Se ae we 
682 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE ~ | [Ocr, 
8, 
d them of their usual | daughter r! No canoes of natiyes appeared, the English 
and the rising of hong oe being in the habit of firing at all. Captain Brice left 
interest for Whyda Jul y the bis with a full args of palm oil. H 
t home, the special commission for the trial of the 
' i - : cerned i late pom 2 has been opens at 
Stafford and a Chester. Several partics known & a ortiee a cannon shot was fired at him. He drew in his ae, 
leaders of ob the Ehret movement have Nad srroeied since | when a second_cannon shot almost hit his yessel. He 
our last, and on no occasion in recent Ag s has 80 | stopped, and was soon boarded ‘by two Englishmen out 
; : : shi 
the proceedings have yet gone, the address of the Chief | down is the cabin, an vegas Berta ee the 
ustice Tindal to the Grand Jury at Stafford which will | crew and pas aving thus wo hours 
: found in our Law rt, is their most ’ markable ye a non (pe ey) neared = lk cit liberty to pod abseil 
ne of the Englis 
fegtyre j i “ap et ipsa grea oeeea sti = te ‘ the Cygnet.’’—The French journals also publish a reply 
common law of Englan % t questions ¢On-| o¢ Fieut. Wilson, of the Cygnet, to the protest of the 
nected with the riots, and will doubtless be read with great | French captain. He says he had learnt that several ves- 
attention. sels had taken up slaves at Whyda, under en 
flag,.and he felt it his duty to search every vessel that 
- Bome Neto came from thence. Hehad fired a shot to make the vessel 
Covrt.—Her Majesty, Prince hse the Prince of | stop, and wait for him, as the night was approaching. 
Wales, and the Princess Royal, are ein well, and con- | He suspected the vessel to be Spanish or Portuguese, and 
dsor. During | week Prince "Albert has | considered it’ evident that all vessels trading at Whyda, 
which i te) 
n 
y his Royal Highness came to town, to attend a | necessarily suspected of being engaged in the slave-trade. 
meeting at the office of the Duchy of Cornwall.—The | —£La Presse aca that ritter the details published by 
Queen Dow wer left town on Tuesday by the South- the captain of the French brig, of the outrage comm mitted by 
Western Railway for Canford-house, Dorset.—His Im- | the British cruiser whilst exercising the right of search, it 
perial Highness the Archduke Frederick of Austria visited | becomes impossible ta continue to enforce the treaties of 
St. Paul’s on Monday, and left town on Tuesday on a| 1831 and 1833, without the greatest danger of a collision 
visit to Sir Robert Feel, at Drayton Manor. The Arch- | taking place between those who exercise the right of 
iy es = ursday, on a visit to the Duke of | search and the parties who aly seit ‘9 it with rele 
sewer and is expected to og tance, ‘It is therefore urgent, sad 
Chatsworth a ra ts Wyre ard- park the seat of th e | those conventions. The treaty ictely pene JE east 
pate apis of tone derr 4 owing changes LA Britain with the United States is an ulterior argume 
the Royal beusehal during the week :— | which France may inyoke with success.”’ e republican 
Colonel ‘Arbuthnot has succeeded Major-General Wemyss National avails raged of the circumstance to renew its at- 
erry to He LB Ls: yal Mejor-General ‘Sir e- tacks upon this country, and says that “ Sagi’ never 
sure A onel Bouverie as Equerry » | hevare to violently rina her determination to domineer 
agolotely oa a = as a mind ndis pens a condition of her 
Neate panei —The Queen has been existence.” The s in e commence- 
to appoit Mr James Walker to be caer ena Clerk ment of a ‘Alpe Meee driving the Ne Frtach A the wart coast 
of the | nd Remebrancer a he Court of Ex- f Africa altogether. e Courrier takes for Saag 
c in the Island of Barbadoe r. J. A. Allen, to ie barning of villages, pi illage of habitations, and firing at 
be tet OF Yhe Teland of T: vinidaa; | Mr. F. P. Beding- | canoes, ag Spas to the English by the French Captain, 
arer 0! i i. aud acs fh at all eae abominable acts were m mired for 
Trench ae wat the o 
0 
in | of the public sand n in. take 
wide world but ae of spite to the he . 
ofr fe tig ti ~The letters and jou the 
nce are filled” fears unts of the Tnundations of 
on the Gambia; an at Mr. t- 4 phing, Bresse, and 
missioner of Arbitration in the Wied sit Cou s j eplorable aes 
at Sierra Leone for the suppression © ithe by tate that they 
Sir James Graham, as Secretary of State, has appomnted : 
Mr. Rutherford Alcock arid Mr. John Bacot te be Tr In_ several 
spectors of Anatomy in England and Wales, and Dr. Rhone par- 
Andrew Wood to be Inspector of Anatomy in Scotland. sat destroyed 
The Army.—The Queen has been pleased to appoint ee to be 
General Sir Robert Thomas Wilson to be Governor and 1 be very ex- 
Vice Admiral of Gibraltar, The Duke of Wellington, as | peditious, as two large tunnels have to be formed an a the 
Commander-in-Chief, has promoted to a brevet majority. | line pis be 3 be basta fate ength. Nearly 12,000 avian 
Captain Smith, of the 27th Regiment, for his gallant re- | are employ t. A meeting of English share- 
sistance and de fe ” = the rebel Boers of Port Natal. ho setae sta ies held at Liverpool, pledging themselves 
Law io Appoint ts.—It is understood that the bank- | to support the extension of the line to Havre. The Minis- 
rupt comin pee ing ssa rs who have | térial papers state that no contractor can be found to 
3 few da ion of the Belgian line of rai : 
certain rules for carrying the provisions of mn new act | seems that in the present iat of the ne gael 
into effect on the 11th of met ment The names of the | market, no company can be found wy 
new commissioners are stated in legal circ dies t ° Aaa 09 — ee pre Sue: a Ayan ment en ; 
Sergeant Stephens, Mr. David Pollock, Mr. Horace Twiss, | imperi difficu oe ase, t co gear ery 
Mr. Shepherd, Mr. Wray, Mr. Kenyon Parker, a ef R. intent ey a she bliss me Paris have become bank- 
‘eynolds, jun., and Mr. Charles Phillips. The present | rupts; and the exorbitant ary to which those works hare 
Judge of the Court of Review (Sir John Cross) aie = raised the price of stone and labour leaves se a for 
ceive asalary of 2,500/. a year, the os mmission railroads. it is now stated Biey ae no pastes 
,000/., and the country commissioners 1,800 a saincnaie be found, th \ 
ware The heed papers ca published the fol- | the line itself. 
extract fr om a Birmingham paper relative to the The opel. mpegs are successively re 
Income Tax on ioe ( 
ced clergymen who mee arshal Soult reached that he age from Eu he bast 
- clergyman, having the as- | week a achatel has since arrived; M. Guizot 
13 wrote to the office of stamps | has removed from his summer residence at Y Autevil to the 
a ‘ whether, in the returns to How el of Foreign hare —The King, Queen, and Royal 
rty-tax Act, salaries were | family arrived at St. Cloud, from Eu, on orning. 
page The reply was as follows :—‘In His Majesty appeared enh y ai Sunday wo at J 
tn cate — the board to state, that | o'clock | at a Council of Ministers.—We le 
bag pes admitted as the Moniteur that, after an absence of 20 years, 
a chee a Ag A oe ee cases | employed in exploring India, M. Diard, one of the 
stipend. vay en ok eee at a fixed distioguis hed pupils of Cuvier, has just re Havre, 
ee ee ringing with him ag tigatgher ot einic bjects, i 
pe ia tended for the Museum of Paris. He succeeded besides 
Fore 30 barrels of the black varnish so useful in 
Fuancs.—- The. Right of Searedhechags sons} Gora and of which the Chinese Pie hitherto 
in, conpeniog. Mit right of search gupplien ther Reorek (eee oy ees. the secret. M. Dias Diard has likewise 
journals of a ties with ndant ther ee a or of new ts, which, 
version against England. It appears that the Enelish | ¢h oo romney Gomer Cute 
cruiser Cygnet, off the coast be aes fired a shot ahead | alt, eee, setaiog. Oe eee 
of a French merchantnian, 
— to avoid the Gaecivia i nd d 
he 
FP se: 
of s 
cond shot was fired, on t n genenP si not heavin aren shows, that Ya far fcom 
on - mich, ike $, grazed his vessel; : mn ng cou ares 0 subdued, as 
admits that the officers who boarded did n he Pap ihe, tai @ a CERES 
vessel, but merely spoke re the passengers. The follow- abet eich eres or ee 
in is the account given by Captain Brice of the Aigle :—.| Gen Changarniée 5, Wie ig pie 
He arrived before Gallinas in ~~ ch, and’ aetee not e to the western frontiers of the province of Or 
pon i re lish Iasing im invaded and invaded the kr nes bs of some “Se-es had not 
: Sy 
and oveeythiigg “ivlened 
anabia 3 the 
mansport to be yee wa alah. 
the Portuguese ex-Goyernor, and shot his } The y foceht daring ime a with s courige wadunt- 
ing to heroism, ene are supposed to have pistaiied cond 
fer i an the ese conflicts the F rench confess t, 
ing six 
wo 
rshal Sebastiani.—It is said to have by ieee 
konceall at ere that the fruit of t fig cactus, a 
excellence. It has since been calculated that the 
i the j 
as it is equivalent et a ayant that the te an 
not in a Powter te to he Srp soeet necessary for t 
maintenance of tha ¢ ear in Cataloni rae Mi nistrial 
papers seee that the Government haw come to no decision 
on the subject of the anaovadtans the prin s, or of the 
new secink. The most serious deeds Agely to agitate 
the new Cortes is, ahekse the young Queen is to enter 
at the early age of t welyé appointed by the constitution, 
or whether it m not bet bagugpt yg ¥ extend the 
Regency. Any attempt of this kind is cted to meet 
with opposition, not only from the Mo aivohen: but from 
the original pares | ef a tri le oe ic —Lett ters from 
Pe Lisbon. Nothin ng has been decided in regard to the 
tariff, and the Soe ‘hip ng in the Tagus can procure 
no freights. The wine-merchants withhold their consign- 
who served in the Peninsular war, are likely to be imme- 
diately liquidated. —Previously to the disgottion of the 
od’ 
robberies and ee 8 = ts hein ature, 
which every day fu The papers state 
that should the plan 1 be reaetee “408 effect, and not left to 
pertan as a mee = pratt It will, poms 5 be ay = en rs 
say, th was the only a patriotic 
character catia by the Cheha pane their recent 
mg. 
pan Cus 
o raise the import duties on British export articles hat 
failed, and t at yee sequen iy hese rates remain un 
os 
lee estimate.—The eae Agricultural Society held 
e ult., t 
st meeting at 
Cuanollies Goortner i in ~ chair, More than 
were present. . de Gcertner informed the members 
that the King t took a warm interest in the proceedings of 
the society, and in all matters relating to the improvement 
of agriculture. Dr. List, of Syste: roposed that @ 
ittee should be appointed to callent no as 
to the different systems © of a i ture pur 
nations. In the course of his s: Tegeterg Dr. List alluded to 
the fatal tie which the British colonial protective 
system might have on the producers of corn, flax, and 
Mans Mace ene ren ba After a long debate the 
motion was carried.—The German natur 
their meeting this year at Mayence, which city has 
i uence of the almost simul 
d only to 10,349,000 inhabitants, incre 
1840: to 14,928,500 individuals, whi v as 
lo mn Prussia, 1,393,79 
16,382 ; giving for Prussia Proper a return of 2,310,1723 
0; Brandenburgh, 1,857,097 ; Pomeranl 
lesia, 2,859,820 ; Saxony, 1,637,220; West- 
Rhenish Provinces, 2,591,650.—It is 
ena wee about to be 008 
: pre: i 
Leipzig POSrA Se that the treaty of com- 
ustria rin an Cres whic been 
Soe ada INE Mile 
