1845. : Difi : 13 
= and by orders in council. Honduras Viluma as their leader were “actively tampering ; with | S ITZERLAND.—We have accounts from Zurich of 
rned s a Gi e Daa and magistra ates, | the fasti and proof of it was found in rece th a afeti Diet, which met for 
at Valencia, where the artillerymen were said t tojt the fir st tine he ult. Previous to this event, 
a colon ossession. The Canadas | have killed several soldiers of the line to the ery of} Mr. Morier, aa Britian Ministeri in Switzerland, com- 
gm in 1759 acd 17 60, and were a d by the | “ Long live the Absolute Queen! Advices from the | maunicated to the Pre gp despatch from Lord Aber- 
` Govert f Par n 1763. `The PEREC of Navarre and the Basque Provinces; de oi ous evi he i 
‘i ed the 261 h ult., mention reports of an impen ndiog t thie any change in the federal 
cts, ced a soon after their a acovery 79 f the Cariists. It by whateve r party it may be effec cted, woul 
Sona and Barbadoes, Montserrat, St. Nevis, Se. Kins it wes to take place simultaneously a parapar Onate ʻi 
la, Anguilla, the Bahamas, and Bermuda, are set- To losa, and Vergara, and the General who was to com-| Pontois, the French Ambassador in Seitzerland, ‘has 
e during the 17th century ; Dominica It was also Vorort, that in the 
be inter 
u 
da were ceded by airaa in 1763; Nene Capi» be ovement was apo with the Carlist a beg Tris- | of the democratic cantons attempting to obtain a ae 
to the naval forces f Cromwel in 1655 ; St. pape: who e mountain Catalonia, near the | cation 1815 by force, Austria, 
capitulated in 1803; St- g French E. The surveys of the pages? ma Barce- | in accord with Engl and, France, and Paai, will put 
rance in 1763 5 Trini pits lated in 1797 | lona to Mataro, the first constructed in , have just | down the present disturbances by an armed inter- 
in 1803; d d by vention, The proceedings of the Diet were opened 
reaty made in 1670 hee capitulated PorTuGaL.—Accounts from Lisbon of the 26th alt., by a speech from the President. It was x: 
Rooke i ee 1704, Matta in 1800, e that Her M was likely gly moderate, breathing throughout a love of 
6 Ceylon i 1795, Mauritins in 1810; St. | anxious wap to gra an amnesty to the persons order, E calling upon the Deputies of all parties 
ded by Holland # in 1673; ong-Kong, by | engaged in the late eke nd no p rifice pers sonal opinion to cons iderat ions of 
Chinese treaty, in 1842 ; and the colonies of New elsewhere. "The ee wt of Her Maj ’s health co Di a 
ales, Australia, and New Zealand, were settle- tinued favourable. The baptism of oo. fe ung Tafanta Pnanitins for the rire a of the De eput ties from the can- 
rmed between the years 1787 and 1839 ; Ne |t k pl th 20th ult. —Th e Bill for the Esc ton of Vaud, and afer deciding it in the affirmative, a 
th Wales was made a settlement in 1787, V | f the C i in its definitive l Ji i Diet should p 
nen’s Land in 1803, Western Australia in 1829, and | b laid e Chamber of Deputies, x P roject | ceed at once to the question of the Jesuits, or that of 
th Australia in 1834. of law for ps hoitoa of akiak in all the Pı he necessity of keeping down the violence of the free 
= possessions, in the e of children born after the d corps. = was decided by a majority of 12 states and 
Fforetgn. ti prop was presented 2 half s tes, to 8 „states and 2 half states, that the 
France.—In Saturday’s sitting of the Chamber of | to the Chamber of Peers, transfi th l t, on the 
i R Anti- oa very Committee. gro ound that the cause of excitement ee to be taken 
nci of State was brought to a con clusion, Boge GERMANY rom A Berlin letter, of the 7th Keh peee into consideration before the excitement itself, The 
Şi lot ta king es: the Bill was pond by that of the Grand Ope 
omg importance is bestowed by the Minisecriat Brede n vo spontaneously confessed that zm w J filled a use 
n this „majority of 27, owing | to the resistance | incendiary of the Opers-bous e, burnt down in rered y rsi where seg Di e sits. The proceedings were 
p f the Bill had en- | 1843— eg t he did it in revenge for a ‘Severe Bical ope ened by the Chancellor laying before | the Assem biy the 
, and to the efforts a to aang its a articles | § iven him by the leader of the chorus signed 
vsti On the other d, the Opposi d oth parts by 120, 000 Ep The discussion then O A 
nts consider the majority a gor one, which | of the theatre. He further declared iat, fi th spoke in the order that the respective 
en smaller still had not several members of | 880, 5 ae an artilleryman by p i ing him with | 
party sent. Much more attention is be- |S f the Spree, | tion. The opening of the debate, th genet fell to the 
on a resolution of the Committee on the Estimates, | that the soldier fell into the river, and was drowned. | jot of M. Neuh aus, the rl uty for the of Bene 
met on Monday to deliberate on the question of This likewise was an act of revenge for an “insult given| who is considered the leader of the “ibe na pari 
mversion 0! per Cent. Stock, and decided, to y the artilleryman at a ball. It was for a time | Switzerland. After stating that, by the Sth arti ne of 
en 2 x 
but one dissentient voice, that the measure could | surmised that the prisoner had been driven mad by re- | the federal compact, the Diet was authorised to adopt 
d into execution during the present session. The | morse, but this has been ascertained not to have b h y for thei land 
ion is a very importent one, and will, no doubt, the case, and the pro osecution is eS ing ye against | him ternal safety of Switzerland, he said that the question 
O reduce the price of that stock still further in hether Jesuits had endang 
M. Laplague Barris read to the Chamber | 5€ ecession going on in Northern Ge ermany, under the | the safety of „the country. M. Neuhaus then reiterated 
e e day, the report of the Committee | a. of M. Ronge, br Catt priest who was ex- | the vari 
d to examine the Secret Service Money Bill. | ° en for writing against the late exhibition of | concluded by declaring that the instructions o 
sporter stated that the commissioners had given |t the oly garments at neden "The following is the | ton were to demand that ag pan be poate Ae tome 
tire adhesion to the foreign and domestic policy | confession of faith adopted by the followers of this Te- | ev - part of Switzerland, h deci ne "3 adopted 
t, and recommended the adoption the ae p 2 or more states, the tire e a the cantons must 
The ee was then fixed for We ae of Rome a his whole establishment. Ms M. Sieg wart, Deput acere, next ad- 
rce publishes ot fee ns „farig h science, sdsptemn cre compasion f haise- dressed the peered at great Ieogth, urging that the 
have reason to believe of | hood, and hypocrisy. 3 sis and th e because it 
tion, that pe ha ai "England will visit ‘rane Christian beliefare theBible. 4 cd ig ion a l upon the ereignty 
th of A ext. Her intention i is no J z y d aiina se che ‘of ge essai ge’ t 
Wo far as i tents of our faith, we lay down the | Lucerne, far from being dispos sed to sacrifice its rights 
e Royal palaces inning as e assured, a- he F who has was determined not to re- 
are already being made for her: enion. ‘ere created the wo on by. his omnipotent word, and who the decree wher ae Fi t had called in the Jesuits. 
hes the authentic and official text of the | Soverns it in wisdom, TEER and love. I believe in Ee Deputies of Uri, ber Unterwald, Zag, and 
Goticludea between France and China, asserting | Jesus Christ our Saviour, who, by his doctrine, his life, | Fri iburg, successively spake and sided with Lucerne, 
ffers everal essential points from the copy and death, has saved us from bondage and sin’—' I E aei the imputations cast on the Jesuits mere 
at` Paris before the arrival of the First Secre- | believe in the working f the Holy Ghost on earth, a calumn ies, and — some thr reatening expressions in 
ina Legation, and that, far from placing holy universal Christian Church, forgiveness of sin, and f their speeches. 
l commerce on à ooting inferior to (English and | life everlasting. Amen. 0. We recognise only two | manded by M. Menin , the De eputy of the Catholic 
de, it has, on the contrary, extended the | Sacraments as instituted by Christ, baptism and the | canton of Soleure, av inveighed against te Jesuits, 
ges obtained by aii two latter countries, In a| Lord’s gg 7. We uphold ne baptism, and re- and stated tha the was instructed to n that they 
; but able ar! ticle, the sa e pape er renders full justice | ceive, by sol lemn act of ¢ confirmation, as if- ting | b he cantons whi ch ha ad r seived -= 
berde: f h nd that they s. Glaris, 
Ee ra. aot Bordeaux papers mention ficiently instructed in Phe "doctriage of faith. 8. = Outer Appenzell a and Bale, eiid pige same opinion 
— ‘ther ere is t Lord’s Supper i he discussion, which had taken up seven 
o be a camp for military o y exercises instituted by Christ, in both forms. Auricular coun ley wai ert adjourned. The debate was ngs 
D the Duk z . The | Sion is rejected. e recognise marriage as an insti-| on the 28th uit., and was extremely animate he 
# sifa Deda ie Nemours, cua tution ordained by ‘God, and therefore to be 2 ke pt E first speaker was the persie Colonel, Lavini, a Catholic 
Duke de M 20th y man; we maintain for it sino. His speech was one 
Month. vi parae" calpe aa E paken te and consider, with regard to the conditions and re-| of the most violent delivered against the order of the 
The result of the census a aw J in the yea icine ponies to saa ee Taws of the State alone as | Jesuits 
t been published, from which it appears that bin cine ick We believ edion = d with the ed, nd there fore “ The < = 
> Properly so called, including the garrison | OMY MOTAM ; we reject, Bons therefore it nes at ‘ e 
en), the number of inhabitants was then “i ore, ing © issioned to up- 
The next census takes place at the = a the — the remission we sins rah the e priata and all pi- ah the Federal ‘coupetece on "thi question, has 
year, The Presse states, that there ust | gtimages. 11. 5 first, for the — of an 
ated at the Royal m snufators ofthe Ps a have only value i in so far as they are the emanation of | amicable and p tion to Luc order 
ense carpet, intended to eei of the ents; ; we reject, therefor e, all com: “tt ey nay renounce gint e Jesuits; bat if Lu- 
issadors’ hall at the Palace Oe Versailles This | of fas h t ifest his faith b r| tio ised. tn th f jaial, the 
as co d in the year 1783. The | duty T in re ristian ni manifest his faith by cs int scsi a at re- 
is ornamented with garland Sweis, Ak the | Christian love.” The commotion whick this new doo | sponsibility for for og = 
fi ied fi rine has pr y spok same side, 
tings in irrigui y Ma ee c crease. M. Ronge ia alread on ie urned in gon | canse of the Jesuits was neal upheld by M. De 
B, sister of Louis XVI., and comprising all the species | with as many copies of his manifestoes as could be col- Colseten, Deputy of Valais, who t aton 
roses known in France at the canal the 18th century. | lected, by fanat ical peasants in the vicinity of Coblentz. | th at d and their r pe eT “ Just S Valais 
Ix.— We id to tl to coer - we shall receive you with arms in 
te It w: as reported that th the tances wold repair | ¥ eather in nearly all a 3 of that Continent. Letters hand. “You wish to o reinstate fallen hemes and you 
to i ga t the religious ceremonies of the tom Tins of the 21s ~% a pleasure on 
Week, and make another excursion to Barcelona | with the utmost owes her ued esist your pretensions.” 
. The Gazette contains a royal decree, or- | SU uccession ap and snow sirms, ar the pi Thi is aby aie eel alternate app fae and cla- 
Minister of Fi funds at the | meter had at soa Š veen a ow as ne ° below pie er i mour, cone’ eluded the sitting. On th, ist inst., the Diet 
lergy t to celebrate in a} @ degree of cold was felt o oro sonn tion epee the Jesuits be ex 
g anie A a ol iesi in- | neither the houses gi T clothing o of the people are | the i. when the numbers: stood thus— 
been instituted by the Government oe prepared for it; and t hing j ap “apülsio: my 10 ca anions and 2 half cantons; against 
plot detected at Vittoria, and was activ G tof S R countries, fhe} SS à Two cantons s (St. G Gall 
~ | 0 + ‘in Tn Ar. 
aah at oe b that the projected ovemment of Sazony i8 PS tan ee yeap a moue S 
~ on at Kh 
broken out at the same basta in | Aragon and | hav e been founded in Ocean an reached should be called upon toremove them. This decision 
It was, however, rumoured at Madrid that, | town 0 oi got m Ger oan unsettled, rp a majority consisting of 
aiming at the reset of Espartero, the con- | mise of nthe Landgrav~ frederick ot Hes: d ! at least 12 cantons is necessary to rend er r vali à any vote. 
bee It was pa jon the 24th ult after a short illness, om = ig estates of | TH 
had been an Absolutist one. 
Party Br a | although it is said that the Jesuits themselves intended 
who acknowledged the Marquis d | Penker „near Lutgenburg, at the age of 74, 
