The New York Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1852, Page 4

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P a ved blood—oan shorten the earthquake ef | impending war, and bring nearer th» restoration to weld peace But be sure, the certainty of the Earo- pean revolution isnot in*the slightest manner do pending vpon my geod luck here, and overn- ment’s support; as also myfailurehere, Would not for 2 Fingle week retard the outbreak of that hurricane | the roent of which is already perceived inthe very | amr. Well, the guaeeios rushes inatinctively to the mind: ‘But has Hangary—have the roppressed Bations of Europe, a chance of su: The revolu- tion being unavoidabic, even were there no chance ef success, that qucetion is, in my opinion, pretty ia- | diferent in respect to what course this your great | Fepublic may be pleased to ae because the despa the means and chences of absolutiem were, ¢ greater claims had the cause of huma your operative sympathy. A just caus, suff etr in itself, requires no ool eh terented in the bis own means, sure thy and cupportina to more sympathy supp With no support bere, su public, in its publio capacity, and your generous @itizeng in their private capaoity, can afford, with out jeopardizing your own welfare and y owa fnteres:— (und £0 be sure it ne otomy mind to desire more)—should we, support bere, be crushed solidate ile power tions, I, indeed, ¢ that it would become a hi r eonsciencs, lying like incubus upon the b | ef tho peo ited States, from genera- tion to ge n. J mean that ides, that had | } yeu not withheld that support which you were able to afford in time consistently with your owa tory. To want sympa euse, is precisely @ claim ald we, meeting | aud the hesitation of Torkey | be losked up from us, friends now stand; ead if your | helps only a little on the way, friendly resolation will be found wuere way: in my con ditt by the musk is my test, as the o ) in Pepasylvenia probably 100,000 homerteads, | balf of the families ababiting them would sscrifice cae dellar each, that slone would give from fifty to serenty- | five thonrand muskets. Generous people of Amsrica, beip | me tp sbis lezittmate commerce, for 1 am told it is lawfal to buy arms heres-and be assured no State interrention ined to enf Gyotlemen, 1 | pleased to beliove that I ha: tere, Bot even during my cap | in vuin, when I peak of facts and of hopes | who eovtrolled the fnuences of Hungary, erested armies > | Out of uetbing, and led on the people of Hungary in the £ | glorious contest, may, perhaps, claim so musa credit as by | uottoke taken for ga untried theorist, but for some. thing of a practical maa mitted to eay; mone will be vations. be pi re- | ten! Deans conveniently to utilize t remains bef wmbly beg leave t pandent of fo naidered my pros Gentlemen :—T most generous pationes with which you have exposition of dr even in 0 net he reality Where hostile races then stood, merous endouragement ering hesitation raied, Geutlemen. I, a Inclined to value everything, e nd swords it wili prooure. to the Arab, Well, there az If only 6 oo now-intervention as @ law of mi not &n idie man here; be not been idle in other aaze- Toe maa And one thing even may and that is, that my whole iite utieast to the honesty of say ia- When {humbly beg leave to ray t coese, if L had manteriat when I the hour of d b prospects, t profoandly thaak you for the stened to this fucte long and tedious, beoanse T hid ; and, begging lesve to assure you of je for all the generous favors yor tbe pleased to bestow npon my ci wishes in this senvian one State—May it. by it nies Of this mighty peivity. Inever speak a word |- may take meaeuree to avoid euch an occurrence in the future. Kossuth’s speeches to the people at the Court House, and at the banquet n Harrisburg, will be found at length in this number of our paper. He had not arrived at Pittsburg at neon yesterday-- having prebably been delayed by the heavy fall of snow, which seems to have rendered travelling al- sleigh. Great preparations have been made for the reception of the Magyar, by the people, in al | most every western city. | the Harlem Railroad, near Albany. Oze of tho passenger tra’ns ran iato a freight train aad do- molished threo of the cars, but fortanately no per- son was killed, although ene poor man had his ieg theee who employ them ! with the murder of hie wife some fifteen yeare ago, was yesterday commenced in Canandetgua. Tue accteed is a wealthy farmer, has always borne an excellent character, and isa momber of the Methodist Church. Tho weather continues exeeedingly eld, 4: tauch complaint is beginning to be beard from al! mails. The Philadelphia train, due at 10 0’ last night, had notarrived at the hour cfour g topressthis morning. It affords great satis: to know thet the telegraphs etiil remain ij, order, notwithstanding the sev which bas recently raged in ¢ from. Tho Washixgton line is ia order thr except crossing the r The ferry bo A very serious collision yesterday occurred on | ' broken, and several othera were severely wounded. Js there no remody for these ceeurrences? Cannot | the law be enforced against carelese conducters and | ‘The trial ofan old man named Woodin, charged | | quartere, in consequence of the non-receipt of the | | r ran | Waterloo time of the Volunteers in 1782, when a French invasion wae expected, and England, being driven to the wall, bad to permis the arming of the Irish people for her own rake, nottheira. By tho burning cloquenseof Grattan and other patrio's of that day, advantege was taken of this spleedid military organization of ihe flower of the country, consisting of 100,000 men in unifurm, with 139 most impracticable in any other vehiclo than s | pieces ofartiilery, to extort from the English go- vornment the legislative indopendence of Ireland. But in the short period of eighteen years, the Irtsh Parliemont «as divided into factiens, and, at last, put an end te its own miserable existence. Under O'Connel!, the lower classes of the popula tion were partially united to reeover what they bad lost; and the arch-agitator—of whom Koesuth sooms the most romarkable type in the prosont day— ministered to the military passien of bis fellow countrymen, and speke in @ mya’erious, ondefned, poetics! way of battles he nover in'ended to fight. How thatera clored in 184%, in the pitched battle of Slevegammon, and how the leaders querrelled aud fought among themselves, i: well knows to all our readers. UCbere isnow no mora hope of tho indo; endence of Ireland than there {> of that of Hun- gary, orofthe establishment of a true republic ia Mii alesa nay nauelessnchipeue tae sta £0, ot have been what be was. Tho Corsi- can eorporal never would have heen able to congoli- date the power of France ashe did. Ia big veins | flowed tho blood ef the old Remans—the bloed of The ¢ andu ot of Groucby--which lost the battle of p cample of the want ia the Fronoh of very irregularly, on agcount af the ica | elf retianeo, fortitude, and all those etermor quali- Anti-Slavery Agitation in the Nerth and Northwest. - The hope which hav been entertained for some short time back that :be an‘i-slevery agitators had withdrawn from the field, seeme, by recent ovente, to be entirely fallacious. I: is very true that certain shadee of anti-slavery agitation attached to the two parties have silenced their clamors during tho pendency of the great Presidential olection, and for the purpote, each, of duping the South into | their rai plans for securing the next Presi- dency. The free soilere attached te the democracy and the Baffalo platform, which went for Van Saren in 1648, are very quict of late; and the light shade of anti slavery apitators attached to the whig party, who have horetofore rallied under the standard of | William H. Seward, have also maintained, for seme months past, ao ominous silonce. Evon the old party of anti slavery agitators in this vity saw but little in the great staple which has horo fur- niched thom with so many formidable weapons with which to assail the South—we allude to such antislavery journals as the Zvibune, the Times, and the Evening Jowrna/, cf Albany, whish aro attached to the whig party; as well ag the Auening Post, ef this city, and the Aas, of Albany, with tho lessor organs ef domocrasy in other parts of the North. ‘The silence of thease anti-slavery agencies attached to the eld parties, is acvounted for by tho fact that the great election for President comes on in Nov vember noxt. Each of the old factions, of course, | wants to inveigle the South iat their projects, aad dupe them into the support of their reepective can- didaver, But, although these anti-siavery polici- clans aro thus maintaining silosvo, thero lg anothor portion who ero endeavoring to raiso a party threugh the North, which will not give up the pro- ject till tho institutions of the South are com- Kryxgy “ann Kossuti—War Between Hun- @any AND Genmany.—The war predicted by Kos- eth har already begun: but ite field of operations seems not to be in Euiope—it is in this country. Tho Kossuth journals of the crazy order—such as’ the rew penny abolition payer—come out very violently aguinst the Kinkel movements, inclading Dr. Kikel and all his Kinkol adherents. It eeeme that this Dr. Kinkel was a leading democrat in the revolutionary movements of 1848, in Germany. Hoe was oxiled from his native land, in consequence of the triumph of deapotism, and gradusily travelled over England, and came to this country, evem in advance of Kosenth. For | several months past, be has been engaged ia wandering about tho country, preaching patriot- ism and democracy in much the same style that Kossuth has practised, without making, however, so much noiso or receiving s0 much applause ag the Hungarian preacher. He has been quite successful in somo of the Western cities, and has recently proposed to form a grand revolutionary congress in Cincinnati, on the 26th instant, in antioipation of the movomenta of Kos- euthin the Wost. ‘These movements of tho ‘jerman hero and patriot Are attracting the attention of the Kosth party, and sccordingly they have come out against Kin- kel, denouncing him, to the most severe terms, ae on impostor, a vagabond, a Bpeculator, a socialist, a red republican, aud have applied all other nagacs to him they could think of. It peems thero isa revolotionary society of German oud Hungerian eailes in Londou, whose business it isto manufacture agitation und agitators, and port them in large quantit: o thiscountry. Kin- kel, according to all accounts, waa the first export, and, as a specimen of the gouds, is considered capi- tal, and bus succerded admirably inthe Western Interest, F bape, would be a free, | flourishing co tead of being blotted out from the earth urope was perhaps free, and the Loonie ga tyranny of leila Fhe were | — : svept from the earth, you then would shed & tear | Pal ? r wy, of ecinpsasion upon sad fate, and moum; NICW YORK HERALD. ever the gr. Yeu would do eo, { | Feow. b But, bel: sion could uot carUial generosity of iis getone of Duropean Inde- plotely in their power. Theyare as noisy, as busy, as active, and ag determined now, ag in any pari of their existence during the [ast twenty yeara. We have already noticed the establishment of even cities. He bas collected a large loan, and paid his own expenses out of the procecds Kossuth left his bille to be paid by Congress aud the corporations. From the same quarter, several importatiens have been taade, who are now in shie vity, and aro com mencing a similar tour of agitation, from henge to tho Weatern cities. All thesy movements, bo vever, and the agitators, camg into coviliet with the Kos- euth party avd the Kossui' obj. cts; and according- ly e very extraordinary state of warhas sommenced ‘n thiy country, without going baol to Hungary or Germany for any more uvicg, A revolutionary congroze is announsed to be held ia Philadelphia, onthe 20:h instant, by the ¢ aan population and Hungarian agitators, in oppvsition to Kinkel’s congrese at Cincinnati it is ssid that Kossuth’s sympathizers are in opposition to the Kinkel con- gress. These congresses are mady up of delegates peut by the various German svcieties ia the large sities, embracing Boston, New York, Philade!phia, Oineinnati, and similar places. The great question betwoen the two frctions the amalgamated Morse and Bain’s lise, ar | tiescf mind which are characteristic of the English company have made every effert to keep the wires | people, aud in @ still higher degreo of Amoci- in erder across the river; but the r in| cans, Look at tho utter incapacity of Lamar- the river prevents the workmen from . | tine hie confrores in 1843. The object of Na a the ‘ ‘ ing their object. | poleon—wno evidently loved France, aad wished to | German nowspapers in this city, and sim lar jour- It ie quite probable that the eteamucr | ee Ker prosperous and great—wag, duriog hie cou- | nals elzowhere, for the purpose of disouetiag the beon delayed by the revent severe weathor. Sha | sulate and tho empire, to effect unity and or; | propriety of repealing the Fugitive Slave law, aud | | JAR ER GORDOS BENNETT, PROPRIETOR AND EBDITOB. W. CORNER OF PULTON AND NASSAU 8S will bring four days’ later news from @ however arbitrary in its form tho consular | continuing the agitation on tho gonorul question. the ls new in her th rnment Was, it wis e:ventially popular in ite | We now find that the whcle aubjest of agitat ineiples and ie propored objeote; for ithad no | smong the original freo soil and anti-slavary paoplo other strength to appeal to or fall back epon than | is just ae active as ever, as appears by. tho follow- tho fina! a; probari the people. Louis Nap: ing bulletin, issaed for the assembly of a con- leon stands in the sane predicamont, and though | vention in Cinoionati, in April next. Here is tho | a dictator g ver univers! suficage to the peop? document :— Napoleon Bonaparte, finding the Council of Five | | ANISLAVERY CONVENIIIN IN CINCIIN ATI, OHIO. Hondred plotting against him, snd given up to dis Py etatcesentemalt im convention in Cinsinnatt, om sensions among themecives, dissuived that legisla- Poceday, Wednesday, Ge aoe Are Ee er e corpe at the point ofth» bayonet. Lonis Napo- Sransamndake, ORELOE BE P78 <i te Louis Philippe at the time of the revolution in | leon imitated thia coupd’wat to the letter. In both We cull upon you withent distinction of party, to 1848, which sent the ** Citizen King” aerosz the | eases the protenco was to save the ropublio; in both | ome together in the spiric of tratarnal love, to ingsire British Channel in a fishing boat, and disguised ia | the people and the army shouted, “Long live tho awig end peajacket, that all things in politics ree | Nepublic,” when, in point of fact, it ceased to teenth day from Liverpoo). "HE DSiLY HERALD, 2 mits per copy $7 per a a) pe The Two Napoleonte A Fistorien! Paratlet. lf history is philosophy, teaching by example, it Feews to be the dictate of wisdom to recur to its poges for instruction which may throw light upon present transactions in the world, and upon those unskaped events which loom indivtisei!y in the | obscure and misty horizon of the future. It is an historic theory of M. ( t, who was minister ef | | | | | DENCE, = nated wu quarter of the wor Reer CORN GROMpMOUS FoMMUMCAtoNS “NO NOTIC We do net re rejected on persouitieation o iC. Bus Lom nota : what aro our we Votunre XVIN SHUBEMENTS THIS RY what more can be doue for tay three willious of slaves in there United States. and to take such advance moa éures ay a pore Christianity, a true patriotism, and aa exalled eharity require 0: eound-bearted philacthro- saticipated in 185 the bush. Still, some eons Tho prestige of Austri POWDERY TBEATRE, Bowery~Vurxan—Deme Maw or Kane TER. RRCADWAY THEA » Brosdwey—Pave Crirronn— aaron re volve in cycles, and return, after their appointed | exist. Napoleon Bonaparte ap ealed tothe paoplo; | pists, £ seoma to be who shall have tho money aud eab- | BURTON'S THEATRE, Ohawbere etreer -C xpenn time, to the point from whence they started. | bis new constitution was sanctioned by 3,011,007 nome bariat 100 nil a reset 89 seepens yer scriptions, and the ma agement of thé & aye: Pe LE pe ak Whether the rumor is trae which may verify the | votes. Leuie Napoleon appealod to the people and faba Kogenth has revolutionary sooievies at bis ccm- tion ayainet your ordinary ayocations to give attention to the erles Jy Fe! cout of bamanity? How many of you will lay by rome of the | | NATIONAL THEATRE, Chsthnw sitet Tro Boxsy | mand, and Kiakel seems to be nothing bobind Bim; CASTLE®-IRBLAND aND Adrhica~Sen:os or [RRLAND theory in his own particular case, we known t. If| the army, and wo havo seen what overwhelming power of —Nanoiy Marre, AMPRICAN MUSZUM—A: CRE ROON AND EVENING. AMPRITHEAT ‘SINC PERFORMANCES Av- E, Bowery—Ravestn ay the report current in London, that he had been numbers have endorse: his acts as dictator. Napo- offered, ard had accepted, under ths dictator of | leon Bonaparte was finally made emperor by a ma- France, hie old post of Seerotary of Foroign | jovity of two millions and g@2me hundreds of thou- would afford Affairs, shot to be a fact, i eands of votes toafew hundsede. We would not funds you ordinarily spead beycad your necessities, to save enough to take you to the convention, or to vend a representative from your neiguboraood! Come, friends, piove your faith by your works, and let the poor, crashed ttaves have seme coinfort of hope ia hearing of @ great and enthusiastic conrention of devoted men and women, forhe bas also an equal number of modes of eoilest- ing funds. At present, the di-turban:e between the Kossuth and Kinkel factions seeme to d3 6n- veloped in mists and confasion; but provably ao little time will bring jight vuet will disgerso tho RmATOLs, Yes, we | eows dy our ed by expe Ip ferme STY'S MINSTRELS, Mecbsulee’ Halk, 472 Broads | wey-Enrostan AaxerRevey, TILLOWBS MINSTRELS, Fellows’ Musics) Hall, Ne. 444 Drosdway-—-Erniorian MineTRELsY. ROPOLITAN HALL—Pnroy. Arpercon's fornnce FRIRUERS. DOUBLE SHEET. & very curio! m of the vicie man fortunes, as well as ef the French naticn. Eat, whether it is his fate to realize his coctrine in hie own person, or not, one thing appears extremely probable, and that is, thas the cycle of political events under Napoleon Fonaparte, the First Consul, and the Emperor, iz coming round again, and will perform ite destined be much surprised if uis Napoleon should yet take the title ofemperor—as ho is already omporor in fact—and that the people voted him right by an signa! mojarity. on, when he became dicwator aad Firat Censul, quenced the liberty of the press, and banished and imprisoned the members of the legitlative body. Whenhe cbtained the votes of trem ull parte of our extensive country, weeping over their wrongs, and pouring out words of fire in adrocacy of their rights. Wectier sou our heepitalities, and shall be happy to entertain ov teu e way to make thelr vist agrees Die to them, Come. and let aslay our gifts upon the alter ing felth, and revew our Shristian isa slave to be liberated, there shall not be wanting an aboliti nist to strike the fetters from his limbs. Souse forthe right and the for ane, for justice and | darknesa, and enable us to evo Luo leading ieatures and lincaments. Tur Next Presipsxcy —The Washiagton Ne- gutlis, in an article on the Vrosidency, a few days since, spoke of the democratic party ag being com. | posed of abolitionists and ircesoilers in a large proportion, and said that in bringing forward the name of Gen. Butler, the democracy want to restore dod | New York, Tuesday, January <0, 185 course under the auzpiecs of Louis Napoleon. The | the people sanctioning hie aote, and rescived num- 4 } the Bertons and VanBurens to power. Now, this is CSS | Parallel, as fer acit hasaiready gone, ie very re- | berlesa addvesees of confidence, he relaxed those y Rimieecy ting ' | Very eitly on the part of the Acpublic, for it cannot net oC oak tees Summary of News. , __ | morkable, and all things prognosticate ite complete | rigore, for wise ;urposes. Lonie Napoleon is pur- ty Aaa { Cossmittece ef Ladies. | bat know that the whig party is liable to precisely emenet now The telegraphic information from Washington ie | fulfilment. suing the came policy. Honaparte cultivated the | | Mary M. Guild, ‘ the came objections ag those it urges againet the and reets only u por | rethor interesting. Our especial correspondent a ‘The nephew has been called ‘ the ape” of biy | clergy, and readily obtained their approbation. Ha ig ota | / democrate. ‘heir principal «andidates are strongly spirit depressing sen sures us that Chevalier Hulsemann hag addreseed | unclo, aud porhape he is; but it is worth while to | brought back from exile 20,000 clergy, oa the osa- 4 Jobn Il. Coleman, H tinged with abolitionisw: aud Wm. H. Soward, beak aoe ts a letter to President Fillmore, relative to the sen- | inquire why be is the follower of 60 great an exam- | dition of eweuting an onth of Odellity to kis govera- | Ah } Committee of Sentiemen, | Whe is the leader of the = party of Now York, ance upon sin a ys 6 timents of Secretary Webster, expressed in an un- | pjo—whether it ie merely because of his relationship, | ment; and he went the length of granting peneions ' nee | ie avowedly an abolitionist, and probably th make i¢ doubtful whether ! | official capacity, concerning Kossuth and the cause | or for somo philosophical reason which lies far | to those who took monactio vows, on the game con dangerous one in the country. The Wai: ard the i disperse and fall | cause it knows oi Hungary. It ie inferred that no notice will be ta- deeper than that. Itetrikes us that whatever may | dition. Popo Piva VJ. had ehorily before died at Orseiswati, 0. Fanunry 6, 1352. We respectfully solicit the editore of newspapers editors are very narrow minded in their views | ken of this epistle by Mr. Fillmore, and, as a conse- quence, that the Chevalier will retire from the capi- | tal, and swait instructions from his government. We are also assured that despatches were received from Great Britain, by the last steamer, the pur- port of which is that no dificulty whatever will hrovghout the country to insert the above call in their respective Papers. In this there can be no mistake. Here men and women mingling together in this incendiary move- Ment, come boldly out before the public, and cali conventions to mect together at Cincinnati and be said or thought ef Louis Napoleon’s intellect, there is one point of resemblanco between him and the illustrious dead—Bonaparte thoroughly know the French peo,le, and humored their prejudices and national genius—the nephew seems to under stand them equally well: and the conclusion at Valencia; Bonaparte ordered hie obsequies to bo performed with groat pomp. When, at length, bo resolved on becoming emperor, he got Pope Pius VL. to come to Poris and c own him in Notro Dame. it is related thet the old man, moeting hia at Nemours, actually got out cf his carriage iato the ere like the ostrich, which, by stricking ite head in the sand, thinks it hidesits wile body,whilo ite pro digious extremities are exposcd to full view. The Republic talks of shameless combinations and come litions between the hunker and freo goil and anol tion portions of the democratic party, but says not . angerons ene- is 20 far from havy- img apy cement, that no man, if he bo attached to that perjured dynasty, can trus’ annextin yank to him, but watches every movement of h arm. in sach an army there is vo hope for ty The old roldiers feel humiliated by the issue of our uggie, They are ofended bh ingno share in the - ine tak i = " Wik hc hha ak 5 i Tr pol i 3 eid Croation regi s fool onteaged in their national steamer Prometheus by the Luglish vessel of war, | publican people, and are not fitted for republican | theday cf the coremozy, the interior of the cathedcal i 2! he ta es and the combinations betwoon that designing poli- tictan and the rest of the whig party. [1 is well understood that Geneiui Seow is Soward’s first choice fer the next Presidoncy, andit is highly pro- hable that he will bo the cwid dato aolosted by the Philadelphia Convention. W th what contisteney therefore, oan the Republi: complain of the dewo- erate for having freo soilers in theirranks ! hevor by being a a their nai The recruits bre Vombsrded ci'fes and of the oppre and in that srmy sre 110000 Hun, wneer our tsi color flac ageinst Aus ing feelings of national wrong memory of their victories an arly cf discipuned sol effects among the people of the North. Tho con- vention in Ohio is only @ small patterra of various conventions which are called for by similar agita- tors, both in breeches and petticoats, in several places in New Lagiand, New York, acd the North- western States. ‘Theze conventions and local } on tho} tn tho yaito coast. nited States Senate, yesterday, along debate took place on the bill to make bounty land warrants asrignable. Among the several amend- ments offered one was adopted, to repoal the pro- | yiso in the ninth section of the act of 1817, which government. This is pretty much our own opinion, | was gorgeously decorated, and the military dis as it must be that of every reflecting mind acquaini- | pley within and without was most imposing. Tha ed with the history and character of that nation. | Pope cet ous tum the Tuileriee, preceded by his We do not believe that, even now, one-fourth og | Chamberlain, on an age, and kep: biz countenance the people appreciate or desire democratic institu. | with aned. iratle gravity th:oagh tho orowds of wow for us, never had tion; and what Napoleon esidof them balfacen. | apectators that lined the etr ete. The Pope enid ‘ 7 * trio fi ; * ‘ : i ings form the clement: oh wi - See NONE oe . | hey ro) Bor La shige ricted the ae Ms bpdligel to ected ey tury 2g0, ie true to the lottor at this very day. Dar- | mace, and anointed Bonaparte aad Josephiae with nae es atte soe ic a ee ‘Tur Poor tw tuts C —Some of tho benevo- treeprtcts who marched iato 4 see Mr. Underwood moved | ing the Consulate, in one of thedebate: in the Coun: | the holy oil, and then crowned both Emporor and | |. shi hob read if led t + at | lent persons who took great interost in the Kos. they an amendment, extending the benefits of the act | gil of State, in roply to Berlier, tho Firet Consul | Emprese. A Ze Dewm followed. But tho best of | “MO Which has already been called to mect at} | rojects, aud set subseripia he formerly be » | of 1850 to the militia State troops and volunteers. | gaid:— the joke ig (o coms. The Popo ex. ected in rotuen | Pittsburg, some time next summer, for the nomi- | UO “pg os Nahai on foot for tho poetic ws Mr. Walker, of land reform celebrity, alao offered They eal) ai) thet (istinction of ranks) child’e rat | for his service: Savignen, Bologna, ond lerraca. nation of President, and at Cincinuati for the eon- | Pil petied Bate eae eee whole of Europe, aro making appeals to the hu- erate, nam nt, to gi n 7 d si oe Be it #0; it is with children's ra! het mev ste |), s ie rage tinuance of a popular Anti-Slavery agitation, which alweys lure tewarde j Gt . oeuee alts give alae rected I would not say that ton tribune; inncouncii | Bonaparte utterly refused, and the Pope retur hay beon there going on factiany Saar path and | Mane te come forward end help the thousands of anow in Mat of land to every bead ¢f a family who would calti- | of wise men and statesmen we ought torpeakoat. Id» | homein a very bad hum i 7 A | poor persons who are suffering from want at this ro- an Ax vate the seme for five years. not believe that the French people love Ulerty and eguatity. ‘Wa find the oslebration of Louts Ny, se plane | Will be kepg up for years to come, until the natural He neioue of | Tho House of Representatives, yeetorday, ro | Zi) French sfaracter has not been changed ty ten yeara of | ,, WO RNU te celebration oF Joule Napo con's clec- | yoare ig mecomplighed, an entire eeparation of | VeTe season. This is all very good, av far acit goes. ment Wan tee - : 708 se of presen oe He yeet ; bref r } revolution. | They ere still what theiv ancestors, the Ga tion as President, or rathor dictator. colabrated in the. Netitnn and, Sebi. - Masdastaselen | Naw it is well known, however, that there are two largo | ferred to the p to etertariattd rch iat rah Sa Phebe ° bee te ane tho very same Notre D .me, with slmilar pomp, and "4 Pi . ef | funds in this city—one for the pur fan the New York ouneil, tenderiag a site, free , then, to aff P : 5 York, Pennsylvania, Obie, and various other | purpose of makiag hawndig ie ai Poosipettg | Tacnt to this rentiment, and to allow of distin a Te Deum, by the Archbishop of Paris and tho | < y ret 8 revolutionin Ireland, and tho cthor for similar t of is city. Tho Cenzus { rerve how the people bow before the dec Siatea, are al! overrun with such deter- ” r unite world t and then tak Without moner once engayed in thie expenrer of the war in tk Jand; whereas the despots lose the disposition of these peak of the war, aad ete re or of Austria wil gentlemen, every Op stent republic, 6nd ly isterert for our jus feccess, dimiuisher ud no money. more decisive weight in mock more tavorably ei was overtaken by the © want of unity and ¢ triumphed every wh tained : why should + susken asin i845’ 4 e, Hecuure ec eolati«m has no meve bayone wenretly cap it de interference of Kt atd this elreu issue. Thou ated tn ism wa: h ab 1847 than in 1851 it | © of 1848, when, “rt. the iibers pore she cap newer fond 20 lovg as fhe bas lols tewateb, an ic why 1 configently ¢thatanew ipter parrive accept Burope, avd 10 dangero most unarcl lable eunse that England would pet favoradi private eapaciiy would oppreeres naaione will wal t fe my confident beNet aud [ for it And thin aly of ters | one bundred thousand copies, for temporary uso, of the condeneed report which recently appearedinthe | Giele, at a cost of not over one cent per copy. Under the circumstances this may bé an excusable ment, erpeciatly since it has been ascer- 4 that tho publie printer cannot furnieh the ! report within the time contracted for. Tiainly murt eay, that it looks very much | of the people; liberty, eqaality. { ag though this measure was almo: with the view of silencing the o: partizan ¢ | a con'ract arra Aud mark w 5s onsideration, and, was decided éo ord How- holly adopted ge of a huugry One favorite printer had recsived afat job, in the shape have completed his work—theredy yment to the two, in order that bh keep their establishments afivat, the good they can for tho party,” xt pense ef the people ‘The whole printing f the government, as pow practised, is a ete macs of corruption. from heginning to to be made use of for no keep wu cal fy 8, who! re ro smal without this aid ¢ to exist in » few months. The rangement is done away with by car ives, the better it will be for of their ¢on- he H » that ef Mr. Barae the territory at according to the of that terr whatever to # t gen leman wasn the inst a large amount of work, the stipuls- ; | tions of which he acknowledged hisinability to ful- | J, avd this wag scized upon as an excuse to | her favorite furnishing o temporary substitute, uo+il the | ep surprised themselves at tO appear without them. ldiers somany Alexanders Tight: it is foreigne It is only te for the the soldlex with glory, dlstinetion, Napoleon carried out his idea. He changed the name of the ropublis. Hitherto, at the head of the acts of the governmont there had boen a vi, with an inscription, “ l'rench repub: Consul.” Inatead of this, was ment.” The sovere: of the peoplo, liberty, aad equality, were no longer retained Here, then, is the key to the divtatorship of] Napoleon. [¢ i not so much in hie character we | aroto seek the cause of the coup d character of the people tyrant. When the h sought the a man to cvercomo the sts, his back, he had to pay the penalty. T are still what their ancestors, the Gat vain and light, fund of pomp, and sho 0 mony, and all that fe antagonii to the republi- can principle. They are also naturaily force and inclined to war, and when they havé no enemy upon wh pensity, they exe hence the facti country in time of peaco, and which rendered the late republic impracticable. They wa: lionce for eelf government, prefer followi me ineapacity for self-government, oxist | | the eternally wagiog w ouly in two periods o fcoptre of empire, J gratified the 7 giving battle to (ko Danes, and ho f lo of Clontarf. When he fe —factions, pl ‘ore, and & ed, till tho Ung: er Strongbow, & mere handful, obtained a footing in the ieland, from whioh their rule hog nover nixce Leen banished, though oceans of blood beve been phed in vain attempts. At ono othor period the Irish united; and thon again it was ia name of the French people, the French govern: | leadore instead ef thinking acting an indepe part j Yhe French are Ceite—th | ing the pative term, Cucl, Latinized. Tho | rib pation are cf the same race; and ¢i fon quar @ and diepoeition, | a j can | court otiquetto. | French ebanged from @ monarchy to a republics clergy, while from the Catholic clergy overy- where the usurper is receiving tle warmest con- gratulations ou his saccoss—to friendly to liborty havo the ecolesiantioal o:derz been in overy age of the world. Tuisi: but the preude to hie corona- | tion ae Emperor; acd Pius 1X. would just bo as ready te perform tho ceremony for the nephew, to. | morrow, ae Pius Vil. wasto wo i In fact, ke could not do lose f saved hie throne and crushed t of ome Bonaparte poured bis biandiehments upon the army, lavished honore and dietinotions upon them, and held great militrry revows when ho wanted them at bis bask to enable him te rule Franco. Louis has taken a leaf ou: of bie book, and ie play- ing the ramo game. Bonaparte inatalled himeelf in the Tuileries, the jent palace of be i ngs of France, when he bee e First Consul, and revived tho splendor of We aro informed by our Paris correspsndent, that Louis moditates the same stop; and there can bo little doust that he wiligo on, from step to etop, till ho has attained the pinnaclo of hie ambition, unless ho ia cut abort by tho for tho uncle. the man who he young republis eagger of tho assassin, the bullet of a pistol 'r @ riflo, or the explosion of an infernal ma chine. Such sttempts probably be mado; but they may feil, as they did in the caro of Bonnparto and Louis Philippe; or if they should sucesed, tho succes does not mako France a republic. Tho and from @ republic to enempire, under Napoleon e Great; they have now again changed from a monarchy to a republic, and are ina state of cranci- tion from arepublio to an empire, under Napoloon the Little; and the ovolo will probably be complote atnodistantday. Bonaparte was opposed by the obins and monarshiets of hie day; Louis is op- d by the monarchists, the red republicans, and ocialiste, o: the presen day. But, as the unclo I the pooplo and tho army with him, so has the hew the same fourco of reliance; and it seom® to be the deducti ho sequence of zoo and effect—that the r ill be the samo. direction Providence may give to this natoral order of things, by tomo unforeseen eveat, of events, it isnot in mean, or oven “tho p ritual manifestations” from the other world, to deiormine, bub at prosent tho régime of the Dic- tetor neome at fim a» the rock of Gibraltar. What Jum Ber.--We uadoratand the penny abolition pepor voy well. Our bes of $500 ia first on tho mined rabid agitators, of both sexes, as we now ece calling aconvention together in Cin- cinnati. The factions attached to the whig or to tho democratic parties aro, as we said before, quiet for the present; but as soon as the approaching Pre- sidential election shall have terminated one way the other, thero will be 2 general union of the dis- turbing, incendiary elements formed around the lecting ite strength in every Northern State for the purpose of future operations. The evil has been growing from the first moment when it waa called into action ia this city by tho Tappans, and showed itself ia the erection of tho dockot, ind iefirrtino dor, ‘Tho editor's an ox- Spoeker, and oupht to know parliamentary rules. When ours is Co'erminal, thon como: up his basi- Dee. We hojo our cotemyorary don’; moon to the Hapgariags, in thin nol, bun: 0508 Jaws G), bbely enthcelaem run cut? first anti slavery society, and the establishment of tho first daily Journal as their organ andagent. It ig a vast clewent of mischief to this country—used by politicians and adventurers, of all classes and of all sects, and made to advance their local interests, without looking forward to the terrible effects it must ultimately produce on the Union of the States. And what hoightens the evil of this vast movement, this dangerous agitation, is the fact that nothing seems to stop it. Untreaty has no ofest—interest ssems to be powerless. It assumes the gerd of religious impulse, and collects around ite incendiary fires both sexes and all classes, in one undistinguishablo mass of menacing danger to tho future Union of this country. Tue Tsmrerance Movement. —At the last elec tion in this State, the temperance movement was brought into the political arena, and to such an oxtent wae it used, that several of the Now York delegation to the Legislature were returned in con- sequence of their wielding the temperance element. In consequence of this, avery enorgotic movement is being made all over the city and State, to bring forward in the Legiglature a bill for tho suppres sion of tippling, similar to tho Maine liquor law. ‘The object of the bill is to shut p all the drinking shops, and to put down by legialation the numerous | nucleus of the original free soil party, whichis col | purpose in Hungary. The very persons who are members of the directory nud the commitice who have there moneys in their hands, are thoze whe } are foremost in making a ne about the poor— | talking about tho inorease of beggare in the | streets, and ell that. Now, would it net bo much better, insten 1 of gotting up subscriptions to make revolutions in Ireland or Hungary, or in other part of Europe, to appropriate this money forthe | benefit of the poor? The Irish Directory have about thirty thousand doliars in their hands, and the Hungarian Rovolationary Committes kave, by thie time, collected probably fifty thousand dollars What folly it is to be keeping these large sams with the expectation of making a revolution, or ting | ap insurrection in Europe, under presen’ ciroum- { stances! ‘Tho idea put forth by Koasuta is utterly | abeurd in the pregont state of things in Europe; | and wo advise the Irish Directory and the Nanga- | Han Revolutionary Committee to call a Mooting at onco, anc consider whether it would not be well to appropriate tho money in their hands to tho poor in the city, who are suffering for want of the nocessarios of life, during the prosont incloment weather. It would certainly be botter to do this than to be dreaming of blood, War, revolutiva and insurrection in any part of Europe. Revort or tue Surerivrenpenr or Cowon Scnoors.—Wo publieh in our columns, to-tlay, the annual report of the Superintendent of C yaiunon Sckools of tho State of New York. It isa very in- toresting document, and ia well worthy of careful perusal. We learn that during the year, Upwarde of cight lundred thousand children, of both sexas, attended tho common schools, and that forty-five thousand eight hundred and fifty received instrae- tion in private svhools daging tho samo period This is a very intoresting Vxposition of the work- ings of our school system, and gives an insight into tho vast benofits which it confors on th community. in this country, above and beyond all other, it is essential that the people should be educated. [Education is the basts of our institutions places whero epirituous liquore are sold. As tho Maine liquor law has received a great deal of at- | tention of late, we insert it in our columns to day, | for the edification of our readera. This movement | will be warmly discussed this winter, and will no | doubt croate a great doal of excitement. Thero are | some five thousand liquor shops in Now York city alone, and throughout tho State probably there aro | fifty thousand or more. It is eay to seo that any | attempt to put thir trafic down weald be warmly | contested, for the liquor influence is tremendous. Undor there clroumstances, therefore, it is easy to tco thatany effortto introduce the Maino liquor | law into this State will be contested to tho donth, | and we are not sure that any party could oarry it into effect. Atal events, thero will, sesording to anne ben torrib’s exeltemont tn relation to | bee Ferro ‘ Without it our posple would not appreoiate thatr excellence, and their superiority ebove all others No man can properly dichargo his dutios as an Amezican citizen unless he is moro or less educated, and, consequently, a thinking man. Intel igont people may err, but they are nover permanently wrobg. Ruessran Dirr Some of the newspaps are publishing long yarns, containing extracts from supposed deepatches from Nicholas, tho Emperor of Russia, to Louis Napoleon, tho Dictator of Franco, ; Tecommending him to make tho coup d'état ia whivh ho has been co successful. bis not likely that Itus- tian diplomacy would pormit those Russian dow. patches to soe tho light; and from tho vory natur and stylo of them wo have no Cowbt that thoy hy puro inventions of goning, got up by somo ot the Janey politicians, in Pari apd vleowbore, to amuse Us yarns Ul LurOpe, 4

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