voiricß-ok THE STAR, CHAMBER:MIRO STREET' A FEW 'DOOR WEST OF Mn. t'ORRY I S TAVERN. • • ' A.DVEI%TISICIII.EN-lAS donspictiogised Ova times for wet DOLLAR per squitre—over four TIMOS,TWENTi.FIVE mo s per repiare will bc..charged. IDZC Lit IY:DWai2 • 443 ,1 Q At $1 per annum, hallNyearly iidvanee. '41a03 (Ba.LIdI.MDO "With sweetest flowers enricled From various gardens cull'd with care." I'VE SEEN HER SMILE. I've seen her smile—and thought it bliss To bask within such sunlight rays, To cute!' the graceful features 'move Upon the lovely face to gaze. I've seen her smile, and all around Confess'd the rapture gallica inspire, Each tongue delighting in her praise, Each look betraying inward fire. I've seen her weep--tho large bright tear Stood sparkling in her eye of blue ; Her quiv`ring lips were cold and pale, Her cheeks had lost their roseate hue.,.. But still so,lovely did she seem, So beauteous, e'en in sorrow's fears, That let who will have Sylvia's smiles, I covet, only, Sylvia's tears. UMW maanwio, EARLY DISAPPOINTMENT. BY MISS E. BOGART. "In aught that tries the heart, how few can stand the proof:" The first disappointment of the heart is the hardest to be . borne. It is that which falls like a blight on the warmest and best 'affections of which human nature is suscepti ble; and though the young and eta-talc spirits may sometimes rise beneath the pressure, •---autiperhaps-recovertheirmanted - ton&amidst. the pleasure and gaieties of life, there is still a cold and barren place on the mind, where hope will not blossom, nor expectation put forth her powers, nor fancy spring again in to beauty and, fertility. Love is, doubtless, in youth the strongest passion. I t takes en tire possession of the heart and thoughts. It is the root on which happiness is grafted, and on which memory is engraved With its - most indelible. - Brint. The histories of its power are spread over the whole earth. They are taken from every station and conditibn of life and painted in all the.variety of form and co- lorine of which the tuvention'of the mind is., capable. We behold in infancy its Eden-like paradise or bliss, its wild tornados of destruc tion and violence,lts morbid melancholy, its sullen pride, its shrinking timidity, its re morseless vengeance ; all these have been portrayed to the imagination in vivid colors, and in thousands of instances; still there are other thousands yot Unrelated, and shades of difference in each, which [wise continually in changeful hues-to the mind like newlights cast on old and faded pictures. The first ---disappoiatment-of,hmmthopckiwiPd arrow office. Many sink beneath its influence,& ne ver recover-fronAheAmek. Otherci oenin to rise-above it in their boasted strength and pride: but while they laugh with the gay, and glide along, apparently, with the surface • of the stream of pleasure, still "The cold heart to ruin runs darkly the while." The gloomy misanthrope, the reckless vote ry of dissipation, the miserable victim of the demon of intemperance, have often been caused by some early disappointment of the' ,heart; where, perhaps, " many a withering thought lies hid," of which the world knows not, thinks not, cares not. They were too dream-like in their existence among those over thoughts, "MI outward bound, Midst Plaids and rocks, and storms, to cruise for pleasure." These reflections were suggested to my mind by the circumstances of meeting lately with an old friend, whom I had not seen for years.—but I have written a long preface tOa - CICCILIA MORINJWSP, as TAM .remember her,was one of the gayest and happiest of hu- man beings. To me she was the animating spirit of all my juvenile pleasures and enjoy. merits. Oiir TriiiiidShip — dertimeneed early, -and was early brought to maturity, for it needs not years to awaken the feelings of af fectien in the heart ; they spring up sponta-' neeusly,,wherever they find any thing around which to entwine themseves,and time has no thing to do with their growth or their decay. I have frequently wondered that we should have been so very intiinate, and can only ac= count for it on the principle that extrembai sometimes - harmonize. • It certain that we were totally unlike in character and disposition, yet I loved her as I have loved but, few others. I know not how to describe her as she was at 16 years of' ago, for there never were two days or hours in which she appeared the - samey— LivOy, imaginative, unaffected and-00c tionate, she was one of the most versatile &- fascinating of nature's children. She was not very beautifill, but the glow of health - and exercise, imparted a brilliancy to her coMplexiOn, which charmed away the minor • faults of form and feature. There was also tm expression of gladness in her soul-beam ing t:c, and aclear wild ring of such heart • felt mirth in the etamd of her gay laugh,that me might, truly have imagined that happi ss th e ver y essence of her existence . . If was a source of deep regret to me that al inOt asaswas callable of appreciating : h er real worth, ive were separated by the changing destinies of litiat. Still our attach ment waeltithfully nursed in a constant in tercourse by letter, which was supplied on „ both - sides with undiminished aigour for the t a of a whoia year; lad at length • shared the fhte atoll siaiiiar youthfid cones,. paiidence. Thiiisties of otrr *Ales be,gtut• • • * L to * grew *Ol mibw and Lit liiihereo," tall in. . 1046 1 0 100 / slierlim silent them Wei lest Of fins nit . ease - end wasjpart . - • WI attain :AP woitntS! DUCIT AMOR . PATRIN PRODESSE LOVE OF MY COUNTRY LEADS MR To RE OR ADVANTAGE TO MY FELLOW.CITIZENSL" 62,12 4 24 1 .141284R269 aaQZilt.f2BaDdia% 2),rBCgailitatlK2 95'9 1124316 ~ . _ , . liarity. Our thoughts , and ietngs, and pleasures, and pursuits, became strange to each other; and as the common topics of dis-• cussion between us were divested of their interests, the pen by degrees was entirely neglected. I Thus it was that for several years 1 knew - .. nothing-of Cecilia Moreland ; Tiuthing but that she was married—and according to the opinion of the world, ?harried wed. .1-ler husband was said to be rich and handsome ; awl as beauty and wealth are the most sought after in the, selection of a husband, w ho could presume to suppose that she had not been ibr tunate or happrin her choice'! I belieyed from report that she was both happy and for tmatte, and rejoiced at firmer li • .ing.it asl would ?hi have done in fier da s. There tare M e 0.. ments of delightful rei iiniscence, wimp. the happy scenes of childhood and the power and witchery of early feelings come home to my heart. Indeed, our first impressions of love, or 'friendship, or happiness, or mise ry, are perhaps never entirely erased from our minds; however they may be sonwtimes carried away and apparently lost in the whirlpool of the-world; there are still lucid intervals of calmness & retlection,..% . hen they are thrown back upon the ineinory,& resume their triumphal* though transitory reign. It is not many months since I met with ___the_friewL_ef whom I have been speaking. We were passim , . c . aecldenlalFroug through the same place, and before 1 knew of her being there, I heard that she was cominu . e' to see me. In an instant the image of Cecilia Moreland arose in fancy, "As bright to my heart as 'twos to my eyes." I saw her as she was when I last beheld her. I forgot that she was no longer Ce cilia Moreland, and knew not that wish a change of name, there was scarcely a trace remaining of , her former self. I awaited her arrival with the utmost impatience.— Every knock started me—every sound of approaching steps fixed my eyes on the door. It was at length opened, and a lady entered, leading by the hand a little boy of - Wren years of age. I sprang forward to meet her, while the exclamation involunta rily escaped ,my lips, "Oh, Cecilia, how you are altered !"—She burst into tears. The answer was eloquent, and needed no 1 explanation. We sat down and spoke of the length_of the time which had intervened since our last meeting ; of the changes Which had taken place within that period, --umi-the--41itirent-tiestinies--by -which-e,ach had since been followed. . . ----.l—gazed-on-hei-face, and sighed-as-the-, picture of memory vanished. I wanted to ask her if she - had been -happy -- , -- -buteould not. 1 - felt that it was a chord that would not bear vib.ution. The question was in volved in too many delicate associations, which I knew could not be separated in her mind. It was evident that her once buoy ant spirits had been crushed and broken, and her light heart divested of its gay and blissful feelings; and I was sure that there. n.ust. have been some deep and undermining cause which had produced these effects; something too near Hong —which workal daily anehourly, and could not be cast off. Our brief intercourse was both pleasant and painful. We renewed our protestations of friendship with sincerity and interest, and once more parted to pursue our course in opposite directions. IVe were never to meet again. 1 spoke afterwards of our in terview, and the impression it had left upon my mind",to oneTvto hadtiiavii tJeCiritirroin -lieroliildhood-- -__l-. —_...,. . .. _ e "Ah." replied she, "Cecilia has seen her best days.. She has got a husband who will harrass her to death, with his teasing and irritating temper. He possesses one of those•fault finding dispositions which can never be suited with any tiling; amid his wife, with all her efforts, ca* seldom suc ceed in pleasing him. Her spirits have at length been worn out by "a continual drooping„" and her health suffers in etinse qUence, Thetis not the only cause; but Bvery body does not know what .1.. , w, etween ourselves, she never lov ' the Man she married. Her heart was' iti to one whom her parents thought no thatch for her, but they have reason now to• re pent their ambitio*, Of what use is wealth • if we mtist sacrifieer 4 perace to obtain itl The One who would" ht4been her choice - wee every way calcalatett, to make her' happy butpher parents refust!d' their. consent to the union, and she gave him up. lie has wan dered away, nobody knows where, and she is fast descending to the grave." . Here the narator ceased her history, and her closing prediction was bin too soon veri fied.. She is gone to her last rest. 1. read amaccotuit of her death inn newspaper but a fey,' days .ago. It was stated that she died'olconsumption, and the world will be- Lim; it was so. None perhaps'will contra dict it l , though there - may, be a few who will knowi that it was disappointment Which preyed at first upon heispirits, and at Iv gth produeed the heetic flush and wasting weak ness, which (*ritually destroyed her. ,' 1 There are two plrtraitallrayrn in Inking colors on my heart and 'memory; the Or trarTs of,the two.Ceeiliiw. • The repre senting the young original in all the ,bril:. Bent hues of hope and happineas; the ether . 8110 . is tow years , meting 'in her .. countenance the eltilloa of pare and do pp: A Nll4 lo w Xtepiablicals Sattlitr+ PI - 'te i.. 8 .2.1"? E 3 &`&10 -a 4,2 .11' .1 ID S Delivered' before the 'Temperance Society of Got. tysburg awl the vicinity, at the Court-house in Gettysburg, on the 1011 r Dec, 1831, DT DANIEL 111. SIIIVSEIt, Esq.. By request of the Society. Why, upon this day, do my eyes rest on this goodly assemblage of the wise and the good—of' the aged and the yoOng 7 -of the lovely and the fair? Why is it, that in this hall consecrated to justice, are congregated as well the young and beautiful, who, with sparkling eyes and bounding boseutt, are just entering en the . racctif the hoary and trembling petitarchs, whose time honored brows, whitened by the ?mows of many winters, challenge veneration and command re spect? Why is it, that my aye, as it lights upon each well known face in this respected audience, meets none bittAnswering glances of sympathy and high wrought interest?—lt is be cause ye know, that a high and impprtant duty has summoned us together. It is because ye feel that a holy and sacred cause has convened us up on this occasion. It is not a spurious and exag gentled sentiment, eng antlered in the distempered brain ofsetne enthusiastic dreamer, sighing for a state of ideal perfection't lint a grand and meg : nanimons feeling; finrol and holy us the teategif pity that trembles in, woman's eye at the recital of a tale of wo—noble and generous as the deeds that emanate from a heart fall.ftaugbt with be nevolence and virtue. - We have met, in the spirit of enlightened philanthropy, in a great moral crisis: we have met, to raise our hands and voices against the dark and demoralizing despotism of 16 - 44 3 1 . 1101 l or IV'l' F. PLR ANTE: WO. TriVe the purpose ofwresting, by warning and example, some at least of his victims, from _his wtthering and polluting grasp. "l'is a cause, attended by the aspirations Or the gnatl: a cause, on which Angels smile, and uvula which Ileaven looks down with complacency ! In obeilienee to the highly flattering request of the Society of which 1 have the honor to be a member, I purpose adthessing to, you a few re marks upon this imp:,rtant. and momentous suit ject, and solicit your candid and indulgent at tention. • The baleful effects of TNTMIPERANUE upon in dividual and mamma interest, are, I believe, uni versally adinitted. Not even the most besotted of its votaries, will, in this enlielitennil day, pre sume to deny the. effect, or palliate the cause ._ With the evidence °len own senses to convince Ils AIM experience of the past to admonish us; and 'with the light of science and the far purer light of Religion, shining in upon its secret places, and exposing its hidden abominations ; there can be but one 'opinion as to its true char acter, nature, and effect, among men of coin won honesty and ordinary intelligence. It is not, then, for the purpose ofenforcing„ by argument, a-self evident proposition, that I, DOW solicit your atten tion : but "that I may stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance:" that thus, our impres miens .on this subject, too prone to fade, may be -renewed and brightened, and we bo inspired with now zeal and determination in the war we are waging against this destructive scourge. Friends! There is an exemv abroad in our land ! 'Tie a POWERFUL and a DEADLY foe! His aim is the universal diffusion ot' ruin mind desolation. NOTHING short fifth's will appease his rage. Ye look about ye, and behold the laud slumbering in quiet security; indications of increasing wealth and angmenting power, every where meet your eye; peace and plenty gladden the scene, and a calm serenity seems to pervade the landscape. 'l'rust not that seeming calm!—'Lie treacherous— 'tis deeeittial--and if too implicitly confided in, al Av,lu re you on to rum. Your foe is an Lvsinions • one :.under the mask of FRIENDSHIP{ he conceals the most envenonnal Our country has been truly styled, "the Eden of the World ;". but, alas ! this Eden, too, has- its Serpent! Do ye appeal to the Wholesome and refreshiag odours that breathe over and around it, to disprove this assertion? Alas! Never did the.groves of Para dise omit a sweeter fragrance than when the loathsome reptile lay coiled beneath their shades! Smite of you, perchance, are ready - to ask, wile, and witerte is our enemy? I will tell yeti. Your enemy in the- Demos OF INTEMPERANCE: end im found in every Distillery, and Grog-shop, and Tippling-house, and establishment tin. the Maim. fliatifeabitterftling d it 0, illyetti°4!Ottft , s , try. His bland, but'ileceitful smile, is reflected from the - gobletthir(b4rkles with.rosy. wine, end he "grins horriblYveithistly smile" of fiendish triumph. from .every:glass - , of whiskey, gni, or ' brandy. overtWila - fiarik and - ,Kous air, lie btu oft presides. the Convivial board; whilst his 'hid eons, features4fiye 4841t0f tlieir mask, glare with horrid triumph, over'Stiolescene of nightly de-, bauch and midnight revel. Upon every occasion of public assembling, you may see him stalk forth under various disguises, followed by troops of his deluded votaries—all more or less advanced on the road to ruin. In everi reeling, staggering' wretch, whose maudlin leer, idiot stare, and speech compounded of vulgarity and profanity, herald his infamy to the world, and proclaim him lost to hope, to fbeling, and' to shanie, you behold one ofhis besotted votaries. Like the arch-tempt. er, ho presents a poisoned 'chalice to the lips of his "followers, and bids them drink. "that they may bo as Gods"—whilst his aim, all the while, is to compass their temporal and eternal ruin. 'ls not this indeed a fee to be feared? And are we not loudly .oalled upon to resist his aggressions 4.--to meet hirminpufhlly, front to front—and sub. due or expel Min, ere he attains 'so firm a foothold as to be inexpugnable? Were a foreign enemy to land on our shores, menacing' Ili with subju •gation, or oven the violation 'of any, of our national rights, who, that possesses one spark of noble and patriotic feeling, would net..illy to his country's standard, determined to preserve the charter of his country's. libertiesinviolato, or perish in the feet *loch 7 And yet, hero is a far more,formida blo domestic foe, menacing us not merely with physical, but Moral bondage: threatening not on. ly to enslave the body, but to parttime and reduce to a state of nerveless imbecility, the energies the immortal mind f His standard is unfurled— hie arm is Wed-I'6 tramp is heard—and he wheels his chariot of triumphant intlimy over the ruins of IMITUIC, HONORjAND DSHRIESTIC PEACE! And , yet, until very tecently, nq War= was sounded; no preparations fet resistance were made. A blind security—a indifference—rearm bling the 'wavelenicalm, the tifthe dead; pervaded ottrituall. And even now, although the banner ofresistence has at length isten unfurled, end thousands have rallied : 'ronvid it, thee are countless thousands more r ho Infertile alumni) 'witboutbeeding itor, who, more iritatizated range theniselves under thelthstese 'standard Said con>bateiruilously , for their own undoing. that dreadfid imourge, the N Cnor;eas ,MOR• In , Which, moving like the vistathres messengers. of God's with hoistes •eitd. snyoleileed - • 4.4( v. I stop, has made one vast charnel house of Asia and the Eastern parts of Europe, threaten to visit our shores, with what breathless solicitude would we watch its approach I—With what anxious tare would we guard against its entrance? And yet, who will deny that the blight of INTEMPERANCE is inure to be' deprecated than even its poisonous contact? The one is 'merely a temporary scourge, having its intervals of relaxation in the work of destruction: the other, an evor active, over devour ing plague. Calculations founded on anthentic data, have shown that the number of victims to Intemper ance in A giving limo, greatly exceeds the mortal , ity caused in an equal time, ;iv wA a, rnsili.Enicr, OR ANY OTHER KNOWN DETERMINATE CAPSE. "1 do not think it extravagant" (says Dr. Rush) "to re peat wh• has oflon been said, that spirituous liquors dt torts lives than the sword. War has its int a uls of destruction; but SPIRITS operate at all times and seasons upon human life..? In whet a startling, in what nn appalling aspect, does this present the power oflidemperance! And yet, fbrsooth, it iscenlled by ninny, a social, and a venial crime: True, the active agency of Intem perance in producing this result, may not be at once apparent to the common eye. Thousands die of diseases under various denominations, en gendered primarily by the habit of swallowing this LIOI7IU POISON; and the connection of cause and effect, in most instances passes unnoticed by .the_ generality of mankind; although sufficiegtly apparent to careful and scientific observers. The number of victims to this 'BEASTLY VICE, in our country, has been estimated at from TWENTY TO Timm moirsfini ANNUALLY. It is seldom that the most destructive wars prove equally fatal.— And yet who cannot declaim upon the miseries and frightful ravages of war? Ni hat floods of elo hat—torrents-of—invectivo-41 • in %Tared h subject? What consternation is there not exci. ted —who t sy input)] v a wakened,when a Pestilence sweeps over the land, the dread harbinger ofdeathl And yet no similar visitation of God's wrath has ever caused such frightful ravages as this scourge of man's own creation. "If," says an eminent physician (Dr. Darwin) "a person accidentally becomes intoxicated by eating a few 11111AP0011113 of a peculiar kind, a general alarm is excited, and 1m is said to 66 poisoned, and emetics are ministered; but so flimiliarzed are we to the intox ication of villein* spirit, that it occasions laughter rather than *alarm. '—it is further remarked by the same writer that "the distilleries aro menu thetories of diseai;e--they take. the bread from the people, and conyert it into poison, and thus under the names of ruin, brandy, gin, whiskey, wine, Cider, beer, natter, &e. alcohol - is - become the bane of the Christian world, us opium of the Malmo. elan." "Pis Intemperance that peoples yobr gaols and Penitentiaries: Investigations, 11111lifi with a view to this subject, have shown that by far the larger proportion of the tenants - of these receptacles of crime, have been brought there by indulging in this vice. Nor need this surprise us; for, when a man is intoxicated, his reason is dethroned; re flection is thrown off her poise; and free course is given to all the wild and unlicensed propensities of his nature. Intemperence necessarily tends to the depravation and ultimately to the extinctiei of the moral principle: and in exact proportion - as you weaken the sense of moral, obligation, will . be the growth ofintmoral dispositions and practi ces. Did you ever know a man who was even occasionally addicted to this vice,have very nice sense of Moral duty? And, did you ever know a man who was become its habitual votary and slave who was not ripe for the perpetration of any, and every enormity, under its maddening influence? It is a fact well, known- to legal mon that more than two thirds of the criminals arraigned at the bar of the Quarter Sessions; are brought there by- Intemperance. Root out this evil, and the office of Prosecuting Attorney would became a mere sinecure. 'A strict and careful calculation of the Volume of evil - springing from this source would startle and affright even the most careless observer. It was remarked by Judge Rush, upon a certain occasion, "th..l he did not recollect an instance since his being concerned in the admin istration of justice, of a single person. being put on his trial for manslaughter, which did not mn.. ginute in drunkenness; and but few instances of trial for murder, where the crime did Nit spring from the same unhappy . source." In the "Prison . Discipline Report." it is stated, that "of 125,000 . crinunals committed to * our prisons in a year, .7.4ll.Wer.l.eldlekatheir count - isle • by spirituous liqUors."- With such. startling_facts...then„ staring its.-Itt. the thee, away with all apathy! away with all lukewarmness and cold-blooded neutrality! Every good citizen—every lover of his country,....rAL convinced of the truth of these facts, is loni od upon by every consideration that can move en intelligent, accountable..beitig, to arouse from his lethargy, and unite, titian afi . Ofitid, fin- tlie exttir inihation ..Of so dreadful, An evil. The glory, strength and happiness o a people, consist main. !y, if not altogether, in the power and influence of their moral character. To measure theii great, ness solely by their physical wealth and strength, would be to adopt art imperfect and decePtive standard. To strengthen, to elevate, and to purl. fy the moral character of his countrymen, is con sequently the interest no lessi„tha9 the duty, of every ono who aspires to the character of' a good citizen. Take. another view of the subject. It is esti. mated that upwards offifty millions of gallons of ardeid spirits aro consumed in the United States, annually: and of these, more than forty millions - are of our own production. These 40,000,000 of gallons are retailed, at the very lowest calculation, at 20,000,000 of dollars. • Twenty millions of dol lars expended annually in the United States: And for what? For tiny-great purposes .or national utility or pnhlic advitittage? No: but for the pur pose of peopling yoariaolz; effilling the land with orhne and poverty and shame; for the purpose of brutalizing-from two to three hundred.thousand of our citizens, and, depriving the country of their productive labour to the amount of at least twenty. five et - Wiens of dollars; and finally, fbr the purpose of launching into eternity; for which it is to be feared too many of them ate unprepared, no fewer than twenty-live thousand poisons annually, the victims of thin most disgusting, most degrading, and most disgrUciful of vices. Inttfroperance is a fruitful source of poverty and puperistn. TO be convinced of thiS, we naiad but cast our eyes •.over•eur own 'country, lidgfity_ fa„,. vrid though it be. Even in this land, whose pFi. eminent bloatings bare formed the theme of many', a declaiiner, and seem indeed almost to realize "the dream's' of an Utopian visionary; where the re wards oflalanit are so abundant, and the avenues to cornplance mild even wealth so numerous and easy -even herst,yoverty stalks abroad in many parts of the imiiiitty, • meagre, gliont, and naked. And why ?• Beeititsp.i he drunkard leaves his fields, tinnily without clothing,Zhat be may. spend his in - the preistworthY eM, pleyinent.iiif degrading . himself bekl, the Wail , Terms—Two DoLLAssiper paYable half-yearly in saviutte, scriptions takeit for lees than six months t iaid none dimContinue44mtil all arrea ß kts e paid failure td notify a dis3continnaneei'ilvin be•edrineidered a new engagement 1144 the . paper forwarded accordingly. • - IP.kata% 9cicac.44lboa 4341.0 ( • • Wholt Number. 90. 3 even of the most filthy beasts ! I need but ask you . to ..accompany the to the abode of the drunkard. : Imagination shudders at the prospect of.the tors that there present thennielves. Behold 'hint"; returning to his de.o.lo.parid sv4dom visited horn% from the scene of htsilruriten Arrels-',4he bitletbl . . Me of madness glaring. frmn his eye; and roilr,ror re noxious than the dew exhalationeeftkit tomb, issuing front his mouth— e move*, a Wane. ipg T,azar tbing te be shunned, atidpoitt' ed at, and Renner(' ! He enters his home—his half titinished, half frozett children, crowd aronndbiett= and ask tor bread, nod he gives them mans His wife—the wife of his bosom, whom he bad sworn to lime and - cherish and protect-:--venturee timidly to—he answers her blows! Is there a term too harsh to designate sea monster! • Is there a 4iiirse too dire to be visited n his head lint mark . the sequel. He gots 0* n his career ornfamy and crime, until he finally erminates it on the gallows which is disgraced y hearing one so rile. His family, thrown on the cold charities of the vorld, too frequently become the tenants of asi Almshouse; or his children, perchance, misled by . is example,' emulate the career and share the fah . .f their worthy sire. 'this is not a fancy sketch: appeal to one and all of you to say, whether you lave not frequently mef the original. Go to your Alms.houses, your I . l oor•houses, and your Hospitals—and inquire Whit has crowded hem with paupers.' You will receive tie same tartlint enswer—"ktrasintesnp his cause, proceeds two thirds ofthe pauperism in he country, costing between six and seven mit. ions_ o f annually: and it is the sarnemtnair - hat annually consigns more than 50,000 of the itizens of these United States to the Debtor's artment in your prisons. Does net this sue. • , _irons) t . . . liolteqtrimra - gubj ofrompbri [Conclusion next week.' -4644 OPINIONS OF. GREA s k WIEN. [From the Hakere-town FreePremj Beware of secret associations and mai*. I am decidedly opposed -61-all-secret-40.-- cieties whatever !---Samuel Adams; I am opposed to all secret societiest-- John Hancock. I believe that Freemasonry does no good t that might not be accomplished by better 44 menus. Its secrecy and extensive cam ' • tions ar. dangerous. Its titles and trappli are =vain, foOlish and inconsistent with our republican institutions. Its Pretensions are absurd, fallacious and impious. Its conk monies and mysteries profitne, and lead mei ny to believe that they impose obligattk n! paramount to the laws—indeed I hat" never known a very great mason, who was not s very great pooL.-- , .C. D. Colden. 1 am not, and have not been the advocate of the present occupant of the executive chair, but the public evils real or &Hedged; of this administration, are as nothing in my sight, the sum of them, to those which spring from Masonrv.—Richord Rush. It is true that after the practical .exhibi• tion of Masonry which we have had in Neer Yolk, no men of 'Common prudence • Can sleep over these disc,overies, and will take are in every case of doubt to inquire . William W irt. Cc:7 - Noitv 'hear what Henry Clay says of Masonry: "I' can make no such admionon. viz: that individual ,ftentiments, on - the sub- , ject of masonry, formed a proper considera tion in regulating- the exercise of the elec tive franchise in respect to offices of the fed. oral government." Or in other words, he conceives it to be nobody's business-whether - he is an anti-mason or not. This is a new doctrine to the freemen of our country, Vizi that the voters have no right to know the o. inion of a candidate on any -1 I t • y t iiik of vital importance to community. 11e4ays44yeu,litive n ••• -: - • ;•- • • -- - my opinion upon any great practical mea sure falling within the scope of federal p01i4..- er." WO would ask, i 6 not the "supritintity of the laws," a great measure? It certainly is i. and no MRII. PhQll.ld,..ll.9.ditatg.A .moment lit_ (rive Tits opinion - otia subject which so deeply; involves the security of our citizens, &oaf . , the ruthless hands of the subjects' of s. 13.0 v. eminent, foreign to our own. We believe there is no instance on record in this coati. tiy, where a candidate for the suffie,ges of the people has been called upon to give views, that be did not do it, ,and it has been left for Mr. Clay to set the example. would have thought it? We did think that , he would have given his opinion fully, either' deprecating the ohs ottheotheebut instead: — : of this "he wraps himself up in the mantle - of Masiinic secrecy and dignity oil. baldly denies the right of the people to'keovir sentjments on an institution which his train. pled on the laws and - usurped the GtrOtter; Ment—which has performed act altered of "usurpation and tyranny, and of which 'he is known to be a member." - The abduction and murder pl . Wm. Nor- , gen would long since have been forgotten; had it not been for the exertions which, the Masons persisted in using, first to conceal• and afterwards to justify the horrid crime=-- and to perpetuate the principles of an l lets - tution which imperiously and otiequivotiOir enjeted its execution. As long as trato_ttiv: fioutintlis.to, tloport the principles Of weir Order, to *Jeff the foul assessOutt ~., : ,ttee.. procese of justice mid adequate y t p so - long shall an indi gnant aud`i. . ; Triunity continue reiterate in , their eere o the iinwelcome.and;gnkirr4sconfik.44oo.,...,__ der, assaiednation and retributive juit40'..0.7.z", The frightful gliotil or, their hephserliiebiy4, Shall haunt their SOubs.througli,llisie,, thrtli eternity —CiViltitiligkin (*V) MEE iii