WELCOME TO , LOUIS KOs GILT DZIONEOMA t TION OP THE PROP= On Etat:tette,' afteittOOn last, the Supreme Court EUcte wee eteried- With citizens of all 7 parties and oroupationi,:and all shades of re t. ligions friewet,-10 male areusgements for the ~ reception of LOUIS KOSSUTH, the illustrious IGovernor of Eiting.ary,. and to express their °Pin : , " lona in relation to the great cause of civil and religious liberty in Ettrope. ' On motion of J. 31. K.Lrkpatrick, Esq., the . t -Hon. Moezellearrox was called to the chair. I • On motion of J.H. Sewell, Esq., the Bon. 11.- i S. Flawing, of Allegheny city, Hon. J. B.Gutb i • tie of Pittsburgh, Hon. Charles Naylor, Hon. ....aims.... C inuriTi Duregh, Hon. limes ~ .Carothers, `t m, General James H. Watson, illizebeth, , r.letieral Jonathan Large, Jefferson, Pollard Mc ; Coinnick, city, Colonel Leopold Said; city, CoL i' Wm. L. Miller, VOPEPillefl, Ore. John M. Davis, Collins,' Oen. 1V,.. Ltrimer, city, Col, Hiram i . Holtz, Snowden, Alex. if Oafish), city, Dr. T. F. ..i 4 .• Dela, Allegheny, John Roth, city, F. Felix, Al. legheny, .lohn Magee,'West Deer, Th. Umbeteet i ter, Esq., and Dr. WM. F. Irvin, city, were ap-. pointed Vies Presidents. On motion, D. N. White, Leek) , Harper, H. • Mueller, J.. G. Hectares, and J. Heron Foster, ware appointed Secretaries. , '.. J. M. Kirkpatrick, Esq., mated that Robert fit ;."• ' 'Biddle be added to the list of... Secretaries, but . that gentleman declined serving. W. W.:lrwin, Esq., said, that in order not to • delay the proceedings of this natal', it. wet to usual to appoint a committee to draw tip rase. [titian', which they. "apposed to be acceptable v .. , , the gentlemen present, for their action. He,' therefore meted for a committee of thirteen. . I This rootlet carried smanimously,and Messrs. • i .W. W. Irwin, J. H. Sewell, CeL 8. W. Black, I said ?JeAuley, Morrison Foster, Wm. A. Irwin ' ; .'W. Della, James ile.hoonmater, R. Biddle ' . i , ;eberts, John Morrison, 8. •M'Clurkan, Samuel I ahnestock, and W. I Rose, appointed as said ',- . committee. ie e ltrom tear the door having been complete -11 ' 1 ly with auditors , while a large number, : we outside endeavoring in vain to gain Admit 1, tan the chairman announced that they could be necominodated at the other end of the room, i and'a great many passed over tilling it tom ! may. The Sin; Moses Hampton was called on to I et - pith:l. the object of the meeting. i .Me. Hampton, rising, said, I presume fellow . - citizens that you all know, as do, - the well as I de,e okiedt of this meeting, For my part I know no-1 .+, thing more than what appeared In the pnblie i . prints. If anione present lose a paper con ' stairrin,g the call, I trust that he will hind it to the ajereteries, to be read. My understanding of the matter is, that the patting kiss been called for the purpose of ta king measures to receive Lours HOPSITTH, Gov , -",- stenos or Hinman:, if he should visit this city, (cheers,) as well as to , exprese the feelings of ~. the citizens of Allegheny county relative to the object of his mission to this country. (Cheers.) Mr. Harper read the call for the meeting from F -'. Gus Daily :Gazette, after which there were loud ories of Hampton, Hampton, , 1 Mr. D. N. White booted that the Chairmen would give his views on the objects of the meet ' big. His fellow;citizens would tide to hear t come remarksfrom him on tho subject.. .1 • Mr. Hampton roe e, and here we may be per : matted to remark that the.length of -the various i . adiresies, taken in connection with the fact that I the meeting was held_on Saturday afternoon, compel" is to materially abbreiiate oar copious i notes, though we giro a pretty fall synopsis of 1 the speec.hes. The Honorable ge ntlemen ea that it was not f his purpose to trouble the meeting at that time, with any extended remarks, owing to a severe cold which rendered him unable to doss, and . ' the - effects of which they would readily perceive in' the times of his voice. 'Under ordinary air .arunitances, he should certainly have taken great pleasure in responding to a call so flatter ing, and more especially. When be considered the ' klikertittine.."4the great 'quiertion...vehich had . than come- before his fellow cititens for the Snit . time. 'Ho would, however makes few remarks. .. There was, perhaps, some degree of propriety in his CCOMERIttillg by alluding to the fact that, through their kind partiality, he had been . n - mambas Of the last Congress,. and had 'voted for, the resolntlyn, inviting - Louie Kass= to the - - United States.: (Loud chem.) He had voted ', tartlet resalutionbectuse ho had thought he - was doing right In either aspect of the case, whether the object of thaVinvitatien was simply to provide a free passage and safe conduct to the • United ,States for their illustrious . guest, or . whether, taking al: the facts of the ease into ansideration, Compete should decide to go far - ther. (Cheers) He had 'rated for it under b'oth these atipects—he believed he was right, '.thee -be knew he was right now. (Tremend.; orts cheers.) Re thought that be did not misun derstand the feelings of the great American peo ple on this subject They would all recollect the excitement which pervaded the United States Iduring the struggle for Hungarian Independence, and he.well remembered the exultation and le. joleinewith which he, in company with every trus'Ainitiesru, received the news of- the over throw of the Acistriazi tyrant in Hcmgary. - But the Emperor of Russia, aided by his im meta pOWer, and hordes of ,Cossacks,atipped in, and all was leet.• Did they not remember • . how the eltiseus of the United States felt tient How ardently they wished for the overthrow of the tyrant, and that be should be crushed to the earth, never to Ilia again I This nation had stood aloof thus; perhaps it might be Its policy to do so 'gain. ~ He did not come there to die . 'tate to the meeting, or to e*ess the opinion of i anyone but himself, but he did not hesitate to express his Min opinion, and that was, that if a similar occasion arose, sod Ramis again at- tempted to interfere with the internal concerns ed'ltaugery, it would be bat right in thls goi emu:dens to say, ~.. thus far shalt thou go, but ma farther, and here shall thy proud waves be stay ed." (teemeiodons applause.) • Ito said that titis nation - had a right to do so, as • Member of the great family of nations, ihkeing teexereise all the powers of a free gar =mutt, .Ife would not then go into an argu nteuttisupport their right to do so, since he did ~ ..not think It necessary to argue it before that an . &elute' (cheers) The law of nations, as he . maiersteod is from an examination of eminent sethars;teabeaubject, was that rule it conduct • preserited bk the finger of:Provldence for their government; in other words it was the !awl of •Jiature,,as htuied on Revelation. If, for In = r ' stance, he saw two men engaged in a quarrel; supposing the !Mr of nature only to Inlet, end one wers . wrak and the other. strong, ,lf a third mart stepped in, and took the part of the strong against the Weak, he would feel it Air duty to in- talent, and he would do ras, so help. him God. (oheeis.)• Whether it might be expedient in the I United Stites to interfere in a eitnilereme here -1 • spi e r, be could not say, but that was a spiestion, the discussion of which he was 1 30 1 o n o t o : trust to the Ameriaan . people when it came op—, there was no necessit y for deciding it just now. Who amid doubt - 11mi they would 110 resolve, how ever, thine all sovereign power was vested in the people, and he did not hesitate to any that if a revolutbin woulripring up in Hungary, or any other eountty, (the people rising ; In opposition to tyranny),ebonld the Emperor of Basalt and his barbarous Cossacks interfere; they should be put back. ' He would Ply to the Government of the United Slates, remonstrate with the Emtier -4.3llthohuß--mse ell necessarj diplomatic means, batlf they fail, write your commands With the point of the sword, and seal them with the sin . nou'ainouth., .(Loud applause.) ' W. had a duty taperfornt--a solemn duty, ha. faro Ged, and in the eyes of the world, he did cot fear the result! We were, it is true, a peaceful nation, bat he - was for 'an honorable peace. He might Bay, however, that he did not think war would * ensue, if the United 'States would say to Rosa* stand back! this is to fa mily.quarral in which you hive a right to inter- Ihrs., If this said in a friendly; but firm, manner tothe.Puiperor Nicholas', did they think that when aft Europewas In a flame, as it would be, the COW would engage ins contest kith the Hummel natio:4, l 3nd this Republic toot , lle, It'e el%liAltuat bellarthe would. . 1 , He thought that the tptatioe of -Hungarian treaders wu • mere question of time, and if, when that time comes, and the people rose, should the crowned huh of despotism form s , league, as he thought they bad done, the first fruits of which were visible In it, shameful usurpation of Louielllapoleon, rather than Nee civil and religious libertycruebed, hit voice should - Be for soar. (Loud applause.) He would then say, the sword of the Laid and of Gideon, until the Blidlanites dual have been slain from one end of the land to the other. (Tremendous ap plause, in the midst of which the Honorable gentleman eat down.) T. J. Fox Alden, Esq., having been loudly summoned, in brief terms, thanked the meeting for the honor they had conferred upon him. He concurred heartily in all that the Chairman had just aaid. We were a progressive people, and the doctrine of non-intervention, as it was for merly andeistood, was now exploded. (Loud cheers.) Thomas H. Horeb all, Esq., after prefacing his remarks, by a humorous introduction, said that should the Czar of Russia again put his mountain fist on Hungary to crush her liberties, the American heart had already decided as to the course to be adopted, and the American hand and head should follow its dictates. Wm not this decision manifest In the welcome with ithich_Koseuth had been received by hundreds of thousand' of oar citizens ? Was it not visi ble in the triumphal march which he had made Over the portions of our country which he had visited ? Our citizens had received him with open arms, and it was only at Washington that the "cold shoulder" had been turned to him. It only remained for them, as citizens of Atte gheny,County, to declare that they were for in tervention. For en Intervention, not indeed as in the case of Pobind, and as was lately the case In Hungary, a mere sympathetic interven tion, but for an intervention which would say to the Emperor of Russia, in the language of the Scriptures, "hitherto shalt thou come, but no farther." The matter should not be left wholly to our diplomatists abroad, but despotism should, if, necessary, be taught to feel the strength of our Yankee tars and soldiers. (Loud cheers.) Mr. Marshall concluded hie address, by some remarks relative to his peculiar political opin- tons.— l The Committee on Itesolotiotus returned, but Doctor E. D. Gausam having been requested to address the meeting, they gave way. Dr. Gamma said that although theopinions with which the last gentleman had conch:hied .his speech; might not be in accordance will: those entertained by a majority of that meet ing; still all those around him were in favor of the liberty of speech, and the rights of • minor ity in this country, were always respected. The object which then claimed their consideration, was the most important topic which. had ever been presented to the American people, with the single exception of our revolutionary struggle, and it was a question of equal moment to man kind, as compared with it. How should we meet this momentous question! Louis Kossuth, Governor of Hungary, the representative of downtrodden humanity, was now in-this coon- • .try, and appealed to their sympathies by every thing that was holy in the nature of man. Had he stolen their hearts by slippery arguments, or by his dulcet strains of eloquence, or had he manfully met the issue, and pioved the truth of his poeition by unanswerable arguments! He bad not appealed to their heart• alone, but to their reason, and for his part, in full view of the consequences, he said that if hereafter Russia should interfere in the affairs of Hungary, we should exhaust all the resources of diplomacy first, trot then, if necessary, prepare for war. The speaker did not agree with those gentle man who thought that the Father of his Coun try had advised non-intervention. If he had done eo, it would behoove every American to ponder long—te ponder carefully over his opin ions, bat he had not bequeathed to them any such advice. The people of this nation true now as a tight set on • hill, to illuminate all around, and were not obliged as their forefath- era were, to consult the musty documents of , antiquity for precedents. They were :them selves, their own precedent. He held in his hand, the declarations of the Father of his Coun try, and he asked them to examine them, and see if they called on us now to observe non in tervention, (cries of read them, read them) : ~.. he the ht they did not. He took the body of the add s, and not • single isolated para- agraph, picked old here and there, to delude the Am • mind. . : I For part he would confess that he , had hitherto; been of the opinion that the address of 1 Washington did maintain the doctrine of non Intervention, but he had beef: led by the great address opium:tit in New York, to examine It for himself, and he had not rested until he bad : found out \the falsity of the ideas he had hith erto maintained. Be thought that this impor tant document should be examined like all 1 others—the text should be taken with the con text—that which follows, with that which pre cedes. The circumstances attending the whole should claim their attention and not • part of that whole alone. The first portion, indeed, of the extracts which he would proceed to read, might appear to favor the idea of non interven tion, but let them examine well the remainder, and consider that the different parts of the whole were linked together, and that the Eu rope of Washington's time was not the Europe of to-rfey, comparatively close to our shore, and 'ties inhabitants our friends and brother:L. He spoke, of course, more especially of those who, although Striving for , freedom, were oppressed. Doctor Gamma proceeded to read as follows, commenting on each sentence as be read it, amidst loud applause. rThe great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is, in extending our cermet.: cial relations, to haw with them as little politi cal connection as possible. flu far as we have already fotined engagements, let them be fel , filled with perfect good faith. Here let us stop. • Europe has s set of primary interests, which to us have none, or • very remote relation.— Hence she must be engaged in frequent contro versies, the causes of which are essentially for.' sign to our concerns. Hance, therefore, it must be nudes inns to implicate ourselves by artifi cial ties, in the ordinary vicissitudes of her poi , Hies, or the ordinary combinations end collidons of her friendships or enmities. Our detached and distant situation invites and enables us to pursue a different coarse. If we remain one people, under an efficient government, the pe riod is not far distant when we may defy mate. rid injury from external annoyance; when ne may take such an attitude as will cause the neu trality we may at any time moire upon, to be serupnlonaly respected; when belligerent nations, under the Impossibility of meting acquisitions upon us, will not 11044 Lessard the giving us us provocation; when we may choose peace or war, es our Interest, guided by justice, shall counsel. Why.forego the ad vantages of so peculiar a situation! Why quit oar awn to stand iapan foreign ground?. Why, by interweaving our des ! tiny with that of any part of Europe, entangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of Europe an ambition, rivaloblp, Interest, humor, or ca price. It is our true policy to steer clear of perma nent alliances with any portion of the foreign world: so far, I mean, as we are now at Liberty to do it; for let me not be understood as capa ble of patronising Infidelity to existing engage merits.'.: I hold the maxim no hiss applicable to public:4lMo to private affairs, that honesty is al wayi the best policy. I repeat it, therefore, let 'those engagements be observed In their genuine *mum , lint in my opinion ft is unnecessary and would be unwise to extend them. Alter-a deliberate examination, with the aid of the best lights I could wee well sat isfied that our country, under all the circum annals of the case, had a right to take, and was bound in duty and interest, to take a nett , teal position. Having taken it, I determined, as I tar as should depend upon me, to maintain It with moderation, preserenneo and firmness.— 'rho considerations which 'respect the right to hold this conduct, it is not necessary on this oe emion to detail. I will only obeerve, that so• cordinglo my understanding of the matter, that right, so far front berm denied by any of the belligerent powers, has been eirtnally admitted by. all. • • The duty of holding • neutral conduct may be Inferred without any thing more, from the obligation which jostles and humanity invite on every nation, in came in which It Is free to act, to maintain Inviolate the relations of peace and malty towards other nation/. The inducements of interest for - observing thst conduct will be but referred to:your own reflections and experience. With me,;eirredom, inapt motive bee been to endeavor to gain time to our country to settle and mature its yet recent Itiatitutions, and:to propose, witbola Interrup tion, Ao that degree of strength and coludirtency; which isurecessary to g ive lf, bonsai,' speak ngi the command of :its own fortunes." If any man, then, had aught to ay against the truth of hie deduction, let them now freely state them, or if not, forever - alter hold their peace. Loud cheers: The Honorable W. W. Irwin said that he had been inetructedly the committee on resolution" to offer the following report, before doing which, he might, Perh - sps, be Indulged in making a few observations: • Be agreed With the gentleman who had just taken his seat, with regard to the construction which he put on the noble legacy left to us by the Father of his country. That gentleman had given it its true, legitimate and legal interpre tation. lie thought that at the time the immor tal Washington had bestowed this everlasting advice on hie people, he could never have dreamt that such a doctrine as that of nonintervention would iver be deduced from it, by human inge nuity. That was not the doctrine of the men, the heroes, and the sages of the revolution.— ' No! the doctrine was to hold no entangling al liance with any foreign prince, potentate or pow er, but at the some time, the whole life of the Father of hie country told us to hold alliance with suffering humanity, wherever it might be. George Washington aid not tell oe to turn a deaf . ear to the wail of the widow and orphad, wafted across the broad Atlantic, by every breese! No! gentleman, I feel persuaded that his advice to the Americon people, were be now in earth, would be, to rush to assist the oppress ed wherever they have been impelled to cast off their fetters by our example, yet have been again enslaved by the interference of foreign ty rants—to give to suffering humanity essential aid and coition. That man and that woman now perhaps live amongst us, enjoying the bles sings of freedom, who were born in the hour of our own agony,—wheo our ancestors took up arms against our ,own tyrant—when they took up arms against a people, connected with us by every tie of consanguinity, and speaking the same language. They fought not because their wives and daughters were subjected to the igno miny of being lashed and scourged—not because they themselve suffered on the scaffold or drag. I ged out their weary lives In prison, but on ac count of an abstract principle. It was not the tax of two pence a pound upon tea that called on ear ancestors to take up arms, but the prin ciple of taxation without representation. Act ing on this, they took up arms, and' appealing to the (led of battles, seventyaix Years ago, they engaged in the strife. They, in that-hour of their distress, asked for foreign aid; weak and feeble as they were, and foreign aid came In the person of the young, the heroic Lafayette,— ever blessed be his name! Became, and we thanked him.' He was followed by others, too, who loved to take the part of the week against the strong. When Lafayette afterwards visited us, he received every demonstration of respect and love which he was so worthy of receiving from the American people. From that day to this, our orators, stateemei and poets, have presented the liberties which w, enjoy and the principles which profess, for tai imitation and acceptance of the whole world . Our diplomatists have urged the example of on. institutions in•foreign courts. Our stateemer have pointed out their excellence in the balls . . . Congress, and now one nation. ; emulating th prosperity we enjoy, and animated by our ex ample and advice, has risen against its oppres sore. Hungary, which had "teen free for a - - thousand years—which had always been in dependent, and which even now was not con conquered,rose to resist the violation of her con etitution by the perjured House of Hapsburgh, and succeeded. She was victorious in severfl suc cessive battiest; bat fellow citizens, the countless hordes of Ramie canteen the held and its Empe ror leagued with his brother of Austria. Akain the gallant Hungarians fought, bled, and con quered, until the gold of ROAMS corrupted and was roceptea by a second Judas, surnamed Iscariot, who had professed to love the principles of free dom. Then all was lost, and the most eminent Iftmgarians were) either victims to the fury of their advernaries, or exiles In foreign lands. The most illustrious of tgeee exiles had now arrived on our soil. He had been invited to this country—he came, and spoke all nu - other man bad ever / spoken. He told his story to the Amencan people, in thoughts that spoke—in Words that breathed the ideas of our language, because they spoke the true feelings of all living souli. What be had said, bad burned an inecription on the mem- ory of all living people. All for which be pray: eewas, that hie ashes should mingle with the Jrrr coil of Hungary. lit asked for nothing for himself; he came to thank the Congress and people ot the United States for their kindness, but he bad no time for ceremony—every mo ment be expected to hear the 'trumpet call of freedom, C ectmmoning him to his own continent. '•Let me go he said. "Let me go 'r" I want not yanr gold; what you bare and wish to give, give to my suffering country, llmagary." Yes, fellow citizens, Iliad when the time comes that continental Europe, now smouldering like a volcano, shall buret into active eruption, and freedom will arise, you will hear a voice—the embodiment of the American people, which will sarto the Czar, stay back, come not for- ward'en free sail The Hungarian wished for nothing but fair play, and that they would obtain, as sure as there was a God in Heaven. James Monroe, one of the heroes of the Revolution, had . said "stand back," when the Holy Allicriatt wished to interfere in the affair, of South America.— Great Britain had then united with him to sup port the pri n ciple of non-Intervention. What were we now? Our territory bad tripled and quadrupled—our people bad observed the same ratio, and it was impossible to calculate the in crease of this nation in riches. We now had ri navy; bad no national debt, and he verily be lieved that the time had come when, in the words of Washington, in a just cause, we might defy the world. (Cheers.). Now we should say to foreign powers, Interfering to overawe weaker States, ••Stand back I—let -every nation estab lish whatever form of government it pleases. We are a member of the family of nations, io are you ; stand back, we cannot let you estab lish a wrong precedent by allowing you to In terfere In business with which you have no con sent." Yet, even if the despots, would attempt to overran Europe, he had no doubt-that the Intlame of the United States would he nu& tient toeheok their career, and would prevent Attatriaa, French, and Spaniel& interference In Italy, newel! as Russian interference in Hen 6hr7. We were yet on the eve of the greatest events which had ever yet claimed the attention of the world. We were marching on, not with the pace of a giant,: for that simile had now grown amtiquated, bat with the rapidity of lightning— of the electrio-telegraph—of light itself, and he had only this to nay, that when our Government Interfered in behalf of down trodden liberty In Europe, he felt persuaded that the people of the United States would eupport it. Hit was sure that if Russia again Interfered in the affairs of Hungary,• u it had done, Congress would not let the matter pane unnoticed; and (Or one, no matter what was done, he would stand by the people to the last extremity. (Tremendous ap plause.) Mr. Irwin than offered the following report: .Rssotoed, That the doctrine of President Jae. Monroe is the true doctrine of non-intervention, namely ashrams on the part:of the Milted States to the League of European Despots, miscalled the "holy alliance," in their apprehended design of aiding Spain In the eubjugation of her revolt ed American Coloulce. Rewired, That the doctrine of President J. Q. Adam, and of his Secretary of State, floury Clay; is the true doctrine of n.-intervention, nenely that theme United States would oppose with their while force, the interference of Euro pean powers with the struggle of the Spanish American Colonies for indpaidence. Resolved, That in the language of President Fillmore, "The deep Interest we feel in the spreed of liberal principles, and the establish ment of free Governments, and the sympathy with which we witness every straggle against oppression, forbid that we should be Indifferent, to's canoe in which the strong arm of a foreign power is invoked to stifle public sentiment, and reprints the epirit of freedom in any country." ' Resolved, That, ,In thelangusge of the immor tal Washington, "Every nation has a right to establish that forte of government under which Item:waives it can live most happily, and that no government ought to interfere 'with the Internal eenearne of another.". Resolved, That all men are endowed by the Creator with the rights of life ; liberty, and the pared, of happiness, which at* itteltecualgl —ihtt In the words of the ittatrieen peeler*: tion of Independence "to secure these rights, governments are iastitnted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, that whenever any form of govern ment becomes destructive of these made, it is the right of the people to alter, or to. abolish iy and to Institute new goverment. 111/14 Its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers In such form, as to them shall stein moat likely to effect their safety and bagpiz'. nese. Resolved, That the foregoing rights and doc trines, constitute part of the laws of Nations, and that the People of these United States, constituting one of the family of nations, should not only respect these laws themselves, but use their influence to cause them to be respected by other nibmkers of the same family. Resolved, That the intervention by Russia in the war between Hungary and Austria, after Hungary had achieved her independence, by the overthrow and expulsion from her soil of the ar mies of her tyrannical oppreseor, was a wanton, unprovoked, and unjustifiable violation of the rights of Hungary under the law of Nations, and that the subsequent orselties, rapine and murders perpetrated by the barbaric hordes of the imperial despot, upon the men, women and children of a brave and generouspeople, deserve the universal execration of the civilised world. Rescilved, That in the event of another upris ing of the people of Hungary, in the cause of Independence, a repetition of similar interren -6011 on the part of Russia, should be counterac ted by the.people of the United States in their national as well as individual Capacity, by all lawful, just and honorable means. Revo/cril, That, in such event, the Government of the United States, anxious to greet Hungary amongst the independent powers of the earth, should carry out the policy of the lamented President Taylor, and be foremost of all the world in the eolemn recognition of her indepen dence And this meeting, cordially approving the proceeding, of our fellow citizens at Cincinnati on this subject do hereby adopt their sentiments and incorporate the same at a part of onr reso lutions, vii .Braolned, Thal in the legislation of the Hungarian Diet of 1849, witnewied with delight.% independent Inl en. intabliebing her linititutione up.. the broad bona of Isi. Mindful freedom. nod laying deep the foundations of her presperity In the hearts of her cilium& by elevating the firme t breritro DTI Vobtritho;:heTr%:lgralreni'oMpf:e r mg for equality of tasation and reprmentation„ by nr leading the right of suffrage. and by establishing a more Just wit h say of property: and ell this without int.. fermi with say vested right. ur diaturbLog the hap of a single family Hungary . Resolmi. 11.. 0e regmel the war in fintiaMT its • hie ride defense, by a brave people, of their ancient and ma nna:l°mi elebto and libertlen summand in the field of battle against the combined power of two hoary despot. and yielding only to nimmbery pumbaani by Russia gold. We rejoin, to believe that war Snot let ended, but that the present condition of Hungary and Nampo le but the 101 l before the final and Inimitable storupwind Freedom, istileh Hain sweep from that