was ce) ageing 
by presenting the diploma, the Earl of Wilton delivered 
i K 
1842.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. ' 9k 
this affair to be looked into, and it is not such as you r 
pre ° ‘ho can look back upon his young days with- 
out finding such faults, and even greater ? In fine, 
you complai rt, Hoevernik is too much devoted 
to the evangelical religion; I tell you Iam very much 
devote I have fallen into several errors in 
my life, and I have at last returned to that ligion, 
pr it, and as long as I govern, 1. will be its 
the ribbon, and badge, the ca sword, were sent to 
nd 
Forbes, the Brit tiahe resident minister, 
address to his Majesty in French, to which the ing 
ngua: T 
Overland l from India, vid S and Alexandria, by 
wa ieste, Vienna, Hamburghy an end, have 
r 
present treaty of sending he manners to Malta, Egypt, 
and India, on Gods 4th of nth, the French 
mail-packets ing that port oh i Tet, llth, and 25th 
of the m 
Itauy.— he Augs urg Gazette of ne one inst. eon 
had been 
that a commercial —— with Great Brita’ 
cluded at Naples. Under this ppt i British pee" 
duce would pay 15 per cent, less.than. under the present 
tariff. It was not knowa what. concess made 
by the British Government.—E ller who has 
en in Italy in recent years b the beautiful p 
mrcncnnaed judgment, by which it eeriane a aeliol 
as to the selling of | pitch es, which has caused a grea t sen- 
picture was bought for fifteen Roman crowns by S. Vallati, 
then a picture-dealer, living at Rome. The same day he 
represen enting the Mrgislan by by Coreg which surpassed 
in ann that of the ; he Dresden Museum, 
an thy th 0 for cee sum aa As. 000 — ns. He 
ob up sy atts also, ht 
cupied i in cleaning and putting a new frame to it. On the 
18th, just as S. Vallati’s house was full of adm mirers, con- 
templating this P bapatid and which connoisseurs — a 
real Correggio, ri (bailiffs) entered and seized the 
picture, at “ee re hh fas of the Prince, alleging for pa: mo- 
authorities. The country everywhere presented a | last week from Major Moen himself, —— _a few days 
raters picture of desolation. after his arrival in India from New South Wales, but 
Uss1a.— Letters from St. Peters burg give “sea of | there is War the pe tps peove val it to a 4|st t Regi- 
pprey dreadful fire in the Russian territory. It occurred | ment ; the near relations of th Major at Woolwich 
e 4th August in the town of Troite k, in the sys vern- rary jaabios hoa such an ee’ as is sai have 
saa of Orenbrarg;s place long celebrated for its extensive emanated from him, could have found its way into the 
commerci urse columns of the Stan . In reference to this part of 
The fire was caused by the e long- eoutlonst drought and | the subject, Mr. Curtis, of Glazen Wood, at Coggeshall, 
the great heat, during which a dry west wind blew without Essex, has addressed a letter to the daily papers, stating 
i a i i 
= 
a 
B 
3 
z 
6 
S 
® 
- 
be 
= 
a. 
i—¥ 
SS 
o 
th 
a 
ot 
a“ 
=] 
= 
® 
o 
= 
2 
&. 
] 
= 
cr 
® 
os 
o 
spa om p i 
,000 silver rubles, The subscription of the merchants | the office of that paper, for the purpose of contradicting 
amounted in one day to 94,000 rubles. A multitude of | the report, and etideavour ring to discover the author of it. 
ess0 
525 students, and a library o 6 volumes; and | man erican po- 
Kiew, 54 professors, 126 students, and a library of 52,157 | litics, embracing the whole scope of his recent political 
ee so that the whole six Universities of Riséia career, touching on the late Pitan dt between Great 
hav nd er cies 2 ae tudents, and libraries con- | Britain and America, pledging himse n to the** great 
ointag “2h, 265 volum national Bare: ae f protection, anit’ dwellin ng with em- 
Turxry.— jens. rom Constantinople to the 28th phasis the criminal conduct of the ‘“ repudiating 
ult, state, that after all the negotiations so long pending States. " Beveral other topics were introduced by Mr. 
macy had oiled er, a i 
= 
estion 
demands made for the senthoulen of sas country. The | lating to the unptincipled doctrine of repudiation. 
a note i 
who ie n tunity 
longer-n Since that day the Porte had published | of witnessing it. He then proceeded to characterise the 
a hatti-scheriff, in which, without — rate into consi- | néw system in labguage well calculated to i 
deration the re presentations of the ropean a ¢ n rep 
est tablishes i conduct, declaring the doctrine of repudiation “a stain 
wend Turkish, and appoints Hscna Pacha Gerader: of which they ought to feel worse than a wound.’? Mr, 
e Lebanon and Anti-Leban te 7 h two Governors under | Webster stated that he was ready to co-operate with those 
hie orders, one for the Druses a tala ae for the Maro- | who have the patriotism to join him in removing as m 
nites. It is added that an wma ae been for- | a8 possible the foul stigma from the name of America, 
~ 
=¢ 
So 
: 
Qa 
a 3 
SS 
a 
s 
a 
wae 
=] 
Cnal 
So 
J 
So 
5 
o 
=a 
> 
Ss 
& 
wh 
or 
) 
Fo} 
c—F) 
z 
ina 
hich t what it may. In re- 
Servia. The Av Gaseite of the 12th, in its cor- | gard to°the relations with England, he alluded with satis- 
9 psi - the &th, from the Turkish frontiers; asserts faction to the acknowledgment made on both sides to th 
i LW, | to the 
that e y he inciples o} 
late revolution. Property and ety were | two countries to regulate their diplomatic 1 Sy paar 
i justic e re 
relative to the conspiracy to poison Prince Michael. | firm persuasion tht in any controversy between the 
Letters from the frontiers, of the 5th, announce that the | United States and England, the only eminent advan- 
= testy es charged by the new t w either side will possess will be in the rec- 
xamine th SS aan — of the ; titude of its cause. * Wi t on our side,’’ he 
aon ca ae itz had terminated its labours, and | said, ‘‘ we should be a match for England—with right 
parse ed him to a year’s Seapine in the fortress | on hers, she would be a match for us, or for anybody.” 
of Kienbzia, which sentence had been carried into execu- | The papers allude to the first arrest under the new trea’ 
houg i 
mu sgzow to a consi- 
28th, the representatives of Russia, Austria, Prussia, | derable amount. The new treaty Pe for “ such 
France, and England had a conference on the affairs of | offenders, and in virtue of its provisions the prisoner has 
Servia and Syria, which Jasted several hours. If we | been delivered to the British Stee ween The following 
it i polo dated pt. 29, 
blished in 33 hours 
Chekib Effendi, peat Minister in England—is said to | after its arrival here, and sold for ta (about 6d.) 
have received 50,000 ducats from Watschitsch as a bribe | all over our city, in a paper called the New 806 y 
to report cesmmarenay of the revolution. Canapa.—We have further news from Canada by the « 
Inp1a.—The reported disasters in Affghanistan, and | Acadia. The papers are filled with remarks on n the dean 
the alleged destruction of rhage 4ist Reghien, prove, as a ee in that eileny. aie a appointme 
we stated in our last, to be entirely without foundation. made, amongst which is that of Mr. T.C. apie 
A letter has been received in town from Capt. Wetherall, MI P. fo for Portncef, to the Saliitor Generals of Canada 
of the 4Ist Regiment, which the letter published in the | East. It w as expected that a gene = ty 
tive that this picture had been bought at a vile price by S. | Standard last Friday represents as ‘‘ cut to pieces.’’ | authorised by the Government towards a 
af : 4 of j durin 
able value. The Tribunal of Commerce, where this affair 
as judged, S. vas ati being a a piece the sale of 
the picture good, a d condemned the prosecutor to pay all 
e expenses dgment 
Segnatura, by appeal , with the exception of the payment 
of _ Fag teas The Prince appealed against this deci. 
a ibee ich has 
ri Femotnan : “If a precious painting is discovered 
mice neath a painting, which covered the icon so as to 
anecal it particalaty it is to remain the property of the = 
it ae its great “ale 
him who 
sold it. The 
C9) pape tain 
of the ig Rig aap laid om 
ing the last days of September. Se Villages had 
actually ted ini 
miraculo wise measures adopted | 
ed Lani Ailbaia end, doreutpete ahem ‘a ih mare-tie 
i , of the 
It says—“' We -” about to make an attack on Hydraba 
after the monsoon, with 5,000 men, under Sir C. Napier. 
I shall have shous 400 or 500 men of the 40th and 4)st, 
I 
tives, cannot resist cannon long, the walls being ve: high, 
ut weaken ing so much lo: . We expect 
to go from this about the 10th of mber.’’ In addi- 
portant fact is supplied by a letter received at Woolwich | which 
‘ 
