fil . Faro - 111 EUROPE. ME ARRIVAL OF MOPA, The - Turkish and Rvssian Tirar—Large :;1 7 ionter of War Steamers in the Bos• L , phones—Sailing of the English Fleet for the Dardanelles.7-oificial Declara tion of England in Behalf of Turkey— • Favorable Financial Intelligence—Ad in Cotton, 4-c., 4.c. §ACiVILLE, Oct. 23-8 o'clock The Europa, Capt. Lott, with 125 pas sengers, and'intelligence ono week later from all parts of Europe, arrived at Bali fak to-day, and was to have let for Bos ton at about one o'clock. "Tim TURKISH AND RUSSIAN DIFFICULTY. Pending the decision of the Emperor of, Russia upon the appeal made to him res pecting the extradition of the Hungarian refugees, the English papers contain ma ny reports respecting the probabilities Con cerning the issue, but of course nothing definite can be arrived at until the resolu tion of the Emperor and his Imperial Coun cil shall be make known. The reply of the Emperor, which was expected with the most intense anxiety, would, it was thought, reach the Turkish ,Capital about the 10th or 12th of October. `Apprehending that the decision of the Czar might be a declaration of war, the Porto was exceedingly impatient to learn the effect produced upon the Cabinets of London and Paris, by the bearing of their representatives at the Sublime Porte. A large fleet of steamers is collecting• in the waters of the Bosphorus, and in the harbor of the Golden Horn; and between the entrance of the Black Sea and the Pro pontis, and the Sea of Marmora, there are twelve ships of :he line at anchor, fully e quipped, and plentifully supplied with arms and provisions. In the army of 100,000 soldiers assem bled around the capital, drilling and re-1 viewing were going on from daylight to dusk. A letter of the 25th ult., states, that, be fore entering the Turkish territory, official assurances were given to Kossuth, that he and his fellow refugees were welcome, and should be allowed to proceed to any ,part of the world. A .considerable number of refugees have been put on board American corvettes and the French steamer L'Averin. Their des tination is said to be Greece. Kossuth has written a very eloquent let ter. en'his present position to Lord Paliner sten, which is published entire in the Eng lish journals. From Widdin the news is somewhat startling. It appears that Amillah had been sent to urge the refugees to embrace Islamism, and has not been unsuccessful. Kossuth, Dembinski, Guyon, Kamoyski, and others, all swore that no person should induce them to apostacy. Bern had no such scruple. The most unwelcome featureof the news from Turkey is, that those pashalics in Europe, which are partly Greek and part 1Y Turkish, are in a state of great-ferment, in consequence of the threatened rupture ,between Turkey and Russia. Under the influence of Russian emissaries, chiefly members of the Greek church, these vas-! sals of the Suit* betrayed a serious in tention of taking advantage of the present opportunity, to get up a revolt. The greatest activity prevails in the sen ding of couriers to and from all the prin cipal ports of Europe ; but the general firm ness of the public funds theme that the prevailing opinion is, th no serious re sults will a rise. The correspondent of the London Times writing from Paris, says that a note, ad dressed by the English , government to its Ambassador at St. Petersburgh, on the subject of Constantinople, couched in firm, moderate terms, contains not a single ex-1 pression or threat calculated to wound the I .susceptibilities of Nicholas, whilst it an nounces the determination to support the Porte against exigencies that would com promise the dignity of an indcpendentsov- ereign. Lord Palmerston has, likewise, sent proper instructions to Sir S. Canning, and has placed the Mediterranean fleet at his disposal, which has, by this time, sailed for the Dardanelles. have also reason for repeating, that France has imitated the conduct of Eng land, and that the most perfect unanimity exists between the two powers. AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY. It has been rumored that the Hungarian refugees near Widden, the leaders excep ted, have applied for leave to return to the Austrian territory, and their request would b 3 granted. The statement that Gorgey had been shot' - Kagenfahl, by a brother of Count Ziehy, who was executed by the Hunga rinns, has been contradicted. Several . Hungarian leaders, besides Kossuth's mo ther and Guyon's' wife, are kept . in close • imprisonment by the Austrian authorities. Previous news relative to the surrender of Comorn, is fully confirmed, after the patriots, who held possession of the for -tress, succeeded in making very favorable terms with the Austrians. • ITALIAN AFFAIRS. The French governMent had received advises from Rome to the 4th inst, . A letter from Rome states that "the ef fect 'cif 'raising the state of seige of that _city, demanded by , the three cardinals, will.be to deprive the French general-of -.o,authority in civil and political ques ' Lions, and to invest the cardinals' with +..lirgited power. The French _prefect of •Ilolieo had, inconsequence, apprised sev era' ex-deputies of the. Constituent Assem p':;.lz, .bly thafiyarrants' had been issued against them by the pontificial police,,but that the I,l"Freneh authorities would suspend their ex ' "itecution until the Ist of October; andflutt th(p the meantime, 'they should h4Ve..a. free sliSt,iisage to France, with the liberty - tn . re. there.,'' _Sixty deputieS left immediate- ly. Vast crowds attended them, cheering them, and hearing their marks of respect. The emotions of the people had a visible effect not only on the French troops, but 'the government." It is reported that the Pope has taken a larm at the numerous • assassinations of. French , soldiers, rnd belie ves ;that there is nn extensive plot for his assassination, W I he should return. Ile expressed a wish, therefore,_ to remain at Naples during a, portion of the winter. The announcement at Home, that the public and pecuniary engagements of the. re government would be respected, tied some popularity for the Pope. Private letters from Geneva, of the 4th, mention that Garibaldi, on arriving at the island of Aladalena, demanded passports for England, witti the intention of procee ding thence to'llw United States, where he intended to settle. Since then, how ever, he has received proposals from the Montovidean Envoy. who offered him com mand of the forces of that republic, which office, it is believed, he will accept. SARDINIA The Ministry having &initialed unsuc cessfully, or Ow Chamber of Deputies, to sell 9,06,000 francs of runt,,, in order to pay the first instalnwnt of the indemnity due to Austria, It has been officially an nouncedifiat the Chamber at Turin will be dissolved. Report says that a formidable conspira cy had been discovered in Piedmont, which was to have broken out at Genoa on the occasion of S,lie• landing of the body ut Charles .:111,`-:rt.. It appears front , the French and Pied montese correspondence-seized by 04,9 T urin authorities, that the conspirators on both sides of the Alps reckon on the retivial of the French anny of the Alps to make against them; aad there is good reason to believe that, if they had consented to march into Italy at all, it would be to give their support to the. Piedmontese patriots, vlOl not to oppose them. AFFAIRS IN FRANCE. The Itioni tear nnnounced the appoint ment of Lucien Murat as Minister to Tu rin, and N. Bois Le Compt; now Minister at Turin, us Minister Plenipotentiary to Washington. But the fact was stated, of which there was no doubt, that the govern mcnt was totally ignorant what had pas , sed in„.Anwrica wizen 111. Bois was ?Willa' The only allusion made in any of the papers received, to the difficulty between the French and American governments, is the following, copied from time Paris Pressr: Some explanations of the affair are nec essary. The French government deman ded an indemnity fa r the losses caused to French subjects by the war in Mexico.— This demand having met wilt some diffi culty, the French govcrtunentharget dur minister to announce to the American gov ernment, that the indemnities claimed would be kept back out drthe annuities not yet due—out of the twenty-five mil lions francs for which we were the debtors of the United States. It appears that the letter written on the subject by M. l'oussin was couched in rather unsuitable language, of which the French government, main taining the claim, has expressed its disap proval: In consequence of the illness of Mr. Falloux, the discussion in the Assembly on the Italian question, and the affairs of the River Pl; te, tope her with the American and Turkish disputes, have all been post poned. On the 4th inst., the Assembly were principally occupied in discussing a bill rotative to the completion of the Louvre. The bill demanding a credit of 15,000, 000 francs for its completion, and the lengthening of the Rivoli, which, afler a lengthened discussion, was passed by a majority of 330, to 59. As was suspected, the proposal of Mr. Napoleon Bonapart, has met with the ap proval of the committee to which it was referred. They declared that tho uniting CO of the Bourbons, and amnesty to the insurgents of June, being included in the same proposition, established an unbecom ing assimilation of the two parties mention ed, and at once unanimously decided on recommending the Assembly to take it un der consideration. The proceedings in the Assembly, be tween the sth and 11th instant, aro quite unimportant. Gen. de Hautpool has been appointed to take the place of Gen. Rostolon, who definately refused to stay at Rome, not withstanding the overtures of M. Mercier. M. Trappoli, the ex-Envoy of the Ro man republic., who is accused of having published false news from Rome, which oc casioned the movement of the 13th of June, in Paris, has been sent, under an es cort of gem d' ((PHU'S to Bologne. The loss experienced by the foreign commerce of Paris, in consequence of the revolution of February amounts to 590 million francs, as compared with the re turns of 1847, when the total amount of the foreign trade was 2,019 million of, l francs. It is stated that the government is to recall a portion of the army in Italy, and to leave a division oflo,ooo men at Civita Vecchia. A single regiment is to occupy the capital Of St. Angelo, and the Span iards aro to enter Rome. PRUSSIA. • The Wurtemberg movement has form ally intimated to the Prussian ministry that it will . not-join the federal leaugue proposed by Prussia',. Hanover, and Saxony, and that Hanover has already announced its intention to withdraw from this confeder ation. SICILY. The affairs of Sicily have been nearly. arranged. The island is to have a dis tinct administration from that of Naples, with a. Consulta or Chamber chosen by the municipality. - ' • ' • ENG,LAND. - • ietu rrlf4 'of t he .Chantellor of the Exdbequer for October quarter • hai4onil published. , The customs duties for thq k quarter ending the sth instani exhibit d;. decrease of £153,211. The excise has increased £185,000: stomps about £225,1 000: •property taxed £21,000, and post • office revenue £lOO,OOO. And the i crease in . the past quarter, taking toe whole income, the balance of the increase of the quarter is . £214,113, whilst the to tal income of the year is £235,501. The increaso in the exports of the country during the first eight months of the pres ent year, amounts to :£7,270,000. The exportation of cotton manufitetures i cor the last eight months, has increased in 'die; ratio of 25 per cent., and cotton yarns 33 per cent. • The papers have nearly ceased to chronicle the ravages of the cholera. IRELAND A faint eilbrt is being made to revive the political excitement of the country,— Conciliation 1-fall has ben opened—let ters of adhesion, as of old, have been read from the chair, and f. 25 5s of rent col lected. John O'Connel is, of course, the principal. Since we conuneneed the publication of the Country Dollar, it has been our con stant effort to keep its readers fully and correctly advised of the many important events that have been transpiring in Eu rope. Ilow well we have succeeded, it is fin• them to saw•. At present, the threat ened rupture between Russia and Turkey is the all-engrossing topic. To those who wish to make themselves familiar with the causes, the character, and the probable is sue of such a struggle, we recommend the following able editorial article, which we copy from th Pea as Imola/L. of last Sat urday : TURKEY—In ALLIES AND lEEE ATTITUDE. It appears that Nicholas bad nut yet ful ly dccided, when the Europa left Liver priol, to attack the Turkish Sult.in, for his I - crusted to give tip the Hungarian heroes. But the antagonists of the Czar were al- I ready mustering in force, to lie prepared for the worst ; and the activity Nlllollg the reputed allies of the Turk, indicated that they expected to hear from Russia at the cannon's mouth. Our own impression is clear, that the Muscmite will strike speed ily and . suddenly. He is flushed with his recent'succcss in Hungary, and feels that he can never lfe in better condition to car ry out the darling object of his heart, and the scheme cherished by hillgreat prede cessor, the ambitious Catharine. But he must not flatter himself' that the indiffer ence of other great nations will allow him to consummate his grand design of seating, himself upon the throne of Constantine, or that they will stand by, as they did more! than twenty years ago, and see him car rying the Black Eagle in triumph over the I dominions of the Porte. Great Britain! has-frequently interposed to prevent the success of this favorite scheme of the Rus sian ruler. When the Russians and Aus trians, in the last century, projected an al liance for its partition, and Catharine and foseph had actually met on the \Volga to arrange its details, Mr. Pitt interposed, and prevented their design ; and when Debit stitch was in full march for Constantino ple, and the insurrection of the jannissa ries only waited for the sight of the Cos sacks to break out and overturn the throne of Mahmoud, the strong arm of NVellinif ton interposed, and again defeated the purpose of the combined rulers. France has long regarded the Enwer of the Char with alarm ; and having twice seen the Cossacks in Paris, it is not surprising that France should be nervous at every addi tion to his strength. It was an extraordin ary spectacle, however, to see the position of these two governments, in 1828, when the Russians and the Mussulrnan's came into collision. England, jealous of the maratime superiority of RittSiar and ap prehensive of danger to 144diEirt posses sions, from the growth of lOssian power in Asia, had long madeY'it a part of her policy to coerce the ambitious designs of the Cabinet of St. Petersburg; but in 1828 the domestic condition of Great Britain was too full of peril to make her:able to attend to the Russian usurpatios upon Turkish territory and in Turkish waterS; She was too busy in fighting against the enemies incurred by her reform bills; too anxious to counteract the dangerous influence of O'Connell ; and too much alarmed at , the progress of antagonist principles, to stay the tide of success that attended the Rus sian armies in Turkey. Circumstances, (and not England,) alone prevented the Despot of Russia from seating himself on the throne of the Turk, and from introdu cing his own Iron system instetht of the timid rule of the Sultan. We need not say that the position of i both France and England is different atl the present day. England is at peace with all the world.' Comparative tranquility reigns in her dominions, moreover, and her colonies aro in a more peaceful and flourishing condition than usual. France will seek and find the elements that will secure, strengthen and perpetuate her new Republic, in a war with tho power which is now backing up the Popo in his ungrate ful opposition to his sometime protector and friend. How can Russia expect much aid from Austria, the capital of which, Vi enna, is still a city in a state of siege, and the provinces of which are still filled with a disaffected and vigilant population 1 It aly and Prussia may be kept in a state of neutrality on account of their opposing parties, each watching the other, and be cause the princes that • rule them will fear • to lead their armies even against the Turk, whouthey may leave behind them a pea plesonly-too; ready to follow , any leader bold enough to oppose 'existing dynasties. 'As for Hungary; she will not require a second appeal to give her best matorial7,--. , in defiance of Austria—in aid of those who Cuba as it Is. : i have resolved to defend her idolized pit- We copy the following hQjrible story from , riots against the fiendish hatred of the Em- the Havanna correspondence of the New peror of Russia : . Orleans Della : . _.... . .. _ . . ... Nor has Turkey indicated that She will In the district of the Pina del Rio, there be unworthy of her friends and of her re resided, some time ago, a wealthy plant sponsibility. Hbr ships arc. crowding the orwhose ehr4titin,rfameavas Don Jose. waters of the Bosphorus, titul one hundred T ' liis i man, or ritther s lirute in human form, thousand men are being 'constantly disci- Alined at Constantinople. 'ln 1828, hall been for seine time living criminally raised but thrty thousand men, and she hest] his own daughter, to the knowledge owing and mother, who, however, wili ; to the sad dissensions that prevailed among pi r the was afraid to excite the brutal vengeance her captains, ti e revo l t. of the Pasha Of of the monster, by denouncing and expos- Egypt, and the Greek outbreak, she went ina• his crime. But, as the daughter be to battle utterly demoralized, and, on the „ cran to bloom into womanhood, the sense on the 11 tli of 'June, or the same year, of shame and degredation beginning to op "the Russian outposts could hardly keep ,i - e pace with the rapidity of the Torlt's° crate upon her min d, she determined to r sist the approaches of the Unnatural parent. flight ; and a force, reduced by "' less to She threatened to proclaim his infamy, twenty thousand men, dictated peace to the and denounce him before the tribunals, if Ottomans within twenty hours' march of he persisted in his atrocities. 'Shortly af- Constantinople." tier present prepara- ter this, the poorgirl was found in herbed, Lions and attitude are in most healthy cruelly murdered. The father was ar- ; contrast with her weakness, imbecility, and rested, tried, found guilty, and sentenced: indifference, twenty yours ago. to be executed by the garrote, a kind of Sustained by Great Britain, which took guillotine, which extinguishes life by part against her in the Creek revolution, means of a sharp wire, which is made by and by the warlike nation of France, 'Fur- n certain spring to penetrate the spine of key ought now to 'lie worthy of her an ” the victim, as he sits in a chair of stocks. cient fame, especially when engaged in a o, .1 o execute this sentence, the public lime.; (Noise so noble in all its aspects, and so tionary, as he is styles] in legal parlance, worthy of the blessings of mankind. " For or in plain language, the executioner, was four years, from 0308. to D-312," as we sent from I favanna. Now, as this indi- learn from Allison, "the Russians wa g ed vidind is held in great horror by , the pee.: a desperate war with the Turks. 'They ple, who have lately been threatened with brought frequently one hundred and filly, a visitation from him, on account of their; sometimes two hundred thousand men into afiperations for liberty, it was deemcd pro the field, but at its close they made no dent to lodge the executioner in a safe sensible progress on the bulwarks of Is- place. lie was, thesefore provided with, lamism ; two hundred thousand Mussill quarters in the district prison, in the same mans had frequently assembled round the , „ apartment with.soveral felons, who were, banners of the Prophet ; the Danube haul , ilpprehensive*:6l becoming better acquain-' been stained with blood, but the hostile tok i i • n ,- • Led w i t h in. mics sill contended in doubtfudand despe-.1 In the morning, Jack Ketch was found rate striti. on its shcires ; and on the gladis dangling by the neck, front a rope attach of Roudschunk, the Museevites had suitt- ,ed to tagratings of the prison. }Lis fel- mined a blthaller-deleat " lan the ) . ever l ' e- i lo„..inmates . 4 the prison did not appreei ceived lean the genius of Napoleon. In ate his company, and had thus rid them the triumphs of the Turks at that Fedi- : selves of it. A facecions prisoner, howev gious victory, the Vizier wrote exultingly , er, allegedalleed teat the executioner hall been to the Grand Seignieur that such was the , Seized with reiffnrse, and disgusted with: multitude of infidel beads which he had; : i i profession, had lv ree , rom taken, that they would make a bridge for ; it by suicide. But thii reso st ed ory to did ti not f Ira the souls of the fitithful from earth to Ilea- ! 171 pgbso on the intelli ent Governor of the di';-, yen : trict, who went to Work, in the old style It is at least possible, howevor, that the , • i , of the ititiliiilion, to a= -ertain the truth Czar will count the cost of any , atte Mp i ` ' n : by the application of torture to the prison - overwhelm Turkey, thus resolute in tier- j ers. In the- proce:si of his ingenious de self uud surrounded by staunch and stal ' vices for the elu-idati;in of the mystery, wart friends. Shoqld he not decide to do! one of the most mu rdefous looking of the so, the reader will easily perceive how, accused was tied up so tightly, that by the doubtful will be the issue, and how fn nee. merest accident in the world, ho was quite al and devastating the war must of metes-;merest sib/ become.s. I unable to give the desired information, al though when taken down, he bowed his . , head affirmatively. lie was dead! l 1 ' The Captain General has sent down 'an especial officer, to ascertain the facts' of this cofiiplicated tragedy. Our corm spoedent suggests that he should fallow the crumple of the District Governor, and hang a few of the individuals connected with this application of the torture. There being no applicant for the office of executioner, the abandoned t u tu icier of, his own child, was token out, and shot by' a flit. of soldicrs. These are the simple facts of this affitir, which are sufficiently traeleal, widlout the pisodieal additions of the horror-lel. ing :41inni:Arils or Havanna. They are sufficient tt illustrate the benighted state ()floors ls, and ofthe administration of Justice in this unhappy & oppressed island. Tl►c Rights of Man, We from a lute number of the Dublin Irishman the; following r xtracts from an able edetorial on this subject : All men are equal in the sight of their Creator, and, in accordance with the tes timony of the Scriptures, they should be considered as the members ()Cone great The claim, therelbre made by a ny' individußl whether calling himscirlsing or noble, or knight, to tyranni:>e over and trample on his laow-men, is the claim ol an insolent bully, and as such will be met by all who have the soul mid spirit of free men. An hereditary aristocracy or a privil eged class of any sort, is,noronly contrary to the plainest ideas of natural right, but it is, perhaps, the greatest curse that the sins of mankind ever brought into the world. It is the root of more robbery, ty ranny, treachery, bloodshed and all (Aar iniquities which sadden and disgrace hu man life, than any other one of all ihe in ventions and devices of the Prince and Powers of Darkness. Political Freedom and National Inde pendence, which are in their nature insep. crable blessings, are amongst the best gills which a bountiful Provifrence•has ev er bestowed upon a people. 'Without those, all other gifts of God will he robbed of hall' their worth. The fertile soil, le ge. Dial climate, the physical strength and mental ability of the race, will have been granted almost in vain, if Freedom and Inependence be denied. . That one nation should tyrannise over another, or usurp its government, seems the most barbarous and unnatural crime. The social and individual usurpations may be palliated by a thousand plausible soph istries, but the Foreign Despotism is bare faced robbery, and the plainest iniquity. For it, there can be no defence of the rob ber and the assassin—namely, the power of the criminals, and the weakness or cowardice of the victims. It has, thcrelbrc, ever been held the most glorious and heroic deed which man can do, to assist in the overthrow of such tyrranny, and in the reestablishment of the national independence of his country.— History records, with all the honors that genius can confer, the names of those bravo men, who struck to the heart the do mination of the foreigner, or spilled their blood as a mark upon the true road to Na tional Independence. Such men were William Tell and Andrew floter, Wolf Tone and Robert Emmett. AWFUL.—The Clearspring (Md.) Sen tinel, of Saturday, says : "A young man named Cox, who was working in a lock on the seven mile bot tom, during the cold days of last week, became somewhat provoked by the cold, and presumptuously exclaimed, "ho wish ed he was within the gates of hell, so that he would be out of this cold world." In five. minutes afterwards a portion of the surrounding rocks and earth fell in upon him, killing him instantly. What an aw ful warning to blasphemers." The Yankee Blade says, "nearly all the suicides in this country are by foreigners.' Yankees rarely make way with them.. selves—for nearly . every one thinks he,' has a chance of becombig President, and, at any rate, his curiosity prompts him. to live on, lust to see what it will come to:' =I The Election in California. A correspondent of the Boston Times gives the liillowing account of the way the election %%as conducted in the diggings: On the day appointed we were encamp ed six miles below our present location.— During the hot part of the day, the season of the siesta, a young intelligent-looking man came into camp on a mule, and inci ted us all to turn out and go to the polls. We had been in the country put a few days, and knew cr y little of its local pol itics, but decided upon following the young man to the Big Bar, where the election was to be held, and there gather what in lbrination we could. Off we went by the mule path, over hill and ravine, craggy rocks, and through thorny chapparel, until we come to the Bar. The place of mee ting was a store tent, and here were about twenty miners, NVe arruinged ourselves upon a log, tinder the edge of the tent, and waited for the progress of events. Directly our guide took his hat and nominated a moderator for the meeting,' thenjhree inspectors and a clerk : all of who nil were chosen without a dissenting voice. At the request of one of our party he then stated the object of the election,' and at the same time informed us that the first name on the prepared ballot for del egates to the Convention was his own.— One of the prominent questions in the elec tion was an expression as to whether sla very shall be allowed in California. The candidate, though a Louisianian, was op. posed out and out to the introduction of slavery here, and so we all voted for him. For myself, I was of the opinion of an old j LARD OIL.—In Cincinnati it is calcultt mountaineer, who leaning against the tent ted that 11,000,000 pounds Of iard will b pole, harrangued the crowd, that in a run into lard oil this year, two-sevenths( country where every white man made a which aggregate will make stearinei th slave of himself, there was no use in keep- residue oil, say about 20,000 barrels of 41 ing niggers. I deposited my ballot in an gallons each . There is also an establisl old candle-box in accordance with this o- ment in that city extensively engage() pinion. .1:: Interesting from the Camomile Nation. ' ate in this way on: 30,006 hogs.' This • I We learn from the National Intelligen- cern alone is expected to turn out-this set cer that intelligence has been received son 3,000,000 lbs. of lard. 3,000,00 at the War Department respecting an im- lbs. of tearine; have been made in one yea portant National Council recently held by into candles and soap in these factories, 6 the Camanche Indians. This council lab- they can make 6000 lbs. of candles aver ted ten days, and its object was to elect a age per day throughout the year. , /,, new chieT to rule the nation, (in place of , the one recently deceased,) and the indi-; RELIGION AND • COUNTItit i .-T.There ati vidual thus honored glories in the name of two things that revive in, th,e heart of twin Buffalo ; Hump. On being installed into in p'roportion, , aslo advances in nitre. office, after the Indian fashioti this. head l his countty and. religion. In youth, bet 'chief called upon his subordinates freely to may. have been forgotten,; but, sooneft4 ' express their opinions upon all matters of later,They present. themselves with all, importance connected with the; affaits of attractions, , and awaken, in .the depths'' ,the nation ; :whereupon 'many speeches our souls, a love, justly due to therilr were delivered. They were, generally/ of, tylm-Chaviaubriand. • Tnc HUNGARIA N CROWN, Which was learried off by KOssuthi when. he fled into I.Turkey, is fabled by the Hungarian le gends, to have been sent by angels to SG ' Stephen, who was crowned with it in 1001. i The truth, as related by history, is, that it was presented to St. Stephen by Pope syl vester H. A golden,cirelet, presented to Duke Geisa by the Greek Emperor, was incorporated with it nfierwardt,. It has seen many curious adventures in the e ventful history of Hungary, when rival claimants c,ontended for it. It was once packed away in h cask bya royal fugitive who, in journeying thus, lost it but recov end it again. This same king, Otto, had it forcibly taken from him by Waywode Ladislas, who kept it three years, and then was forced to return it. In 1489 it was stolen liv a maid of honor, at the instance of the widow of a duceitvd monarch, who wished to have her inthnt son crowned with it. In 1191 the widow pawned it to the Emperor Frederic IV, for 2509 guilders. It was redeemed, but soon :Ile ' len agrtin by :mother woman to crown a nother royal claimant, and after several changes till, into the hands of the Turks, whose leader, t•;olynion, returning from. the sae (,f Vienna, exhibited it as the crown of the fimitms Persian King Nushi vocn. lie all A -mist sent it back to the person from whom he obtained it, and it then was given up to the Emperor Ferdi-. nand. Alter many other changes it was sent to Hungary by Leopold, and there it remained until Windischgratz tool: Perth, when Kossuth removed it, and has evdt since kept *it in his possession. Amu:m(lAS ENTERPRIZE IN PARIS.--; Cult, the "revolver" has thought it prop er, in these revolutionary times, to offer his invention to government. Ile is here, and has had several interviews with the Minister of War, and no doubt will procure a large, order for these) shooting irons, for the French army. So much for American enterprize and intervention a• broad. Its influence is perceptible in ev-: cry' country of the world. Since my last, I have not encountered :.;o many of Inv, Countrymen, although a s*ct number of delVnteS arc always to be met with at Messrs. Livingston:, Wells & Co's., A merican forwarding & commission house, No. 8 Place de la Bourse. This estab lishment is a perfect paradise for travel lers who, in their meanderings over the continent, have not been able to peep af one of their own breakfast-table newspa•. pers; }hero (thanks to the proprietors) they arc all to be found ; and many is the Amer ican daily seen hurrying along from his morning meal to get the latest news, al, ways to be had and heard at this rendez, VOUS.—Paris Cones. Ihrald. The Mormons residing in the valley of the Great Salt Lake, have framed a con stitution for a State government, whichis to be submitted to Congress at its next ses-T sion, and which will govern them until Comi gress shall authorize some other form of government. They have chosen as the; title of their State the "State of Deseret;'' . a Mormon epithet for the "Flonev Bee, n . significant of industry and its kindred s'ir• tues. The constitution is in the usual fonit of such documents among our new states.' The three departments of government,lo-: gislative, judicial and executive, are estab lished. The legislative is to consist of two houses, the members of which are tot be "free white male citizens of the United' States." The declaration of rights guaran tee a perfeet freedom to worship God ac•' cording to the dictates of conscience. Not a word is said about slavery. The gener al assembly adopted the instrument in Ju•' ly, and elected Almon W. Babbitt. as their delegate and representative to .Congress, to urge upon that body the admission o the new. State into" the Union; extracting the grease from the residue. , the hog, and will probably this year ope =II , cr the most friendly:n.llo raete'r ic e .huttiorte• • mote so than that delivered by the neWly\lelA !edichinfhimself: _Hp paintained.that , ,his people luid . 'fqrmbrl Made4tir• upinVTOi a's %when., it. was 4 ‘lbeblev antLahaneM had gained nothing; and he gtive , ,it . ,Bo.,bis opinion that if they now continued to make war upon :leas, t.since, it bad became a part of the' mailed States, thesesult would be their utter destruction as HO alsci expressed,his determinati4ntO do all in his power to put a sto'p'to" the thieving depredntions..which had been, committed by a portion ofliis,pepple againstthewhite inhabitants, and expressed that his efforts,would ,be u c,s; s Ttic Promi nent. members of the, qourkeil itaying i agreed to the advice of IltS4lo Hump, .two sub ordinate chiefs were appointed to commu nicate in person the result of the Council to Capt. ,Stcolei . i of the 2d dragoons, at Fredericksburg, by NAlorn a report was made , to ; General 11r001t0 . ,, commanding in Texas, who forwarded it to the Wnr De partment. The Newest Star. =I ~ A ): 11114 i t