The New York Herald Newspaper, December 8, 1851, Page 6

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AUTHENTIC NARRATIVE disposed to labor, on sécount of coat to | gniTlONAL BOROPEAN INTELLIGENCE, canpert, which, bad the promoted his Supreme Court—Spectal Term, oF THE Awe ge oo RECEIVED BY THE ‘conveyed by Lord John Russell with a. and blistered her; when she was te wary is’a tnoat material eddivion to THE APPLICATION FOR A MANDAMUS A@ALNST THE ESCAPE OF MADAME KOSSUTH. bad been conveyed to the Lore ahead STEAMSHIPS HUMBOLDT AND AMERICA. hoy fooling, is 0m ; 4 BOARD OF COUNTY CANVASSERS—SWEARING ON A ios a ing that the poor euferormust be none Our London Correspondence. sah ne feralehed, wo think that Liotionaat Pie Dre ¢— inthe case of Levi 8, Obatfeld against the Bosse During the month ef the Pr | the of her search, expremed 8 visit Lonpow, Friday Evening, Nov. 21, 1851. elie forthe ws Pessoesing very possile of County Canvassers. an order was granted last Saturday a me c Departure of Kossuth Death of the King. of Han- Ff at bia werk, ieee the for the dafvndant show conse Why 8 mendamtus Ea nny abe Th Had oad | oth eet acl. Meters Train, tad |“ cver—Palmerston makes Political Captal—Aus- Tar Cenametical Eedlety, tovolel warel’ edseus should moj distrist of the Sourteenth ward, Mr, Loses Beiaven thet fn - tows ‘Zoga- | the latter Sh ES veaireg, te tria’s Rage—Bankrwptcy of the Austrian Empire have come forward to express thelr desire to accom- B Eheperd moved fee eo of on aGhdavite, ‘The “het Se ree Gate | Attaegth Badan iE the Sisters to in | —France—General State of Affairs—Trivenph of a of medals to the crews bevwason of tbe three Lnepevtre of thet iit The tangarian rope anaes Be form her that she had » message for her from her ‘Ne Coup @Etate=The Weather | of the Advance oad Reseue bs in the New the late general election of of New Yorn; that epeamD) behind him, towards the husband, who was not dead, as she hed Lowis Napoleon—Coup ‘ ‘den | Xone Fare pon ‘all the beetended te al fam the opting os the mording wes ussian of reserve, Paakio- and thet she would sven convines Hes, if ohe and Theatres—The Arctic Research—The @ —— m copied London of the 4th November, to the c ‘at sunset; there witch. Dembinahi, with his men, Tomes ber to outer. Pt Mesto, be foar and Lottery Miscellaneous, $c., He: ‘Phare have been anew: pom of wind were cast 404 votee for the office of Attorney Gemerai, of wer, and he had already carried its wall. ve her and L——— was aniled at last for the United States. storms h glee which{Levi 8. Chatfield had 397, and Daniel Ullmann 67 Between him and the Tisch ny the waited Austro- | allowed to see her handed her | _ Kossuth has 96 70m 4 Benth const, attended with shipnresk votes; O'Nell, Abel Price, and Francis Gilmore, who were Russian forces. The cree ot Baw “hed bose ie. the letter of Governor Kessuth. recognised at | Before, or at least as coon as this reaches you, the and loos of life. The Verto steamer was totally the chosen ins for the dacrict, made an at Hermanstadt the Rassian Ge: once the writing; kissed it te her heart; Magyar chieftain will have set foot upon the free The famous I bate Crew saved. original Malesrat of the roi ho cet, tod caried band Sreine Sine soil of the United States. been drawn at Paris. ‘the lucky heldorne’s chivty Original statement and cetitoata O'Neil being Chairman Cement | Accompanied by M. Pelusky, Mademe Pulssky | persons of the poorer olasts.. ‘The was of th Tnepestors delivered the same to James M. Berd, iad eee) ene London apn var ag Nowman Bs been appointed ident of the Satori tated thas ‘ettended xi te Board was ; as mo » s 4 Spence ne eho imo pips | fora weap a a wall ted bet | Soap naar TEAM wha, aftr | “Rare change sass Haga fender Sun coarumn, ote ft Roe, oat ey» setae egy oa Ue » . American Consulate, he | main firm. ‘mentioned in O’Neil’s affidavit, for the. been d to forsake and retire to | on escape from the enemies of their country. | passing an hour at the * Rah: Page Sind bogereh e ao ues ot Vilage Before leaving the Go- Tt is not known by what route the ladies reached , accompanied by the Mayor and Corpo- Our Southampten Correspondence. for the ce of ‘Attorney. ge IS took esper segactad from hin vite ana ikivens oa | ne corti sneer? eedd ans a sunqeatod os | "alee (iw fall vohen')- cm Seand the Japan, vies Soursawrron, Nov. 16, 1661. tutimele and make much Niteneat of teerrote, arcuee = ie pola iat my ye Peat thet nerstoalty ded to that city, then | took them on to Cowesto join the Humboldt. A | The Tyiwmphs of Kosswth—A Review of his Pro- snd decided not to make any estimate oftham, they're? of the moment, it was a subject of even more than in posteuaion of General Hlapans. Tt has sincethen | handsome dejewmer was prepared on beard the Jupi- gress in Emgland—His Departure for xdmerica. foont to py original statement of the votes of deabt whother they would over meet againon earth. | becomes source of pride toboth of them, that there ter. Kossuth’s health was drank and responded to. The wonderful triumph of Kossuth has at length bcrigy: ois, commen yaeliere . coded to paten 2 eg a meviah wih BE pap a te wh ys ‘Among {| At®P.M. the Humboldt steamed out of the | concluded in England, and the exiled patriot, by ing that district. Counsel et considerable length Kossuth, sly swore to bis wife that be would | the letters with which this lady was by the | Roads with the Hungarians on board. At the’! the steamer which oonveys'this letter, loaves, to on- io capes! of Bi enue Aad Wer SXioues Ce tecame maver_isare ber busbend, thet Medens Tages | a et on ee eee ae aaa ee enn ae ei a eacrere | epee NeeealNT of Shy. Unita Stetes.. The Willard rédsted the applisation, on the grouna thet the ted to.be rate ‘o a of Hungary, n Q The 8, from the correspon. q ‘ r in fight The children were confided to the care of | fined in a prison of the city, on cruel fate re ot fog >: sain: hog ag Powertul encores te be = upon the English Oy eae Pompei eng a “eM. Forrest, | Totes were iogal. and in point of fess, the Board of ry e secretary of the Governor, and this indi- | to which the “butcher” subjected him. When it | donts.of the New York p onal mageos, You will only be-sble to properly appreciate, | a.ainst Edwin Forrest, an order was issued by Judge | COUntY Canvasers eres nonentity, and have no exist- EN siitrst wently delivered them upto the tender | was decided that be should be lgnominessty pat to | duct of Kosruth on board the Mississippi, have | whem you come to trace the wondorfal sensation ; Campbell that the plaintiff ahow cause why pon 4 ence, Yea Uasroties 8 msndimn ovale not lamne agsinet moroice of wy, for the purpose of securing his | death by tho hangman's rope, tha: excellent and | 4¢oq pablished in tho London joursals. he will produce among the whole body of the poople | obtained by ber for struck jury should not be vacated, | Unailenged were eworn one-cpeliiog books fons tnabecrore own pardon and safety The shidren sot out before | mild Hungarian patriot endeavored to put an ond Th. King of Hanoveris dead. Ho was the oldest | inthe United States He is, be bert ; OF modified 90 as to enable the defendant to call for | Soted in that district. lnatecd of tn i Sis Ueafoctors their mother, and the latter, in ber flight, ondea- | to his own existence with arazor; but, uofortuaate- je King 0! oe " 2 2 ‘e is, beyond question, | the striking of the juny, on proceed to trisl before an | Kops thisty-one minutes poarch oe vored to keep at least so near to them as to hear | ly, not succeediog, Haynau dragged his mutilated | monarch in Europe, being is his Slet year. the most profound representative of the principle | ordinary jury. Mr. John Van Buren eppeared in sup. py: ae ee ey paseettody eer aiamens pecece now end then of their sa‘ety and bleeding body from the prison, and ended bis | Duke ef Cumberiand, he was never liked in ing” | of free government that sprung out of the revolu. | Primc’pre,epPlication, which was made on the afidavit | sontrary to law, during tle absence of « majority of the ‘Madame Kossuth sought out a brother of hers, | life on the gallows. The letter which Madame | 1.14. 4, King of Hanover be proved ® good sove- | tions on the Euro ‘continent in 1848. £2 Shor ‘cee wore ase things thet | reguisr imepectors; the return of votes cast and pre- residing in the town of Vilagos, and he is now im- | L had for him was from his brother, who had | Bt “* OA ot will be felt in Germany. He | Oe te plead seg MSS area tated ‘be with teetee na gee ig ed ag tiga sented to the County Vanvassers was incorrect in every prisoned in the fortress of Comoran, with many | escaped into Turkey with M Koseuth; and she bad | taaioe a gon, who is stone blind. 1 have anotion | doubtless take the earliest pe rtunity to ph am | — Mr. O'Conor opposed the lication on the ‘amdeyita | WAY; the chairman of the district refused to let the Behe i sufrsnate Hungarian patriot fr | the satutoton of euring wong the TAAL at scouring to German iam, the Fvloce wil ot | Gh" Amecean oops the foment that lotated | Men, Yrs cna,tor Morey ar Ghee om he | fn tut feok ay nha and Teterta % succor e | Oo! im, aI jooume p - 5 Seeegere te be meer “Leaving him, she next went | ferer, to whom It was no Little souree of onselation ier on oe a as theee el be are. | are fig Sard pen Prone] Be te | fecompanyi fetes inoue tr °he peamiae’ the County Clerk's flee om, the iaxt day, altered, in search of her children, and wandered to @ pesta, | to know th — ; enoy, probably ueder the Duke of Camb - | only people where he oan confidently rely on mate- | im 4: end were. fi bi f Boeksak,’ bel to a relative. Madame L— hada relative in Hungary who P r ae ly rely great importance to the plaintiff! Mrs. Forrest's affidavit Tam she fell il ry s pote Tg which nearly | bad not been compromised in the war; #0 thi Pere | Hae} caer Copy King) Re ay Prmtoe bins ey ral uy le ‘non ome he Fe. oa es the most ee ae oa } Bienation and | ended her life; and when go far recovered as to be | son arranged to meet the ladies at a given plac age. According to Hanoverian law of succe> | masses upon what they desired es policy of this | advised that she should not go to trial ‘without those able again to travel, she continued her journey in | and in the character of a merchant trave! with th H ; | gio, the throne descends only in the male line government to be towards Hungary, should she | Rs A Lelegrapbic despatch had been received from search of her children. She soon le: that After they had left the pasture groun: is ) ‘ngland, just | ‘the Mew Beng den. bad beon given up by their protector to the Austrian | as the husband of “Maria,” and the | oC Palitical ewe nee meme onto tolma, | make soother struggle for, her Prostrased indepen; | counetl or sents there, wud that the ad been seat ty | General, Haynau, and taken to Pesth. Her own | ashis aunt. At night they stopped ai | Palmerston bas.received d tions with congratu- rape f. or pod ped Ley G stated | express to New York. The affidavit pt fm Forrest went safety depended wholly upon the fidelity of the | were suspected, on account of the females oocupy- addresvertor his hed conduct in su, i aprenry) meml ak louse eee | om to state that though Chief Justice Oakley Hungarian peasants, and on their attachment to | ing the bed, while he slept at the door They started | ing ‘Turkish government in the release o! | at ° great anenet 6 acre ion, that when | mated that the cause could not be tried until the j' her husband. | early in the jag, and the “husband” re- | eta im bis fon Attitude towards the despetio tho Colonenqeeies to the Eng! soreramen te i yaa serpy 998 the counsel for the defendant att EiNow, having no other object in view than her | maiged behind, to loarh something more of the aus- | @usd,and in bis Arm_sttitade towards the dospolts | know if the latter would preserve inviolate the | st the trial (rm, from dey to day, calling om the cee, to own safety, without friends better off than herself, | picieps to which their conduct bad given rise. Ho what ia called political capital and has earnedsome | rerengys of A. * be «7 ho o and | gige tn ep ne Pee as Soe aay ae yj 4 abe yon Became reduced ton Male f comple do Sguin overtook them, eo they topped food saci" | Popularity. Fie bas also rucccoded im ‘ofuting | fyeodom—ona upon. au ‘afirmaive Toply, he, was Pali coun! were ty the male inapplicable to the | Seid agsetice naa “Shnsar et wee poked ie titation. In ise, she Wan oven Rae aes |. Ere “A Bovdpocned - | Austrian and Fronch influences on the Porte. The Tf this be tru d ‘but little | recent motion. and he then proceeded to draw the at- ‘t was sworn in ii y . J miserable part of Hungary. She even, asa means In the evening, while the two ladies wore sitting 4 | toleased. ue, and there can be but little , tention of the eourt to the in which the | PODCBt was eworn inspector by O'Neil, and om the re- of safety, Esl as veapee , Bought for service asa | together in amberably cold room—the face of post Getaman Horie bas eenational Sho. fremation of the | doubt of it, for the great chief has stated that his case stood. ‘The ccunsel alluded Ramet Forrest's af- | tr thei bean wepefiors newer pe ogee yng se pes but Servant, and by telling she was a poor woman, | Maria so mutiled as to conceal her features, in- eee dintel Y> Doge test pes ogy perso hadEng- | fidevit was himself (Mr. V, B.) He bad attended the court pode or —_ cameomce 4 me whe bad just been discharged from ® pablic hos- | duce the belief that she was suffering from her fe po er a ye {and Ro united with Aneto BT yp A | tery day this wook, and tbe tral i ote moved under | inspector O'Mellin hie cadets, clan tee ee oe pital—which, indeed, she very much resembled— tooth, appea: much a8 pel - | state. Tho follo letter from Vienna, dated | ;j ie ree) = _ | even the paint ba ate | was brought to him by « policeman, and he believed it to was #0 fortunate as to find employment in the family | poverty, overcome by Pher aftlictions—Maria faa wing the baokruptey of the tion, be will doubtleas return here, as he must be suey ay 8 Lang Play Rag rus - ¥,] Bi i Orash , | mervous laughed eo loud | 16th ult., pithily portray 4 : near to the probable scene of operations, and would jury, and th lenged on it, and contin 0 9% 4. of humble carpenter, inthe town of Oath aye: MAZL her voles Was recognised by an Aenrian o@loer, | Austrian Empire, and the despotie rule of Sehwar- | Sxpect to make Gogland his home while awaiting Li” o’ener's Cngagemeat in tis United Btatee Court. | when i wns dissovared by McLaughl notte bea Bible Louis Kossuth, the late Governor of Hungary. | who happened to be in the house. This person boy ER are calculated to a | (DSt result. Still it is in the United States, the never thought proper toaitend the Superior Court | The Sdditional affidavit of Abel Price states that the Everywhere notices were exposed in the streets, | sent a servant to ask them to come into his room, 4p. ming with astonishment and Will mot fail ¢o produce | there caly, com he expect that sympathy whioh will Fo ee gee | book on which he was sworn as inspector did mot con- offering forty thousand florins for her capture, and | where there wasafire. Madame L. inquired the their eppr e frait sooner or later. Lalludetothear- | #*#1 him in the next struggle. ‘Whevover he has om prociaiming death as the punishment of the person | name of the “‘ good gentleman” who hadthe kind- | rests and summary ejection of upwards ofa hundred indi- been he has declared that Hungary can at any mo- ary jury, then there will be no necessity to vacateit. | French,” by J.L Jewett’ The argume who ebould dare to harbor or conceal her from | ness to invite them to his room, and when she heard | viduals, engaged im businces hero.whove transactions were | ment throw off the bondage of Austria, andro- | Mr. Van Buren read the order, which has been | occupied the authorities. | it, Maria recognized in him a deadly y of her | Pen yoy Seon te affected the funds. The ex; main master of her ancient boundaries, unless the published, and continued to say, that it wase of Among the persons who fled with M. Kossuth husband While wer ing @ means of | ofthe natives trom house and home on suspicion of enter- latter receives support from the Czar; andhe has ndifference to the defendant, at the . ne ©. 1 4 di | Dre. 6.—The Judge said that he should defer all the is fl ‘adi im, th ti teiming hostile views, or planning derigns against the | here incuicated the maxim upon which the men of an ordinary jury, 9 acer inty, whee Pend of hie bg owen om cmd — »< tely come aged prouged oes Btate, the daily application ot the corperal’s cane to the | the Ameri lation d in the le ‘about the commission was en. | ®Usee until mext motion day, except those that imvoived backs of the humbler classes of both sexes, the suppres- : ad Madame 1——, and who, from being un- humble courtesy, in so awkward manner as to M - | of their own freedom, that every people have an r 4 ‘ie ride as fast and as long as those ka wore divest him of all suspicion. Madame L— s 5 eaittens Wiican men ant sovial 2 be coger y e labore Finns to Steep of tests: oun sor a | the Court | Cou 4, -_ 1 omfirantion of er and younger than became and thanked him again and again for his kindness, whole string of the like abuses of euthority, are already 8 ' 6 had become of rasa wd Sine aopeeig Sf Baaie, wy matter hepoelf soon | and was left behind. She hada "a butaddedthat such poor creaturesasthey, were 0 familiar to your readers,and have been so long the aristocracy of England have extended to him no | jor in the Hungarian army, near the person of not fit to go into his room. So soon as the officer order of the day in Austrian cities groaning under mar- SYmpatby—a body whose position is dependant | met interfare, | Sis moved Sor the appcintanens, of Csapelaspaers of the Governor, and both the bon and the mother retired Maria bad auothor attack, which would cer- tal law, thatthe appetite for such herrees becomes palled, upon the law of primogeniture, felt the inevitable | postpone this | Eatimete for open “Town Go Mey Fig ade were warmly attached to his iuterests. Madame tainly have betrayed them, had he been present. 4nd one gladly turns from the subject with ssighofpity. power of a man whe came to personate the princi- detentions will be | on, cast of the owners, Misheles 0. Bronett end Aaron L—, when unable to proceed longer with the | Madame L— implored her to be composed, or But when the euthority of theswordontetepsthe utmost ple that the will of the > people, as expressed in | 1 apenron’, a8 | 0. ‘The Court then selected from the two liste fugitives, in orde: eee sy of safety in the | they would be lost. , Umit thateven in is nesigned toit--when the pollee | their aggregate body, should be the law of the land; Pe oe erm eee expen. to vt IN aeut | the following n 0s commissioners, W, 8. Mille- dominions of the Sultan of Tar , determined to | Starting again, they were not molested until the | fpPerintendent. nen nity Pwane a ow eed that arti distinctions in personal rights, | being in another court, he should not have undertaken | “0ller, Pls. Sweeney, and N. C. Bvorett remain in Hungary, and devote herself to the find- evening, whon they were apprebended and conduct- {au “ePysilers Oe day, with the commercial foceations, without reference to merit, should not be permitted ; ‘an B ) had given up other scitihendbiditcdhadestaclciis ing of Madame Koseuth, and restoring her to her | ed by two policemen before » magistrate. - There of the monied world, and then threatens great bankers | 10 & government that claims to be even partially bad suffered defaults in many instances be- Sean husband the former spoke of them as suspicious charasters; | and wealthy firms with the sword of the law, incase {ree 4 | his i . The first ground of jourt of General Sessions, For this benevolent purpose, Madame L— dis- _ but they were not told of what they were ted. they poreist in epeculations, or make purchases which The Times, tho most influential paper in Europe, | spplication for it motion is imposition—Mr.For- | Before the Recorder and Aldermen Oskley end Ball. guised herself as » beggar; and after along and | While the examination was going on, Madame | may have the temporary efleot of reducing the value of as the representative of the aristocracy, Bos placed | orderonwhat | Dec. 6.—The Case of Fernando Wood.—The District weary journey, oftener on foot than in any con- L—— slipped a bank note into the hand of the su- | the goverment paper-money, one is naturally tempted itself in an antagonistical position to ov mon- = s . ‘They never Attorney, with whom was Mr McKeon, in court Veyaace, sue crossed the vast sandy plains of South- | perior of the two policemen. This bribe quite ss where is the police and militery int nee to stration that has been in his favor. No sooner ¢ tees ee ave he bed heard some ings had been ee ah the place a | Phanged the affair; the men became their fricads, $24," wher« is the precise limit to discretionary power’ than he expressed a wish to visit England, they calling for setruck | taken in this matter, which he did not understand. “Ie which Lossuth's children were, but could bear | excited the pity of the magistrate. in their favor, 1s, counting bouse of the merchant 99, yall 60 the opened upon him a flood of bi ate that would | “yr? appliertion: | paid the criginal indlotment, to which no pies had been een a Ee iron tad Sen ant, | Site tee eas ead Wetman tne | sabes nyse vaees a taeygt nett Puranas Worm pated of the Feechroolton sat Si moetioae ay 3 earned that theo! mm ha nm sent, | on from station to station, un! read | in? Jf #0, when ise justified ta rebel- » mever woul as above, and he thought > soon afrse toeir mmotherW@ad lost sight of thom, to | frontiers af Hangasy, neck the Daneber They coe | Beueemman ite, went PeeRnanecuppoced to | They have chargea him with peouletion in early | ww applies to va- | mount toa demurrer esata.) elemnell is mo question Mr. Blunt said if it were a demurrer, he would join the house of Gea. G——, now in the service of the | tered the little town of Saubin, and asked | = tougher hide than other people, exposingthem !ife, with unnumbered frauds during the poriod of 5. Sultaa io ‘Syria, to be kept with his own three | sion of the pew of the police to pass ever ie cae | ‘cecoaite trom their rulers, anda ef measure of his magistracy in Hungary, and that he has oscil- | and thee an application | is:ue and argue it. children, hoping that they would thus be screened | to Helgrade This was refused, until they said they | ‘justice than their bens? Gi tennese cit! lated from one extreme to another in politios— | TJ a miei) it, whieh the | Mr. Tucker was under the impression the District from those who sought after them. The eldest, | wisbedto go there for a certain m ¢ for m | Mmstate of siege, and Stadchauptm noe times in favor of moi y, sometimes in | ie nae Tefor- | Attorney was advised of yesterday's proceedings He * | : - él tow ; Flowers, | explained that he was counrel in the civil ault which had mamed Louis, after bis father, was seven years | daughter who was ill, and that they would leave wesbertiy, co 0 cours: bor be cilzen * Why, the favor of freedom—ever since his entrance into pub before, and so the of, age aod all were told thas if they scknow- | their parsportsaca security. He thea gare his con. | ESWasctscerwea'e period of eunshine and liberty 12 fe, Tho Time: has, in advance, denounced | morning newspapers represent, thet that commindon | retained, an’ bed undertaken the anaaiasi matter” Net they were the children of the Gover- | cent, and they crossed the Danube, andemtered the | compared witb the evil dar: we are fallen upon. If the °Yery man whe has lent to his cause any | was not to be produord on the trial, and thet the Hoffman was to-dey engaged in the United Btates Vou: plain. they would be imprisoned by the Aus | dominions of the Sultan of Turkey. ate: interference lsaliowed | 2trergth; and thus, perhaps, prevented many, | tiff intended to examine the witness on the stand. There | andbe (Mr.T triads, ‘act cover see. thelr paronta ‘again. So | “It wee tight when they entered Balgrade. They | SeectrlocesrPeaatn the Rustriancapitsreil becomes even of the partially émancipated aristocracy, from | is no mystery about it; be atated it before, and the Court | Lut there waste be as argument, be teqaested the sant that 'whon az Austrian offer traced them to | knocked atthe dcor of the Sardinian Consal, who | by word smong the ces of Europe, and thenobiebied. giviag expression to sympathy in his favor.” Nor | would find it reported in the core an setter etcen | age BE cree Gn Se-mecrey. the house of Gon G——, he was ata loss to know | badrecently been stationed in that frontier town | ‘mblematic of Oars, - bas eny man been identified with the Hungarian podgaghy abe i 8, Che Gefvatens | Attorney said bo wanted to understand whieh of the children were those of Gen.G—, | by his king, whose whole heart sympathized in | cause double headed will be wably confounded with movement that the Times has not endesvored to | {hat t.shoud be so umended as to comply with the only | bis position ; if it were «motion to quash or a demurrer, and whiek these of M Kossuth; and, approaching | the Hesgatian cause, and who had formed afriend- | ‘be lower animals and the herd of um things..The Jestroy, until at evory demonstration it has been eame Vandoren tom read ae | eee hase sosen vee the eldest of the latter, he said :— little | ly aii bh M. Koseuth for the freed Fae ne ee ee ae eprninoation, end 8F0aned, burned, and trampled beneath th. 6 | ‘ofthe erae witemacicdeersecrpubemel bo Form hg se det Oh ar hace fv 7 Mae | young ak Me Heck ths dem ff | Reva, cua on gies epameeretarten ne Ee Cartny,tMaseretoteemetn a enepees | “aes Star sens | ging abr tle the Gnu, be inraen To wuish the youth repliod—“"T om net, oir” | vioch, by DM Ketecth, ches two semales Gold pro. | sreraemre, on the pert of gorersmest te patdovn 215) ogress nrough Eogiand, Dot inferior to those | that other scucesl tot catiened ta i ean cette | «git MekKeon eld tharo was thie diioaliz—e mincte Fils Samnese surprised God vexed the e@icer, who | Debiy oceh his protection; bet ‘ast, Roowlng thom, | cestyrove.cnscivazeias proved to be stacy omen, | extends “ chat and they on the part ef Ue pala, | Sere Nandervoort (clerk of the Sesesus) ended to tho emperors, when they re- __ is no proof of that, and they, on the of the plaintiff, be y . Vanderv: clerk Bese: was certaia, from the statement of their betrayor, he inquired what they wished of him? Madams in fact, worse than useless, as it diminishes whatever ned from the subjugation of those distant pro- | deny ir there is m0 counsel but ond on the povk of tase. | ora and ite Bieat contiones: : he ed canton the that these before him were the lost treasuros of his , L—— replied, “lodging and bread.” Ho invited cem@dence before existed ard creates wide-spread disaf- yinces, which were hailed by the Roman people as | Forrest in thie case. In reference to the appearances | matter to be regular. He had elways laid down a rule to ambitious search. "He uow endeavored to frighten | them in, ard Madame introduced him to | feeticn. Not the leart important cf the eymptomsof clemesits of national perpetuity, but which proved Sean (Rave taken pince st the Conceal Term of this | canse persone to apply to the tonglatrate first, where it the childzec, and, drawing a pistol, directed it to Madame Kossuth, the lady of the late Governor of mistrust opperent bere le the fact of several manufac, only to have tended to the final overthrow of the | Ovconcr) had bees attending did mot ait Ui icrrn, cu | (aa bracticable | but in this case he had mo earthly al- the breast of the boy, and said that if he did not Hungary. ” Cae eed ie ieee ee caeileularty the cose 7@PUblic. The corporate authorities ot Southamp- | thet the Superior Court sat at tem ¢ sit till eleven, ad | ternative ; he did not know anything about a civil euit, at once acknowledge that he was the son of Kos- It will readily Le perceived that the Consulcould Shere sik is employed, that article being sly pur. ‘22 the dirst piace at whioh he landed in England, gid not appear im Court in this matter ; but the attoruey iepustname aaakenanbaih h, be, would put a ball through his heart. scarcely believe that these two miserable beings | Chumabie with imdsech, received him with every demonstration of respect, | on record was in Court ready to give any information, | Mr. Tucker had thought that the Court and counset ia—who, it is said, shows himself now were the persons they represented themselves to be The Prussian chamber will be opened on the 29d he was invited to # banquet, at which he laid | and there was no necessity for (counsel's) attend- would. (the indictment having been found as it was) be « Kutayieh, much of the character of his Madame Kossuth convinced him by showing him | 27th inst , by the King in person down the reasons that had controlled him in his ef- ror and besides that, Judge Oakley had Cory | glad of the opportunity, if no offence appeared on the replied, in a tone equally Grm— | the signet-ring of her husband. In his house, Ma- Ishould not be at all surprised if Mr. Hulsemann ‘rts for Hungary. The American minister, from stated that the cause was necessarily suspended until | tace of it, to have so pronounced They had no intention [toll you, sir. Iam not the Kossuth.” dame, Kossuth fell ill, but received every possible did demand bis rta at Washington. But ‘adden indisposition, was unable te be prosent, but the jury was struck | he would also remark, that during | of poruains 00 ane Geren, The officer, bailed by the obild’s simplisity of | kindness from her host. They learned that all tho after all, it would be an idle demonstration of im- Col. Lawrence, attache to the legation, responded | Patt tf the time the two Courts met at the same hour, ¥, Blunt. If this is a demurrer, T will joim issue but + n that the: deal nnecesaa| parties tanner and spparent sincerity, was divested of his Hungarians and Poles had been removed from Wid- potent rege. The United States can suile at Aus 9 the sentiment complimentary to the American part of tbe copssel tn sailing the cape o& | wt tog hh 1 jedament eu os came: Lad ny ‘riven hguinat and led to believe that be had been din to Shumla; and, notwithstanding that it wasin trian vindictiveness. jot; while Mr. Watker, the former Secre- | js inconvenient to strike the jury unlees the cause (9 cor- the Treasury, gallantly uphold the inte- | tain to be tried; the jury can be struck in forty: (Pane ‘teoe ou, | agested that they might withdraw the er C ‘ , I ad “Wie tand as before ; they might then renew er agents of the Austrian Government had been | Consul applied to the generous and very liberal vot, upon the Electoral law. The very tery reste of the United States, and pledged, for | bours, but u nately the trisl in which bi owed) a rr Avsrion rams she American people, a hearty Co- operat Ly | O’Coner) bas been sors not shown fay sigan of Chem an they ware advised re successful, and the three cl mn kad been | Prin rvia, in whose principality Belgrade is, ta y This course was sdopted and an order entered that ti carried of in secret to Peath, near the clutches of fer his sacistnnes in bebalf Pe ths lado, and io the sore, % en saan “the pmo of the *Wo countries to form an alliance to prevent the ra- | isthe absence of the plaintiff's papers. Counsel then proceedings of yesterday be withdrawn, and. the caso im d upon. the midst of asevere winter, they decided upon pro- Louis Napoleon bas had another tri Bat before Madame L—— could get near them, ceeding at once tothe latter place. The Sardinian | ro I ‘cone you, in my last, ther » with England, should it become neoossary for the | terminating within that tho butcher Haynau. The mother and sister of most hospitable and fearless manner be provided Elyséesay a gloriamus. The next important dis pidly encroaching power of absoluteism, which now nt on to state that the trial had been put off at the im- stand over for further advisement by the defendants, no- M. Kossuth bad also been captured, and placed in them with his own carriage and four horses and an ounien = A the; oposition cf the questors, which, 4% Portentiously threateas to swallow up the liber- wee Se comtene my the plaintiff pe yp ep ty te o the Stat strict confinement. |: may be here mentioned, in escort, and in this way they started throvgh the if carried, would have enabled tho Kesombly toap. ties of continental Europe. Napoleon was right | jjctie delay in consequence of the absence of those Allee Rdvatde and Mary Evwus wore inalcted for larcos this little varrative of the sufferings and deliver- 7 eir journey was without avy point ite own officers, and give it the command When he declared, that in fifty years from the papers ny, in stealing various goods from the house where the ance of the relatives of Louis Kossuth, that Madame apprehensien of danger, for the British Consul over a number of troops, to aot, if necessary, against © his prediction, Europe would be Republican or | Judge thought. as at present advised, that the on- first named prisoner lived as servant Many of the stolen L——, on finding where and how her children were | General at Belgrade, Mr. F——, had provided the Louis Napoleon. Cossack—yet "tis impossible he could have believed | ly ota = bim was whether be ought not to make goods were found im the of Mrs. Kvans, but situated, found out ber own maid-servant, and so party with a parsport as British subjects, under the After @ very vielent debate, the proposition of the latter would have been the cage ; still, Russian | svch # modification as would have been granted at first, there was no evidence of the taking, and she was acquit- succeeded as to have her one st Posth astheir assumed names of Mr., Mrs, and Miss Bloomfield; the questors was rojected by a very large majority. power at this moment prodominates over the greater °F vacate the order Cy =a if the plainti? hasbeen ted. Alice was convicted of petty larceny Margaret nurse. This persom never left them until the mo- yet the severity of the weather was such that Me The mountain made common cause with the Eiysée. portion of it. The American Consul, Mr. Croskey, | Silty ef any unreasonable delay. ‘Taylor was then placed at the bar, charged with receiving mont of their final deliverance from their Austrian dame Korsuth, io the ill state of her health, sufler- (A mor erring i took @ most active part in the Kossuth movement , MT. 0 Uonor was certain that the Court would not some other goods stolen by Ace Hawards jailors was arrived. After thus having provided ed very much. Often the snow was as deep as tho , the ee tae icons, one p Lig at Southampton, and thus retlected honor on the Sting s0 the part of the puters py eee 4 eC nnn Sen hare Sot, whe, by virwne for the welfare of the children of M. Kossuth, | breasts of the horses, and not unfrequentiy four resorted to, and blood might have been shed. Gen. government to which he belongs. At London, the other side, this application should be made on that patch ey oan oa : he prisoner's Madame L—— renewed her search for their desti- | oxen had to be attached to the carriage intheir St. Arnaud, the Minister of War, had in his pocket \ossuth was received by the Mayor and Manicipai und. It bad been said that the ticularly eb iy pao ee, onne ae . —e ES tute and evfering mother. places. A journey. which, in summer, would have @ message of Louis Napoleon, to appeal to the peo- uthorities, in great pomp at Guildhall, and ‘tis | finporition ; he had no objection articles, wearing apparel. &c , were concealed betweem Finding po trace of ber, Madame L— deter- | required bat « few days, now was made intwenty- | pie, had the vote been in favor of the quostors:; d that the streets through which he @ | no offence, and therefore he should the bed and elsewhere mined to follow the et and if she reached | eight. , cdgar Ney was ready to start fur the ditferent bar- ensely since dan = — was no room for the imputation —=— The question wasin case raised as to thecoustruc- Widdin, to ascertain from M Kossuth himself, ym the twenty. th day a courier was sent in racks commanded by officers devoted to the Presi- flushed with vic nig yy wow Gites att tion, of the statute, whieh was vo interesting one, as where his peor wife had gone, and them return in | adyarce of them, to apprise Governor Kossuth of dont, to tell one body to advance to defend the Pa where the groat Napoleon termin: that be would samlt that be should ever exercise that | uo-eridence that any, conta omy A oan oe search of ber. Continuing in the dieguire of abeg- their approach. He was ill; and, moreover,on ace of the Elysée, if attacked, and another division ‘ul military careor which bas rendered his name | cupping which God hedgiven him. le then referred ‘wants ar, sometimes on foot, at others in afarmer’scart, account of the many plans the Austrians to aa = to surround ‘ie National Assembly. (jen Magnan immortal. “ z . to the iclay in pi the commission to examine pam RR A cpl By 4 is heroic woman reached the frontiers of Hungary, | sassinate bim, the Suli thorities could not bad declared that no orders were to be obeyed that The next great mecting to which Kossuth Ann Flowers.and submitted that the tiff had,on all | any manner, upom any consideration, aay personal end crossing them. entered the fertified and walled alow him to leave id go to éid not emanate from the Minister of War. Asit Was invited, was in Copenhagen felds, when the cocasions, acted im good faith The delay inthe receipt | property, of any value whatsoever, that shail have been of Widdin, where the late Governor of Hun- | wife. The news of hor deliveranes, and her ap- appened, the Assembly was defeated; and people people flocked around him in tens of thousands. | of thore papers is the reason why the jury has not been | feloniowsly tale of stolem from any other, hnow- sad bis brave unfortunate companions proach, occasioned the liveliest satisfaction to a! are curious to see what will be the next move iat his greatert triumphs were in the manufactur- struck, though it is true that another cause has been su- ing the tame to have been stolen, sball upon convis- “ : Ps A 9 4ded to that im his engagement in the United States ‘ion Ke.” bd njoying the protection and hospitality of | the refugees; and the Hun ne aud Poles went The Opinccn Puldique thus analyses the late vote ng districts of Manchester and Pirmingham, though 5 the Sultan ot Turkey. Madame L- lied gs far antbe gates of the aay Yo moot this herolo | in the y eine on the proposition of the ques- the Mayors of onch of t refused to call | Court : bat (he stal and tree ronson ts, thet they desteed inte Dintelet Attorney having had occasion to inquire ip; and the Austen Central having wt o> high s | unis’ ibe osrringe seored ther, Ao th eaneres | Tt vas ngoting of the town counell, and extend to hime | “fe Cup ‘Buren then. in rep, gave review ofthe | The Ragith ietiute be sal was haomed as tas tastas iy, ae ustrian General having set so high @ | when the carriage near yy. As it enter The 44 ¥ vided ae follows :—185 recept ° cireumst under which the commission inened : tice on the capture of bis wife, he at first regarded the found the streets lighted up with belongir stimulated the people the more, and in Manchester Snq\the reason cf its cha py celebrated Jonathan Wild was trafficking in stolen pro- 1 from New Orleans to Texas, perty, and two or more rtatutes were passed with a view sot less than one hundred thousaad of the people ¢ Mason. on conditi: A turned out to witness his entry in the city. In the id pay eared det | he expression * valuable conside- evening, Nosauth received addresses from various ars. to enable ber to send compeel there; and that corporate societies at the Free Trade Hall, said to money was paid.and he (Mr. Van Buren) supposed it | consideration beyond the in: be the largest hall in the kingdom, a necessity, went to Texas to the deiay of the papers: in the | chief, The Recorder was inclined to adopt this view, that grew out of the immense meetings that Cobden | Sy** a aye 4 == papers are; | ond charged the jury accordingly, who convicted the used to electrify when he dircanted upon the anti. {he wiimers will be put upom the stamé ne te in fee | sceusea corn law league. Here he waathe questofthe great Ctner counsel beimp in the cause he (ifr syed | Im the course of his remarks on dhe orime of receiving menufacturer, Mr. Alexander Henry, member ot faith, comme, po, Te. ) #0 | tolen goods, the Recorder took occasion to say, that we 5 , on the faith of Mre. For affidavit, in which she | jegatised stealing to a certain extent by licensing “junk , er im the light of an Austrian bs 4 Having, how. | of lights, green, white, and red, the colors conser vat ever, soon found her son, who had followed the | of the Hungarian flag, and was welcomed with the | rgitimi o Governor into Turkey, he readily convinced M. | mest friendly shouts from the whole body of the {(" "ere 108 ‘ogitimistn: © Kossuth of the identity of bis mother. Alitheia r. fugees tives turiomsts ® formation which M. Kossuth could give her was, Waen Mada that thore was a lady in Hungary in whose house he belioved his wife would seek ® refuge; and if who bad risen from his bed of illne She was not still there, this lady would most pro- | seive the poor * Maria F——,” of the bably know where rhe was. Hangary. In place of receiving her io bis arma, Kossuth descended from ber car- e, abe found herself in the presence of her hus om. and the mon The Governor now furnished Madame l——— | ,. Kossuth, overcome by feelingsof admiration for 'rzrerde ta, with the exeeption of ive. parliament, and one ofthe most successful merchants | stated that Mr. Sandford was her counsel hops,” all of were receptaoies for stolen propert; with a letter to this lady, ont costes se. - the sufferings which his wile hi amemree, a0 by eThe ‘eoial o of the different generals whe have ” Ep ae At Deegeee, be sesepeen ~ BL tap case | there are three suite sinege rosdy to buy saying fom a tae cool toe . wi wou evi- " fi i cause of her ¢ a Y = . fr sible, more brillian 4d ie e and ‘ortest. phece old rope. He seid it with great t ae eS ye hg Font gig thy bey ‘s van seats im tbe National Assembly on the proposition whole people turned out on masse; the streots |. Mr. ¥ City euthoritien, but Re hoped to ree the aap obew no dence of her fidelity. It is not hero necessary to wy, threw himeelf at her fect, and kissed them She follow Madame L——— on her toilsome journey. endeavored to speak and effer her husband con wach places would be licensed. Im his mind, it was may be seen fromthe manner in hrough which ke passed resembled the triumphal Devoted to the philasthropic work which she had | sojation and tranquillity, while her own poor feeble « Generals Bedeau, Cavaig- entry of a returning conqueror. In 1 ning he iv 1 great encouragement to thievery, and the jury all knew undertaken, she wandered over the sandy seppes | heart was ready to burst with emotion. "Her voice 4 was welcomedtosbasqust, where cighthundred and | "vets it le not the custom for couneal to inform their | they were nurseries of crime, Allee, for latveny, whe of Hungary, until she succeeded in reashing the | failed her, and, amid the reiterated shouts of the Fright de pane fit set down to dine, with jome threethous- Ai had no rearom to believe, even if they had informed | hy Salat ‘re admitted into the little town in which the lady resided, and delivered | Hungarians and Poler, this heroic woman was oar. Mre. Forrest that Ann Flowers would be examined on | the penite to ber M. Kossuth’s letter ae she read, | ried aes bebe aperiments, * SS Fabiier immediately burned it, not ing even to allow In March of the past year, some seventy persons ‘ , P to exist in ber possession. The lady informed Ma- | —the chief of the Hupgarian refugees, among whom 4 Hautpoul, Husson, Laidet, ‘pice, pecan dame L—— that the wife of Governor Kosmuth | were also several Poles—wore conveyed inone of the ‘/rnane, Oudinot de Reggio, clet, Rapatel, Reg- Baragoay-d'Hilliers,de Chasteloup-Laubat,Durtien, { e town hall where it took place. Tho | the stand, that it would bave quickened her dedre to | not : oa d jourgaud, de Grammont, de Crowchy, chair was taken by the momber of parliamont for | try the cxuse, As to this order which they now applied | celver ta'theee mooihe st” “mmo™ © habitasl re ingham, surrounded by all tho distinguished to vacate, he wou . de of the Hungarian cause oct the close of the beenobteined from Mr. Forrest under s misconception, | actha jurors were discharged, and tne Court adjourned 4 of the facts; nd that, certainly, waa tom bad loft her roridence in the guise of a mendicant, | steamers of the Sultan of Turkey to the place de- nault do Saint-Jean a'Angely, Rey, Rogé, Suber bridge, ofyour city, who had — "Ne ne oe may have, tious an | : Mat end intended ax th Maria F. n; their future residence in Asia Minor. vie, Vast Vimeux, and Admiral Cecille against it nod sentiment compli . that she waste {olen herself me te aavitew fe | Peete. they travelled by land to Varna, on Yesterday's mall from Paris brings the result of mentary to Geatcn, prevented to Kressuth, | Yt. se intention to inposition none Poltes Intelligence. Beren—But certainly the | 7 ofthe American Constitution, and the fare seoceatel torah Src eae dant nares | | Swpicion of Sling Money —OMeer Dowling arated of Washington Kossuth recei . under the impression that both parties | picion pbs ye oy Besors, 08 ome emotion, and, rising before Ve Bf ; apewed to pacticipate in the ie | Beoner Mar One a4 ote from > d them to his peart, and sai at «=a application for re! ) that order, obtained under Curie thea, phen he believed the such circumstances: and he therefore acked to have it Beaver ctrevt. 6 soldier who hed fallen in battle, and that if posei- Sea; from thence they were taken inthe %D0ther vote An amendment of Monet, that bie, #h¢ would go to the very ‘tenage of Hangary, ~ bay Ghemilk, in the Gulf of Madanioh, in the electoral domicile should be reduced to one year, in those vast pasture lands where she hoped no one | {he sea of Marmora, without being allowed to stop was rejected, on Wednesday. \ esterday in amend. would seek + he: at Constantinople. ‘They crossed from tha! place ment that the electoral domicile should be two, in- Tith this inf tion, Madi anil i * t it Olymipus, and stead of three years, was adopted he bad before publicly stated plainant, who inan el Pathan. | ne ‘juny. be ‘a a} ety he = agitated by hope a The rreneh funds are languid, in consequence of ‘bile was teen ‘om of government that wa- beg = od modified. on the ground of the inconvenience | to hi counting res yesterday ther, wh | they continued om to Ratayieh, wbere taggs Gohaees a ‘ 4 the ad dapted to the Hungarian peo for they had bean of the tute ome appenent lincunenion haste, | (Fridey,) cad sented 06 gat © complet the ou of Ber | are, Madame Kossuth is with her bus he cold weather bes set in here, and the infu so fatally decoived by all the monarchicsl sppiication ought to be granted. The principle of jus- | SEtoant, to setane, Unb, Wt the conlttonceem end eras is very bad. The ponds im the Park are , that no future guarantees could exceed those tive g. mand that the or m reatly through the labors of Madame L-—, w _ Le 7 should be vacated guards, Li Ridertock another journey into Hungary for this ee ot ~_ “Merry PeTiously made to the people, sod sil of which had ‘Decision reserved Gan ana ae oe tee reached the plains before mentioned arpese ‘ow also has ber children with her Princees's Theatre has re-oper with the “*) 'Y thamefully been broken This was the last grea pocket. book, containing $195 in bank bills, principal, ase to house, ae if in search of he: Kinong the individuals Wives of Windsor ;" Haymarket with MoFarren’s publie demonstration to which he would bave an op Ixpias Danpvism.—A Washington papor says | So’ the Leather Manafecturers By Aa pr-4 n realty te find one who wo Kate et with the ex opera, ‘Charles II.’ Jullien continues to draw tunity of addressing the people pre * to hi the Frairie Indians are im the city, but are not so tion given of ber Maria bie Ted ‘are Madame large audiences. The death of the King of Hano- Separtare for the United States. On his return t wee they were o1 Gen, tn exhibiting CSemrcives on the fo a cabin, she heard that nam during’ the dangerous wanderings in Hungary, Yer will put o stop to court festivities London he visited the annual Polish ball, where he (ieveh ‘ne coum teeanet pt fon | ou nd on inquiry who and what that | Sgured as ber husband. Many of the refagee Licutenany Pim, who offered to start in search of | was tho conteo of all attraction, and whers the Indies jhn us the Center, Maret gelly, aud fantastionlly, com | and discovered that the pocket od that «be was the widow of a Hangw | p54 \\) provided for. The amount which the Sir John Franklin ove through Siberia, started crowded around him, as i’, to gaia a smile from th Saulim, Wad oeomea te enechanty money was gone ; and aa no other r who had fallen in battle, and that she ent allows M. K ith for his subsig. for Dover and Calais yesterday He travels by rail- great Hungarien leader, the measure of their hap ye abundant supply of wild and tame this young mao. suspicion at seee, tented oa 4, who was with itegrand parents They | , sfficient for the support of ao many per Wey, vt Berlio, to Warsaw, and thence to St. Dinoss wonld be rendered complete 4 fow! Twoet them lingered long at a stand wheres large Fo ed Dart 1. jured Om swap! ber person, but added that she had | Petereburg. It ie By the steamer that eys thie letter be wil! unpiched turkey was exhibited, and evidently coveted a senenln ti lnneee ~ ueh from illness and grief, that she was | perial Majesty wi 1 reach the '/nited Stats There reatest tr part of tbe plu At last the generous countryman | paen Wperchy ny cvieunes 00 tes sngrd. ‘Refore she cane here,” said Naval Inteliigence ance, a4 that we aball see " wmphe aro yet to be recorded, and there be wil) gare sn old ch Mission to help himself to some of | cxhibited guilt, any more than the suspicious olrounstes- 5 , worked for ber bread, even @hea | +;, © @ sloop of war Jemestown, Com Drwaing ¢ ucred {a 8 me have an opportunity of witnessing the practicn. pid he gdh we mad dit ce ‘Osborn, bafors whom the accused wad : nto a r ee to pero ° " of free inatit ople tak nd quickly pia © largest : » be detat 1 , 4, but atver Ber acrival, she beosme tov Mack LO | mained at Mio Janeiro, Oot 22 All wet we Fovekgn' Once Ligutensat Pim bas teorined that ae a bees head to oll abe 000 rerelt i wine wee not long before adored nis beating © Crtelans uml © Cee a

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