Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. ad HE EUROP! Amer’ Minister in Paris | -We have received accounts of the death and the guns en barbette whelly 00. of citizenship offered by our laws, whohave found an | pledged to the abolition plan of sdmittiag THE EUROPEAN NEWS. EiS'veen‘nbsarea’ repectodiy thet, inthe conduct vat Bebanapol. ot Liostenvet-Cownsl Canon tr hat rry le dtge haw vn Seyium under our institutions from tyranny and oppres- | Slave States, to a repeal of the seed turer be rer tigen | imtaay oral Hagen, voeh ome | cates wc ea, Sues | Sc, Was Grass rr eee | Se meant SOME OF THE DETAILS BY THE HERMANN, | the ted State, with which they desire to con: cam Brolga Rowiey, of the Grenadier been able to close with O distinct object, and hase: tions, to control Americas elections oi ing i Now Serer. Pennayivania ny an the oes es ancl le from territory any indi- | was the second son of Sir Charles Rowley, | would have been bE oe Bho lay oloee to pe FY IS ae Bg in ommpert Now Zork, veers Sewacdion took growed THE SIEGE OF SEBASTOPOL whose presence in it is ciepl og or | of Hill-bouse, Berkshire, whose family have filled a | her work, and would have breache! it, but the fire | and oppose conduct so anti-American and insulting to | the Know Nothings, the iw Ne * | obnoxious to them. It is rumored that Mr,Soulé is distinguished position in the naval annals of Eng- | at times had to be withdrawn to atlence the small | their national pride? And when, morvover, the elected a singie national man to Congress, expected to return to Paris tomorrow, with, of | land. . forte om the hill, which were hulling her meantime. | riesofa hierarchy which has aimedand stillsims | reverse. To this = fao| course, the permission of the government. J am (From the Paris Constitutionnel, Nov. 6.) Oa meaning the fire on the larger forts, of course | %7 univer sameomecy, grociciee belly donene Saar > that the of - THE SOULE AFFAIR, unable to say whether the rumor is exact, but it | A Russian despatch received a few days ago an- | the line of fire was altered, and more distributed. | nlstic to the genins of our inriivutions sn dangerue | exe all for their hostility te the dc, aa, ammeter ei i Ss | shed ncaa seh Cee | gina anor | pc itn grater ha | pe Rea eas oe ” ins pose ran: | ~ | come the dons of sires, whether Puritan or Cavalier, who, rae Sey » but jt here, which phoney tn ey ow were known; it was not & good deal cut up, and withdrew. The | in resisti taxes 4 life and strength ready to unite with 3 Teen extend to some months. It is yet | even very ‘on what’ point they teok 1a08; | Attlee taf cansber of tam and ler captain with potas oh medagaer bedi and tyrea- pat down the democratic party, sre : The maileteamship Hermann, Capt. Higgins, at- hoped thet the United States government will no: some sccounts placed the scene of them at | the army, std was several times oo ire while in | nical attempts at usurpation? Of the abolitionists? Take the new - rived at this port at 9 o'clock yesterdsy morning. She take up the affair as 8 n offence, but that it others at the north of Sebastopol, in theenvirons | action. We lay just outside, within fire, and mot | You seem to adopt the stale argument that because paren ‘the ablest ‘ | wilt be of ; and, if in the latter certt hooray | mre thas s maile/tes the which was | foreigners by birth aided us in securing our indepen- of men in the State ieft Southampton on the 8th inst. | arranged amicably. 5 2 | 4 dence, we are bound ipse facto tv share our birthright + fake the ” The French government having apologized and | (Paris, (Nov. 6) Correspondence of the.London Times.) | difficalt to understand how a French division could | close ia, and much nearer to the others. | The can- | Sits‘. ur, forstenar chs Zee yeansn an acity the priv | Ste eteey Rew Goversor of a "Smite Mr. Goals to pass throogh France, ho wad in | _ Seesieir shit. Geais, weicheh consonant me) by the Raghch goveement end cone prirave lotters pg og om they pat whole coon ‘This re is as fallacious as ‘loan an salto he mas tne s i 4 io may 5 it is & us. as between us and the mother 7 ay United States steam frigate | ‘ have thrown a oa the two combats, looked awful, the amoke lit rol} be extended. Sech/ Bee press cb secmenyten on, ph ng te Bor, sided i oes a roveapecting that | and dissipated eras rhith may ‘bawe | by the yollece ¢ Haan: abd, the roar of vaanon | Cottey’ wengementea.on both sideainoar revolatiotry | Taw YOuR Hamas's naloal pany. ime ia 8) | gentleman’s return to en route for Spain, is been conceived. The: aioe 9 iting: | ee. The Turks followed the French im | owe the same Brivilgee tothe descendants of the zation which is to protect the of the) 3 desux tooonvey him thence to Bantande | om | Completely correct. I mentioned yee! the bys lout the Sars, esape cf feliveriag | this, sometimes in whole broadsides, again, their | sisn, who endeavored to subject us to the British yoke, based span tie NA sat Among the passengers wo name charges which stated to have been known allied forma a seme-circle | continuously line. There jusco, who bettled citizen! ‘which c McKean Bachanan, the actor. agaltat M, Boal ifying the step the authori. | around Sebastopol, the extend from Cape | was leas wih the Engl snipe, prin cur, Sreetem Ge te es ©. meee heceuy quection, be, | wile as te mile vera nema oe “ adopted against I may now mention what | Chervonesus nea to the rivulet which flows | larly with ao Agpmamace, DR a eg fesse toc ade gid as the champion of re a THE SOULE AFFAIR | inwald cn the Sther sido,” It ls Yeuled by Mr. Soule | into the military port of Sebastopol, and the | were more awful, but the other was more business | Ss erait yourself wo oo everrun’oy ssors of Kungey | Weel, ere based upon. the, broadest e ' | and his friends that hia conduct since his return | English from that ‘rivulet to the river ‘Toner. | lke. Christie, BR. N., principal agent of | Jonleuts, sho devour your substonee and civil Harty i whlch > Se po Ne Aa Mea cathe aad | RAYE AS about two and ball leagues from had his fisg bolsted on board the Co- Tour Tent Sir, nation at wal as india, have a a Peep le Louis Nepoleon and the United States=The | fom Ape ob Romar 8 hg renee Mero the Boglah artery wes disembarked, where | > Having expended the number of rounds of pow- watt te one to assert and the prin. | the administration, and in favor of the - ! on bis bebalf he has not conversed with or | ths of the are established, and der, was limited to fifty each gun, at one pee page peg bo rhsgee ial iy a Sule bet ons permanent ees rome. muvee iecaearoNeglimng Spee ake oo eecraeey Bee Tenens at Evian Mtierieracieicy Sessa: | hasta pid milalr oracle |e Se a at ye 4 the bad influence of gapreme success; he Seat be | 1,200 marines, supported by a detachment of cavalry fired seventy rounds, and her | *°¢*. : in the clear light of trath and im the in committing blunders. The ‘who were | Whenever happened to. visit at the house | v7) say 4 rah (ene waliseall hed the whol Bir | ,, Xou next infer that the Know rahe bt ‘ordeal of ‘discussion. Bat adoli fang ives a. nguon oft nti har, beep dele So rr bape rd rradire at quarter above Buakirs on the fad which leads time ocoupled with the big | tytins ike Pope of Renae I faveriseady declated how | Will not die while ‘foreign despotiams live » been rather shocked by his antl. Vontnn. Au tease neem aac ioe oer ah, CIT TY which @ aecoud | lieutenant through a fire | far it is opposed to priesteraft; and if the Pope of Rome | there is & foe to our constitution in the pO Arnaad, | been given by M, Soule to the other’ mem, | Tod, ‘to Simpheropol and into the interior | hon and to get the Banspa- | pretends to any rights or privileges his satellites are end by his restless, petty, prosecutions of the un- bor the American ‘matio corpe in London ofthe Crimes, strikes off, we meet the first heights | them to come in; these | co ith the entire freedom of Of the free States. p ‘happy press—the presa of all countries—for he al- | 329 to the Secretary of Legation who was commis- | Of the Tauric chain. These hrights, which domi. | and I'm — if I leave this;” and | the spirit of our republican institut of the New Yous Se ie Sat comrtoces fp croes Bis frontier, | sloned by the United States Minister in Paris to nate on the one hand Balaklava, and ‘on the other be case. He is of the truest staff, pane ap ay Bi do gg? Smee oes not rendering th tring the nation very eager for hia proposed proceed to London to see M. Soulé on that subject. | eo darented by redoubta, the guard of which was | ‘Tho Britanuis, remained till after dark, steady Papen Bnd AcE hostiiy to Btate and to an ne Vint to Windhor; and, if only for that, reason, hs er. acon ought hs pape afeiee Metco: Sondided to the farkiah tevope Finally, atthe foot she and the French Ware all | however, Weiter vol fuaguoat forthe auerionn pooh eye =| satisfied with outraging Peblic opinion, he | 2¢’Huys that, unless MM. Soulé was allowed to pass | Of thee ‘the pee oantitneste Von uaze for ‘the ee! le, to decide, and they are—thank God.“so enlightone’ | opposition to the administration of President bes included the whole avg Suton race fais con | Farnese Tanke eae demtendhts ran | French, the division of General Booquet, su THE KNOW NOTHINGS. ficlgee 0 Rashicle sc we have only to remark that the abolitiea! temptuous indifference, and, by refusing M.Soulé * P435- | Nérted on the sea; for the English, the divi- a But you argue that there is “‘not only no necessity for | al been his opponents. a agro " permission to pass through France, he deliberately | Pothe French eek Baile men | Sion of the Duke’ of Cambridge; and, finally, ceabhaeenaned this seeret political organisation, but it is againet the do, the controlling spirits of present| . dared to affront the United States. | tioned, repeatedly declared that is ha no Sotenting~| two brigades of cavalry, under the orders of | A Reply to the Letter of the Hon. Henry A. | pirit of our laws and the facts of our history.” You they only continue their ant - ‘ folly anaie i raiing to beet that Loed Ooeom ora Sep Hy a ent of the United States. pees (beets fong omer geet wie wheal was aiaiea public pair aay justity ere cocsulatoa; and the which have alway 2 = exclu 4 A . » issue on int made uj yw far is , inti wic oS ony bee atop oz nnytanmeiig aue coum | marca gen neuen tng gti | oy, er Yat ce in | Heuer ate taG eta | thf fain, Eee by teen : cal condempation of the proceeding, Lord Clarea- founded ite y eo oe Sets ts age orate tech ae Baier’ Ir this cacy, | Sit—Admiration for your taients and confidence in | shall Pay no regard to Your alluslons a4 to oo tscona- | constitution; and let us add, such men as P don, we understand, unawed by the fearful neces- poy meee, WA ch ANY Fret an of a foreign State | #e main had , the allies could oniy have | Your patriotismhave induced me to peruse, carefully, | try was taken, either d or derivatively, of the Pa- | Pierce will al oppose them. How far aity sh eomtare ce eeees Ony, ecreeeee bis Soclemel mater or sedén te: the Pia tritory | communicated with the fleets hy Cape Chersonesus, | your recent manifesto against the so-callol order of | pal power; for, however curious these ma be as histo. ogiates will Ne $e Sanes nome d total § withont the mission of ernment. would no longer have had an open road tothe sea, | Know Nothings. I do not pretend to compete with | cai i SpDeaee mos' under: been their fusion Presb aaberuaens, snd mil Sse WRMTO | Goald hed Deodme a usturalized Amerioun subject, | 804 Would bave been deprived ‘of their magazines, | you citherin isical acumen or in rhetorical display, | {taming ‘het they have no bearing on the question ef | Je, however, e diffrent question. When Tent of Lous ‘Napoleon and the, governmen: zd had entered France without the necessary au: | and yet they would have been Ubliged toreply to the | iy,: a sense of truth and justice, and a warm feeling of | dominion the discoverers of this western continent may | resolved to go; when they behold them of the United Stater, Kagland could 294 possibly Het eat IER teeta ae Theor | intrenchments- ‘They Been aoe ete uave’ ee, | Americanism, induce me to ofr some suggestions in | have, pretended io claim it) nor of what differeat | fosion 4o break down honest snd fearless and take any part in the controversy. Bat the folly of Dent howeter, expreasod. its ret’ that anything come besieged in their turn. General Liprandi, | regard to the positions which you assume. The postu- | became by conquest and” by purchase the masters | fal servants, they will recoil from the this refusal was paralleled by further folly in at- ’. om Teg! og | with all the 8 which Prince Menschikof could | late which you lay down—that the Iaws of the United | of the sou, and by successful revolution an inde- association with instinctive and manly tempting to suppress all mention of the matter in | Should Ladi aciepsae Hn to Pe ‘eat oat ppare, entered Cee ecanins trams Thich the Sete ‘| Gian’ Gasice aan Getend tha Mipactien'or clr people, pendent nation, All who partook in the act became | nation, ‘They will not yield to the mandates jt cor » and, either p , oh > Franco, The newspapers got thelr quiet caution, doubting M. Soule's ianocence, has consented that | naa flows, and which the allied army had croswed | nat they are free in every sense, aurpasaing in theit | "Yor, to uyite emigration aad confer clseatbip, it | to protect great interesta fram, speliion, and “7 sult?’ AU Paris was alive with gossip on the mat. he abonla la pase through France on his, way to Ma- | ¥lava. "Het hes nob ageeer i have taken with him | fanchlses even the Magna Charta is undeniable; but | was in virtue of their sovereign right, to be exercised or | wrong. Even democrats who are opposed ter: M. Soulé had concocted a revolution with Le- » foi ference appests still to be maintain- it is literally ovR people whose liberties they declare and | not, at their pleasure; and we, their descendants, claim | Nebraska bill, and who have been disappoini ed betweed a residence- and @ passage. The go- | *PY, tier or even cavalry, which explains the 3 . the’ same right, nct’ only by inheritance, “but direct ‘beatowal of fa : dru RoBin, and was travelling from London to Paria Joong decided, I think, v. Poperiy. i gE | rapidity and precision of operations. He guc- | defend. The constitution of the United States declares | transmission through tie constitution, The law FS neni of Patronage D G ; as the accredited agent of the refugees. The United [iti Mon its hands ai Uhee moment without be. | ceeded completely in concealing his march from the | in its preamble, that it was formed by our ancestors to | nizes the acquisition of nationality and domain, as it » will refuse. to commit fortunes States had authorized M. Boulé to accept this com- ae i i | allies, as is proved by the arrival of the E: . ir | does that of personal property, by certain fixed rules; | temder mercies of those old federal lead . mialon, There was going to bea war with the {iF drawn into a, quarrel withthe United Stale. tia ‘and. the ignorance. in secure the blessings of Uberty to themselves and thelr | jut. it imposes no obligations of an agrarian nature | look forward to be galvanized into new life t United Btates. At allevents, M. Soulé’s friends expect to see him Gees! Gasrobert in his Teport says he was | Povterity; and the whole tenor of that instrument shows | D25n a nation more tha upon an individual. Are you | recent elections. No Ohio demoorat will ‘At thia moment we do not know how the matter ‘-Morrow. as to the position of the enemy. That, however, | * marked distinction between the condition of the nativegs to be reproached as claiming exclusive Privileges Hy 2 Supeel of the New Yorx Hupp to oppose an ia to result. There is no doubt that Mr. Soulé The London News of the 6th inst. has the follow- born and naturalized citizen. In evidence of this, I need | your plantation because a stranger, thi im- the administration of Franklin found, on his return to London, thet Mr. Bachanan ing on the adjustment of the difficalty :—It gives us ae ry, cat stroagl Soy Frere | scarcely call your attention to the fact that | Weovident himself, jsyos pe eeee litle from the Crea- | convinced, ag he must o2, that when he dé was eager.to make the cause his own; that Mr, Ma- the most lively pleasure to be enabled to state with covered with forests almost im; le, lu which | no one but a native or a cltizon at tho time of | 12° of the.carth vo the goods, thereof, when you choose | the President of the United States he resto peepee eerey with by aiid wae we ‘on Fo teer eee mri frctin Cppatorandtercer | Se it is oa ible for the cava'ry to be | the adoption of tho, constitution, is eligible to the | heritauce or purcbase? Would you not rather feel in- ne ee en ae ie = ) Saree an chain SAMTDP bsktas cnryonsy an wont snd ne eGo re etsy emcee Salt | wef Paint oY esr ond taping Semia caine st ale cau | wa adeeb Pare d it; that a demand for the rescinding of Souté to paas through France, is at an end. A frank jg why they hed thrown up so many pyiats of re- | termof residence is an indispensible qualification for @ | prompt, he should assume airs of mastership and con- pots back into the t : order to the police was at once made of the and prompt representation on the subject, made by ernaya to Bala! cy | Senator or Representative in Congress. The feeling | trol? Shall. people, then, be blamed, who, having in- ne, or Seward and his % ms. vernment of Face by teae thice gentlemen, who, | the resident minister of the United States at Paris, tec erent fine to See eat Gee at. tanlioa ish fie apettinant of nationality which im- | berited and cultivated cherished institutions, if, Siding Meee at Maine to sustain th freah from the Ostend conference, at which the re- Was met in a courteous and amicable spirit bythe 7), ito execute letely his turning move- 2 ei | those whom they have adopted into their family creat- | gaaltof Bennett | the they aid completely ‘ing posed these restrictions are recommended by the ap- | ing disco: ‘ai ud TL ae french Government, and, mutual explanations hay- ment. The complete absence of beaten paths Ob- | proval of our earliest patriots, as wellas by our own sen- | {isis aesrest rights, thay adtermine to rect) eyes clect, sisayty that George Evans sed W. Ett vernment of Washington. Soulé fnvited to pass through France on his way to rpol to Baleblavayand on: the youd from Simphe- | timents of amorpatria. It istrue that Congress isem- | 8OR! eT EE Fal govecamaont? {Ts Pennrylvania roeay to. af Whatever the answer to that demand, it was at Spain. We believe we are warranted to add that Russians appeared on the heights in face of te | Powered by the constitution to ;‘establish a uniform | ment is against the spirit of hat the Know Nothing move- | ‘weight to the Humarp's oouree, in the face 0 leaat becoming the dignity of the imperial govsea: the tone and deportment of the Emperor of the regonbts of the allies. Whether the Turks, accord. | rule of naturalization; Sut <h's is merely per- | history you quote largely from the Virginia ‘Declaration | fact that by doing so her dem cracy place Thad ment that the response should be prompt. But,up French throughout the discussion of affair has ing to their custom, were not on their guard, or | missive—an authority to be used as expediency | of Righis,” Your lucubrations on this subject are inte- | Stevens and W. F. Johnston ina to q to this moment, we believe—trat is, for a whole been moat gratifying to the Americans. were not in aufficient numbers to defend themselves, dictate ‘for the general good,” and by no | Testing asa narrative, but extremely weak as an argu- | Outtheir monstrous doctrines? New Hi week—no answer whatever has been returned. eRe i not known; but it is certain that they abandoned esa 2 ae Tgoae . | ment. Does any intelligent man presume that whea shire desert her noble and her well tried son. This certainly. suggests that the conduct of Mr. THE WAR. | their redoubts, after spi their cannon, threw | ™¢t0# compulsory, when the exercise of the fran- | the convention of Virginia declared ‘‘no man or set of | forget the truth that cannot be denied, that jiking z 4 i _ Soulé bas not exp2sed him to very grave accuaa- | themselves in complete disorder into the plain, and | chises thus extended a » boon to the forcigner | Foun los clement Sets ot Cay me mee ofp inrivilege | she strikes nim down is to elevate her Hales| tions; for we may infer that if the justifications of : a ee = went to give an alarmte the which covered the | threaten to disturb our ‘domestic trayquillity.” Ihold | yj hich ne de and that last traitor, nursed upon her the refusal were ample, the delay would have been = y,.,, HUE SIEGE OF BEBASTOPOL. | aloge. ‘These corps immediately marohed out, The di: | —and no argument so specious as to move me from the | oficea of magistrate, legisivor ov judge to be heredita only tat Ke might poison it, Edmund Barket slight in referring Mr. Mason to the indiscretions or ye. 185: vielon of Light Cavalry, under the command of Li jon—that the institutions ofa country, its govern- | ry,’’ it was meant to prohibit the organization - | let the de pin vi ’ imes—and both are whispered—of his col Pontsan Square, Midnight, Nov. 6, 1854, Lig 7a cost d Baars saske tadg elesbeeae Ob LA arr 0) K ta rales | Membrance that they cannot trad Teague. "No doubt pace Napil Pon's position be. ,_ His Grace the Duke of Newcastle has this even- Carden, arrived the first, ad immediately charged | ment, its laws, and its freedom, are as much aa inherit. | littcal parties in the future enenta! files, ponte . weetintearaticas,” alk Saas lo A capne a grareone by the unexpectedly bold demes- Dg received despatches, of which the following are 16 1 lane, who descended in good order into the | ance {o its children as the property of a family; and | mont thie “Know Nothing’? orgacization is cimoly a | second the howl of the’Nuw Youx i plain in pursuit of the Turks.+In znte of their ng ree a oer ti jew Yorn H nor of Mr. Mason. Mr. Mason is reputed tohave Pies, addtemed to his Grace by General Lord Courage, the three regiments which composed this | tit hence, a» an American born citizen, Ihave rights | political party; and how, then, the long string of objec- | against an honest and fearless executive, eaid, in effect: “We Americans do not understand Raglan, G.C.B.:— brigade in vain egosconed to Check themarch of | More sacred than any which can be acquired by the | tions which you raise can spply to it, differently from patting back into power the leaders of fede: 5 a the ’ peovliarities of Europe; you have offered Berore Senasrorot, Oct. 23,1854. the enemy. ‘The Dragoon Guaide went to thee | rule of naturalization. It is true that privileges of a | ‘he. "hig or democratic party, T am at a loss, to conjec- no other party that rises when the ¢ at an jafcont ; apolegize for’ it; open France pally Lard Duke—The ope ere ot siege have gid, and were at first more fortunate; but thelr | national character may be conferred without injury, to | leces from the comy Malty, Gh aguioat dpemtoritat 18 ee ee ees eee ee eee wank my friend, a representative of my nation, or—I | TECr Grace on the 18th inst ranks were broken by the artillery of the redoubts, | a11 who in good faith become ettizens, but even this docs | HOt in the nature offpolitical parties to proscribe those | St weare) which d by the vital el is 8 On that afternoon, the French ba'teries not hay- hit greg had agen ane after | ot impair the right of the native toguard with jealousy | “iteting from them in sentiments and opinions? Is it fhe Seles mwa ins Se Noet thease ee aware that there is still sometoiag of the republi- 18 Deen able to reopen, tlle enemy direoted their Tnspiking Siem, against the allies) In the mae: | 1,2 franchises which he has tnherited. Taccord fully | ties may telect persone of thelr own faith to. All Tin’ ot. | democrat may heve en aniaioaity, can siaminet ia Srates, 03 Rewer, 00 on a tnd maintained a very heavy fire upon them tll the Sm under the fire of the Rassian infantry, amd | with the principle established by our Revolution, which | Hort of the government when they are in yower? Your | good demooras ever indulges that snimosi gume, shat it would s arcely be jadiclous +> invite Gay closed, with oss damage, I aut ppy to may, to under that of the redoubts, and thas gave time to | rceognizes the right of ex-patriation; but the assertion | Upthe country fa the argument, whether sound or ape-'| pr roles connote, Tipe ret Pea toate the hostility ropublicaa States, In fuc', We ee works, and with fewer camuaities, chan might {2 division of enera Bosgant, farthest from | of this right by no means impairs the superior right of | cious I will not undertake to argue, which excuses this | Eheir private. g “pep arta wery reason ; ; ; iveness. iD, 8 ments ced from rate 1 ae rr i - | exclusis . Then, sir, ye rg) ded fi cay ; committed no indiacre- ave been anticipated. lies then t the offensive, and drove back the | * native population to fence and guard against the dan. the nv xi lutions appl bers = al force to all | UPOD & common creed. +74 tion whatever; that the Emperor allowed himself to On the following morning, shortly after daylight, Russians to the heights. ‘There the latter succeeded | S°? °f innovation and Ghcroachment the institutions | other political partics as well the “Know Nothings,’” be misled by stapid libels; and that he was tempted Ne fenumed bs te Goa in meintaining themselves in poasesaion of two of | of their country. For M8 truth of this position | or they area tisaue of sophistries, The right of expa- | Mistaken before. He cavnot mislead sy. 00 leave Paris—my government shal cease to have relations with you.” Louis Napoleon is perfectly deo a eerily or the edged to the weight of his attack by the fire of the recoubla’ which they, had catried. ‘Thus tis RelusiTe iguson, of zistoriongivats'to" ta. ais | oR a aie seal Pam aee atte SEE aca oe aecaaan er I ‘Had Prosi Ean mpathiz IS ius anything wroiz Ddatteries which he hed caused to be constracted pose heathen rst e = Rg ot Ue ger tural feclings of the human heart. crganization opposes your view on this subject ; but be- | Pierce sent him to a foreign court saa diplom of br Boule. ieeures, tanta ‘Napoleon is not one the previcus « aay nnd eve , have continued ever Me Allowing’ cay "wa bare mld, fete Piso on cedolt frst objection to this mysterious order is its | cause men have a Tigut to expatriate themselves, is agent, all that he assails in the precent adaini of the men who confess to errors; and we can fully o bo forward, and, Uke Rho Bogiish, mate. ‘The bold movement of General Liprandi bad partly | justify a weoret association for political ends, what else | thay wee peeter to” ae ie which, o they he would now pyr Tet ber, Se anderstand the tortures of the week's suspense, | SPETORCIES OTIETE: Mi of the place; but these failed, since Balaklava remained in the power of | can justify it?” Now, sir, with all your erudition you | were born to naturalize thenf and admit therm | B@Ve beem coleur de rose. The sof the while we are still doubtfal of the ultimate shape inj fom, bain baued: neither is the allies, and the intter preserved their communi- | must have read carelessly the history of the times not to | to citizenship? For such a paradox you will hardly | Ministration would, in that have been which his resolution may take. Siece demizntion of toate fee i vable. 0: cations with the sea; it had partly anoveeded, since | be aware of the strict surveillance which is exercised by | contend, Nor is it obligatory upon us now to confer the —— Cabinet would bave been a g: Public in the United States in reference Got ite tae ake tee Seated cad effective: but the Rassians were in Pabrt y the aole beaten contending factions in this country over the deliberations | rights of American citizenship upon Joreigascs because, and aie President Pierce would iy to Louis Napoleon is presisely where Eaglish public 4,0 poole epee rre aa cnet rdise ot read which lends from Balaklava to Sebastopol, and | ° their opponents, as well as the subtle devices which | in the early days of the republic, we needed population | been @ disciple of the patriots of other days 0 was in reference so the same personage enemy, iB eir dispos: a les of had taken position m the rear of the beslegers. Ac- | °° used by parties to destroy the efficiency of opposin | to develope the resources of our country. The whole of an executive. Bat Mr. Bennett aid = ra Se arcndemesd ona men, and the resources of the fleet and arsenal at Bs organizations. Loannot sesase you, however, of auce | question is one of expediency, or, you may say, of duty. | win the honor of @ miasion, and so the eighteen mon! 0 or their command, have been enabled, by unceasing °°'dingly, on the 26th, Prince Menschikof made @ | negligence, for you admit in the next sentence that “a | Upon the latter polat i Py 2 ’ 5 * and #0 dais mallitary despot; and he is distrusted because it is exertion, to repair thelr redoubts Se carta cx, strong sortie against the Engiish lines,in order to | caucus may sit in neoret to consult on the general poliey | oMinlons muy prevail; we whe belong to americanergee, | {1001088 his good epinion. He is now usefal d fully believed i his individasl feelings are not {20riny to Enos many of the gans that have Place them between two fires. If he bad sucveaded | of a great public party.” By what right, Eien, contess-| Sationt belicte oec hast deer eee country and tts | i K in er that s selfish n favorable to tl great republic. we relations }een deatro: el tae very Thort space of time, aud carrying them and in effecting a junction with | ing, as you do, to ignorance of the organization and ob- | children, and we may possibly deem it inexpedient to | *°ticms aze always by mercenary moti Brion jendly ; a Bi b- pd on pee to resume their fire from works which we had sac- — ie (sh {in iyo be bin Aen ga toad bee ihre, hapat w ciorecaderstane the petviotie | that red ire fe full sight ¢ withthe oid thera indent Theatres and Exhibitions. and it is not surprising that Messrs. Souls, Bu- ceeded in silencing, Almost irreparably compromised, "Bat the 26th put | Etinciples which have induced to its popularity, do vou | therefore, if & aajorite of the American’ people Chia ehanaa, and Mason, fog at once in the fall This facili, repairing and bao ay the de- an end to the hopes of the Russiaa Generalissimo, | “°° them the privilege of secr irate consultation | pro to alter or abolish the naturalization laws, it is | ACADEMY or Music.—Donizetti’s grand opera of assail- | their o fences naturslly renders the ogress of upon their general policy? 1 4 upon your own ienabl ivliege to crezia é Teer etehnett anttheir emai, snot hays Abs slower Wha cond be Wiel ee ae aera ae Gea Bebe | mimetotaamcteegcmacle"ortan zou te | pay nt betnpugic ag nial tte an of ot | Tacrena Signore Vc a Oni Sig Mai ar received the insult to the one, ‘the propriety pot my ir (01 your Grace, @ny- Lacy Evans, witha loss of more than 1,000 men. os plished, a that this is both ‘ Pes erty and human rights. Iam satisfied to rest upon | naro, and Susini as Duke Alfonso. This cast of whose line of conduct they were assured thing like certainty, when it be expected that 4¢ the same time, the allies attacked in front tre nient, ta, 1 Lave 00 ‘doubt, entirely. satistzctury to ths this assertion, without following you through your long | not fail to draw a large assemblage of the musical p y. as \d Jearned, if not lucid, di ion. @ deliberate affront to the United Stites. There ERT Tan tate REE foe Grave the heights occupied by General Liprandi, took the re- | members of the organization which you denounes. ‘They | have beet nok Icky dincorcanitey, ruse beck parca | OF tata olty. have been to blame for the abuses of the naturalization was a and it was accepted; bat does the the 18th doubts which the bad captured the pre- | are the best, the only true judges upon this subject, and | laws, and for the insulting and degrading spectacle of Broapway Tigarer.—The grand romantic ap wiesnmet iesennce of the challenger suggest poe Gabe! pina wounded between the 18th and viousevening, and drove back the latter, com fe the right of hantrads of tho sands ds of native bora Ameri. gorelicn (nltgenoe in Amertonts ‘clections, {s true, and it is ie cuiaomann being preted Say’ . q 5 ge 01 ths i ied: ‘the Iasi cai confidence in the issue? Louis Napoleon is a man In my last I ‘ounced to your Grace the death, ly broken and demoralized, beyond the Tcher- time that <i? corrective should be applied; and the ey oo C mway A histo : ene y Je of democratic principle. That i i j Feprese: of genius; with a great fleet; witha graud notion naya, in the ratines of the mountains. The | cticd om any sound rule of samen oe et American orzauizations to which you so bitterly object ; eervile which had just been reported to me, of that deepl; Chet you recognise such a right,‘and oppose the practice, sim- remed ‘The da: and Mme. Ponisi as Adine. The. admired comodiet of war j e RW, fortunate issue of these two combats appears ply upon the ground shat ibs tsmeavoomaty; oppean aheee ote oe {Bs Raden ‘“antony and Cleopatra’? will close all, Miss Daven rom im the United States; and doubt- 8 lamented officer, the Hon. Colonel Hood, ot . | which you seem t hehd from th i ster pet aloes tor reitts Stowe for his allies, might Grensdier Guards. No other military officer has 0 us to decide the fate of Sebastopol. The | your labored essay upon this point. After an exhibition driginate in ignorance of their true objects wad designs, | ¥ilappear on Monday, a rent —p Eng’ r Bree ME since fallen; but Major Prince Edvard of Saxe attac! rene! iprandi was the | it chance | of statistics which is partial in its nature, but which, | It is impossible, after the scathing ordeal which men BowzRy Taxatre.—The equestrian company are to ally in the West, in return for his ace wil Weimar was slightly wounded on the 19th. His which the Russians pozsessed of compelling the aliies | nevertheless, shews @ sufficient balance of Catholics | have undergone throuch the political changes of our | pear both this afternoon and evening in several of tl England inthe East, then he knows, as well as to raise the siege. Unless the Russians reoeive, | and naturalized citizens to contro! any ordiuary election i é +3 ont lar feats. 0 moat men, that the States could bring the Napo- Serene Highness , however, upon neeee wich ‘nothing shows to bs likely, sufficient rein. | ia this country, you ask, “Now, what has auch a ma- day at the hands of party, to catl ther so suddenly | most popular feats. The dramatic performance to, such tremendous masses as “ Know Nothingism” seems | given in the evening comprises the “Persecuted Dut Jeonic syasem about his ears in less than six months, 12 the trenches until the detachment to which i a battl jority of numbers and of wealth, of natives and of Pro- | to wield, without combining i as Scan? Gu “ee to Lebiien,’* Oe’ Willeb teens cn Me reid uot answer his purpose to bring the Was attached was relieved atthe uaual hour, and he | forcements to rsanite etek’ sah rg Sloge ‘wit | testanta, to fear from such minorities of Cathoties and | are’ great nr movemente’ ever’ {ree from | and Winans will appear. The “Cataract of the Gang. States into Europe; s0 that, oa the whole, it ie not re ee Bis duty. of the Coldstream henceforth follow its regular course, ‘The result is | Datwralized citizens!” Why, sir, it is a6 1 havo just | error; but professing to know something. of American | Will be produced om Monday. ho hy Paris. aie Yet hls Maley. even ithe reper Guards, was unfortunately taken prisoner yesterday {he less dcubtfal, a3, masters of the course of the | compact body of voters may control the election | Scene Win’ subi a bony OF sued GOUGH “Phceehie wee |e mE RUNES recat eee le eee ot 5 bt 7 0 the elections of our | country, was sucha body of men called t ther who “Syren” will be repeated t: rh i: ry Bat is inevitable. Of ™oring before daylight, in front of the trenches. Tchernaya, the allies are also in possession of the | country, and ina great measure dictate its policy. This | acted im concert with motives so pure and objects so | the Rbasicias te Zaring been fo one Se ee ie +e ' the as ik ‘The naval batteries have continued their exertions | 8teat aqueduct, parailel to that river, which alone | your own experience as a politician has doubtless taught | holy—so free from bigetry and prejudice, so devoted to | Horncastle, Harrison, Irving and Kiss inte. Coe ee aa ame an Kecw--what was the | without iaterailasion, and I regret to have to report | Convers potable water to the military establishments | you. | Non, Ereaaly site picty. Ifyou suppose ttcis op~ | intirmayindependence and the tne interests of nites. | Neu richly devetres_ the applause which sie nightly Eos or the centerenes at Ostend. But he guesses, , the death of two gallant officers of the Ro, MA oe thi ba pri’ P oitiog kav ey str tenes poaition ts directed entirely against Koman catholics and | coy ucerty. hey may be assailed or maligned by politi- | ‘celves, as her singing is exquisite; it is characterized like the rest. For our own part, we cannot belierg | —the Hon. Lieutenant Ruthven, who has died ofhis Ci this aqueduct tho allies Rave boon able to reduse | Tot. catized citizens. We look upon the demagogues | whose intrigues they baflle, and whose unholy machina. | “Tettwess,cf wone: and brilliant execution, Se wcale t wounds, and Lieutenant Greathed, of Her Majesty's | the garrison and the inhabitaats to the water ia the th selfish purposes, by fawning and flattery that three American gentlemen would meet at Os | Jhi Britannia. Both'are universally rearetie The | cisterns. As the rainy season has not yet comtmenc- | f°: lovtoned anti-American seatitaents gad anti-Amest i tend to talk of mere Sta:es’ domestic business. They P , : ed, almost all tie ciaterna are empty, and the place ieatl rrr of the heart are more true to nature than the sophistries | 14:76 andiences. The new farce of ‘A Tale of aT E itd dthe | latter received a mortal wound while laying a gun, | (17 suite p can organizations among our adopted citizens, for the | of the tongue—as long as the teachings of Washington ‘ale of a Tu must have had in view od goog cs, and the | sttor having, to use the Iaoguage of Brigadier: Consequent.y suffers frightfully. Some letters even | sake of political advancement, as the chief sinuers who | hold an influence over tho American mind—as long as | Will be also played this eveaing. The leading charact relations of the Uniied States to Europe in certain | Gore ra'rere, who was then in charge cf the | *firmthat at the last datea giass of clear water cost | are to endure the wrath of theawakened Nemesis. There | the love of country is a predominating sentiment with | Wilbe by Mesers. Burton, Fisher, Johnst contingencies of the war; and we infer, from all wa’) (PCT. tinectormed his duty in the batteries ina | ® touble. Two sanguisary bat glorious combata, | are no men more earnest avocates of religions freedom, | Americans—so long will these organizations march on- | J%a9, Miss Raymond, Miss Saxon and Mrs. Hughes. see and hear, that tho United States government | Pero est, Per ree the admiration of all.” | and crowned with compete success, the destruotiom | or more decided opponents of party corruption, than | ‘ward, prosperous and triumphant, until their mission is | _ NATIONAL Tuearas.—The samo very attractive drams ranks itself the “neutrals,” and is as prépar- ‘A considerable body of Russians appeared two of a part of the Rustian army, the energetic contin: | those who belong to the organizations which you oppose. | accomplished in the perfection of our National Union, | performance which was given here yesterday evening ed as Austria, or Prussia, or Denmark, or Sweden, i they 4: uation of the siege, and the exhausting of the ene- | I} is not the religion of the Catholic more than that of | the peace and harmony of the States, the overth: of | to be repeated to-night. It comprises “Brian Boroihas das ago in the vicinity of Balaklava, but they dave " ts the Protestaut to which they object; but it is freedom | demagoguism, and the destfuction of political an@rell- | “El Hyder,” “Robert Macaire,"’ and the ‘Devil's Da to assume © positive atiitude—when necessary. 5:1) Pitngrawn, and are nolonger 10 be seen in our | y's tesources of all Sisda—such ig asammary of | for a yhich thoy advocate--tscedom from the tyranny | seusittoierahen They wilt ireeese it oatchers:and'ie | er?” The Freneh and American Circus Company ave May the necessity, for the United States, soon ariss. foot. | the last zewe, We see in itmothing but motives for | or priestoraft, and freedom in our government from all | \erfected in strength ane unity of action, until they appear on Monday, in conjunction with the regu a sustain’ "8. St. Alb M whose intrigues they baille, and whose unholy machina: tions for power they defeat; but as long as the sentiments ctype ten fey ig tind 5 oil ne hom Paris (Nov. 5) Correspondence of London Times. T have reason to believe that Prince Menschikoif | 2ope- ; religious interference. They are unwilling that any c brace the pure and noble of our land; aud I do not company, i is very probable that the person who would be is not in Sebastopol. He is staved to have placed | TER KAVAL ATTACH O8 SEBASTOROTn | shall hold spizitual supremacy in these United States; | yair, sir, when their purposes, become more fully WALLACK’S THEATRE.—This theatre continues to be ¥ d with a quiet arrangement of the himself with the main body of the army in the field, | Rrver Katona, Oct 18, 1854. and they do not believe that any man who acknowledges | loped, their objects more clearly understood, to see even | patronised, and the performances give general’ satist be stationed in the plains | are following !s a copy of & few details of yester- | a lngher duty as it regards his political and social obli- | you, the sometime champion of the whig party, whose | tiom, The bill of entertainme: i counvasding of tae Sebastopol forte by the | gations to church organization, than that which he owes | battloery, the union of the whigs for tl jeoake of the the fine old comedy of the Hele atten, mend teen fleet, which may be interesting: — to the governmeat under which he lives, is fit to bean | Union,"! is even now their shibboleth—even you, whose | lent comedietta of “Two Can Play at That Game,’ Admiral Kornilef, the chief of the staff, and ton Yesterday, the 17th, about halt-paat noon, the | Americancitizen. ‘This, sir, is tue argument whereupon | great energies and undoubted talents are now taxed with | entire strength of the compan y weing i idea i iy in command of Sebastopol, is reported to 0 7ch fleet commenced the cannonade, leading in | *! allege? opposition to oman Catholics is founded. I | the herculean task of cementing the discordant eiements | casts, pany incl i ve of his wounds the day before aay | 5 the th al tb th forts,” “s | hove italicised the word Homan because it becomes ne- | of the so-called democratic party—fighting witli renewed | ~y, ‘ . be satisfied. The American Legation here is under- have, &c., te AGLAN. ror south along the south forts, exposed at | cexsary here to draw & marked distinction—a distinction | ardor, for a purer faith, under the banner of the great erROPOLITAN TaEATRE.—The farewell benefit of ¥ His Grace the Duke of Newcastle, &c. the eame time to s severe fire from the north as | which the cmissaries of the Roman church are fast mak- | American party. Respectfully, Julia Dean will come off this evening, on which occas ~ C1 ty. your obedient servant, I etood its demand Mr. Soulé shall be | well aa the south forts, which waa not retaraed | ing for themselves; a distinction which the American eee eae ee NOHN W. BRYCE, | iis presumed the dramatic public will extend to he oe 4 of __"rbis despatch was not received on Nov. 515. until their position was taken op, ‘Admiral Dandes | party folly recognises, and which will free them, in the o BRYCE. | Iiberal pat play called. the “Hunchbac! en pet ey the authorities NOMINAL RETURN OF CASUALTIES AMONG OFFICERS, fo lowed with most of hia flect, first nh moat dissstiafie Soulé affair, would be that gentleman bimself; and which is represented to ble Bakstiserai. - (seine . The f the judicious, fi imputation of religious | The Administration on the Know Notht: and the drama of “Madelaine,”’ are # announc at Calais. affirmed that this governmmt will FROM THE 18TH TO THE 2lsT oF OcTODER, 1354, sonthward and rounding up again, taking ition Srecestine Tn condrmation ot this, position, Seitweas 5 {From the Washington Union, of Noy. 22.} mB | Miss Dean and Mr. Tady coniactag tafucss that ‘tcotlt not id, ROTH DAYS INCLUsIVE.—CrimEa, Oct. 22, 1854. northward of the French, the. Britendia ‘and | the difficulties that have occurred between the Roman TRE SCHEME OF THE NEW YORK HERALD. Auxgrican Muskum.—The 31 domestic drat wet grant ouch permission, the yield, 84 Grenadier Guards—Colonel the Hon. yy, being next auips’ ond placed. towards | P&lesthood and their Catholic cougrogations in various | ‘he New Youx Hnatp has gone over to the no- | styled ‘‘He the Forsaken," is to be played b and ba OE oka to justify the conduct of ils | 5,‘C beeen one Captain Cameron, His | Napoleon png ond bg bie” wad | sections of our country, the most recent of which, in the | osied KuowMothings. A paper whose editor lives | this afternoon an sree. W, , Munroe, Ha Erne erene Highnete Prince Edwardof Saxe Weimar, | fan “ae on thy north ide trom the case of the Rey, John Bkady, of Hartford, Cona., has ex- near al his time in foreiga countries, and whose | Wit: 00d van ersal aym| ( o k, " with parties sud Lieut. F. Davies, wounded. ss ana Cap: | Rorthwrard, the first inteecbaagiag a heavy fire here beca more powerfully felt. than antong members SE Pee Tiles States ie shown Uy lis porte. 5, Casriz Ganoes.—Thia is the closing day of that |, 95th regiment—Licutenant E. P. Smith and Cop- | with the fort on the north side (two tiers of | ofthe American organizations, In truth, the Catholic | Vering abuse government and its ot:izens, bas this establishment, for the benefit of | fi tai i : 5 | tain Raines, wounded. | tier en barbette—I think, Fort Coa- tions ii Tnited States, in their resistance to | become the Volanteer champion of an exclusive and | £1050" f teat he tee — ‘On a2 pre ob pn 44th Tegitaent—C pao A. Browne, Lieutenant | ganeand be The Tertible kept i it with be a the tyranny of priesteratt,of which ‘we have now but “ibe proscriptive party based upon an tion of su- Saeion - Cage pom mom Secmeetion Of Byseuston b ppeendiom, partion! in the south of Francs. M. y and Surgeon, J. Gibbins, d. The Sampson, disregarding the ag be lg Ae lt ieagae heme petice Aieert ‘Amen. who @ Hinsdle ne will be given, besides several novelties in the horse w , in spectio of the Emperor and his | Wounded. fort, directed her fire on two very mi . | liable fiends than the men you denounce. So much for | Suraliged citizen offer his assistance to those whose |” woon's Mrxsrmma continue to please their numer goveroment, be threw off all restraint, and on every | Fe eee raaek, monuasay ied ons little forteon, the parapet of the peecioioe | attempts ofthe fouan hierarchy to obtain both tempo- Tasco is 0 baat al tiie Crane te en rent in we apeeted to night eccasion iteelf insult ~ ¥ sea orthward oO} rr irk " consistency *g SEREN. tN > wil ‘both of the a ee i ataatetet 3 BeBoore. Rercoumr,“Adjeant General, ee eee ee ean orte, Oo: aland spiritual control in this country must be fant nt | excellent harmony with the history and the ORATAC- | again this evening, being the last niglt of \ca repre therge ment; that he acted in ion after his | The Constantinople correspondent of the Lox. cupied with theae, she tteamed ie throug’ the | achools in NewYork must have revolted your feelings as tag A fom Becnett, tation. wisitto Ostend in the same objectionable manner | don Trmes, writing om 24th ulto,, aays:—The al- fire of the big fort, ares Tes in @ beautiful | a christian; and their attempt to revive the tenure of | 51 platform upon which the Know Ni Of | — Woon’s Vanterres, 472 Broadway.—The programme swith reference to the refugees ; and that there | lies are no doubt in went of fresh troops. Theef- manner,and again wentatraight at them. All the | church property, against which tho statate of mort- lon movement ia to be conducted, as this OFM | this evening is unusually attractive, wes feason to believe that he wonld have | fective Britiah force isnot more than 16,000, so , however, which wae directed throughout the pea x enacted peony! ago Oe pon nligutenea is eae asa Redes involves the $v. org iz residence been made battle thease forts t! rnest opposi 3 4 u jitionista 4 2 or mere, ‘tn France to promote ate the greab ng xo \cso than 9000 men ard dead ee hors de | Bilpac any, hy intervals, they ‘atarend © meet Iegisator. x maar ence aa faut Lp ttnglod misiotration. “‘Thisin the scheme the Naw bs ig hg og! Court. and avowed by the revolutionary | combat in the last eight weeks. More Turkish | galling fire. While the Britwnnis was rounding SR ot tie tous Ba a Charte, abuldGanes been ont Rous Eeaubts a aaa te oe Soe Ihe New England Sovw Cones ag iSilien committecs. Were M. Soulé not invested with a | troops are being sent up; to-day the Golden Fleece | in from seaward, the Agamemzoa proceeded along | raged by ecclesiastical usurpation upon those points, Plot, Ratchieg ex! Aeonpetne Raward B, Mead.—Judgueat for abe pisintil on. * character in Spain, this government | arrived here ‘fom Volo, with 2,000 troops, who | the north const southward, to where the-| jad nota counter organisation Roascaved strength to op. | 80cisi and political, to consummate which the ¢ tos | vexdict. denen Paros such conduct would be unattended with | were en in sing the Greek invasion. But | Sampsom aad Terribie were’ engaged. It was | pose the machinations of the Roman priesthood, ani | Of the His aup has yereran’ He vc eadie tert N. L. Griswold et al. vs. The Insurance © any serious result; but it believes that that charac: | it could be wished “that reinforcements of a bet- | evident that this ship had 9 distinct ‘mark ia | heteat the intrigues of corrupt partizans, J accord | United States, Among all the of New pany —Judgment for the Momshe verdict. + "ter gives an importance to a who, tm his | tek cla cond arrive fiom Poramouth of Mar- view. Cuatious’y closing ‘with We land, she | fcly nz, mith your proud beet af fo the vantincats ot | York politica, and cf French ecceatril eats | ine James aby ‘darian ions —ttow capacity, would peilles. | anchored jo and pation: ‘ - 3 toost 8 . j or bg Ba ameoah of it has labea' op ro ‘The London Times of the Sth instant, noticesths and she cease mayen vie re ins veeyene Pie, and which will undoubtedly survive through tong | In the first place, it is to be a warfare upon Sew. | the President and Directors af the, Rntg Comps to ‘azrent the progress of « parbaroas and am. | desthact the ‘allowing officers: Mr. Brown, olerk water, ‘Toia was the position of tha day, and bere | Ercan aad in tue devotion to ieedora, {ts becuunn | Srlam-and upon aboliticaians, (OS et ied Hoses Pome coe om caigetnn re | oe Bann, sig a SN femme ot AB pt ay ore oie coe’ Sak, | eameter tie es cc a | aire ee hg tat ame wy | Ge aurea aga at resoived | dled of wounds received i ported by the Sansparell | thatiwouldguard well the avenace of hor ascred tempie, | SonouR na ite leedera are also = on TW i the event. the trenches; Lieaten- | ness, She was closely su Ei te I. mJ was Killed in action; Mr. | sstern, and later in Gas doy vr) on OM | tis not against the fore'gner by birth, or the Catholic in | tate, with incor sigerabie exseplivns. very mem | moni for the ‘on at Boilers; disd bow. Lattorly eee OP Teak). | religion, that secret poll cel cryanization intevelled; but | bee Of Congress elected by the Know Nothizas, ex- | he ‘ty 5 i Howell. ori Rad pean, “ 1 wince Ginnet y ine fort was ‘leat, whee ma of foreign birth, who have accepted the boon cinsivs of come Ami Nebraska democrats, is aigo | quach the indigtmnent an Bow men | iy i a5 i F