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PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 23, 1830.

I must own that it differs from that which the commit tee had formed; but, in a matter of this importancethey will be willing to hear, though they should ulti,

Before I begin to state the offers of Mr. D'Homergue, and the plan founded upon them, it is necessary that I should mention a few introductory facts.

SIR: I am honoured with your letter of the 11th inst. which I have immediately communicated to Mr. D'Homergue. He desires me to convey to you, and the hon-mately disapprove. orable committee, his respectful thanks for the favora ble sentiments that you have expressed towards him; he wishes it also to be known and understood, that, if sufficiently encouraged, it is his intention to settle himself permanently in this country, which he has learned to appreciate.

The contents of your letter have been the subject of frequent conferences between him and me. The various matters that it brought to our consideration, and the desire on my part to lay at once my whole view of the subject before the honourable committee, and to do it with as much as possible of that clearness and precision which so extensive and complicated a subject requires, have been the cause of this answer having been so long delayed. The committee will, I hope, see from what follows, that no unnecessary time has been employed. The object of the committee appears to be to extend, throughout the U.S. the knowledge of the art of preparing raw silk in all its varieties, for the domestic & foreign markets; and that it should be done in the shortest time, in the easiest manner, and with as little expense as possible.

The mechanical part of reeling silk in France and Italy, is performed entirely by women. There are in those countries what are called great and small filatures. The former are large establishments, in which from 50 to 500 reels are at work; the women employed there, are under the superintendence of a director, who is thoroughly acquainted with the mechanical as well as the mercantile part of the business. Those directors are brought up to the profession. The women employed in those large filatures are well paid, and generally remain there to the end of their days. The small, or, as we should call them, domestic filatures, are carried on in families, by the farmers' wives and daughters, who work from one to five reels, either with cocoons of their own raising, or those they purchase of their neighbors, by which they make a handsome income at the end of the year. Those women, in general, have preserved the art in their families from generation to generation; hence, you may have seen in the memo. With a view to this object, a plan has been proposed rial of the merchants of Lyons, which I had the honthrough you, and several questions asked of Mr. D'Ho- our to send you, that those merchants complain of mergue, with a view to obtaining his assistance towards their imperfect routine; I believe their complaints acarrying it into execution. The plan is the establish-rise in part from jealousy, and the spirit of monopoly; ment of a normal school of filature in the District of Co- till I am not unwilling to believe, that the silk from doJumbia, in which Mr. D'Homergue should be employed mestic reels, is not as perfect as that which comes from as an instructor at a fixed salary. the large filature; it sells, however, and the manufacturers know how to employ it. It must be added, that the French and Italian female reelers perform their work mechanically, and are, in other respects, of the grossest ignorance: few of them, if any, knowing even how to read and write. Our American women will prove themselves far superior in every respect, and their domestic filatures will produce perfect silk, because they will not have received their instruction thro their great-grand-mothers, before the art was improved as it is now.

This plan is formed on a noble scale, and bears the stamp of the character of a great nation; it is such as would naturally occur to a man of liberal views and an enlarged mind, on considering the subject unconnected with its practical details. The knowledge of those details, however, which Mr. D'Homergue possesses, has convinced him that it would be liable to many inconveniences, which he hopes it will not be thought improper in him to suggest. In the first place, it would be very expensive, complicated in its mode of execution, and liable to various abuses; and, above all, it would be subject to the risque of ultimate failure, by bringing Mr. D'Homergue in contact, and, perhaps, in collision, with persons not acquainted with his art, to which his ignorance of the language, manners and usages of this country might not a little contribute. This last reason alone would deter him from acceding to the committee's proposal.

For my part, sir, I must frankly acknowledge that, after giving the subject all the consideration in my power, I have myself come to the same conclusions as Mr. D'Homergue, and I am satisfied that it is not by employing him as a salaried instructor, that the object of the committee is most likely to be attained. On the contrary, I am fully persuaded, that a degree of confi. dence placed in that gentleman, in the manner I shall presently mention, will produce to the nation the most satisfactory results.

After this candid statement, the committee will no doubt expect that I should explain to them Mr. D'Homergue's views, and my own, on this interesting subject. I shall do it with due diffidence; but, at the same time with perfect freedom.

The committee, I am very sure, will do justice to my motives, and be satisfied that my feelings are congenial with their own. I shall lay before them a plan, the result of which is to be the dissemination of the art of reeling silk, in all its varieties, throughout the United States, in the short space of three years, and at the moderate expense of forty thousand dollars. So far I am convinced, that the views of the committee will be fully met. They will also be pleased to find, that its excution must naturally be followed by the introduction of silk manufactures in the country. In other respects,

In this country, there should be both great and small, or domestic filatures; the former will be the deposita ries of all the improvements in the arts; the latter will contribute to the ease of families; and there is no danger of there being an excess of the article in the market. There must be filatures of all sizes and all dimensions, according to the means of those who will undertake them. Full and free competition can alone ensure success.

The first thing to be done, therefore, is to instruct, in the art of reeling silk, a sufficient number of young men, to disseminate it at once through the country.→ Those young men will, when instructed, set up filatures with a greater or lesser number of reels, according to their means; in which they will be obliged to employ women, who will not, as in Italy or France, remain all their lives on wages, but, after a certain time, will return to their families, or get married and set up small filatures of their own, which they can do at a trifling expense. They will, probably, also plant a few mulberry trees on their farms, and the females of the family will raise silk worms, and produce cocoons to be reeled in the house. This is the course which the thing mustinfallibly take.

Thus much being premised, I now proceed to state the offers of Mr. D'Homergue. He offers to instruct sixty young men, to be designated by the Government of the United States. They should be healthy, intelligent, active, and dexterous youths, between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five, and having as much as possible a natural disposition to the mechanical arts. They will be instructed in the theory and practice of the art of reeling silk from the cocoons into the various forms and qualities of raw silk. They will be taught the theo

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retical and practical, the mercantile as well as the me- import this valuable apparatus, in the first place, as a chanical parts of the business, with the most modern model which will be soon imitated, and, perhaps, imimprovements. They will, in short, at the end of the proved by our ingenious workmen; and, also, to enable course of instruction, be enabled to take charge, as di- him to instruct the sixty young men in the knowledge rectors, of a filature, however extensive, to instruct wo-of all its parts, and in the use of it. It is very complimen, and, in short, to do every thing in that branch cated, and requires great care in packing and forwardwhich Mr. D'Homergue may do himself. ing. It consists of more than three thousand pieces, which must be all marked and numbered, in order that it may be properly put up on its arrival. It requires, therefore, the aid of a person profoundly skilled in the business. Mr. D'Homergue proposes to employ his father. He would expect that this apparatus, and what other machinery he should think it necessary to import, during the three years, should be free of duty.

The course of instruction will require two years; that is to say, two seasons, from the 1st of July to the middle or end of November in each year. The young men will board themselves where they please in the neighbourhood of the filature, which they will be expected regularly to attend during working hours, to receive their instruction. The remainder of the year they may dispose of themselves as they or their friends shall think proper.

By means of this plan, the United States would be in possession, at the end of the contemplated period, of It is intended by Mr. D'Homergue to erect his filature the means of offering to the markets of Europe and of in the vicinity of Philadelphia, as the most convenient this country, raw silk, of all its different qualities, in the place, for reasons which shall hereafter be explained. highest perfection. The committee will have observed The course of instruction can only begin on the 1st of in the Lyons memorial, how much importance is attachJuly, 1831; the present year must be employed in pre-ed to the perfection of the filature, and what complaints parations. Mr. D'Homergue will have, before the 1st are made of the want of uniformity in the silk produ of July, to travel through several of the States, in order ced. It would be a most essential point, that the first to secure cocoons, & at the same time he will instruct the raw silk which shall come out of the American filatures, farmers, as much as will be in his power, respecting should be as perfect as possible, and uniformly so, bethe culture of the mulberry tree, and the raising of cause, in addition to the superior beauty of the material, silk worms. Every year, in the Winter or Spring du- it would at once give a name to American silk, which ring the three years, he will travel in the same manner, would establish its reputation on a solid basis, and make varying his course as much as possible; this will be ne it every where sought for and purchased in a manner cessary, on account of the scarcity of cocoons, which with the eyes shut. If the United States are determinmust be expected to last some time, and probably to the ed to introduce this manufacture into this country, the end of the contemplated three years. In the approach- committee will be sensible that it should not be done ing Summer he will establish a filature near Phiiadel-partially, and that as little as possible should be left to phia, with at least twenty women, so that the young men, at the next season, when their course will begin, may see it at work, and learn how such an establishment is to be directed. In the next year the filature will be enlarged for the immediate instruction of the sixty pupils, who it is expected will be sent all at the same time. Improved machinery will be imported from Furope, and every thing necessary will be done in the course of the three years, that the young men may be fully instructed, and enabled, when they return home, to set up filatures in their respective neighborhoods.

Speaking of machinery, I cannot avoid noticing the celebrated apparatus of M. Gensoul, so often mentioned in the memorial of the merchants of Lyons, and which it contemplates to introduce into all the filatures of France. As it is very expensive, the memorial recommends to the French government to distribute bounties to an amount not less than 600,000 francs ($130,000) by way of encouragement to those who will introduce it into their establishments.

This apparatus can only be employed in large filatures of at least thirty reels. It is moved by horse or water power, or by steam. Its operation is to turn at the same time the arms of all the reels employed, while the reelers are at their work, which otherwise must be done by a girl or boy stationed at each reel. Hs advantages are the following:

chance hereafter. A good method introduced every where at once from the beginning, will, with difficulty, degenerate.

If this plan should be adopted, and carried into exe. cution, it will follow, that, at the end of the three years' instruction, three sorts of filatures may and will be immediately introduced into the different parts of the U nited States. 1. Large filatures of thirty reels and upwards, moved by Gensoul's apparatus, by horse or water power, or by steam. 2. Middle sized filatures of six reels and upwards; moved by hand in the ordinary way. 3. Small or domestic filatures of five reels and below; these would employ the farmers', wives and daughters; and the slave population, through the country. The difference in the perfection of the silk between that which is reeled with Gensoul's apparatus, and that recled by hand in the ordinary way, is hardly perceptible, when the directors are good, and the reelers are attentive, and have been well instructed.

The reason why, in France, the silk reeled upon farms obtains less price than that reeled in filatures, is, that the peasants' wives and daughters follow an an. tiquated routine, as has been mentioned. In this country the method would be uniform every where.Negligence and inattention alone could produce a difference in the value of the silk reeled in farm houses, and this negligence would carry with it its own pun1. It saves the time of reelers, who are not incommo-ishment. The raw silk of China, much inferior to that ded by fire and smoke, and are not obliged to stop to feed their fires, as the hot water is conveyed by pipes to their several basins, and the furnaces to each reel are unnecessary.

2. It saves the labour of a girl or boy to each reel, who otherwise are employed to turn the arms which this machinery sets in motion. This will be very important in States where slave labour is employed, and will be economical every where.

3. The motion of the arms of the reel, thus produced by machinery, is perfectly equal and regular, which is not always the case when they are moved by boys or girls, who sometimes turn too fast, and sometimes too slow, which affects in some degree the regularity of the threads however skilful the reelers may be.

Mr. D'Homergue intends, if his offers are accepted, to

of France, is still sure to find purchasers; and there is little doubt but that it must be, in time, superseded by American silk.

When the art of reeling silk shall have been thus established through the country, it is to be expected that the article will abound in the land; particularly, if measures are taken, as will be presently mentioned, for promoting the planting and growth of mulberry trees. Mr. D'Homergue then will have a great many competitors in the business of filature, which, if monopolized, would have enriched him; consequently it will be his interest, and it is his intention, if this plan succeeds, to turn his attention to manufactures, from which he expects he will be able to make a competent fortune, and at the same time to enrich the country. In this he knows he will also have competitors, (for it is said that there is already

in Boston a good English silk throwster, of the name of Edward Brown, who has brought with him the necessary machinery for the exercise of his profession,) but Mr. D'Homergue relies on his knowledge of the various arts connected with this business, and is not afraid of mecting competitors.

The course which the silk business will take when filatures of raw silk shall be established through the country, is expected to be as follows:

1. The fringe-makers, who are already numerous in this country, will be supplied with the article which they now import at a great expense, and in considerable quantities. An eminent fringe-maker of this city said, in my presence, that he imported raw silk, annually, to the amount of $20,000.

2. The filoselle or floss silk which will issue from the filatures, and needs not be thrown, but only carded and spun in the usual way, will be immediately employed by our industrious workmen in making stockings, caps, vestings, and other kinds of hosiery.

3. The art of throwing silk, that is, of giving it the last preparation for the loom, is not so difficult of acquisition as the art of reeling from the cocoons, which is the foundation of all; silk throwsters will come over from England and France, and that branch of business will soon spread thro the country.

4. The weaving of stuffs out of the three first qualities of raw silk, singles, tram, and organzine, will next follow. It cannot be expected that the beautiful gold and silver tissues and embroidered stuffs, for which the Lyons manufactures are so eminently distinguished, will be introduced for a considerable time. Velvets and satins also will be among the last that will be manufactured in America; but the Lyons memorial, if I remember right, says that those rich stuff's amount only to onefourth in value of the silk manufactures of France, and that the other three-fourths consist of those plain tissues which are yearly imported to such an immense amount into this country. It may be expected, therefore, (such is the opinion of Mr. D'Homergue and my own) that the manufactures of plain tissues and those of mixed stuffs of silk and wool, and cotton and silk, will rapidly extend themselves through the United States. There is no extraordinary difficulty in the mode of weaving,andMr. D'Homergue is fully convinced that our ingenious and industrious weavers will master that business in a short time.

be sufficient to enable him to set up for himself, in the other branches of the silk manufacture that he contemplates.

He has calculated that it will be necessary that the money should be advanced by the United States, at the following periods: 1, Ten thousand immediately. 2, Twenty thousand dollars on the 1st of March, 1831. 3, Ten thousand dollars on the 1st of March, 1832. The reason for which the sum is doubled for the next year, is, that machinery will have to be imported from France, to a large amount, in the course of that year. The reason why the money is thus asked for in advance, is, in order that the business may not, at any time, or on any account, be retarded for want of funds, and that all may go on with the necessary rapidity.

Here, Sir, I am well convinced that it cannot be reasonably asked, that this nation should trust with so large a sum a young stranger, who has not been above nine months in this country, and who can give no pledge of his solvability, in case of failure. This objection has struck me with the same force with which it will strike the committee, and I have long been revolving in my mind, the means if any could be found, to get over it; at last, I have come to the resolution to make the following proposals in my own name.

I have set my whole heart on the introduction of the manufacture of silk into this country; I know it is possible, and I know, also, that great honor awaits those who shall have been instrumental in it; I am ambitious of that honour, and, moreover I have committed myself so far in recommending this course of proceeding, that I stand in a manner pledged for its success. I cannot better prove my firm conviction, than by the offer I am now going to make.

I am willing to interpose my personal responsibility between the nation and Mr. D'Homergue; I offer to act as a trustee, to receive the money and, see its application. Mr. D'Homergue is willing to place himself entirely under my direction; and in consequence, I shall be responsible for any misuse of the money to be thus placed in my hands; I shall be in fact the director, to whose control Mr. D'Homergue will be bound to submit. He shall receive no money but through my hands, and I shall see to its application. In short I shall act for the United States in this manner, as I should do for myself, if I were in their place. For this service, I shall expect no reward or compensation whatever. I am But all depends on the reeling of the raw silk. It is devoted to the object; I have leisure and health; it will the foundation of all; the sine qua non, without which, be a pleasure to me to direct and watch over this great all undertakings connected with silk, must prove ruin- undertaking, and to enjoy its progress, and I shall conous to those who shall venture to embark in them.sider it a glorious employment of the latter years of Fine raw silk alone, though it were never employed long life. here, will, nevertheless, be a great source of riches as an article of commerce.

I bave thus stated to you, Sir, as clearly as I have been able, the offer made by Mr. D'Homergue to teach that valuable art, in such a manner as to disseminate it at once through every part of this country. I have shown, in as much detail as I have thought necessary to make it well understood, the manner in which this proposal is intended to be carried into execution; and, lastly, I have endeavoured to sketch a view of the effects it may reasonably be expected to produce. I have now to state the terms on which Mr. D'Homergue is willing to engage himself to its performance.

He requires the sum of forty thousand dollars, for which he will engage to instruct sixty young men in the art of reeling silk from the cocoons, as has been above mentioned. He will be, for that sum, at all the expense that will be required for carrying the plan into full and complete execution, and he will never ask or apply for a single cent more, by way of advance, reimbursement, reward, and compensation, or any other account whatsoever. The forty thousand dollars are expected to do the business completely, and to leave something at the end for Mr. D'Homergue; what that may be cannot be calculated, but he hopes that it will

Now, Sir, that you and the honorable committee may not think that I am here guided by unreasonable enthusiasm, I think it right to state to you the grounds on which I am induced to make an offer, which, otherwise might be considered by some as at least a rash act, but which is only the effect of a strong conviction of the probability, I had almost said, of the certainty of success; indeed, saving unforeseen accidents, I cannot conceive how the project can fail; my grounds are the following:

1. Of the talents of Mr. D'Homergue, I have not the least doubt. His recommendations from Europe are explicit on that head. The silk that he has reeled in this country, has been admired by respectable silk merchants from Lyons, now in this country, who are competent judges. I enclose a small sample of silk, of the quality called organzine, which he has reeled in my presence, from cocoons sent to him by Thomas Sumter, Esq. of Statesburg, South Carolina. They were most beautiful, and of an extraordinary size: this silk was shown in my presence to the fringe maker, whom I have already mentioned, who mistook it for that fine silk with which they make Valenciennes lace, which he saw sold at Paris for $20 a pound; but Mr. D'Homergue, admits that it is not of that quality. This sample is very

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GROWTH AND MANUFACTURE OF SILK.

small, but there were but few cocoons reeled; and similar samples have been distributed among friends, and some sent abroad. The committee will, no doubt, be struck with the dazzling whiteness of the silk; such is seldom found out of this country.

I shall now state to the committee, the reasons which convince me that he is the person the best calculated, and, perhaps the only one, through whom the silk manufactures can be speedily and effectually introduced into this country.

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less, in justice, can be offered to him, undertaking as he does to bear all the expenses. From the view he has taken of the subject, he does not expect, at the end of the three years, to have much more than the materiel of the establishment, which will, of course, remain to him, and perhaps some money. If it were otherwise, it appears to me, a just principle, that he who makes a nation's fortune should make his own. But Mr. D'Homergue does not expect to make his fortune by the execution of this plan, but only to be put in the way of making it by future exertions, which will also be highly beneficial to the country.

2. As to the personal character and disposition of Mr. D'Homergue, I have had sufficient opportunity of knowing it, in a constant intercourse during nine months. He is a modest, ingenuous young man, ambitious of fame, and of perfectly correct principles. He places in me implicit confidence; and is willing to be, as he has hitherto been, entirely guided by my counsels. I can rely on his moral character; and I have not the least 2. I regret very much that, as the committee contemdoubt that he will, under my direction, faithfully ex-plated, the execution of this plan cannot take place in ecute whatever he shall undertake to do. the District of Columbia; but several weighty reasons are apposed to it. In the first place, there are not in that District the resources that are to be found in one of our large cities; 2dly. In the employment of women, the differences of colour might present great obstacles, which will not exist when several reeling establishments His being the son of an eminent silk manufacturer, will be scattered through the States; 3dly. I have alhas been attested to me, not only by himself, but by ready stated the difficulties which Mr. D'Homergue credible persons acquainted with his family. His would find in his connexions with strangers, and which knowledge is not confined to the reeling of silk, but might eventually produce a failure of the project; and I extends to the various branches of the silk manufacture. am also convinced that, from my knowledge of him, his Such persons are very rare, even in Europe; it was a character and disposition, from the confidence that he fortunate accident that brought Mr. D'Homergue into places in me, and from my having become, in some dethis country. Silk reelers may be found, silk throwst- gree, familiar with the subject of silk, and the various ers also, and manufacturers skilled in particular branch- modes of employing it, he would more willingly place es; but none, or very few, and none at his age, possess- himself under my direction, than that of other persons ed of so general a knowledge. His youth, too, is an with whom he might not so freely communicate. Unimmense advantage, as it will identify him with the coun-der these cireumstances, Philadelphia seems to be the try, and give him time to carry all his projects into ex-place where the plan in question, if adopted, should be ecution. French reelers cannot be induced to leave their country; and if they could as they are very igno rant, and work mechanically, they would not be able to teach the art as Mr. D'Homergue can. Directors of filatures are, in general, men of an advanced age, with families, well compensated for their labour; these could only with great difficulty be obtained; and it is very doubtful whether their talents for instructing would be equal to their pretensions, which, no doubt, would be very elevated. I consider Mr. D'Homergue as an important acquisition to this country.

Thus, Sir, I have ventured to lay before you and the honourable committee, a plan for the firm establishment of the filature, and eventually, of the manufacture of silk in this country; which, after much reflection, and the most mature deliberation, has, and still appears to me to be, the cheapest, the easiest, and the most effectual, to produce this result completely, and in the shortest space of time posible. Permit me, before I conclude, to submit a few observations.

1. I believe it must be admitted that, if the object can be attained for the sum of forty thousand dollars, without any further expense to the United States, it will be, considering its value, the cheapest purchase that ever was made. When we consider the sacrifice which the Sovereigns of Europe have made for the same object, the noble rewards that they have given to individuals under similar circumstances; and when we consider, particularly, that, at the present moment, the Government of France is called upon by the merchants of Lyons to expend the sum of $120,000 in bounties to the owners of filatures, merely to induce them to purchase and use an expensive machinery, that the preparation of raw silk, lonk since known and practised in that country, may be uniformly carried to the highest degree of perfection, we may be able to judge of the importance and of the value in which is held in Europe, that fundamental branch of the silk trade, on the perfection of which every thing else depends; and we are unavoida. bly led to the conclusion, that forty thousand dollars is a trifling sum, indeed, for securing the introduction generally and uniformly through our country, of so valuable an art.

As relates to Mr. D'Homergue, I do not think that

executed.

Nor does it seem very material where the sixty young Americans are taught, since their instruction is to take so short a time, and their acquired knowledge so soon to be diffused through the whole land. It would have been different if a permanent school were to have been established, as seems to have been contemplated by the committee. According to the proposed plan, the school will be only temporary; and, in the course of two Summers, the instruction of the young citizens will have been begun and completed. One more observation remains for me to make. What plan may be pursued for the introduction of the filature of raw silk into the United States, it will be in dispensably necessary to take measures, at the same time, to increase the quantity of cocoons. It will be sufficient for that purpose, to encourage the planting of the white Italian mulberry tree, because, when it shall abound through the country, silk worms and cocoons will naturally follow. I would, therefore take the liberty to suggest the expediency of granting a bounty, for a limited time, say five years, of $for every three thousand such mulberry trees, of three years growth; and if it should be wished to extend the benefit of it to small cultivators, then a proportionate sum for every thousand. The amount of the bounty should depend on the greater or lesser probability that there is of its producing the desired effect, so as to obtain the greatest possible quantity of mulberry trees at the least possible expense to the United States, I do not profess to be a judge in this matterr, Mr. D'Homergue, on the supposition that the citizens would immediately and generally turn their attention to the planting of those trees, proposed fifty dollars for every three thousand; a gentleman from Indiana county, in this State, on whose judgment I place great reliance, on a contrary supposition, proposed one hundred dollars for the same quantity. But this is a matter on which the members of the Legislature are most competent to decide. If such a bounty were granted, it appears to me that no other legislative measures would be required.

I have endeavoured, in this communication, to be as clear, and, at the same time, as brief as possible; I am

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Of the Board of Managers of "The Pennsylvania Society for Discouraging the use of Ardent Spirits." Read at the Annual Meeting, May 26th, 1830.

The Manager of "The Pennsylvania Society for Discouraging the Use of Ardent Spirits," beg leave to present the following Report.

of enterprise, which perhaps has constituted one of the chief features of her national character-The French Revolution, by embarrassing the commercial operations of the maritime nations, threw open to this exhausted country the widest avenues of wealth and prosperity.

From a state of the deepest declension, her advances, by these occasions, were rapid in an unparalleled degree; but with the influx of wealth, came the lessened necessity for labour, with its high prices and facilities of living. Intoxicated with prosperity, the encroachments of idleness and dissipation were not slow to sap the deep foundations of that economy and of those rigid observances, that had been laid by the forefathers of the land. The West Indies furnished the alcholic product of the sugar cane. The brandies of France, and the spirit of the grain of our own country, insensibly took their places beside the juices of the grape and the apple, and by their insidious attractions usurped such a currency and ascendency, as to be regarded, in a short space of time, as articles of the first necessity. No well furnished house or table was without a due supply of ardent spirits. We may venture to affirm, that at one period, the distilled liquors of the dinner table, were, in the United States, considered as not less essential to comfort, and not less declarative of a good style of living, than were the tea and the coffee of the morning and evening repasts.

Since the formation of the "Pennsylvania Society for Discouraging the Use of Ardent Spirits," nearly three years have elapsed; during which time there has been an increasing conviction of the nesessities of the country, in relation th the objects of our Association, and a very general admission of the power and efficiency of It needs no laboured detail to show, that these cirsuch combinations, to arrest, and in some measure whol- cumstances, in which the use of ardent spirits was rely to eradicate, the vice of Intemperance, with its con-garded not only as excusable, but polite, would soon comitant evils-misery and crime. usher in the whole appalling catalogue of vices that follow in the train of drunkenness.

It is believed that the annals of mankind can furnish few examples, more strikingly evincive of the force of public sentiment, in controlling and modifying the private customs and habits of any people, than that which has been so happily manifested in the United States of America, in regard to the common and prevalent use and abuse of intoxicating drinks. It is easier to fall from virtue, than to retrace the thorny and ascending heighths of repentance and restoration.

Without entering into a lengthened argument to prove the pernicious tendency of such a custom or habit, on the honour, happiness, or political stability, of any country, your Board of Managers deem it sufficient to call your attention, again, to the events of the day; events which are known and appreciated by all class es of their fellow-citizens,-to refer you to the organi zation of new societies for the suppression of intemper ance, in every state of the Union,-to the change so visible, and so universally acknowledged, in the views and customs of the people;-and to documents that show in the most irrefragable manner, the diminished consumption of spirits, whether foreign or domestic. The Board therefore deem it useless, in this place, and in this day of light and knowledge, to say more than this, namely, that where drunkenness, and its inseperable companions, irreligion, immorality, and crime, are most prevalent, there will be the earliest decline of free government, the profoundest oblivion of all patriotic aim and effort, the greatest amount of private distress, and the most shocking spectacles of poverty and depravity.

The victims of this fiery Moloch, immolated before your eyes, have been too numerous to require more than a single moment of reflection, to convince every member of the Society, and every good citizen indeed, of the importance, and the beneficence, of the operations in which you are engaged.

What are the facts of the case before us?

The French Revolution found this country just recov ering from the exhaustion of a seven years' struggle for its political existence and independence:-her wounds yet bleeding her wealth, public and private, drained; she had brought out of that great contest, nothing save her independence-her morals, which, to an astonishing degree, had resisted the usual contamination of civil discord and war, and that inherent and native spirit

Accordingly, the American people, in their individual capacities, felt for many years the ruinous extent to which they had been enthralled by this tyrant custom, but there was no public opinion on the subject. The poisonous bowl had infused its "leperous distilment" far and wide into the very vitals of the country. The elections, those palladia of the republic, were contaminated and vitiated. By the admission of distinguished judges, it is universally understood, that the courts and prisons were crowded with victims of this atrocious habit; thousands of our fellow citizens, from every rank of life, and countless widows and orphans, had tasted the infusion of the poison in the cup of their happiness. The evil bad become intolerable.

Public opinion at last, armed with truth, as with the spear of Ithuriel, touched the foul and bloated vice, disclosing to the startled sense of the universal people, all its odious, and hideous, and portentous deformity. The effect was electric. Not a state, not a county, not a town, nor village, nor settlement, in the vast domain of the United States, but has heard the cry raised by a distressed nation, as with one voice and accord; and we thank God for liberty to say, that in the few years that have passed away since the institution of the American Temperance Society at Boston, a wide-spread and still flowing flood of light, and reform, and inelioration, has taken place of the dismal declension which had sunk us in our own esteem, and drawn upon us the sarcasm and derision of the European nations.

The American people are awake; and with one voice and one cry have resolved to escape from the verge of destruction. The organization of temperance societies, upon the principle of total discontinuance of the use of ardent spirits as an article of drink was rapidly effected in all parts of the country; and such was the sense of the extremity to which the common weal had been endangered, that the people ran before these organizations. It is confidently believed, that a great diminution of the consumption of spirits had occurred, in many places, long before the active friends of the cause had had time to array themselves, and, by union of strength, to energize their benevolent operations-a fact, not less honorable to the country, than cheering to the friends of temperance, who have resolved with the blessing and aid of Divine Providence, to carry on the good work to perfection.

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