‘ 
atl. 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
611 
passed th he day i in Neer oi gallery of Pictures and the 
ggg collection. On the 3lst he set out for Amster- 
__ The object of his j journey is to view, ie the secon d 
. me, 
scqusintance with the Dutch system of embanking and 
draining. 
ot a tw ony ed in the * bisergh of 
ednesda y that intelligence h d been received of the 
death of the King of Hanover, after taking an ice wae 
heated, at the review of Dusseldorf, on Saturd. y- The 
information w aid to be derived from a gentleman 
ho had arrived direct from Dusseldorf; no such 
tidings have been received at His Majesty's apart- 
ments in St. James’s Palace, but there is teaso 
to believe Is seriously indisposed. The 
howe laid do 
the ission i interfere with fun tal 
constitution of ae is understood that the King 
inte he decides on the 
he establishment of a general railroad ¢ com- 
munication between t 
a; A Bil I respecting — a where private rights 
of property are ed. ** Suabian a ercury’ 
says that the sha Cantatas eee ot renewed 
tween Russia and Prussia, but mer aig a provieloual ar- 
een until fuller negotiations are entered into and 
mpleted. The King is aking a tour through his 
Catholic plates and oe en very well received at 
their chief town, Munster. He i his way to Cologne 
where aaa rman potentates are assembled to receive 
him. T g will there perform a great Teutonic 
nity, that of laying the first stone of the re-edification of 
the ar Hep cathedral. eek a curious spec 
place a 
wee 
took place at Berlin, of which there is scarcely an exam- 
ple in modern times, at le Germa a ing 
masquerade. This spectacle was given by the pupils of 
oyal Swimming School erlin, in honour of 
e 28th? annivers of blishment, which 
formed 23,360 asque- 
the Archduke Joseph. Of the gigantic work now n pro- 
gress, wird coffer-dams pt in cu ubical | dimension 
by any e tein construc ers 
and w 
aente “ose those on on "Pesth side, whilst thee Dn the 
a side are in an advanced stage. 
leted, the stone was iid in the His 
i ina, the chief pro- 
Clark, resid 
the work, his Highness presented 
liants, and gave 106 —_ ts (50 
ce. The conve f the by the proposed 
route will a little or no delay, ror will cost a much 
now gat 2 e 
mail to ugh 
provided Tensan steamers are 
The plan is at 
Post-office 
smaller. 
Austria t the 
minions w Be is arge, 
employed = pitch it to England. 
8 moment under the cons sdtenBos of the 
mall perm 
authorities, and, if ado opted, will ney this country Mpa 
independent of the Fren ost-office.— Accounts fro 
Rome of the 25th ult, announce that the three thane 
built in England for the Papal spinster had at last 
reached that capital. The ready given proofs of 
the solidity of their construction, vite 3 the space 
hours, to thr laden, from the 
to fe bi he river 
Tt was likewise stated that some Sar aes — taken 
place bebweat the Cabinets of Vienn 
urt ~ Bala, should 
cage there ke stri 
Sw ti ike —The cantons of Being; Soleure, Argau, 
and Bale, have formed a kind of commercial unio 
the abolition of all international duties. isi 
ened with an oF osion. 
severe on the c 
ars 
actually ex- 
changed. One m the noe but the 
Cc d it becam 
man was much hurt in 
ay ier 4 . 3 
eS 
more serious. 
URKEY, PERs1A, AND Syr1a.—The accoutits from 
Constantinople of the 17th ult, Spit by the Levant 
mail, are destitute of impor No “Feng had 
he Persian frontier, and the Porte appeare 
rehension of fresh hostilities in that 
quarter. The relations etd en t 
acha, 
jf oruies through the Archipelago.—Private letters of ‘the 
same date confirm ate A hep advices, that accounts Ait 
Erzeroum ed, which posi ri — ced 
that hostilities ha ¢ tess Settee n the Turks 
ue to the power 
u fetenfaadin of England. The merchandise racpretd bd 
f 
mah at t 
e on to Persia. Within a few days a caravan a 
2,000 erie had left for the ane destination, escorted 
by a age force of cavalry, ordered by the Pa cha of Erze- 
rou The Persian Commandant received it at the fron- 
tier, hid sent | ‘an escort with it to ph ntinue it oveibl The 
rt + 
Porte pags s soon ible, an 
ambassa ta ibeteny to betnifniats all the d aerences db 
Reecmehe negotiations.— Advices from aires t announce 
that the French squadron, unde A Lasusse, 
rived there he 8th ult. It consisted of two ships of 
e line, two frigates, th: aller vessels. The 
British squadr ome ths 
since an officer of a Frenc war having been in- 
ted be Pac Tbanian soldieee, the regiment to which 
the latter belonged was transferred to Tri 
y been ordered to that 
hi usse, 0 
being apprised of this fresh outrage, rege ttg thither two 
brigs of the squadron to dem ob pe 
lies Pectend, 
ined to re-establish the pantech of the Emir 
Ecypr.—Our accounts from Alexandria come down to 
the. 20d dat. The Pacha issued fresh orders on the 18th 
for ‘the fleet to or —- to sea, 
ea ope months’ provision 
d Pacha, who left on 
t, was asdivias expec osteh-ak Alexinleis. The N 
steamer, with the 
having reached the height of 18 ells, 
bankment of the canal of Cairo was cut with the usual 
ult. This rise in the river was 
o insure an abun rvest in Lower 
Egypt, and an additional increase of four ells would pro- 
pod the same beneficial effect in the upper part of the 
Troid, OT we following are the moar wh “% Aartara, ap 
e hour 
received on Saturday, of which 1 
their arrival, we were unable t to hed shove im a brief 
mary in our last 
These reg os emerge prove 
aa ere Lge d 
Ma ough m 
French 
that the acco persis of the 
perverted in their passage 
uncertainty an 
the evacuation 0 
m Ma 
uneasiness still pieralt in India res} 
tinal 
Affghanistan, the actual state of ae eeneaas 
the telegraph had announced. 
el  Gandshar. The 
id= Seoen reserve with which the final determination of the 
appear hereafter. The facts relative to the measure—the 
period when it is. to take place—and the policy which is 
About the 29th of May, General Pollock received a des- 
rom Lo nborough, directin * to return to 
India, if ssarenps ne - Conceiving that by acting 
on e ructions, the interests confided to his 3 charge 
m eG e al 
opposition be o days after the — 
been 
of this letter, all “the Pinaroshil which had 
ing for retirement were postponed; and, on the 33th 
June, the Gene ived a reply, in which his lord- 
ship, though by no m countenancing the idea 
f a permanent stay in istan, or ‘any scheme 
of ate conquest, or retributive hos ility, gave him 
permission to remain until the season w le for 
return, and he should have poy sufficient carriage, 
cattle, and sy to ensure the ress of his troops 
upon by some as ve in General Pollock 
rr to proceed erent to “Cabul, while by others 
they were considered in the light of deceptions. The 
a nd the officers 
instructed to hold in readiness to march, but the encamp- 
e ch n re move- 
ch have by different’ writers, 
it may be confidently said that it is the Governor-General’s 
intention to wi a 9 he se is favourable, 
without any attack on the capital, eth pe -r of the 
cre. beyond agree ; md ee ould o untrymen 
d countrywomen now in not be d when 
vity n she 
the time for wit hAtawal sihihaas thet release will be left de- 
pendent onsubsequent negotiations. The opposite accounts 
admit that a wi ithdrawal a t this Goiil cture is calculated 
to inflict a most serious act on the supremacy of Great 
ne Fouad 
¢ 
& 
ies 0} 
o 25,00 and fully capable of restoring our 
character in r Asia, evacuate the 
country in e foe t would 
useless to attempt to reconcile these statements. It may, 
however, wi' be affirmed, no measure was 
ever proposed by a Gov hic of 
all parties in India have so decisively condemned 
he pa 
the Presidencies unanimously declare, hn to retreat 
country w our envoys “ 
our troops butchered, fe i ‘niki one ef- 
fort to retrieve our honour, or rescue ould 
er 
our subjects that we have at length 
u 
. in the field, and have been ignominionly exe <apelied: 
ntry we had Bo septs be. our resources” 
wer sak re-conquer—what enue poet de 
draw, than that the term of our Indian empire is drawn to @ 
close >”? Government papers state 
the next campaign, now in of 
to have been arranged by the | 
land, and will be to the end of having not 
army of bah of any 
ng sit a ‘ e 
th his division 
secret, and the absence of 
1 Fouiie a cuaaeel tad WAipt, ted Virowa on oir of 
