9,1: who comical macaw. UNITED STATES. THE Man Roosas’ Martian—The following, from the Courier and Enquirer of this morning, is a point-blank i denial of the reported confession by Mrs. Loss, relative to the I death of Mary Rogers—Journal of Commerce, Jch. 19. I noticed a statement in the Tribune of this morning, re- lative to a confession said to have been made before me by the late Mrs. Loss, which is entirely incorrect, as no such ex- amination took place, nor could it, from the deranged state of Mr. Loss’s mind. Respectfully yours, x GILBERT MERRITT. Hoboken, Nov. 18, 1842. ' , The New York Sun says, it is currently reported in the. City, that lllary Rogers is still alive, and in the keeping of 'ber former employer. , . Hoaaio Mnttnsa '03 Lowe brawn—Monday evening, -inte|ligenco of a most brutal murder at Huntington, _L. 1., reached otir city, and we lay before our readers what infor- motion we were able to collect of tlte horrid trtttlsuclltzm. ‘ On' Sunday evening, the dwelling of Mr. Alexantlerbinitlil, 'on aged and worthy farmer of Huntington, was (ll'SCUVel'et to be in flamea, and on reaching the spot. hts .iieighbouiis were horrified at finding the bodies of Mr. b‘tllltll and his wife, partly consumed, with their skulls beat in, apparently With a heavv hammer, and their faces most awfully disfigitr. ed, showing- conclusively that they had first been loiilly mur- dered, and the house then fired by the blood-thirsty mis- creant, to conceal his crime. . There is no doubt that this double murder was committed by a German, who had been employed but a few days before by Mr. Smith, as a labourer, and he was doubtless incue_d to commit the crime for the purpose of obtaining a cons:- derable sum of money, known to have been in Mr. Smith 8 possession. . . The supposed perpetrator of the diabolical murders was arrested at Wading River, concealed in a barn} when taken, be admitted, that he Was the person who resided With Mr. S. From appearances, he obtained no money, as the pocket- book of Mr. S. was found on the body, in a side pock'et, un- disturbed, as also the money in his chest; the kcy‘ol which was lying near the fire, having been burned lroni his pocket. The person taken tip had been In the employ of Mt. Smith only a fortnight. Mr. and Mrs. Smith were an aged and respectable couple, anti he is supposed to have been womb about $150,003, but kept very little money about him. They have but one son, who resides, we understand, »somewhere in Westcliester county. WILFUL Monoaa av One nounaen AND 'riiia'rv Pen. sous l—George W. Lore, charged with the murder of Henry Blake, was caught in Barbour County, Ala., iii the neighbour- hood where the tniirder was committed, on Sunday night, 1he301h tilt. Upon his third trial for this offence, he was found guilty by a jury of Henry 00., and the sentence of death was to be executed on the 15th of June last, but was not aside by the Supreme Court, and .1 new trial granted. . Lore soon after escaped from jail, and went to his friends a the North, and returned to Barbour county, he says, for the purpose ofstanding his trial. The citizens, it seems, were ' not satisfied with this statement, and fearing that he would make his escape, held a meeting, to consult upon the proper course to be pursued. The meeting consisted of about 200 persons, 198 of whom, we understand, voted to have him publicly executed. ‘ Accordingly, on last Thursday, about twelve miles from Glenville, the sentence passed upon him by the citizens was executed by hanging him—Nothing can, in a country oflaws,justily aich a proceeding. Hoaaiau: OUTRAGE.—lll the Runinsas (lowa) Gazette We find the most extraordinary and cruel relation of circumstan- ces that we believe ever went forth in type. An old man lived alone, and had forbidden a daughter, who lived near, and her husband, and even their children, over to approach his place, on account merely of some whimsical pique that the old mati had taken against his child. One morning the inhuman being found his grandchild, under three years of "'at e, climbing upon his garden rail, and he deliberately went ' or his rifle and shot the boy dead. The victim fell inside of the fence. The old man reloaded, and sat watching. Not long after, the mother came seeking her child, and as she touched her father’s garden rail, as she did with a shriek the , instant she perceived her dead child, tlie‘old brute shot her in the temple, and killed her stone dead on the spot. The hoary maniac (as be is now accounted) shot the father also when he came, and he is now in prison, to answer for the three murders. MANUFACTURE OF IARINE AND STEAIHNE FROM LARD. A patent has been obtained by Mr. J. H. Smith, of New York. The substance ofhis process isas followsz—Boil the Lard either by fire directly applied to the kettle, or by steam. Whin the latter is employed, he uses a steam tithe to des- - centl from the steam boiler into the vessel, and coiled round on the bottom so as to present a large heatin surface to the lard, provision being made to carry ofi'the water and waste steam. It is usual to perforate the ttibc with numerous hcles along the whole of that portion of it which is submerged below the lard,tliiis allowingthe whole ofthc steam to pass through the lard. To operate with advantage, the vessel should be of considerable capacity, holding, any, limit ten to one hundred barrels. The length of’boiliug will of course vary according to thc qtiality of the lord. That which is fresh may not require to be boiled more than five or six hours, while that which has been long kept may require twelve lionrs.—lt is of great importance to the perfecting of the separation of the Stem-inc and Enrine, that the boiling should be continued for a considerable period. Alcohol is employed, mixed with the lard in the boiler at the commencement of the operation. \Vhen the lord is sufficiently fluid, gradually pour and stir into it about one gallon ofalcohol to every eighty gallons ofliird, taking care to incorporate them as intimately as possible; and this will cause a perfect separation between the Stearinc anrl Eariue from each other, by the spontaneous granulation oftlie litr- mer,.wbich takes place when the boiled lard is allowed to cool in a state of rest. Camplior is sometimes combined with alcohol, dissolving about one-fourth ofa peiiiid in each gallon of alcohol, which not only gives it an agreeable odour, but appears to co-operate with the alcohol in effecting the object in view. Afler the boiling has been continued for a sufficient length oftime, the fire is withdrawn or the steam cutoff, and the mass is allowed to cool sufficiently to be ladled or drawn off into bogslieads or other suitable coolers, when it is to be left at perfect rest, to cool down atid acquire the ordinarv temperature of the atmosphere: and as the coolings prd- ceed, tho ‘granuhition will take place and become perfect. The material is then to be put into bags, and pressed mode- rately under aiiysuitable press, which will cause the l‘larine to.flow.ou_t in a state ofgreat purity, there not being con- tained in. it any perceivable portion of Stearine, and this practice is to be continued until the Stcariiic is as dry as it can be matte in this way. The Steariue is then, by a very simple proces, which we have not space to give at present, prepared to be made into candles, the Bruins being ready for use as oil. We have seen some ofthese preparations, and they are fully equal to sperm oil and candles, and are much cheaper. The oil is sold at 75 cents per gallon, and gives a beautiful clear light, and emits neither smoko nor smell while burnl ing. The candles also burn as well as the best sperm.— Ccatral .New York Farmer. Roseanne—There is not a man upon the face of the earth, perhaps, a man ofsuch extensive, continually operat- ing and efficient power, as Rothschild of London. All that we hear of him, however cxtravagantly expressed, may be said to fall far short ofthe truth, if we look to his influence ——that secret anti mysterious influence which almost realises the strange tale of Godwin’s Si. Leon, whose hero is the Wandering Jew—or his wealth—or his mode ofoperating, as by dumb-show, upon all Cabinets of Europe. Talk as we may, about Emperors and Kings, and of their despotism -—there is no despotism like that ofwealth, boarded up here only to be scattered there, garnered iii the treasuries ofEti- npe only to be distributed in Asia, antl circulating every- where with s steadiness like that ofthe atmosphere, whose ally changing and fluctuating. I —-tlie soldiers that are paid, are the only soldiers worth will, not even sitting iii a Council ofwai', it is he, though walking the earth tindertlie ’ I ought to be regarded as their c uef. Rothschild of London —or at any rate the Rothschilds ofEurope taken iogetlifll', are the King-makers ofthe nineteenth century. It is only Talk of soldiers in Europe hav- nml he that pays them is their co‘l'tmiander-in-cliief; be crown nor sccptre, if you and he only, guise ofa broker, Who ng, . to who he may; wearing neither iday or two since, that a young friend oi ours, recently li‘om abrOad, favoured llS'\Vllll a description of a fete by the London Rothschild, which interested us not a little-Tile had given a dinner party, followed by sundry shows oi one sort and another, which the tvealthicst monarchs efthe titty might have been protid to equal, so far, at any rate, as the entertainment would go. —-British nobfctnen and stock—jobbers—lords, ladies and Jewish dainsels, gathered together in such numbers, that one who entered the house uiiprepareilly, in the midst of the splendour—‘ barbaric pearl and gnld’——tlio flashing eyes and swarthy countenances, would have started with sur- prise at every turn—believing hiinsclfat a masquerade, or a great Eastern thin—0n his left, he would encountth Prince Esterhazy, in a’jeivelled vest, the splendour breaking out li'om beneath the folds ofhis outer coat and waistcoat, though affecting a more than usual plainticss ofattire, to avoid the reproach ofscattcring diamonds as he walked; on There were princes and paupch his right, the Prince Talleyrand, standing aloof and apart fi’om the crowd, like a shadow escaped limit its natural body; here, a cluster ofEiiglish lords, Lord Lowther, L_ord Stati- liopc, two or three cabinet ministers, a score of baronets, knights and secretaries; there Was a considerable number of women, as nearly as might be oftliesame look, all Jew- they were all ofone household-saying nothing. "1:0 tell yon the truth, Sir,” said the gentleman referred to—“it was aliving pantomime, a \valkingedition of the Arabian Nights. Princes, and noblemen ofthc highest rank, found themselves, they never knew how, sitting side by side with the dangli- ters of lsmel, their dark hair, clustered with rough gold and sparkling with gems—or handing them to the table, utter strangers left to entertain one another—no common latt- guagc, no common topic of conversation between them. At last, ‘Monsietu‘ est servi !’ cried a fellow iii magnificent livery, dropped with gold, passing the word through halfu soure ofinilitary-looking associates. But when we arrived at the table, we found (to borrow a very expressive, though not very genteel phrase) more months than spoons. A beati- til'ul scene occurred here—plenty of uproar, hurry and bustle; such whimpering and shuffling to avoid the skilliil mantBuvring ofthe major dome! naments ofa kineg table. ard, neither paired nor matched, anti almost every disl plishcd feelings ofllie higher bred and more orderly spend thrills. The very plates wcre—gold-ufine gold. whole were ever associated together before, barring per theatre, as by the totich ofa secret spring or the uttering o u ctibalistic word. Abel-"Portland Tribune. ladder that reaches to great results, these before we run ascend higher. llespise not small beginnings of wealth. ' . men began, with small means. millions. to he the wealthiest among their fellows. little—that little once gained, more will easily follow. Despise not small beginnings of education. ofthe first astronomers in Europe. llei'sclicl,also,thc grea regiment, and received llLll. little more than a drummer boy" zeal discovered. A host ofiiistanccs rise up to testify, the by properly improving the small and perhaps imperfect be upon and admire. A mati can scarcely be too avaricious in the acquisition 0 the utmost assiduity and diligence, biit unlike the lucre come five,aiid his five gained to them other five. D‘espise not the small beginnings of fame or honor. 'llie fame. which springs upon a sudden, like the mush room plant, is seldom lasting. I‘rue fame and honor are 0 the lowest offices to the highest stations; from the regard it his own ctrclc, as too small a’ thingr to seek after, will neve secure the esteem and renown of astute or kingdom. Despise not the small beginnings ofcrror. dogmas on its ruins. devastate society—Savannah Georgian. or character, by deserting his office to mingle in partv poli hundreds of men in our midst who linv ruined by leavmg their business during most truthfully styled “ the madness of nefit ofthe few?” Our streets are daily filled \vitli melan choly instances ofthe deplorable effcc influence” which, like an ignis-fatuus, from the useful and productive pursi into the meshes ofpolitical ambition, (l and ruins them forever after forall the ciety, to themselves, and to their families. oflice, now-a-days, especially the pot-house, the liar-room, and those who travel it are seldom after fit for road or capable of returning to the less seductiv respectable and beneficial pursuits they abandoned forth idle chase after official case and the idle juggling. any othe sinus and vitality are never diminished, although continu- esses, and all limit the same neighhourhood—looking as if The service was superb ——all gold, ‘pure ‘gold, massive and rich as the proudest or- Thc hangings were of gorgeous crimson silk, falling in heavy folds fi'oni the ceiling to the very floor, ponderous with lustre—the rooms were lighted tip, nobody knew how, for lialfthe lights were invisible. The dessert was arranged in a slovenly manner—or more pro- perly, not arranged at all--distributed over the cloth hap-haz- was wrong, or, in some way or other, affrontiug the accent- The pins apples, grapes, and other costly limits, were in golden baskets, deposited about the sumptuous tables and Sideboards, with wliatappcared like astinlied confusion. In fact, the furni- titre and-service were in good taste, the company in bad taste; anything indeed but company; for no two. of the hope a dozen or twenty British Nobleuien,‘ and five or six foreign Princes.—--After the dinner, there was it French play by French actors---the drawing-room was turned into a After this, a concert and a ball l"-—-John LITTLE Tamas—Every thing around us tells- us, not to despise small beginnings, for they are the lower rounds ofa and we must step upon The Rothschilds, Girard, Astor, and most of thericliost ‘ From cents they proceeded to dollars, front hundreds to thousands; fi'oni thousands to Had they neglected these first earnings; liad’they said within themselves, what is the use of saving those few’ cents ? they are not of much value, and 1 will just spend ‘theiii, and enjoy inyselfas 1 go ? they would never have risen It is only by the economical husbanding of small means, that they increase to large sums—1t is the hardest part of success to ‘gain 8 Franklin had btit little early education, yet look at what he became, and how he is now rcverenced. Ferguson, feeding his sheep on the hills of Scotland, picked up merely the rudiments oflearning, lint subsequently rose to be one astronomer, was in his youth a drummer boy to a marching education; but his name is now associated with the brightest discoveries ofscieuce, and is borne by the planet which his ginnings of knowledge, they may become as foundation stones ofa temple of learning, which the future shall gaze seeking tniser, intist put out his knowledge to usury, and by lending out his stock to others, increase by the commerce of his thought his capital, until his one talent shall have be- slow, btit generally sure growth, ascending by de yrecs from a few to the applause ofa nation. But he who despises the lower steps of honor, because thcyare lpw, will seldom reach the higher, and he who spurns at the commendation of The walls of a castle have been undermined by the bur- rowmgs ofsniall and despiscd animals; and the beginnings ofcrror, though at first unlieedcd, will soon, ifiiot checked sap the foundations of truth, and build up its own wretched All first errors are small; despise them not; they will soon increase to great ones, and perhaps g'l‘HE. Errec'r _or POLITICAL OFFICE-HUNTING.—-A Cin~ cinnntt paper, With great propriety ntid sense, asks which meinber‘ofthis cuy “has added to his prolcssional eminence tics? ls there any promising young inaii in this city, in any of the various trades and occupations, who has not lost his credit as a busmess man, just in proportion as he has de- voted his means and time to party politics? Are there not is absolutely been . the last five years ‘ - z' ' ' ‘ ‘ and following that t‘poke-o’-nioons|iino” which hasubeen, mm. Mid wncuvmg n "my move lmcresungm ourrenders’ the many, for the be- ts of“ that malign leads our young men nts ofactive industry, leaven save the mark!) good purposes to so- _ _ I The path of in this City, is mostly through and the excited assemblage, a bit! more ness of political Covenant—As God is the origin of power, and the Supreme Governor oftlie universe, he delegates-authority to whomsoever he will; and though, in many cases, the gover: norhimselfinay not be of God, yet civilgovernment is of bun, for without this, there could he no 'soCiety, no security, It: private property: all would he conlusmn and anarchy; an the inliabitable world would. be soon depepulated. In an- cient times, God, in an especial manner, on many ticcusioiids, l appointed the individual who was to govern, and he,acc0i - ingly, governed by it damn rtghl;us iirthe case of lift??? Joshua, the Hebrew Judges, and several of the Israelite? Kings. in after times, and to the present day, he docs‘tllitit by a general superintendiug pruvnlcpce,_ivliicli lie (‘lll )(It- fore by especial designation. in all. nations of the cart 1, there is what may he called a constitution, a plan .by which it particular country or state is governed; and 'this constitu- tion is less or more calculated to promote the interest of the community. The civil governor, whether he be elective or hereditary, agrees to govern according to that constitution , thus, we may consider, that there is a compact niid consent between the governor and the governed. and, in such case, the potctitate may be considered as coming to the suprcanc authority in the direct Way of God’s providence; and as civil government is of God, who is the fountain of law, order and regularity, the civil governor, who administers the laws ofa state aceording to its constitution, is the minister of God. But it has been asked, if the ruler be an immoral or profit- gate man, does he not prove himself, thereby, to be ttui‘gor- {llV ofhis high otlicc, and should he not be deposed. l atiswcr—No: if lie rule according to the conslitiilwn, n0- thing can justify rebellion against his authority, He tnay be it'reg'ulariti his own private life,- lic may be an immoral titan, and disgrace liiinselfby an improper conduct: but ifhe rule according lo the law; if he make no attempt to change the constitution, nor break the compact between him and the people, there is, therefore, no legal opposition to the civil authority: and every act against hiiii is not only rebellion, in the worst sense ofthe word, bitt is unlawlul, and absolute- ly sinful—Dr. Adam Clot". The following Lines having never yet (it ' who ma probably, have torgotten, ere thig, ‘ to such a precious gem .- , : m 1 z of one ofh'ie finest pauaguof , STRANGE 'I‘ENUns.——Ay|cabury is the largest and best town in the county (Bucks). It was in the Conqueror’s (\Villiam) time n manor royal ; several parts of which that, king gave to his favourites. to hold by this odd tenure, viz., that they should find litter or straw for the king’s bed and chambers, whenever he should come that way, and provule him three eels in winter, and three green geese in summer, besides herbs for his chamber; and this they were to do thrice a-ycnr. iftlic king came so often thither. . Damn—Unless the farmer has a very diligent and indus- triousfivife, who sees minutely to her dairy, or ii most honest, diligeht, and careful housekeeper to do it for him, he Will assuredly lose money by his dairy; trusted to common ser- vants, it will not pay charges. The dairy maid must be up every ii'ioruing at four o’clock, or she will be buckWard iii her business. At five, the cows must be milked, and there must be milkch enough to finish by six. The same rule must be observed iii the eveiiiug.—.€rlliti.r Young. . A HINT 1‘0 GiaLs.—-\Ve have always considered it an un- ei'ring sign ofiniiate vulgarity, ivhcti we hear ladies take . particular pains to impress us with the idea of their igno- rance of all domestic matters, save sewing lace or weavng it not to incase their delicate hands. Ladies, by some curi- ous kind ofltoctts-pocus, have. got it into their heads that the best way to catch a husband is to show how profoundly capable they are of doing nothing for his comfort. Fright- ening a piano into fits, or murdering the King’s French, - may be a good bait’for certain kinds offisli, but they must be of that kind usually found in very shallow water. The surest way to secure a good husband is to citlti 'nte those accomplishments which make a good tvilb.-—-Erchangc paper. l. PnOPERTY.—“ 1 do not know,” says Dr. Paley, “whether on ' attacliiiietit to property he not soi‘ncthing more than the more dictate of reason, or even than the mere cfi'cctol'asso- elation. Property communicates a charm to whatever is the object ofit. It is the first ofotir abstract. ideas; it cleaves to its the closest and the longest. lt eiidcars to the child its plaything, to the peasant his cottage, to the landowner his estate. lt supplies the place ofprospcct and scenery. In- stead of covering the b ‘tllily ofdistaiit situations, it teaches every man to find it in his otvn. it gives boldness and gran- dcitr to plains and feus, tinge and colouring to clays and fal- lows.”——Nalural Theology. LIBERALITY.—-A cause so great and sacred as that of Christianity absorbs all those differences and divisions of a minor kind that exist among its; and I trust and believe there is tint a missionary of our Baptist communion, who would not infinitely prefer the conversion and salvation of one soul, to making the whole heathen world adopt our views ofa disputed and comparatively incmisidcrable cere- mony. If there is such a limit, i am no party to his senti- ments; there existsno communion lietiveen us; let not my soul cuter into that iiian’s secret! No, my dear lircthrcnl We, I trust, have far higher views; the only kind of prose- lytcs we desire to make, are proselytcs to God and Jesus Christ! Iii the promotion of‘sucli a cause, we are ready to l forget our own denomination, and co-operate with every omen—Robert Hall. 8 He that puts his trust and confidence in any learning or loses the truth, but also, as much as lies in him, he robs l God’s hook ofliis sufficient truth and verity, and ascribes it - to the book of men’s decrees; which is as much to wrong God and his book as may be thought or done—Bishop Hooper. r it” " ' M i ' “77’ " "—; _ knowledge; he should hoard up his intellectual gains witl _. . a i] e @o I a a t a 1 $9 8 t a [3' l , N - - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1842. We are again under the disagreeable necessity ofinform- ing our readers—(ti the: with which manv of them are, no doubt, already fully conversant)—that the lonrr-looked-for .‘tlails have not yet arrived. Not having had an; Post-com- -' munication with any part oftlie world since the 19th tilt. i when the Steamcr S'r. Gsoacs made her last trip for thd . season, there are no less than two English anilfive Colonial l Mails now due. It is therefore high time that some inquiry were made into the cause of this detention. and the means to be adopted in order to prevent'tlie recurrence, as liir as possible, ofa similar inconvenience in liiture; and we are glad to learn, that Thomas Owen, Earp, Postmaster of this town, proceeds to Cape Traverse to-day, to make such ar- rangements as may he found necessary to secure the more ready transmission ofthe Mails in future. Front that gen- tleman’s well-known practical experience, activity and en- , ergy, we anticipate the best results from his mission. Mccnaxios’ leTlTUTE.—0II Wednesday evening last, the Rev,Jatiies VVaddell delivered a scientific and jh'acticallv useful Lecture on Caloric, its nature and properties. Exper- rimetits were also shown, illustrative ofthe radiation and reflection of heat ; ofiis power to expand gaseous fluids mid solid bodies; and of the tendency of chemical combinations to absorb and evolve caloric. Though the operator labour- ed .under very great disadvantages, from the paucitv of ma- terials suitable to his purpose, the experiments in'general succeeded very Well, and afforded much gratification as well as instruction, to a very numerous and attentive addi- eiice. We have been liivourcd with a perusal ofthe Lec- shall have pleasure in giving it insertion in the course of a week m- two, '1 he Antittal Report will be read, aiid ofiii'e- - (iiizers chosen for the ensuing year on Wednesday evening Curran. Acansiiiv.—-Thc examination 0 the Central Academy, which was advertised for Frida terday), we understand, did not take place prob-ml 3" (Yes. count ofthe almost impassable state of tilt; streets y) 9“ ae- ing persons interested from being able to attend iillfgvem- fortunate that it happened so at this time “3 “,9. “4-13?”- manifest improvement would have been ’found in thlme . |‘ nageiiient ofthe Institution, in consequence of tl . 8 ma- ful efforts ofihe Masters to introduce to a com Tree‘s“ extent, uniform and improved Book.. ,Tlle classgzliviiftii: resumed after the Christ ' . r . mum, “"13 “01"‘835: on I‘Uesday, the too. f the pupils at u Out of thine own mutlb will i judgi'ihu ~ ’ —_ niche in any of our public Journalsflheie ' may possibly utterest some of our rams“... tVriler :0 hi: flirt“, Mr, J, 3 “ Th’ apostle thus to Christ, the“ ‘ How often shall my brother me . A day, repeat, and l for ' e'the m And then, with pride an unwind,“ To show his meekncss, piety and to» And answer his own queqlionfihub ‘ 'l‘ill seven times 1' he. Hearth: t ‘ I tell thcc pardon thou shaltiiotd ‘ , Nor yet as, ‘lauce to his wants mini \thu be, otfcnding, but repentant, ‘ Though in the day, be olt’iior thee » Than unto thee that (llay may niinu [trust this net-opt have read u‘ ‘ Though hear uly doctrines, yet, , And more, e’eu now, I trust the deed 1'” Between yourself, my well-tried friend The one ilic other shall not grace do,“ The paril'iier, you; and the otfendcr, “ Charlottetown, 23th Dec. 1839." To The EDITOR or was Cones v, i , “ Let the gelled jadewince, onit with As Flagellalor has had his motto, ] see on why I should not how mine, and 1 1 one 1 havevchosen will please those for w ‘ ltir benefit the present cortiiniiuicatiou : part, it seems to the tube peculiarly up It appears, Sir, that the Editor called the Islander, not content wit flicted upon him by my friend Flag: u 1 forth and endeavour to brazen it out with able efl'rontery and barefacednese. In x Islander, it appears, wants war, and w I, as said Palalox— ‘? ' “ \Var oven to the knife?! d Alter concluding an editorial article, lGili instant, with the notable profession,» . study to avoid personalities,” the Islander f and proceeds to fulfil his promise, by attack the Colonial Herald and his brother, on Religion! Here, Sir, do not imagine that, like personality—4h) not allow yourselftnbe the common—place idea, that there is an r nature in Religion! ThelEditor oftlie V ced his infallible opinion. You may “3‘ . and yet burlesque a man’s religion as in I is not this most admirable logic? But; ' ‘ here-"this “avoiding personality” gent v arrogance and self-couceit—this ped , trodiicing, in the most itiiivarranmble," . tally un dulled-for manner, the subject of i" of two individuals, he proceeds to charge I “snuonaau set their faces to di'fl'mnl horizon.” Does the Islander understs what he writes? I would charitany , and that, notwithstanding all his parade » _ as stupidly ignorant of the grammatical ‘ ‘ simular, as, at his first appearance on the, ‘ ' proved liiinsclfto be of the word 5 I l;- inust in cliari'ly suppose this to be the I daut is in the habit of amusing himself r leaves of his dictionary, and, without selecting a string ofobsoletc and liir-fe to astonish the natives of this island awc-iuspiring—dt-ptli of his unequalled poor man, appears to think it would be ‘ language as common mm may nude . endeavors to carry us beyond the clou' which he assuredly does not, and no sing his efliisions—cnrcs to nnderste Mark the consequence ofiuy iufe ofthe Islander—this pseudo 7mm of . .lundcrcr of the, worst description; tor,S ' sclro assert that the brothers are both .- (oinrk the ward)—in “setting their times ., the religious horizon ;” thus constitu ' ’ EJilor qfllie Islander, ofall people---a iu sciences—1w tukc upon himself to decide , any man’s motives! \Vere he a religious ,' dare not do so—he would tremble at the know Iialfas much of the Bible as he pr ' the conducting ofa'pitblic newspaper, he , . aware, that in that sacred volume are to ‘ atid injunctions such as these :-—‘ Judge judcred.’ ‘Judge not according to the app doctrine besides God’s word, not only falls into error, and‘ rigfileousjndgnieut.’ ‘Lel its noljudgc one I» ‘Who art than that judgest another man’s" own master he standcth or falleth.’ ‘ W judges! another? lie thtitjudgcth his brother, - And now 1 come to the second point ; V i which fi'ieud Flagellator ought to have ,, myself. The individual who conducts the ment oftlie Islander comes forward in t ~ manner, and, without the slightest- foundsl , shadow ofa foundation---cl:arges the autho ” signed Flogellator (whose flagellalion this I remember) upon an individual whom he to be connected With the Colonial H I would ask the Editor ofthe Islander, upon lie dared thus dastardly and publicly to at individual, ivithout sufficient data-untld » scsses not---the authorship of an and"; nicatioti? By what right dare he ihns': tity of private life, and endeavoru-ulthouggé ---to drag fi‘0in ltis retirement a person say, never cared a straw about even the f Editor of the Islander. Truly did the P ‘ in his “ Address to the DEN”— “ Great is thy ow’r, an’ real thy f Far kcnn’d an noted is t y manic!" And as truly do I believe, that if this V the Editorial tlittnders ol'tliat woefully tn- the Islander, had never existed, or, exi tempted to sally forth from his propere i saucy brats, the individual whom be it? author of hisflagcllalion would never be gle thought upon this awful personage this veiled Prophet of Khorassanu-evflll intimate friend and well-wisher, the ‘ above alluded to, “Great were his [to fame-«far keiin’d and noted were bisly, JnNius asserts-«and his authority, 1 self-opinionated Islander will scarcely. Justus, lsay, asserts, in a letter to the ‘ Lord Mansfield, that “the injuahbe r sometimes of service to the public.” NOW. - it is an act of injustice publicly-end ; that upon an individual which the! proving,- and I defy the Islander, With ’ prove the authorship asserted by lllmi, do further contend, that this very ch87!” . to the public,"'illullllll0h as it will ‘3 . an the unpardonable extreme to Which .' ‘v, ecruple to descend, when writhinl i” surgical operation such as that lately by the delicate and tender hand beloved li‘ieltd ngcualor! “ O. Islander. thou art or“ ' r ' (Think not, I flatter, for. ""51 r Valiant, wise, remoncftll. ‘V . The Islander scents pertic‘flfl'l! .. ~ Editor, and your brother. should ,, . I.fityles the post of “Dcan ind" > I, inclined to fill the berth, for my P."‘ L Jection; but it occurs to me. “'5‘ . better have a care, and, deep“. 5' 0370111 personalities, interfere som’m' Viduelsaud private cliaractel’io'd" ' - nor of figuring-"and that erelon! r moons and astonishing literary ' " l}: ’,——‘ to fut but do get ', ' yet at 2‘..- of can the “'l: at It) nil An dis inn the chi Isla tiia net am you tiot Mr. tho I you scri ill t Wet Uri! flier he , bait: lalo I you a ct 1"!“ \Vl't. the; vim at Y, an'l disc of v as ll ltiii; incl eha and mm ii I") ‘Itll ing’ graj Jet, sum asse «wet the ther that who won tors of (A h CtHl (wit Scot the vnf a “lo the . opal -d6(ll‘l reltii lowt fitll," A Ten Pres tuou Dow passl Colo =Cniitl turn “ nrt': linvc remit ing; this ‘llOI‘l devo of its And about ‘ls 'Hoii‘o 'VOltin Islam and i that ( rathe extrit and i Islam bis ir had— him, Onetn They ‘0 I)" But I, 9 "1": in tli need] his {‘u °fwh take hover Write the c 1y be] P‘ust. lndivi hem-n dared