THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.  [Deceuven 29, 1860. 
333 taels. abe a Pe shag Bec 1d be burnt to the ground. These letters ; into immedi te operation, h 
the y Shameen ite, ipy the same day. The rest is fri be p g ; ion, together with those of the Treaty of 
ut companied by proc a gery ea sig were placed on the Et tsin, a aao hari the rati tre: 
pe wees a -fifth of the ne of which will be chien wails m ore apei ming eo ss peo of the aoe res tha Ae = hin Saeta i i Da ‘and Ea ae 
erly until whole is pai opens the port of wae to be taken nd the reasons STE their adoption. The | lat lies . ‘sehociated with Tan, Governor General 
Tien: pi beget Art. V. removes the interdict X emigration | English, in the oar ge pra followed, acted entirely by of chit ii, "when they ineffectually attempted to stay Lord 
‘o the British colonies or elsewhere, and provides eres regula- themselves, the French Commander-in-Chief eing openeet to | Elgin’s advance in 1858. On the morning of the 24th Lord 
Bone shall be fixed for the prote oxi ay ofthe emigrant. Art VI. e destruction of Yuen-Ming-Yuen, fearing it might preclude | Elgin and Si ope nt entered the An-ting gate, accom- 
cedes to the British Crown the portion of Ko z l sre chance that existed of comimg to an eee By with the | panied by an escort of 600 men and 100 officers from 
under | pakes i opa pe of the colony of | Chinese Government; but Sir Hope Gra: nd Lord Elgin | the regiments at Pekin. The Commander-in-Chief with, 
Hong Ko . VII. pro s for the immediate opers were ery rent to pass Ba! over La want rót goa sears on | the Head. -quarters and his personal pen ce a little 
of the Treaty of Tien. tsin and ss present Conve mtion of Pekin. | the par the Emperor of China. Th ore indiff eLord |in front of Lord Elgin, who was carried Ty B 
Art. VIII. prevides for the p KARPET of the nag = roe tho Aend abeen: signing Ber r age to | State chair 16 Chinese, dressed in ai arial his 
Convention reat ay cin Art. IX. pr rotas s the core ore alarme pa the Cision Government became, and | saddled, was led behind him, and the me Ebel othe ai aa 
immediate evacuation = Chusan by the British for 2 Fa ssing for ay to be named to exchange the rati- rode on bape side. The 2d Division, under Sir Robert aba 
eta t, and declares that the ane of our no in china fied prety oe Tien- ‘si. On the 18th of October Sir John | lined oe reets, o as Lord Elgin passed followed at in 
n at Tien-t ety or Taku, or Tun ng-cbow, or Canton, | Mitchell's division marched to Yuen-Ming-Yuen; they met | tervals, ag up strategic: Hace nd long the line of route 
A Ad yeg “tieals places, as the sriti sh Government shali| with no pas bi prise a Tartar soldier was to be | incase rair des CaA by hinese. Considerable 
tende: aa sara armies are to ere Pekin on the sth of | seen. 01 is arrival he disp ome ‘his orce for the | crowds _ d both sides of the ed they were extreme] 
No reported that the er Royals, the 87th, the | proper and systematic carrying out of his orders. From the rae ly, merely evincing great curiosity to get a glimpse at the 
Quesn' s, the Buffs, and the Marines proceed to En gland. Lord | place that was seized by the French on _ 6th of October it | ‘Great batin. by attempting to peep into his chair as he 
Di residesin Pekin. The Snpra is at Zcho, in Tant was at least six or seven miles before the uilding of Yuen- | passed by. The Board of Ceremonies is about three miles ana 
eure, De Norman, and Ander n have been buried w Ming-Yuen was reached. This ve ah the foot of Me fir Et a half from the An-ting Gate, and it was past 3 o'clock before 
ps nly. Brabazo ghee he aded abou at the 21s l pe range of hills that bound the plain to the sean of Pek: Ath the procession arri o se urrounded the 
September. The Abbé a te s Hered met with the same fate. this large extent ree were be ens, en ae S, tem olei entrance and filled the streets ard squares in front and o 
The sum of 100, aoe ri ted for the families of the | pagodas, on eo l hills, some of them 300 ad 400 feat in very side of it. Thi d formed either side of the 
British officers who pega karpie ed. The Summer Palace | height, “with forest tr rees of all Ai nds coveri ng their sides, | courtyard, wher which the ceremony was to ke 
of the Emperor aie Darsi by the British on the 18th p torong 7 a green “foliage of which were seen the yellow- tiled place opened. The officers ranged themselves on the left of 
AEEA Bn insurgents at Shanghai are still levying tribut ‘oofs of arious Imperial Ekili i A large lake lay e dais, the place of honour, and on hog Scion 
in varii places, and are menaci Dek Ningpo. buried i in the midst of these wooded hills, with two or three | a num ns. e ba £ 
on it, wit picturesque buildin, joined to the main-{ tw ll l 
Mr. SA , bearing the ‘Treaty of Peace ‘i Lord Elgin’s | jand by quaint, but beautifu at sane fhe ae On one s Ades ot the gin, the one son the’ ight i “an le for Lor 
despatches to to the Foreign Office, and the Honourable | iake, extending crac mee windin; out, Elgin’s c othenti the Godknenderin-Chicr: on 
Major Anson bearing Sir Hope Grant’s despatches t to | am ni grottoes and Ga “flow gardens oofed. ie by TE side, S sight “angles, babe a small tables aud chairs 
Re Was Ole arrived inh E a at & late Bour. on flowering c reepers, wa3 the vosti: ak of the p astaat d | for the high office: i oak. ; behind them, again, was 
e iat z Í his Count; in some places, where the palaces came to the water’s | another row for t 4 Bede E of other officers. As Lord 
Thursday night. Yesterday orning th sual salutes edge, the walk was carried past them on a light and beautiful Elgin’s chair entered the po the eons prertates arms, and 
in honour of the Peace were fired at St. James’s Park, | Stone terrace overhanging the lake. The high mountains | the bands s played ‘God save the Quee: s chair was carried | 
Rivne Tke deastatehes are excaadingl i ie, forming the background made it, while it certain] iny — of the dais, when Prince aty advanced to receive 
. A of the most curious, also one o tiful | him, accompanied by all the Mandarins. A cold bow from 
t to th z P y sae 
pubi in plemen : en Lord in and an anxious hesitating salutation from P. 
Gazette of last evening. They c in the Yu a Kung, and Lord Elgi: sed at once to his seat 
3 i now ratitied, at full length; the as impossi motioning Kung to take the one on his right, which is con- 
atic Pik GUA kin $ ree t bip om: ae to was destroyed. It is said that it exceeded | sidered the lo x t. A table stood in th middi f th % 
onven' 10n lctated at k ekin, an lat engthened an two- millina sterling, exclusive of the buildings. During the | in front of which the boxes containi: vention and 
most interesting account of his captivity by Mr. Parkes, | destruction of the ee e soldiers ca i s placed, Busi s diately com- 
owing extracts from a letter from head-| that had been sen the 
ced by Lord Elgin telling Mr. Wade to hand the 
translation Hi 7 oe go os Kung, with ae Én 
to Pri nor 
quarte: TS publish ned in the Times of yesterday will oo. Genga cael adhe Kung said his y 
andr 
Tt 
as PSE om ee authorities had given notice that on the 12th ÀBaeratiiis weed 
penton y a o rs 
L i rae 
of the prisoners still remaining in their hands power ve negotiate and conclude a peace, and also to affix thé 
great seal of the Empire as a ratification to the treaty. The 
sarees ia ana Cag seein in n the course of the vinings ns + convention was signed, each Plenipotentiary aifixing his seal- 
~~ ikhs were brought into camp, but no Bowlby or a The treaties were then exchanged, Kung sealing it with the 
as hi most been ho for against hope, accom- | Gua 
i rsh nor were the Sikhs able to give us any tidings | of even 
of them. We had not, a oe CA to hig fee eg On March. § Pores 
ff peed Da. pak ates the great seal of the Empire meant 
be sor ag Mahe peiver ši pom ae boat- the e by mperor of all. the conditions and 
cesilt 3 henge mere re 4 fro responsibilities contained in the treaty. A few interchanges of 
a t that Bowlby and Phipps, the private of th Ki agoo isk youules of the Greely, and hopes Thati 
two So ki $ nen i poin aam pa: had stated their pt ae Boat shad cae ae ee veto pbs of establishing ə good Ae EARE 
k b; last “mai, Sibon "Aabe. : Rete alm iracle the fate of these their p between the two Governments, passed between Lord Eigin and 
th t th karera ee a ra i pees ow walked à on either side of De Norman's coffin. Nur ners Prince Kung, the latter remarking that a great many mistakes 
pray pa big of their ey AE sat cant ae nice E ot fficers of both armies, in- | had been made heretofore in their intercourse wi foreigners, 
ie : : 
thatthe abovementioned two Sikhs ‘ene in, the bois of De | Ignati Hh nae tee a eral Hpi Eie i ote ange ogg aT na he oped ; a br 
16th those of Bowlby, i eiigna: aide tee nae Sikhs; those of | army © ti i ; is state of “things w would commence. Dore. alr m the: oy Ose ; 
P ace: distan Torm, en 
e ora Pia m lange were pera srt sae Che) Tbh completed, Russian comets of the Cons orin Chief. Kung walked a short cian ce across tic bopi t me an tien 
entire party had been taken were all buried i t sioppod; Elg in “rash image ya as only 
eyheiaber with one exception, that of “Brabazon, | 2. ODD Grave's vigorous of the s atten g anc 
chaplain to the | | Rev. Mr. M‘ and 
-whose somë time remained in mystery. the most striking occurrences was the presence at ine e grave, 
poig six, in all, were captured—seven Englishmen, 19 Sikhs ; | in their vestments, of a Roman Catholc a and a Fe who 
prayer 
of these two Englishmen (Parkes and Loch) and 11 Sikhs were Jolma their to ours over the r murdered 
untry: 
Mandarins 
Lord- Eigin Kung was induced, “are A 
hesitating pauses, te accompany him to the edge of m8 de 
Prince Kung is about ee ste looks older; his pease is 
ua occ a ot mie lligence, but See. was an arp ssion or 
released, and four wake sibs en a Norman, Bowlby, Ander:on, . The 20th October's wal the aa petit for the pay- care, y fea ruggling 
and Phipps) with ei s, died of their sufferings. Braba- marie of the. in Nataly of 300,000 taels for the families of the cpr z finding himself in a a position s dierent trom a 8 one 
zon alone continued missi counts subsequently recei The mon y long be: he had been med to hold in the pre igh 
_ left us in no doubt, bowever, either as to th le officials of the rriten nineties vei thats eS a pa R pee. 
death or of th y in which it of familiarity and respect in the manner of the officers 
earliest em all, in poin > tow: him. The manner of Lord: Elgin was quiet and 
the death, for he sav dignified, and the C l ot fail to be struck by the 
ferings the others underwent. No attempt was ster im manner in which he performed his part of the 
th darins to produce ceremony, The aes at th NENTA d Com: — 
t had become of him, they said two Euro, in-Chief mee in the order as that in which they ‘ 
n bel by order of the e witnessing. re sent | but the eee were paisa at "different points by the troops 4 
ahi Rah; lahon bo when Aaina pn 0 aw aE ede -= i 4 of visi the public buildings | of Sir Robert Napier, who had placed them with great skill, so. 
g o 2lst o , | in Pekin, and to select j i Chin in 
and th their b cae thrown trite the oani? his statement agreed | view. 2 ka that the capitalof the ese Farat was the actual 
pes~ 
h: 
urately with that piel gt ea ot =~ Chines session of the British troops. Lord Elginand Baron Gros a 
er of ; takon up their residence at Pekin. ‘Ihe French army re 
visited Gros, and h the inform k a oi kino m mig lst November, one battalion only remaining 
through the Russians, thats ho. date remained that poor| for the esco t atten 0 n whi ron Gros. The Convention and treaty are to 
Brabazon was one of those Euro; . To reach the E ied ed he city. scripti poverty of be published i a Pekin, and circulate throughout the Empire. 
and the Mandarins and punish them for this treachery was the city, and state at decay of the publi bullae, The English army: and the Ambassadors do not leave Pekin 
won ng er and the great = tha on It could smh ‘be eon | th most deplorable. With an escort of 50 men eeded | before the 9th November.” 
e by adopting re t 
rough the northern portion of the city, rangja pA Dy in ree 
r four iye mt had been sent ana’ to obtain th thon INDIA.—By t i arrival of the Overland Mail we have pei 
t were the best repair, a 
entrance into any o ey mi i : | accounts from Calcutta to Nov. 23, and from M 
rs the; ight desire to inspec : 
h seemed to Shin! the — in ‘ilapidation and wretched t 28. The following is a summary of the news: 
a stree’ E A at tig aw ee ee aaan sou a ma = an d hats it _At Calcutta the co erg We ‘ow eg pk about to mage its 
St sS 0l curren new 
Wa from the to tia Chinese city, w e Ipan mie and the kataton of A 
ts attention. 
Mon esi óre brí : 
‘Ming-Y paan es tablets of the south a ess goin A e ete apes upteer movemen! king progress. A third company 
acta were preserved, a ap safety of which, in the opinion | thre: uildings $ 
the existence of the nt reigning fa of the 
people the Palace was ven. bali y en Sir 
constan: aay A 
Frere being his locum tenen y Mr. fi 
the Imperial city South to Tho Hurkesu gives a gloomy account of the state of the indies 17 
of the Chinese city. A large square or enclo- districts, describing matters bad to worse. d 
se is et Ol a | Goro 6 Kala. near 
Shio out vinsendooren the E monies, arth STT 
n the rivers Kei skamma and Grea i 
territory betw 
ivil Office, B an a in Kei const titutes ‘this new “dependency. F Bagio hac | 
a ae hies "was e | been formed in oe astern provinces rocure s a 
West s 
S cay is ente 
ceremon 
-Yuen was aa 
the Commander-in f both 
informing 
t decision. | reception, and tthe rince of I’s was named, as being in a aia: 
out the | venient situation. gpl is a building of vast Madea Ags out- 
conduct of the Gov. ern- | houses alone could modate 3000 soldiers with ease; 
moment of thelr attempting to} but the palace 
last act of r panay in vii ab aiae a | condition than 
truce and murdering those captured while under its | workmen w 
p ey can do 
e cruelties ka — the state of decay of the pul slic buildin 
even when owned by one of the prays ghee ichest prin 
within 48 hours as an aie of the empire, like the Prince of fn alte a pence ceed! | paren 
ee es R informed | sion for FAT S e — ~ oo as the da; ay na med for pot Sent 
was any Boe ei oing, or any | signin, Ees previous Messrs. 
convention and exchange the | Wade pe Parkes: Sine e busily engaged in discussing the clauses Mr. mars bb, Secretary to the T Tr a ary, g the Ge z 
Em — inside ! of the Convention, and making arrangements for their coming | With the intention, it was said, of joining 
