The New York Herald Newspaper, December 16, 1851, Page 1

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WHOLE NO. 6991. MORNING EDITION----TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1851. PRICE TWO CENTS. pemrenerer We ANQUET OF THE PRESS der it imposelble for me to absent myself from of | seored cause of Hungary. The independent pres of this | You ides what « tortureit is to sit down to your | tensions to it. There are some who advocate the Stan foncknoreage Prrcans imme Ofindvod, to more | great republic has im this very ase also proved to the fhe breast full of the necessity of the mo- | {26067 Jet {walla be aucw divided ty iaseane, 9. cation, athogwise it. afford me much pleasure to | World that even against the mischievous power of calum- | ment, full of righteous feelings, the mind full | ana by topgues. You are aware Louis K fe) Ss s UTH unite with you in honoriug your distinguished guest. nies the most efficient protection is the freedom of the | of and of principlee—and all this warmed by | this if it were not t; fieable, would ve but a a PT Groat respect, your obedient | press, and not preventive measures, condemning human | the livelpfire of » patriot’s heart—and to see before | curte to blow to civilisation and pro- pte ee , . HH, STUART. ; gress, and throw back mankind by centurtes—it were an LETTER FROM HON N. K, HALL. Intellect to eternal minority. I address you, gentlemen, | your eyes the scissors of the Oeusor ready to fall upon | Stereal source of strife to war, bessuse there lee holy, @REAT SPEECH OF THE MAGYAR. Post Orvice Derantatnnr, the more with joy, because through you I have the im- | your head like the sword of Damooles, loping your ideas, | almost religious tie, by which man’s heart to his home Wasninaton, Friday, Dec. 12,1851. } valuable benefit to address the whole university of the | maiming arguments, murdering your thoughts ; le enn. 098 nomen gree. Would consent to sbaa- wee tae TT MET have had the honor to reosive your | great, glorious and free people of the United States, | and his pencil before your eyes, ready to blot out, with a | 20m, Detive land oply vecause his neighbors. speak THE KOSSUTH FUND of tho press of the elty of Mew Hoek, to attend’s banyast That iss great word, gontlomen, and yet is literaly | single draught, the work of your. laborious days and of | slaims for Mim that enored spot whore the thes of his ' $0 be Given Ot Ge Ase teed cn sede orteiee ner true. While eighty years ago immortal Franklin’s own | your sleepless nights ; and to knowthat the people will SS air Senne hak ee a es Bic, e., See sermons peeie, Sr, SOMONE, SES onczy b0 press was almost the only one in the colonies, now there | judge you, not by what you have felt, thought, and writ- Sede RATE ct Wii meakoaiy wate one ‘The idea administration of justice pee dn a eee pga ten gto Pr the | axe over three thousand newspapersin the United Btates, | tem, but by the Censor wills ; to know that the | were worse than the old migration of mations was—deepot- | The promulgation of the laws Ja every” tong ‘Last evening, a banquet was given by the press to | that my official duties compel me todecline the invita- | having a circulation of five millions of copies, and | ground upon which you stand is not » ground known | ism. fe pee monte strife. pieatind’s fe bey Renand toclalm patton ke x tongue i Wouis Kossuth, the price of tiokets being §7; andthough | “2”. amounting in their yearly circulation to the prodigious } to you, because Mmited by rules, but am unknown slip- mischi is willing to yield to it for | all this and thus far more done in thats at was pretended that the dinner was confined exslu- | dieat site Sem Fompects Your very cbe- | aumber of nearly fourand « half hundred millions; every | very ground, the limits of whieh lie but within the arby- Bimaehe—but others he destres to yield to it, Every iso, hater other uation ove? weet fo strely'to the press, it comprised all deseriptions of LETTER a Ere grown man in the Union reads on the.everage two news- | trary pleasure of -your Genser — doomed by profes- a Stsous hee Sar Godan id iret Ls wy yt thera word eons—merobants, lawyers, professors of aaa, pad pee maine. are, Doo, 18 1651. papers a week, and one hundred:and five copiess year; | sion to be stupid, and # coward and a fool ;—to Kes Pyencke to Spe iiinct thas uke pthc the be MR epupeigitea ioreanes mat here. ‘men, greem grocers; so that, in fact, the members of the PR irae rot wpa | to: grateful ac- | nearly eighteen copies fa'l, in the proportion to the po- | know all this, and yet not to curse your deetiny— | very men who feel revolted at this ides, who ol tor | It is, therefore, the most calumaious misrepresen- plese were the smallest clase prorent. Tickets wore | Sttond the banquet tS te given te Goer Mee {2 | polation, to every human being in the Union, man, | not to deny that fou know’ to read and to write, Soa hanl i thalnnashants seesk paleess seraeems) | teins ate eae ee eae Tefused to the Herat office. A ticket was refused to | the press of your city. -I¢is tome & source of extrame | Woman, and child. Iam told that the journals of New | but to go on, dey by dey, in the torturing work of | Youla claim from H ry to vide te terrivory, which civil, political, social and. réligicus Pn ond Dr. Jones, who for many years ‘has heen connected with pemeoual reuret that my public daties make i¢ impossible Yerk State slone exceed in number those of all the rest | Sysiphus, Oh ! itis the'greatest sacrifice which an in- God himeclt has limited by its range of mountains and | mon’ to all, Austvian strug. 7 me to avail myself of your invitation. we our Ul and thecireu- | telligent man can make to the system of streams, as also by all the links of a com- | gled for the great le of self against ‘the press, on the ground that he did not belong to it. | In justice to my own feelings, I must be permitted to | the world beyond your great Union, fetheriond and. bu. |. Suulty of more then a thouand t off Centralization; - and rnvralisati ‘Tickets, ao we have said, were freely dealt out to all | ¢ my entire concurrence in the objects ef a mani. | lation of the newspapers of this city alone nearly ex | mapity! And this is the condition of the Pros, | Fight hana, ‘Transylvania, and to ‘give it. up to. the | lutirm, Yen, contrallaation iwnbeolat atleast is inconale. Classes of people. ‘This is the more remarkable, as Kos- So, peculiarly impressive and affectionate, | ceeds those of the whole empire of Great Britain, | not in Hungary only, but fi ll countries cursed by Aus- | neighboring Wallachia, to cut out, like Shylock, cne | tent with constitutional right: Austria. baa. given the ney , Bumbering seventy persons, pas Your profegsion is identified with the interest of hu- But there is yet one particularly remarkable fac | trian rule, Our past revolution gave freedom tothe | poutd of our very Sevest—-the Seaebeass the rien | ve) peadies %. ‘Zee Homes of Austria: pods pomes the pire any Ranepanin pinged gee hes gale wbich I cannot forbear fo mention, gentlemen. I boldly | Prese,not only to my fatherland, but by indirect inilu-|| (ounity betwen the Danabe and Thvise--to augment by | slightest Satention to cract coastitutional life to the Rae -auente for the reporters were very inruficlent, the gen- declare, that beyond the United States there exists | ence also to Vienna, PraguesLemberg ; in-a word, to the’| of conquert, but an easy conquest, not, by arma but | It. bates constitutions as bell hates thy salvation of ‘Wemen of the committee having been quite satisfied in scarcely a practical freedom of the prese—at least in | whole empire of Austria. This very circumstance must language. Exton s Bae, ot eat, ttiat thls abeurd peame, sot, Fo tie Sette oe Oy 3 tekhcannie betes, Europe, not except, perhaps, Norway, of whose condition, | be sufficlent te ensure’ your to’ my country’s | {ative United utalen, whieh aid sot obese neaitks | ho that coustication, now? It wes aoe wai oeeaee in the United states, which did not open ite hospitable | is that. constitution now? It wee not only in thet respect, Iam not quite aware. You know, gen- | cause; as, on the contrary, very olrcumstance that Racer to humsnity, % ae en a aie ac pa a ere ey ome mee pod eco tlemen, how the press is fettered throughout the Euro | the victery of the Hapsburg’ @ynasty, achieved by emigrants ry ), a order that ven t! mi i» blotte: " Pean continent, even, for the present, in France itself, | treason and Russian arms, was a watchword to oppress | divided into new framed, independcat oot We ted | House Court, wad’ Bate chenesiion ae whore great nation, by # strange fate, sees, undera nomi- | the Press in Hungary, in Austria, in Italy, imGermany— | according to languages. And do you know, gentlemen, | was; only Metternich ruled, not with the from #ule Committee nally republican, but centralised government, all the | nay, throughout the Ruropean eontingmt. ‘The contem. | whence thie absurd Faso Sane we, om She Sorensen | f weetiel Tae cvse, Bee ee er ae posed banquet to Kossuth, authorize me to ask ic plation that the freedom of the P; Continent’? It was the of Panslavismus—that is | trina Schwarzenburg dors. Metternich ‘attendance at the banquet. on Monday, Deo. 15th, af the ‘oppressed glorious fruits of their great and victorious revolutions ‘reqs on the Muro- | the idea that the mij stock ot Slavonic races is | vpen the constitutional rights. of Hi 3 Aster House. In doing this, the Committee wish toex. | o'her lands. The people of Hungary, through the'r | wasting between the blasting fingers of centralized | pean continemt is inconsistent with the preponder- | culled to rule the world. as once the Roman did. It was | rjlvavie, Croatia, and sclsvonia Mr. Breisach, an old Hungarian resident of this city, weceived the following invitation ;— New Yonx, Dee. 16, 1861. Mr. L. R. Dean Bin:—The il on i ‘press their high sense of your services to the Hi chosen leader, call upon us not merely for oursympathy, | administrative apd legislative omnipotence. You | ance of Rursia, and the very existence of the Aus- | ® Russian plot—it wasthe infernal idea to make out of | ebclicbed them, and the young Nero; Francis 2 cause. but for the aid which it isin our power to give T' trian dynasty, this national feelings a toolto Russian preponderaneeoverthe | melted all nations together in a common bondage, whirs ‘The company numbered about 220 persons. Theroom | Ppéal will not be made iu vain, It must ot, and ought | know bow the independent press of France is y> Sworm enemy of freedom and of | word. Perhaps historical origin | the promised equality of pationalitie>is moe acne d vy not to be resisted by a generous people, who ‘have been | murdered by imprisonment of thelr editors, and by | every liberal thought—yeur generous support will | ofthis plot. It wes after the third di Literally, to be sure, becauso they are all was moguifcently decorated with the flags of the Union, | speci: ly choren by Divine Providence to illustrate the | fees: you know how the Present government of | sweep away those tyrants and raise iMberty | thie most immoral act of ty: that the chance prersed, and all are equally ruled; by absolul ‘and the windows testooned end arched with the tricolor | adventeges of free institutions, and to vindicate the ca- ay where now foul Proudly rules. Gen- | fate brou the Prines Caartonisixy ciples, in the German language. And: wi was ‘tai of Hungary, while, through the centre of thé room, from | Pécity o! mankind for relf-government, France feels unable to bear the force of public opinion— | tiemep, » considerable time eg0 there appeared in | tharine of Russia f | ilusory constitution withdrawn ? Because it wese lie ee pi T am, guotlonem, cath gresh negerd, to much that in the French republic the very legitimate | certein New York & systematic compound of the | Alexander, the aaales et mittee it en hele ae heed 1; gene same emblem were er : que” moet become a | most lumtest falschooda, malarepeespatation noble Bees jen founded petn- euspended, and had a very pretty effect. It is worthy of Your PABUINGTON HUNT, | -tBOwt of “ Vive ta Republique”? bas ab © | cidas the Hungetee ease, going 20 tae ae ations | Claimed from the young Osur ciple of centralizstion, and centralized thirteen different yemark there was no flag of England in the room . crime. This very clroumstavce is sufficient to prove that | s:npied effrontery, to state that we struggled for op suggesting for equivalent the ides of Russian prepomd. | mations, whieh now groan under Austriag rule; and yet, , LETTER FROM us RUmNIRAS im tbat glorious land where the warm and noble heart of | sion, while it was the cursed Austrios ayansty which erance over ali natiors of the old Sclayonie race. I be- | to have a constitutional life, is more than an = At the back of the: chair was a tastefully formed tri- Pn a yr gy ped invitation | the French nation throbs with self-confidence and noble | stood forth for liberty. Now, there is a ‘Of etfront. | lieve his intention was sincere; I believe he tht bility. It is an sbsurdity—it is am eppression. aug- olor Hungarian arch, studded with stars, and the | 10 ths Kossuth Banquet om Meaday meat. It would pride, @ new revolution ia an unavoldable necessity. It | ty» the temerity of which becomes ‘stoulahog sven ed "oy Aeon Se Mem epee peepee ef ES mot to_miscon: borders, 5 theend I only state clearly my own end eagle of America soaring among them, and & white | give me inexpresrible pleasure to be with you on that oc- me, who, bas seen the unexampled treachery of the | betides the affinity of lan, God himeeif between | speech, s0I goto shield beneath his wings with the words Inscribed | Scale and eorenrble pleasure to be with you on that oc; | isa mournful view whieh the great French nation now | House of Russia, and beoume fainiller with the old Iie, | the Dations bas drawn. Sut be that the spirits | my nation's ruling principle, evenin reapect tote claima maxim, “ mil odmiecrs, hich Be raises, he will not be sbleto master more, eo of languages; und thet it is—we will “dive me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue | SP4bonor vith whioh you will salute the noble pairioz | pretents but it iv also an eficlent warning against the | man mazim, © ni y ineooah my tampest-toceed | Tite emeaed fanaticim ‘will recdey faatastionl | Davo republican institutions,* founded: om univeren, and intererting _ 1 toadd that a rheu- | propensities of centralization, inconsistent with freedom, - de, mlarepresentod, sorrsed, jeered, | oh force into his frame, which the | frege, and ro the imajonty of the hal! Stes son, ra te | ratte igre mtn | etna segment cs | SE hte ace aD te | Ren a yen aces | Hees eye eae - end goveroment— @ sword in one hard and scales in the other. Thoonly | , Wishing you all the gratification you anticipate, and | @ scurce of hope for the Buropean continent, beosuse we | fools; and even heroes, the veneration of | Russian witiens to liberty ; 5 he forgot that it can even not be favorable tothe aefect of the Agure was that it was not blind—on the | sausen, to epced the progrensoffreeden frou al tgnenes, | 2nt™ that things in France cannot endure thus as they lopment of the Bolave, nationality, because Sclavonic ‘ it everywhere!-the people sovereign every- ’ sone soon eee » | are; we know that to become a true republic is a necer- Ve seen strange spectmens of the aberrations of the | Bétions weuld by this idea be ded into individuals | governmen and wes the fgare Of Libesto with Ue red cee |e eR RUGRINGHAM. | alty for France, and thus we know also thet whcever Human mind; but that,in the midst of tho most wonder- | of Hwsanlon—ell abmorbed by usa that le absorbed | where and universal rulfrage and the rule of tne @rnaments, particularly those on the head table, were | ncuncing yeu may offer it ao the kent cesbodiaiont of | Pe the mam, who in the approaching oriia willbe honored | tion should be sacred to some mien, who enjoy thobeneat | Teadily ‘Nebie"iocligations ther wan yorsgs ond 'the | Siy:sequest the protooting uid. ef the people tae Unied pelea ssoreerate J forling that would require’ volume te-expreses | by the confidence of the French nation, he will, he must | ef free lostitutions ued profees to be republicans—that =e epee Ee Sd Seater end chehy your eld embgoceection pen The dinner was s magnificent ono,and in the best | , Lovls Kosruth—Bis intern virtue borrows no lustre fom | be faithful to that grand principle of fraternity toward: | ¥ ‘oe Mace ft ls 8 sorsomful pege in mankind's history. | 110°, of common in hivtory to aee such Francis Joseph, | OU, the sapianens << Sho pablo Spemcn.0k 79 titied rank, but lends to humanity the fire that ziv. - | the other nations, which being announced by the Freach 2 > y of Austria—so young and yet sucha Nero as he is. few | gloriousland! Let me entreat you, gentlemen, to accord Style of the Astor House, The following is the bill of | Gor to patrictism, vigor ts tres “4 te sion, entering into a special refutation of this astonishing yrere na & fh os m, and omnipo censtitution to the world, raised such encouraging, but | ocmpound of calumnles. I will reserve it for my pen,sosoon | 7eara of power were suflclent to extingalah every spark | [his protection to the cause of my downtrodden land; i ‘. . y time: there REE ELD ESS LE | UETTER FROM GRY. AVEZZANA. bitterly disappointed expectations through Burope’s op- | 91 can haven tree day for it: It willbe very easy work, be- | P15 toon the throne ofthe Romanow'sis themiaz soos | continent. It ls the curse of Germany, beding THE PRESS Gentes webieasias i mt ps 205, t pressed continent. But it is chiefly, almost only, Great | 1,1: into dust before ply ead ror igatere statement of abeorbed. by the Autocrat. The air of the traditional | the eae Se ee as ene enone. : have recived your invitation as welesme foc une | Britain in Europe which boasts to have a free press, and | facts, the greater part of which, I thankfully have tous, | Policies of St. Petersburg is not that air, sual eye Teas moaned hiahed cabtoeen te Me, ro American {o the liberals of Italy, but at the same | tobe eure during my brief stay in England, I joyfully | Knowledge, are already not unknown ta you Permitme an on ot bnor, soonaiag on homie pre--| many respects te dear to my heart. We have a common 3 GoveRNon Louis KossuTH. Hate of me hee shee oat Ruwewure that through the bad | saw that really there is « freedom to print, almost an un- Honalltice,” whieh play nash ernie question oC ne. | Forderance. Kussie avalled hereelf of the ides of Paus. | chemay; se we aro brothers in arms for freedom paras ally in the demonstration of sympathy a yr merd iimited one, so far that I saw printed advertisements | say, such « mischievous part im the jes of Europe, | '#vtm to break Turkey down, and to make an absolute rs . LS es a nee monet, Ge Se E which ycu give to the meritorious Hungarian repre- | *ftead at every corner, and signed by the publishers, | Tsay mischievous, because no word was ever so much | Ssteilte out of Austria. Turkey withstands yet, but | Rently dee rat thebead of which Massint wands Grecn Turtle. Vermicclli with usnrthed of Game. ire he American continent the cause of the Ba- | stating that Queen Victoria is no lawful Queen—that she mts. its money, ite venomous seoret diplomacy | It do eommonistical schemes or the. Puletiiniesan/ndtiet: taeeetithen Binks ie tiat "Fie exteem which Tentertain for thet man,so fult of | OP#htte be sent to the Tower, and all those who rule To er ee ee ee ae | a ctens Seoamiegenioen, Saline aan: wponoed Mecslone, Normandy § | genius and virtue, and for all those who, sympsthizing | OUgbt to behapged. Mem laughed, and nobody cared Misia Wamescted, alee eationaiiny maker ten one, | peodeun aad independenee. tf, bet 6 shay pastyymbioh, ‘sa Fried, with Rashers of Pork. with him, rympathise with the cause which e repre | about the foolish extravagancy. And yet I dare supremacy; but obietly it spoke = them of Peus- | Meszinileads? To the King of Naples, perhaps. Let ma RELEYSS eonts, ix such that though I cannot be present in person. Cage ae Ee Ee Fol rf be silemt about (hat execrated man. Or to of Turkey stuffed with wuts, Truffle Sauce. my heart will be with you. » | say, and I hope the generous people of Great Britain \aviern ups Paap me io Gece. Sa mat-:| ae tat Poameatt is pokes te 428 of Muon, with Currant July Gen. JOSEPH AVEZzZANs. | will wot feel cffended at my stating the fast, that , : Naan ee eedeni a took ta, has oye eatin are | Honel, sua i cnpteres thoes peer aneartas 3 ‘The first toast of the evening was— there is no practical freedom of the press. The | the people of the United States, are mot of one bioud, | flattered them with the idea to become the rulers of the | who seek an aeylum in Piedmont; it de- Torhey Great Britain, and the United Btates—The Deli. | freedom of the prers, to be @ practical one, must | and Rot one language.” Millions of you spaak | Wold, in order that they might not think of tiverty. | livers them te Austria to be shot—and they are slat— Tenens Routh Mow Jurband pleas the couse in wich | be a ecmmon benefit to all—else it is mo free- | Beglish others French, thers Gornian, others Itatiao, reer tas tare tenes nabiion acereend un ihy:| Genaay aeuvteeed on the’ ensilh: Gusiee theeathar Terma of roveramant, waite theit efmpathice aud thelr seve’ | dom, but a privilege. It is wanting two ingredients— Seteerark iaet uke: _ bie ghd spirit of liberty. This ambition got hold of all the Bclaye | years. The houre of Savoy ot ey: x ed Hon. Gxonce Bancnort responded, aa follows:—Gentle- | freedom of primting and freedom of reading. Now, there pent even the govarmment of your States may. | eee aa eee . the blood. men the event which we this dey commemorate exceeds | ir no freedom of reading there, because there is no pos- of your di are | Surce fe of ‘bub of the do. | tous rympathy of the publlo = inien of Me ” Stateo—God be Liessed for it!—is aroused to Sisco Hane, 91s Roarlasta. in grandeur all those that have preceded {tin the history | sibility for the people at large to do #0. Because the | Bet !¢xisating, and governing, and administering in n | Wire, St wnguegen Shae word Menguade! replaced | Cre goad eulferingr of Hungary. by humble tare 1, a of man. In thej that attends fe zy lapgusge spoken in your Union. in the res that ie done. Now I look for your sald rs ores wi a Wine. wi joyousness our banquet | circulation of newspapers, the indispensable moral food | pective Btates and in the respective cities themselves — to keep that us sympathy ally or pry 4 oh hana we oannot forget that we meet to commemorate the op- | of human intellect is, by # heavy taxation, checked. | and yet you have a National government! Now, suppose haath po Bory = a p Re God Broited with Truiies, Ornamented with pression of Hungary; that we meet to do honor to the | The press is a source of public revenus, and by the in- on ee epee ae at Es et | I look for your generous aid to urge the forms Wieaas Ferre Bois in form. of Tyr captive whem the United Btates have redeemed. (Ap- | combrance of stamp and paper duties, made almost inac- | wore once struck, should a once rieé and say— The $f Seatetioss te etiaah. Sunde 00h 40:-cuntte astoe Ceftane, om a Hedestal; CalcKensintormof |“ 9 | plause.) That event enlisted all the sympathy of hu- | ceribie tothe poor. Hence it is, that the newspapers in | Union inwntch we live is an oppremion to us "Gai laws aia | sginten ef the. Sorensen. panaios of ten tens Youn of Helly: Boned Turkey with” "=" § | manity, It rey ulred not omly the co-operation of the | the United States are only one-tenth, and in some casos Hey shades We tomer ear We Unten ve | could not arm them. +0 I could not accept them. We | Slates, to pronounce in favor of the humhle prop * Trades, new requblic of the Weet, but it required, also, the | one-twentieth the price of English or French papers, aad | us’ what rights? what laws? what freedom? what hla seers, Volek © A icboas on tn ok ee tat the ~ oe Paka Anchovieg | Sd and assistance of the oldest members of the Buro- | hence, egatn, is the immense difference in their elreula- | ry’ what geography’ what community of interosta? | Sebt thamarme—and nobody was ais tnd Paattaees hin... tt an ean governments, It required the sasistance of tha: | lation. In the United States peveral of the daily papers | Tmt ties afnian ree taTe diene ene tts | of the quertion of ma‘hemaatics In Barops Now, let ms States. Ta: Sea Fing, Gonaiehes at) Suatic nnd Seales. power which holds under ite sway the territo-y which | every morning reaching fcom thirty to forty thousand | oitien, Let ue divide the whcle territory, by wed accord: | fe¢ WEAt war (he condition of Hungary under these make. Teepe .- Gotaeletteg of Fuad wit Steifed Oyeters og oe po ph Fenders, whereas the London Timey t oasidered to he a | ing te languages, and them let the people of every lau. | Crvumetanert,. hight henised and. fity years, ago, | {9 0) oy Beef, Stowed wish Powdered Sucar. of ail the Latinenee of the West, with all the redeem! monster power because it has aalroulation of fromtwenty- | svese live end form each a separate State. Be- | Cristian nimeelf. converted the Hungarian mation to | to ¢xprers my bumble wish to see (reat Britaiminritet ni, Par'sian style. influences of humanity, when it speaks to thoee M0 } ye to thirty tho whe congo every nation Ras 0 right to 0 ai fe ‘and to | Christiansty. It was the Roman Catholic clergy of Germa- | Within this proteotive policy. ‘The reason i, bocauss L weil in the East. ‘Fhe liberation ot the Gapernds af + SS *? Dirty thouspng copies, of whisk, I was told, during us fhe language ‘Is the natlon—nothing ele ; wud your | Sy'sxcm be invited to anslat bimin bis plourwork, They | teke the prevent French Government for tar et the mete ei by en, be the protest of humanity a: my stay in England. that the good, gererous sense of the q emt pt hae = and tH ate om f Ba but itwas natural that the pious assistance hap- | O/Prerrors—it has interfered, ard gontinuss te inter- of Chicken ii dor of Jelly. people bas abated some eix thousand copies, in conse- | ‘obs! __ > TeneiOH to us, because | pred also to be accompanied by rome worldly. | fere in Rome. But the Freney pation I take fr sae x with Partridges, Le Payette style. Ja is the only basis which States must be | fungory offered a wide field to the ambiion of of the od ‘The French nation will do the “ape of Enc econ wi Hea quence of Its foul hostility to the just amd saeredcwase | founded. Lverythirg else is ig nat would | crs And they persuaded the king to adopt s curious | me as Hungery, Ttaty and Germany. The aili- of Tame packs Orange Sanee. of Hungary. Such being the condition of your press, | you say of euch reasoning ? would ——— of | principle, which he laid down In he polltiodl testament. | Snoe of the Frerca nation is insured by ity nsces- pa en Hcheat owible, saaction of ous government, <0 | gertiemen, it must of course bea high source of joyful | [Or Greet Calon | | What of your ott ea That ie thet Is Se Ret good, when the poozte of o ccunty | SUF JENpevies ff the, repeblio becrmer a svality. - . berate capt en an Amécican F is byt of One € mand speaks one tongue. There he ra uestio a owork Laseiee Halse tieeacian vivie’ keel ever pl ugh tie ancient waters of the Medi. | [*atifeation to me, to have the honor to address you, | those 1 de ee ng mahind’s moral cane” | web yet adopted ancther rule; tbat is to advise the lan- | ¥ll Zomend theve are Great Britain and the Ue ‘ terrme2Otn on a mission? And ss it received | 6f@tlemem; because im addressing you I really address ba | What ne the spirit of freedcm spreads its isin, 3s, on bowrd the illustrious exile, and passed down those | the whole people of the United States—not only a whole a Se cs ue tine eens? and jut a whole intelligent people, gemtlemen. Th t | \ bat would beccme of this grand; mighty complex of | Ce@inRs. So it became, of course. guede of the cburch—Latin—for the diplomatic language | states. Let me hope, gentlemen, that however to of the government, Legislature, lew, and all publi¢ pro. have tallen fp your expectations by this my has...» that the Teal Manners « OMALL mas. Fried Oysters, Petite Bouchie of Game, Cioaaateet of Chicken. ancient weters that washed the ancient republics of YRORTARLES. ‘the shores of Athens f pecple, . hy } eee, malty Renee etins down, bs A ae one. parte; raise which can ester A ; that epoke Latin. ciagarian, rate; still following the generous va Thabes Busted tunes, Fessclon. thrcha ‘epubllos of Tealy ross to bla God epred to tte'ren’ | 8 the highest praise w ‘upems people be bestowed, | your republic, should it ever be attacked In its consis ee sceinc Dacinica, teeka Tet, the Tek eae | sepublicgn Maite, end teasing inal tae Tones Baked Mashed Potatoes. Peas, tel on its western course. It was the voios ofhuma ny | and yet is no praise—it ie the acknowledgement ofa | tency DY Oo an ee ahd A This te the origin of that ty thas dei y did not | ™y humble self but merit of the caus which [ piu! ture, and was immediately followed up by our cut | real fact. The very immensity of the circulation of | S9N” temrine ur hemane ye Ldteoed | 2c¥elope for centuries in Hungary. Thepublic proceedings | YOU Will accord me that protectize aid of the free, in who sooner landed in Bagiand than under thy shadow | 1s reals proven it to be so—because this immence | upon the ruine of rg et over the fragility of | Daving beew carried on {n Latin, the laws given in Latin, wey Bay natlous per 'Dy sett foe the greater past, t's» roms with Crust. ye oe ‘tatoos with Cream. csroby iiselt he spoke out to the nations of juro the people were excluded from tho public life, Public es of my nation 8"4 those of 0) humanivy ied by <1 jie oe = faith in princes!’ (Appliance) There, in | clroulation is not emly due to that coastitutional pemee ho pad Carteret Jogtry ing o op ta. ; them ycepe \ And if you gene” usly accord me the Protective ail. t : roo ageg ® monarchiom country, he spoke out thas fre the | right of yours to speak and print fyooly your | basis of n. nation's. lihed rere pe ag lurere, did not partake ta it; | *2 38% %< fulniled, in my own eountry’s cause, tho» . Ganvase Back Duck, Parte aes Continent Of ETO ate eee eo Foc | opinions; itte not only due to the cheap price Uke se sileaah ke” te and the few who, out of the ranks of the people, partook | Pobls words which you, sir, (to the Chalrman.) from tiat . Broiles ‘Quan - Tarkey, cenism. (Applause.) ‘mr.’ i a * World, eternal ti teu ‘ height where the genius of poetry soars, have told your Cena of Applatse.) Re Gentiemen, stvil life ts Which makes your press © common benefit | unlvimal for every climate, for every time, like Pro- | 18, Jt became. by the very instruction, severed, and ot people. which so likes to listen to the noble luspiratious eaten Victarie not lage ronowaed {&ah 0% of war; and to all, and net » privilege to the rich—but ft ls ehiety | Yarhen, Thou hast no tyrants among theo to throw | Ho'rwes introduehd fate the: public life, of a iiving | °? + Bryant, cq," us, Brion sarong Bemsely, say, ) | fee Mustrious Governor of Mun <7 ot twee an an, | ate to the universality of public instruction, which | rante’among thee to alee ine tare or heey Me £2; | zation, waa the moet mischievous agelast liberty. Truth crushed to carth shall rise azai Beran iar Sie it, Maasai. noudooment to the world tbat the aur‘ciem mnaarshy | enables every citizen te reed. It is glorious thing to | peloadl temily—atzed of sations, that surse of | Prerceant church, intvodceing the national lasguage But erver, wocseed, noises is pal Temple. of iy. *7,, 0% Wy Washington, La) | Tat sick and dyiog, and that if ther» wae i i | knéwriiat inthis dourishing young eity alone, where | What's che ep JePM@ | into the Divine rerviora, bosome medjom 1m te | ne ach aise among — aid Fa ood TD | Users wltensd wae met the volec-of itat egy) Sa | ftteets of eplendid butidingd proudly semu,!, Wheres few | many t countri: fet > developement of the spirit of liberty. were our | Let me add, sir, with——his worshippers. " ly, but of al 7 ne Gierent fa langurge, history Rae Sens ry Fone) and all cred out that he uttered tus truth, | ¢M* *g0 theriver spread ite waves, oF the plough Ulta, ts Fendering to thy shores, and besoming pe yg RR eer Sizay® Gini.| ovavrw, ehertly after the delivery of his speech, agaia carats Residan ikensite sgommed the i is seiver | Petey “0 Bundred thousand children receive public | Diet etmmok fiperty. Would T could do the'aame, | St, Latin Public fe weut om 90, far As t0 1780, | rove and aid = speech was, for the greater part, the tthe am ¢ oid ship whodo him bouor are thors from Tertacy | “0cation annually. Do you know, gentlemen, where I | but I can ¢, becelise I love my native land, inex h Sens, Josep apsburg. aiming at central- | toast which Tam about to give you. f in one ~Somahtetionafelan. "°F tathe Paclic Oones. he grat truth pce. | coneider the most glorioé monuments of your country? | bewodler, trved'®.. Lieve te more thanllfe, tere hes | AUD. replaced the Latin by the German tongue. Thi a aR fv Fatah Pavia TS. Cottage ; is i raised the national epirit of II ; and our f word to anewer this toast. It is Foe te entree ecenilon wat the volilax | Tg it be oan T have road St onee—it is that faot, that | BAPpinets; Tove it se eosiett days, Woat'mancea | {tber®, secleg that The, deed atta language ex. | The Prose, ~ | brothreti~fhat all nations and people were respoasibie | WB¢D im the steps of your wandering squatters ape clued the pecple from the publle concerns, canindt be) (Great applause ) 2 3 5 i 3 : E e & isipele Peepamppemaetp torres oa eer Sane CRRA EOTCTETELE TODO PROD OOOO DDR DDEF 4 DDO ID LNAD LO LD th H to one ancthe?. And what Is the meaning of this bin- | your engineers go on to draw geometrical lino, , Vie 1A EI | Mr Kiwo reeporded, and at the cone! q Surnbeery Te, "cena, ue Oem, oo oe me re ang cf tile assemblage | even in the territories where the sound of « human | "tl 17a scanty in the word, whose 5 eS to mening i intothe commen aceoting orsieeaesisng | dre, asked leave fer Korruth to ‘ole aa bd , +4 ; Pagscayes. . solemnly pledged to every. | *(T meter yet has mixed with the marmurs by language only whion | Srvutho lite rte ety “ppore this desiga by s cheer. | overcome by the heat that his life was in danger; ead piiggets Chow show, Susi) Mend, Brandy jt Wghage te Bone of | which vinginal nature e adoring the Lord; tn every community of | Faseeg !ews lo the direction that by and Dy, ntep by | ‘hat life was precious to all mankind. “ ‘ ply any, oat place masked to become « township, om every six- and dj bag ohbett step, the Latin language should be replaced in the pub- | Here three enthusiastic cheers were given for Kossuth Come, —Liquens, "Anchovy font: ete thn sentient whieh ail we | scemth rquare, you place & modest pole, with the popeletion, hough | ft Proceedings of the Legislatare, and of the Govorn- | Kosecrn then rose to retire, and im doing s0, auld. he aw Sead or ee ‘ glerlous mark, “Popular Eduention Stock.” ‘This is Za Hungary telng inuogary, whet ornate | Would be very happy to ct!oy, as long as possible, the Grace was said by the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. The ‘the ‘rien Pow —1v i aay for the libertice of | your proudest monument. Lowever, be this really th that, being in_ the necessity te choose one | CFsoling opportunity of heating you pronounes that ‘wusle of Dodworth's excellent band helped digestion. “‘enisetpp! It ts worthy of mack thst Geaeet Wee seh ant The rext regular teust was, the >." pi present, having, on account of what occurred at the | Mott) honored egents im executing the m. ‘The third toast Louis Kossuth. Ay 008 4* Corporation dian t back the tickets, after having pew J grooured on. Pehie ” the name of the Governor of Hucgary wat mentioned. the aesembLI¥ge cheered vooiferously. i aan he pevenber the boarders of the | "i casuth simponded es fellows -= people D Noeery ay not to be on, i will be by. commen | ho spoke secral ether languages together be no wind Peirdavee esl jokon aaa The fourtea ‘ ladies, were admitted into x always willing ‘ ; ares. powerful imam, no other language ular toast i- ‘the passages and so completely occupied every vacant KOSSUTH’S SFEECH. caachts bors goed ett To hia yy 37er# to Hangary was Francie Joos “doi, Preesed—the Hungarian language was spon. nobody secured by international Law, - asa ee at National depend —horever another laneusce was Sad not left to thi ; ‘ cs | oo! here loner “¢ e morey of despotic power. @pot thet there was no passing in or out. ‘The sir was saruswen—Rising respectfully to return my mcé | peneat my country’s cause, I must 90 addreer to tht pu.” . ja in | Public life; for Yustance, cf whatever ohutomjwas. 7° | Mr Ravsonn responded; and im the course of his care or not, im every case, in my epinion, it is not you gecgraphicc! situation, not your material power, not the bold enterprising “irit of your people which I consider to be the chief guaraste, °f Your country’s future, but thé Universality of education, because an intelligent the Hungarian language in and | ympathy which will be the saviour.of the world. But really 1 om vory sick, and this circumstance alone pre- ot onl, © comparative majority | = Ls ae ca atte aaerty, | Yents me having the honor and the benefit of your dbsee- that ir, thore who spoke Hungarian, were not only | vations this evening. Exe all | 1% use me, gentlemen, for retir- snation. That this le Jaguoges, buts If not mere, st least equal to, oll thos, | "STAM very ecrry for it. 5 nffceatini ot worm thanks for a m tingly hot, owing to the crowded state of the at dan arin ore of the my hla lic opinion of the whole inteiiigent people of the United ived and our broth. | fo! _ = Seana commannty) 0 wus meres : | obsétvaiscne, quoted Webster as authority on interna- Wm. C. Bryant presided. demonsteation, it s with mingled feelings of joy and fear | Suit You are the mighty enyfineers of this sore. Detore the world | Lato, which '¥ and-by Became eliminated from the di- | bons! law, whch there were loud enles of «leis no ox. The following letters were read — that I addrese you, gentlemen. I address you with jo; teign power upon which rest my countsy’s hopes—it } fy4 satinction of Hur gary, the partition of ite territory, | ie i, and replaced by the livi Lo peurtetbe isa misorable humbug.” Mr R. consinded LETTER FROM How. $ beenuse, conselons of the immensity of the pow > ahs must be, therefore, highly gratifying to mo, to see, | and age! the erntralization of the dissected limbs into | ©" Uy ®t ip Tunsasy, gemtemen, be plean tO | with the foilswicg tonet— ; ; Vaiminovos, Dec. 1ir ist. | you wields I: a natural to feel some awe in wadresing | 2t, lated men, but the powerful compte of the | the conan :® body of mevitudo, the treachorous dynasty | Fevnatyuitic ifs of Cried Bolin ack tok af, Nenirni Folic 04. datned by, Daniel Waberer— * —I te i “ + grantl y ngarians . = — atk nen gan Ler uring me | geen". th rnb fara cat | otaon nga, mains amd of rympeny; | atanereg Pens wok went | st Ment. Wot ect akon vn nea | Ase Wasa mg SA be present at the banquet to be given by thera, on hopes is placed. Still, I equally know that in your next, Louis Kossuth; but my py hander, er tt impossible for me to leave this ave Gentlemen, the independent republican press cipal public iiie. ‘They thems-liven, Croatians amt Scla. | The Chairman esvnyed to rpeak, but hus “**X woice wig still I address you with fear, gentlemen, because you Rengestone~Megyere, Ne Weare in our own language | voniens, 1epeatediy urged it in the common it | drowned in the tempest and wars of “Sit down. Mr. are aware that vines my arrival here, T had the great | ‘med—tembnesa’e their jan pnd birth hy | to afford them opportunity to are the Hangatiam Ian: Jane otandiing, Weligth tom che present time. “Yours. with at A ean Hak Teapen, Wat © wespon to defend truth and jus | noace and valuable benett to sve my whole time ogress: tormed it with the iron rule of martial law; they em. | &Us6e, that having the ght they might alse enjoy the | Citcly wae all tha iane appleatyy ordered a census of nationalit.¢s to be made. They per- DANI tice, and not to offemd. It is mo ecreen to hide, no led | benefit of being employed mmion governmental offices | Priled to sit down without making a speech. reception Noyed terror iain much = 7 08 go . LETTER FROM HON. J. 3. ORITTRNDEN. enuffers to extinguish the light, but toroh lit at be Aan 9 ba fee rose Dee tian Faude of wournand men whe poriasd to be Magpare, | of Hungary Pace tae alty wae aiturded Se Cheat | Mr. Pureny was then called for and said, that cause Wasiuxoron, Friday Deo. 12,1861, | the fre of immortality, @ park of which ie giisten Proferred not to know, pay. not to have pe ph ey he ee Pon Cre t be noble that was taken the Indies. for Gestiemer—I bave had the honor to reseive the in- : grove ite divine extgie! entirely impossible for me to be thus prepared to atdress | op xerlanguege than the Magyar. moewatbet to do so; but with their own manictpal and pubic life, up by they ing in every man’s soul, ‘ . | think with their war: ‘itation whieb, on behalf of the press of the clty of New | «torch which es Bd A you, gentlemen, in.» language which I but very impor: | protestations, wer put dowu to be Holaves, Becks Ger. | Of Aiko with the domestic. social, religions life, of what- | & tt ebtaatial at ree imatead of calculating tend a banquet to de thems te hoee Mnapeth ag. | ght with 00 the mont lon 7 hor " Med snip, | SCUY sBenk, as the groat importance of this eooasion ire Manette coe anh hot Gn | gunge did Saver interfere, tat replaced aly the tanta | ahe ledineame nn von ~ 5 e) ns of humanity. quite arian sound, And etill what was t i - ~ the wiros am daughters of the t the Astor House, on Monday evening next, the Lith | And as the cause of inn ont fly ays yom os would have required, and my high regards for yourselves | of thie malignant plot? But of the twelve millions ef | ae Me ged Jie gh ot ney (Lod cheers } happy daughters of the free. T feel deeply this mark of and truth—aw it has in no reepest ¢ ba pointed ont ase duty to me, However, I hope you | inhabnante of Hungary proper, the Meayart turwed out | 2" beevure tt excluded the people frcm any hare ia the | pp "urine the evening, the Rev. Hyitay Way Beaches date pn Arwlgey io your fav indness, and paste © fone Nght, but re | wit take thie very circumstance for a motive of excuse | (be More than eight millions, some two millions more | tublie Willing to give freedbm to the people, we | SP Rt It response to the toast of civit and retigions share in ite evjoymests, and to contsloute te tle ven pet be pobenim ne poncatbetne baer to It the sup: | you will generously consider that whenever and wherore: fp nis that tee tptaas had the dedien ede nena Tint thet Latin tongue, which was an obstacie wat tthe wecof cor eit en'L remarks, he azure, deserved honors which you so worthily design to bestow oe na teint Of freedom, of every | 1 publicly epenk, it Is always chiefly spoken to the prom; | pretext cf inmguage the very. existence of the mation. | writen by Te the wap tO he een E none | ibeety ! I eetell ané religions Weert si eprivuege, it o , these i ? . ~ oerase lon +°8 com. tty is @ pri it 0 Louis Korsuth, your iustrions guart. But noble- minded man, aro the reasons why I addrert | ond, lowering your expectations to the humility of iny | {°rm+d by the compound of all nose ingredients whieh | Nyse Ip glee Rady a ng nat pew U luties here, reyuicing now constant attention you with jey, gentlemen. The more with joy, because, iberty. Your country ie a happy one | Sertie® with ita duty likewise We have duties to per- Thave mentioned above, and with that common good | ‘ form. Just as We are strong, so should We protect the attemdance on the Bupreme Court, compel m ti tagh 18 le secsowdul to ace abilities, and to the level of the principal difficulties | genee which « ition preserees, met the t ic plot t renpest; Doing a youRy mation, FOU Cid Bot | weak. inst ‘in we abe talentea to those Sour Invieation, wHgh: Under Woes ee ne 0 deeline | the ngh It fs serrowtu thet Ubwilled miscepresea- | o¢ my situation, you will feel Inclined to some kind | ani i answered. «We went to bee cation’ marie Bh fw a fg gn Ig Be on RY wre tots ana. tance ase tpg OAT ought tances, it would pire me so much plea urs to nogopt, tations or secret Austrian intrigues, distorting plain, yf bw Pleased, gentlemen, to resetve for yourselves and | Open history to a thus of fulschood and fies, know how | MUvleence for mo, were it only out of brotherly moth etinnicte dak sae om ublio fe. You have a living @ atic life | {o, 00Fy this home to wh A gemab deal bas A we are all Hungar wall, - PR he sai ater Now ‘ seapecttauy Trceett, mY sincere acknowl. daments. Very | to find their wey even to a amall, insignificant part of | S&F%ity for oue of your profeamional colleagues, aT | featiemen, this happe premier tay noveewor. | rust, apaten te zone Doneree, la nous State Legis of the waning. ee Be A ot kgs “hat ceepectfally, yours, &e., J.J. ORIPERNDEN, | tne American ahtamenees cab aeae t profess to be one, Yes, gentlemen, it is @ proud recolleo- | +n’, but’ «ven under tion martiat | isoguepe is wotthe pative latguage of pour whcle meet Interveve with fo-vhra mations by cxamMe, by our LETTER FROM HON. ALEXANDER ft. tt. STUART. Lome = erpy to see | tion of my life (hat I commenced my public career in | *¥. The cabinet of View furious, it | piemrearcely oF that of « majority; afd yet go men in | Nterature. and viplomecy. It io mot poanible fre Wasniworow, Baturday, o> 18, 1961, | Seat the immense majority of the American prow | 10° boos) 7 ont ober te tek thought of a new census t moa told Union tabes it for am oppression thas rite aa | 88,60 expcens an opinion Cat has Dot mors OF lew Geri rmee—T have the honor to acknowledge the Bot only proved inaccessible to these venemous in- pote meen shed Katee nap nd in that F) | them that «new census youl whole twelve | goverpment is not carried on in every poemble language | Mivence ceipt of your letter of the 9th inst, tome tilquee; but conectous of tho noble vooation of au | ‘Ptct A May perbape be somewhat entitied to your bro. | millivus es Mogynes, aud goarts wad | Ghat iempoken in the United Bates: 204 gut are heney | But thie i to thhend “8 brent Mat he ya independent press, and ylelding tothe generous in. | Ret Indulgence, as.you, in the happy condition which | The" 0? acts. my auer ton that It ls not lat | in your ecmmon ea {rom Knglaad, some Latin, | mittees ‘a benquet to be given Louls Koamut! 4 ” “i me which Wen Mom aa a ~4 : pressions Monday evening went, the 16th Inst at tho Astor | clisation of freemen, of protecting truth and jus. | ‘Be Metitutione of your country ineure to you: eau hare | iveruie sour ewn great trpnitic. proves om the worut. | c*Ptacut the aMdavila ke ; wud have foRnd itis law, Uguse tice agnings the dart plots of tyreney, hes, withoat aay | Sorc cn ite et the tortares of » journalist whn has | Ene on the Burcpesa conctgeat there watsprly | iia ng T have to ‘montion yet. Tis te- — - 3 to write wi ‘ t mel ot. | OP OD & Front whinh boned the idea of a aetion | ON r 4 - , - Bible ie preparing every ate; ‘meeet (hat ay calalenanqementangeruch aatoren | inteetecence trom my part, cope forth to protect the tered by cn Auge ertinary ervventre onnu re Only te Uae idee of denguage nad joived poiition: pre | Peles of the Lata laaguage by the Maegerian war not (te® FOUBTE CADE | dies rs : Ls _ Be sci.

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