The New York Herald Newspaper, June 1, 1855, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 6853, MORNING EDITION—FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1855. PRICE TWO CENTS. — the ive liberty to maxkint or who have referred to {ts records, know ‘That's the cheese.’ and great cbeering ) Hamanity, | that my father wasone of the most cherisned men ENS SCS C eae policy, justice, all procisim that the weery wanderers | that Tammapy ever bad emong its sachems, We have she! taken to our shores; ex, ey and ourown | met bere to celebrate a victory of cemocracy over faou- WHE UNTERRIFIED JUBILANT, AND SAM NOWHERE, | political institutions bave established that the mea who | ticis ’ save Se me who cig, the men who labor are erate saioninoctiaes e bone emigration; bet if € hed, f should much prefer that ¢ taken the catacombs of Know Nothi ughtor. thove who came hers should be «worn to slidetonse, than { There never was a Southern issue tS tals omen ‘4 2 bave them remain as atiens in ourmidst. (Applause.) | Whieh the Irishmen have not been found foremost Gone his victory, ox thas it is alleged, aad with come show of trath, thata large iwaperiing Seathers institutions. I think I poe the of , hp sucoesa’ with him; ‘ot | portion of those come to this country, imsteaiof | reeding of a foreigner, named Lafayette, ping wceeed wii very of | gOlng where labor ia scarce, remain where 7 is least (a. | at Bay, tm the Vingiatw i'band of Beitas! — for what else can we call this ne eal jorthy chairman, in alluding to it, has made use of | alove s victory of t w, the muscle and strength of the | clarsic figures; but can think of nothing ao indicative | democratic prin lidaves wi ue dezocradio part 8, effected Lb demand. some of them may be uneble to go: but no | a b.wt of by Li soldiers, and without them Amerca would be as | of its ridiculous character as a little anecdote which y associstions, so frequently scoident: mavter, & e masa of them go Westward y. The Old Wigwam Siluminated, ry ago; whereas, with them, ehe ia | occurred in the State of Georgia We have all beom | Teel? dovoribe er dofine the political vontim theamulvan eher the pesires, to mountains aud #66 vale | to foreigners: Vingiats bee's nt (ongotia wn if; and T sine world. (Applauve.) \¢Ams- | afraid of Know Notbingiam I candidly admit that six | yidvals who.are ranged under them Isys of the West. greater portion thus prepare | here new to thank Virginia, im the namo of the ceme- ientoiew Just loox, gentlemen, at tuis | weeks ago 1 quaked in my shoes at the prospect ‘and Tkuow that thou themselves to beeome good Amsrican citizens, aad the | cratie world, fox what she ‘bes just achieved. Though Speceh of Capt. Rynd John 6 ¢ is pot people on the face of | for the contest of 1556, because the Know No- | rej ite sucocss. Let it, Progenitora of sturdy Americans. But it must be | there are corses at the Crimes, aod the the fool of es, apt, Kynders, Jon COCUANE, | the glove who occupy their aborigiual soll uarixed with | things seemed to be epreading with trrmeadous ra idity ‘caching canvass in cocfessed that there are scme—and I want son | France teies to forges the slaughter of his troops thers 7 otler races, who tate any rank in tre phalanx of ma | througtout the whole Union. Well, in Georgia, ouc jumph way crown our efforts, Lot our posi. | to tisten to me patiently—there are some, Iam | end o; no England Messrs. English, of Va. and Indiana, tions. Leek at the bessted Engl oh power. How are tas pane Torn sometimes dissipate, and got yo defined, our oauco thoroughly discnased, and 7 te ans ous he Ciey organizations, bearing Buehingbass fel Ang Ayn IG peed phy Judge Morton, Geueral Nye, &e, English composed! Of the Briton with his paiated skin ? e time since there were three young men, scions o/ Sf site Sneh be hie and Now name of their former mationalties long after they | auc mony soctle Back teats sotip oe inane of the Aye Tee Pe aed Seen tes, b apenag reper Vis Somat theme eee Ad — of ie mite veu in the front rank of pea Pinaerinng Bowe fee wn be erm peresiens; Frnabe, the Theiss, and in the rmeets of Rome; ————~ * ¥ rf ou ollar, with no cr ne 0! 4 fy end thi e, e e native portion, ible, " ind tog asiner companies mvt te foe Sig_| thom arwe‘t, Mad teers ae be So ime wetrantlegFaxponss. | tnt {5's aateahaed cater—ud sar wit | Aoktbene’ iran wil ah comme, (Apoaens Letters from Jobn Van Buren and John | pity ofanation. Look at France Is shy composed 0 | work fo devise ways and means by whicu they might LETTER OF JOHN w’KRON, the approbation of none who iook at the oath of alle- [| surance fromthe triumsh © in Mekeon. the aboriginal rdce? No. Look at Italy. No Looka | pay their botel billa, and get out of the piace. He New Yorx, May 31, 1865. Giavce properly, ‘There are others again, who, haviog | victory of Virginia is a sure hope anf a certain Greece—in a word, look at every mation on the fac according)y proposed to his companions that they should Genrvenen :—The olection which has just closed'in Vic | tecsyed from being trampled down at Lome, when the; to the success of the cause of maakind (é anpisi Fees the ¢ Jobe. ane we wield the Sachin 3 of the geople pet ome Bula struck off, sanousting thet they would wot f cesay of consrapulation Wy tb come here, in the exuberance of thete spirit at {coe |. | plause, during which Mr. Doheay resumed hia seat. of the ¢ are they who have ved from the ai ret aghtexdidit » tremendous animal—the gyascootis. ‘, tpg ov free sotl, where king nor tyrant can no longer 201 read OPEN AIR MEETING. the former occupants, and by « comingling of They got cut thelr bills anrouneing that in che eveaing | &i,tueeeh® or to the piinciplos vindicnz0d by opirees them, become the, Rercest of republicans, Gad oe tyes in Lee DS Fave become the arbiters of the destinies of mank: they woold exbibit at s certain hall, for tweaty-fve nds the triumph of religious fceedom. ‘The victory | "20 «peal about correcting errors which they say exist | tie! Jnat been received from Philadelphia, as tole Leck, too,at the former republics, How was it with th cents arent, the , one of the most tremsn. wi i in our system of governmest. Now, this they have as | lows :— cr ¢ true principles of the asd more particularly the opp ment to the King of Great Britain, who @UNS, HUSIC AND FIRRWORKS, What was tbe or i of Rome? struggles of Home for bie., &e., &o. and 00 wet your bosoms three Do you pot recollecttue | cous anmals that er been seen by anybody—no thin afew years past, | meragerie had-ever encompasced it within its teat—it b quiskened pulsstion Purnapenrnia, May 31, 1888, Mexring, Tasamany Haai— men of the birth plaoe of liberty perfect right fo do, an either yow ort; but ther®, 87° | Cy, inay Deuconars seme who attemp* eect a) is by aT ether d parsed | under thels former naticcality.. Batif they hese not | ,,2f ents. thousand Wit devoured all that came in its way, beasts and human goed mod at the thought of those strogglea for the restoration of"! beinge—it was so tremend z thee egulation Virsiuie tock, up ‘acise' Mite hor’ Sinmey | learned, a they will lenro, teat this country ie mot a | Minto irs desc sat eet (ARAM EE jmmedtately was grand demonstration at Tammany Hall | Hi¢t9,10 that Rowan republic? And yet, what was ; galcnica y Ror aria on the Held primitive democsaey. but a counter whose inatitutions | pain. F. J. M’CAPPRBY. There me in her inception but ap asylum for ths oppress: 5 ing less’hing grow; jown ® royal tyrant, so now ave grown out of the peculiar ion in which it was Jast evening to glorify over the recent rout of the Know | —nye, even for the eriminals of the earth? Upon that es, whizlwinds round fe Folly irvomtn, trampled under foot placed, mud by its colonial meressitice—if' they have | Pele Corel ne icrabtianideos: e forces ia: Virginia, and the triamphant election | bene’ was reared the proud goptentrecture of Homan n it shakes, it quakes the earth from pole the caious not learned that 'y will, And those offences, R Nberty, in the other days of that Roman to pele. Of Henry A. Whe as Governor of tne Old Dominion. Keyubllc; "an ‘tho’ stretched forth: the broad mgis | (Laughter) Thave not a copy of their shewbill, but I About 7 o’clock P, M. the ‘‘Empire pocket-piece,’’ as | of ber protecting arms to all nations, as she ad- | remember that that was a partof it. Well, of couree, the ‘the brass gun of the kmpire Guard is facetiously denom- | venced with conquering strides, the banal of the | exhibition ol en animal of that extraordinary characteg, Anated in the call, commenced:to make iteelf heard from | Nerd over became citizens by her triumphs ; ao | Grew an immense crowd of people, | 0) 9 Cone much so that in the Latin or Roman language but | young friends who bad got ‘broke,’ Mo Park, and the noise quictly collected acrowd of | cne word was known as distingu'shing strangers | keeper and took the roncy, and the others stayed be- patel 28 SAlecs, of all ages and political complexions. Soon after, | from enemies. The word postis, which expressed the | hin ied scenes. As soon as the house was pretty well he body; with such means no good object | We admit the services and dewption of Commodore Barry, My fellow cit zens—I cannot say, as some have sall ® band om the balcony of Tammany Hail divided with | ide# of a6 er, also expressed that the atranger was | arcembled, and the quar: were bere had two | evercan be sought. Truth loves the light. Froud. wrong, | Lafayette and the o'her distinguished foreigners who | to-night, that I thank the Chairman for iatrod me an enemy. All mankinc were Roman citizens, except | wlo bad been behind the scenes jum) to their | and error, can only thrive in darknoss. What true Ame- | fought in our revolt it should not be considered in- | here to-night. Neither you nor I may feel much ol 4 The noisy gun the attention of the fast increasing | they who were at war with Rome. Look agein at Greece, | wa} nd the other left the door and wat upen the | rican could join a political organization which is olamp- gratitude to those noble men if we find i necossury or | to bim for that. (anghieg, ) I come here for the growd. Im front of the platform was spread, in huge | an Kgyptian colony; and tdere is but one instance on re- It would not do, of course, for them ail to leave honorable mind. ‘The dark lantern gecspitacs ce Me | think it proper to change the term of naturalization. 1 | time in my life—I have no {al claim on this hall—t Jetters on canvass, the devico— cord, fellow citizens, which enables us to trace the ori- ce for fear of pursuit, and some good excuse must | Wire termstio pew foe to the coustry and | @™ satiated with the term as it st iveat | amarort of interleper—(A voice: No sir-os.)—but I > gin of the Know Notbingiem of the prevent day, and that | be made to the assembly. Accordingly, the one who | to the enlightened age in’ which far ean | that conclusion solely from motiv pediency and | come bere, gentlemen and fellow citizens, to ny is an origin which datea it from the cradle of tyranny. | had ected as door-heeper rang up the curtain, and | judgo ofits or, avization its lead mposed of mea } State policy, The question is cne that stands by itself | comgratulations with yours om the democratic the spawn—the ery 0&8 ‘of the Joulest principle of | with dishevelied hairanc extended fingers thus addressed | who could hofd no position in any respectable psrty—who | on its own merits; but the other point, which is o) achieved in the old parent State of Virginia. ( Applat ® TAMMANY HALL ALWAYS RIGHT, ° ism over the rights and privileges of men. | the suditnce who were impatiently waiting for the won. | fave, in fact, been expelled from political eombina'ions bav- | sition to one sect or religion, can ever be suecesstally The name of Virginia I honor. I remember that in her © fled to this last | defended, whether that proscription consists inex:la- | honored soil li Twonty thousand Wise democrats in and about Tommaag Sida Aval gir td we Se Bh ecto aed oe ee Wall, sond greeting back to thoir brethron in Philedelphis, (Cheers) On the ether band, in justice to our opponent: (Enthusiastic cheers. ) Tien debe td Lead Serta to beget — General Jas. W. Nyx was next introduced, and after leughter)—I mi say, some of the a ener i favor of retaloing the uaturalisation Iaws ao they are, | ‘Bre cheers being propored for sn\ given him, he pre- were not more pertinent to the is While | ceeded to say:— names, has ever ’ } ti @ceccccescocccccccoceeoccce Boccccceccc oc coco ccocc ooo oe: | (Cheers.) Suffer me to detain you for a woment withan | derful apimal to appenr—‘Fellow-citizens, men, women | !>f Preper objects in view, and who. ; ¢ ashen of a Jefferson, of a Madison, Bistorical anecdote. In Eygpt, once a land of darkness, | and children, save yourselves—tae gyascootis is' loos.” | Mantientises with this moroment—ane are sion from office or fromnaturalization. (Cheers) But | of aHenry, and of a host ef other worthies. i. i fanaticism. 10 trace of which w: 0 removed, 6 | who x) er Siigameae act A eh Ley “thls man sacrificed | cheerig.) ‘The democratic party, te whig party; the | will be branded hereattor ce unworthy of tho cealdeneo of | purposes, ‘New Taenin reencd co’ peor cies, | frumn he’ aeaniootn ote epentean tof aa i¥t taomee man whose ni was Busiris, this man sacrificed, B-) ‘Sy ry purpo: I say in reg: to Ist loose, if you | from the ingredient: . ee ee00900000990998999902 | with the most Bhumen torture, ali the foreigners with: | republican purty, the anti-slavery party—all boon Aetee iba noappeehensiom, that the ravings of bl. | will, upon them the Iagignation of thelr fellow citizens | to me to be made up of men who had lost ry VIRGINIA DEMOCRACY o | in the kingdom to his god, Jupiter. Jupiter, gentlemen, | told—‘save yourselves, the gyascootis is loose,” but | Hirds of tke Amorisan people. “They may be mi ut | @md the thunder of the law. But if you look at the | all hope of success in regular Party o1 tome. ® ms © | you may not be acquainted with, (laughter) but in | when the truth came cut from the bag and from behind | the moment they are convicced of thois unter they ‘a | mere tnfluence every minister exerts over hia congrega: | But they were not able to bear the light, Faint indeod: ry feel idet ce eanioiens, o | those days, that very respectable gentleman was the | the curtain, the yarcootis existed ohly in the | resume their wonted course, which is guided by trathand | tion, it is past all law to control it. ‘There is a tendency | must be that vision which will disnipate and melt under fo representative in what they called Olympus of ail the | ‘mogination of broken-cown politicians, who want- | honesty, sions, all the powers and ali ths selfish- | ed to obtaim place, just as it existed only Te mie frank parkineatian in icked heart, and to Jupiter were these | in the imaginations of those young gentlemen | {in(etey nen, irom participation im the ma by this in‘amous despot, Bastris, | who wanted to obtain s small sum of money. | man's conscientious mode of worshiping his Makor i to priest worship in every community, more especially | the light of democratic trath. among the ladies, who always lead the gentlemen by the | could give it evens faint existence. It was like one ef nose. (Leuyhter.) The lambs of the flock doat upoa | thore ephemeral existences which cies as soon as the Rev. Mr, Context, whove syle is 80 sweet, whose | is born. It has gone out—and it will only leave @ manner is co gentle, whose atep is so cat like, and whose oncoive no more monstrous pro} 2 ° @oecocceccoccoeccooocco co 0° | vices, all th On cither ride of this were to umaiter transparencies, | Bets of men's i with the mottoes respectively— This was the ori ft Know Nothingsm, and the egg | No; fellow citizens, we have a nobler purpose anda no- | the badge of dislionor, farewell to reapect for the 00 of putricity behind it. ig! ve a broader e @©00000000000000000000 co0ce | thus planted in archives ot Egyptian palaces has de- | bl vhs ane uw eos Rene to the oe party, Pd, the country—farowell to Anse le eae over bis congregation is as great as that of the | philanthropy ou this su’ of Ces gt me —_ er Rew moveme: re! Vati 5 \- prin< . thas © vows wrrm rerouemAnce Axo Prosomrrmiox. © | mitent gathered from Ennion soramtie werigteaied iy | demosraeyhave s higher sim and. grander parpose, | fertienrot the nfenceo: Keman Cato fevers The thusdere of ‘Mis mandates do not roar ao | kind of chaiity taut] care nok whore a. iaun waa bore ° © | the bosom of our roll, aoe Nothingism has flourished | Why, Imet @ young friend to-dey, and he said to me, | Mon otthe ratio "7 n ; | loud, bat they are as powerfal in their church as thoso of | Give mo the man, I care not Whether he was bora a Ire- 9900000080099000000090900005 | and blossomed throughout the whole North, untu it | ‘Don’t you think there are a good many democrats | York no Roman Catholic bas held tho office of Governor, | Pius JX. Papal Rome, Protestant England, Catholi: Spain, | land, where genius haa its brightest glow, or whether oii fice ‘at Al: | Puritan Massachusetts, Quaker Pennaylvania—all pi waa born in stolid Germany, where genius is dag out of Mayor | tecuted and all were persecuted. Saul stoned Stepthe the inch, A man is de if free: i i And— bas met with a nipping frost in the State of Virginia, | among these Know Notbings—and what shall we do | Lieutenant Governor, or any of the State (Loud cheering ) Why entlemen, these modern Know | without them?’ But, said1, 1 kmow not one; andif | bany. Not one ever held yi 9090000000000000000000008 | Nothings—there modern Busirises—date from the cradle | there ie any, racy oe eo can & ares mak te bis of thls. olty, Bi be, Ermeral Gotorament ect gee Bete eruciBed Peter, aes paenecnig Reto oe seen es wie roadie 5 8 Baperie By alld “4 i ced incl nto arty for going into such an organization ?—one that is ® } vin perrecuted Servyetus; Puritan seg eboues | who turns bis back upon his hom 2 8 XO RELIGIOUS TESTS IN A FREE COUNTRY. : ai eae Apil ronal Ben te god i. wer latecicn takin Ooa: "No, sir; we must atand by de- | 88,the head of a peti oe Bm eR Permouted Obadiah Broadbrim, while he kills the | of bis fathers, whe fenounces oud deapotia 8 and ©20000000000000090000000000 they have encountered an opponition and a deadly de- | mocracy as we bave received it from our fathers, auflwe | sncient creed from this Stal n serv! a mem. character of his oppozenta with lying murderous | comes @ shelter under mocrat 7 feat, destructive to all their future hopes. (Cheers.) | Tequire nothing elve. It is sufficient for us. It in grati- | ber of the House of Repreees ves. No Collector, Naval | inuendoes. I: is the nature of the beast, and it | tions? We are Americans because we cannot help Two still smaller specimens of the sume kind of ora | Having thus traced their origin and characterized their | fying, and it will be gratifying, to the democrats of the | Officer or Surveyor in this city, bas ever bolonged to that | cepnot te altered. We cannot stop this by enactments; | it; you foreigners are Americans from choice. We have ‘Ment bore respectively the mottors— prinaipies let me ray to eae fn conclusion, in the Ian- | Country to learn that such an assemblage as this was | cbuich. Re oreee minister, telscted from this State hes | the true golicy for us to purene is not only not to op- ia no sacrifice for our privileges; you have made bit guage of a suggestion which 1 have heard made here to- | held in New York. Our fellow citizens are holding a | fret beam altached way at ihe | in this State | prose a particular sect, but to prevent the domination | ter sacrifices for them; you have ieft your home be © © 0000000008000000000000000 d I take pleasure in info olie Church | Cf the strong over the weak. policy of the people | cause you were under a despotism, and have come te Ly ‘© | night, that it is much Letter you should be Wise deme- | meeting in Philadelphia, an P Ng | in the Union isto be found. How can there be any reason mg ‘ peo; mse y a 4 " ou that a gentleman who is vei well known intl hem @ ti ¢ | in such acontest should be to divide and conquer. No | ¢pjoy republican freedom. I honor you in your cl 4 URW Rusu iaa Hy ivobry| etily , Ban Matinee, ONeS fonenten £69 20 those assembled here, has won very hand- pf omer re ® trace" | meter what may be the religion, no matter what may | you ‘have Uoze well. If you do not Yankee yo IO CCCCCCOCO OCB DODD OOO OO OOOODS 2 eome sum of money on the election of Mr. Wise—I mean time fully to develo; be the position of the minister at the altar, whether he | you may make your children bless your choice. (Laugh- Ex-Alderman Rino then read the following list of Vice ing topio; bus Lmust wot forgot that the | peat cael Mr. Charles Carriga boids forth in ehureb, pi on toge' No, fellow citizens, we have only With the reverse— jue, temple, chapel or meet. | ter.) It is the proudest boast of the country that we Presidents of the meeting, which was appzoved:— ‘one course to pursue, and that is, rally under the flag of ther is peculiarly opportune to ing house, be will a'way: an immense {ofluence over | take 400,000 mers of peace from the down-| IP eecccowccceccc sc 0 00800 0000 VICE PRESIDENTS.” femoceacy: I ould not mabevss' et mere eloquent ied sent Wag sheeia ee ion Ker givebeoue dive | bis bearers, an influence tar more omnipotent than that | espotisma Teast, and if they are not YVIRGINSY NEVE ¢ | Ward 1—Josiah W. Brown, Michael Murry. ispguege then bas been used already by another, who to ourenemics? W ton a common | exercised by German tyrants. Now let motany one here | by choice, we make them become auch. Thore is a heal- - sy gel oe 3. 2—Robert C. Moatgomery, Wiliam Micer. said the republic itrelf might die, ita glories might ex. | declaration of oppositi ‘against menof any | misunderstand entirely the cause of the late triumph in | ing power in democratio principles. They make men ° ° > 3—Charles Fletcher, ’ PG. Mulleney pire, store after stove of ite columns and monuments | country «x any particular creed. We oan all stand shoulder | Virginia, Don’t let it enter into your minds that that | love them whether they will or no. But the queerest See ee 4—William Baird,’ Florence McCarthy. Inight moulder and erumble; all the illustrious names | ‘o.shoulger in opposition to legislation founded on fanatt: | victozy was alone a triumph of the administration, or of | thing about Know Nothinglam is its proscription ea B=- that adorn the annals of our history might be forgotten, | tional rights of the South ante, | Enst an well 6—John A. Kennedy, Henry Hoftmire. per Mr. Wise, although be had to fight against Know Nothing: | I don’t care bow much pny you ha’ E fs savpert of tne € ras its measures, or that it was a mere personai triumph of | count of religion. Being a square-toed Onan find it the human heart where it, bite — Se ee SOP AF ret ASRS Be 08 06, srw ie pec? Same eMurpiay. hetann tongue aball anywhere plead yay nectege | aeninat ext eae, Peeters atite | ism with Bayly end Extra-Billy Smith loading the foroes, | If your religion is not right, yeu will soo~, » VIROINIA ALWays Wisi, ° oe. Francis Flot” Gol Dant. H Delavan, nal and constitutional liberty, that heart | ments by the government ina word, in eupport ot | Do pot either imagize it was entirely and olely avvictory | and if one set of trustees dos uot, wait you, the » AND EVER TRUK, ° ene y ehell od that tongue shall plead that that demo- {£06 o4d.fashioned democratio doctrinos, He who cannot | over Know Nothing!sm, for there was apother princip! areas will Gnd you another set. (Great langhter. ° 0—William D. Kennedy, Solomon Kipp. eracy which has lived eo many years, and which has | 'W ch doctrines is no democrat; and, at any rate, | involved, and I am glad Ican tell you here, in Tammany | It ip said, hore ia religious toler tion” Sir, at Pasevcccccccsccccecsdccéoed preted per RS trlumphed in so many conflicts, Will still ivoin triumph, y {ere are suflcient numbers who do, enpport hem 1, corth of Mason and Dixon’s line, what that principle | of giving you oflence, I repud'ate the thing, There is Besides these nois; sonst ett, rae nf echeeet.) Tregret that I will not be able to be present at your meet. | Was, and that when that is presented to the peo~ no such thing #8 religious toleration here. It is reli- ee noisy and picturesque demonstrations, 12—Terrence Maguire, D. F. Tiemann. ‘ ing to night. 1 have ments which I saanot forego. I | Virginia, their action will be is i. gious freedom. Religion is as free here as the sir whicl: the Old Wigwam was illuminated throughout the whole rae & Moteasel png ropes After Mr. Merton bad consed speaking, the following | *™ certe:n it 7,,, .- am stsombly worthy.ot the cause; and, | stitutions of Virevit eng getsiled by wo breathe; and there ig no such thing as toleration ‘extent of its front, and ‘Catherine wheels,”” Roman can- Roe vnecues Dewrieede letters were ackrowledged by the chairman, but the ou, Y has 0 ab Ora en. te] {uitrt.) Tt bad Been proclalmed from one extreme of | about it, It ts aninherent right Its « ma [= lee, fire rockets, and every variety of pyrotechnic dis- 16—Wm. F. Havemeyer, James Cassedy. reading was dispensed with;— ‘all hemor ie due, for she chivatrlo manner ia ware’ S* | he tanta otrer Cone the recent vicki oF tne | Tee ee eee a oer cavatit claims eae jure Salles ts toireagciinnlon Stxouies;. 60) attract, a ech ot ree LETTER 0: UREN, fas upheld the Bapner of the democracy. fn his ands thy | ney ae aie noe Virgists had lentned | toleration from nobody. it is entitled to it, Ikis free and to ex; the jubilant sentiments of the 18~John Murph; A.8 Mathews. ss F JOHN VAN Bi . esoutcheen ¢f Old Virginia not been dim: Bohs | that fenaticum; sit re! Iti f th titution It ise part of you, and ‘srowd, ‘press 19—Anson Herrick John G. Kipp. New Yorx, May 30, 1355. vindicated the true American principles of liberality ani | to caloulate the cost of the Urier, whenever a foreign or is @ pert of the constitu’ ? great unterrified. What with guns thundering, rockets 20—James Furey, 4 William Murray. Genriemen—f have received your inviting me to | the rights of conscience, on the soil rendered sacred by sh) | @ domestis foe should attempt to dictate to her what | s part ‘of me; but see to it that you get that kind of » 94d attend and address a meeting of dem . tenets of Washington and Jefferson. His stelworth arm ba: | she abot ‘io, And this power | religion which will bring you safe to Heaven. shooting and screaming, Catherine wheels revolving, Ro- 21—John qe Thomas McCoy. ia celebrate tl defended the vepuichre of treedom’s mightiest ebicte from | She should do, ot whatahe sbould not 10. Any Tt bares | ™ Avoice—Safe to the cther side of Jordan. (Roars ef man candles popping, ether nameless affairs 22—Michl. Connolly, George D. Davis. jemoers fa’ Vga and guy u id sled rte With great roopeet, E yale yout campoliend ah lar aut ba “tis trus it caus? ina | leughter) whowering red, blue, green and orange sparks, the The following list of Secretaries of the meoting was hci . I rejoice, my fellow eitizens, in this victory obtained musiciaas blowing and drumming, the b’hoys shouting spproved:— tl ; . t fe Teadls ar the. reorge’cisetion in Virginia is highly | Th@ President sext introduced Mr. Tuos. Duxw Eva } mask iteceiveds and thet tresipet aie Be tetas ere Re: Virginia, for this reacon—that it ia the death knell of @ bonorabli 7 LsH, of Virginia, to the meeting, who spoke as follows hi -rous organization. There is but one excuse for a SECREPARIES. ? y comac, has led them on to victory. (Tremendous ap- | den; y sand hallooing at evet} discharge, and the great crowd it | oy aetng) Dor TEE som McArthur. | Soumenvenith Bh TA It in now veatly ten years since Ilast addressed th | plause.) Gentlemen, Lahall stop hero. “I have but's | set ot mem 2 ge eR Boag front of the building pressing and swayiog end enon 2—John M French. 18—Thos. H. Ferris. bere has mever boon am occasion when | Ce™ocracy oi New York within the walis of Tammaay | word or two more to say. Before I came ia a friend | selves together in Pot the outs n—that ia, Joining in the discord, it was = curious, amusing and % Thomas Munroe. 14—Thomas Boese. oaspicnous than now. Inthe | Hall. (Cheers.) It seems to me, however, thas | hended me en article, published im one of the daily | air, where the iron tren \ebuehene e-ttme exciting scene, and one which, perbaps, can only be wit- 4—C. J. Dougherty. 15—Wm. M. Cooke. ative citizen of New ork ledtho | 1 see very nearly the same faces and witness | presces of this city, the Bzpress. (Groans, and cries of | every impalee of freedom is ruma°C7 every d " - 5—James Lawrence. 16—Jobn McCaffrey. sats aetive of the same eptbusisem now as them. (Cheers.) | ‘Don’t mind resding it.””) I do mot intend to read it | that beatae and throbs with the gusli{ag of free- onsed in its fall glory at Tammany Hall demonstrations. 6—Patrick Kelly. 17—George Could rg Sead I feel exceedingly houored by the invitation to address | all to you, but there ares few extracts— dom is pursued with the bayonet of thé Mreling sal- ‘The doors were opened shortly after 8 o'clock, and in 7—Michael Wall. 18—Maurice Daly. her own 90D, you, although 1am sensible that that honor is given Orient pesrisin amber hung, diery—there, where freedom cannot lisp wiiscut the fealf an hour after the crowd inside increased to seme 8—J. McKibben, Jr. 19—Phillip Foy. el Dioh, more to the Statein which I reside than to any personal | which I must read to you. qui $hree thousand, the hall being densely crowded, while | _ ,3—THoman Fay. oe” Ms e permanent pelicy othe | an an boner, and will endsuvor to epene to tas haat | 972% speaker proceeded to read and'commont upon » | 12etiher it secret ongaan : Bho gathering in front of the hall did not seem much T—Wedley Smith. -»«22—B.F, Falrohild, | Fevertment.. In the eevere struggle of 1844, which Taanga- may. if Tahould sey anytbing which may, excite your continued: Now, itis true that Virginial ie inodrabiy | Sem Amerien, where the ballot box Birthright of Seed, Pa u-Tho meeting having. beta now regaiat: | 8. 3 i f Virginia, and a citizen of | Prejudices or ill feelings; if you should disdain my style | Gemocratic, as the article says. She took the disease | ¢Very man--here where itis in operation, and open ‘ing! asthe whig cham mos | OF Gi:like my argument, you have an excellent remedy every month in the year foran honest expression of eat “Although Yen: | sb hand—yon cen refuse to linen, Tt ia oneot the | ‘a ste.ratural, way, and it hae been on her ever since: | tr? wishes through it—-(cheers)—here it dangerous Pririleges of American citizenship that we need aot | snd bigotied, either shows that the writer spoke what | {2 itself, apd freught with evil; and if i sten to anything except what wo like tohear. Ihave | Fo brew war alte, or elrothat he war gromie ignorsat, | Upped in, tho bud, tt might grow to deen er S ed for many gears sativa although not | ‘There is.n0 people more conversant with democratic | Fellow citizens, I have never had tue leas Captain Rrxoms, who seemed to be the leading sptrit | 1y organized, 1 will rend » telegraphic despatch which ep of the occasion, opened the proceedings, after threo | ye have just received from Philadelphia:— w@heers proposed and given for him, with ‘a tiger’ ap- Parvaparrua, May 31—73; P. M. i pended. He said:— 50 (anew I8AlAm BTRDERS. ly, in canvas fore the peogle on the cf that hybrid indescribable Know Fellow Democrats—Tho hour having arrived at which | ,(i,ctte have the following presented at your meoting to- t rty. During that time Ihave | Pren P4t.0F nue ill more edi nae? of: Supument | ter.) I seo that they kicked a man out of com ‘this meeting was called, I suppose it devolves upon me | vo THs CHAIRMAN OF THE DEMOCRATIC MEBTING aT Tam: | friendship of ¥ ain sho turned | heard much on both sidesof the question; but I tell | As io her being a secondary State, 1 have often heard | ™Y Dative city, because he made two ciphers on the en- ‘to mame your chairman. I do so at the request of the MANY HALL, N. ¥. from her own son to eustainthe true principles of free fo, you in a friendly spirit that in the canvasses in | that before It is am old £0: The State of Virginis yelope of @ letter. (Lau, nase) His name was Hub- wommittee. Before} do it, however, it may be proper ‘The democracy of FAiladelphis ageembied this ¢: ming $e Yernment, which she found represented by ® comparative | which I have borne # part I have never witnessed any ‘intained 7 ition b: telat bard. On general princip'es,1 say the; bim . | te the number of 20,000, in Independence equare, within the | stranger from ® distant State, And now, wi in which there was uch ard for tra ae a Te tonteee ce Ponition by patrlotiem, | right to kick him ‘suse he had no business there. for me to state that this isa meeting called by the citi. ‘A ‘ ‘of Virginia, saw the vi #0 much disre; ith, de | jesrning and by the intellect of her sons. (Applause. ) out, bec: g@ens—that the Democratic Republicen General Commit- | {0% 4 of the toosin of American liberty. | The desire to in. Nolled in cency, courtesy and liberality asin the Jate canvass of y, , PP (Laughter.) ButI sey that when they watch men eo ‘tee of the City and County of New York had intended to | NzC™RPS: coperatulations with their fellow democrats of ® ‘maintain. | theState of Virginia, It seemed as though men who had | A7C,J00 cannot forget that though she may pot bave | cisely in “convention, that if thay seo him make twe eall this themselves, but i asmuch as the citt- | ren'in Virginia, and pledge the Keystone Stato in her next | © Promptly | been noted bitherto for thelr courtesy and manners inad- | Heng’ seats an rome Stares East, she hus. given priney, | CiPEe% which [ could never make anything out of, they gens had called it before them, they suspended their | contest to stand by the ‘fide of the Old Dominion. sl ices these straggles | dressing the people, towards their opponents, for their ion which are a: owledged and revered, | must be a small set, I believe that Kicking out is what call, tendered us the use of this and JOHN ROBBINS, Jr., Chairman, | hi d with a generosity and liberality that | strict regard to trath and deceney—it appears that the not to bechanged because an enemy comes | ‘hey call taking the fourth degree. (Roars of laughter.) ted the hall at their expense, (Loud cheers.) | A Vorce—Three cheers for Pennsylvania, boys. (Given shed and time honored ckeed. Perspral considerations | Pave forgotten suddenly all this; and men who hi ine, for Virgisia cares nothing for the word, | No¥, herein New York, where, I think without say oge- they also appointed s committee to co-ope- | with enthusiasm ) were everywhere laid aside, Accomac, the residence ot Mr. | hitherto been accustomed to can’ State peaceably, | she must be satisfied with the sense. tism I can ay that the hong gg of the defenders rate with us. They have co-operated with us, Wise, gave his compotitor the usual whig majority. feared to go before the people uniess supported by ti : democratic principles has mm raised and will be and through the General Committee we have been | Mr. MoLxop Mcrrny then read the following resolu- | fax, the residence of Mr. Flournoy, rolled up io courage of the gladintor, or thebrawling of the bully, | The speaker sat down, and most enthusiastic cheering | raised; where strong hearts beat as eng, And ba Stent enabled py the people assembled here in this hall | tions, which were proposed and vociferously adopted:— | favor one of its proudest democratic votes. Rookinghs: ‘There were men who took part in that canvass because | in honer of the State of Virginia was maintained for | for democratic success, as even in = we will to-night, It is only just to that committee that Ishould | Resolved, That the democen York. in bro ib, and Page, the cld sonth legion of Virgitis ¢e- | there were now issues prevented, and because they were | several minute only do what Vi ‘has done to Know N make this announcement. 1 shall now present for | bling here to-night to celebrate th tio viotor; Sena Whig as. the Buskitn Duseh—sustain she domoeratio ned that theold party in'Virginia should aot be | Mr Cocurann stated that he had information that the | but we will beat them, aawe do, three to ehsirman of this meeting, Mr. John Cochrane. (Great | Virginia, and to offer their congra! pon that o cause with nxperallaled unanimity party that had adopted a system of | Hon. Wm. H. Fngiish, of Indiana, and other members of | (tremendous applause)—im moejority which we wi ‘eheering.) Those in favor of my motion will say “aye.” & lenry A. Wise, the Mpa sleet, one cause | as the result isto democrats ¢ tact and which assumed to rule Virginia. | Copgrern were in the ball, and if 80, be would respect- | acquire. I very seriously doubt, Mr. President, wnether ‘There was « tremenous shout of ‘aye’ in response, | soufttul or unforseen, but from the ‘faekiey with whieh see le to t SH a ‘The great canvass in Virginia brought in some new and | fully invite them to come up to the platform. He fur- | we will ever have a chance to do so—1 think the thing falfilled the an: be remarked that in a | ther informed the meeting that he tapaden to have in- | is dead. Caagetes) L hnow it is cold above bere and Wished to address | {rbalf written, “in what paper ik will appear re and ed to addret wi in what paper will aj i kpow, nor dol care; but it will read something disturbing elements, but it contest solely for local_offices, the opposition presses | troduced to it James W. N. teemed with, and the opposition speaxers were full of, | of Colonel Doheny, who it, be would first introduce hi wand the Captain declared the motion carried, without | frmtsea® of Vieni Bistory; and the szample aetey | jks to prosoribe by ite politieal action those who ha putting the negative side of the question. them to all, who, forgetful of the: past, or doubtful o: the | been bors in the United Staten: ox who pretest cecthennee ‘They do: toacting erat, jony thet assoot- sbuse of the democratic national adminis:ation il Mr. Joux Cocumaxx, on presenting himself, was re- | {0t0te havo wavered for # moment in their allegiance to the religions fait as No: ’ + responso which | thing, it is true, was ur; specifically; but there was ‘Col_Doueny then came forward and was loudly cheer. | this:— poe gn FO BT ok an hy otens oc se roaing mae othe | Ses ven tem 22 tr Recah | az,ghamcance at tacasm an malisaus nusndows ie | ed. Me anid bewabed to tay afew words her Inco Died on» sre. day—what me, a listen 4 that the true principles of reputlican igglos for om in | yelled sgainst the President and his Cabinet, sequence of certain remarks which had fallen from the jovbing. you will allow , before yor principl pal the Old Wort the causes of re. It was lamented by noon ied Zo the other speakers who will address you, to direct h the democratic party alone has been | volution—they anow ing of declaration of indepen- A Voick—Three groaus for the Hxratp. last #) er. He (Mr, English) had said that Know Unhonored, and had s pauper’s grave. attention briefly to the object ot your assembling cover flow nothing of the meang thick our inde- | This call was not responded to, and the speaker coa- | Nothingism was not without a cause, 1 agree with | (Rears of ieugute dere to-night. You are called together upom no ordi- fran ‘enstoion. pe pas seapieet—s hing of the founds. | tinued zi him. There is s certain caure for Know Notningism, Such will be the end of it here, you may rely upom it. occasion. No unusual disturbance {n the politica Hon of the United Sts Te SN (heel bat not the cause which he has assigned. There aro | There is nodoubt about it. Lat not Irishmen regard fs Of the alt or of the State asks that you should assemble ‘and bigh ability in ® | that they know, if Jess than ‘great do net come here as the charpion of any set of | brave: every ion and traitors in every cause. | let not Germans get too uproarious about it; just keep ‘here to-night; nor are you asked here to assemble be- ited on prin- | men reat history of Virgizia, ‘Th jefferson’ one = bat I allude to this as showing the spirit in | These was Gavazzi, the Jesuit traitor, on the one side, quiet, the Yankees will take care of that thing. (Ge. eran eet pot | ting througt the Union for onquerable, that every | of Vitginis’s noklest sons, anda champion of the world’s | W! that canvass was conducted, and as showing | who came over here to kindle religious animosity. There plause.) Donot fret about it, I tell you, it is a x democratic victory in the State of Virginia. No: whether openly or seoretly | freedcm, drew the declaration of our independence, which | One of the elements agsinst which we bad to con- | is Brownson, the atheist traitor, atthe other, who was cog,—(laughter,)—and when I say that we would have he vi Virginie have been frequent ime ely ond mi gainst our royal oppressor, amongst the chief of | tend. Thero were s number of gentlemen who had | converted to catholicism. ¥ finished it here, 1 say that I am it received ite Seri Dat you are enllod Here 40, gckepente tee, | Enitived, That that he had © endeavored to pre formerly acted with the party, but who, because of | A Voice—‘‘And the Angel Gabriel ” hter. death blow in Virginia, we should like to have Gefeat of Know Nothingism. and ‘sin i for purpose ol certain private ends they in view, not assist Mr. Ye ind there is the Angel Gabriel too. | dealt it ourselves. (Applaure.) I havo said all that® for naturalizs tion of foreigners, refusin, cnecurage their aa ns hit and rei f ri abit us. They acted im this way because they were not .) And the sum of their religion ts to toach re time. ae ft is selected ‘ta the standard. ecter-ihey. 1efteed to bear | Cuthdlion’cad Protestants, so ge te hears Parr E Ba Rey AR oy Ag hake deherieiaa “de fet ehtmkawsate, | Suited, Lecacattae ct, rae | sey Cheetos cl ta en mpi en ¢! 16 cont le adait al a, to not whether 101 ane sl or contend with a foo whose blows were felt, but whose Geo tachi a tly donc ; F 5 great resu ving of caps.) The triumph of democratic les | of the South Rue Stare oe vi is 0s common ‘as the light of Pied od bey ‘ay, but the defeat of this dark conspiracy was reserved | tj0n* bY. For Virginia alone, First the (Empl rasp it, pledzes herself to forms of pol itical error or ranati- “North” and ‘South’ sball become obsolete til 3 t. (Laughter) But I am a democrat; and mhe struck down the monster in her path, and Kborty | "R. will stand shoulder to Sri COOH Beh ba papa fou Who. pantered te ths owe to thask the meble aon of the South fer risk ‘The Cuarnuan next introduced to the meeting the Hom pT ecb ne dnd Te ont antl wo hy Rg ee ad est interests, and 9 {co that was illiberal, ungenerous, | for s proreribed people his position and his political | William H. Englieh, M.C., of Indiana. Ho was receives . Rraiarare Steier aes | Sacer Rae Mares aca ie racine est | wen teins tare mantnese | Reten great Naamceesptne Se | wih ed em Wim hey eb oa was Virginia which gave in former times « champion to | Exhibited to the Americen people in alltbeir treasonable and "for the evtablishment of Teligious | ing’) "A man’ who came before the people’ with | ove section of foreigners hore, and l can say that if Vire | , entlemen—Iam a.stranger in your eit S———— he liberties of America. Is is Virginia which has given | hideou eorniy. ards, t ait hte frankness and boldness—who, winterer may | ginia bas done us Stayer Dow, we have done Vi ps rag on maat iay toe canine! boyhood, of have been his past life or views, stood there | favors before, and shall do ber favors again. zaked to the world, who feared’ notning bat | vever wes a time when the iostitutions of Virginia, or te Saiy 05 wages op Lemaoe vonee doing Mags” and who despised nothing but fraud and | South Carolina were endangered that there were not the lating the roble of Villany. (Renewed cheering.) The result is before you | voice and the votes of Irishmen to support them. (Loud | Jima." hor Siai nee ae you know {t—you have met bere to-night to celebrate it, | cheers.) My friend from Virginia (Mr. English) will re- | Ty gentlemen, has sent a dheill Appia and your cheers as they reverberate from old Tammany, | memter that when a lawless mob, by a clergy- ‘e heart of the democracy of this nation. ty nomer,te do. | will re-echo to the very extreme portions of the Old Do: | man, rore to violate the law in Boston, the law was pro- | Jo ihe lent OLihe demeoracy of thlametion, (Applause) opinions in physics or | minicm. (Oheers,) I think it proper that I should ray | tected and enferced by a body of Irish citizen soldiery. | Tock "Oy cetence against Know Nothinglem was 10 be ssa | Susten l Wamenitert'ag | (amet) dinawan ia’ Wit scne wie del | foun ih ifomiab toner. oe min kare upon an which we have. 60 mi 3, bu TOU! vernor, ni yproac! 8 a tage ede Irish citizen | 80¢ further, and have said Loy at all times, and wtitutions J gheering ) ‘‘ Ten thousand ity”? in . x y”’ is reverberating | building who were calling for speakers. He asked the | in of being called to the offices et andemola | some difidence—I cannot »# . 1 know | States, for he disbanded lintel e RS » Unless he prefers, or Eepounee this or that re | little of their secrets, in fet y Iknew nothing soldiery who caused the laws of the United States i dey sem ge hen to this: Bat tl the land, as doom of that secret | chairman to invite some of the gentlemen on the plat- indomitable: + (A Voror—=* Down with it,” and renewed | form to go out and address this vast assemblage, Aves ows opinion, is im | injariously of thos | of them—that is, of my own knowledge. to be carried into execution. (Great applause.) | cious alien and sedition laws were introd ee = cheering.) pitow eitiz, Unt? taal it tends alco xo | odes of getting’ an izsight into some things, no Now, rupose the Know Nothings. were to have thelt | Cf cerence waa then the democracy; and then pe ig your and of lbertios— The 1AN—There are plenty of here | ccrrupt the how teeret they may be kept, It does not require grea | will to. morrow, and that we left this blessed Iand—all | [O° or 1812, it was the same ‘Tock that agen proud charter of American rights. A black cioad | and amongst them s gentleman from Vi Who will egacity after all,to discern the objects of the party; w | foreigners and all Irishmen—there might be some with. | 45, were the men wi . Jowered over our northern horizon; 1t rested on our east address us tonight, 4 now introduce to you Judge Dave had spread abroad in the speeches of Know No* | drawn from Marsachusetts who had devoted their labor tion? It was not © ern border; men walked in fear and Lag 8 andknew { Morton, formerly of Georgia, now of this city, thing governors, senators, and legislators,their aims and | and industry, not to making wooden nutmegs, but to ~- mented. Cheers.) That where the day- | Judge Montox, who was enthusiastically received, ad- urpores, and from these it aj t doring its mountains, and to developing the internal re. | represented. ¢ a Lame rg ‘preak 4 i Ay dressed the meeting as follows:—I have to retarn my te contend! for two pointe—one of which is | sources of the State, and their loss mght be felt. My | sod im the war between’ the democti nd, os larkness recedes, this phantom of ignominy | most sincere thanks to you, fellow citizens of New York, to prevent totally, or or nearly so, the naturaliza- | friend from Virginia complained Saat there ere persons | SF the United States Bank, and when the whig jer onee was the champion a ory, party, faction or combination 4, Wise is now the pion what omentle foe. (Tremendous cheering.) itever dis- iF ands Washing ® champion to the institutions of our Resolved, That apon this platform of opposition to srery, pear terrified democrac renga all timsen fa ve r yy of New " in conjunction with their les of liverty achieved # brethren of Virginia of the Union, to eet these enomics ‘ia, by the arm of Washing. | of the constitn' of merica from England, #o on the soil Capain Ryxpens, at this point, addressed the chair the arm of Henry A. i the in. ot the Union be sever from this midnight | {0m the body ot the meeting, and stated that there —the society of Know Nothings. (Great | were over 10,0C0 persons assembled on the outside of the i s 5 erelore. iblie confidenee by | i I i | f iti before the coming light, with the motto in | for the cordial manner in which you have chonen to re- tion oF foreign 4 the other, 1 bo preserved natiopal badges al , ‘como- Sts hand, to be sure, <"amerige for the Amerieans.”” | ceive te. My prosencs in Tamimany Hall is 0 novelty, See, CHERREE focee Sar eats’: Saaiele || Bie Meee caries task ater I cuars bere 1 61d po, cat t fal A poe EE RB Americ for the Americans |’ There never was s | because those whe know me and the line of policy I have (Uheers.) Stripped | of all the ” rhodomontade, | am rot ssbamed of It, | (Cheers) We Irishmen Seleckuar te Gan Ge ane | well to an st ie SEE ee a ag are oe ee aoe de Mead tree heart within | proved that the Know Notbing party bas an om me: er dodges ave a forty | cn ‘“lunspers’’ » *t bas Cwindled down into » contemy am midnight councils, to strike down your Ii eré_| did not mest in this time henored ball, But, fol- | sru'tnet th horse power of humbug about them to deiade the ansus- | us; aod] say that it would be well for America, and as Cw wn iknow that they’ are in danger? Are they gentle. | iow citizens, the very fact that can appear before you | aifeot. thelr preting, the teal objects of this Gath lantern conspiracy | weil fer hunsa and cam never raise its bead b soon became apperent, Now, im spite of the sec: of | ‘preserve the this movement® let me tell’ you thet it has for ite | and consecrate them to wi To the vindloa hes lersot basis—ond that is what rendered it dangerous—some | tion. (Applaase.) I belong to a regiment «i ” Mensa iResteticn, aeevetst | Ine shew of iat 'f neund bese to eateries Tene | moa 1 Wels ety, and 1 fan’ tell ey’ tnd froma it Church yards yawn 0nd eetrncy and Hoary ae upen bie tombstone, ‘wee discovered jou knew, no matter whose prejudices I may | Virginia that if any mob in this rise to vio- wo three effcot—"‘Here lies Fun againet, whose ores Tmay (ample unoa, or whee late the laws of the Union, that regiment will ity, that Irishmen and Germans should Party = “ ood ‘qualitie the (Applause, during which M Englieh resumed , of iven with I readiness and em- aasesy, a over » author of the Eeolaration of American hat 1 may ‘knock over his eyes, (Laughter.) For my. | be first on band to defend the law; and whatever danger {| ,, The cheers nem & center pest 10 Ps Me ‘the meet Sestitutions. (Loud cheers ) Se a in abe State’ of Virginia. (Renewed cheering) an Pee ot ne i rarslty Gt winginia Te was teeces | eelf, I rae san af ail'stoni tne ideo | thresten this country, wbetber from the Pope of Rome | thusisrm, snd 7 pr Nada oy " sity next | {loth of this history, In tho foce of this insoription. and ration that our . . an Indian By Han ay aun may have shone tantly Ades wis Peg tt, Sy Aa ves th of tila man, thas the opposonte Wieehene ‘he : A hvnta ptt cae pees Te Le oon nent hed eae ba. OUTSIDE MEETING. yen Loa the man invested with the dignity of -| stabi in to attempt the lishment of native come here snnually, and be absorbed freedom, and Irish bleod will be found mingling with ‘The crowd round Tammany Hall wae se immense, thae aa nd clothed with the hts O alt veg, pareeeees lor had they the gst Anglo-Saxon maelstrom, without checking its ver- | the Lo tea da bt (A aap oe oe enly » moiety of it could got within the hall; and 0, as 7 ‘To vilege here w! J y other citizens. (J ean. “(Renewed and —," ) le fom ge Sik A Voicr—The Celtio, not Avglo-Sexon. ask the liberties of Americans, and we offer in exch: Capt, Rynders suggested, # meeting was held outside, tm | I en ad ihe aan the lone’ peiseipton under. whi curled on and Mr. Excusn—t my ‘Anglo-Saxon maelstrom, because | our blord. And If ever once’ more’ arin Quebec, t6e | front of the*hotel, whero*an extempore platform wae pee I ie hoes og mig ly DAS, Smonget that class | Which cur Hperties were sstablished—thove who would oon: | when wo eprak of thie country colonized from Great | Like oceation thould azire, there will be found Irish (n- | srected, whence stirring speeches were delivered by the f wd of the globe—a composi ae Mf emocrat \- w belong who have conscientious | vert.its promiscs into false pretences a yreeine it's | Britsin we call it Anglo-Saxon. tellect leading the armies of the United States, ond Nant Captain bimeelf. and by Mesars. T. A. Glover, W- } hb pee aces; and alckough the scledieen, vepeont That t rewrell tone’ iedenen | ad Bi poy ote vine east oat (ny Gas Mae Be ——. Boil ag Pong oe te — saab Ning in the tide of success. (Great ap- | f ul Carey aed others, and ever and anon the J “¢ af iz hLsa—T em eccustomed, in nee pa Bt obeeee, tingly bat antrnly, to the C necessary, I would go adit thelr genneotion wih en order which | which Ireside, to be put dow when Aidreeing au as. |” A VOros—Wint about Sebastopol ? eens tha vonenee ter ta ar Mae Pel GI Svcs daotiaion bites ie teas commeeee ve eS are i. to bo covered, ‘The rerult ls what miht | remblege of may fellow citisron in a rexprot‘ul menner. | Mr. DOWENY—I am not epoaking about Sebastopol. Wo ay oo eect Sear) ortee te the Anglo-Saxon beware, have no hesitation in Saticipated. Mr. Wise deserves the | If thet is to be the case, however—(Ories of “On om!’ | bave Bad n greater battle to fight in Virgin's. They bave | plau . 7 fareriog—a ra0e of God’e—will hereafter qhow whe belonged jp the old a mly “ier, fagved thls | “go ou.") 1 aay Shave as fence whowt tin immense ' yt taken Sebastopol; but the Virginis democracy Rare nae icici in

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