The New York Herald Newspaper, May 6, 1842, Page 2

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anaes 3 oi ea 7 peng +p ew nothing whatever about them. Inever } Hable General Meeting ofthe New York Washing- a ea oe i haps dane ihe onoaagn, which, wea aya sorry we a Aes hak Phal theths teieeootiaety Bilal Latta ton Temperance Soctety, in tne Green-st. | haying clothed herself and children in thei now apparel, ng enorwaeres ae tee! What hadi to do ebont temperance? “I did hot ge. | Pardon me ifn thi weekly toil (Mr. Briggs replied, it a) secasion Thave beeh led off and goue NEW YORK HERALD. == = + ° - “Cheer up, my lively lads, that there ‘emperance Society in | too far int detail , Now Work, Friday, May 6, teen, | Methodist Church, last wght—Owe Brt- | obra her hac cum tom oy) ey, eh se cement cay | ng rn ete dle "oun Mr Ba PS ca sd : gade of the Cold Water Army, repententend reforael Aineaiat tateort yo Pcie 2 Cheer up, my lively lads, ts Nothing that had been said al papers or else- | at least not been for any idle boast that Thee dont Att Remo ‘The Henatp Orrice is removed to the Large as is the well known Methodist Church in } f rted narrator, “ like a bab; (Applause. Str The victory will soon be ours. where sel » my conduct, had the slightest influence } nor to raise my ¢ estimation of any class or any cious and central building at the cormer of Fulton and J /“*"8' ss ie : Y Briggs here related the experience of Mr. Hawk- One line was as follows: in whatl did in this respect. Nothing that was heaped | particular mn of society. (Laughter and cheers, Nassau streats, where all advertisements and subscriptions | (reen-street, in which the celebrated Robert New- | (1) 78... of the honored Baithmore Relormed | Dronk. «Wall pales ald Hea atieaGabaie™ upon me, however abusive and untrue it might be, caused | And if eny good all comes of itwil be. w nucleon are ruceived. Also, orders received for printing of every J ton made his debut in this city, its amplespace was | ards, but as that has so frequently been. before the secaen : spe to haltor change my couresone jots. All theabasein. } spology. | have dose eerlemly sud without reganting Geaceiption : filled last night upon the above interesting occasion. | public we omit it here: Mr. B. then Tepeenio there ee jfinging of wih i caused the Hon eal Bene ones Sedaste sic eumanerae cee Prince naierindgy Fy tiys ety 8 happen the Crsiesad (yp Av Acexy wanted for Providence, R..,tocirculate } And, contrary to the tenor of the mighty meeting | ner suspenied from'one of the aides of the gallery, und } nu Teanty Gl toxtewacr Giath tained any thing very, Hehe blackguayiing and slane J may publish me {il the hand ‘hot draws the libel pilinds pa biper pret bipe Mly iameg Myr cokes atthe Tabernacle the previous evening, a majority } mscribed, - San Gos the clear voice of the leader gave out a eee a oN nd me ie pa with the fonel Webb of delrgube ee ye 4 ne no oredit will hereafter be given. of those present in the Green-street Church were Ramees ee Pines. Guang! \« and our Senators are waking up abusive paragraph in question metked all" round with big | lish me from city to city, as one of them del tiemeee, Like Maxsuact of Kentucky,” blac for fear that by some accident I might overlook | ning, in this city as the Honorable Mr. Marshall, the 1 . lause which was long continued quite shook | it (Cheers and laughter.) And I never got up in my seat | reformed drunk: (terrific cheering and shouts of laugh: This stea hi » sailed from Liv- | *hat industrious class, which by some miserable | ticed we are safe. But | have seen the error involved Wing. Again and azain did the peals of ap- | i the House of Represeitatives to makeaspeech, as ovew J ter and cries good”—“Give ithim,Tom.) They may p is steamer which was to have 3, logicians has been termed the ‘humble class” | this. 1 know many persons; those of intelligence and re- J 11" NUTONE. Mian ODE Ne viking, and. Mr. | Si@ually 1 was called upon to do so—that, when the papers | libel upon libel Sa thiokiy and as fast as they think proper, erpool onthe 19th ult. had not reached Boston on ' es “ spectability, who are in the habit of indulging in th i op. 33 f si, | Containing the account thereof came back from a distance | and they will all fall heedless from my breast as the leaves “4 . Gve o'elock. She may | society. Certainly they were evidently not | ofwine and other light intoxicating drinks,do not consi Marshall seemed hardly able to contain himself. i- | they did not abuse me, and say that when I made that | ofauturn from against castle! (Cheers) Pm nxvonp the hi ediiteday adroaare ie esterday, however. | 89 Wealthy as the females present atthe Tabernacle, | that it is dangerous for them to do s9, but I” believe firmly : tained and the lines again given | speech I was preity comiortably and most considerably in- | reach of any thing of that sort, (Tremendous cheerin rave arrived there that night or ye Y> A 4 And that they are mistaken, that it is as dangerous, and I thin the shouts of applause fill the | ebriated. (Cheers and laughter.) And, in all those fiv if} feel any thing at all in connection with + news early this morning, | P¥t what they wanted in money they most amply } that q full and fair examination of th i H yentes:] a vor y thing, theae tibels fe i Many, and I, among the rest, have advocated the do females—young women, belonging chiefly to], motgisitanainente trom ardent spirits alone be pre Steam Ship Caledon \. Phe ap shal : ’ ft ’ . six speeches, except one, I give you my honor as agentle- | and attacks, it isthat I am become a man of some conse- Timpanre meblsecel ye Nee eee immediately, | ™#de up in beauty, in the rich glow and fresh bloom | any reasonable indi 8.806100 0) ras, however, at last. concluded, and the song | man, war a4 soter ef ajudge. [Loud sheers and roars of J quence [shouts of laughter] In thlegreat work—and if 1 and an Exrna Henan wil of health on their cheeks, and doubly added lustre derate of | wine spaneen the habit are 4 | was fin hed—when Dr. Kirby again spoke, and sait laughter.) pa aie ot hose Speeches cost me a good } think anything about it, it is that among those whoare to Q ‘ s quires the constant use of excitement and it leads | Vo" had forgotten to say that the * pledge” was ly- | ‘e#! of time considerable mental labor and anxiety. | sutfe Srappling in this strife, I am considered Tur Great Anoitrion Navionat Convention For | and sparkling brightness of their eyea, and in that J to intoxication, it produces intoxication if taken in any § {Cheers,] Well all this abuse and these libels upon me | of sufficient consequence to be made something of a antity, and ‘to the same ruingus and heart breaking | Ng on the table, and it was perfectly in order for} instead of making me repent of my frolics, only made J mits after this fashion, [Tremendous cheers and ater. 4 Dissouvtios of THe Sacrep Unton.—We under- | exquisite symmetry of form which those females | tcc cnces asthe use of ardent spirits willdo, ‘Tknow | any person to step upatany time and signhisname. | me mad. (Laughter) And at. at I pot ees | leaker) T keee weltehes t did sehen nae, 3 stand that very extensive preparations are making | who work fora livelihood always possess to such a } astartling fact which bears on this subject, and which | ‘The initia fee was but two shillings, and if any | didnt care ay fig (what they aid or what they wrote | when I went amongst them—amongst my fellows, ax buniantblag hrs F reed s chiens ves | has occurred within my own experience in these last few | i sign Ww not then 1 y¥, | about m was determined to do just what I plea- | sometimes call them—pioneers—for we led the way, forholding the Great National Convention for dis- | much greater extent than the daughters and wives Fee tate case of te ola algae een i : . those’ wis aibned | sol in spite of the. whales OC heart teers Pieter Lote The al ren, kee eae solving the Union of the States, and subverting the | of the wealthy taken as a class. spectod member of Congress, who sat in the house with | ¢} aperance pledge,” that they should not hesi- | given them all now, but there uever was aman born into | taunts and sneers, and i expected for more than I did present form of government. In Philadelphia and | ‘phere were a large number of all classes of soci- | %° He wes Hea rprofeetiony pd hi spconsnct tate tn feuat them. pecan pee: a perect hatved os all those let eacouniar; aad te has not bee Pore the, See Boston these efforts are stirring up, and next week | ety present upon this interesting occasion, but in | puré and devoted man, truly serving God. “During along) | Mr. Marsh having announced that Messrs. Briggs | ton ‘during a session of Congress. (enthuniastic cheers Sarsuneein to asl the: hace ceree Teen ve is anit , souks P . 3 sful | Session of Congress he was afflicted with a disease which | and Marshall would deliver addresses on the sub- } and shouts of laughter, in which all parts of the house | I prot « too, at that. Let them pou we shall have them here from all parts of the coun- | p6¢) le and female the industrious and useful sg d i 8} proud one too, pour ou. We ha i hold ‘oth male and female sae ~ | is very common in the southern climate, that’s called the | ject of intemperance at the Broadway Tabernacle ad ake common cause against reporters.) But (Terr cheering.) And if [have been try, We have not yet heard where they are tohold | clauses predominated. All the seats in the body of } liver “complaint; he suffered much and severely from | Gy Saturday, instead of this evening, when d ° them all now. (Cheers) Well, gentlemen, | made out worse than 1 was, if that would do any good, | this revolutionary assemblage—but—as soon as we | the house were fille © were those at the sides; ‘t esr — ee for reepaito tae ings of the state of the stomach after having been eres dic plore Bee enn aaty vine este would not contradict it—if by holding my example up as * . 4 nable: wo pel i e + ! ie hi " id ec] ory com e vl z y be a ted i i can learn it shall be made public. so was every seat in the gallery; and a greatnum- | hon. “Ay thebest which he could aclect, He chose w ; ubjestedt io the action of alcoholic liquors, would | tx excitement tmevpnrablo from. great political contests, (Learoer: Petac Gh coe ae Vor fonda This motley crew of traitors are beginning to | ber had to stand up in the aisles. Still, notwith- wi inthe any taking it regularly haart think- fag es i Res a ape goiered politic: eee Gory as a candidate for thls deag iption if could induce any one to de exactly as 1 i . . my " gait hi ing that he was in the least danger of becoming intemper- ir. Kirby rose and said he had great pleasure in } public favor myse' ers.) And ivs a custom in m have done. (Enthusiastic cheering, and cries of * brayo! come in. The black and white abolitionists will | standing the large number present, this church is so] &t6, so far was he from having been previously an intem- | introducing to the meeting the Honorable Mr. Mar- | country for those who are candidates to drink pretty freely | ‘Theseit is-yow kre des rane story aA thet be pretty wellprovided for at the ensuing Anti-Slave- | admirably constructed, and ventilated, that it was } perate man, that he was a member, if not an officer, of 4] shall of Kentucky, and pretty frequently heir constituents, (Laughte: brass farthing who knows it. (Shouts of laughter ry Meeting. Eight ladies have offered to accom- | py temperance society in the district which he represented in no means unpleasantly warm, although the ex- Mr. Makstant then rose and said—l thank you, gen- And I never remember drinking with any of my consti- repeated cheers.) : Congress. I sat by him day by day; I noticed the pro- bh he ad sees ti F nts on these occasions that they dida’t gét tolerably . . . ‘ modate about fifteen each, at 50 cents per day.— | treme reverse is invariably the case, winter or sum- | gress which he as making in the use of this intox deena eine ailitted oa ee eens, hed Whe V welttioogy: with me. {Roarsof laughter And Lal Mr. Marsnas changed his place on the platform, Thre: nitwiil'e: We ‘ . an me is . tf i e disease fed by it increased in. | om on ** | when I wason one of my sprees, took pretty e' 4 ni ” Three gentlemen‘will entertainjabout 20each,atfrom | mer, in a crowded meeting at the Tabernacle. rat of diminishing. fe insresset the quanthy of | (aorious tong had been asleep all ie days of his life, hell | (Nat every body. thou Tkaow of i. (Laughter). wor it | @d concluded with the following appeal to the 62 1-2 cents to $1. There will be crowding work. Some will have to lie on the floor, some will have to bundle—blacks and whites are to be received with- out distinction. The Barelay street Temperance enives mn | have waked up tonight inte 1 pu da y be ahs The accommodations for reporters here were most | wine, and he fella vielim (althowsh the fact is mot genv- | Hive, faked UP, tomght 10 ail intents ind purposes— | may spreus were not very long, nobody could say that they | ladies:— you, were not loud. (Laughter.} "They were about asloudss | Let allthe women in the Uniied States join the Teme ‘ r 3 7 ; Hy known) not to the di e of the li but to @ admirable, for which the society and the chairman | [lly known) tlemen, J feel far more at home, and far more natural here | 1'W'en knew how tomakethem. [I are of aaghter:) Yet, | perance Society, and ifall the men don't follow their ew far worse, tothe most horrible you ean think of; he fell a ; r e 4 i ct wu » dil f to-night than I have done sinee I came into your great city Saba i =F F vag, | Public meetings in this city, the reporters and their | Tani the death bed of those atficted by i Let those | ¥¢ had a most prodigious crowd. (Laughter) Bul Teckel fia iad entreerang Twa no habitual | (Cheers and laughter) ‘They’ ean% ludles, do without your House will take fifty at 5 shillings per day, being | 4. ati me the least thought of, instead of (ue : cerage look at | how, every thing looked so grand, and so big, and $0 di re eotane ; ei smuiles and your favors to keep ‘em in countenance fong. x : “, accommodations are the least thought of, instead of } who are in the habit of using wine as a beverage look at dei, and’so kind of proud-vand ait th aniliecra Gi I give you my word, that when I was not engaged in one of roncheer.) And there's a plenty of crowded. The Graham House will also take a few being the first, as they ought to be. All the seats in | this example, and becrarirr sya they dle ire: fod thingd that alg bi igs al Like F oy ae those citing political contests I ould be Areawently for iy young fellows for you fx aay fee oe i . * . ieee he rh b d the account ot death from a near and persona! Wo Pony a ? weeks and even months together and not touch alcohol— ms ie: it White}ones. Aiong other matters a marriage be- | the centre of the church were reserved for the fe- ] ftnt wine hat witnessed his dissolution, andso totally un- | [land, and between that and your city were all so | een and c\en montis ome pretty heavily 1 assure pou, | ChCcks ane shouts of leughier) without the drunken and tween a beautiful mulatto girland a white abolition | males, and a beautiful, cheering sight it was to see | known and unsuspected was, his intemperance that his | Mix UP Dut’ at ihe Takes gentleN et | Laughter] And the consequence was, that when? got Se meee ony pleige not bemies usc eee month : faces which they presented on this occasion. In | with the fact. Oh,I beseech you “beware of the first Nee eee aia eheae eigen aint Amd hen that | confoundedly sick—I did n't like liquor. [Great lng goilten by ihe Vente kit ch the [seep ne On the whole, we expect curious events next | the front seat of the centre gallery sat the members | glass”, How many y ut Weshingten oi mong my vigilant fellows, ax Leall | {cf nd cheering.[ Well, I felt disgusted, and couldn't | (fremendous cheers). ‘and that territory is womny's week, growing out of this Convention. Itis true, @ | of fire company No. 33, with their signal lantern, | Ressof Youth hare been rouge to rt an te ‘am proud to be connected. ‘To be} Dear to taste it, I then considered that there was } Heart! (Most enthusiastic cheering.) Let nll the women _ iam pi F something in my physical organization that would | then, sign the pledge amd t Ehanhabibee aeeAltia a heer Dare nse aera oh ¢ we do not have any where quite so good a song as thi ai hen, sign the pledge, and put an end to the battle at once ; notice has been promulgated here, by a few persons, | r1.4 interior of the church was slightly but very Bee ee read ald lead Stings { Which you have sung to-night—not so fne—nor so well | Prevent me from becoming, & drunkard: and that. so far 1} (cheers and laughte+) and mankind will follow the wo: professing to be abolitionists, disclaiming any pur- | fatale dhearalkds Air ROAEGE UME Coaie HAL fox sosnesning DN pape oma sung—and L hope the reporter will not set that down, be. | Was sate. But v ‘iene igton city 1 was ersal rush as they have ever Scales’ the Yih * ‘Thisis nothing but appropriately decorated ; in front of the centre gal jue, pi ne and oe Sa to ae rity cause don’t want them to think that I think any body pe ress polil ek snettemant, Gigs of lay hter J followed thei int all past time that we've heart o} (Tre- dissolve the Union nis ol s * Ane ae emale i and whiskey. en comes the oyster supper, followed by > 5 el * | and universal chee ) The very atmosphere ond eri a“ 7 - chairing thawind™, The sredtmaas gn tlie !| ty eer ee nena One hae female ina cheerful | He Wanight debauch.. ‘Then inthe moPaing there is the | SiS8 such good songs as them. (Cheers and loud roai : mendous cheering and shouts of laughter.) ‘Then let eve- black, white, and brown, are out and pose to a ripple abolitionist as c he wl ms fullof it. And entiemen Lott ers, to fy « : he 5s cottage, with a child in her arms, and two or three | throbbing. tem parched. lip—the furred tongue | of ughter.) And why should we not sing? | Who, of all : tfvord to thelr papers thas 1 | 72,005 Who Joves hie. wife, who loves hie children, eautifil children playing around her, and the name J and trembling hand. ‘Then it Ieads to the grocery or bur | thw eerth has so good a Fight o sing asthe cold water men? fo thettaple” on “Which 0 ull come up here (pointin, . it " her I was or not. (Great laughter) And ‘ > te es 2 er peieaeealpal i ig fe po pig mete Aare smust | Whoon the face of creation has such a perfec? right to a 4 Sp table on which lay the pledge book) even out * repeale and revolutionists.” ‘They pre- | | nove her of the “The Happy Wife.” ‘The second | a to RSE h donde > cy demu . utterance to the most joyous feelings the human Li eos ee ooagae ele ey cull of Tom Marshall of Kentucky—now wide sent the spectacle, as they call it, of a moral re- ave to ste . i rt is susceptible of as the true temperance men who ne K and get drunk just wieecaner | ctetke—(cheers and langhter) and sign the ‘Temperane flag was, we believe, that of a cooper heading up | tion and maddens his brain. He b Ses depuis ned the pledge. They talk of gloom and fanaticism nd tet haan | picige. (Terrific chee lery was asmall significant white banner, on which | no means of sustaining himself—he descends low . | and fanaticism thrown around these cold water celeb: 5 g.in the midst of which Mr. larshall sat down exhausted.) volutionary party. It will be astrange spectacle, truly. puncheons of rum. On the front of the right gal- Its ny delight ina _—_—— rac devilish appetite, and came to want to drink every day, and Another song to the tane o! N, “ : a . i “ en he lose staat ! Why, a temperance meeting is the cheerfull ‘ y day £ sy * —According to the best information, and the most | Opposite to this, in front of the left gallery, was a | him—he descends to the company of the lowest and most Pe erie teat ern Wa cnte pare? katy n | think thatthe Would fect comfortable, (Shouts | Ame forward to siga the pledge; and then, ow- recent intelligence from the clubs and caucuses of | panner, having on it a portrait of Washington in the + be we ed—and Sey eae . Tvodber ane routl aa ce sate sa ay’ tiie of laughter) And then it was no longer-a frolic and quit. } ing to the lateness of the honr, and the large edi- both “the houses,” the new Common Council will | centre ; around it were the words “New York Ty Aur bean ‘wisn with aepulahiDyT course each as ee ota hier.) And, what 4 worse. the newspapers Tea tanoats OrLaee mien ents peter lid he ae tion of our paper, our reporter had to leave, and rondition Ww. a ¢ le - i 7 e . 2 H y r - ” a emi ” e ‘3 m A y runnin, Cat hel nh one continual amemicmapite ties hthen web ered, eas ne cnecan.ts) underneath it was the motto “‘ Total abstinence from | fow many hearths has not grief and desolation been car- | !¥ reininded me of it, ax the orning, by an. murelhe audience seemed. hall couvalsel with | Fox Cutvac—The ehip Oecar, arrived last night ere are three disputed wards—the 6th, 8th and | all that intoxicates.” A platform was raised in front | ried by the ruinous course we have described in thi reformed drunkard, would address, the, meting ay | laughter) And at last I was perfectly frigh in such ra Rd, led ] 12th. The Mayor will swear in the democrats of | of and around the pulpit, on which were seated the | Stet city. We have become so ace I to. this | Sy : i, “[Tremendous Cheers.) “Well, | @ manner, us never man was frightened before in this | from Canton, whence ¢he sailed Jan. 12th. Our ad- the 8th and the whigs of the 12th, because they have sot epeciscie Bom Sere "| Wide world, I verily believe. [Cheers.] “One morning | } vices by way of Ergland ceme down to about the Ilon. Tom Marshall, Mr. Briggs, Dr. Griscom, Dr. | occurs, that it has no longer any effect upon us— aid, 1 at rome routs and revels in my tim: ‘ eigen 4 a ipesaen atti ing of ontinary Gocurrence heard some soxgs—Baccanalian songs, in the heat Kirby (the Chairman) the Rev. Mr. Bangs, and seve- He, posses tt By Os & nine cto “Contemplate, | ald heart of those revels—and never of all the songs—and ral other distinguished individuals. Atthe back of | however, a young man with perhaps a futher—per- | 1 y aa a Sebel meer te Bevastiate mF hound sin wae every Inrite flag. -wi 434 haps a mother—and perhaps brothers and sisters, pursu rat seemed to come rom art, and I them was a very large flag, with an eagle rising aloft ingacch a course as this, You have probably oll heard of | that went #0 plumb fo the heart, aa the one that I've listen. veins. [ had determined never to { Viously reached as:— and a dove bringing an olive branch inits mouth to | that excellent and eccentric man, Dr. W. Taylor, of Bos-| (ito to-night! (Lond cheers.) Well, gentlemen [rub- ‘ r d to te Lond « b- } drink again, Cheers.) But then, I never got on a frolie 812. those beneath. In front of this flag was the well | ton, he who has received the weil earned ile of the sea. | bing his hands down the aides of bis antaloons, and then | fy the whole course Of my life that I duit wake the tame | Deane J Pacson nasty went to my scat inthe House of Representatives without es havin, ed any liquor, wine, brandy, rum, hard cider, | “0° period. i k-tail, or any breed of the “ crite Still, the following letter of our correspondent at And [ found all the way there th pad.eontaing: some detail . nal gi cts at otha ‘nd wee | Macao contains some details that have not pre- the regular certificates—but the 6th he will refuse, and thus leave it to each Board to settle. The great difficulty will take place on the sixth. From the first to fifth, there is nothing but plain sailing—but at the Sixth, the fight will commence. Some sup- pose that the organization of the new Board wil Sate : man’s friend. He was once driving in the retching out his arms horizontally) there's another thing | resolve. And I re-solved, and re-resolved, nud rae Le phasic antes ath Ge Sith "heetbel Gate a WL) known banner of the New York Washington Tem- | yt of the city, when his horse mu tenly that makes me feel more at home here than T did at the Tae | dslvadt (Groat Laughter) Gal tet eae ed Ae is customary for you to have ¢orrespondents get bey ‘ ur that only allows | perance Society, with a female figure standing in | a dead stop, ard on looking before him he berniasle- (pends ol sentangets a with some good fellow who'd come alonside, and clap | '0 Your valuable paper throughout all parts of the the old Board to hold over, for a whole year, if the | tho centre, treading rum barrels, So's wo unde ung man apparently very respectably dressed, 1y here oa “oy ign ! (Loud mcegrl Tdidint see any | me on the shoulders, and say, “ Come, Tom, lev’s take 4 | United States, perhaps you would not object to hear DEW: cilé: cant ai RiRAGaenES: he centre, treading rum barrels, &c. &c. &e. under n the road rectly in the way of his horse. | Pledge last night rnacle. {Laughter and cheers.) But I felt the mosi | occasionally from this part of the world. So I shall - 4 rd \ necotwi drink,” why ‘Tom took it !"" (Cheers her feet, and holding in her right hand a scroll on | He called to. him and asked him’ what he was | Theregwas no anxiouss seat spread there for mournersto | 4..ful’ sensations forthe first time, a Zi lemnly trust for | devote a few spare moments to give you a view of. c i 1 : : eas fying philoso: | sit uponon this most mournful occasion, (Cheers, &e. JAnd | 4% ful ser 4 f teal Gaearing coe rai By CbCUHEIe i ‘Tum Hoy. Tow Maxsns at tasr siairr. | Which is inscribed the following words, being the | thw ‘Sir ‘raylor tlt him itewar a bad place ( atury | Cmustsay that itmruck me asa litle singular, thoi to | ytamr, ,dpe hole ot mp animal eppwtite seemed J affairs as they eecur here. hearin —The speech of thia gentleman lust night was one | celebrated pledge taken by the five Baltimore drink- | philosophy ; and old him if he remained there he would | large @ temperance meeting, if temperance meeting it | King possession of my soul. And It reelly din Chinese, WENA Co eee Sneodily find that the hoofof some horse would put an end | Was, thatthere was no pledge there for people to sign. m as if | against the Chinese, which, from present appearance of the inost thrilling things that has been heard in a | atds when they first sct this great ball in motion :— i | next house, and | {Cheers} For of all the experience tht mankind have | }2Mictive Heaven had resolved in its wrath to withdraw | j'4¢ far froma termination as it Was twelve mont 3 to his philosophy. He turned back to the next house, and that_mankin¢ from my heart and nature those powers of mind and bod: Pe 4 long time. He rose at a quarter past nine, and con- | PLepor.—We, whose names are annexed, desirous of | told them ofthe intoxicated young man who was | had in th ing progross of this mighty movement, } which before rendered me capable of enjoying all the bom | Pt. ‘The Chinese seem determined to hold out, cluded at 25 minutes past 10 o'clock. Ceasequcatty | forming e Society for our mutual tnd to guard | the road. Now, L heard Mr. Taylor relate this story, and | there i4 not B20, deep—so sure—no other such solid | tics, blessings and mercies vouchsafe Dy God to his wu. | and England will be obliged to send a inuch larger ded a r ; quently | against a pernicious practice, which is injurious to our f me effect upon his audience that this has upon | foundation on which the Temperance canse can repose. reatures and turn me over to the mastery of a bru- | force than she at present has in these waters, before it was impossible » write out his speech in time for the first edition. The whole of it, however, will be health, standing and families, do pled; ; smiled at the idea of a young man getting | {lod cheers] There is a charm about that pledge— tlemen, that we will not drink” any spiritous or malt 3 . a . " tal appetite for the wrongs I inflicted on the proud and | she will be able to make any serious iny ion drunk and lying in the road. But that young man had a| {Here he paused and struck his breast forcibly.) and I | jonie nature which he had implanted in my breast. | the mind of the mperor. "They are at pretentcon, rapide te ‘ er, and ad sisters. Think hat 1 say—[{Cheers.} there is acharm about it that # sae ae aures i a found in the second edition of this day’s paper. rae yagi ar a ire bey Fe orhet they ened? ane. Sica eckee: | ha never foundfelsewhere. [Ch Do you ask me (Case) ae teat lites ene ge Lp breast taring all the junks they meet, and so little do they ee me kgiao quently to this event, a venerable grey headed old gentle- 2 Lanswer, ‘Ido know why, and 1 don | hasreason todread the loss of all that readers hivaatwee ct the Portuguese, that they take them dizeetly Mtisnior aun Miuisiitie oly Courreeuesnnlll beens ‘ F than waited on Mr. ‘Taylor, and asked him relative to the thy 2 (Cheers.] but the fact I know to be so." {Cheers} } ohio. (cireateheering.) Well, Least about in iny mind | Pade? the guns of the fort. \ few dayssinee the nee Pi eee at ji is Aeros ora, The utmost order and most intense silence were | fact. “Oh! Mr. Tay Jo ae ed ths, on man be ie hares hed frig fet tie oo ing fs how I should get over that infernal day. I had the most | boats of H. B. M. ship Nimrod, actually captured a preserved throughout the whole evening, a striking | Was my ron, and once Me wae eed there: and received cians have demonstrated Tong tince that the yee | OFtid dread impending over my mind that unless 1 J junk within fifty yards of the fort, and the poor fel- feature of these great temperance meetings. The | high te Ae ian by Ailes GHikcactex. 40d ca. But, | of alcohol was destructive to the physical organiza. | K¢pt from liquor that day that I was irrecove- lows, after having arrived as it were at the Mount before a jury and obtain redress in a civil action. i i i Hoi of ment Every one. has demoustested: lone sihes rably gone past hope. I wanted to get through J Pisgah of their voyage, were carried out under the Persons having demands against others to the extent ; ‘ Chelsea Volunteers, and Fire Companies No. 38 and | sir, he fell i Lome the ten olie wen Mestinctinn to the tebe? enaeee tates, tday. (Cheers and laughter.) [tried soup—(augh- | gunsof the ship. They at first professed tomake war of $100 can also go there, and, in propria persona, | 37 were invited, but we only saw company No. 33 | : Tato mas (Cheers W nas besa denonnced iene see | Se and Leaverad it pret deep, with earemne peppet— J only on the Mandarins, and issited proclamations to prosecute their claims. Itwas established under # | present ‘ ponte by religion and by philosophy—yet it has gone on—andon | PUNT a” Caen rat horrible appetite re: | that effet, in hopes, 1 presume to enlist the populace State law, aud consists of three judges and a clerk, = | have rained hi : : 7nd on—and planted its roots wider and deeper—and | Representatives and told my colleague in a sort of confes- 4 ON their side; but now fie: woceedity are diametri- ‘The chair was taken precisely at half past seven | foctionate expectation and blasted the bright and well] Spread more misery and desolation through society than | of ang previous to this I'wasa little the slowest of all | C2lly opposite to their professions, and the Chines Lo x 2 ‘ : ; . d pestilence both combined—(cheers) until that thing lil i ii b to think that “pape; kee” not dr. f duced the Rev. H. s | founded hopes which had been formed of his future ca- | War and 4 u mortals at thing like a confession), I told him that 1 | begin to think that “paper talkee” is of not much by Dr. Kirby. He introduced the Rev. H. Bangs ee hones F pledge was brought forward to check it and discou iad ‘aiviesepoeeedbte co Pi drank thatdes, | | consequence. who are entitled to no compensation except what is derived from their fees of office. There are forty ‘ 4 to the meeting, who delivered a very affecting | {/. habit, this fondness for liquor} nance it for (Loud applause.) Tsay know it to | ™ ‘ - a 4 a oe very we court, 7 ng, . u r 3 5 : at aarp » was lost. (Greatcheering.) I looked and spoke so se It isrumored here that Captain Nias, the jurors sunmoned every week to this court, fines for | ayer, Dr. Kirby then rose and said, “Mr. Collin | now exists and irk continues, if the habit not now got | Ue #0. (Cheers) "I say it, gentlemen, chat Lave felt} NasjOu.q(Giemeneang) of Make and spoke so eet | It isrumored here that Captain Ning, the iar: non-attendance to which are directed to be paid over : airs rid off, will probably lead to ‘the same consequences.—} More naturally to-night for these reasons ; end there is speak rery serious on any snbject) that he looked me hard | tack die Weta tod ineaty rae e an at- ; | will favor us with a temperance song. Mr. Collins her young men hor old men can do that which has| another reason which I have not assigned why I should % lasked pp ” ack upon the forts and is only waiting foran increase eee oy oy Verano eros ting neonate oy then sung the following temperance ode Mand destroyed others without danger tothemselves | feelsonow. I was last night asa ship at soa sailing w vi Caan} waveryeobntiey A Cheers YY long ter) | °! force. e ode :— ined : “ —to—the—vi entre! (C ; : i: 1a , the poor. A peace officer was formerly kept at the ng tiialling in the same manner. Aman never becomes a| Out] my consort. (Cheers.) But ies arvel toda Just then, Teast my eyes up, andasif a fasts from tke bias | 5° Strong is the opinion to that effect, that the En- The Temperance Flag. drunkard at once, and it is never without surprise and as- | (Cheers.) And without him, I felt very much like a fee- | Y°\(0F Heaven ns inexplicable to me as the electric glish residents are a!l leaving Canton Jretumming Court by the Common Council, whose duty was to aoa ent that’ @ man discovers himselfto be one... | ble merchantman placed under the convoy of a man of not to drink, that is the question,” and it is a question which n consider himself safe? Let him withhold his usual { And it was such characters that afew pure, involves more of human happiness or of human misery | glasses for a month, or for a day, and will he not feel that | noble high-souled men, und: ® ers babe ay 1 park fi Highi—a (rowskt bc toMacao. For the last few months the Chinese hav preserve order, enforce the payment of fines, &c., BY OH. ANDREWS, ‘The delusion is complete, ‘The natives are the lst tomee | War, and separated from her consort by axtorm. (Cheers | Which “ndgeed me to wk. hime "Doyo thing | been rebuilding and manning their forts:/and. it io but the situation was abolished two years since and The Temperance Flag! the Temperance Flag ! their own situation, and if a friend who sees with un} ri eter eof his guna (rubbing down lie hans and | that there is any thing in these Temperance Societies | sid they are putting them in a most form’) able con- 0 Pe iter shrsitie ° Flag ! the "lee! i and oi * e” he shi y smiled, 7 ir service: : i ; rian 2 5 procial , 1 , and had been engaged in a good many of what : . Ne ci ° r i ney, o be obtained to try an important cause on Friday. ‘That fl proclainns us fee trom Rum, see Reload frolics, ud whee reepleey teed begunto be im-| gentlemen, I feel as though | could mak small fight Re eee ice He aed pete eer om the engineer department, they are capable of making Such things should not be. Where’s Tom Lloyd. Ther as savtter all then te Bowe paired. I commenced talking with him on the subject of | Myself—(roars of laughter and tremendous cheering)— | Mondous cheers). I had. chat ‘horable feeling in a much more desperate resistance than upon the last we Aa 8 the odusetwithout dels ntemperance, and after some talk I asked him whether if} though unarmed, (Cheers) I've said that I knew the | frost that prea RY every other faculty and passion, and attack, ‘That officer thinks that Canton could not Cans anv Cauey.—The insolence, injustice, and ‘The Temperance Fing ! the Temperance Flag venty years ago, any one had told what was now } virtue of that pledge. | The honorable gentleman, and my | sendcred me completely callous for the time to.all but itself, | Be again taken without the loss of five hundred of extortions of these fellows are becoming even more it is the banner of the free, 4 FE eer aeienca ia htseves that | strain of simplicity. pathos and pure: feeling peculiar to | J, asked him if he knew any one that could tell me any | the assailants. ae eg ‘The Temperance Flag ! the Tem e Flag ! lieved him? He acknowledged with tears in his eyes that | Ptrain of simp icity, pathos and pure feeling peculiar to} thing about these temperance people. He said if there Information has been received b intolerable than those of their predecessors in bru- An eating Grows libe: ee he should not! “He did not, however, give up the habit | himself, some anecdotes illustrative of the great principle | Wingy One in that House that kirew any thing wtont the | micnonnation hi received by the French tality—the venerable hackmen. We have received f qaths SOT co ek of drinking, and in ashort time his propert wasted | for which he contended. | In proof of this, he might per- | Tmperunce cause, it was the Hon, Me Briggs: Thad | Twoneties hese from their brethren at Pekin, that seas cage a a og RO a taal ‘That banner tells of sorrow past and his family broken up and scattered over the country in | haps have told a story. bearing even still more closely on | Neyer been on any very familiar or friendly: terms wit | Ute Emperor is about to remove his family and valu a number of incidents which must be told very soon. Othiove, that wow vrecaian Raat search of a livelihood. ‘These are not solitary uid | the point ; and I could have ratified it ; and I will ratify it, | thay gentleman in iw Dut I left my seat and went | #0les into Tartary, and is determined to defend his In the meantime, let every sufferer take the number Ofgrief when Rum did bind men fast that vere? Hew many melancholy feelings, bitter | here and elsewhere ; that it fully and most conclusive {0 his, and said to him, “Mr. Briges,deyou know | CaPital to the last gasp, should the Ruglish suc- : f . Ofjoy, now that their foe is fled.” roans of anguish, and how much suffering and crime, | demonstrates the same position that I have announced, | 91\"ting about. this tamperance Lusines } Isthere any | ceed in penctrating to me interior. The country and report them to the Mayor. No more that tyrant shall have sway, | degradation and misery, have been caused by this fatal | of the strong and redeeming virtues that are concen: | thine good in it He looked in that look, | about is arming en masse, and he is aboutto dix : ~ And ruin those who serve him best; habit?) Why is itso!” And why should it be so? Let piven: rete al ee Ba Loa A erred af | asl met it, I could discover a fi as if he thought that | patch a large army to the protection of Canton. It Tus Lion or THs Wrex.—The Hon. Tom Mar Alluring men “till they obey, me caution you again, ‘beware of the first glass." | member of that society in Washington which consist here was a kind of expression that | 1s also said that twenty French engineers have en- shall of Old Kentucky is the lion of New York for Each fierce command, each sternybehest. Where can “the line be drawn between temperance wert deuaitien cndchesia\ee ome nC) spol possibility of a quiz; but when he had looked | tered the service of. the Emperor, and are making 24 es res e F! PT e1 y Jasses: a ou et w] e ui e * ‘ rf Byes, » tremendous—greater than Mr. Clay could stir up any it tells of comfort to the poor, brandy, whiskey, or any intoxicating liquor. You | numbered among ite members: men or the most pure, dis” | He said instantly, “Certainly there is!” Taaid, "Who is | 1.4 eenmpcree kere eaarins seized several. of the ’ Of peace and safety to the rich; commence with one indulgence which soon leails to a set | interested, and high-minded dispositions—some who had | x+'the head of them—who can put me in the way of get. merchants here who have been supplying the day It brings contentment to the door, cond; the appetite grows with indulgence you gnc anennna epiren Bid ny loaner pam do He replied, “Dr. Sewell is at the head of it,” Fee tfc tea, ei baad to Canton in . " : Where bitter strife and anguish dwelt, consider yourself in any danger, and consider yourself in e + : apd thet is wreull iaisotienautte ae i . | chains, where no doubt they will be treate rE Dux Great Race.—Our hotels are erowding full Foreverbe thet Ving displayet, ruled if tome warm hearted temperance fiend should | the dangers to which they were never—(ho, Twill not | 1," tonight won't do forme, Twanttegetack | tors to their countr } cee with the bloods of the south, who come hither to SBA gehts eoanitey far ail wide; yan yes oft contre ocala ned os the bette ong reputed aiet leat heal Divas disor now—right away!” (Tremendous cheers.] Itwasthrough | | The general feeling here is that the war is very witness the race between Boston and Fashion next pp tA gest Site eh may gente cap SS: eke a eed frequently said | tainted by all the sores and shames that follow in the dis- | tat most infern a afl Cage thet Tw jeer k kt far from a close, and that many years will elapse bs ; But still uphold it side by side, doth the sage and the peasant. | It has equently wise le bape he +h joined thar | (Cheers] However, I said to him, “Let's go behind the | before the trade again resumes ite regular chantel week. The horses are on the ground, both in fine | ‘The Temperance Flag ! &e. &e. to be hing how men of such talents, accomplish: | robiety from motives of purephilanthrophy, Butvor ine | SPeakers chalr,” for by thet time 1 was gettingto talk | “The price of ten continues Ihe mud eral Mi . ; ; ‘ in society, . tty e1 3 ‘ u 1) order and condition, and every thing now looks like | The President then introduced to the notice of the ery heshould desire food ?| most part that society was formed of men taken from the gut Ene vertanghier| We, Went behind the Specks | American ships are loading at these very high @ great race, a great assemblage, and great sport. the meeting the And if a man has created this unnatural—for so it is in | ters and the kennels of the city, from the dregs and lowest chair, and I then said to him, “ Sir, | am | Prices, though there are few ships here at present. —— appetite, is it wonderful he should seek to | degradation of the oe hborhood, men who had been cast tempted this day ina way and manner that I never was The last arrivals from the United States are the Expresses.—We are indebted to Harnden & Co., | Hon, Mr. Briaos, who thus addressed it :—"To drink or | gratify it? Is there’a man who has formed this appetite retrievable wrecks upon the barren shores of ut- | sombted before.” Always before I could drink or not, as aie Osear and schooner Ariel. The former will i Adams & Co and the officers of the Cleopatra, for I pleased; I could always by the exerciseof my will con. | sail in a few days with a full cargo, and the latter Boston papers in advance of the mail. ‘To the latter | than almost any other which can be presented to the mind. | Craving, that unsatisfied gnawing, for what it has been | and horror that surrounded the victims, sought to save! | {l! degre Pongeg ti regi thealy yA pgp har eho pathic en ig “aghaeg fe raycmumn smuggler... The © for alige frat Newport jon Which now occupies toan_ unparalleled stomed to? Ah, if you feel any such sensation, you | and with a muscle that was never exh yet, except | INET T could clways bef Nienioe, iist of all the Americans.—Oscar, ben Z : uu of the community and agitates more or less ing on forbidden ground where thousands helore | by the arms of these Washingtonian boys, plticked them by the exercise of my faculties. . Siew Luconia, Conomando, SUE ees Hart Mrs. W xg House iw Broa ery land. ‘The extent of that agitation and the | you have ventured and fallen, No; there is not any line of | {fom the depths of degradation into which they had been | ¢2vent. T said to him * | want to go off and sign the pledge | Pucp»Henry Pratt, not yet discharged; Cynthia,do; Ited from it evince the vast | demarcation between temperance and intempe' vhich } thrown, and which hed consumed all others with despa Lintin, Lima, Hygia, star ships; brig Cayuga,bound way.—In another column will be found the sn- . sb : will you go out with me.” He looked me a cold, 5 dieses commenaas Gan, ge that lie wilt ae oat 1, gentlemen, it was with men of this description—with Poe ed Tere ite wien gy mea cold, | to west const of South America; schooner Ariel. nouncement of the opening of this splendid estab- 8 of intemperance were too well ks five, but [ do say h racters—that [associated myself, (Loud cheers. ¢ Briggs sat) and you_northernfmen, they say Yours, &e. Cana. lish . Broadw: ‘ed kuown to require enumeration now, But since the agita- {falling a victim to this fatal appetite, which will | No matter why! (Cheers,) I, pin rr! (Tremendous | OV aii cold, fond o Aeth water en he is, and the wate: ) . ishiment, at the corner of Broadway and Cedar st., | tion of this great question what a reformation has occur. n by the indulgence of one glass till it ends in | Cheers.) have been necessity. (Laughter and | \icdin both his eyes, (great cheering) and he went offand | Rascas 1x Bostox.—There has lately been a embracing numbers 137 and 139 Broadway. The | red! Habits have been changed—opinion has been ness. Has he commenced this habit? Unlesshe | applause.) It may have been pride. (Cheers.) | Grew the form of the pledge—and it was a teetotaller freak importati f is 7 ew di lead: ‘tl ht of | Changed—appetite s been subjected to the voice | stops, and that instantly, he isin great and imminent dan- for pride, it is well Known, has many aspects in the hu- (Here the enthusiasm and cheering was perfectly terri resh importation of rascals into Boston. Most entrance is a new door leading up an easy flight of | of reason, and to the admonitions of conscienc: ger. Do you know or have you ever thought ofthe pro | man breast. (Cheers) And a part of my pride, gentlemen | Wo Neyer heard anything like itin allour ex rience of | every night for the last ten, there has been either stairs, on the right of which, on Broadway, is the | In the agitation of this question, numberless indivi- | portion of men who die adrunkard’s death? Are you 40 | —for all men have some degree of pride on some things, public meetings.) That I was not only 0 sais fron. aiee- incendiai ttempt to b he ci ick adies’ drawing room, furnished in a most tasteful | duals have been raised up from the very depth of suf: | years of age? Look back upon all the companions of | more or less—one part of my pride is never to be ashamed | POP Av scit but that 1 was to discountenanes the uae of fe | eee ery Attempt to burn the city, or pic ve prc phen 3 . fering and degradation to respectability and happiness. | your youth, and where are they all? How many of them | to avow what I do, whether it is for good or whether it is | in others (cheers); I didn't sce that last clause in j some person's pocket manner. On the left is the large dining room, 42 | These blessed fruits were pow every where ch Il | have died the victims of drunkenness? Again I say, there | for bad. (Laughter and Joud cheers) And it does appear | (ii; afterwards, (Great laughter and cheering. CT wre feet long by 24 feet wide, elegantly furnished, where . is blessed country, and flourish gloriously i is nciple in which there is safety but. thal of total | to me that if], with all the responsibilities of my station. up my sleeves and took the pen—the appet vas rioting Somuer Dness.—The whole country from Maine He was not sutticiently versed im the statistics of | abst Young men—middle aged men—h of my connections—of my family, and of my friends, and daily two dinners are through me—my nerves were quivering, and under the | to Georgia, is now in its beautiful green dress for served up, at 1 o'clock and at | temperance to enter at large on that topic, but he would timated the horrors of such a death;a living drunkard is bad | of all the responsibility that attached itself both to my pub- t n , ; ‘ i f the gna’ vi marks the > * 34 o'clock, in the best style of acelebrated artiste | recal to their recollection the most gratitying fact men- | enough—but adrunkard’s grave—have you considered the | lic and to my private career—that if my pride did not d specter the Pod pe ah a tiremadaed ks the | summer. Every thing looks favorable for the far- who had twenty y. L f tioned at a meeting in this city on the former evening, that | horrors of such a death? In this land there are thirt ter me, under all these circumstances from pursuing a ng ;) and I give}the w rd and honor of a proud man, that | mer. a nty Years experience in London, | during the last year 200,000 people had signed the pledge | thousand whoflie ev courve that was literally leading me pell-mell to the devil ; | 0.) ta moment that T signed the last letter to that pled e a Havana and New Orleans. The lodging depart- | in thiscountry. But that was only one item in the long ” (laughter) it was stran, deed, that it should prevent Ss. catalogue of the blessings of the temperance reformation. | happe ’ : 1 me from openly avowing and pursuing a coutse that | {have not drank again. (Cheer upon cheering, fo)» NAVAL, Movesieecs.—The U Marshall's voice rose above the din, while many tazee Independ- ment is arranged throughout in suits of rooms, con- ; But a few years ago the opinion that intoxicating liquors | sidethey would extend eleven miles in length. The would lead me, and has led me, I trust, in a totally | Marshall 1d as soon | ence, the flag ship of the Home Squadron, will leave sisting of parlor, bed room and closet adjoining. | here necorary ant useful was almost univereal—tut » | intenociotemtw: In dishonored greves—tose ing fries opposite direction. * (Loud cheers) Weil,—1 did | their fect, and waved their hats) and 1 would ae ge : * Y J) ig Bj ¥ ig" : drink fire from hell itself— (Here the remainder. in afew days for Boston, probably t ito the The most experienced waiters and servants are in | Wondrous change has come over the public mind on this | mourn their departure—and if we only allow a rs) And T didnt care a button who knew it, ! Sontence was completely lost. in the positively terrific Dry Dock. — % 'y to go into her determination to conduct the house on a supe- | hes even sd to those in official station, and the re ink tofsee the whole of the inhabitants of this city in * anid roars of laught i h ited, and the perspiration Cheers and iaughter)—T_feit | LAkor Fine ix Porttaxo.—Eben MeLellan and a of alcohol fromthe rations | mourning caused, by drunkenness? And yet this amount 4 say —and asa very ResPRCTARLE paper (ironic recove y for years had fallen | Wyer & Co. fe i 2 ee f the soldier. the good cause is also pro jefia caused alchough scattered over the country. Is | in this city did say—and ax one paper this morning sia | St ifsome Lesnar ade eager in’ year Stoed toy) and others, suffered by fire in Portland iin a of the soldier. i od atte c i — ’ papel 1 , aye, in years, . ae pen fj The Rev. Jouw Mavrrr is stitching up the | Afestsg gloriously, and very many merchant ships now | itshere‘ore less honorable Deeause itis not concentrated | (hat the Honorable Fom Marshall, the reformed drunk. fromm cise ane fet that Twas free.(Immense cheering) ate unday. ‘Ten buildings were destroyed. Loss doned Washington, as a sink of corruption—and he | country. A a set this illustrious example to the wsina desultory way to your vi —T didn’t eave a button what th bi Sg ready t to go up with me to-night, and / world + Europe it is moving onward in prosperi | to adopt this remedy.” If you. consult your fait, nor how much they said upon the subject about your | jet us see this society, and let me put my name among their is right. ARE ee ty and trinmph. In France—in Prussia—in Germany—in | you will do so. Ponder it well—remove yourdoubts penieen avant. Un maendous ¢ cers) 1 chose to join this archives, and get a certificate, For I felt that i ot the | Hornimir.—Last Tuesday, the body of a woman 3 ——— e i distant Russia. England—in Scotland—and oh! how | if you have any—reflect— very society of rmed drunkards. (Cheers) Ang ¥ was safely fixed against a hanees a i 5 Baavrivot.—The weather yesterday. Every | gioriously tn old lrelanl! treland trodes Gown for eees | decise wt bomexlet conscience have. (ull. s¥ Join them! (Enthusiastic cheering) “And, as 1 said, there perme Yor ever. (Loud laughter and cheering) | Woe found floating in the basin at Albany. She thing looked bright and pleasant, Ireland, generous hearted, oppressed Ireland! strug | think you will come tothe resolution that this i charm about this pledge, which ean be found no where | 4nd there—among men that were the very outcasts of so- | WAS taken out, and appeared to have met with foul PP s gling for ages in the deep morass of degradation, and sink- | proper course for manto pursue. (Mr. Briggs sat else upon earth, (Cheers) I am proud of it. (Loud | cigy—without character, credit, station, friends, home, | play from some quarter. Iler he: Boarprxa.—Every thing ix coming down, so must | 125 deeper a \decper at every stragate? She has at last | amidgreat epplause) cheer erage Gan ansthing else with which 1) Kindred, or gonnection of any Wid that was reputable |) Oi ed perpen ip ac > Ag planted herself upon the rock of Temperance, and now she | Dr. Kinny the » and said he was going to | 2™ Connected on this @arth—prouder than all that is | men who had never raised their eyes to any such circle—I | horribly mangled and bruised, and about her body this business too. Boarding is as high now, with | jn rising from her degradation, and presenting herself to Wr. Kinpy then rose and sai P was § near and dear to me in the sweet and hallowed relations | jeljeye that’s the word they use now—to eng such cireleas | were other marks of violence. She was genteel] flour at $6, as when it was $10 or $12. How goes | the world, & glorious example of a temperate nation ? | offer them another mode of expressing their joy by } of domestic life and of home—prouder than T am of my | that in which I moved—there,amidst the Ta di ibenaitbe-d 4 con beat’ Nearly six millions of her population have taken the giving $200 to the Washington Temperance Soc seat which I hold in the Congress of the United —— bates, and amidst the stori ir sufferings, | Aressed, and seemed a decent, respectable woman it on beef 2. embracing ail classes, ali ranks, all conditions of ety, which has daring the last year collected ix ] [' lerthon I am of that great people whom T have the | and of whet they had made andthere, amid | of about twenty-four years of age. Her dress was . 7) Who ean estimate the resul: 4 honor to represent in that Congress—and more than that ale cloth “se Wi . ; » St thal >, result clot , Lil these Washingt hh . Senator prom VERMON' jov. Paine, has ap it? Among the in esting “nsoteies of eve small sums of a sixpence and upward, $1,650, out J crtal man cannot say ' (Tremendous cheering, which el theet, sould het have anictans a plain dark ealieo, and green veil, black stockings pointed Samuel C. Crafis, Senator in Congress from ble ults of the reformation effecte! through the in. | Of Which they have paid the rent of the room ip } joted some minutes.) “Gentlemen, it is customary with W } Yoi0 ty adoller anda half—-who had no bed tolicdown on | and shoes, a pair of white gloves and Ii ist- that Stats, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the re- J st™mentality of Father Mathew, he (Mr. B)) would refer | Which their meetings are held, and expended the } hoy of oursociety at Washington, when we get together Atnight—no home to shelter them froin the storm and the | bands. f aoe A a toone. It was that of @ poor Irish female peasant who re. | sum of 500 in relief to poor fellows who have } in our meetings, to say something about ourselves and our | tomptest—the frost or thesnow a eha-wonta levee Ba a signation of Judge Prenti jor bd ag. Oe otthe hoppy erate oe woanperance ata | been found destitute and abandoned, and | there: | posteare 7 k—somie of whieh Ta otiy the | helt leat garment enaaemnes wolkemeaeeoel for rum. they “ toni"Three atedea linew Wies sane on ——- blic meetin 9 e mother of fo : seat . st cred e world, Ovexe.—The Canal between Buffalo and Black 9} 8ia for many sears her husbond had tact children and | fore ask for a liberal contribution. _ Although I ser | most creditable in d could have plucked it from its mortal shrine—whe had no | yhie gity wi ripe, merossly intem. | many poor Washingtonians just raised from the gut. J hat we call our experience. (Cheers and great sustenance butalcohol by day, and no abiding place bat ‘his city with Boston, One runs via Stonington, one . The ret on We: te. He earned twenty-one shill ao i ight in this way, and trouble you with | fstenanee | : oniag Rock. The water was letin on Wednesday. Aint six io drink, thus leaving ule family etna ett P ter, and who can but afford: to give their two shil | Amit Trespass to-might ®t er can any. body | Beneath the eaves of the market at night, with theswine | via Providence, and the other via Norwich. All ‘ = ‘ for their slee partners—rirene—amid men of thatide- A > . At last, h , he ed the Temper lings, yet if those who can afford five dollars as wel! | [oS te it to theeustom of the place where ping p 4 good. BREACH IN THE Gevansee—Taere has been ® Pf Coty, and brought home his Ghats pean aearance Bo baat) can give two shillings, will do 80, we shall P factor oe ctteere.) Aut hope that hie polish de semeeippe yet scene ie mart d breach in the Gennesee Valley Canal, near Mount f wife fared thie change woul! be but temporary, wat {collect $2,000 instead of $200. | 1, dienes inthis mostpollhat city will Orgive me Br indul | ett th sat ot which the close of the sentence was | _ C*TE4r.—One can go from Buffalo to Chicago, « s. Navi ede veek after , and she saved, unkni 0 _ i 7 4 uri ic nce in the cu | ho 5, dis > i ‘ Morris, | Navigation will be suepended several days J im ail put six shillings every week, tllshe had enough time the oles rete wera hondcd around the City | learto me (Cheers) Wellrthen, aa f-eald Tart night, | lost) rhere, Mr. Briggs-—(turning to where, tat J distance of 1400 miles, for $18. Feed on white fish in consequence thereof. to purchase a table, handsome tea things for it, six chairs | bose Company No. 33 sang a song, composed for } ad not only never joined a temperance socicty till very | S*"teme ») isn’ ‘ and dance every evening during the passage,

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