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I have not been able to discover those reasons. " And here I might, perhaps most properly, close my reply ; but had I more leisure, I would, in justice to mv views ot the great importance of the subject, and to render my humble support to the American Temperance Society in their noble and arduous enterprise, present some of the reasons which have produced in my mind the conclusion above stated. But at present I can do little more than to express my full concurrence in the reasonings and conclusions of the Committee in their Report. The whole question, I think, is there stated and discussed with great ability and candor; and although the unqualified declaration, that ' all legislation relating to the sale Tory Burch Shoes of ardent spirit is sinful,' may seem bold and startling to the mind which has contemplated the subject Tory Burch Flats as clothed with the sanction and authority of law, and justified by long established custom ; yet I doubt not that the same mina, relieved from the influence of prejudice, will accord its entire approbation of the proposition." From the Rev. Francis Wayland, D. Tory Burch Outlet D., President of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.—" Your letter of Nov. 11, requesting my views respecting the principles and arguments ofthe American Temperance Society, on the subject of laws for the licensing of spirituous liquors ; and also respecting the general adoption of those principles by legislators, is before me. I embrace the earliest opportunity to return you an answer. I believe the arguments on this subject, presented in the last Report of the Society, to be sound, and the conclusions to which they lead correct." After stating a course of thinking somewhat different from that mentioned in the Report, by which his own mind had been led to the same result, he adds, " Now to all this, I know of but two objections that can be urged. I. It may be said that the grocer's property is his own, ancl he has a right to use it in any manner he pleases. 1. Now this is manifestly false. A grocer has precisely the same right in his property as any other man, and he has no more. He has no right to employ his property in the slave trade, nor in the pur¬chase and sale of counterfeit money, nor in the manufacture of false keys. All this every one sees. It is not then true of him or any one else, that he has a right to use his property as he phases. 2. His right in his property is the same as that of any other man; it is the right of using it for the promotion of his own happiness in any manner he chooses, provided he do not so use it as to diminish the innocent happiness of his neighbor and of the community.
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