1 •7crArtS.M. 7111 If CD W 1. ZsU D II 8 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15;1845 I.Erren room Ito nEIIT DALE OWEN.—At the Demo• rratic meeting published in our last, a resolution was pas• ~td that a committee be appointed to procure the publi cation of a letter from Robert Dale Owen, setting forth the fact that Col. R. Nf. JOHNSON was the slayer of Te cumseh; and refuting partly the slanders of the Whig press recently put forth. The following is the letter of the committee addressed to us, accompanied by Mr. Owen's letter. EAFT SMITHFIELD, October 6, 1845.. To the Editors of the Bradford Reporter—Gentlemen: In accordance with a resolution of a large democratic meeting holden in this place on the 30th of September, we haw procured and herewith forward you, for publi a co py of a letter, front the Hon. Robert Dale oven, to Cal. e . . Sofisbery.written in 1842, establish beyond co ntroversy, an historical Tad highly interesting to the Amencan public, namely, that Cul. R. 31. John. met in single combat, and slew Tecumseh in the battle of the Thames." Since a pinion of the public press in the United States, have seen proper, with great earnestness, to raise the q uestion. and gravely urge upon their readers, that Col. Jolooon did not kill, that celebrated Indian warrior, Te ra,,,,,e/t, it is incumbent on the friends of this illustrious man, to.npel these bold charges, and forever settle the question. Col. Owen's letter, then, is in point, the facts are most conclusive, and well stated. As a matter of national.history fully authenticated, it is eminently worthy, in the language " of Col. Owen, of rec : and and peen-era/ inn," To the end. therefore, that this desideratum be OrCOM plished, it is our intention to forward a copy of the Bradford Reporter" containing Mr. Owen's letter, to .the Hon. Henry H. Gilpin, late Attorney General of the U. and distinguished member of the Historical Society at Philadelphia; and, as the let ris an "inter esting end authoritive historical remin . ce,"reopectful ly request Mr. Gilpin to adopt such m ures as will in sure its "prescrralion" in the archives of the Society. The country are under high obligations to Col. Owen 'for the facts which he has presented with so much clear ness and ability. As a gentleman of acknowledged in tee! ity of purpose, a scholar and patriot, he ranks among the most eminent of his countrymen ; his letter, there fore, FO overwhelming in proof that Col. Johnson did kill Tecumseh in the victorious battle of the Thames will be read With deep and absorbing interest. With sentiments of high regard, we are truly, yours sincerely, • • TRUMAN M. BEACH. CHAUNCEY GLITHRIE, V. E. PIOLLET, J. L. WEBB, ' WM. ELM ELL. Nenhannony. Indiana, Sept., 10th, 1815 Stn:—lour kind invitations on behalf of the State Ventral Committee of Pennsylvania, to unite with our fellow citizens throughout the Union, in the approach ing celebration at Danville, of the anniversary of the memorable battle of the Thames, has been duly received. I deeply regret that my duty as Trustee of the State ISni ‘ersity of Indiana, which imperatively requires my atten dance at Bloomington, during commencement week, (five days only previous to your celebration,) compels me to forego the gratification I should have experienced in meeting, and such an occasion, the distinguished men who will assemble to welcome in their midst, our valna- Ids friend, Col. R. M. Johnson. Since f have alluded to the death of Tecumseh, by ido3o.'B hand, I may be pardoned on this occa sion, for adding, in proof of a fact which nothing but par ty jealousy ever disputed, evidence-of the most direct chiracter, which chance enabled me to procure, and which has never before, that I know of, laid before the public. Levi Gritton, an humble farther, now living about three miles cash of Evansvile, in this state, was present, then quite a youth, at Winchester's defeat; was takenprison- Cr and carried to Malden and had there frequent oppor tun:ties of seeing Tecumseh, and of receiving at his hands, a degree of kindness, not imitated by those who called themselves the civilized allies of the Indian chief. Tecumseh's appearance then, was stamped upon Mr. liotton's recollection, by that which is never forgotten, deeds to a captive in a strange land. After a time, an oath was tendered to the prisoners at Malden, not to rerve again. Gritton and two others, who refused to ~ 1C It, were hurried to Montreal and sold for goods to a f , mcir trader there ; but after five or six weeks captivi ty Gritton seibed a skiff, descended the St. Lawrence, and returned by way of Buffalo, after enduring many harlhips, , to his home in Mercer Co. Kentucky. There he enlisted as one ofllcAffees compa4' , and was afterwards present at the battle of the Thames. These parcticulars, and those I am about to relate, I had from his own lips, noting them down at the time; and, after reading them to Gritton, causing him to append to them his signature. 'The young soldier, then not yet twenty one, wasse leered as one of the forlorn hope, which, as every one knows, was led u p against the Indians, in advance of the mounted. Then by Col Johnson in person. Next to Col. Johnson, rode Col. Whitley, and immediately behind him Levi Craton. Whitley, se is well known, fell &lid at the first fire; and it W 3.4 Gritton who afterwards carried home to his widow the rifle and shot pondh of the fallen soldier. The same fire which killed Whitley, brought to the ground every man of the forlorn hope, Col. John son and one other excepted. Gritton received a wound in the left leg, and had his horse shot from under him. "hen CoL Johnson turned round and saw' the forlorn hope d'own• he called out to the rest of his•men, to dis' "mei and fight the Indians after their own fashion. Each man who wasmot disabled then took to a tree ; and a desult,iry combat was kept up for some quarter of an hour; Johnson's' men still advancing from tree to upon the Indians. About that time it was, that tuition who had taken his station behind a beech, saw Cot Johnson ode round the top of a fallen tree about len or twelve yards in advance of him, and perceived an Indian whom he instantly recognized as Tecumseh, stand ing s few steps from the root of the same tree. He saw Tecumseh raise his tomahawk as in the act to throw, and at that moment Col. J. shot him with his pistol. He saw Tecumseh fall .and die on the same spot. Next morning Gritton's men, knowing that be was acquaint .d with Tecumseh„ induced him to go with them about , uprise to the scene of combat, and there they still found the body where it first fell.. About the same time An thony Shane, the half /breed interpreter, who had known "Tecumseh for years, mated the body, and recognized it m ga° ll .V. I irked Gritton if he had ever heard it doubt- V, in the army, that Tecumseh was the Indian shot by "Never," said he indignantly, "no man ever doubted or disputed it, there. It was as well known and 2Ckn"Ple dged. as that the Col. was in the battle at aIL , saw the encounter with my own eyes, and am as cer tain of it, as of my existence." Gritton met his old ehier, during his visit to Evansville, whither I accompa nied Col. J. in the autumn of 1840. His eyes filled with tetra as he grasped Col. Xs hand; and his emotions was ea Crest he could not articulate a word. . AB an interesting and authentic histo rical reminisence, vouched for by an eye witness, who yet survives to con firm his story, I trust it will be deemed worthy of record and preservation. As such, hail I been able -to attend the celebration, I should have sought an occasion to re- Pea it, and, being denied that pleasure, I take the liber ty of Incorporating it in this communication, at the 'la _ extending it to a somewhat unwarrantable length. I beg to offer "to your - committee my.thanks for the honors of, .the invitation so courteously extended to me, and to re-. peat the expression of my regret that I cannot avail my cltheir kindness. lam Fir your fellow citizen, ROBERT DALE OWEN. TilE.:.-• - •BRADFORD, :REPORTER. [For the Bradford Reporter.] Thoughts for Young Men.—No. 2. Every young man should know, what every old one can tell him, that there is ordinarily a great waste of the powers of human life. Probably not one in ten thou sand does nearly as much for himself and others as his abilities and opportunities would have enabled him to ac complish. In reflecting upon the losses thus sustained, we natu rally Inquire if there is any general cause for such an evil; any at least, that we may hope to see extensively remo ved. One we may readily discover in the almost uni versal want of any sufficient stimulus in the develop ment and application of the powers bestowed upon us. The common gains of life, pleasures, honors, riches, pow er, are not adequate rewards for the high and continued efforts of which men are capable. In some cases they do indeed appear so, but in general they are more truly ap preciated. But there is another defect in the stimulus to activi ty which they afford. They do not call for the use of our higher faculties. Inspired wisdom has taught, what common observation might also suggest, that “ that out the heart are the issues oflife The affections must be set upon proper objects, and regulated by the compara tive value of those objects, or it is but a show of life, lit tle better than the galvanic excitement of a corpse, that we attain at best. It is a fatal error, the common one of mistaking the pocket for the bean; and equally fatal in result to mistake animal pleasures for well-being,Mpow er amongst men for dominion over the powers of evil in and around us. The amount of it is, with most young men, they mis take the end of their being. The consequence is, that while each has been constituted a machine of wonderful power, and curiously adapted to produce the greatest re sults, the working of this machine is irregular, and often quite nugatory. Sometimes the strength of one part is expended to the injury of another, wheels are left out a year, perhaps the balance wheel itself; or foreign sub stances are allowed, in the more delicate parts, quite to impede the operation of the whole. All this must hap pen where the real object o the machine isnot regarded, and where the whole operation is not directed to that grid. He that should mistake an ordinary steam engine for a flouring mill, would not err 'more signally than the most do in the economy of their lives. If young men could be persuaded to learn and lay to heart the first question and answer in the Westminster Assembly's Shorter Catechism, it would save them and the world from losses greater than any that the best poli•. cy of this world's insurance can cover. The question is, ‘' What lat he chief and of man . 2 ". and the answer, in words not unworthy of inspiration itself: '• The chief end of man is to glorify God, and enjoy himforever." Is this too serious fot a newspaper of essay I Let it be made then a theme of the next Sunday's meditation. Whoever will draw from it his rules of life, employing the requisite aids of reason and revelation, will find him self in the end a new creature, intellectually no less than morally he will escape the greatest losses to which men are exposed, and attain the best treasures that men can enjoy. Towanda, Oct. 8. C. S. A. Setting Posts—Fences—Harrows MR. 'nick - En—Posts for fences or other pur poses, set into the ground, will last double the length of time by being put into the middle of the hole. The space around the post filled with small stones instead of earth. the earth does not come in contact with the post, and the air is also admitted to the hole, both of which probably tend to prevent decay. In con structing fences, the earth taken from the hole is placed directly under the line of the fence, thus forming airidge which is asaving equal to twelve feet of boards in four lengths of fence. The stones should be raissd three or four inch es around the .post above the surface of the ground. The posts will not be very firm at first, but after standing through one winter their firmness will be much increased, and will con, tinue to increase for several years. A post and rail fence, constructed in this way forty-five years since, in the vicinity of Bost, ton, is now standing, with the exception of one post,, and will probably stand a dozen years more. The common zig-zag rail fence is much more durable with upright stakes than with cross stakes. My •method is, to connect the stakes before the top rail is put on, with iron Wire. say one-fourth of an inch an diameter. which is done after the stakes are set, by bringing the tops of the stakes as near together as the fence will admit; then take the measurement with a cord, which will show the length to cut the Wire. which is easily done with a cold chisel ; the ends of the wire are then hooked around each stake : the top rail being then put in eoni pletes the fence. With an iron a foot or more in length. with a hole near one end to admit the end of the wire, the operation is quickly performed. This is a much cheaper method of securing upright stakes than the usual• way with a piece of scantling. The, Harrow, svhethei square or triangle, should be constructed entirely of iron, (except the points of the teeth, which are steel ;) bars of iron, of proper thickness, width and weight, and selected and welded together so as to form the desired shape for the. frame ; the tops of the teeth being rounded about an inch and a half doWn, pass thr9ugh the iron plate or frame, and are made fast on the upper ride by a nut. The teeth this way are always kept tight, which is very difficult in a wood-framed har row. With the exception of the teeth, a har row thus constructed, will endure a century without being housed. A CLEVER. ONE.—An infidel. once meeting a boy who had er.joyed the advantage of. having a pious mother—sarcastically said to him— " Well Jack—l'll give you an orange if you'll tell me where God is." To which the boy meekly replied—" I'll give you two. if yoti'll tell me-where'he is not!" 7CAuptt-LEcTuRED.—A gentleman who has only been married two weeks. - was so " Cau dle-LeCtured " the other night, for being out till ten o'clock; that he vows be will never be married again. He says he " wont go home till morning," if the practice is kept up. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. S " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." Address Delivered by Mr. Booth, Before the Borough Temperance Society, Monday Even ing, Sept. 29. Published by Request of the Society. [CONCLUDED FROM OUR LAST• Have you a father that is proud to call you you hij son—have you a mother that loves the child she has borne and nourished ? There is no-sentiment more pure and ennobling in the sighi'd heaven, than that partial love which is bestowed by an affectionate parent upon thi teous child; and there is no obligation resting upon your soul so sacred as that which binds you to repay that love with answering tender. ness and care. Are you willing to bring down the grey hairs . of those parents with broken hearted sorrow to the grave? You do not alone, and by your own sufferings pay the price which Nature exacts for your vicious pleasures; but you force all those who have ever loved you or taken any interest in your welfare, by the pain and natural anxiety they feel, to contribute largely to t he amount.— I When with rash and s cidal hand you rend I your own bosom, you a \ the same time pierce through the bosoms of your parents and friends with many sorrows. Will you give your pa rents reason to feel that your existence has been to them a curse ; that instead of paying that natural debt of affection and care which you owe to the authors of your being, you have mingled for them the bitterest cup of wretchedness that the -whole course of their lives has ever commended to their lips ? Are you willing to inflict this curse upon your own soul ?—of having stung the parental bosom with your ingratitude and profligacy ?—of hay ing embittered the last years of life—those years that are always but too destitute of cheer ing circumstances, with the knowledge of your infamy and shame ? If you can do this with no misgivings ; if you fear no voice of con cience in after. days to harrow up your soul with the recollections of past conduct, then go - on, brave youth, and enjoy with a relish what ever gratification is to be found in the region of sensual pleasures, for you have calculated the price and have coolly concluded to pay it. You can make your own bargains, and although your friends may agonize for the consequences, yet they cannot prevent it. But it is a terrible reflection to think how - deeply asman may curse himself by his own acts. Are you a married man? If so, then the price that you must pay for indulging your appetite for intoxicating drinks will be materi ally modified by that circumstance. You have a wife, Whom in the presence of High Heaven and witnesses, ypu Solemnly promised upon the faith.of a man, to honor, love, cherish, and protect; and whom you persuaded in the ar dor of her affection, to leave the parental tool' and that band of sisters and brothers who doated on her, and to unite her fortunes with yours, thenceforth trusting to you and you alone fur happiness, rank, station, and character in so ciety, wholly blending her being with yours, and theneeforward possessing by the laws of her country and the estimation of society no separate existence or character distinct from that of her chosen lord. In the profession of a pure and manly character, unstained by vice and guiltless of excess, you wooed and won her love. There was at least a tacit under standing that in future time you should never act beneath the character that you then pro fessed, that you would never in after life do aught that might not become the man that you then studied to appear in the eyes of her whom you sought to win. NVlien, therefore, you indulge in those ex cesses of which we an speaking, there is spe• cial reason why you should weigh well the price that you are to pay. Though you may j consider it a small matter so far as you are personally concerned, to become transformed into a beast—though you may think it a mat ter of trivial moment to obliterate the image of God in your person—and though you may consider character and reputation of no account. which you are at liberty to sacrifice as may suit your pleasure. yet when all the circum stances of your situation are weighed. you are not, strictly speaking, free to brutalize your self, whatever may be your inclination. The I degradation which you inflict upon yourself, attaches also to another. Those excesses in which you indulge, render the•trusting,sim ple hearted maiden whom you persuaded to be come united to you, the wife of a drunkard.— And are you prepared to make such a sacrifice to a beastly appetite ? Will you pay this price also for your gratification ; Will you be so' scurvy a fellow as to inflict this irrepara ble injury upon the woman who loved and trusted you ? Are you prepared to see that love changed into scorn and loathing, for the man who has forfeited all claim to her regard and degraded himself to the condition of a brute ? 1 have no conception of such sublimi ty of affection in woman as is able to with ' stand the shock of seeing a husband transform ed into a drunkard. That woman may well be considered as wanting self-respect who can still entertain her affection for the man who has become so lost to character, so debased, so destitute of the better feelings of humanity, as to sicken her sight with the disgusting ex hibitions of habitual drunkenness. Nature stands checked, rezolting at such loathed, de tested union of thriving with the dead ! Are you willing that your bosom companion should regard with abhorrence and well-deserved coo -1 tempt ? This, too. is a portion of the price that Nature exacts from those who transcend the limits of temperance and sobriety for those tumultuous gratifications that lie in the regions of excess. . Are you a father? If so, then you know something of the affection, something of the pride with which a parent regards his chil&-- the bright, young boy that has arisen in his pathway of life to cheer and to comfort him ; to sustain him under the infirmities of age, and continue his name and memory among the liv ing, when he shall have paid the last debt of Nature. Would you inflict upon that boy the disgrace of having a drunken lather 1 \ Woeld you stand humbled and abased in the 'presence of your own child Would you have that child flee from your presence with dread and apprehensions of your brutality? Would you have him avoid your sight with expressions of loathing and abhorrence ? All this, and much more you are preparing for yourself and those whom you love, while you yield to the fascina lions of the intoxicating bowl. Have you friends'? and would you see them avoid 3ou as though you were smitten with leprosy ?—. Have you property and would become a beg gar in these streets where you now walk with a free and independent footstep Have you a reputation, and would you become mlamons among your fellow-men? Have you health? and would you transform that rigorous body and those active limbs into a mass of putridity and disease ? Would you become a miserable outcast from soeiety, lust to happiness and to virtue, accursed of Cod, abhorred by men, and bearing in your own breast a hell of malignant passions—a burning appetite insatiable as the grave? Possibly you may hesitate a little.— Perhaps you may be inclined to think all this too great a price to pay for the gratification of the palate. It is nevertheless the p r i ce th at Nature deriaands, and thousands have paid it. No man ever suffered himself to be lured far among the enchanted islands of intemperance, I without being forced to meet a reckouing,which if not minutely similar, was substantially the same. lam not laboring to amuse you with pictures of the fancy. I only tell you what you already know, what your own eyes have seen. There are beings living in this commu nity and in every community, who exemplify the troth of every word that has been uttered. Hardly a day passes, but that we see men, be ings clothed in the human shape, who have made all these sacrifices in order that they might drink—drink damnation to their tempo ral and eternal welfare. We are indeed, so familiarized with such facts, that we are scarce ly sensible to the strange infatuation of these persons. We see men with i staggering forms, bloated visages, maniacal Icioks, and red eye balls ; ragged, squalid and vicious—without property, without character without friends ; lost, miserable miscreants—without one. ray of intellect or feeling to enliven the grossness of their besotted faces: and so familiar have, we become with such scenes, that we are almost accustomed to regard them as incident to the lot of humanity—as part and parcel of those co nsequences that were entailed upon our spe cies by the first fall or some other fall that mankind has experienced. And, yet these men have run their race of pleasure. They have had their - frolics ; they have enjoyed all that glorious excitement that wine, brandy and jovial company can give. .They have seen the time in their better days when the night was too short for their carousals—when they could proking their revels until the daylight streaked the east, and feel scarce a transient head-ache to warn them that they had violated Nature's law; so sound were their constitu:' uons, and so bland were the spirits of youth to endure for a season the encroachments of excess. They were perhaps favored sons of Nature, upon whom she had lavished a capi tal of health and vitality, a strength of constitu lion and a mental vigor, sufficient with pro dent usage to nave maintained them in comfort and happiness until extrette old age. But they chose to take up the funds which Nature , had in store for them at a ruinous discount be- Ifore they were due, and to waste in a single drunken debauch more of vital energy than I would have sufficed for the ordinary wear of existence during many months. At length the time arrives when the treasure of their ex -1 istence is spent, and they bankrupt in fortune, in health and in reputation, are forced to repay by the racking pains of bodily tlisease and the fiercer tortures of remorse those penalties that Nature exacts for the treasures Which they have improvidently squandered. A tiound constitution .for a time may have preserved them from experiencing the consequences of excess ; but the hour at length arrives, end Nature's penalty is exacted with many stripes. It is useless to think of evading the universality of these conditions. No man has ever yet escaped them or ever will. When a man has once tasted of this fatal fruit of excess, she ne ver forgives the debt—she follows him silent ly through every, lane of life, and while the Iman perhaps fancies that the transgression is , forgotten, she extorts the penalty in extreme old age, even upon the verge of the grave. The laws to which she holds us amenable, are laws of universal sway—laws that pervade all space and cotrol all mind, that govern our physical, moral and intellectual being. But it will perhaps be said that these con siderations which 1 have now presented, indeed constitute an argument against excess in the use of intoxicating drinks as well as every other kind of excess. but ItirniA no .reason for the entire abandonment of them. It is not necessary for our purpose to inquire why ikis that the use of alcaholic liquors in any oltheir varieties, is so dangerous to man ; it is sufficient fur us to know the fact. Ana -1 tourists and men of medical science can es- plain how it is that alcahol, by its anon upon the nervous system, and the various parts of the human frame, becomes such a subtle. in sinuating and deadly foe to the health and hap piness of man. A reference to mental science might give us another solution of the problem. He who has once accustomed himself to one degree of excitement. finds it necessary to his present cornfort..and will not easily he satisfied with a less degree. On the contrary, the stimulous that to-day was sufficient to give him a pleasurable elevation of spirits, to-morrow is inadequate to string his nerves to the proper degree of tension, and thus having once dis turbed that equable flow of life wherein Na., ture lia,s placed our rational happiness, there is a kind of necessity upon the unhappy vic tim tb persist until his ruin is apparent in a .debauched frame and wasted health. I say it is not .necessary to inquire why this is so. It is sufficient for us to know the foet—whieh is clear and undeniable, that the use of alcaholic liquors of any, description and in ever so small a quantity is extremely tlangeroue No No . who makes use oftheru In any degree, can say with propriety that he is free from danger.— GOODRICH & SON. Does any man pride himself upon the strength of his character, the potency of his will ? 1 tell him that stronger men than he have fallen Has he pride of family, or character or intel lect to sustain him ? Is he man of brilliant parts, of high principles, of noble sentiments ? All these qualities, these barriers in the road to ruin, have vanished before the breath of this demon, like mountain show in the hot smith wind, or dew before the meridian sun. Per haps the whole history of human actions be sides, does not present so many humiliating examples of the weaknesit of man's resolution when opposed to his passions, as have occur red in impotent attempts to resist an appetite for intoxicating drinks when it has once been formed. The strongest. tne most gifted, the noblest. have fallen as powerless and as low as the - humblest and the weakest. Alexander having desolated Asia and carried the terror of his arms to the extreme boundaries of the known earth, having overthrown and establish ed kingdoms. having demolished and built up cities—the world's great master, expires in the flower of his age in a fit of drunken debauch. Mark Anthony. the hardy Rotnan soldier, who by his valor had arisen to the honors of the triumvirate, who had the imperial purple in full prospect before his eyes, drowns the hero in luxury and wine, becomes a victim to the wiles of a lacivinus, artful woman, loses the empire and ingloriously stabs himself to es cape being dragged after the triumphal' car of Caesar. Think of 14ttleton, the younger— think of Sheridan and Fox, men of the most brilliant genius. but rendered desperate and wretched by their excesses. Think of the poet Savage—of poor Burns. Think of Tho mas Campbell ; who in early youth sung of the Pleasures of Hope," whose genius pro duced some of the noblest lyrics ever compos : - ed in thisAr any other language ; whose glo rious o is, whether sung upon the sea or upon the d, have a magic power to inspire a ten martial fury in British hearts, and have added a new and undying lustre to that flag of England that— ' "Has stood a thousand years, The battle and the breeze." For the noble spirit that breathes in his earlier productions, he will be rethembered so long as 'ode single human bosom feels the lava-flood coursing its arteries at the tale of oppression, or so long as the sacred name of Liberty is known among the nations of the earth. His beautiful poem has caused one of the most beautiful vallies in America—the sweetest val ley through which our noble river flows, to become classic ground. The story of Gertrude has been told in other lands than this, and in other tongues than ours ; and that sweet vale .. on Susquehanna's side," adorned and dres sed in the beautiful coloring of the poet's fan cy, together with its happy tenantii„ the dear old Albert, young Waldegrave, and his love— ivhose innocent beauty seems to him who reads the poem, like a familiar face—will be remern bered so lung as there remains one natural hu• man bosom a wake to the beautiful or pathetic in sentiment, or alive to the charms of nature and art. Yes, think of Campbell; in early life stringing his lyre to some of the finest melo dies that ever vibrated upon the human ear ; and think of i linn, too, in his maturer years, when that lyre was hung in silence upon the wit.' lows\ the bands that swept its chords palsied by intemperance, and its master transformed into a drivelling, drooling sot. Was this the end to which Thomas Campbell looked forward when in the morning of youth, he sang the Pleasures of Hopei Yet this was the end that he lived to see. The visions of his ambition. to have his name enrolled among the bards of England, were in part realized ; yet faithful history will have to record of him, that lie was consi g ned at the same time to the poet's cor nerand the drunkard's grave. Shall this be the end of any here present ? Whose .. Plea. sures of Hope," perchance, have not been written, but in whom the passion is as strong as it was in Campbell, and points as bright a future 1 Would any man be content to take Campbell's fame, together with his ignominy? —to feel the gradual annihilation.of such pow ers by . the fell influence of an accursed habit— thus to become his " own soul's sepulchre ?" For myself, were such a fate in reserve for me. no matter how brilliant the career of fame or pleasure that might lead to it, I would say in the poe' own language, ~ 3 en melt ye elements that formed in vain, 'I is troubled pulse and visionary brain ; Fade ye wild flowers, memorials of my doom, And sink ye stars, that light me to the tomb!" There is no end or limit to the victims of Intemperance. From every occupation, trade, profession, or station in society, have been taken its brightest ornaments. The bar, the bench, the pulpit, the senate chamber, the halls of legislation, have each furnished forth their distinguished victims. Our own country has lost many noble sons—hut charity bide as draw a vail of oblivion over the failings oldie living, and the memories of the dead. All human ex, perience of the high and the low, the strong and the weak, in every age and land, proves beyond all question that in die use of aletiliolic liquors as a bevarage. there is no safety. lie who endeavors to persuade himself to the con trary, commits a fatal mistake. There is that in , the nature of this element, so unfriendly to the human system: that no strength of constitu- tion is sufficient to resist its poisonous activity when used in any considerable quantity ; and so subtly and insensibly does it operate to lix the chain of habit, and so powerful is that chain, thnt it requires a strength of resolution and 'a self.control to set its victim free, such as no man can safely count upon possessing. When* a man has once formed the habit, thnugfi under the influence of some strung motive he may be persuaded to give up his 'cups, yet lamentable proof has( been given in numerous instances. that theieis no absolute security for hire. Even the pledge, assumed in .the most soleMn man ner,. has u too,often proved an ineffectual bar rier ae inet this unnatural appetite. The only perfectly Safe ground upon which any man can stand, is never to acquire the appetite. WD3III3S@IS3IIE a. A quite common circumstance in my child• hood, enforced upon my consideration the va lue of the temperance pledge. My road to school led me by the door of a drunkard's dwel ling. I had often been witness to his drunken delirium—been disgusted and perhaps frighten ed, by his abuse and blasphemies. I had seen the terror and unhappiness of his family, and also their want, not unfrequently having been keen with some charity in the shape of food for his children. These scenes, witnessed dai ly, young as I was, produced a strong impres sion upon my mind. Though I had scarcely ever tasted of intoxicating drinks, I was im pressed with the fear of becoming a drunkard. I knew that no man would willingly become a drunkard, and yet I saw drunkards around me. It seemed to me, therefore, that there was some fatality in the thing, that some men would be come drunkards perforce, and that no one— and consequently not even myself could be considered secure from such a fate. I distinct ly recollect that the thought was horrible to me, and brooded upon my mind, so as frequent ly to depress my spirits. About this time, a temperance movement was made in my native town. It struck me that it was just the thing desired. became it member of a temperance society at the age of eight years. I can keep my pledge, thought I, and I shall never be a drunkard. I have kept that pledge, and have still no fears of becoming intemperate. As a taste for intoxicating drinks, in my case, had never been formed, it required no self-denial to sign the pledge, and if I have ever thereby missed the enjoyment of any rational pleasuro or gratification of any kind, I have yet to learn what it is. The audience will pardon me for this digression, this episode of my own per. sonal experience, and with which I will bring these remarks to a close. When it is an estab lished fact that in our nation, containing a pop ulation of about twenty millions, there are at least half a million of inebriates, who have been sunk to that condition from every rank and sta tion in society, a prudent man might feel it worth a slight sacrifice to occupy a position of safety. It is not bravery, in view of the disas trous results that have always attended upon moderate drinking. to neglect this precaution —it is iashness—it is fool-hardiness ; unless the man has coolly concluded to close in with this kind of bargain with Nature—to make this use of his life, health, and the powers which she has given him—and then it is madness. -For her penalties dreadfully outweigh the pur chased gratifications, and these penalties will be exacted. In this connection, all considera tion of punishment inflicted in another state of being, is waived—it is'enough for the argu ment to be able to trace the unfailing operation of this law of compensation in this life ; and it is a safe caution to those, who, in the thought less levity of youth, make .large drafts upon Nature's bounty, .to say to them : Remember —remember, your reckoning day. - PRIMITIVE.-A correspondent of the New York Spirit of the Times tells about a happy valley in East Tennessee where the people live out all their days undisturbed by politics, and very field= going out into the world.— They are contented, simple in their tastes, and of course given to wondering at and respecting very much those of their neighbors, who have travelled beyond their own narrow bounds.— One of the inhabitants sometime since returned from a journey, when his presence was an nounced at meeting " on Sunday,' by the aged minister, in the following impressive words : Brethren, there is a a man among you who has just got back from New Orleans, where he saw two dead men at once 1" A DELICATE ARRANCEMET.—In China the married women, it is said, lie under a sort of interdict from the presence of their husbands' fathers, who may not speak to them, or enter their rooms, except on particular days. The father-in-law retains, however. an unlimited right of chastising the lady when she does any thing which he thinks wrong ; but bow is he to flog if he may not approach her ? An ingeni ous expedient is resorted to ; the old man flogs his son, who receives the castigation with all meekness, duly returns thanks for it, and then aoes to make a complete transfer of it to his spouse, being careful to hit her just as hard and as often as he has been h it himself.. CHARCOAL DCBT.—Extract of a letter from Mr. S. Camp, Plainville, Ct.---.. 1 will mention an experiment made by myself about eighteen years ago. Having a piece of hill land, of about three acres ready ploughed, : I seeded it down to timothy. It produced about one ton to the acre. It has been mowed once every year, since, has had no manure, and has not been pastured at all. It has gained ONE THIRD. and remains the same grass. About five years after sowing. I burnt coal near the - i)lace ; I took from the bed, dry dust and fine coal in my earl, and with a shovel sowed twice thro' the niece, which has increased-the quantity of grass un those streaks ever since nearly one half." KEEP Goon COMPANY.—There is a certain magic or charm in company. for it will assimi late and/make you like to them by much con versation witn them. If they be good compa ny, it is a great means to make you good. or confirm von in goodness ; but if they be bad. it is twenty to one but they will corrupt or in fect you. Men or women tint are greedy of acquaintance or hasty in it, are often shared in ill company before they are aware, and en tangled so that they cannot easily get louse from it after, when they woul.l. Prrry Pam.' sa.— The Angelica Reporter gives an intimation of two respectable Milk*. living in the same neighborhood in ne of the towns of Allegheny county. and in prosperous circumstances. Swapping wives-411e ladies taking to their homes all the property they bad on their first matrimonial allisuGe. The above Journal,further states that, no difficulty ,bad ever occurred between any of the parties, and that no reason is•given for the strange recipro cation. "- "