THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Ocr. san 
ant artis. 
unti—Her Majesty and Prin 
the hered 
Mecklenburg ep the sinens son 
expected that the Doteinee 
e Albert 
od my rincess Royal, are til . Win d- 
with the 
at the 
Duk 
will take Fe 
Lo 
° 
2 
a 
gq 
o 
a @ 
o the 
of their 
“and Lad el, at prast or, on her wa 
Metropolis.—His Imperial Highness the Archduke 
ck of ria, with Capt. Fitzroy, and the n 
constituting = hag ay urn to Mivart’s Hotel on Tuesday 
next, from in Yorkshire, Durham, and Scotland. 
Bankru aceneapnind following is a correct 
list the new ruptcy pe an 
several destina’ faila," ot differs j in some 
iverpoo ow 
Mr. Charles Phi lips ; Benaneaiets Mr. Sergeant Ludlow 
r.M. J. Wes r.M 
and Mr. Jem 
tagu Bere; 
yeti 
mett ; Leeds, 
Bristol, r {oi nt Steph me 
cts red those 
on- 
- Mr. Ste- 
; Exeter, Mr. Sergeant Goulburn; Newcastle, Mr. 
—The Duke of Wellington, as Com- 
Hors e Guards. 
mander-in-Chet has issued a 
to eomanry em canloved durin 
e manufacturing districts 
t, hi 
2g which these corps assembled 
e preserva 
eneral sly in reference 
dis- 
peace, ess of the facoatealence to which 
d purs: 
< pias Sinn *h 
that season of te so wat have exposed them. 
report to the Secre' 
Queen, at the time, 
feimaphy 
Dake of Wellington did 
eomanry 
ot pats with w 
rsuits, at 
The 
ecretary 
vied 
or the. support of 
esvoracion: tan talintanieaad ot 
eis 
vate property, 
actions to every ct Narva of the community, of the 
e 
nied by a 
jesty’ 8 ppaaions approbation of th 
well by the Yeomanry as by hgr Majesty's 
[eee 
France.—The Frene 
selves and the country, not without reason, o 
of the three quarters’ revenue, published by 
increase seca 
observable in every 
trasts 
ts. 
taxation has attained in the 
than at any 
e present re 
tory in the amoun 
of his agreement with va em ployer.” 
,f is a letter from Sir 
onveying to the Duke of Wellington et Ma- 
e services perform 
troops. 
It states that the rer of the 
accordi 
oreign. 
Sip winkaeg congratulate them- 
returns 
nm the 
the Ministerial 
manne and of revenue is 
and the Journal des Débats| Spa 
- | inst. 
ms a Shar one 
previous period, the ‘eins on 1840 being 
ty 74,000F., and i 1841, 25,372, “ed rt details are 
not only the increase has 
 naeinnel : per cent. and 
hae ee outweigh com 
paper: silent on the tubjct, but th 
it mithent: reserve. 
commerci, 
it, that their union can never, probably, be 
aa the result of a 
forced them 
to vote the or 
Ges inte peas than 
a popular clamour, oe: to that which 
aris. — 
that Count Molé and 
. Thiers | cancies caused by the 
ter the Cabinet. The 
! has boasted that he could latrange the ecu pending 
with Belgium, and i e the Chamber 
commercial treaty with England, and it is we ‘al aint that 
xious ~ se ct some arrangement 
which 34 includ e both coun 
The Capital. oth general Sh eenhin: of the diamonds, 
— and jewels of the crown of eye has ee se 
= 
ec. deed sh mi ib 810. 
A “Peritieatiots of that inventory took place ander: Louis 
on his return from am yt whither those a 
du sty a the ays; and all 
en tubes asunder, the di sane, 
were worth 20,900,2 
n made, in virtue of the law of the oA of M arch, 1332, 
a 
v= 
of re people 
announce tha ta mall m 
the “Cha amps Elysces, for the Mahomedans residing in 
~— 
ench Post-office. saan propositions for a revision of 
the. Post office pet between France and England, sub- 
desired results, and the bases 
spective arrangements are understood to ‘be as 
he French Government consents, as regards all, Letinns 
to and from Engla d Prince, oapply the same tari 
for letters in the interior of this country; and the 
English ——— on its part, agrees uce the 
uniform charge 0 f tenpence to threepence, so — a letter 
from s to London, or from London to — 8, which 
now costs to francs, would ha ye yey vere n Lon- 
don, dr ninety centimes (eighteen sous) in Pari and the 
transit of letters from Englan j 
East Indies, and other points. tae “additiod to this, the 
daily papers announce, wit , that the Mi 
road is now definitiv expresses, 
that for the future no impediments ts il be thrown in the 
their couriers.—Another question of some oo ree 
; Post-office agents, has been decided by the oun of 
— admini iminal 
mber 
pe ae by the - — ° rairial, year 9, cannot 
be extended beyo ertain eat formally specified 
therein; that the pas ho of that decree are not ap- 
plicable either persons 3 eladian or to “oe 
effects; and tha ; consequently the latter i od one to 
subjected to an obligation that is not rhs 09 do oan 
hi 
the law. e pretension of t t-office to ae te ‘the 
she or baggage of travelers for deners has thus been 
ounded by the highest legal authority in 
the kingdom, er resistance to that pretension declared 
In Our advices from M are of the 10th 
The official Gazette contains a decree of the Re- 
ing the benefit of the amnesty of the 30th of 
the Carlists, terns and ae ates, sti 
ot included in the conven- 
All the Moderado ange joudly com- 
the Christino exiles should be e: — from 
this act of merey, 2 t' pmatyesnte eek ts 
strongly the feeling of the a rulers of the oh de San 
little calculated to consolidate their power.—On the 8th 
the ; 
aay exten 
Ov., 1840, to 
under confinement, who were n 
tion of Fang og 
plain tha’ 
inst. rushing of the Christino in- 
, 184 pire er a with — 
pomp, and rt off tarot any incident. The s: 
of the Palace } had been pssegpr y confided to sp Netiogal 
Guard, and the Queen, her sister, the Regent, th ve ymenet 
ters, and the civil and military ary washer svoleted 
Chapel. 
solemn 7'e Deum, chanted in the Ro It ie 
observed that the Regent had on no former occasion dis- 
played so n the 10th, Queen Isabella II. 
ening.— 
meer Cc 
5 dapat De H 
topics : of intelligence, but the details have no interes t for 
eader. The affair of the slaver Gloria is still 
unsettied. 
we 1umM.—The rare papers publish the reports 
made by the ae sent to Gu pe ate re that 
country, with the view of idowiaining whe 
ofa Belgian colony would be practi 
tion 
able. hey recomme t. Thomas as 
to Vera Paz. Speaking of the English settlement at Ab- 
botsville, they say, ‘‘ The English colony a miserab 
condition ; most ra settlers do not w ey are idle 
drunkards, an 
nd le life. This 
sult - be poker shy to the bad management of the 
_ settlers arrived in a count 
ted 
quitoes ind where the means of communication are diffi- 
Accordir ids, me were soon discouraged ; 
oontianss to clear the land, 
at which is a pen he ‘cleave d. 
sisdation 0 ony was badly chosen with respect 
=< 
s 
which originated in th emperance of t lers, 
o the suffering of the colonists. The best of th 
settlers, including the Protestant clergymen, mi- 
grated. It having been stated that the company intended 
to send a hundred settlers at the f this month, the 
secretary of the c company esnely gn this mye and 
says that the company will send at first oma’ 
on y, bie will employ the natives in oe ae 
down the woods, clearing and sowing the {ground a 
first settlement, aay erecting the habit tations—not for 
settlers, but only for 
hot set out 
will, in their assistance, wip pb the land 
and habitation of po who are to follo m 
opening of a Sesition took place on 
e 17th, with a ipeseh from 
alded to the recent marriage rie: his 
eral pe wof the financial bam Sf ote o 
was unusually lon 
ing of Bavaria, 
and his brothers are connec 
of Mecklenburg-Schw ne Hohen 
eorge of 2a gy will have aioe his "Bid vie on 
the 27th el ay ni 
= er arenes of German papérs had given 
different vanities s of an impressive address delivered by 
russia to a body of the clergy that came to 
pa Majest Minden, during his 
ate progress through his Rhenish provi The t- 
halian Mercury declares inaccurate all the versions that 
ios one ‘—' 
and 
y for the ‘eeabitane’ § y nd aural in his 
spo : els, ‘ 
voice of calumny had published uch respecting 
his views and dadiatoirs as regarded celesiatical firs, 
that it would be pve for him reser lence 
er em Things utterly inconsistent with the spirit of 
age, nay, downright absurdities had been gratuitously 
abated to him. Among other rere it had been 
contemplated t he enactmen ws for enforeing 
a ance ay. ‘Now, er 
cerialy something very beautiful, something of great 
but he was far from thinking of attaining so pe peta le an 
by legal " Wolenbe. 
the church ought of 
office 
ie ate citizens of bed 
berg, who waited on 
pointment of Dr. + 7b 
account 
expresses are quite in ac everyth 
pr s from this enlightened Sovereign. e 
said, ‘* Fi have received your remonstrance soe the 
tninister Eichhorn. rancés are not only 
The 
directed against Professor Hoevernik, but against sik’. for . 
has acte mi 
the minister Kiechhborn 
you say, he co: 
| @ fault 1 ya go when he ms om. Ihave ordered 
ed by batch an the ribs: 
Prince © 
ee ale ae 
3 
a 
3 
a 
ey oe ear ee 
