THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
“Bag 
Sans Souci... The Senate y of Berlin 
has received a reprimand from the Minister of Religious 
Affairs and of Education, for refusing to sanction a society 
among the students of divinity, for supporting the his- 
torical view of Christianity against the attacks of the m 
dern. school of, philoso Th ate modified its re- 
fusal on the g dof its not being able t se to sanc- 
tion a scientific union p socie- 
tend to unchristian principles in the university, 
is said to be very probable that a considerable reduction 
will, shortly take place in the r f postage throu t 
russia: Th in no case to b er than six silver 
groschen, and the lowest. to be one silver gr én.— 
Rhenish journals inform hat an_ une d tumult 
took, place at Coblentz, on the 25th ult., arising from a 
quarrel tha ead from a low tavern into the street, in 
ar 
ere unable to withstand the 
the ae pulace pai 7 ‘am 
vernor-General with a s 
body of troops Sanit ae —Prepar ratic ons are ok 
P 
at Mentz for the meeting of German Natural Philosophers 
in September. The ppc of members is ex sees to 
rea Alex 
whieh was er? a few sien ago in the presence of the K 
of Wurtemberg on the Necker, near Louisburg. A Sider 
250 feet in, length, was completed in thirty-five minutes, 
and 100 pi , 100. tirailleurs, a battalion of infantry, 
a battery of artille a regiment of, cavalry, fie 
over it in succession ah accelerated. paces.—The “ Augs 
a_ letter fos ‘Trieste, Gated th the 
expected 
28th ult., stating cae Mr, Waghorn. is shortly ex 
in that town, to or vice of correspondence for 
the E ia Company by that route, It is helieved 
e in 
ast, Indi 
that. the desp 
before the Marseilles telegraphic despatch could reac 
Paris, counts also point out the importance 
establishing the German line after the impediments 
in the .way of..expres: y, the ch Post-o 
Ration rown, Mae a Asie ips as cere- 
tenhur 
ents,: the e apartmen 
Berzelius i in the University, leah the foreign visitors had 
the opportunity of inspecti e valuable collections of 
the Swedish, Academy... On the, next ientific 
meetings commenced, and lasted six + On the 23 
there. was a visit to. Gripsholm, where t ere are many re- 
markable curiosities...On the 26th all the m a war 
meeting dined with his Nps Sei he King, 2 
following days were spent in excursions to Skoktote ead 
Upsala, OF pik 319 ae ntific men d at a 
e. two from France, one 
walde,. two ae “St Petersburgh, one from Helsingfors, 
and fourteen _ from Norway; no English visitors are 
mentioned... fi 
M Son prod thi 
island by the prosecution on the part of the Crown of 
Signor, S, .V. Camil 
iovanni Fenech, two clerks 
or - 
ancient pine 
th sggrvatn g circum 
avoid parcel ost. rigour of the law, Ay conse- 
rte yee of Malte i ina sme English gig. ea! by Water- 
Dy Via twen ee voour HOPE P.M., a 
water calm 1, the 
nto Lig current, and performed 
an e.. first two hour 
ee jittle short. of sixty pales t in Hiactiar hou 
eight minw pac ane thirty-three seconds, 0 did ee Aone 
round the w a4 ot Gozo, an bE the 
d reas s d Malta. He arty 
four-oared Ma Itese "boat gk eal c distane, wich had 
les of f the gig, 
a ouble joel relieve ree other. 
Man ndant on the feat, which 
plished 3 ina ravaetls manner with nine hours, ved minutes, 
q 
ee as 
and twenty-seven seconds to spare, Mr. Wilder havin 
allowed himself two hours’ rack on i excursion. P 
advi ces from 
in t ttoman min 3 are con- 
sidered the precursors of the fall of Izz ehemet, the 
rand Vizier. It was expected that his successor will be 
ve venerable peste ew nb the se hbhe graced 
ort time since for rapt pra It was also 
ewan that "Reschid “Pacha Foul recalled from 
Paris, where he now is as yan Sakon hid resume his 
place in t n Councils. The It of these 
changes we probably be the hone tac, of the hostile 
attitude of the fe hci For 
emanci zs rule from its difficulties, and pre- 
wre the integrity ye ‘ts empire, during the ott oe nt 
ministers now about to be recalled.—There is no- 
thing new as to the Persian hostilities, escent that their 
defeat at Suleymaniah, by t ow stated to 
ad rast much exaggerated. The Me Phage het 
troops on the of Minor, ey on that of Syria, 
as had assured . Ambassadors that it vill sai come to 
af 
I eo ATES.—By the vy a of the packet-ships 
North America, Hottinguer, and Roscius, we have receive ed 
intelligence from New York to the "25th inst. 
ill ha 
passed it, with some amendments, by a majority of 116 
iG Aye that Cong 
Ist August, was rejected by a majority o An angry 
correspondence — passed betw Governments “a4 
rdicted from trading with, ram emigrati 
m 
England. The Pres as issued sage on 
the 2 29th June, in hice he confined himself ‘principally 
that the public lands be dis ees of in order to defray the 
Government expenses. The N rleans, Union, and 
the Meckenh ? and Traders’ Ban nks, have ye d pay 
t.) "The ae of Louisiana was only one which 
continued to m the deman its. creditors. r 
d been Shane and hi 
any personal violence. The papers by the 
vey the seins assurance that the negotiation between 
Lord Ashbur the Government is satisfactorily | 5.4 
concluded. The line e me 
o 
rican territory about 100 miles <p oa and 12 broad 
We s give up the free navigation of Ba! St. John above the 
Great Falls, pand. Rouse’s Point on L Lake Champlain 
Frenct tN: ee with 
commissioners on board, on their way to the southern ports, 
Havannab, Ve era Cruz, Rio. J aneiro, Buenos Ayres, &e., for 
out a super ay eee 
blishment by the French Government of a line of steam- 
packets between France, the West Indies, and America. 
Ca A— tle news from Canada. ual 
robberies of arms and ammunition had taken place on the 
frontier under some a me 3 xt, Lord Morpeth w 
at Mon —The arrivals of emigrants this year 
Que to the latest ¢ date of return, are 31,938; in the 
sh s 20 vessels gaya that port and 
ort space of two ae 
d more than 5,000 
West Inp uw2The RR at Mail steamer, Tham 
piven s at Falmouth on Tishhday y morning bringing only the 
“ie pecs ome island mails. We ha Lo mcipetili Havan- 
salen pom is vessel. “The er re- 
mined a for days at Nassau waiting for them ; but 1 not ar- 
ving, the captain did not feel authorised y ‘detain the 
Antigua and at Barba 
Charles Adams had arriv 
sailed in the Illustrious, on the 
Report of a eae epee appoi 
to collect evidence respectin ves 
has just been published. “The ‘Committe state i — the 
St. Kitt’s 8, an 
slaves in the West In 
a rds the charact ond Pp 
nm, of the most sieoeants sé and grat ing resulta, 2s 
setae sormen in the of the the negro. 
te 
colony ‘i 
time to pret iqady} is proved by abunds 
of sin yowventer and increasing desire for reli and 
struction ; a growing ng. disposition to pbabanDRe 
civilisation, and.an d f the yalue of pro- 
y and independent station, . Th unhappily, 
ere has occurred, manned uy with this am t 
r the condition of t very great diminution 
n the voy qreducions ai of ‘the West Indies, to such an 
sane have caused serious 
pe a rt a to pret ten te) ; 0 
nies. 4, That while this distress has been felt to a much 
the 
hat the principal 
inis production “and consequen 
0 
the planters for mor n three or four days in a week, 
nd from five en hours in a day, so that they have no 
sufficient stimulus to perform an adequate amount of wo 
That this state ises partly from the high 
wages which the insufficiency of the supply of labour, and 
heir competition with eac er, naturally compel the 
ocagy ds to Pays ee is principally to be attributed to the 
ich the use of land has bee 
tainable a 
slaves have been enabled pu 
labourers generally are allowed to occupy provision 
grounds subject ‘to no rent, or to a ve Ww one ; 
and in these fertile countries, the land ‘they ~ aa hold 
as owners or pts gt only ample 
supply of food, but in cases a considetab le overplus 
in money, altogether independent t of, and in addition to, 
9 
the high money wages w they receive t the 
cheapness of land has thus been the main cause of the dif- 
ficulties which ha “ perie ; and that this cheap- 
ness is the natural result of the excess of ile land 
beyond the wants of a: existing aaa pen 10. That 
in considering the anxious question l 
of what practica 
rem e best calculated to check the increasing de- 
‘fectaeow! of West Indian property, it therefore appears 
t i sted by judicious arrangements on 
ng 
pensate for this serene atreuh i of labour, is to von 
te the i hips da se os to 
t. 
question, oe it is not required b 
just rights and interests of the 
e ukieate welfare of ane hegroes them 
sheen as ‘ag 
ially in consideration of the fan ok ae 
which it is h 
selves 
tion to the tabouring popu oped ma 
soon be eff y immigration, thatthe laws which 
regulate the relations between em and labourers 
the different colaiies ae undergo pity and setae re- 
vision by their respective Jegislatures. 
ee eauieneicadien 
4Barliament. 
HOUSE OF LORDS 
Se cgay 1 —The House met to get tole, Savion routine bus 
Several bills were yey “se up and read a Arst t time, among 
hich were the Exche oot Bill, the Ecclesiastical gaa 
Ba, ps’ Bill, the Bonded Corn Bill, and 
several private Bi 
Monday - 
Ss Fortescus moved for returns of ontrages re- 
ported to 44 constab , of which, he said, there had been 
a oy vied increase Saouh which ‘his 
ad be change 
Ribbonm: 
cadyostot of foe Dake of idee ay sernd acceded -t 
pace cng = — ribed the incr agin tg report ny ag me 
and eficiency 
of J 
‘ived at Cent “go say ae me 
y unimpeachable w: 
guilt of the prisoners.—After a ry 
ae peti and the Earl of Wioxsow, the Baal of @ Gi ; 
aring 
