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rmmM^«y—*————^—^—^—^—f oreign intelligence.
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dfowsn puBmlanj).
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SECRET SORROW' . . CERTAIN HELP ! Immense Success of the A'eui Modt of Treatment which has never failed.
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DR , ALFRED BARKER , 48 , Liverpool Street , King ' s Cross , London . From inany years' experience at the -various hospitals in London and on-the-Continent , is enabled to treat with the utmost certainty of cure , every variety of disease arising from solitary habits , excesses , and infection ' s ; such as gonorrlicea , gleet , stricture , and syphilis , or venereal disease , in all their stages , which , owing to neglect er improper treatment , invariably end in gravel , rheumatism , indigestion , debility , stan diseases ,-pains in-the Wdneys , back , and loins , and finally , an agonising death ! ' ¦ The lamentable neglect of these diseases" by ' medical niun in general is well known , and their futile attempts to cure by tbe use of these dangerous medicines—mercury , CO-
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Brother Chartists beware of youthful Ten Shilling Quack 3 who imitate this Advertisement . PAINS ' IN THE BACK , GRAVEL , X . VH . BAGO , ISIiciiuiatisiu ; 4 nu : it , Ultilij ' csjinu Debility , Stricture , . Gleet , ' etc . "" tsJl 011 ' € AUTION . Ayouthfulaelf . styled ten shilling doctor ( unblushing impudence being his only qualification ) is now advertising under the assumed name of an eminent nhvsician , highly injurious imitations of these medicines and au useless abbreviated copy of Dr De ltoos * XSn . ^ Medical Adviser , . ( slightly changin ; i ' s tiHe ) - sutt will therefore do wej to-see that fhe ' stamp b ' eaS SI proprietor ' s name , affixed to ' each box or bo'tle t a 6 o » l arssffs ^ &swajg ?
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THOMAS FAiiH ,
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FRANCE . lord Palraerston ' a speech at TiYerton is quoted at fall length by several of the papers . It seems to please the French liberals better titan the English ; bat is the object of violent attacks on the part of tome organs of the conservative press , particularly the AsJemblee Nationale . ' This paper , which one ahoold think from the circumstance of its being conducted by M . Guizot , would be better informed , makes the most ludicrous blunders about English tdtninutration . It affirms seriously that upon the least disturbance all England is put under martial law ; and that upon the famous Chartist demonstration in 1848 , toui kapouvoirs were confided to the Dufce of \ Jeltmtton .
M . Weiss , director of police at Vienna , holds frequent conferences with M . CarKer on the French-German plot , which is still investigating , ana gives occasion for fresh , arrests daily . j ^ , tmPn # . tfSKgSSSSS SSSaSS&STT . rt TheMole stations to which private seciety ig subwted in the departments , by the Impertinence of
the police , are all bat incredible . M . Bagard . a con ndllor-general and wealthy proprietor of the Tonne , writes to the Siecle' that as he was dining with nine friends at Jouy , on the 25 th ult ., after a shooting party , aud not so much as dreaming of politics , a couple of gendarmes walked in , and , declaring that all parties { reunions ) were prohibited , called on them in the name of the law , which they were accused of violating , to give up their names addresses , and so fortb , and to disperse . Proceedings ef this sort are of daily occurrence .
The following is tne latest item of press persecution intelligence : — » M . Bareste , the responsiWs editor of the ' Republique , baB been snmmoned . to appear on the 14 th inst . before the Court of Assize totake hU trial , on a charge of publishing a letter from a subscriber containing false assertions against the government . ' There is no idea of asking the editor for the name of his correspondent , nor would the readiness of the latter to avow himself , and take the consequences of his act , save M . Bareste from the gaol to which , as « matter of course , he is doomed . f
The correspondent of the Daily News * says he has serious reasons to believe that the government intend to impeach those members of the Mountain who subscribed to the Mazzini loan , and thus cut down , if possible , the constitutional majority against revision , by purging the Assembly of those members , and either leaving them in abeyance or replacing them by revisionists , elected under the law of May . On the 21 st of August the' Naiinnal ' published in its columns ' a letter from M . Schcelcher to the Citizen Mazzini , president of the National Italian Committee , ' announcing that he , together with several of his colleagues of the Mountain , subscribed to the loan opened in favour of the cause
advocated by the ex-triumvir of the Roman Republic . Besides M . Scfitelcher ' a , forty-six other names of members of the Mountain figure as subscribers to this loan . Here , then , ihe lawyers of the govern * meat of Louis Napoleon conceive that they caa lay their angers upon impeachable matter ; - and the train of reasoning by which they arrive at this conclusion is remarkable . What is the object , say they , of the National Italian Loan ? The sums subscribed will be spent in rebellion , massacre , pillage , fire , and the destruction of the Pone ' s sovereign authority , Fomented fay such contributions , on some day not far distant , the Roman demagogy will break out in insurrection ; they . will find in face of them that French army which restored the sovereign pontiff , and which will once more rally round the chair of St . Peter . Bnt the cause of religion will not
triumph -without a bloody struggle , in which the brave soldiers of the French Republic will many of them be shot down by balls bought with the gold of the Mazzini loan , contributed fay French representatives . Who donbts the right of arraigning bb conspirators representatives who subscribe to arm a plot , which strikes by rebound against the government of their country ? Who questions the justice of accusing as traitors those who contribute the pay which the ? receive from the French treasury to procure the destruction of French armies ? The government puts these questions through its organ—the 'Patrie , ' and expects them no doubt to be answered in the affirmative by public opinion and by the parliamentary majority . The sympton is a grave one , and gives additional countenance to the report that such a purse of the assembly is contemplated .
M . Leon Faucher has instructed the authorities to prosecute a letter written by M . Langlois , ex-director of the lottery , to the 'Siecle' containing charges against M . Clement Reyre , secretary of the Prefect of Police . Tie editor of the ' Presse * has been acquitted from his sentence of imprisonment and fine for publishing the letter of Victor Hugo , en appeal to the Superior Court . Let us hope that this is the beginning of better times for the French newspapers . A German who bad long worked as a journeyman tailor in Paris felt such a horror at the idea of presenting himself to the Prefect of Police for a permission to remain , that none of his friends could persuade him to conform to the order . He became more melancholy from day to day , and at length committed suicide with charcoal ; savings amonnting to £ HQ were found in his room .
An instance of the oppression suffered by individuals in consequence of the indiscriminate arrests that were made of foreigners , accused of being implicated in the alleged plot , is afforded by a letter from M . F . Kellerhoven , an artist residing at No . 37 , Rue de la Pepiniere . This gentleman , now set at liberty , and . admitted to bs wholly unconnected with politics in any way , was arrested , and detained twenty-three days in prison , on account of some letters received by one of his workmen without his knowledge .
ITALY . Private accounts from Italy contain , full confirmation of the total failure of the officially got up rejoicings to welcome the Emperor . In every one of the larger cities through which the Emperor passed , the severest orders were issued to the inhabitants to decorate their houses during the day , and to illuminate them at night . Fear of imprisonment , or perhaps still worse , compelled the
people to do what they were ordered , and lights in the windows , and green bough 9 and flags on the bouses , were not wanting ; bat in every town , er even village , the rejoicings treat no farther . Police representations of exaggerated loyalty were of course not wanting , but in Milan the majority of the popu ' . ation left the town for the whole time the Emperor was present , leaving to their servants the ungracious task of illuminating to welcome a despised and bated monarch . Soch conduct will not be allowed
io pass unpunished by the police , la Verona a tombola waa arranged by the police , for which free tickets were distributed , but , notwithstanding , the theatre remained half empty , a fact which speaks volumes when the love of gambling of the peasants in Italy is taken into consideration . LOMBARD ! . —The 'Opinione' of Turin , in giving an account of the various festivities with which the Emperor lias been greeted is his progress thr ough Lorabardy , states that , on the 18 th ult ., a master bricklayer , named Ogionni , who had contracted for the illuminations with the municipality of Monza , was stHettoed in that town , and died a few hours afterwards .
AUSTRIA . Advices from Vienna state that the head of the Vienna police , Hitter Weiss , is to be placed at the head of the central federal police of Germany , which the Diet at Frankfort has resolved on organising . This person has played a most notorious part in the persecutions which have been instituted in the metropolis since the October revolution . At the head of the worst secret police in Europe , with the exception of the Prussian , he seemB really to have Served his post . He is , without exception , the worst of the bad . His private character is stained oy acts which , in other countries , where laws exist utT rfP . eCted t would awe be « i Pushed by i fri ^ _ ° " ment 5- » * «* very long
SSSS ^ rha 4 h ™ £ C cSbe ^ S ^ 'f ^ S are atill possessed of sufficient * £ ? %$££ shocked at the atrocious manner in which h ^ in atructs them to proceed . In Kb [ Ormer davs h « has been known to deaounca individuals for acts or words pronounced by them while he was their piest , and he is not ashamed to boast of his success or to instruct his inferiors to follow his example ' . His official career , has been one series of failures ! The accusations which he and his tools have furnished to the Iconrts-martial , and tbeir evidence thereon have bees in nine cases out of ten proved
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to be lies ; innocent men have been seized by his mistakes and mide to suffer punishment for offences the real authors of which all his cunning and trickery could not discover . ' Any person connected with the court or government need >« t name an obnoxious individual- and Chevalier Weiss pounced upon him and secured" him as safely as letires de cachet formerly secured individuals in tne Buttle . Fifty thousand political offender * the majority named by Chevalier Weto , fill the penal companies of the Austrian army . The prisons were full of his
victrmsTand under the present anarchical m . ladmigration ot wb . tia . ealtadjn . face . bunareds of innocent men wait in crowded cells , month after month , until it shall please the authorities and Cheva lier Weiss to place them at the bar of aome tribunal or other . Such is the individual who , it is repor ted , is to undertake the administration oi the police affairs of the confederation . If the report be true , the imprisonment and trials of 1830 will be nothing to those which will ensue upon his taking office . No one will be safe .
A correspondent from Vienna states : —' The police force of London bears a high character for probity and honesty . Since I have been in Vienna 1 have heard it very strongly asserted that individuals connected with it have made , themselves subservient to the purposes of the Austrian government , in a way that reflects discredit upon the whole . Your readers may perhaps recollect that not long ago a case of forgery of Austrian ' tank notes was heard at the Mansion-house or Guildhall police-court , and that statements were made during its progress to the effect that a systematic forgery of Austrian paper-money was in operation in England . The detective police who were employed upon the case in question are understood to be still engaged in the prosecution of inquiries at the instance of the Austrian government . Their
unsuccessful efforts have hitherto been well rewarded , and promises of further reward have not been lavished without a purpose , for nothing is easier to detective constables than , while hunting after banknote presses , to hunt up the dwellings of Austrian refugees and to report their proceedings to the Austrian embassy . In plain words , the police of England are accused here of taking Austrian money to be spies on political refugees , upon pretence of searching after forgers . I do not , make the assertion myself ; but so long as the present character of the English police force is allowed to exist by parliament , I must maintain that they ought not to be allowed to be at the beck and call of foreign despotic governments upon any pretence whatever . I may also mention that several of these said refugees are nothing better than police spies . '
We learn from Vienna that the appointment of Prince Windiscbgratz to the governor-gentralship of Bohemia , vacant by the removal to Hungary of Archduke Albrecbt , appears to have been already made , though it is not yet officially announced . The military journal , which is general ^ well informed , states that the appointment was signed by the Emperor on the 18 th ult . Soldiers administer the government in every one of the provinces of the empire for example . Archduke Albrrcht in Hungary , Radetsky and Giulsy in Italy , Khevenhuller in Gallicia , Jellachich in Croatia , Windiachgratz in Bohemia , Welden in Upper and Lower Austria—all men whose characters and antecedents render them incapable of introducing or carrying out any other system of government than that of military rule . How such men are to introduce the promised con stitution is a riddle , only to be solved by the supposition that it will prove a corporal ' s cane .
GERMANY . XOSSOTH AND HIS COMPANIONS HUNG IN . EFFIGT . . Simultaneous almost , with the arrival of Kossuth and his companions on English soil , the Austrian government display 8 at Pesth , in the most glaring colours , the fate which English sympathy , pertinacious and prompt , and Turkish good faith , have succeeded in saving them from . On the morning of the 22 nd ult . the names and effigies of the Hungarian fugitives were publiely executed by hanging them in the market-place of Pesth , with all the dreadful solemnities which accompany the execution of a human being . Disappointed in their passionate
desire to wreak the most frightful vengeance on the head of Eossuth and bis friends , the Austrian government has hung them in effigy . The 'Mirror ' of Pesth reports the fact in the simple tera 8 which a state of siege permits . The military were drawn out and formed into a square , within which there appeared the usual gallows . The officer in command read the sentence of the court-martial , according , to which the following pmoinwefe sentenced to death in effigy , having been tried in contumaoion ( Anglice , while fugitives from justice ) , and found guilty of high treason . The sentence having been read , the hangman was ordered to do his duty , which he did by hanging up a string of black boards , on which
the names of the sentenced criminals were written , as follows : —Paul Almasy , Julius G . Andrasy , J . Balogh de Galantha , Count Casimer Batthyanyi , Eugene Beothy , Ludwig Cseb ( Csernatoni ) , Stephen Gorove , Richard Guyon , Esq ., Paul Hajnik , Francis [ Jazmann , Michael Horwath , Daniel Iranyi , Baron N . Josika , George Kroethy , Karl Kornis , Lad wig KosButh , Johann Ludwig , Ladislaus Madarass , Baroa Y . Najthenyi , Moritz Merie , Lozat Measatos , Jos . Orosshegyi , Moritz Perczel , Nicolaus Perczel , Nicolaus Peky , Johaun Rakoczy , Julias Sarosy , An ( on Somogyi , Baron L . Splenyi , Baron £ . M . Stein , Bartholomew Szemere , Samuel Sonntagh , Michael Tareszes , Count Teleki , A . Von Deggenfeid , and S . Mikovicb .
Of course the military were indispensable ; otherwise the populace would instantly have torn down the beards and Hung the hangman and his commanding officer in their place . The Cologne journals state that a prosecution has been commenced against six of the municipal counciliars in that city , for having , in a discussion as to whether an address should he presented to the King , attacked the government . They add that the burgomaster has been reprimanded for having allowed them to continue speaking .
A correspondent of the ' Cologne Gazette' states that the Diet of the province of Brandenburg was suddenly prorogued on the 24 th nit . On the previous day the members had been discussing , with some energy , the terms of a proposed address to the King , upon the calling of this Diet . One party was for calling his Majesty ' s attention to the old guaranteed rights of the Stande , and expressing the hope that the King will maintain them in all their integrity . Some of the speakers on the same side went 80 far as to declare that only upon those old rights had the members assembled at all , and that the temporary exigency alleged in the royal mandate was altogether insufficient to justify their meeting . The discussion was getting inconvenient , hence the summary prorogation .
In the meeting of the Diet of the province of Prussia , held on the 23 rd uH ., ten members handed in a written protest against the legality of the proceedings , and left the hall of session . According to law , the votes of seventy members are necessary to give validity to any resolution of a provincial diet ; the secession of these ten reduced the actual number thirteen below the legal quorum , but it is not anticipated that the government will regard this regulation . The'Constitutionelle' \? as confiscated at Berlin on the 24 th ult . As it contained no leading article , its offence is matter of conjecture with the public .
Advices from Frankfort announce that the wealthy merchants and bankeis of that city , from whom a very general participation in the new Austrian loan was expected by the government , have subscribed the paltry sum of two million florins . The government journals explain this failure of their expectations by the assertion that several of the larger Frankfort houses have subscribed through their agents in Vienna . The Austrian finance minister has had recourse to the trick of putting foreign houses down for subscriptions witbont their knowled ge or sanction . The Constitutional , ' of the 24 th ult ., was seized by the police ; it contained a remonstance of the citizens of Cologne against the terms of the Royal rebuke recently administered to them .
The ' Hanover Zeitung' publishes the following official notice : — . 'The Government servant Feise , who , in his quality of Cabinet courier , has , contrary to his instructions , conveyed letters to private persons , and has even forwarded correspondence and transmissions of money to the Socialist Democratic Committee ' of the German fugitives in London , is dismissed from the Royal service by the highest authority . ' ;
. HAMBURGH . The Court of Rome has made at various periods many vain attempts to establish an episcopal see in Hamb urgh , the metropolis of the north . These attempts have uniformly realised so lively an opoo-5 ' not , only on the part of- the senate and SatS tlF' « r ° fromtherei « ° K Priices , was ten years ago M . Laurert , designated by the
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Pope to reconstruct and occupy the episcopal see destroyed by Luther , was ordered out of out town On the 23 rd ult . the Court of Rome , supported by the two great powers which dispense the affairs of Germany , renewed its efforts with increased pertinacity , and everything seews to indicate the speedy creation of a Romish Bishop of Hamburgh in the midst of a population attached to Lutheran doctrines . In consequence of this , all the chief men of the Lutheran confession with Dri Zimmerman at tbeir head , have assembled in Hamburgh to deliberate upon the best mode of placing a barrier to the incessant invasions of the Romish church in most of the states of Germany .
UNITED STATES . ' By the American eteam ship , we haw news to the 16 th ult . : „ . The news brought by this arrival-may be characterised rather , as interesting than , important , In the business of their state elections , the people of the Union , are considerably Qccupiedj and now that the Cuban excitement has died away , no topic of allabsorbing interest commands public attention . The actors and - participators in the anti-slaverv
not at Christiana , Lancaster co ., Pennsylvania , wherein Mr . Gorsuch , the owner of a fugitive slave from Maryland , together with his son and same other persons were shot dead on the spot , have been arrested and committed to gaol on the charge of treason . There were twenty-four prisoners in all , and tbeir capture was effected by the United States Marslnl Roberts , Commissioner Ingraham , the United States district attorney , Recorder Lee , two lieutenants , and about fifty of the United States
marines . .. .. The excitement about Christiana and neighbourhood nas intense , and hundreds of the people were in attendance during the examination of the prisoners . Several other arrests were subsequently made , amounting in a \\ to thirty . A ' number of fciie prisoners were brought ' to Philadelphia , and lodged in Moyamennng prison . With one or two exceptions , they are all coloured people . . ¦ ' ¦¦•¦ . Three-captains of the late Hungarian army bad arrived in Washington , as delegates of the 128 Hungarians who lately arrived in America Jrom Shumla . It was stated that they have , been directed
by Kossuth to advise with Mdlle . Jagello ( now Mrs . Tochtnan ) about the means of reachinz the colony which General Ujhszy formed , where they all propose to settle . There are fifteen ' Hungarian ladies with them , all married . The delegates wevc introduced by major and Mrs . Tochman to the President , and cordially received by him ' . In answer to their salutations , the President expressed his satisfaction that they and their leader , Kossuth , have chosen this country for their home , and assured them that they will find friends wherever they may settle . William W . Corcoran , a wealthy broker in Washington , has offered to pay the passages of the exiles from New York to New Bada , the name of
Ujuazy ' s colony in Iowa , their destined home . On the 15 th ult . Mr . Edwin Forrest , the actor , re-appeared at the Broadway Theatre , in the play of' Damon and Pythias . ' ,,, After an absence of two years , he was vociferously cheered . In his address to the audience he made some very strange remarks . He said : —• I have been insulted in ' the public theatre hy a person whom I never saw before , and who was set on by those that dare not do the act themselves , and who hired that dastard , to whom drunkenness had given a momentary courage . That person , I am sorry to say , boasts of being an
Englishman —( cries of « ' He be d - n , " cheers and laughter)—and the bystanders alone saved him from , sudden death . I have been abused , vilified , and misrepresented by a mendacious dungeon lawyer , who , under the colour of his trade , without the slightest shadow of justice , has prosecuted and persecuted me ; one who has admitted to rue , in the presence of others , that hia client was a prostitute , and that he had the right to purchase perjuries from houses of ill-fatne to blacken and falsify ray character . ' The address was frequently interrupted by deafening plaudits . ¦
Death of Fenimorb Coover . —The decease of this distinguished man , who , for over a quarter of a century has held such au emiuent position in Americanliterature , took place at one o ' clock on Sunday afternoon , the 14 th ult ., at his residence in CooperatnwB . For several months past , bis health bad been in a condition which awakened the anxiety of his friends , although with a vigorous constitution and temperate habits , they could not but anticipate his attainment of a ripe old age .
CUBA . Departure of the Prisoners for Spain . — Captain Parker , of the Matt acfewMtet YftUuim and John , which left Havana on the 7 th , and arrived at Savannah on the 15 th ult ., reports-that the prisoners sailed for Spain in a government transport , and only the four already mentioned had been liberated , viz ., Col . Haynes , Captain Kelly , Lieut . Van Veehten , and Mr . Chapman . ¦ -. Tbe New York papers say that no steps will be taken in regard to the American consul at Havana , who , it was alleged , refused to intercede on belalf of
the fifty prisoners who were shot , until an official report of his conduct shall have been made . If it should appear that he made no effort to have mercy extended to tbe unfortunate prisoners who were shot be will unquestionably be removed . The steamer at Pampero has been quietly surrendered by Mr . Sigun to the collector at Jacksonville ! She was overhauled at sea by a cutter , but ran up the river , about Palataka . The cutter Jackson , reinforced by Lieut . Merchant and twenty regulars from St . Augustine , was . stationed at the mouth ot the river , with loaded guns , which were to be used in case of refusal .
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: idpn KOSSUTH AND HIS COMPANIONS . The Mississippi , with fifty-five exiles on board , touched at Smyrna , and on the 16 tb at Syra , one of the Cyclades . On the arrival of Kossuth in the Dardanells , the captain of the Mississippi went on board the Turkish vessel and placed bis ship at the disposal of the exiles , at the same time presenting 15 , 000 dolls , to their gallant leader in the name of the American government . When all the refugees were safely on board Koasnth made a speech in which Lord Palmerston and the Americans were not forgotten , and soon after the Mississippi started on her voyage . On the 20 th uit . they arrived at Marseilles . The vessel only put in for coals , and was immediately to proceed on its way to England . Several of the townspeople went on board to see them .
Count Bfltthyany and his family , it is said landed , and has arrived in Paris , where he intends totake up his residence . They arrived in the Gulf of Genoa On the 21 st . Nnmerous vessels immediately went out to welcome the noble patriots , ornamented with flags and accompanied with bands of music . The sanitary regulations only allowed a deputation p f m persons to approach' to manifest to them the joy of the inhabitants at their having regained their liberty . . Kossuth replied to them in very grateful terms , assuring them of the happiness their kind congratulations afforded him . The vessel had not leftthe Gulf on the 25 th ult .
Prior to the departure of Kossuth and his companions from confinement , the Austrian Internuncio at Constantinople made auother strong effort to prevent it . In a letter to the Turkish Ministry for Foreign Affairs , he , after upbraiding the government with breaking the engagements , entered into with the Austrians , also states that they have broken numerous treaties ' existing between the two countries ; and as an example he quotes the following clauses of the treaty of Belgrade , which ( clause 18 ) says : —» When such rebeb fly into the Turkish States with the intention of concealing themselves there , the-Porte is to see them out and cause them to be punished ; aud also , when the said rebels aud and criminals shall show themselves repentant , and promise ' better behaviour , the Porte is not to believe them , but detain them and confine them in a place distant from the frontier . '
After going in the same style to a considerable length , he concludes thus ;—'On all these grounds , and in consideration that the Sublime Porte has proceeded eo far as to coinmence the ' execution of Us design of liberating Kos . suth and his companions at Kutayah , the undersigned feels compelled to protest against the liberation of Kossuth and the other detenus of the afore-mentioned city . The undersigned repeats his
declaration which , he took occasion to make on the 17 th of February of this ' year , namely , that the departure of any of the detained persons from Kutayah Without the previously obta \ ned : acqvrie 6 Cence oi the Imperial Austrian government will be regarded as a breach of the agreement concluded between Austria and Turkey upon the subject of their detention , and as an event which must draw after it the . destruction of that good , understanding which has hitherto existed between the two governments :
' . It is impossible that the Sublime Porte can shut its eyes to the fact that by such a misapprehension of its duties ( as well as of the dictates of a wise policy ) , sucb a flagrant repudiation of Us own assu-
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rances , such complete obliviouaness of all the proofs of real friendship evinced by tbe Imperial govern , meni , which fill the annals of its history , the most painful necessities will be imposed on this Court , arising out of its doubts of the sincerity of tbe intentions of the Sublime Porte , while filially such a proceeding as that now complained of will completely justify Austria , in presence of impending questions , to consider nothing but her own interest in her relations with the Turkish empire . ' The undersigned has the honour , &c , « Edward Klezl . « Bujukdare , July 29 , 1851 . ' The following is the reply of the Turkish Minister for Foreign Affairs ;•<•
_ ... . . His Majesty the Sultan has taken cognizance of the various verbal communications , and of the official note of July 29 th of the present year , in which your Excellency the Charge d'Affairs has notified to rue that the . re&olve of the Sublime Porte to set at liberty the Magyar fugitives now at Kutajah at the beginning of September has not the acquiescence of His Im perial Majesty . The friendship which has existed for centuries between the Sublime Perte and the Austrian Court , to maintain and confirm which ia even upon the ground of territorial proximity , so much the interest of both States—tbis friendship , upon which the Sublime Porte has always set the hiorheat value , it has always sought to preserve by
avertin g every occurrence that could cause its interruption ! I am not able to express with gufficient force how greatly the government ; of the Sultan regrets the , difference of op inion which has lately divided the two Cabinets on the subject discussed in your last note . The Sublime Porte gladly entertains the hope that the Cabinet of Vienna will finally acknowledge the frankness and honeB'y which have uniformly characterised its proceedings in this matter , and will put away all those prejud' . cidl suspicions which ; from the terms of the communication of July 29 , it would seem the . Imperial Cabinet was then inclined to entertain . For , in fact , it is not until all engagements taken by the Sultan ' s Cabinet have been punctually fulfilled ,
and after taking most anxious measures for carrying out the safe guardianship of the fugitives , that the Sublime Porte has determined to remove them from its territories , considering their detention no longer necessary . We find it hard to believe that any one can with fairness characterise this resolution as a breach of the engagements entered into wivh respect to the refugees , Your Excellency has taken occasion , in the note of July the 29 th , to allude to ancient treaties , and also to . the written assurance given by the Sultan to his Majesty the Emperor on this subject . But it is superfluous at this time of day to refer back . to those old treaiieB , since the most explicit declarations have been long ago made
to the Imperial Court as to the limits withia which those engagements were and were not to find their application . As to the , letter of the Sultan to the Emperor , it contains no more than the assurance that the ' refugees should be so guarded that it should not be in their power to disturb the tranquillity of h'S Majesty's dominions . The noie addressed by the Turkish Cabinet to the Austrian Internuncio , April 6 / 1850 , to which your Excellency finally appeals , and which contains in the most express terms the promises of tbe Sublime Porte , states that , " after the restoration of order in Hungary , the Porte , before 9 etiiug . tbe Magyar refugees at liberty , will inform the Austrian
government of its intention , and endeavour to procure its sanction for the act . " Now , tranquillity has long been re-established in Hungary ; and , , , if there are some few still occupied with projects of disorder , yet are they not , by the express admission of the Internuncio , in a situation to excite an insurrectinn . Besides one might wait in vain for the time when no persons in Hungrry could reasonably be suspected of evil projects , since in all time and countries there exist such . But , although the Sublime Porte has for along time thought that it might liberate the refugees without injury to any , yet it has not refused , upon representations made to it , to protract somewhat the period of their
detention , —a proof of tbe neighbourly feelings it cherished towards Austria . . This alone did tbe Sublime Porte undertake in its engagements with Austria , —to watch over the refugees in its own States , so long as any rekindling of insurrection was to be feared from them . But if , on the one hand , a friendly feeling led it to undertake and fulfil that ; onerous task , the Sublime Porte expects , on the other hand , that , in consideration of such self-Bbnegation , the Austrian government will not claiuyindefinitely to prolong an unpleasant state of things , from which nothing but embarrassments and misunderstandings are to be apprehended ^ If thu s , at length , tbe Sublime Por ; e has felt itself compelled to liberate the detenus at the beginning of September , this has not been without the complete
conviction that , looking at the subjected state of Hungary , no necessity for their further detention exists , and £ that the Porte has fulfilled its utmost duty , of which conviction tbe Imperial Court was informed without delay , and its acquiescence in the same solicited . Conscious , therefore , that in no particular has it beeu wanting to its engagement , the government of his Majesty tbe SultBn does not surrender the hope that after a candid reconsideration of the facts , and a just appreciation of what must obviously be the desire of the Sublime Pone , to put an end to a situation fraught with difficulties and dangers , tbe Imperial Cabinet will attain to the conviction that the Sultan cannot depart from the resolution he has taken . ' I have the houour , &c , 'Constantinople . Aug . 16 . Au Pasha . '
To this note tbe Austrian Internuncio forwarded the ^ follovving reply : — ' With the deepest regret has tbe undersigned , Charge d'Affairs of his Majesty the Emperor of Austria at the High Ottoman Porte , learned by the note of his Majesty the Sultan ' s Minister of Foreign Affairs that the government of the Porte persists in its resolution to set at liberty , on the 1 st of September , Kossuth and the other refugeea at Kutayah , without considering tho validity of the weighty
reasons urged by the government of his Imperial Majesty in favour of a prolongation of their confinement . The undersigned must repeat the protestations contained in his note of the 29 th of July , addressed to AU Pasha , and at tho same time hold the Sublime Porte answerable to the Austrian government for all the consequences of the liberation of the said refugees without ; the concurrence of tbe Imperial Court . I have the honour die , ' Bnjukdere , Aug . 18 . ' Edward Klezl . '
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¦ The first batch of emigrants for California , to be sent from Paris with the produce of the lottery of tbe lingota of gold , set sail on the 30 th ult . This consisted of 160 persons , and 184 more are expected to leave on the 15 th inst . The f etes of national independence at Brussels closed ou Thursday last . A Modern Miracle . —The 'Univeru' contained the following in its number of Saturday : — ' There is much talk at Rome of an extraordinary cure which has taken place in the very palace of the Vatican . The following is the manner in which this prodigious fact is described , and which will , without doubt , become the subject of a judicial
inquiry . — ' A young girl of about twenty years of age , whoae family is employed in the domestic side of the palace , had contracted a bad fever , owing to the loss of her father a little time before , as well as to the influence of the season , which has multiplied at Rome diseases of tbis kind , and . by which a great number of victims have fallen within the last few months . Notwithstanding the enlightened : efforts of the doctor of the Pontificial " family , " and of her parents , the young invalid was soon at the last extremity . The vice-cure of the palace ( which , as 18 known , is a foundatiou ) , a member of the Augustin order ( Monseigneur the Sacristan of the same order is the titular cure ) , had administered to her the
extreme unction , and bad recited the prayer recommending her soul . Her last sigh was hourly expected . For the sake of enabling our readers to understand the prodigy about to be related , it is necessary to state that during the course of the malady the vice-curu had several times engaged the pious patient to invoke the aid of a venerable servant of God , of the Augustin order , whose beatification is about to be declared , and he had even mixed in the potions given to such girl some little fragments of the clothes of the venerable man . On the other hand , according to the usage of religious families
they had carried into the chamber of the dyiDg person the Santo-Bambino de l'Ara Cceli , demanding of these last resources of the faith a cure no longer in the reach of human science to bestow . Let us return , to the bed of the dying giri , whom we find in a profound sleep , from which she shall soon awaken to relate with smiles on her lips how she had seen the infant Jesus , having at his side a venerable servant of God , clad in the habit of the order of St . Augustin . She adds that she feels herself cured but very weak , and she asks for a cup of broth to give her strength Tbe broth is giv ? u ? 0 £ * £ though the request is regarded as coming from one
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in the last agitation of dying ; but the . wet girl , who bad felt the action of grace , and who knew well that she was cured , rises , throws off : all the blister . ' , of which not a trace ; was left on her body , and on the following day repaired to the church of l'Ara Cceli , at more than half a league distant , " to thank the Santo Bambino and the" servant of God , who had restored her to life and- health . You may easily comprehend the sensation that a fact of this kind must have produced upon a population so full of faith , especially on the eve of the ceremony of the 21 st , which will put " solemnly upon the altar , in placing him among th e blest , the venerable Father Clavier , of the Society of Jesus , and at the close of 1
the expiatory iraiuo which has been ceiebr&leoat St . Andre delta Vall e in reparation of the sacrilegious outrage committed against the Madonna An Vieolo . dell'Abate Luigi . ' Our readers 'will be obliged ( o us for saying some words about this ceremony , and the cause which led to it . Last year Colonel Nardoni , assailed by two assassins , providentially escaped death . It so ' happened that the theatre of this event ' was preciaply under the Madonna placed at the corner Du Vicolo dell'Abate Luigi . The colonel attributed his escape to the protection of the Holy Virgin , arid out of gratitude caused tbe image which had so protected him to be carefully restored , for , ' owing to the isolation of the place , it had been much neglected . Demagoguism , as it , appeared , owes a grudge : to ( the Queen of Heaven , for having saved a man whose death would
have been so precious to the republican cause , and a sacrilegious , and democratic hand , some time ago , smashed with sionea the crystal which secures the sacred image , and mutilated its blessed features . This brutal : outrage having filled . the town with horror , his Eminence the Cardinal Vicar , yielding to entreaties , ordered a solemn triduo , which < ook place the 14 th , 15 th , and 16 th of the month . The image so outraged by demagogues was placed on the grand altar of the church ,, in the midst of an infinity of tapers , which crowned it as with a diadem O' fire , and for three days she received the homage , the invocations , and the tears of a faithful people . 'A . pamphlet published in Brussels , on the centralisation system ' of the Austrian government , and of which tbe Russian councillor , Tengoborski is known to be the author , has been prohibited , on account of its hostile nature . ; A dispatch from Calais announces that a cannon had beeu fired by the electric current from Dover .
Rmmm^«Y—*————^—^—^—^—F Oreign Intelligence.
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2 THE NORTHERN STAR . - . Qctob ^ 4 , 1851
Secret Sorrow' . . Certain Help ! Immense Success Of The A'Eui Modt Of Treatment Which Has Never Failed.
SECRET SORROW ' . . CERTAIN HELP ! Immense Success of the A ' eui Modt of Treatment which has never failed .
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Oct. 4, 1851, page 2, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1646/page/2/
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