THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
inns. 31, 1859. 
Snow: that 
cac «ON, i i l fr eedom and cordialit -A | brought against it. In 
also been Erre frem Bombay to December 12, The | whole pondenco with much fre ips 18 e nc tho e steam " sansports Beg ib — TE x n 
follo n nstructed on suc 
Cawnpore—The Governor-General held a grand durbar here did not go t toria, vie remained in the steamer e told, 2000 men, and seen soci rae hat they can carry, 
on the ta "November 8 at which he announced to the Maharsjas he eae ad Governo uglas, i with a fair propertion of — hue — E" tee 
of Rewal Nr 3 b € Some s a the British Scott offered to withdraw some merican forces, i des d to me that wre cannot too confidently scs 
1 sideration o eir 10) C E : impossi 
—.— : : she: ee P, te d during the and proposed a joint military occupation of the island, B xd eis y — ,, hostile expedition 
rebellion, the Government will, in the event of failure to any to be continue by an equal force of English and |I trust that such a contingency is not ue our shores, 
one of them “ direct ns 8, recogniso th 5 penny American ri d 1 be question of the title should m" | E., Hus such an attempt ^ 
according to the ancient customs o respectiv 3 $ ikely e if it is kno 
It appears that the Maharajah o ah, en d by|be settled the t e piger " 1 : iplomacy be attacked does not possess the mean or, mdi t to 
Captain Osborne’s nerve, did all his limited prea son Gover or le 8 lecline a join uitary OCCU- | tering the force to be landed. On the other . 
while the Rajah of Cbirkaree fought with h pation but proposed a joint civil occupation. This | known that a hostile expedition, fer en nd, if it is 
. . finally y surrendered, was rejected by General Scott, and after some parley- | risks which it must meet with at sea, and havin, nus ui Me 
offered t ender, his own s0: a hostage instead of the | . : hi the best ble feel our shores, i if it should Poem e this, th E 
En i sii Lu ing on paper, in whi est possible feeling | lands, with the sea behind and no retreat, it 5 * moment it 
paul Ene death of the Nana is again pum the| was displayed on both sides, e eral deter- t 28 ith a powerful rifle force Tarte 
statement of a Brahmin, ho — that = attended him i in hi$ | mined to remove all the troops aad artillery except one the moment Ak — known, I believe that so h m 
last illness, and wax pros * t IM 3 wes company, which was ordered to remain for the protec- | ferP rone r be 5 I think it is of the greatest 
employed as a spy in vwd his testimony is ^ importan e that e establishment shall not be | 
not considered to be co Brad on of American settlers. He therefore ea an pin it has heretofore been. But something more is wan ess than 
Khandeish.—Mr. Souter, Stperintende ent of Polic n Khan to this effect, of which. he sent the Gov copy, | for t believe that our safety is to be placed T da 
deish, on qt llth ult. cam with the rebel Biel under lowe e dar ermanent peace establishment, "Tad 
Bhagojee Nalk, and Deeded | in shooting and cutting up the ti e "i P 9 10 persuaded that this country is at this moment infinite] lam 
to n. Fifty-one bodies were counted on the ground. | tion of his or ort pared for any war in which it may be en ed than if beng 
The Bheels and Arabs composing the gang fought with great 8 8 by tee ders ae Ge obi Sail during the last 30 years, kept so large a standing arm t had, 
obsti , and we lost a Jemadar, two Sepoys, an ar of to be uspen vus As soon as | these; en nm = been taken Piet have poren that iner f wealth, that yh 
the police kiled, several men — horses wounded. Mr. h diatel n tr anufactures, which constitutes so vance- 
aenn own horse fell under him pierced with three shots. | he mme late aem Grit be resent strength. Ib 2 
Bhagojee Naik fell in Ad action, bat ES — hung his body advantageous that a part, at all events, of our m of di — 
at Nandoos ingoba, t spot W Captain Henry w sections to vhi DT. hey "c open to none of 
iurdere z objections ich a lar — bm n ie e r arm’ 
ur the nd m 
Oude. Der de Gazette states with reference ee d Public Addresses. liable. ost the nation or next to nothing, and 
egt 
durbar ai 
€ — dn je been prepared, and that no less than 60 0 
ames are enrolled in it. m of them "ias been called u L GREY presided on Friday at a dinger of tho 
EAR 
Newcastle: on-Tyne nea Rifles, and in the course 
th 
having obtained ad n tickets from the Se o NE G the evening ma the following remarks on 
t on the frontier of Oude, under Lieutenan dy, com- Ls movemen vite 
manding the police, about 20 of the rebels have been killed 5 vale 
A party o! ilas have been routed under x M tb Irejoice in the m. olunteer 
from Hi . He came with them in a gorg rifle corps has been taken up, not : Od in this Miei — 
2 and another score were = ed, Including Hur etr. throughout the country, Miso agi I confess that it appears to 
iab.—Captain R. Mecham 1 he Bengal A and e for the nation's safety that eic 
lately commanding a light field pee in the Punjab , was 
. tay sah on Ss ibi of the 5th ult., while trave! i 
ooly fr o Khant. Hisassailants we glad if it were 
„ at all events, upon the Mri 
. in the use of that 
moment's notice to 
n 
re “five r six 
dei * Sh their 1 ie d 110 * To ee 
red no Ah mà or uneasiness p? other countries, b because these 
volunteer corps cannot possibly be used for offen: 
ial objections, they have, 
and social recommendations. 
pho of men me 
ship, knit togeth 
of society ; T they keep. et in the nation, in the 
a: Med that sort of martial spirit without which no nation 
Sm Hancox SEYMOUR at a recent meeting at 
Ta 
They are the 
otor: — Wuzzeera robber named Zingee, from | come for mig 
I pers 
not N ridicule o the 
lcutta, t i 
alcutta, o organise favour o of the for 114110 
h 
n Ca 
It is ana that it will not in 
l exceed 
—Sir Hope Grant I 
the Indian n expedition o China. 
any case exceed - 000 men 
eae Of these one-half PS 
have not yet bee "feque este 
Buts Ze des etched some y Mts aT D Ree b aro up on t thev 
and 20 5 Ne diet bag The peri is our faithful ally ; — — Mn 
— — Em rustful; therefore all th: abo] » ike 5 of 
corps is to tally 8 has only caused a panic to 
—.— upon t the nation.’ I ca gaa, e in that light. Far 
be it fro e to impute to the Em tees f the mrnids, or the 
ped riri which: he governs, that me they, cherish hostile 
designs agai — ^ country. Ta o give him credit 
for those assurances 
which we are told are eenah ly reiterated by the Emper 
but j LA say that within the Let few years 
ave a whi ch make it end E this 8 sho 
increase i its peang 5 defen M n 8 had a much 
and within 
— for service 
and all the Ae al 
be despatched. 
Japan s mare satis- 
en arranged on 
commenc e rs skly at 
ope ene! 
v las Lu en established thero as her 
and Mr. Hodgs 
Britannic Majesty's 
ounts from Shanghai of November ie 
e that t | the t has applied 3 
rican —— on the late ne A sy 
igration of Chin to 
Ee 
he approval and co-operation of 
the tative authorities in Canton, and is likely to gt 
work well under proper supervision. The last in 
Russian courier, who left on the 17t! 
that the R mbassy at Pekin was enjoying 
perfect safety and liberty. All the alarming reports to 
the con are, there efore, unfounded. Adm 5 
5 
a nota oficial character) 
er she as A ofthat I 
Á— clas: 7 
gri 
an this E e 
newspapers 8 i 
that while in 
Mm “having 
nnah, has bee en wrecked 
+ an 
saved. The ona cable M to be laid bein 
Singapore and Java had arrived at Singa nh 
NITED STATES.—The House of Ree ves had 
not elected a Speaker on the 17th e. pi the 
President's M e had not, therefore, been c uni- 
cated to Con Advices from n state 
0 
Vine taies see 
uld | an 
e| thing that o 
e movement :— 
is apology for en- 
ne man in this 
untry other vis had 
necessity f rr this get b national aroféthant it wi 
onths ast his declaration to his most intimate 
foem. S a aa io: bon s of his family had been this, s I see an 
enormous. Sanger impending? I . one, a and one only, safe- 
willing 
of a friendly disposition towards rk | ing a ca 
of St. o had been set on foot by th 
ethnal Green. It happened, however, 
m had great respect—Sir De Lacy Evans— 
= Square. 
wrote 
F 
of attending the meetin 8 
ject. He entirely agreed as to the ne 
to attend to our own Wins. d of 
d in the remo 
rd 
for he 
cessi 
offence eign nati is own 
gerad the eg with other peo = 
ed that we should be allo to 2 
re that w oe “polit w 
erect t alias akof 8 Belgrave Square; 
very mild one, for 
rtify 
but we were 
the proteine. of our 
ble 
that, on the whole, the mission of General Scott to San 2 ibiy short spac of 200, 000 7 * 000 
uan has june = tisfactory to the Government, |? e Bee ae tr 
sm h it Men t quite Mom eqs all that uem 42805 eans t at protection, Th bd dcn i 
ME engagements entered into —I don’t mea: ou Exe n the declarations of 
approved by the President and Cabinet. The i the Emperor that these preparations gud Die. pd ny 
the prisoners in the Harper's Fe affair were th batt nyc gh &heni of a d vel thero ensure RR pr 
cnp gro , Virginia, on the 16th. All| must be be admitted that their r object eh is namely, that if f 
ed off quietly, no attempt at rescue havi a dh ould * mo eip x 
1 ‘ower 8. x 
JJ 
great meeting to express sympathy with the ofe 2 5 
t held. at Boston on the 8th, Mr ust n hi 
Everett in the chair. In the e of his speech he centuries peine i m wee or the good. fat 
owed the wickedness of Brown's attempt, and viet P pr rovidence, ze must rely ; 
referred to ilete volt in St. ingo and its results voir perl te 
a proof of how ite the world is likely to gain hy the | fr * = F | 
establishmen a Ne monwealth. e called | si ta nent with 
upon the people of the North p e a the 2 al. FEES 8 us that a diff d of opinio on re ane 
of provocation which they have used towards the | Pre which arose between the tw : Len 
. Southern people, aud to use all means | icq rot the : prevented 
Union, which Abolitionist dness had endang red. N onthe naturally oh, also, tb 
MN ana w cigar- tigar iape) s steamer is reported pem E pe bell ved tx um x ay at pprehend on = pert es 
" e a very su t trip at Norfolk, attai its rw — i ei eben istur! — ut, on e es —— 
EI go ningi that o spee made i 
ccounts from San Jua : 
-state that ^ the ac arrival e eem d in the wee, 
of the islan once a personal in 
Ss. and aa "ihe beloea te e^ would pot very ‘uch to 
y to Victoria. which mr — pe to them 
nka uglas, who a im. — — ATE applicable 
—.— 
of * Noli — tanger 
eat movement. 
