By MOORE & THOMPSON; mmmmsa The " DEMOCRATIC BANNER" I 8 pubhshrd Weekly. on Wodnnsdny mornings. nISS’. per nnnum -or 8] 75 if paid m ndvnnco. J N 6 n or run he diamnlinuod (unloss at the up lion dFlrm editors) unnl nll nrrcnrugca are paid. ' 'W‘Advcrusemnnls. &0.. at tho usual rules. POETRY} from tho Juvemlo SW Bnok \London Annuhufior l 47.) WOMAN’S LOT. 0h! say no: woman] [Ol u nan], Hvr pnlh a path 01 Sorrow; ' Tlhdoy. porchancc. aomejoy dehnrr'd May ywld monnjoy 10-morrow. fll'in no! hard—J! cnnnot ho. To speak m [ones of glndncas. ‘Tu hush lho sigh of nusery. .‘md aoolhc lhe brow ufsndnews ‘h' "I no! hard sweat flowers to spread. To nlrew lho path \\ilh roars, To smooth the much. and reel lhe hem}. _ Where some loved lrlond repnscs. 11-is not hard. In Him lhe henrlh 'For bmlhers homo rrmrmng; To \vuko (he nyngn n! harmless miflb. When wmlor fires are burning. H u: not hard. n nislcr'u love. To pay with love us (emit-r; When rum péfplex. nnd lrinln prove A uislerg' help lo rcmrlgg. II M no! hard, whan troubles corm- And dnnlm- nnd {omsdislrossing To nhollor in n lnthor‘s hnmc. ' And laeln molhcr’u blessing. It Is nolfgmrd. when nlorms nr'w Mul fnrkncss nnd drjm‘llun. To look to Honron \\ilh lruyl‘mg eyes And alk m kmd protection. Then any not womm's lot in hnrd. ller mlh lhe plllh ofsurrow; deny. pcrrhnnce, some Joy dehnrr'd May yield un'col pcncn lu~morrouz Vice President Dallas. INTERESTING Lyman—'l he follnning communication to the Washington Exam inel. inlrmlures n cnnespomlence betuern citizens of Washington county. Pn.. and the Vice Ptemlent ol the l’niled but". We publish the reply ol the VICE I’vest. dent In connection w ith the communication «eh-nod to: To {ln}: Edilors (3/ the H’aalu‘nglon Ear mnmer Gunllnnon~ll being (levulvcd uhnn me to rrquest lhe lavnr of fun In publiah in your next pnper, lhe annexed Cnru‘!pun~ dence between the Vice President 0! lhe Uniml Sam and some of yuur lriendr. neighbnu and subicnbers. in loan and countiy—lhe Stale and «roomy eleclmn living over. a calm. delibetale and unbinn std considenlmn of a great national out» jecl may be cxpeclml~and I now. [here lorr. prifurni the duly. The pure nwrnlisl no less than the re publican staleman; and bath equal uilh lhcj Hue pnlri 0 ml enlightened phllnnlhrn. pint. it may l/ZJNIMHNI In anticipate. will anunl (hex/u“:|_y nl Mr. Dalian Ihe mum] nl lhgir higl/i/sl comnwmlaliun. In it lhrro ‘IB nu indirection, no Eublcrluge ; .overv Ihing is manly, camlnl and ahme-bnani. He n-gnuls his fellow man nu! us a nun: animal. whose highest insiincl iI idolatry .u/ mam-yet? ianes/s; but ns a moral and inlrlleclunl being. enduwed by lhe wimlnnn land goodness of lhe Creator, wilh a capn-i cily, undor a ‘bem-ficent government ol u, high clegn-e or mental iniprnvtment. and Individual and nocul happiness. Il’i’ltl/ll‘ i I'3} may be continued; but this degrades nnl him. but lhose who use il. “'nshing lon, Jcflerlon and Jackson wvre merci luply pelted by such stmms—lllalony rev yards the result. II is a tribute or tax, ev er levied on the fearless and able advo calts ol lhe equal rights of man. How then can Ihe Vice-President escape? El ligies may be burnl, but where do we find the scan? 'Strike. but hear.‘ is a noble and heroic motto. and il. alter hearing what none but those whn/ear l/Ic (rut/4 tun object to hear with calmness and cantlor.*uud a sincere dcaire to arrive at the truth, the weapons do not [all [tom the hands of those who grasped them so inglminusly. he and his lrienda,-. having nothing in view but the truth, will doubtless heanztyith a eimilar spirit, whatever arguments may be urged in opposition. The subject being a national one, and 'of lhq hlghehl importance—mulling lhe lsober though! and deliberate duly ol eve rr-y citizen—coming home, as it does. to [the fir'uidcs of the moat indigent m the .cnmmunily, as well as [how in good cir __c‘umalencea. it is 'wonhy. not ol a fleeting ,nhouglu only, but of the most earnest and unprejudlced investigation. Very respecllully, . . . , . ON3. or THE SXGNERS. " ' ‘ Philadelplua, Sep!. 26,1846. Géntiemen :—-The animated and war ~:getic letter I hove-just received Irom you ..‘cnll‘ator an Immediate reply. l‘cnunut lallow vou, for n Vmomcnt. to suppose me ‘inée‘nsible to the approbation you so eto ‘quén'tiy express of my recent conduct in thechnate of the United Stated. The ‘compxehens'pVe View which you have taken “off the-oubject gives. greater valuoto your judgement; and entitleujou as (well [only ‘thplko‘nl to a’frauk reciprocationof neu ‘tl'ne'n'tl“ : - ' . . 3. 'An‘mqual system bf taxation, 'and as vmilanmne as ,5 pure and economical ud j’mipist‘ra‘tionvd their public concerns wall jubtjfj. _is thcdemand of the; American pco'pla.‘ "It ig'théir right, routing on a (an: .daiuonhlgprinclplbzof ~their s‘o'cial 'strucl ;,lu(e.g and guru-limb; the whole {tenor} of their ‘con'stitucntu. [Why shouldithpy I,_ x . . . . 9 .- ‘ I ‘ ‘ V. ‘ \ I ‘ i .- . .; V. . .' z . .-, H H 7' n: V ‘ . w ‘ ‘ W I " V .I ' v " , » | , . . ‘ '. 1‘ ”.21"? ""‘ i". A, ‘l ‘N ‘s'” a“. ' ' ‘ I ‘x-. .I‘- 'l‘ . . - w ‘ V . :P‘ at ,w’ {35:5,- . _.- 1:; 1“, iii: . #35:: §', \ {£l2 ‘ , . . ‘ \» “" ' , . ‘l' ’6 not have it? Why should we perc'ewe in enforcing a mode of obtaining treasure to meet the expenses which works unfairly—- kindly on the cast and cruelly on the west and south; which galhérs wnalclul and pernlcnuq surplus, and gradually gives un uicldy and dangoruus power to a single clu-s ol capitalists? Answers to then queslions might be easy, as long, as the ma jority of the people. sensible of an unripr ofgnnizution. largely. in order to drive deep Into their loil the roots of weird independence and safety. But answers become dillicult, it nut itnpmi-ible. when tlmt ninjority, con sciuus ol matured strength, nnd prepared ‘tn cope with every sort of antagonism. n lvow a change of purpnse, or ’rathe’r n:re current-e ol the juutice nnd freedom lrUtlt which they ditergntl under the beliel that it was at least prudent If not necessary to do no. They-‘ihuve‘nnw culled for a reduc tion of the duties on imports tn the meas ure of revenue want ; tnrnn nbnmlonment at all legislative favoritism ; .lor an equal i'mtinn of the burdens which they know should be borne by all alike; and they have llllislt‘tl. with emphasis, that indirect but copious tribute shall no longer be rx~ acted {tom the agricultural, comtncrclal and mechanical nlttflcfl, under pH‘ll’UCt! o! prntecltng “here protection is obvrnusly nnd notoriously more pampering. Call» puch us these. lrom such a source. it in as wise, as it is wholesome, in conformity With the spirit at our institutions to obey with as little delay or opugnnlion as pos piblr. My taithiin the intelligence and patri otiam of the people is hab'tua'. The de rnocrriry never tail. sooner or later, to un derstand and puriiue their true policy and inter'ente. ()n the subject of ti tiiritT, how eier, dtflLultiea exiirted. at once complex and covert, bv uhich they were liable to he embarrassed and deceived. It II indi rect and unseen taxation on all but the im porting merchantr; and tmpoVCttblics with out its agency being perceived. Incomes or wages become inadequate, and it is not immediately discoierett that this inade quacy is caused by the swollen prices which men at e obiiged to pay lor their iron implements. their clothing, their household utensils, their firoceries, and their corn torts. The demand of the tax collector who visits them tor the ordinary rates and leviesi. distinct enough, and if thatbe exorbitant they redress themselves by el ecting more economical county commis sioners—the grievance is direct titid un ilisguised—and they know their remedy. Not on With the taxation which taxr-s in phone of duties on import“. The plough iiiiin ta uncctiat‘mus at having ptiid anvitite Upon the nuchrne with which he is furrow mg the :oil—so is the blacksmith u! to his mnil—and the laiitity mirtroti ad to her hlanketr. her sugar, and lH‘r salt—they bought the articles at a neighboring stout lit” the same money that others paid, and nothing intimated that a part of the money i they gave wa‘ the tetlnburat‘lllt‘tll or final: payment olri public taxi \Ve of Penn rylvanm, who can acarcely continue quiet I under the imposition ot three mills per dot liir to meet the interest on our debt. hovel actually become accustomed to contribute from our means Without the s'ighest inur ioor, titty, not. it hurtdied'tinwa as touch in as many deceptive mode-8. under the operation ol the land at 18-12. We not only pay our share for supporting the gen qral governineut. but we also pay that por tior. of the price of every article we buy over and above what it would have cost ll the tarilf had not been enacted. Why, then, wonder that the laboring cianea oi our population were late in attending to. and slow in thoroughly appreciating the oppreariva draining consequent upon an exorbitant tariff? Like banking, there in ii mystery in it whose solution lugi at the close oi protracted dircu~sion, inquiry, Vigilance and thought. Yet, the same people that gradually matured the opera tions and tendencies of the one. and reso lutely arrested them. have now, with the progressive Ipirit which characterizes them and their epoch. pushed torward to check the other. The veil by which the evils of indirect taxation are concealed from the eye of the people should be determinately tilted by those who have at heart the happiness 0! the masses, and seek to ameliorate their condition. This is a high obligation of democratic representation. legislative or executive. It is the higher. because eas. ily evaded or plausibly lelt undone. Let the wrongs of a confiding and tolling con stituency be studied by the agents whom they honor with their suflragon, and let the real sources 0! those wrongs be laid bare. ll harsh, unfair, or unnecessary demands upon theirsuhstanee have been made, they ought not to he considered sanctified and unaosailable because long and patiently endured. On the contrary. the ,laithlul sentinel should “cry aloud and spare not" the more zealously when the opportunities ot'his elevated position enable him to see what is hidden Irom others. A strong and gratitying'illustration presents health: a recently distributed document addressed by the Secretary at the Treasury to Con grass, and received at the close of the late session, Our countrymen shouldghave their attention invoked towards this re msrkable paper—remarkable, in every tes pact—its broad bearing; [its precision. its authentic facts. audits striking results—f volunteered lo sacrifice CLEARFIELD, PA. DECEMBER 10, Ist No dcvelopement of which I om aware has been made equally lucid and impressive. ll purports to be a report, in complianCn with a resolution of the Senate, exhibiting it list of manufactured articles upon which $54,000.000 (titty-tour millions!) are on nunlly paid to the protected class (not to the national Treasury!) by enhancing the price of the domestic‘ nrticlen, and the n moun’. no paid on each article. under the 'l'urifl' 0(1842, and by accurately lormml tabular statements it establishes the annu fll flugreuate of indirect taxation imposed by the law—-—seen and unseen—for govern ment and for lovorite clussel—to exceed righty-twu millions of dollttrs! “'on: the American people sensible that this tori”. which (t‘lt‘llSllliy lonced but a single vein. practically made them blood ‘at every pore P—which prolz-‘ssrd to collect for pun ‘ltc' user twenty-eight, millions, yet silently‘ and imperceptibly drew also, {or private! monopoly almost twice that sum? Did \\'o nl this Commonwealth realize the ex _‘l trotdinury juggle by which the federal let gialnture bt't’lllltlg to seek from u duty on Iron alone a gross revenue of but 83,2314 437,31‘tun11y extorted o total tax oi 336,-l 515.317? seeking from in duty on coal a lone the sum of $130,221, extorted .1 tax‘ “i 86.869092? and seeming to seek Irom n duty on manufactures ol wool alone the ium ol s3,73l,oos,rxtortetl a tax ol $lO.- 437.i-is?t¢, Some lew financial students may have early detected these Intent vi one of tlte system ; but our formers and yeomanry. our Working producers and toiling poor, our men of the oxe and the anvil. the scythe and the sow, they have not the means our the time for such inves tizutions; they Could take no note olit but by its loss. they suffered long under the weight of the burden, and dreamed not that ll was the invisible and tnsatiate vnm» pyre of indirect taxation which exhuustcd their ntrength. ' [Wish not to be understood to prefer the substitution of excise {or impost.— There are aspcritiel in the former “hich render it almost intolerable among a peo ple peculiarly sensitive as to domrcitiary visits ; and it is abuse only that makes the latter mischievous. Certainly our liber ties would he safer under a system of open and direct taxation, withall its roughnen, than under a prolonged administration at such t'urtive oppression, gross inequality and immoral deception as characterise the tariflot 1841!. But reduce the duties one hfl”. take from them their tendency to nurse and rear monopolies, adopt value Instead o! name or torm as the controlling ~tanilaid, drop the false hypocrisy 0t min itmumi, and the thing essentially demo ,cr‘atrzcd. becomes at least harmless.— i-q‘tC t. ln plain truth, is the. law which "the izrca: Congress” has passed. to commence operating on the first of December next. [That law may contain errors ol detail. it meridablr- as developed by expericllct‘. bl“ comparatively its traits are equrility'i jus ilire. moderation and candor. \Vhde the lneceasary revenue is snught at custom lhoust'l, we shall experience ie-S wrung. land incur less tt~k train a tariff tuumlcrl on its principle- than from any other mode lottaxirig. if la.o not mistaken It! the pervading r-pirit of that law. political BCO nnmists “ill herealter say that its reforms igave security to the earnings of labor and itimrts to the power of capital. The horne operation of the taritT or 1916. promises! to be genial and salutary—l mean in regard to the great industrial masses. Its reduction of taxes, one half. is immediate reltel; its indirect abatec rnerrtot prices and the general expenses ut comtortable living,nwakcrin hope in the breasts at all whose wages or means are low and precarious, and its tendency to oblige capitalists to seek the success of their investments rather in a fair and gen erous. than in tin arrogant and avaricious treatment of their workmen. yields a pro tection to the worst independence and dignity of labor tar worthter ofattainment than that which the manulacturer demands for his wares. There is much more to protect in the citizen of a repubiic than his opportunities to work. He is not mere‘ ty to devote his days unceasingly to ac quire bread and rniment. The "rights of man,” rights too readily ridiculed or for gotten. are his. The pride of character. the sense o! natural equality. the spirit ot independence. are. his. The ennobling relations and duties of domestic life. are his; and the law uhich would sacrifice all these. upon the wretched pretext of secu ring‘lo him a market where he can sell the strength 0! his linews or lhe dexterily‘of his fingela. is a law tor the gradual estab lishment ofllnvery on the basis of'anilnnl necessities. - > Thev'l‘arifl" of 1846 recommends itsell no less by certain consillerationa‘counect ed with its external hearing or aspect. [.t l: 111-greater harmony than its predbces nor with thaliberul ideas of international commerce prevailing throughout .lhe world. {Retaliotory restrictions (on trade are uncalled for» The vista of general peace stretches far into futurity.~and‘ inr viles us in mingle on terms of reciprocity and feurlessfl'riendship With our fellow men every .where. Even now Agrioullure exulls in the liberty of sending her surplus food over lhousands of tunes. ol water. to .lhegfamishing sons of Ireland; .Our'crops; ,olrwhcat and .lndlan corn are suddenly augmentcd in value upwards ol lorty‘ mil~z lions of dollars an clfecl 0‘! opening lhc‘ eaten in o ningle channel, which will cat'- ry gladnessito the family fireside olevery larmer. ‘Auuredly this 'l'artflis far from Free Trade; that, nl enurse cannot be pre tended. while' the revenues necessary to mntntain ‘ the Government, say twenty eight millions of dollars, are exacted lrom our imports alone. but it meets modern en lightenment hull wuy;hn(| though'atill-dis criminating in tarornf our own industry. it gives- a much broader welcome than was heretofore given t'o.th_c industry and en terprise ol other countries. in relr-rrtng with such extreme kind and complimentary language to the dams ion given by the Vice President, when reunion were equally divided in favor of the new 'l‘aritl', you seem gentlemen, war .med up by the shameless excesses of slan der and outrage with which cupidity and {faction nttetnnted, an it were, atronce and lb}! storm to overwhelm the casting vote. 51 fear you do me more than justice. and ithat I am hound’t'o thank my defutnera for In large share of your animated applause. it was the duty ot-oflice and the peremp .tory lawvol position. The citizen—l care itiot whether whig or democrat—who can deliberately inculcate thzu under the cir ‘cutnstnnces. political and personal, which surrounded me, I should have voted a gainst the bil|-‘ Itic niger est. [nine to cavene Remand—4w is radically and in curably insensitile to the obligations 0! public trust, and his instincts utterly rick ety sud unsound. I claim then only not tothnve been recreant, not to have proveu false to my morals or my mission. nor have sunk to the hopesand standard ol my assailants. in one aspect, indeed, the chance or the design which devolved upon me the necesstty of intervening, assumes an importance and a charm to which I cooless myself tar lrom insenaible. If.- au you forcibly argue, and as certain ad voc‘alea of moneyed interests seem almost to admit, the casting vote has disenthralled the producing classes, has dissolved the letters which bound the poor to the cars of the rich, has palsied the movementsol cuv etoue rapacity, has summoned labor to the: assumption of its natural independence and dignity, and has taken EVen a few leathers from the backs ol theoverburden ed. it. I say, the casting vote. by the clo sing career of the Tariff of 1842. has led to these results, then I solemnly and sin cerely thank my God that it fell to the lot also humble an instrument as myself, e ven reluctantly on other accounts. to strike the final blow in an nnchievement so philanthropic and subatuutiatly glori nus. Our cornmnuwealth 0! Pennsylvania. is thought, has ' intern/9’ which may be Injuriously affected by a diminution of KM dunes un Impqrts ufcoal and mm. The“: ‘interesls’arc; I presume nothing more than the profits ol such of her capitalists as have made investments connected with procuring and selling these two articles ol merchunilize. Such profits may. for a season be impaired. and no one can be ac cemnry. even when impelled by the best inntlVeu, and aiming at the wisest purposes in (leleziting incidentally the pecuniary culculatiuns nl lth friends and neighbors, without feeling pain and repugnance.— Such was m'y avowed sentiment when dew trimming the Senatorial tie. SHH. I cannot retrain Irom snymglhnl lhosu 'interc’srs,’ an loudly lrumpvcted, are very far from being the only or the area! public ‘ Interests’ of Pennsylvania. They are mtthnsc which constllute her happim-M. her intelligence, her character. The}; are an! the ' imam." oi her Juri sprudence. Juulice. Education. Virtue, or Liberty. Asau'rcdly. ihev are not the ‘ interests’ which create or strengthen the roots of patriotism. or bind the hearts of her Inns. a: mine ha»: been bound. insepa rubly lnhcr puritv and honor. Muy we not be permtm-Il lu think something more of the" interesta‘ of her poor. as the many, than of her-rich 11‘s the lewP—more ol her moral than of her material ‘ inleresla,’—- more of the free, upright. and manly small ul her pupul‘ntiun. than of thecheets 0| her corpuralions? All who have weathered lhu slurmu uf lhe Int lwunly years. can remember how the ' intelesta’ of the SIM: were represented as centering u! n grcnl buanl. \vhereon paper credits Were. manu l‘nctured wilh magical lacilily, wilhiu lhe while Wall! ul' n Chesnut Ilreet temple when our mlernnl improvements and their avails. our public schools. ohr commerce. and our currency.‘ were said,to radiate from an' institution which wielded the lorce’nl hundreds of millan of dollars.‘ amllilledhrlower'ed lhe value-clevery thing around us-nt in pleasure. [The sumo debating and stale picture il now drnwinghy lhc'siune class 'ol men only lhefidolv with which they at New“ identity on! "interest? is the, Tarifof W 2. placed on llie'pede'stal whehce'lhc‘ National: Bank was‘Crumblcd in'rums .-—: They lsummon' us-lir p’ray fall-our! inter cs‘ls’ at ”glue old'shrine‘, ‘wi’lh all lhe sup‘e'i"? slilmue observances'nnd‘rileo formerly es tablished, and really. makes nor change but in the figure'olrtheir JO5. May we not doubt wh'elhel? lll‘ese .minialefs ol the Pro lean Mammon have junter conceptions of .‘lhe enlarged. lusting, und'sulid ‘z'nt'erests’~ of _our 'people‘than (hey-enlertizined' in 1836? Is ilnol excusable to tell them that this noble' community-has mu’clihfio're' to_be.proud.ol nod to raly 'upun, ablmégfi. of prosperity. order and renown,l {hag NEW. SERiESmVOL, 1..N0. 425-WlioLé No. 10“? what they are pleased to label all hel‘ vitll ‘ interests P' ' ' e ‘ ‘ ' It would be well and wisevrere these ' interests’ to take ‘waroiug iron the ‘gia‘s't. nod resolutely decline being‘pluced'hy party fanaticism in a position uhta'gonitiiic to the social and polticnl relorma ef'pro gresswo democracy. , Within'their profier sphere. no one cun desire that they should cease to thrive. But if they quit that sphere, and blindly rush forward to domi neer over the' masses—to assume him ‘all in' all.’ highest, greatest.- belt-fie marshal, exhort. and subsidize, 0r coerCo p'nrtizane—or corruPt or overuwe legisla tion—and to dictate what shall be, instead 0! obeying what is, the law—then it in but the deduction of uniform and yesterday's experience to my that they must become odious and Intolerable to a free and proud people, by whom, at any seeming acri (ice. they will be dimwned, provtrated, und proscribed. Let us. gentlemen, en deavor, while we have yet time and toni per left. by inculcations of truth. forbear ance and moderation, to avert the neces sity of such courses, but if‘the one‘c‘epsity be forced upon us no a similar ueCeeeity was forced upon us‘lin 1836, your letter distinctly tells whereegin that conjuncture. the honest republicans 'of Washington county will be iound. and' I hope this an swer was not necessary to let you know where to look for me. Accept the renewed thank: and vista: ialulalions of your obliged lellow-clfiun and (fiend. G. M. DALLAS. [‘o Thomas Morgan, and others.‘ , During a certain period of Mr. l-lall’s ro sidencs at Leicester. there were in the eon. gregation some members of a family for merly widely scattered over the world. but Who, I hope, are now dying oil—l refer to l the [elders—sometimes lound related to Ithe busy bodies in other'rnen's matters; and always to be discovered where mis chief is to be done, especially among Christians. My friend, having been an noyed by some of these partial. resolved to give them a little advrce Irom the pulpit. On one Lord's day meeting, the piece being crowded. and the earlier p'or’tioni’bf the service gone through. he rose, and in the hesitating, tremulous manner in which he always began his sermons, announced as his text. James I. 26. Hll any maneu ong you seem to be religious. and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own/heart, this man’s religion is vain.” .The‘congre gation looked at the preacher. and then at each other, beginning. Isuppose,'to‘expeet something "appropriate to their circumstan ces." It is possible that Mr. Hall perceiv ed this. for he proeeeded. in a somewhat higher note than usual, to say—"My dear brethren. you will probably feel that some thing like an apology is due,on account of my having selected this text, from whteh to address you thiavmorning. I entirely sympathize with this feeling. and'hereby I solemnly and publicly ask‘pardon of God and of you, that] have so long neglected an important branch of my duty, which is to reprove one evil that has awfully tended to devastate the world, to ruin the Church of God,‘and to destroy the peleonal. religion ofevery one who indulges in'it;.l mean the practice of backbiting and slander.” . , 1 need nol add that lhe sermonhaljuo Which could no! he enailyiorgougn; and happily it was useful in removing . then"! which he thus exposed. _ . 313°0l the many revengelul, covetous, lalse. and ill~natured pereous’whom we complain of in the world. though'we 11l join in the cry against them, what man a mong us singles out himself as a criminal. or ever once takes it into his head that he adds to the number? orowhere is there a man so bad who would not thinkit the hardest and most unlair imputation to have any of those particular vices laid to his charge F ll he hss~thc symptoms ever so strong upon him which he would pro nounce tnlallible in another; they are in dtcatious at no such malady in himself; he sees what no one else eees. some secret and flattering circumstance in his'faveur', which no doubt makes a wide difference betwixt his else and the parties whom he condemns. What other man speaks so often and vehemently against the vice o! pride. acts the weakness of it in a moreo. ' dious light, or is more hurt with it in sno ther than the proud man himself? Itls the same with the passionate. the design mg. the ambitious. and some otherchar note” in lilo. and being. a consequence of the nature of such vices. sud-almost insep arable from them. the effects an: are geo _emlly so gross and absurd that where pity does not; lorbid. 'it ,is pleasant to observe and 'trace the“ cheat through the seveul turmngs and” wiodingsof, the heartglaml detect it. through all'the shapesyend ll pearances-which it putsonh, . - ». V, .. , Mom; SCANDAL. -—The ediwrof the Al abuma Jl'mrual has jus‘ leArned Hut-lhe ".ludieswill not look at or notice a bright moon, because Lord Rosne's new Tele scope has'proven that than: 39.110 mania i‘o” . . ‘ I ' , ‘> . ' Liz'fll Language.—-h il estimated that“! '0 housnndlhrao hundred and .forly-fqufldi.’- umn langungouro spoken, in money”; TAT'I‘LERS M / ..• t