| ree gen ee scsi ox my nS Se ate adnan saoeeien saa nara - oui = aE a Se a = tod Op y tenc Este re dor, and the Count de Spaur, with his reverend charge, crossed the frontier in safety, and arrived at Gaeta, a, larg town, the first in the Neapolitan territory, no! far. from Tarracina. The Pope left the Quirinal on the eve-, nine of the 24th, and arrived at Gaeta on the night of ~ the 25th. As soon as the Pope arrived a letter was sent to King Ferdinand, the Pope remaining in the Bishop’s palace at Gaeta. ‘T'wo regiments were sent from Naples by steamers to Gaeta, as a guard of honour, and the King, Queen, and the Princes fodowed in another Stea- mer. ‘I'he royal party arrived at Gaeta, and did homage we his Holiness in the usual manner, by kissing his foot. The Queen and Princes remained at Gaeta, while the King returned t ples to make preparations for the reception of his Holjpess. The Roman and Spanish Ministers at Naples went to Gaeta, and the diplomatic corps at Rome, except the Sardinian mem- ber thereof, has arrived at Naples, with the Cardinals. Only six Cardinals remained at Rome. The Princes Borghese, Doria, Salviati, and Rosbigli- osi, and several other Rowan noblemen, have joined the Pope at Gaeta. It is very commonly supposed that Lucien Bonaparte, Prince de Canino, is deeply implicated in the proceed- ings which have led to the Pope’s flight; and it is said that he will probably be appointed president of the Ro- wan republic, if one should ever be constituted. Seven of the Cardinals have arrived at Naples; but aome accounts in the French papers assert that the Pope bad ordered the sacred college to proceed to Malta, in order that a conclave might be held there in case of his e. ‘The Pope is at Gaeta. His Holiness will not visit, France until after the election for President. is over, as he has no desire to place himself at the discretion of.a Bonaparte, after having been expelled from Rome by the Prince of Canino and Borghese. His Hoiiness effected his escape from the Quirinal by concealing himself ina’ baggage-van. ~ The Naples journals give the following as the re- ply of the Pope to the Diplomatic Corps, guaranteeing its exactitude :— “Jam, gentlemen, guarded.a vue. My own guard has been taken from me, and replaced by strangers. Myrule of couduct in these circumstances, in which [ find myself without succour, isto avoid at.every price tendance at Chureh, | make everything yield) the effusion of Roman blood. to that principle ; but know, gemtemen, and make all) Furope aware of it, thatd refuse to take any part. what- | ever, even nominally, in the acts of the new govern-' ment, which is altogether @ stranger to me. I have! forbidden that mv name shall be employed, or that the usual forms shall be used for the public acts.” | Mr. Temple, the English Minister to the Court of Naples, has arrived at Rome, He is the bearer of the) ultimatum of France and England in_ relation to the disputes between Naples and Sicily. It is said that the Romans intend to, proclaim a re- public, with the Prince de Canino as President. FRANCE. Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte has been eleeted President of France, not only by a sufficient, but by an overwhelming majority. During the week preceding the 10th inst. the most strenuous exertions were made by all the multitudinous employes throughout E'rance in favour of General Cavignac. The latest intelligence from France states, that the Proclamation of the President will probably be made about the 20th inst. The Ministry was formed with the full approbation of M M. Thiers, Mole, and Marsha) Bugeaud. A well informed Paris paper says:—* So far as we can judge from the incomplete séturns that arrive to us! from the departments, the suffrages were divided in the following proportions :— Louis Napoleon, - - G6 per cent. Cavaignac, . . i a J.edru-Rollin, - - - S...%. 4 Raspail, : ‘ . 44.4 Lamartine, - - - Bal’ ays THE EXAMIN BR. a 1 SEE co NE leonstitution. It appears in the Preussiche Staats n- zeiger of the 7th, which contains also the royal ordon- nance forthe dissolution of the National Assembly. ‘he blow is therefore struck. ———— a mm sii) NEWFOUNDLAND. The Newfoundland Legislature was convened on the 16th ult. The Lieutenant Governor in his Speech announces ‘The official portion of the Staals Anzeiger commences)as his reason for calling the Assembly together on eo iby announcing thatthe king has nominated Herr Von/early a day, that the Colonial Revenue Act would ex- ider Heydt minister of commerce and public works, and| pire on the 3let ult. ‘Count Von Bulow head (pro tem.) of the department of| His Excellency recommends the promotion of Agri- foreign affairs. Instead, therefore, of dissolving the ob-|culture as the best means for the extension of the field noxious ministry, the King of Prussia has taken steps to|of labour, the Fisheries alone being now inadequate for complete and strengthen it. their support. —_——— He fears that the finanical condition of the Colony HUNGARY. will not admit ofa large appropriation for the extension The Pesth House of Representatives has declared |of the Roads, that the throne of Hungary is vacant, and the house of} Her ecommmends a moderate assessment on houses to ‘Hapsburg uaworthy to reign. meet expenses for the adoption of measures for impro- ‘i sie ving the health of the town—in event of the appearance SAXONY. of the Cholera. By a new law of the kingdom of Saxony, the press is His Excellency concludes a good Speech by declaring declared entirely free, and the censorship for ever abo-|that “in some of the Districts in which the potato erop lished. has been destroyed, and the fisheries unsuccessful, the ,inhabitants have been reduced to a sitnation of consi- THE DEATH OF IBRAHIM PACHA. derable distress,” | Certain information has arrived to the effect that lbra- nieem eae Esq. was chosen Speaker of the House o ham Pach died on the 10th of November, and had been ; ' ‘ leuceeeded by Abbas Pacha. He was buried near Cairo, There were several cases of Small Pox in St. Jobn's. in the tomb of the Caliphs, on the 16th, without pomp. None of the foreign consuls were at the funeral. The government has been placed im the hands of Said ee |#acha, until the retarn of Abbas Pacha from his pil-| We are credibly informed that a Despatch has been grimage to Mecca. i@:eived by the Lieutenant Governor, from the Colonia [brahim Pacha leaves behind him three sons, two of| Minister, directing that provision be at onee made for whom area: Perm. pst the payment out of the Island Revenue of our Civil SCOTLAND. List, except the Salary of the Governor, who is to re Acurious ecclesiastical case is presently before the ceive £1,500 from the Imperial Treasury. This will civil courts. A clergyman in Blairgowrie, Perthshire, be sad news for the sinecure officials, who, at a time ‘having refused baptism to the child of a school-master, |Jike the present, when the Revenue is greatly diminish- the case went the run of the church court, and ended . ‘in the baptism of the child. The school-master then |°* eee ee - to receive large and unnecessary of There is no doubt that Earl Grey has been in- ,instituted a civil action, and, in absence of the Lord Or- aries. ‘dinary found the defendant liable to £500 damages, duced to.make this order from noticing the prodigious jeereunely, and £500 gp Miageiriss wae the kirk ses-. jjberality displayed by the Legislature last Session is. sion, In the meantime, the clergyman as commenced | ora ning large sums of money for purposes not. abse- ‘a new suit against the school-muster’s wife for non-at-| ; | lutely necessary. Hurrah, then, for Responsible Go- ‘vernment: if we are bound to provide for our own Ci- Fravup ON THE Bank or l'nGLAND.—A few days.ago| yjl Jast, the Colonial Office will no longer have an ex. a note for £1,000 was presented for piyment. ‘The in-} spector examined tt, found it genuine, looked to the num-| bers of the stopped notes, and seeing that the note pre-! ee THE CIVIL LIST. euse for refusing us this right. ‘sented was not among them, two £500 notes were gi-! Roya. Agricutturat Sociery.—The Annual Meet- , } shane y thie wa tren at e . ven in exchange, for which gold was procured almost ing of this Society was held at the Town Hall on Wed- immediately. On the following day it was disrovered. . , ws : re. 4d nesday evening last, 3 - that the leading figure of the number had been dexte-| "© day evening last. His Excellency the Lieut. Go rously changed, and that 94.825 was altered to 04,525. [t required the eye ofa chemist to detect the change ;) and as.no blaine can be attached to the inspector, we! presuine the “rest” will be reduced by the ameunt paid in error. nary examination was eqtal to its discovery, ‘thus sent formed one of a series of which a bank elerk was defrauded a few years ago, COMMERCIAL. Commercial affairs, says the Luropean Times, have considerably improved. The Colonial Produce markets, although not active, have manifested considerable firmness, and a fair amount of business has been done. The supplies of all sorts of Breadstuffs continue large. "Eke market, which has. been dulband depressed, begins to. show a some- what firmer feeling. ‘Ihe fact is, that parties engaged inthe trade are beginning to think that prices have touched their lowest point, at least for the present; in- asmuch asthe disturbed state of the continent mus! have caused too large exports of food, therefrom, and which must shortly be replaced from this country.— Sales of Flour in bond have been made at 25s. Gd. and and one very fine parcel at 25s. 9d. to 26s. per barrel ; but the best Western Canal cannot be sold in quantity above 25s. The value of duty paid is quoted at 27s. to ABDICATION OF THE EMPEROR OF AUSTRIA. | 28s. per barrel. Sad. to 32s, per quarter for inferior white to the best yel- ‘low, has, in consequence of an increased demand, ad- Our accounts from Vienna to the 3rd inst., communi- cate the abdication of the Emperor of Austria in favour of his nephew, the Archduke Francis Joseph, eldest son), somewhat. restricted. The inquiry for Indian Mea! of the Archduke Francis Charles, who has waived his claim to the imperial throne. This important proceed- ing was announced to the Diet at Kremsier by Prince Nchwarzenberg, and two proclamations were imme- diately issued; one by ihe late Emperor, Ferdinand, dated Olmutg, the 2nd of December, in which he an-| nounces his reasons for abdicating the throne ; the other | by the present Emperor Francis Jaseph, whieh embo-| dies the principle points stated in the ministerial pro- gramme, as given by Prince Schwarzenberg, in the Chamber at Kremsier. The news of the late Emporor’s} abdication was received, with satisfaction at Vienna, | where all was tranquil. The ex-Emperor has fixed up- on Prague as his place of residence, for which city he) gyjtted Olmutz on the day of his. abdication. PRUSSIA. Qur letters from Berlin to the evening of the 6th inst., unce that the King had, by the advice of his minis-| rere dissol yer. the Constituent Aesembly, and declared a, Indian Corn which had receded to 29s. vanced to, 32s, to 35s.; but at these figures the demand ‘is limited, and prices are reported at 16s. per barrel. UNITED STATES. Bishop Hughes, of New York, has issued a pronun- ciamento, directing his clergy to oifer prayers for the protection of the Pope. A horrible murder and suicide have been committed under the influence of Jove, jealousy and madness (a strange trio) in New York city. Marxets.—.Vew York Dec. 26.8, p. M.—Flour brisk. improving; 4000 barrels 85% to $54; common and, straight brands, $5§ to $54, pure Gennessee. dull, unchanged, Boston, Dec. 26.—Sale3 of Gennesse at £5624 to $5 75; fancy brands $6 to $6 50; Ohio, Michigan and Oswego, $5 50. There was a better feeling aad more demand. Corn, The figure was so wel! inserted that no ordi, The note | -vernor, who is Vice Patron, presided, assisted by Wm. Douse, Esq., President, and the Hon. W. Swabey, Vice President. ‘he Hall was crowded, and the liveliest in- terested was. rmantfested in transacting the business of the evening. The Report is a lengthy document, and embraces a variety of interesting topics: we did not ireceive it soon enough for insertion in this week's pe- per. We shall, however, give it in our next. The Re- ‘port being adopted, the usual vote of thanks was passed ‘to the Committee for their attention to the business of ‘the Society during the past year.—The Hon. V’illiam ‘Swabey was elected President; the Hon. Stephen Rice, Vice President; and James H. Conroy, Esq., Assistant Vice President. The following gentlemen were also ‘elected members of the Committee in the place of an ‘equal aumber who retired in conformity with a rule of the Society: Judge Peters, W. Douse, Esq., Mr. H. Longworth, and Mr. George Beer, jun. Charles Stew- art, Esq., was re-elected Secretary and Treasurer.—Af- iter the election of Office Bearers had taken place, Wii- liam Douse, Esq., read a well-written Address, showing ithe advanced state of Agricultural Science, and sug- | gestive of improvements in our Island system of hue- bandry. The Meeting’s appreciation of the Address was marked by an unanimous vote of thanks,—His Ex- cellency evinced much zeal in the promotion of the So- ciety’s interests, and.communicated a good deal of sta- tistical information derived from the Census returns. Murvat Fire [nsunance Company.--The adjoora- ed Meeting of the Members of the “ Mutual Fire In- surance Company,” and of others desirous of becoming members thereof, was held at the Town Hall on Friday evening, when the following gentlemen were appointed Directors of the Company for the current year :--D. Brenan, E. L. Lydiard, Thomas Pethick, W. W. Lerd, Charles Young, George Beer, jr., J. D. Haszard, Henry Palmer, Henry Haszard, John Gainsford, Thomas B, Tremain, Robert Hutchinsgn, and Peter MacGowan, Esquires. The Directors purpose meeting this (Tues- day) evening, for the purpose of appointing a Presicen, | Secretary and Treasurer.