11 opocE OF THE STAR; ClaYßEßfilit/RG STREET, A VIM 'DOORS WIST Or MR. FORRY'II TAVERN. ADVERTISEMENTS Gmepieuously inserted_ soea times fbr opiz ifoLuts. per square—over four nines; xwtNTY-FIVE eirrre per square will be charged. DR? 53UJ.)6r 4 2 moo. Mappaa j N At, $2 per annum, half..yearly in advance. Vaio Q1A1:31/A7.1Doi "lVith sweetest flowers enrich'd From various gardens cull'd with care." The annexed feeling lines are from the Norfolk (Va.) American Beacon. They wore addressed to a young Boy, who supposed himselfrebuked • for his affection, replied, 44 1 aw not too old to love my 21lother.09 1 did not think to check the flow ,Of thy young heart's deep love, my boy ; And with ungentlo hand to throw A cloud athwart thy sun of jey ; Would—thong:li fast coming yearawill steal The'boyish freshness from thy brow— Thou neeersoouldst be "too old" to feel The- memo pure love that airs thee now! Would that thine heart might over be Linked to thy mother's by a spell As strong as human destiny, Ard love, that years, nor cares may quell; That manhood might not load away Thy thought from the maternal knee— The spot whore thou are wont to pray, The lip that only blesseth thee! • Yet vain the wish—a mother's voice May not forever win thine ear, A mother's heart bid thine rejoice; Nor - blend - witlrthine - a - mother's tear! Thou wilt commune with men—and yearn For the endearments childhood know, And sigh, when later friendships burn, For those—the early loved and true! And they will quit thee not—no cluiiin ----Ling-awkbout, our allot yeariLL There cometh a matettital charm To mould our course, or stay our boars, And thou wilt look in sorrow back, On many a joy-enlivened scone, But find on manhood's wayward track s Not like a mother's love, I weer': , Then think not I could bid thee seal Thy living heart up in thy breast, Or would that thou sho'uld'at cease to fool All that hath_power to make thee blest? 0, no! let thine affections now Gush out, whero'er their promptings ruby°, flieroafler, it may be that thou . Wilt find no human thing to love! oclLß'thl.c.),'&ll2Lbtga. SPORTING WITH 'FEMALE AFFEC TIONS. Man cannot act a more perfidious part, Than use hts utmost efforts to obtain A confidence in order to deceive. Himont. and integrity ought to be the leading principlgs' . of every transaction in life. These . are virtues' highly requisite notwithstanding they are Rio frequently dis regarded. Whatever pursuits individuals are in quest of, sincerity in profession, stead fastness in pursuit, and punctuality in dis charging engagements, are indispensably incumbent. A man of honest integrity, and uprightness in his dealings with his fellow creatures, is sure to gain the confidence and applause-of all- good men; whilst lie who acts - from dishonest or designing principles, ob tains deserved contempt. Dishonest pro ceedings in word - or deed, are very often sive to, and unjustifiable in the sight of God and man, even in trivial, but much more so in consequential affairs. The most perfect Uprightness is highly requisite between man and man, though it is too often disregarded, and is much more so between the sexes. Every profession of regard should be with out dissembling, every promise preserved inviolate, and every engagement faithfully discharged. No one ought to make any oilers Or_pretenSions to a lady before he ,is, in a great measure certain - that her person, her temper and qualifications suit his cir cumstances, and agree perfectly with his oiVii temper and way or rliiokifig. For a - Vivi ty - of maidMid---inannera-is.-vory_nr... cessary to render the bonds of love perms , : nenrkand those of marriage happy. "Marriage-the happiest--state of life would be, b ath ie W *49 . 011 . 1y 19 klllfityV4PlCl ilpp.o 8 agree," The man of uprightness and integrity of heart will not only observe the beauties of the-mind- r the_goodnessof the heart, the dig nity blhentiment and the delicacy of wit, but will strive to fix his affections on such permanent , endowments, before he pledges . , hip faith to any lady. He looks upon marriage as a business of the greatest importance in life, and a change of condition that cannot be undertaken with too mueh„reverenee_,; and deliberation:— Therefore he will not undertake It at ran dom, lest. he should precipitately involve himself in the greatest difficulties. -He wishes to act a. conscientious part, and con sequently cannot think . (notwithstanding it is too much countenanced by_eustom) of sporting with the aff.ections of the fair sex, nor even of paying his addresses to any one till he is perfectly convinced his own are fixed just principles. AU imaginable caution' is certainly ne misery be%rehand; but after a man's pro fession Of - regard, and kind services and so. leitatiOns hays made an inakpression on u female heart, it is no longer a mutter of in. srifreme*s, whether he perseveres in, or wanks off hitt engagement. For he is then . pticularly dear to her,: and reason, honor, . . "" ice, ail unite to oblige him to make good hie engagement. When the matter is . brought to such a :crisis, there is no retreat ing, without Manifestly disturbing her quiet and tsaoquility of mind; nor can any. Ailing - but hati loss of virtue justify her desertion. Whether Marriage haw been expressly pio .. nfl itild.ar of little Signification. - For if he.bas solicited and • obtained her nflite. tioqa t 'oit ihuxupposition' that he intended - 'to Marty -het, thilcontiact is, in thulight of . • *me, la vist4t, the . . _ . _ ._._.__- _. . ._._ -.- -,• ~. •,....,..... a_i 4 ,:•,'.-, .. ~. ...,, • •, . ~, . . ....• . , • . . . , • • A . . . , .. 0. , •••• • . . - • . . . • \ .. . . . I L. ._ • . - . • . . .7 . . . . a .T. .. ~ ... . F abasto County, Ii 1 :7 1)1:1C17 7 AMOR ['ATRIA PRODESSE CIVIBUS-.-"THIC rov or MY COUNTRY I:RADB MR TO RR OF ADVANTAGN TO MI FELLOW.CITIZMNIIIii man who basely imposes upon the honest heart of an unsuspecting girl, and, after win ning her affections by the prevailingltheto ric of courtship, ungenerously leaves her to bitter sorrow and complaining, acts a very dishonorable part, and is more to be detest ed than a common robber. for prixate treachery is much more heinous than open force; and money must not be put in com petition with happiness. PARODY OF A POACHER. A poor strolling Mayer in England, was once.caught performing the part of a poach-. Or, and being taken before the magistrates assembled at quarter sessions, for examina tion, one of them asked what right he had to. kill a hare, when he replied in the folloWing parody on Brutus' speech to the Romans, in defence of his killing Crosar: "Britons, hungrymen, and epicures! Hear me for my cause, and be silent that you may hear; believe me for my honor, and - have respect for my honor that you may believe; censure me not in your wis dom, and awake your senses that yen may . better _judge.. If _thorn be any jai sembly, an , dear friend of this hat*, to him I say that al poacher's love for hare is no less than his. If then he demand why a poacher rose against a hare, this is my an swer; not that I loved hare less, but that I loved eating more. — Had You flith - e - r - Tliii hare were living than I had died starving, than that this hare were dead, that I might live a jolly fellow I—As this hare was pretty I weep for him: as he was plump, I honor him; as he was nimble," rejoice at it; but, as he was eatable, I slew him. There are tears for his beauty, honor for his condition, 'oyfor his speed, and death for hisiooth semeriess. Who is here so cruel, would see me a starved maul—if any, speak, for him have 1 offended. Who is here so silly, that would not make a tid-bit I—if any, speak, fur him have I offrnled. Who is here so sleek, that does not "love-his belly ? if any, speak, for him have I offended." "You have offended justice, sirrah," cried out one of the magistrates, out of all pa tience with this long harangue, which had began to invade the time that his own bel ly had arrived. "Then," said the culprit, guessing at the hungry feelings of the bench, "since JUstice is dissatisfied, it must needs have something to devour: Heaven forbid I should keep any justice from dinner !---so, if you please, I'll wish your lordship a good day and a good hare to dinner ?" The magistrates, eager to retire, and, somewhat pleased with the fellow's last wish, gave him a reprimand and lot him go. PULPIT ORATORY.—The Rev., M. Weston, when preaching .at_Eding.burg, made the following division on the text:— "Ephraim is as a cake unturned." "The first thing we shall do with Ephraim is to turn him, and this we shall do effectually, Ist.. We shall turn him up side down. 2d. We shall turn him outside in. 3d. We shall • turn him backside fore. 4th. We shall turn him iibout his business. Dr. Franklin's Parable against Perse rution.—Tha following beautifid imitation of the historical style of the Old Testament was written by Dr. Franklin, and by him communicated ✓ to Lord Kaimes. And it came to pass after these things, that Abraham Sat in he door of his tent_ a= bout the.going.downof_the : sun—_ . And beheld a man berit - With:Ageteiniirg from the way of the wilderness leaning on a staff. And Abraham arose and Met him, and said unto, him, turn in - , -- Vprity — thee, and wash thy feet and tarry all night, and then thou shalt arise early on the morrow and go thy way. And the man said nay, for I will abode under this tree. But .Abraham peessed him.,gieatly, so he turned and went eito the tent and Abraham baked unleavened bread andattieydid And when Abraham saw that the Min blessed not God, he said unto him,.whi?",doet thou not worship the most high nd, crea tor of heaven and earth? And the man answered and said, I do not worship thy God, neither do I call upon his name; for I have made to my sel fa God which abideth always in my house, and provideth me with all things. And Abmham's_zgal was kindled against the man, & he arose & fell upon him, and drove him forth with blows into the wilder- RCM And• Gaitselled unto him, saying: Aiwa ham, where is the stranger? And Abraham answered and said, Lord, he would not worship thee, neither would he call open thy name; therefore have I driven him out - froth before my face into the wil derness. And tod said, 'I :hive borne with him these hundred and ninety years, 'and trur ished him tirld clothed him, notwithstand ing bier rebellion against me : and couldst not thou; who art thyself a sinner, bear with him oue night? • The. world is• flooded with anecdote? . Johnson. Lapse record an anecdote of one of his *Aims. He an&Burke were nne e -ttenntoj bell Ave at the Mime& Cotterell%, :When t4kieceasten4ticn time& avow th e • Caaitn•lng2lll 3 43os 9 Ltagita WWI/104)4M zutxPrzattlr $.4, ;mac) nevittilicatt poets of antiquity. At length, it was settled on the comparative merits of Homer and Virgil. Johnson was for Homy; Burke for Virgil. Johnson poured out a prodigious qutintity of thought upon the vividness, ori ginality and grandeur of the Greek. Burke delighted in the sustained miqesty, the min gled pathos and vigor, and the mellifluous elotfuence of the Roman., The argument . went on for hours,- while no one ptesent thought ofinterrupting so noble a display of genius on both sides. At length, a young lady's eye glanced on her watch, and to her surprise, finding that it was past midnight, she whispered the. hour to her mother.— "Child," said the mother, indignant. at being disturbed, "tell me that thefire, for nothing else can be an excuteaving such conversation." The Dutch Van Tromp, who was a largo heavy man, was once challeng ed by a thin, active French officer. "We are not upon equal terms with rapiers," said Van Tromp, "but call upon me to-morrow morning and we will adjust the affilir.", When the Frenchman called, he found the Mitch Admiral bestriding a barrel of Gun powder! "There is room enough for you," said Van Troinp, " at the other 'end of the barrel ; sit down ; there is a mach; and as you are the challentrer,kgive fire." The Frettcbmari- NI, us thur?derstracit—nt rible mode of fighting; but as the Dutch admiral told him he would fight no other way, terms of reconciliation ensued. A map does not exhibit a more distinct view ofthe boundaries and situation of eve ry country, than its news does a picture of e-genius-and Vr - a2i.PI2EiUOr.WS 1.05.3•&G1U&51D:5`5.14:2 .1 1 . 7 r 41)D1IES 8, Delivered before the Temperance Society of Get - tysburg• and the vicintty,ml the( I:nirt.house in Gettysburg, on the 10th 1)oc, 1831, BY DANIEL M. SMYSER, ESQ,. By request of the Society. [Concluded from last.wook.] We frequently hoar the drunkard complaining of his misfortunes; (for by that mild epithet , does he distinguish the consequences of actions at which angels weep, and even fiends would blush;)- and wondering wh_it is that all things prosper so ill with him. 1 t hint make the following easy calculation, arid imagine we shall hoar no more il . of his senseless idling at what ho chooses to call, his destiny. I will suppose that every , man who is in the habit of drinking ardent spirits, expends 12i cents for them daily. This would amount to 53 , 15. 6 in a year: a sum equal to the yearly In terest of it76o—and sufficient to pay the rent of a coilifortahle dwelling house. But there are ma ny who expend two fold, and even ton fold this amount, to minister to their leastly propensity. Let him - take into consideraoon, in connection "WitlilTilii; tireless of characteri the waste of time, and the ruin of health; 'the less of public confi donee, and the consequent decrine of business; the habits of neglect and inattention to business, which intompejonco, engende; and the number. less mistakes, omissions, and impositions to which it exposes him:- and the drunk*d will he at no loss to account ter the unproinisitt aspect of his af fairs. - Intemperance impairs, an if persisted in, eventually destroys the intone. .fleimath its in. fluence, the fire of Genius lose] more and more of its vvaritath and brilliancy, atfl dies slowly, but surely away, untilit is finally; extinguished. Who has mot_seea how at the _willieting -touch-of this destroying demon, the firmest, lost compact, and well ordered 'intellects have f len to pieces, and been resolved into the disjoi ed ,and shapeless firmest, atoms that float in the brainof :he maniac? True, it is - allegod by - some. that - winci,ey (piiekening the flow, of the animal spirits,briglf_shailienleasi and.. (involves !Nein i ii" lilac' Iciiiiii Oil liiilliiiiiriiiCeiiii: sion. Alas! Those transiors flashes, like the lightning's fitful gleams, Leadenly to reader more palpably inanirest.Alte.dare,,fl4rlLaight of vague stupidity that precedes and-!plows them; this false -and-momentary gleanicserrsi but to light the dark and downward path thairiekis to the destruction of all the mind's noblest ent4ries! And who, that has listened to the ribald jests; obscene witticisms, and licentious orgies of a 113acchanalian revel, would consider them an adequate compensiition for the degradation ofintellea and the profanation of decency which they intro's? Their very ex hibition proves that:the Millibar. already loSt one of its strongest stays—the Freer of regulating and controlling its min iiiipthes in subservience to the dictates of sound sonmand practical mor ality. Nor is the voice of experie ee silent on this part of our subject. It has been st d,ortunquastiona. ble authority, that betweeshee fourth and one third of the insane persons eilnitted into the Penn sylvania Hospital , became 4 through too free an use of ardent= spirits. Neton, whose bold and grasping genius led him tonvestigate and teach 1 to a wondering world, tile hes which govern the wheeling planets and circhg spheres, and fbr whose mathematical and ell ordered mind no subject was either too vastr too minute—Locke, whose daring and adventurix intellect fleet sound. ed.the depths - of mind andaplored the thitherto unknown regions of the uterstanding, with no other guide or compass ths the acuteness and discrimination of his own Mceptions,sensations and perceptions.-Sir Willi* Janes, whose m imi was a capacious reservoir oevery thing curious in modern learning and anent lore.-.and our own illustrious countrynian, Frail:4 at once the pro found statesman,enlightentithilosopher and skil ful mechanician—were allitnarkaele for a tem perste and even ,abstemiothourse af life. Does . any one believe that additial excellence would have been imparted to Netin's "Prfircipia," or Locke'smilmirable "Essay dire Understavaliag, ," had 'Wei° distinguished indltiult/e _worshipped at the shrine of the Moloch olnkernPesancel No: by keeping the bxain clear ad uneloudeil by the fumes of inebriety, they inirted alike clearness and peleipicuity to their Mt.. 'llan* ga n one o f that flighty brilliancy abeutleinvvelfrah ima ,„6 - 0. times mei( in. the waning letlent. °Co g ,. ~,,i i, l , Of disaipatioateilin illi ii liaPay al ..imptune, er r a flash of more tin usual bjlibl~ioheirjtisMi the point of expiqier birt-insitiono,,t and elaborate. laws 41 . :408,. thews I eike . ieltt*,l , of peke! AND Danner. and consistency of design—a just adaptation of moans to ends—very .different tlmn the wild, mu l.table, and momentary inspirations of the bottle. It may . not he amiss to glance, for a mo-, meta, at some of the inducements which are sometimes offered as apologies for their cock duct by the intemperate— Some have recourse to it to drown care and banish reflection. To such I would say, that the remedy is fur worse than the disease. It is, (to use it homely saying) curing the itch, by scratching the skin off. Will it lighten the burthen licare, or idle viate the poignancy of their reflections, to yield to a vice which their own consciences —the general sense of mankind, and the precepts of inspiration, unite to• condemn? NO:: when the factitious excitement has sub sided, and ttoymiviken from the delirium of intoxication, they will find that thertheite but infused another drop into their cup of bitterness: to the pangs they formerly endu red, will now be added the sting of self-re proach: they will feel humbled and degra ded in their own eyes: and to drown the maddening sense of this superadded torture, the will again seek_teAteep themseliesin_ lie - oblivion of the. bottle: and thus they go on from one degree to another, until at length they sink into confirmed irreclaimable sots, past cure, past hope—and "Society grown weary of the load, Sh.flterhermicumbe i d l.w, alict .tv-them-eiiti. Persons of a melancholy, hypochondriacal temperament are peculiarly subject to the operation of this cause—Domestic afflictions, losses in business, and other similar causes also drive many to this pernicious resource. Wretched delusion ! Seeking to lose the remembrance of pain, they add fresh poit Dailey to their sufferings I - fh , xhilar- l)thors have recourse to exhilaration of the bottle, to supply the want of natural gaiety and vivacity. Self-convicted of dul ness, they strive by this artificial stimulus, to force their spirits to keep pace with those around . them., Such.. persona display mot only an obtuseness of intellect, but a want of common sense; otherwise they would never jeopardize both body and scan for au object so little conanenstrate with the risk. Some, either from an irritable nervous tempera mein, or from a sheepish bashfulness as alien to true modesty as vulgarity is to wit, quake and 'tremble like a convicted felon on his way to execution, when circumstances compel them to mingle in the circles of so ciety, and have 'recourse to• the bottle, in order, as they style it, to steady their nerves. I pity the man who cannot encounter his fel lows without previously doing that which ought to render him ashamed to look any decent person in the face. He whose spirits ebb and flow under the periodical influence of the bottle, in like manner as the Moon is supposed to influence the fides, is, but a poor acquisition to society, and might very well be dispensed with. Besides, he is pursuing the very course which will eventually shatter and ruin his nerves instead of stre gthening them. There is no man so nervous as the drunkard. Slime are led to Intemperance, by the in ' iluence of a social, convivial, and withal a • thoughtless disposition. Such are the very materials out of which the Devil loves to manufacture drunkards. Such persons set out with the_axiom, which has caused' the ruin of many, that there is no harm in occa sionally taking a social glass with a friend,. provided one stops in time, and does not take too much. 'llluenter orrthe --- of --- de - -7 - )iiirciFiViiii a faettsleteratimuion-(as—they - - - finiey) to limit themselves to a certain quan tity and to stop when_they have arrived at a, certain point. That point is attained; but seditced - by ihe - Contagion of example, (for -drankettess Is - lu - contagious as a ta:t cial vice) and excited by the :liquor they have already quaffed, they go, on drinking potations deep and strong, until they are as drunk as any of their beastly associates.-- , With the ensuing morning come 'nausea, vertigo, arid head-ache, qualms of the con science and of the stomach; and with them come, too, sundry good resolutions of future abstinence.. By the next evening, these qualms are gone; and with them, mire fled too their praise-worthy resolutions. They re solye7—fintrless souls I to brave the peril once more; determining full surely to profit by the ' experience they have purchased, and refrain in season ) , this time. It is, I presume, need. less to say,that this resolution, like the pre .eeding, is .miidc only lathe broken. And , . thus they go on, resolving and re-resolving that each tnuisifitsilica shall be the last, and transgressing, and, with each repetition of chi 'dangerous indulgence, losing more rand more of the inclination as well as the ability to withstariljt, until - at length, they cease to struggle, and yield willingly and unresistii , igly to the current ,that is hurrying them to destruction:--whilst Heirs caverns re-echo with .the fierce 'laughter of exulting fiends, as they contemplate their victim spepding swiftly on to the . consummation of his dark and fearfiil-destinyt It would .be trespassing too-41inch upon your patienCe, to enter into a minute analy sis of the causes of this wide spreading evil. Theft' is one however, deserving of notice,, and which I must not pass: it is the needless MultipliFttiton of taverns, or rather licensed G rog;skro . _and-trippl ing houses (feu .many of them ars.no better;).m.sur Janet. It has been' a subject ofastouishinent to foreigners *ravelling 41irtaigli our: cotuitry, to wane* r ,', , Terniti—TWO DOZLARS'pet payable half-yearly in whams,. Nersuit---, Bcriptioni taken for lm than six months, none iliscogived until all sneaiges are pirW , —A failure to notify a discontinuance, *lir be considered a new engagement ind tiVa paper forwarded accordingly. • • 114621 Q scoaQiiiivc..ascb Whole *umber, 91. the vast number of houses of this description, with which ,it abounds. freely can you travel three miles on a ity of our public roads, without encountering one of these license* pest-liouses— •"Pass where we may, through city or Hero! taint' Village er hamlet of this merry land t every twentieth pace, Conducts the ungarded nose to such a whiff Of stale debamdt, forth issuing from the swat That law bath licensed, as maketi Tempeeime. reel." Havine'aivelt at such length Upon the mischief, it remains that we, in a few words, should point out , the remedy. .This, we say, . consists in a. TOTAL ' anvil:amen from--the use of ardent spirits. Nothing. short ((this/ will be found an adequate and efficacioutt remedy. lam aware that it has been - eon; Anded by many that the moderate use of ardent spirits is not injurious: that it is only the excessive use, which is prejudidial. 'But is this so? Chemical analysis and physi , ological science prove that in very few eases, are ardent sirits, taken in any quantity, i., beneficial to e system; and even in these,, only when taken So . the same footi that -other-medieines-areadministered:- ' • - the opinion of every scientific man of the medical profession, who has investigated the subject: and are their opiniems to be otit , weighed by the crude finicies,,*hims,-and percbance prejudices, of everydreinkieisk i ___ er .„ Moreover, - the moderate use, is toe apt . to lead men into excess,- by imperceptible degrees. The process may be more or lei* rapid in different individuals: but the reindt is sure. Every drunkard was once a mod. -- - emte drinker. No one was aver_lxunsit-------, drunkard, or deliberately designed to bee' come al drunkard. 'The only security mine sitintLetieeabstineptce. , ---Blitl--lanv-itti thin to he attained? The means are found is the institution of Temperance Nocietiso. Let the orderly, respectable, and temperate pore Lion of the community, unite in these 'An. tart'-associations,.. for the purpose of . i i pressing intemperance by distotterierig . lie' .- use of ardent spirits. z Let such a Mast direction be given to public opinion, to - ... . render it not only disgracefid to be sees drunk, but also, discreditable to be seen drinking. Thus, and thus only, can your drive ardent spirits out of cirealation, and consign them to their proper and legitimate place, the shelves of the Apothecary. The true aim and proper scope of Tetaperunee Societies, are not - so much to reclaim the habitual drunkard, as to arrest the career or those who are in danger of becomin such. The confirmed sot is, perhaps, irreclaimable by any thing short of a miracle. , Bat the moderate drinker, who has not yet reached the point of excess, but is-last verging to, wards it, is an object that den - inds all our ' • aid and claims all our sympathies., - ,And, let me say to those who are associa. ted with me in this noble cause, that if„ by our influence and exertions, we cad succeed in checking one votary of 41temperance ii his dark and perilous career, and restore him • to respectability, and return him, reclaimed .and regenerated, to the wife, the ehildren,or • the parents who have long and bitterly mourned over his degeneracy ,- i s will be a i. l . rich reward fur all our sacrifices: and, in - 4. any case, we may be assured of one corn. pensation which ie dependent neither upon success-or e lisappointnietit- the smiles g as approving conscience. - Should :disappointe---„ h m n en :::i hover over our prospects and the, rank breath Ofcalninny dim the brightness ofou r her iekerinfhopetintat'ilid6ihe,gafne- - , ering gloom of despair. But the . presetti aspect door cause does not justify the lan.- 2,. age of despondency. Already, within the ... contracted sphere of our own eperatione, - the - re has "been a very sensible dirnimitiors effected in the consumption_of ardentviritas whilst every post brings us the most grati6 , .. ' • ing and animating accounts of the onward and successful march of the champions a( Temperance. In many sections of the mime: try, the circulation ofardent spirits has beets almost wholly arrested. The votary of in temperance no longer pays his- *owe to ltie God openly, in the face of day, as thoafil he gloried in his shame; bat, by , the itrests. tibia force of public opinion, he ts.constraitt ' ed to offer them up in secret and hydealth; or, Whey-has the hardihood to brave _,public sentiment, you may see the coward blush of . conscious guilt, crimson his boated visage., The” drunkard is new regarded with loath ,, lug muldisgust, as a monster too vile to be • admitted within the . pa :liens Of civilized see : g ciety. So let it be. If he is so fait icy . shame and hardened in g u ilt, as to be Imre. cessible to the voice of reason, entreaty, nail ' remonstrance, let him &el . that th eme is 0 vindicatory principle in society, which will not be defied with impunity. Let. hint fed himseig what he really is, a despised, istobre'. ted being; an object ofcontempt and sir., ~ ~,' renee;--.a fit subject for the unerrtrg fl uor' ' ' of scorn tcrpoint at. And now, in moles. , sion, let ate , 4 *a name ofharnanity, lathe, name or pbliVorcler, the conserratiou of tliekeneraf weiffire, mid every thing that le • or ought to he dear to you, ma4e , gutappeat . to one and all of you, no longer te content • .. yoirrselve with *mining m a state or. .. ... - douttfid 'neutrality, ,which,, Auttever yell .-) -' may think, is not altogether devehr•of 'andresporiet6io; but to Omit roma' rilAnTrOa".a manfully, and honestly, and contribute you • ..,'‘ . ...• aidandrecorli your .approtkatmi of this So:- - . bleatereauses., '. ' . „ , .; [.. . , El