Analyze this table, and show from it that the foreign immigration of 1854 was sufficient to have settled three States equal to Arkansas, three equal to Iowa, three equal to Texas, two to Louisiana, four to Rhode Island, five to California, seven to Delaware, or ten to Florida; so that under the principle of the Kansas and Nebraska act, while immigrants continue pouring in upon us at the present rate, we may have within one year ten new States applying for admission into the Union, entitled to their twenty Senators in the United States Senate; and yet this would be but the Senatorial representation of 500,000 foreigners.
Let the light of truth be heard upon the great question of immigration, and let the people see that if the ratio of immigration continues as it has been since 1850, during the ten years from 1850 to 1860 there will have come four millions of foreigners into this country—enough to settle eighty States equal to Florida, thirty-two equal to Rhode Island, sixteen equal to Louisiana, or eight equal to Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Mississippi, Vermont, Alabama, New Hampshire, or New Jersey. So the Senatorial representation of foreigners may reach one hundred and sixty members in the United States Senate, and cannot be less than twenty in a body composed of but sixty-two members representing thirty-one States.
UNITED STATES COAST SURVEY—FOREIGNISM AND NATIVEISM.
The reader will find below a list of the names of the employees in the Coast Survey, classified according to birth, and their respective salaries:
| Natives. | Salary. | Foreigners. | Salary. | |
| E. Nutty | $1,200 | J. E. Hilgard | $2,200 | |
| J. T. Hoover | 600 | S. E. Werner | 1,419 | |
| J. H. Toomer | 519 | C. A. Schott | 1,500 | |
| J. E. Blackenship | 500 | J. Main | 1,100 | |
| R. Freeman | 350 | G. Rumpf | 1,000 | |
| H. Mitchell | 1,000 | J. Weisner | 900 | |
| H. Heaton | 700 | L. F. Pourtales | 1,500 | |
| R. S. Avery | 660 | S. Hein | 2,500 | |
| J. Kincheloe | 339 | J. Welch | 1,565 | |
| G. C. Blanchard | 339 | A. Brschke | 1,408 | |
| R. E. Evans | 339 | —— Balback | 639 | |
| R. L. Hawkins | 1,200 | —— Lendenkehl | 782 | |
| W. McPherson | 700 | W. P. Schultz | 704 | |
| W. M. C. Fairfax | 1,800 | G. McCoy | 2,000 | |
| M. J. McClery | 1,600 | A. Rolle | 1,700 | |
| —— Poterfield | 1,000 | G. B. Metzenroth | 1,095 | |
| L. Williams | 860 | J. C. Koudnip | 939 | |
| John Key | 782 | J. Rutherdall | 526 | |
| —— Martin | 751 | J. Barrett | 375 | |
| B. Hooe | 419 | J. Vierbunchen | 1,095 | |
| F. Fairfax | 500 | P. Vierbunchen | 281 | |
| H. McCormick | 156 | T. Hunt | 704 | |
| E. Wharton | 1,100 | J. Missenson | 626 | |
| J. Knight | 1,700 | R. Schelpass | 469 | |
| F. Dankworth | 1,700 | C. Ramkin | 313 | |
| J. V. N. Throop | 1,252 | F. White | 960 | |
| R. Knight | 939 | D. Flyn | 600 | |
| C. A. Knight | 626 | T. Kinney | 525 | |
| G. Mathiot | 1,800 | C. Kraft | 420 | |
| S. Harris | 519 | B. Neff | 526 | |
| S. D. O'Brien | 1,059 | A. Maedell | 1,095 | |
| A. Geatman | 704 | ——— | ||
| H. Tine | 626 | $31,867 | ||
| C. B. Snow | 1,000 | |||
| J. Smith | 593 | |||
| G. Hitz | 313 | |||
| J. Cronion | 519 | |||
| A. W. Russell | 1,300 | |||
| —— Tansill | 660 | |||
| V. E. King | 720 | |||
| F. Holden | 500 | |||
| J. Mitchell | 331 | |||
| W. Bright | 216 | |||
| ——— | ||||
| $24,429 |
The whole number of natives, 43; number of foreigners, 31. Amount paid natives, $24,429; amount paid foreigners, $31,867. The average salary of the natives is $568 12 per year; of the foreigners, $1,029 98 per year—nearly double that of the natives. Is not this favoritism to the foreigner, and discrimination against the native? The disbursing officer, S. Hein, receives $2,500.
The result of the last Presidential election was controlled by foreign votes, beyond all question. Look at the figures—see how they foot up—and see that the country is controlled by foreigners:
| States. | Foreign population. | Foreign vote. | Pierce's majority. | Electoral vote for Pierce. |
| New York, | 655,224 | 93,317 | 27,201 | 35 |
| Pennsylvania, | 303,105 | 43,300 | 19,446 | 27 |
| Maryland, | 51,011 | 7,287 | 4,945 | 8 |
| Louisiana, | 67,308 | 9,615 | 1,392 | 6 |
| Missouri, | 76,570 | 10,938 | 7,698 | 9 |
| Illinois, | 111,860 | 15,980 | 15,653 | 11 |
| Ohio, | 218,099 | 31,157 | 16,694 | 23 |
| Wisconsin, | 110,471 | 15,781 | 11,418 | 5 |
| Iowa, | 20,968 | 2,995 | 1,180 | 4 |
| Rhode Island, | 23,832 | 3,404 | 1,109 | 4 |
| Connecticut, | 38,374 | 5,482 | 2,870 | 6 |
| Delaware, | 5,243 | 749 | 25 | 3 |
| New Jersey, | 59,804 | 8,543 | 5,749 | 7 |
| California, | 21,628 | 10,000 | 5,694 | 4 |
| ———— | ——— | ——— | —— | |
| 258,548 | 120,094 | 152 |