Serremmer 24, 1859.] 
t le and attainable. The — esteem for t 
— —— —ů e — ai sibios anne is into the surf, was ca 
rule her relations with Germany and her 
render to — 
miles distant, cl 
nearly dead rom want of -— 
erde. Tunxmv.—A telegraph 
— to the boat 
ie despatch from  Constan- 
psized, and every soul perished white settlers from the Wi 
except one Me. who was picked up four rH atrocious mu 
afterwards 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZEITE 
=t 
"Who were com miti ting m. 
râors. N — to * ae Govor m 
ment was MÀ cx movement, ai 
and | or 3 
| wc 
| me fry 
— ba 
has . discov: — Tre 
Circassians and Kurds, ha 
Diafer Dem, Pasha of Albania, w 
chief £. A special 
Federal i 
letermined to 
is energies for the furtherance of these ——— oon · 
„„ pot BR he T 1 ilem. -it lo belated 2 — onveata 
upon, ways ol many an y vi eir plot had no rami 
—— will be compatible with the commands of duty an 2 and tat no other persons than thos 
| under implicated. T Montenegrin boundary 
| commission m e had n» Grakov 
RIA.—Fresh affrays have * place between the 
tians and Doe: in the Lebanon. 
tion, 
SwrrZERLAND.—On the 19th inst., after the — 
ofa French courier, the Plenipotentiari es of Fran 
and Austria held a conference w] ted th 
On the followi: 
al 
Pd » [c 
the Sardinian 
ose now 1— 
H n consequence l 
as the bov indary, and 
— wit be ned be 
unn 
— 
| righ’ 
— 1 tue Government 
Unitod — as the treaty 
| vision for a settlement 
|! Department has had 
General Harney will 
» and 
with groat 
—— antil the ho 
day M. Desambrois, 
a consultation w 2 ‘the French } — 
immediately transferred to the D Datch Consul, 
Sommer drm on the — 
the | state chat the native tri 
on the French 
bigs thd houses. 
and 
tack in had not the 2 er to check them. 
said t ere has been — hn e 
regards the 8 
ae - will suffice to 
for the got - 
ish cam t the 
that trations 
— 
EDI ET 
vileges for ever. 1 — 
Clyde retires 22 of the Indian army a 
the 2 of this € and w ^ y sir |o 
eni at Hyderabad in the 
> p^ x^ 5th Modes € Cavalry, which is «y com- 
Mahometans, was like that 
i 
by 
» UM streots — T tha 
-— iga — in 
their religion, and Xillin 1 the Ch 
lace. r from Rohileund . — that Balao 
— = the "we Hurdut Sing, Taloskdar 
e zx 
to them 
have — 
from the National A pe 
of p Coun! tA 
and the 
repulsed The 
oroeco was not implicated ated in these 
E ex 
nd — “to 
he crown, - whieh the — — the oe. As 
mpaigu against Moors, it is 
the demons already 
ith 
gS 
direct 
à 
vi 
— 
| British Bay Sapper and Miner 
ation 
eral Harney om 
41 
he Y. an »ert: He mg 
A message to t 1 — 
i whioh — e — forces would 
be landed on e ner aeea which he announced his 
belief that ‘the M and discourteous at aet, so 
trary to of civilised nations, had 
Em 
had been ordered 
maintaining British mo 
— yel and four A “Ww 
Americans a cs i "ot the 
can 
d Eng ish, 
dispute, started for San A report t -— a —— 
steamer had opened deo ‘pen the Ameri no 
redited. 
Public Avdresscs. 
— 
,, EARL STANHOPE resided las! at a meeting of 
owne, near Be — 1 rr — — — of 3 M 
un 
D. eet 
siderable number of em 
evidently with a view of concealing others Tbe Adm 
rous | Sent an officer on shore to communicate. with ‘the authorities, 
.| but he was met by a guard, — of cou ny people, who 
prevented him from landing, an formed him that there 
late | Were no officials On — 
were mas 
om 
* tot, except that, Deu 
er — 
uem except 
saver UN 
about 3 feet in depth. 
A.—The Frenc 
Cuts. manding in | Son, 
ere | Cochin China has a pore ty wih e — 1 
"iar: will probably start with his 333 
até tiat p^ 
m t] 
cm 8 — 
d master, J 
€ pm publish 
18th of July Lieut. Hope, of he | Juan had created 
Mr. Kilbro | the question in very mod. terms. The 
mate, and 10 — were off F the | correspon ndent of the ee F Fork Herald says:— 
taking soundings, when their boat got ral Harney sen to San Juan to protect the 
10 
ock 
Wost — at 2 — Maid- 
stone, and spoke as follows on public affi 
1 
T 
1 
"| 
jui 
- 
i 
He 
: 
i 
al 
til 
; 
nection, had 
tration of public affairs, In the late 
office 0 
at the Ne 0 
of the 
d nobleman in the 
Irish nobleman 
wo an la 
D^ 
or m 
emus con 
$ up in the country. and inti 
of the people. i 
rds by way of og rn ag 
inly was a = ions 
unusual course, and 
in ‘fact, postpo; ning the public 
