiaries and forwarde o London The ¢ was 
to open the Cortes sini on the 10th, after which the 
Duke of Palmella was expected to enter the Cabinet as 
Secretary for Foreign a co ioe wae the state 
of Syria continues to be of m anxiety. 
The Divan i is determined to eine ithe Yine of om against 
which the Allied Powers have so long remonstrated ; and 
it is feared that a demonstration of hostilities is not far 
distant.—From the United States we learn that the 
mission of Lord Ashburton still inspires the utmost con- 
fidence in the result, and the American papers look for an 
early and satisfactory adjustment of the boundary ques- 
tion, and all other matters in dispute 
t home, Government have introduced a bill for the 
pegs protection of her Majesty’s person, which has been 
gi it has oe both Houses | during the 
at length the 
tual. Bythisa spense 
usual in cases ot ‘high ¢ treason, meet such offences 
as those be have ety been before the public with 
corporal p ment,—a provision which has met with 
one ep probation from all parties. The Poor-law Bill 
as made but little progress ; the clause ? Big con- 
po of the commission for five 
after a warm opposition; 
Ministers will consent to pass a temporar 
bring the whole subject forward at an early eres * net 
ived the Royal as 
second time in the House of Lords, after being subjected 
several material prnciice tions, | in order to conciliate its 
he ny 
Juchess of Kent, wa a her Maen y-at Clarem: 
"he Queen Dowa eduesday visited pete tre 
ospital, accom 
itary Prince of Saxe Me 
he same day to embark at Dover 
— of ares pe 
. . 
morning in Cripplega 
the Rev. Dr. Bomber 
On Monday his, Ro 
imbledon, and on the following aad left town to attend 
cultural Meeting a 
; “uncer 
the: no very aistan 
rending a scene that melancholy spectacle occasione A 
clergyman of St. Philippe du Roule, and the a Neu- 
illy, were called in, but cow uld o 
unction. The Prince ae at three o ee 
Fain left i immediatel announce to the Ministers as- 
sembled at the Tuileries, the event whi ch had delayed the 
arrival of the Kin inisters tenes started 
for the purpose of being near his 
d’Aw , who was at Courbevoie, as so be 
tenth ab yp PW of Paris, The eines ansjorty 
then reached 47 votes, and there remained abou more 
results to be known, which were expected ei increa 
the egssexiga ie: Ser ik th. 
time bid 
more dangerous than 
everywhere believed that if the last 
proaching its natural es phe ha 
al me a abe one comp 
be r 
the aes of 450 nominations were 
the Ministerial loss and 
ced amount of a 
thie Opposition, " the c 
eminent as those of the Ministerial Pett 
— 
road 
e 
ere by m0 meats g9 
indiscriminately with the members of family, The Capita 3ey scene of disorder occurred last week 
followed the Ministers, officers of > citizens.| at the cemetery of Mont Parnasse on the occasion of the 
every class, who had collected on the first tidings of the | interment of auny, a physician, well kno r his 
catastrophe, Several clergymen followed the cortége, re- | violent resubbedd principle he pr ion Was com- 
peating prayers for the Royal dead. It appears that ed reat number of persons in plain clothes, and a 
Prince was alo: the carriage. e carriage, called a perho 2 number of National Guards of the 12th legion in 
lemi-Daumont, carried a tambour in suet which came o ms, and in unifo with ir sabre e 
The startled animals ran ary grave, an 
away, but postilion succeeded in stopplg them when 
they had run about forty paces from the spot re the 
Prince had fallen. The death of the Prince is attributed 
i he s: gay 
the course of a few days. Nothing can exceed the sensa 
on prod ger rye in Paris Ay the event. ‘The death of the 
Prince, who was one 0 
was rega aad ba as fh Sitiopal calamity. The st streets i Paris 
were crowded, and grief was painted in every face. The 
ry fa 
theatres were closed. The funds fell rapidly, fu the 
urse produce uite a panic in 
mgt es ae was 
a ‘by Mini ahents tie f Departments, an- 
ouncing the calamity, and stating ‘that the King | has borne 
irmn Count de 
th the Fren 
ould be idle to speculate on the probabilities 
oss: hich thi 
ue somes ven! nees to whic it may give rise at 
The Elections.—With the een of the melancholy 
fate of the Duke of Or leans, the Pari 
rought 
the returns, caused great mee! in the early part of the 
week, as they were b s so favourable to Govern- 
li r nisl bj en unexpected! 
ede mie Phillips of Wendor hs presen sal Mr ots pi candidates having been returned at in t 
pac * al interest, to oppose Capt. Fitzmau- | first : comprising the rich quarters and the Bo 
rice at the forthcoming election for the county of Bucks. : the other pat. ist Ue at we, ee 
. The fiercest struggle was in th arrondisse- 
nt, between M. Billaut of the Opposition, M. Thiers, 
bee tome of State, and M, 
France.—Death of *the Duke of pe aa is with 
death of the Duc WOrleans, ‘the 
rleans, the Bene - : to ~ 
French throne. The lamentable event mappeent ‘ 
danger, | ‘ earri jage ; 
unfortunately his spurs, or, ad su say, his sword, 
his nentadied loak. This s accident caused him to 
and the Prince received contusions on 
rty Garnier 
—— where as in most dit 
and the wrist. A cere heal congestion 
the shock, and was succeeded by » seating ay Se eet 
Having fainted in the road, his Roy was re- 
oved to the nearest house, poh by a grocer, a er, at " 
assistance speedily arrived from the Tuileries. ceding wd pvt 
as resorted to almost immediately, but the Prince’ di those 
ot recover consciousness. Dr, Baum enin pidibo: 
to be on the spot, gave every assistance 
oyal Hig:.iicss's physician, hated com 
The King, who w preside at a C shinet Council in 
Paris, had quitted Neuilly. He arrived at the spot where 
the dent rre he Prince was being raised. 
when 
His Majesty was accompanied by the peer © ame 
Adelaide, Our readers may well imagine how heart- 
» happening | not m 
e to Dr. doy 
Ne adele Aton = when the of 3 
wing that the Ministers ¢ 
although the Oppoutda had obtained stead vot8 i in as 
FS 
f | that a gold ged! 
body was deposited in a het 
salute fired over it. Four speeches were then delivered 
the first and third being ‘political, and impressed with a 
spirit of opposition, but without goin s be ail certain 
limits; the second, by a medical s » was perfectly 
consistent, being purely Biseriiyhtea- we scientific ; but 
the character of the last was plet tions en 
this la eaker came to excite disobedience, and even 
resistance to the laws, and to a declamation against the 
ights of property, a commissary of police interfered, and 
the Municipa 
this = agitators threw stones at’ t 
armes,” and some ac tually 
This, "Kouiies did not n 
violent, and the restoration “of trangu ne —The righting 
on ace great progre Within 
r than oo streets, rotten ges, esi 
hate received the benefit of this ‘fa: 
—It is stated that a large number of a 
a ave ¢ lately faken econ among the troops engaged on the 
many have contracted fever rainild 
rovin e Lyo ons papers of the 6th mention 
that the rain which fell in that a a d on the pre 
pest day had ret anti dissipated all fears for the 
arvest.—The Strasburg papers cen ey the manufactur- 
fie interests in Alinbe h with a new crisis. 
At Mulhouse a nutnber of cal talibephtitets are unemployed, 
and at Colmar no less than 50 weavers applet for syaee 
ment at one establishment and were sed. Several 
sills yk been close 4, in geen ence of a Vek of water. 
avy.—The ta a report to 
the i ing owe m the afin of M 
an English 
P 
to several of the 
corvette nnd babes had become pee usly ill by eating 
some poisono The report states that when Dr, 
Davies was ssked what his charge aie! he replied, “I 
should be as to receive payment for herr 
rendered to an ‘English ship of war, ay 1 have the 
of ee: ae ae ot late French consu id 
against 617. izot has been elected at Lizieux, and din 
+ Sg sheet af Als. MEM. Debanart, Pusan: Tope Cal that ety. affair of Father Thomas, ‘a ig 
lard, De hag vos and more than 20 other Ministerialists Imports and Exports —The * itis gt ishes . 
have ed. e Government, however, have | the table of French exports and imports 4 ng 1 TH 
cob gat a decided triumph at Strasburg, where a eas tee The chief increase of importation is in Fe and iron, 
urned in place ical | There is a sensible in the importation of ma 
deputy y tte that fog) Of the other great tows B ordeaux | chinery, and a n increase in its export. itest in- 
as returned i being two Conservatives crease of export is in the article millinery. * he export 
M has returned at of woollens 
Opposi- wan 
se wesc ron | 7 and sp an increase. Glass and Bho also phe: 
antes returns its old} Algeria.—The accounts o dehly 
n has toe last dapatth ssnounces ee “the G aes ¥ 
raise, choos- | Abd-el-Kader is brok This chief, former at the 
ecting M. Bar- head of amore fa ie tion than was generally believed, 
es ve lost one vote. | is now an outcast, with a handful of cavalr ie oes ie 
. SF estlg st nearly yor in earnest finished, and there now only r ains to 
ink scatter: vesti 
the greatest evils “Spain is afflicted. ” 
dion of the Cortes was ay sen approaching to a close, thé 
