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554 ; New YORK HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1655. ball bo infused anew intotBe Ber 00 tn) ving ‘We thiak ra our de- | when they bave it by the of eur Who Magular Veto of the | Anether Bombshell Thrown into the Camp tom, Wy a freah invocation # ” at national spirit which termination to eer ee israet thie infoence subject in P 3 in, | Of the Spiritmalistsa Nut tor Judge Ed- lives net more in the glerio’ as of thepant, lawful means within 2 : Oxpen ieee: | monde to Crack. 1h deeo in the settee ee eee hove pa BS etiet se 4 q 10 THE EDITOR OF THR NEW YORK HERALD. at the present day. . ‘endeavor * aes ao & a 1 traat tis not anking too much to beg the favor of 8 ‘The time is pr combination A short space in your columns for an explanation to w! - @pitions to this great reform. AM} cay to My 21) wen scknowle” Giiiiiee paxile ly to assert and 009 40," 4 se'ig 47'573 I find myself foreed by Judge Edmonds and the editor of aie sear ee csealsahle Dp the origina! torts | byrthctsnet xfons’ er areed We atier may Do. KaOW®, Caled seal, Se wheky FF: Nua “aire 36204 9012 12795 S102 | the Christian Spiritualist, in relation to Gction pre- Pr 3 SE Dosh ay seve bes it in | Belding their union, however slight, to be as dangerous | Ps)? ved, chat wo regard it to be the interest and Bea Sas ae 28,148 | pared by mefor the Pioneer Magazine, which, I mustasy, wap see meen eee to the one as it is corrupting to the other. If, therefore, duty of our t and people to give to the honest "it SOM, BSS kA ee tsi! | singularly enough, they have seen fit to republish as ‘ally apparent have lapsed into e condition | we make war to-day u organiza portion of the emigrants from 188 , X ae find them eal field, we should, in 24160 64,308 147/663 155,185 110,912 16407 | tact, and os an evidence in proof of “ spiritualism’ @bich bes lost them much of the confidence of the peo- | cause we 'to- - ‘98,568 187,800 1303 118,112 167,010 194,167 of the seme ., 192 6484 9:43 | the former in hie magazine and the latter in his news- ple. They lie open to the reproach of substituting for | (hé sem Sd golroh Ieseo muae 1S0e 29'000 | paper, Donert differences of judgment upom questions of public find 83,608 31,064 30,405 25,278 22,149 30,411 In order to render the matter clear te you, itis, per- concern, others of trivial import or even of mischievous extravagance. Many exciting subjects which, in the 2 q g 3 g 8 haps, necessary for me to state that, in casting about i ri ss for » subject, it struck me thet no one had ever passed tie Adm’n. 0; Adm'n. Oppo’ earlier stages of our progress, legitimately divided Aigeti woul 4dn Oppo, sen. Onpe a. n. nee na hy vide procaeboae 5. epinion, have manifestly lost their significance igen ie 7490 They ‘so fice S30 | by _— Ai soem pate tt amt prc ‘ap pidte) estimate of the present day; and the country has seen 6319 8244 6,941” 6,244 6,941 ath, wi 7 to “little Janie,” another cl i ‘with regret these f view, new and 4,318 875 «3,873 3,215 | 5,638 4,579 | man during the momert of dissolution, and to sketch ® | jiving at the house where I resided, and that I a wort! seer Anal cqnanpctl thrust inte S308 a8 oso ta es as picture of the scenes, so to speak, which may open to | “ wriling modium.”” This reminds me foreil _ ootveed iced cee tn Inet? 17.365 3439 Iw'798 "12136 101006 | the soul as it enter ss dans exons the storg of the “Three Black Crows, ’ and only, their place— be noted, chiefly, by the low pas- 40,028 30,142 3707 84,405 am 34.405 ae ia tanh a * how eager spiritualista are to believe what they w: See tear tar basins and by the base motives ss yee iss ame 27,309 Knowing that the subject would necessarily involve me hie iis ‘but another evidence that for , : Th to be eee pie a Soe en in ideas somewhat metaphysical in their character, I | gations are searches, not after truth, but after » ‘they propore toa continued strife. ey seem ve ra Cniialie cleweha te the USE be cak eased f 39,744 30,117 40,561 40,478 48,812 46,742 a Eaanter’ to cates! atink Tikod teat! tne page theory. It may not be irrelevant fo tive than a desire to xeap up | States. We resist it in a law! when we discess Toe ‘ ‘ail assault, from whatever quarter; logtors chosen hy the legislature, determined, in order to render w! wri 10 esy thet’ after the article was pad! grown ont of no better mot merits of its pretensions, and express our 0} against essai > 87,125 58,943 62,n04 so78 294 60,678 tteactive, to undit with astory in the narra- y ivision for the profit of those who may thrive by it, im | it. We resist F inca thea we resect totus baller bor and that in this determination we know uo distinction 18,590 4,985 13.091 22, fig 2202 | more a ive, So: eussO if 1 happened to be ina ball-room where ‘a career which looks tomo object of honorable ambition, | tochoose these whoshalladminister the publicaffairs. Our | @f o7ced, nor sect, nor person, hold! ane cal ~ te 872 80,526 473,872 08,526 473,872 591026 | tive style. was a little of or was anywhere io : pila TER SRE Se eatin resistance isnot less'tawful when, in the selection of indi | should exercise mo other control over, these riehia Phat | aay... 151,990. 374915 470,001 173,000 171,121 s71,006 | MY Ast dificulty was to account spparently for the | nelsbborhood | of e, little plat, ta avenue und scarcely affects to refer to the public good. Party ° seeded ction has thus, in great degree, lost all dignity above | eee er tr ae ee ee ereacectrduace | against licentioes abuse, and to secure to every one the * Election returns of 1854. tanner in which the strange information concerning | Probable that Mr. Austin’s story erigmated fre Pat fall and peacefal enjoyment of his religious opinions and Histon serene or aE: death and the of the physique future world was to | fact that at the house where I occupied » room that of a merestruggle for the power of dispensing pa- | with the convictions of the country at Le, In the worship. + the earth; and it occurred to me that the best | wana little girl, an adopted daughter of the la rwauare. been bia ted dea 5 With regareto’my being & ‘writiag medium,” | ‘tronage, and bes done what it could to mculeate in the | exercise of these powers of resistance %. Resolved, That, as nece to religious toleration, Ms Sad emp. petal bas bss igs “Tr —p | mode of overcoming this dafficulty would be to assume | ove, had any hesitancy in saying that my ba charged with a proscriptive spirit, 4 ———- 1858. 1858. ‘mind of the people an opinion thet government is but & | been denounced as and as indispensable to its healthful support, we regard | grates. “Gamia sa aeinaan Oe" my F Z complicated system of rewards for office seekers, in | ship. When {t can of Violation of ithe rights of citiven- | every altempt of any one sect, oF denomination, o Proce Aoerios 1 Age ses Aeoiweo Lolters setier &RCony | w etitions character, describe his death, represent him | at times moved in a very singular manner, witho P Btates cburch, to obtain an ascendency over others in the | Slave.. 451,330 ‘374,013 470,931 ‘472,900 471,12 "471,556 | as conversing up to the last moment, and then allow | direct volition on my part, to my knowledge. " bligat lain the motives whom the feculty for faithful service is the last andthe | Btates is under any obligation to explain the motives | cite, by the demand of especial privilege or exemption SE Reman eaten eeere Tae SHES sere ts aire. {iia eceetien do poeane otlar Neast ications they are expected to present. | ¥ nce ‘him to casta vote or to select a public | Ot. Waa” within the sphere of political rights and | Total..1,007,728 1,502,682 1,900,810 1,562,782 1,897,311 1,098,628 | him to give the remainder of his experience of death, | Or''.im investigation, 1 could and ean discover « diapite cinerea) ee functionary; when it can be maintained that he has no | $1 t0y (na, < ta.0n-|( sad a denceighion'of-led whieh wad opesing to kis gauby | Seetine too nica ‘of disembodied vou’ " till more, ination of the members | Majority for Administration in 1852. To this latter strife the accidents and the necessities | right to express an opinion upon what he conceives to | duties, and still more, any combi of J iy wi a ry ote Re frcmtty Ray, Pye & 1 of the day have brought new and dangerous auxiliaries. | be en impediment in the way of the - public of any denomination to obtain political power by com> | EO rity ofainne Admisisteaion it Sais | UY means of “spiritual manifestations,” so called. I | hand bas never givea/ ch information of ony fm The poverty or misrule which has overborae large nem- | Welfare ; when it can be req of him to be | to be dangerous to tha t whieh sho a gave the name of “John F. Lane” to my leading it equality of right =——_——_— st question cerrect silent or:pasi in the prese iblic dan, * bers of the subjects of European monarchies, and the eer oR? ree power ene of either by indivedeal belong to all citizens, hostile to toe fe igi rine and ‘The Alleged Slave TrafMicking- fictitious character, located the oecurrences in San contrary, by ‘careful introspection and deliew) ‘ ° conspicuously objectionable as a step towards the sub- . ti “« tful | mory, I have been able to trace every answer whien ith» attractions which have been offered by the United States | action or by combination with his follow-citizensthen | Seoubrenetaly Perel eaiesamieas aaciere; thet (UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE. Mote cee ied the Article, “The Eventful | Pensed while in this abnormal condition to the indire tw many who desire to better their fortunes, have, for | may the American party be called to ane rer this heiee, | we therefore take our stand against all such attempts, Before G. W. Morton, Eaq. Ye bes plished, re. | 2ction.of my own mind. T cannot, of course, state tI some years past, turned an immense current of emigra- | pursued is that which it believes to be the most effectual | Wherever we may egies nestor piven ald March 10.—The United States agt. Bartholomew Blanco, | _TW° oF three months after it was published, I re- | with the same positiveness with which I eanstate th ton tewarde our shore. Notrauch less than balfa nillion | s a defence against an abuse of no small magnitude in | 0; fesejved. That. wo cheyen, wih the Ne AEM | The prisoner is under arrest upon a charge that he | ‘tived » letter from Judge Edmonds, in which he } tit paper is tefave me; be atate it with the #. i eness with which I can assert spy fact o! strangers are computed to make the yearly sum of this | it# beginning, and full of portentous mischief in its con. | ciation, Se ee een aaa rie. |. baller Mtiadscaciomsa, loaded or other dan | Stated that his attontion had been called to the article " na ie Meenas, Pa ok ar i sabi xilisries to on. aaa re pe penn ort of aay var the tae by a friend in San Francisco, and that he had copied the | “Ty"i4r, Austin bad made inquiries—as he should 4 Moerease to our population. Whilst the greater portion of If they who are aggrieved by this course desire ns to be the most valuable auxi 4 lightened and free goveroment. ‘We look to these aa a first balf of it into the November number of ‘The | done—he would have fo ‘as others did, that ‘these may be described as respectable and industrious in- | nething more than equal rights and equal claim 10 | the truest and best ‘nurseries of republican sentiment | Millandon, for the purpose that the said vessel should | 50° s"G. 19s) This wae quite » surprise to me, but | ¥## no house in the ity designated as th: dividuals, seeking domestication amongst our people; and re < and brotherhood; and regarding them as ticularly | be employed in the slave trade, or that he caused some where Lane died. whilst nearly all—with some conspicuous exceptions— Stet, hie objet AF etey a eetforea of cig | adapted to. the formation of vigorous ational chat- | of those acts to be done with euch fatent, in violation | 2° Suxprise was as nothing to my astonishment on | “'But ail tis in as naught. Whatever confidence . ‘may be turned to useful account in the labor required | uty. It is but necessary that they fall back into | Scter, we hold that they should be common to all citi- | + tne 24 and 32 sections of the act of Congress passed | Deine made acquainted by him with the fact that he | Edmonds may bave had in the coolness and good biic im; ements, and in the settlement 8 * zens, without distinction of creed; and to that end « ”” intervie ment of his friend, the latter geutleman’s stateme: eer atens cuctitinated teriitorioe, 8G eqneay cate | eens Cea ne oe erery cue TeligioNs | should’ be free from all influence or direction of reli- | April 20, 1818, 3d statutes at large, pages 460, 451. It | B&tidtone ot tee farding the doubt ‘existing here, should have sufi: ‘that this accession to our population ‘has mot been un- | tion which is not common to all; renounce all attempts | 8:0US zeal. And as we believe the Holy Bible to be the | sppeare that during the month of May, 1853, Mr. B, | 1 must confess I'scarcely knew what step to take un. | lead him to caution. But, this out of the quest attended by evils of serious import, The emigrant, ig- | toembody themselves as Catholics, to infuence public | ‘ovntain and depository of the universal religious doc- | Bisco. merchant of good standing in this eity, in the | der the clrcumstanoes. At first I was about to write to | cannot conceive how anything could have weigh norant of our institutions and laws, often ignorant of | policy; proclaim undivided allegiance to the civil power, | ‘Fine of our country, and the teacher of the profoundest | thle Thased of Walter | J24ge Edmonds; but on maturer thought I decided, for | iota against the glaring internal evidences im our language, necessarily in all cases unimbued with the | and exemplify it by practice, in conformity fos ‘the | Wisdom to all men, we express our firm dissent and re- | ordinary course o: usiness, purchased of ‘er | several reasons, to adopt the course ef addressing the | Eventiul Nights” noted above, as 89 pisialy indice fraditional’ end native sentiment which gives life tite aon, proof against any and every attempt to exclude it from | Lockwood, of Greenwich, Conn., the bark Millaudon, for | public, with your liberty, through these coleman, that it could not be a narration of facte—that sud permanence ‘to our institutions—s ‘rentiment ae Seer oeemnauttines goes to°maiutain « the course of school instruction! or ene | $6,100, amd.on. the Gth & Decelnber following’ sold her Tee fail biases it Tamme odes “yi Pen wagering men, though fool, could aot err thee witheut which no rican citivens! can w, having ani 8 2 ver, & r and merchan’ ie “ \ T grammatical er: into the : teed paiapineeeel renal Hep yhern tok hy 'upom the cbief and peculiar questions which have | efty, for abe sum of $8,000, and all the usual and logal | Teict*r nies sereived inves seranges the cee ies | ticle during the last nic months, I prepose to say a0 pelied ym as the support of a true American | th, cture and ity of their church, and, | Party upon iey—hew been permitted, after the probation of s impelled an ence oe ae shall find im ered created the necessity for its organization, we deem it | forms necessary on a change of ownership were gone | gone broadcast over the Union. In fact, I know this to | thing about; but} con ‘ears, to be brought into the circle of national fel- | to demand from the State the recognition of per at the same time, to declare the views by which | through with by the parties. The bark was afterwards | be the case, from the republications which are before | thatthe title which I Jowship, armed with all the } scr ar ny evil which | their separate identity in the mass of citizens, and to | itis Coibeige) in reference to other important questions | chartered by Glover to C. C. Carralero for a term of nine | me; and I cannot but feel that the minds of many | derful Revelations—The Eventful Nights,” ‘&e., nor Deleng to the natives of the soil. With what facility | insist upon exceptional privileges in the domestic ad- | touching the administration of public affairs. It is | months, at $400 permonth. On or about the 16th of De- | who have perused it, and believe it to be a narration of | ‘‘ Wonderful but True, or The Eventful Nights,” &e., this high privilege is obtained, with what fraud its ac- | ministration; if ‘they shall feel ‘themselves justified in | therefore further i cember s crew was shipped, the proper pepers executed | facts, ahould be disabused of ther error, And in the | into which it has been variously altered byether hands, quisition is often attended, with what nye ated d | concentrating their power to secure an election or to | _,7- Resolved, That the American party, holding the | at the Custombouse, and the vessel eleared; and on the | second place, 1am the more impelled to the step I am | but simply, ‘‘ The Eventful Nights of Au 20th ans) want of appreciation of its purposes it is used, itis use- | obtain an acknowledgment of their distinctive exist- | Union of the States to be the great distinctive and vital | 18th or 19th of the same month, sailed for the west coast dixog. tennant asthe argument used by so many | lst.” EWER. Jeo to recount, Our experience is but too familiar with | ence and influence in the community, by the elevation | idep of permanent and comprehensive American republi- | of Africa, with Carralero as supercargo and Holmes | thousande—namely, that Judge Edmonds has’for years San Francisoo, Feb, 7, 1855. these inquiries, and points to the facts they discloseas the | of individuals to official trust as Catholics, and be- | o&Dism, will devote its unitea power to the duty of sus- | Marra as master, She arrived and anchored off | been in the habit of weighing testimony, and that if @emmon reproach and opprobrium of our elections. th Catholi deemed to be ial: taining and strengthening that Union against the the Con; river about the 19th of March, 1854, | there is rh ii itualism to convince him, ‘the: Affairs in Brazil. Whilst emigration was but an incensiderable ev favorable to Oatholior,—it ‘these ‘objects are thought | tacks, either open or secret, of whatever enemy may as- | and su megeestiy yevoowed'” ap the river 10 | must be something ia it”——ean now be easily refuted, OUR RIO DB JANEIRO CORRESPONDENCE. and was from our view in its dispropor- | worthy of their enterprise, let them not be sur- | Sailit. To that end, it will insist upon strict construc- | Qabenda, where her cargo was delivered to a resident | The fact is made too evident for contradiction, that he Rio Jawerno, February 11, 185 tion to our native population and to the large com- | prised at the array which this must bring into | tion of the constitution of the United States, in aceord- | consignee. The testimony of George Jackson, an Eng- | has shown himself to the thousands who look for and ” ? Jol our unoccupied field of industry, there | The field to. oppore them, nor. let, them com. | ance with the true intent and meaning of that instru- | lishman, Edward Myers, a German, and John Colatein, a | implicitly believe his views on the subject, and to the | Arrival of the United States Steamship Susquehan nothing in the contemplation of it to | plsin of proscri ton if they should find their endeavors | ment, as expounded by its authors, and as sanctioned by | Swede forming part of the al sefaras material, nar- world Ps large, a6 « man incapable of aetise teatime. The Coffee Market—Flour—Ships Unable to get in challenge the attention of the national legislature, It trated, dicloua and lberal-minded Catholic | the most approved opinion of the country. That soon after the Po meeetat © Rae incase Ot wee hing. tei ! has now grown into s vast and commanding power, | Hiven ‘wil scarecly: allow himself to be embroiled in | Upon the full’ acknowledgement and due preservation | ora were called into the cabin ani informed for th whose mind can be easily tossed abvut by the desighing, | o7t @ Rio Grande—The Case wf Captain Le It furnishes what may, without much exaggeration of | such a contest, but rather, we should hope, would | Of the rights of the States, as expressed and reserved im | time py the master, that he intended to take on boarda | but, as in this instance, to be one who is anxious to de. | Health of Rio—Yellow Fever—The United States V , be called the distinct estate in our republic, | promptly interpose to tench that large body offorelgners | the constitution; and the careful avoidance, by the gene- i tcisons fee Wa laleadeb Gabe, ana that tae | ater Gi Wer Dicahe asa pwert ite ever-awelling tide is visible in every community. | who constitute the preponderating mass of bis church, | 7! government and by each of the States respectively, of | might either go on shore or remain on board for the | Had he merely republished an imaginary case of Ht ie banded into combinations more or less apart | {hat the objects sought to be attained are neither in | tterference with the rights of either by legislative or | voyage to Cubs, If agreeing to the latter, each should | cgpiritualism,”” “which, contained mc’ assertions in | 97antt fc. : from our long known and familiar masses of native | accord with the institutions of the country nor the | @xecutive action. have four hunéred dollars for the voyage. The men | physics impossible in themselves, or which, granting | MY last letter was forwarded per clipper ship Tejr citivens, by ties of foreign kindred, by unforgotten | genius of the people; that the pursuit must not only be | _ Upon the faithful performance by the govern- | concluded, under all the circumstances, to remain on | the correctness of the “spiritualist” theory, might | which sailed for New Orleans on Monday, instead of & and ever cherished nationalities, aud by sympathies | fruitless, but will be repelled by the quickest and most | ment, by every State, and by every public functionary | board. While making preliminary arrangements for | have occurred, the blunder would not kave been 60 un- | day, as I stated. I have the pl ot 7 A alien to the spirit which alone sustains our peculiar, | sensitive matinct that stingulehes the national charac- | °f each, of all duties epjoined upom either by the con- | shipping slaves, the bark was eized by a iruiah cruizer, fortunate for him as a leader in the new theory. He | °°)? 4 he inecttericg J temperate, and complisated system of freedom. Worse | ter, stitution of the United States. To the same extent the acting in concert with the United States ship Perry, and could only be charge ith indecent haste in accepting | °° the morning of the 4th instant, the United St. than this, it has caught the notice and stimulated We disavow any interference, therefore, which may | American party also pledges itself to suppress, as far as | was afterwards condemned for having been employed in | testimony. 7 steamship Susquehanna of the Japan squadron,comma, the craft of mate poliveal sspiranis and demagogues, | be drawn from the free expression of our opinion, | it has the power, all tendencies to political division | the slave trade. The crew of the bark were landed at | But how utterly incompetent he is to stand prominent | ¢@ by Commodore Franklin Buchanan, arrived inp. - who have too eanly found it @ pliant resource for | that the American party in intolerant towards | founded on geographical position, to rebuke all | Cabenda, and the master and consignee gave to each of | among what has become « very numerous fect in Ameri- 7 z P ty use, and who have cajoled, flattered and seducad it | the Catholic religion. With the principles and doc- | @kitation upon topics of dangerous import to the | the men due bills or orders for their wages of the follow- | ca how utverly unworthy lie ia of wielding the wide | "Bi famous ship is the first aide wheel steamer that kato the ranks of the partisan strife, and thua imparted | trine of that faith we have no concern. We value too | peace and harmony of the Union, to check the ef | ing import— and increasing influence he unquestionably wields—will | gone round Cape Horn, all others having preferred: | to it a consequence and an influence most powerful to | highly the privilegesof freemen tolold any man to ac. | forts of selfsh and designing politicians to create | PanewpA, May 1,184. | be plainly seen by ezy calm, thinking man, who may | Straits of Magellan ; and her trip from Valparaiso © aid a perverse ambition, but utterly powerless to accom- | count for his religious belief. The Roman Catholic has ns by appeals re A ay or Emietlons Mp. Banruorounw Branpo— Mioria!Ratvades Tathete cr: | BOER VEDO Eventful Nights of August 20th and 21st.” - Sf ee ei on regs plish any honest end for which the highest prerogatives | our respect in as full measure as any other established uurpose and desire of the party being to | fit You will pense go crayon Marre culvader Talucta ct | ?'How stands the case? “In the first place, the article | Performed in ys. Other vessels belonging to: of citizenship were originally designed. x it i cr , an ) e F ‘Aisently haa the eee Deen stared by am extreme | Sietty 221! pete carters ory cue aee Tou, ment of naticnal loyalty thoroughly American in cha- | Wir worm dene ,on the diisades tothe ‘ie 3 ave. pita] isl arpa haere leer dete piel iets, bags il probably b " development of this influence. In violation of the epirit | against all assault. As we cherish the foundations of | Tacter, and sufficiently payer to protect the Union “A *“GULIELME JOZEDE Sr. CORREA. ip raseeded which, stripped of all surroundings, ‘and ORR: VARESE : WA SEODARY e detain ef our constitution, if not of its letter, for we cannot | our political liberty, not less dowe cherish the right of against all sectional hostility. ° Pleate to deduct from the above $25, which I paid for pas- | reduced to plain English, ‘amounts simply to this: Yhate | Seme time before cargoes of cofiee can be obtained, but ruppose the literal prohibition was omitted only be- vel t hip God ding to hit 4 8. Resolved, That the American party regard it as the | sage. catise the case was not deemed possible—-we Had thatin | Sletoueet huthe We assert this cae peculierly Anson, | Policy of the Government to exerelte its power to recure | "1 somo of our States the alien, stranger equally to our | can principle, and pledge ourselves to its full and faith- | te prosperity of every American interest, and to give , our laws, and even our homes, bas been clothed | ful observance, in all cases whatever. the most ample scope to the ingenuity and industry of mhich be was found, | When called upon by a etic needle turned away from its piace atthe north, | there is only about 50,000 bags in the market, » etry pe grcapter Ciera aio crip 8 and went round to the southwest point with « jerk, | that is of a quality not suited for the United Sta several times, and of its own accord. Why, it seems to by which be was found. When called upon dtm siantiient seowal Sat. this. fat. elems, Ghould: net The last quoted prices for coffee are as follo inl pursuit with the power of deciding, os far as his vote may de- ‘ . American citizens in every law! . " For washed tide, the slecton of our mat hal representative, and of quaealabetate tol Oar eee eaiet | complish this it” is ite duty to give all aid, computi- | abroad, and all interest or concern in the vessel, cargo, Bare sumieey, Waeasapss, the Tadee's eradolihy, : Great gs the national executive American party, ‘They are suggestive of the whole | ble with the power vested in it, to internal | voyage, &c., and refused to have anything todo with the | Wn Anne has shown it tobe. | | Brat good : of this policy, we have seen | scope of its aims. Whilst in the waning stage of the old | 80d external commerce, by improving the na- | mex, or to pa the wages, &c., observing that some other | 4 Nalleve tern piritaalian who is not willingly blend, First regular, 34600 & 3)1 ly iothe the alien of the Territories | political parties the country has been distracted by tue | Vigation of rivers, by adapting nations! har- | j¢rson of « similar name must have been in view. The | [0 U6! hardly feilto cee tuat the article, ano whole, in | Second good.. 34300 a 3}4o» with the cight of suffrage there, with certain anticip: teeming growth of new organizations,created to nurture | 00T8, both on the lakes and the sea coast, to the | ‘sailors procured s lawyer to act for them, and in conse- - , ‘| Second ordinary ” 24800 & 3}le> ‘ ipping: : he argument reductioad absurdum—to be applied to thon that this example will be followed when the Terri- tra: lar rotection and convenience of shipping; and by pro- | quence of a letter from him, Mr. Blanco called at his the: teriés aha! pass into the higher condition of Staten, ia | Ne ih re eaie the Cale ethare ake meacefal Poting the construction of national roads {or {ntercoss. | cfloe, where disevowals and disclaimers of substantial. spiritualism. I assume the grounds of the spiritualists, | The sbipmenta to the United States during the part the same spir. of fatal flattory of the emigrant, Con- | feiatious of our government with the rest of the world, | munication between the oceans which bound the terri | ly a similar character were made by him, with the addi- | ['.; that all matter conducts this mysterions © | month have been as follo ws:— 2 \d,”” and thatit is the neeessary condition to interlie Guate, bas geesinional iho guriio. londs, 1. 00 tee heat | cat i tories of the Union. To encourage the developement of | tional evidence of his being at @rat very angry at his | {™4, Fy condit : F Sie er: ths wecvnia: of waateyer lek Oke beg | ace ee cette wake “peowgut | American fonlus by due protection of inventions, pro- | teing thus troubled. cooling down, however, and rayin espilesenecny grec gp Baler patna (gents pple panera gated provoked the appetite or emigration to fresh en- | intoactive resolve by this emergency, has proclaimed | éuctions cf art, nad works of lioerature and science. | that if there had been but ope demand he woull | [0 move matter, ns the embodied Mind moves the arm | oy Sy! «33515 @eavors by the lure of bribes of that magnificent | the necessity for a great American party. In obedi- | To guard the industry of the country against the inju- | have paid it sooner than to h: MB erwin prt tte) a pac tte ryan pd positions will lead: ‘it. that | Philadelphi 8.267 domain, which it has re‘used to bertow upon the ce to that call rty has already come fortn, | Tous mfluence of the adverse policy of foreign mations, | bothered. The sailors were . fe ative population of the States for purposes of educa- | gnd has entered upon the theatre of iti duty. It comes | D0 t0 secure, as far as the same may be done, in ac: | States District Attorney. ‘The question presented for | the departed soulcan have a power over its dead body, ee ; : tien anc public improvement. This is the chosen policy | to silence the clamor of factagn, to check the career | cordance with the powers conferred by the constitution, | consideration under the general statementof the circum- | Tonys 4 teach it Sot kad pea g oll tig ge cI fal ch Sala ee BEE ite “« BL? of our government at a time when nearty half a million | of pernicious innovations, to rebuke the busy intrigues | the prosperity of the American workman, by giving him | + tances is, whether the facts proved constitute probable does ve Boa W esgetecce stannr sheng? ry " is " the ‘‘circle’’ present at Lane’s death are charging the Flour, in the beginning of the mao! th, was in b of persons in each year are pouring the flood of igno- | of selfish politicians. Its great purpose is to recall the | the preference in the supply of the work required by cause for believi: neponeg sheers foe honest position table all night with the * odie fluid,’ they ey Mey ? ginning » wi vice and crime, and in its best ingredients of dis- overnment to its time-honored and approved princi. | the country. of Mr. Blanco as wap false and deceptive, 4 : hands to the extent of 3,700 bbis.; in seeond han ungenial nationalities, into the heart of our | pies of administration, and to express’ the authentic | To maintain the public defence, by euficient military | andthat he equipped and dispatched her to trade in | Sclously charge Lane's entire corpse, which, after bis | 1. 799 pig: and at present date the,stock has deerear: country. Yoice of the American’ people in favor ef a thorough | 80d naval force, and by anefficient system of fortid- | slaves, or caused any of the acts specified tobe done with | fou! has given acigespticd ay yaoi anid iis cas icoe tune eee Is it tobe wondered at that the sense of the coun- | American policy. We mean that henceforth, in the | cation: and fina ly, that intent. Ihe duebills held by the erew, if really in- | RrTZ UP! t lo Sovernn nai Fee rade inthe | as consump’ has been greater than the qu. try shouk: revolt against wach a policy’ that the | face of all opposition, and all combinations; Ameri. | To administer the goveroment with a liberal economy | tended for the accused, import upon their face nothing be- | P*4: opening itseyes, and announcing that the soul feels | tity received. The prices are 26/600 for all deep, homebred and earnest lover of our historical | cans shell govern their own country, and that every | Which shall supply nothing to wasteful extravagance,— | yonda t that Mr. Blanco should draw ona house in | {seit at thal ny deg Firiclate of wciatence, Aad | BEW, 201000 for Haxall, 251500 for Philadelphia, 26) freedom, of our glorious of our Greside | genuine American interest shall take its paramount | but all tbat is proper to the healthtul development and | Cubs f is, and after having received them, pay the | World, end Passing into & (hind state of existence And | tor Frecericksburg, 25[000 tor Baltimore, an 241/000 notions of the ends and hopes of Anglo- | Flace inthe counsels and thoughts of those to whom | Progress of a great nation. bearer so many dollars for wages earned on board the | Jet, instead of seeing thie absurdity, JudgeRamonds, for- | New Orleans, ip Saxon liberty, so #0 distinctive of | the maougement of the public affairs sball be in- And as the American party is aware that, im the | b: ut no color of evidence sustains the idea that | *00th, elu tightly his premises, moves placidly, Several vessels are lying outside of Rio Grande una nco, directly or indirectly, hired the crew, or i sheep to the slaughter, into any ridiculous con- yace—tbat our pride, so fondly cl ned by the asso- | trusted. We desire to see our internal resources | duties here enumerated, there will be different views ly, ¢; to get into port, as the water is ve: ae Gation of our colonia} struggles and the career which | jmproved, our labor rewarded, our genius fostered, ly entertained, at different periods, and in dif- re of the destination of the vessel, procured yp lip gtenlpy way gpemencnston ie ayy wm bern waiting te Jong an twenty” ine erhan they inaugurated, and which weare left to consummate, | our agriculture, manufactures, and commerce, guarded ections of the country, on the question of the | her cargo, &c., &c. It in not probable that the captain lee, Of hie colloborstenr of the Christian | them aro the North American bark Wym. should be offensed and disappointe: by this heediess en. | and sustained ‘by an intelligent American states. | best means of securing some of the ends pro of a slaver upon the coast of Africa, whore vessel had | $F ihe, Judge, of his colloboratenr i ally ‘The | briga Charlotte and Henry Nelson. Captain W. Lang couragement of an evil that brings its daily evidence 07 | mansbip. we take the ground of Congressional independ been reived, and who intended to defraud his crew of | SPW Hlbeas) oe rae re trots Lane | the bark Overman, is still in prison at Rio Grano Souder teeer tock We desire to see the children of our republic educated | that measures of temporary policy which, from tl ages, would be very scrupulous as to whom he | Tey communications purporting to come from Lame | waiting his trial for puniabl ff his sailors, It Nor is this all that envers into the topic of our com- | in American sentiment and principle, and fortified by | Very nature are constantly and variously ‘affected, by | would direct them to call upon im New York for their | Prevents theory wit sees ly contenes ta the theory | #id that the Chief of Police that he will not 0 plaint. A very considerable portion of this yearly emi- | the wiscom of that sacred book from which our ances- | the changing condition and circumstances of the nation, | pay, nor at all inconsistent with his object that the nistatued othe wet Cah oi eet rid to the core. | sent to be bailed out, for it is believed that when | gration, perbaps the majority of it, is evidently, and, | tors drew the inspiration of the moral and religious free- | *hould be committed to the free decision of the poople, name and place of the persons should be specified. it | ™ by the spiritualists. Lane, for instance, de- " wl ‘i the soul is etherealized matter, and that it has | comes to trial he will be acquitted. From all I can lew without meaning any disparagement, we might say | dom which they infused into vil institut to be made in accordance with their own sense of would seem to be an extraordinary streteh of the doc- that a a f the affair 1 ¢ : Digotediy attached {to a church which in Fegarie! | ““We" desire t sce the right of sullrage consecrated | is best adapted to the wants of each section of the | trine of grenumptive or inferential guilt, vo incnlnate a | {hah ni he desion eS the imraeierial atic, ceupien of sab asir 1 hia ey Tang ite 8 abused man, with jealousy and suspicion by the greater number sti £ the people as the bulwark of | Country,—untrammelled by the influence of party dic- | respectable merchant under circumstances so slight and i St our poople. ‘Whatever may be the merits or de- | liberty, ‘and protected by laws which shall forever | t#t0n: that the opinions of the constituency of each | open to ratinfactory solution, as their credulity must be forseoth, ‘whether cur absent friends are. wel oF poe naps gon fey inwioan taaseetieal pina as merits of peculiar constitution and policy of that | p: it as the paeufas medium through which | State, #0 far as Senators in Congress are concerned, or | largely invoked to make up the suspicion which would | Pov}, "8h {go und ae ak’ bee 4 | Of the vossels which enter this port would not get’ aw burch, in the popular estimation of those who do not | pone but genuine American opinions and sympataies | f each congressional District, no far as members of the | pronounce allthe apparently innocent facts compatible | “80W-”) He py one mus ome purer an ‘ ii for months, fens its faith;—whatever may be the true interpreta- | shall find lon th the fanctions of aove " House are doncerned, are the best guides to the general | with fair and open ordii business to be false and | Petter beforehe can advance from one state of existence | “EDN it itt " ype alegance Of its chiliren—upon which poiat | “We denire’ to see the federal constitution, faithfully | @*timate of what is most conducive to the weMare of all: | deliberately gotten up to deceive and divert attention to-enother bereatter, Bs. Be. And yet Judge Bimbeds, Die regret adel egg ides ix id= den doubtless much misconception exists, and much {njas- | administered in ptrict accordance with the views of its | 80d that the action of government shouid be coadacted | from latent and extended criminality. Itis more difficult , and bis brother of the Spiritualtet, | menther has been, cooler,, wit tied Sor 3 Fa oll in hia infatuation, have blindly republlshed aa true, tice may be done—we have no doubt of the fact that it | founders, all ti f hecked, all en. | 24 Fpirit of compromise, directed to the establishment | to detect anything leading to a different conclusion from 7 rep ®, to prev . ‘eteame: exhibits, in ite, brotherhood, a, more submissive obe- erossbintitd upos Cub Tigkin Of the Biatea-eebuket,, all | ‘that content which is essential to the general pros- iheonsidgration of what occurred during the interview ee ines weet Nipple nf cxabayed to uabethe din: Inaonsoeeap tions ‘the ship. dience to its guider, a greater dependence upon antho- i ; perity, ween Mr. Blanco, the sailors and their counsel. As to = rye 4 ; marine pertea ; rity for ite direction ‘and couduct, apd n closer inter. | ye por rere leergg iy the responsibility of | _ We are expecially induced to make this declaration, be- | the frst, the disavowal of Mr. Blanco was prompt, explicit | fierarchy of Tspheres!’ and ™ circles,’ and their own See tums hea mat Seraag of Senet ialaoee relation of personal sympathy and identity of end | the poriticn it bax assumed. It knows full well the | cause we are not willing that the efficiency and useful- | and uneqnivocal when afterwards their demands | [ne duane materialiom, munt utterly fell: 1s really | in the harbor. The yellow fever im 1651° won at ite and object than ‘any other raternity in our land. | Keen" opposition it bas to encounter from the congio. | Des®, of our Association in the prosecution ofits great | were backedby a profesional intimation thatanexpousive | {eems Wau tens ariute invostigatars ba maski’ TGS | greatest height trom the 10th of April to the 7th of Mi Trained as it has been in « strong and severe antago- | merate of all fragments and factions, of the old ettete constitutions] a forming Werpeses shell be ae baa gtk not to say criminal proceeding, might possibly | iy¢aqno mind.” in 1862, from the 7th of January to the 15th ef Febr nism to cll r creeda than ite own—long and | democratic and whi rties, with their alien allies, y dissensions arising out of differences of opinion store for him, bis former repudiation of having had ne ary, increasing again in April and May; im If variously conversant in persecutions of which it hax |*names tat were one haliowed and had a meaning, | Pon subjects in their nature transitory, aud dependent | snything to do with the vessel after being sold by his, si Eilon Taek ae dak eee oon from the 10th of January to the 20th of Marob. "Pe deen equally the agent and the victim, and conscious | Frrorm it may commit—inferior men may attain eleva. | UPOn the shifting condition ef national expansion and | was emphatically reiterated, with the not unusual dectar. | 17/6, between, lame's remarks, the remarks of | 440 to think that we shall escape thie malignant fe_ that it is looked upom with distrust in all communi- | tion from its swelling ranks; such matters are una- | growth of public interests, and upon the details of which | ation often made under somewhat analagous cireum- ‘ae welles Pit internal eviden plainl; to | this 5 ties which reject ita tencts, it ia but in the orver of hu- | yoidable in all’ great pupelar’ movemente and revotu. | entire unanimity of view in scarcely possible. stances, that were there but one demand, he would have | Mf well as 10 other internal evidences, going plainly to Decatur which sailed a hunt man action that its votarion should partake voewhat | tions; but they are nok its principles nor its high aims, | 1X Kesolved, That we utterly condemn as odious paid it to save himself the annoyance he was underszo- | fier, bat will only, mak Li Dhooedece iene Nol MOY y with the U.S. stesmer of the character of @ separate embodiment in the great | and will be corrected. National in feeling, national in | 4 un-American, the obvious absence of Executive . While every proper effort #bould be made to ex- fetion.” ONY Make one more statement in this | sachussetts for Valparais } ‘ 0, had not arrived at that things, it claims as belonging to | Power and patronage, which for many years past has | pose and bring to trial persons engaged in the nefarious | Connection. at the time of the sailin aan. | led to ull ite rights and privi- | More and more found’ favor in the administrations of | and piratical trading in #laves, proportionate caution weapes ie tee anenal Acoonling to the theory de- | oe Semabered f the sailing of the Sasqueha Fool ° rue hearted citizen, no matter to | OUreovernments, both Federal and State. The whole | should be observed in order that the character of mer- mas tbe 6 seaced State rye & diferent from | PUt back to this port to repair. It was understéod, w cret im such purposes ar it may find extraordinary mo. | what party he may have belonged, no matter in what | fYstem of rewards and punishments is unworthy of a | chants should not be recklessly asnaile?, and their buni- | pases into & second w beeen ng on ds at Loess te ships of our navy left,this place, that if 1 Hive to promote, where the design may be most e- | pursuit he may be engaged, whether in subiuing the free and independent poople:-—We perceive in the prac- | mets injured by loose and vague suspicions: beyond | time aienthere, and pas Teight, snd, in the process of | were separated, the one which shosld reach the Str fectaally compaased by concealed concert of counsel | forest, tilling t th, levelling the mountains, illing | tee to which it has Jed, the most unnatural and | which, in my judgment, nothing has been made to ap- | Mato the nrit a fran the color blue in from | & Magellan first should wait for the other, It in belic and action, To the emigrant population which | up valleys, wielding our commerce, toiling amid the | demoralizing influence upom our population, It pro: | pear. ‘If different views are entertained by the prose. | Sry {ecm the ATat ane moond an the color Blue is from | thie dhe Ducatur arrived Aret, and that the Mansa find shelter under its wing, the remark is more es- | din and bustle of crowded cities, ssiling on the ocean, dig- | Scribes the bigh minded and independent citizen, and | cution, or should additional evidence be within his con. | * mass meeting; and so on, there being no possible inter. | 141. followed to tow ber through into the Pacifie yecially applicable. Not the most intelligent as a | ging in the mines, seizing on the idle streams that flow | Puts the obedient tool of power in his place; it de- | trol, the care can be presented for the consideration of | Communica: gaa Pa 3) Gaenat, whith ‘The American bark Eliza Anne arrived on the 9th fy class, and, at the same time, deeply imbued with the | from our mountain sides, and causing them to leap | Bounces the best men for a sincere love of their coun: | the Grand Ju.y without any danger that the ends of jus- | $4 men upon e 7 ie | Singapore, with merchandise and 300 Coclies or Chi ‘ions of foreign countries where the dominion of | upon the water whee! d “at ind labor millions of spindles in. | tey;it often prefers the foreigner to the native citi- | tice will be defeated by the present decision of the Com. | Bé Publishes as true a statement, according to which he | Coyeaperes Hlth church authority Ia more absolute, this concourse | {4 motions or amidet the dust and. whirl of tright ma, | ze, and it corrupts the patriotism of the masses not | missioner, which is, that the accused be discharged {rom ee Foye agree Bibemhord fn Calfornia, Theleve thet thie, melon ite o¢fecvinners inte lea capable and the leas willing to | chigery, he in in God's appointed "vocation, molting | 1% by cestroylag & genuine American ‘sentiment of | the prencat warrant of arret Cree canted gitee to the wesldl a commumection from, | beneficial beth to Chinese and Brasiliaus. Brasil vent masa of the nation, and should fossess, in greater or | name, American i leas degree, the disposition and the facuities of a sesret | its brotherhood and association—not secret in ite ordinary pursuits, but se- | leges, any sud every resint the influence of clique and profession when these | and fashioning the rude materials of nature into forms | ‘dependence, than by stimulating the people to aban- neti Tal rade ‘coast are exerted upon rome plaasibie motive to extend the | of strength, usefulness and beauty. He has only to | 40m the pursuits of wholerome industry tor the stake Our Georgia Correspondence. = 1 sai come. sate nares tetciog of the church, or to promote its polisy, or to se- | feel in his own heart that he approves and adopts our | Of the emoluments of office. It has thus brought an Guonois, March 2, 1855 That those who stand at the head of @ class of reli- gure for ita friends some desirable politisal advantage, | principles, and that he is ready, when the star-spangled | ‘lement into politcal contests which, by appealing to Ane aes is Pantnolions. Cone Eas ee eaten Six oF seven years ago, a er municipel contro). i Pinner is unfurled, to stand under it and by it. ‘True, | selfish motives, has proved itself sufficiently powerful | State Pelitice—Candidates for the Next Nomination | who are the Sir Oracles of “ spiritualist” —should have 0 Wan Werth 6600909000; ONE aoe aw the more liberal-minded and intelligent | it i but a piece of bunting, a painted rag—yet | to embroil the country in « perpetual strife for the be- Their Pretensions Examined. republished in their own jonrnals, as « remarkable proof | is worth from to $750. I understand that the nclies of the country may refuse to be brought | what hallowed associations cluster round it! it | nest of thore {who fatter and serve the appointing | The Henao in the only newspaper that I can rely | 12,/8¥or of thelr theory, an article which, as » whole, ia | new colonists from China are to werk for thore who 1c Sate euch combinations as may repel them in the most | waved in glorious triumph when Bainbridge, Decetur, | Power, and who are impelled b; ed | more than by ment against themselves; which, besides, oon- un argu " earnest conviction of their incompatibility with the Perry, Hull, broke the charm of Rritish invincibility | 8B honest ambition in the discharge of daty as ci- | Upon for correct and varied information from every | tains statements in physice that could not be true, and mae ocwtarsttstos’ nS ) on the paramount duties and obligations they owe the State, ocean; Stark had it at dennington, Warren at Bun- | tiens. warter of the globe, In this State the approachiag | Which, im addition to this, propeunds a theory be- puarraarare we have too many evidences before us, and too de: | Ker Hill, Gaten at Saratoga, Sumpter, Marion nod Greene | . We reject this principle and practice, not only for | fait elections Sean shite Was patrol.” MSE | fore ‘which their own “must utterly fall; and ‘The Mercantile Libel Suit. cided am experience of the fact, pot to know that this | jn the South, and Washington bore it aloft and stood | the reasons we have given, but also because we deem © Sappapaar to crown all, should report @ conversation which they 10 THR XDITOR OF TRE HER. bas grown to be a great evil In the country, and one | under ite ample folds when he sealed our nation’s inde. | it to be of dangerous influence in enlarging and | Several candidates are in the field xlready for » nomi- | have just announced could not, have taken place—seoms svegtd which claims the most earnest efforts for its correction. | pendence on the plains of Yorktown, It ia now, asit was | *trenghtening the Executive power. We have had | nation. Senstor Dawson, whe is regarded bere as a sort | Almost too ridiculous for belief, The whole affair is too Tamer Borpixes, New York, March 10, 1855 We know that the Catholics of the United States have f tionalits too many occasions to observe this influence employed glaring an evidence—I will not say against “ spiritual- In your notice this merning of the libel suit i been brought into a strong array for political action on emhally, oie fig 4 tm pre. | in making war upon hovest, independeat and capable | of Kinderhook huekster, though on s smaller scale than | frm”—dut of the blindness of ite devotee ja fy | the tcpuhe Court rosaes th aval ram M4 mere than one notable occasion. We know that they | served, strengthened and perpetuated, as the bricht | men, who baye been found’ not sufficiently pliant to | the great original, is desirous of being ran, and is using | my taking any other step than that of exposing it to the “ cény 4 be have been imove! in these enterprises by the force of | jinks of a chain that has no end. aad to'thia, before ail | the executive will; have seen it too ofter exerted to | all his powerand influence to obtain a nomination, It ix | world. which I appeared as a witness, you gave to the pul Mf gent ae: Guanes ee ea are not without | the rest, we pledge our unalterable faith and the whole | ¢ontrol tbe action of th Co-ordinate depaximents Of | not thought, however, that he will be taken up. Apart | 4,20 sompiats thie singular history, allow me to Sp et ean de genres Gothen dhbrationaigd) , rengest lor are F go" ment ; oftener to enforce a servile wu! 4 ju 4 in layi fore his readers mainly impeiled to these attempts by a re 10 os power of the American party Saission, in ‘all subordi Spb known in | fret ial Of mye tele, pabiehes tee letter trom bis contempt of court, with liberty to go at large \ ; to the worst designs of | {tom his want of ability, his vote on what andize their own community and give it control, as RESOLUTIONS. party leaders. Georgia ax the Copper bill would doubtless defeat him J.B. Austin, of this city, with a statement | Mondsy, and then to report my appearance to a are able to achieve ft, in the administra 1, Resolved, That the highest civic duty of an Ame- We believe, therefore, that an upright administration | now, ax it did on a former occasion. Judge Andrews. the article for what it ia worth. In his | Sheriff. True that I have been in that gentiems tee of the civil affairs of the ‘country, We per of government demands’ that honest, faithful and capa- Q : ustody, to whom, as to the Court, I feal gratef. ceive them to be actuated by a sentiment of hostiity te the predominant Protestant spirit which our origia and laws have infused into the structure of our govern- meat, and we cannot but see that their ultimate aim ani ble public servante home and abroad, should fill | Whose financial abilities are well known wherever he is tye pisces of honor, profit and trust—that they should not | known, it is thought would like to make » run, but he * its truth, Thorstt, | From the motives of plaintif’s counsel, and the n. ure dismissed from employment for ihe exercise of & | decidedly slow in everything bat gathering pence, | 0thing in it too marvellous for him to believe; and, | ¢f the question which alone I refused to anawer, Mr commendable independence, #o long as by their conduct | The Hon. A. N. Stephens has spoken of. He is, no finally, settles the matter, #o far as he O'Conor, counsel for defendant, at once odjected, pre. Aepe is to acquire, through the influence of the foreiga | States. they shall not impair the usefulners of their service. t 1 i ry sn additonal prefix, dated November 4th, in which he | »jous tomy giving expression to i clement in our population, a power over our institations | And to this end we hold it indispensable. that every fe believe that the power of appointment shouid be | ‘erebtity and grent abilities ws arstavesmen hace jactiy | Publishes a report of s spiritual conversation about the | the other, Kunesi on'both tides Steupted = cancers whieh shall, at least, be able to mould them into accord. | citizen who has the privilege of voting in elections | exercised with scrupulous care to prevent the patromage | made him so. But he, it Tknown, declines, and | *%Air between himee Lane, containin ment, when the objection was overruled ance with their own interests, if not wholly to subvert | should be acquainted with the constitution, both by a | of ment from ever being brought into conflict | js in favor of the Hon. Cha ; other curious announcements from the latter, by the Court and the admissibility of the question #u- p Isat to the effect that further communications were to come | tained. Again was the question at, whe Teese ever ane soweit | {rom him through me, J merely desire, by way of pa- | 10 Court and counsel, I declined to answes’ The genes that nothing but the whip | Temthesis, to inform Judge Fdmonds and his friends that réer, and again did I refas. ‘number of | [*aid all lwished to say in ‘the Eventful Nights’ — ig the Court that I had not the nder severe | that I consider Mr. John F. Lane excecaingly dead, and | most distant ides of offering to it the slightest dis euch as etend in the way of their demgns. capacity to read and understand it in the langu: in | with the freedom of election. o The Catholic influence in the United States is the | wich it is written, and by euch longand familiar inter. | Aad, fivally, we believe that the dignity and prosperity | LOW yas defeated at th preduct of s Pog iden and may be measured by | course with the country and its institutions as ix mecos. | of government are most surely eustained and promoted | known at home the progress of Catholic emigration. They have ai. | sary to imbue his mind with the distinctive American | by a wise and kindly toleration of honest difference of | nq spur of the p vanced side by side; and the increase of both is | perseption of the nature of free government, and with | opinion, aud by the acknowledgment of this right as the | the opposing party ty jockeys prevent a lar m voting for b striking manifestation of the establishment of a dis- | that sentiment of attachment to it which shall render | true national American fesling. 6 that I do not intend to write another fiction in which | respect in so doing. Acting under the i tinet and formidable foreign element which, in later | him at all times its effective friend and supporter. 10, Resolved, That the American party, in recalling | tevtint Sai ‘4 pre eitlewed that he on Sy he shall figure, tod now, that. the plaintin's counsel wast ‘wereliny years, hae assumed « position of great sigai joe in That with this view of the qualifications for citizen. | the government of the Union to the principles of | feted, He is the “ sobleet Roman of them all,” I find also, that after the second half had been re- | from ual recognized and legal course in @¥idence the oly politic. It organization ia foreign ; its | abip, we proclaim it to be a fundamental precept of our | ite founders, revert with affectionate concern to “ GEORGIA, | published im the Sacred Circle, the editor of the Christian | and that | considered, and am still of the same opinion, agents, guides, and directors, are in great part foreign; | republican system, that America shoul. be ‘governed | the precepts of Washington, as the sacest and wisost _ "| Spiritualist, for fear it should not be thoroughly place’ | that the question was altogether foreign to my duty aa its paramount attachments are foreign; ite moral, if | only by Americans, guide, both for our foreign and domestic policy, and St. Patrich’s Day. vefore the believers in the new doctrines, and those who | a witness, and, may I add, legaily unconnected with ot its political allegiance, ts foreign: an'l ite ambition | 2. Resolved, That whilst we have full confidence in | in concurrence with these, adopt his warning ageinet 70 THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD, Nero wavering, republished it again, and, to settle all | the issue before the Court ‘and jury, caused me not tr) is to effect mena change in the social constitution of | the strength of ou: nationality, aa it ia cherished and | all interventions in the affairs of foreign States, anc ont cavil, writen an article nearly » cola to prove | be coerced, and for thus acting my conduct ie public’) ‘the country as shall assimilate the putlic policy and | defended by our native citizens, and, with scarcely leas | especially in those of European nations—rebuking all | 1 see there are great preparations making for the cele: | that’ it is utter folly to disbelieve in “the kventful | construed into ® contempt. Convineed of thie tr: 7 ‘the pri habdtts and opinions of the nation to the | attachment, maintained by numbers of citizens of foreign | de ues of every class and name, wae would lower | bration of St. Patrick's day. That {w all well enough; but | Nights’’ as « narration of facts. ferred the displeasure of the Court to be visited ‘i ® Church which is itself, as regards nine- | birth, wno by long domestication have been identified the sbudard of tried moral and intellectual training for | 1 hear that some of St. Patrick's worsbippors are en I fear that I am encroaching on your space, but the | me—again disclaiming any thought of diares; “ position in which I find myself demand deavoring to have the flags @ying frem the City Hall and | Pine of tenths of our people, essentially a foreign power. The | with our mative American population of the United States ean- vietion tl wet look upon thie inf as ft ie from alien sour concentrating ite energi creating an organization 4 le, we are yet deeply impressed wi con- | the high places of trust in the republic; who would in the ext Tsordinary concourse of aliens | barter away their birthrights for the emoluments of of. fed and strengthened | which recent inducements have brought to our land; | flee, or dereerate our flag by placing it in the hande of | other public buildings. That, as an American, | consider vl see it so assiduously | in the peculiat incompetency of many of them, | restless and demoralized propagandists, to plunder in | as not well, and should not like to see anything of within ite circle, ant | from education and habits of life, to become tho: | the name of liberty; preserving pure and uncorrupted | kind. If foreigners wish to celebrate certain d igntd to give it unity of | rough American citizens; in the attraction which, | the public conscience—by confining ourselves to just | their own, ket them do so; but let them not seek & word or two | roover than surrender a principle which experience) é mviction told me I had s perfect right’ & even at the sacrifice of myyervoual 1, iat is ealled conte . P 1 the Court may hesetepiate Frode pened dosh i 6 Janation from mi tes in hia letter that there is ‘much doubt gin the minds of some of our community as to T snid article in fiction or fact,’ that be knows believer me to be ‘entirely incapable of giving assured unintentionally #0, { T porseased me of Offering to ite auth pose and great command of means—they cann: bot from their numbers and their facility t and ceful relations with all nations, as faras their | Americans to join with them in any way—if t tion to falsehood as this would be alt or contem; this without something more than Wintrust te mislal, thay offer to the ambition of demagoguer, who feades towards us will permit, bat wo farther, and not | they will find themrelver mistakee—it b ‘were it not true, and one calenJated to do so mueh in- | tend to justify the one Kpuevesi cae ties, on Tn irem, at least, to be admo have not #crupled to mike use of them av allies to secure | refusing the ¢xpression of that sympathy, which is | often already. Also, I think the autho: jury.” I find myrelf, therefore, reduced by this either | and that you have reported me committed for conc, of extending \ts political sims | selfish ends: in the frequ vidence they afford of | natural to the historical memories and national renti- | that the (foreign) mil!t do net carry powder to the necessity of remaining silent, and thereby imply- | 1 will ask of you to make reom for m explanation, ¢ heiz incapacity te app: the right of ea ment of our people | belle, ag J understand they did last year. eb B sg that The Eventfo) Nights ration of facts, | oblige P. EL®OOD Mere ‘ i a a ee alll