THE "CLEARFIELD REPl'BLICAS," CLKABFXKLD. PA. EBTABLIIHED ID 16T. 1 tie largeit Circulation f any Newspaper 1h North Cttitrai Pennny .vault Torma of Subscription. If paid a adTanee, or within I months.... 13 4M If paid after I and bfora 6 month 8 AO If j.ttd after the aiptratloa of month!.- 3 M) Rates ot Advertising. Trunilent adrertiunienta, per tquaraof 1011 net or en, 5 tlmeeorleae fl 60 F'r aaeh aubiequent inaertion.. M Ailminlatratora' and Eiooatcra'notiooa 1 60 Au Ihora' aotieei 2 (0 Cnutloniand Kitrayi. 1 60 I) insolation noUeea SO profe? atonal Card, I llnai or 1mi,1 year,.. a Of Local notleee, par Una SO YEARLY ADVEUTIBEMKNT8. I Kinar ......19 00 1 eolumn.., $50 00 3 Bnarae ........ la 00 i eolamn.. 70 00 Sauuaraa... M..20 00 1 1 oolama.. 120 00 G. B. QOODLANDER, Pabllibar. jCau'Bfrs' Carfls. jj w. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 11:1:79 Clearfleld, Pa. J J. LINGLE, ATTORNEY-AT - LAW 1:1s Phlllpbare;, Centre Co., Pa. y:pd " JOtAND D: SWOOF15, "" ATTORNEY AT LAW. CurweaerlUe, CI.uD.ld county, Pa. ool. , '78-If. QSCAR MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLRARFIELD, PA, Offlo. In "Old Waelornl building," (up. Heir). Ool. . ?8-tf. JSHAEL TEST, ATTORN KY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. jar-Offli. on. door uil of Bhw Hon... tJjll.'M yjl. M. McCULLOUGII, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. Offi in Maaonlo building, Beoond afreet, op poaile th. Court Hone. Je2o,'78-tf. C. ARNOLD, LAW A COLLECTION OFFICE, CURWENSVILLE, r-ri Clearfleld County, Pcna'a. lay s. T. BROCKBANK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. tTU'. (n Ope r. Hon. e. 5,T7-lj iVa. A. Wi.i.AOl...rt Hiner F. Wali.acb,. Pavio L. KnBia, Wu. E. WALLACB. y ALL ACE & KRE1SS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, ji.nl 1 1 Clearfleld, Pa. gMlTII V. WILSON, .lllortiry-at.Lair, CLEARFIELD, , . . PENN'A. JNfrOHle. in th. Maaonie Building, over th. C unt; Itettonal uank. liu.rz4-80. J F. SNYDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. Office or.r th. County National Bank. "JBTStf jRANK G. HARRIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLBAariBLD, Pbbr'a. Firef-oLel Llf. and Fir. Iniurano. Compaaiea repre.ented. .afr-OBee in tb. Opera Houie.-a M.r. IS.'SI-ly THU.. B. Mt'BRAT.... CTRUI BOBEOB. jJURUAY & GORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. &Offlo. la Pl.'i 0pra Ilottsa, mond floor. w ILL1AM A. HAGERTY, jTTiM'f;i'.rif ir, OI-'UCE over T. A. Plork it Co.'. fltore, CLEARFIELD, PKNN'A T-efWill .tiend to all l.gal bualn... with pniinptne.a end fid.lity. febll,'80.f. lunapa a. b'bnallt dabibl w. ii'cttanr. cENALLY & JIcCURDY ATTOKNEYS-AT-LAW, Liearneid. ra. PL)(1 baitnit attandtd to promptly withj fl -leiUy. OffleaonBeeond itraat, abova tb Fint Na.tinn.vl Dank. jan:l:70 J, ?. McEENRICR, DISTRICT ATTORNEY, CLEARFIELD, PA. All Ieftn.1 bmlOM .ntraitsd to bll oar. will r. eeiT. prompt attention. jffCr-Offlr-. In th. Court tloui.. augl4,IS7S-lj. A O. KilAMER, A. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real EitaU and Collection Agent, CI.EARF1F.LI, PA., Will promptly attend to all legal bullae., en tru.ted to bie ear.. 0(flo. in Pi.'l Op.ra HonM. Janl'7$. JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Vnii Heal I'.elate Ageut, Clearfleld, Pa. Ulno. ea Third atr..t, b.t.Cb.rrjA Walnnt, r4r R.tp.tfully offor. bit lervleee In eelllng and buying land. In Cl.arfl.ld and adjoining eiunti.a ( and with aa .zp.rl.ne. of ...rtw.ntT y.are a. a lurv.yor, flattan himeelf tbat h. eaa render a.tlffaollon. lir.b. 18:.a:tr, I'lijisifians' Carfls. D R. K. M. SCHEURER, U0MEOPATHI0 PHYSICIAN, Offlo. In reJidena. ob Firrt It. April 91, 1871. Cl.arfl.ld, Pa. Tl W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, DUBOIS CITY, PA. Will attend praf.iilonal ealla promptly. anglO'70 jQR. T. J. 1IOTEU, fHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Oflo. on Markat StrMl, Claarfleld, Pa. r'OBjo. hour.: I to II a. m., and 1 to I p. I) U. J. KAY WRIGLEY, noMEOPATOIO PHYSICIAN, rar-(iB1r adjoining tb. re.ld.nf. f JamM W'riay, K., ua Seeund SL, Claarueld, Pa. juij.n,'7s-tr. fi C. JENKINS, M. D., VXa I'll YSICIAN AND SURGEON f CUHWKNSVILLE, PA., oditvc at raafdenoa, aoraar of State and Pin Tfrti. J.o. lib, Idel-tr. It. II. B. VAN VALZAH, (I.EARFIEI.I), PENN'A. "H ICK IN RESIDENCE, CORN RR OF FIRST AND PINK STREETS. OBot bo.rrFrom It to I P. M. May II, 1171. JJIt. J. r. I1URCHF1KLD, Lata Snrg.na ot tb. B8d Rcglm.nl, P.nneylrania Volant...., baring r.torn.d froa lb. Army, orTera hia praf.eel.Bal t.rvle.1 to tb..itte.aa f Cl.arfl.ld Bounty. -Prof.eeional ealla promptly atund.d to. OSr. ob Saooad ttra.t, formally o.enpl.d by Dr.Wo.di. apr,'M-U CLEARFIELD GEO. B. Q00DLANDEB, Editor & Proprietor. PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. TEBMS-$2 per annum In Advance. VOL. 55-WIIOLE NO. 2,710. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1881. 'NEW SERIES-VOL. 22, NO. 37. Cards. HENRY BKETH, ( OSTt SID T, O.) JUSTICE OF THE PEACE poa aaLL Tows.mr. Ma; I, Wfl-ly. JAMES MITCHELL, nalLaa is Square Timber & Timber Lands, J.H'tB CLEARFIELD, PA. V. HOYT, Land Surveyor and Civil Engineer, pniLipsnuRo, pa. jE4-All bueineea will bo att.nd.l to promptly , D.c. Id, ISHO-ly. " REUBEN H ACKMAN," House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfleld, Peuu'a. tauWUI execute job, in hla tin. promptly and in a woremanllk. manner. apr4,07 I? RANK FIELDING . AND WILLIAM 1). Ill G LEI?, iTTon.n:rs-iT-L.i ir, CLEARFIELD, PA. Nor. 17tb. last tr. WEAVER &. BETTS, DBALBRS IB Real Estate, Square Timber, Saw Logs, AND LUMBER OF ALL KINDS. JHr-Offloe on Second .tract, in rear or .tor. room of lt.org. Weaver 4 Co. I Jen, '78-If. RICHARD HUGHES, TtTKTICR OF TI1H PEACE ron Oecatnr Township, Oaeeola Mllli P. O. All official buiineca antraited to him will ba prompt j attended to. toe li 211, '70. TARRY SNYDER, LI BAR11KH AND HAIRDRESSER. Bhop od Market St., opposite Court Home, A clean towel for ever ouKtomor. Alao dealer in llept llraiuta f Tobarro and tlari. CUrliMiJ. P. m.T 19. ?. JAMES H. TURNER, JUSTICE OP THE PEACE, Wallacetun, Pa. ffr-lle hi prnpared binitr with all the neeeaa-ary blank furtui under th l'ention aud untr lai, aa well blank IJ !, etc. All lKl tuattera fntrusted to bn cart will receive prompt attention. filay 7tn, i7V-tr. G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NEAR CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. "P urn pa alwaya on hand and made to order an ahort notice. Pipea bored on reaaonable terma. All work warranted to render eatiifaotion, and delirared if deatred. myZMypd Ijivery tWlnhle. THE underlined bee: learato In torn, the pub lic tbat he la now fully prepareV to acoommo date all in the way of furniihin lUaaea, UuiRiea. Daddlea and llarneaa, on the ahorteit notice and tn reaaonaola terma. Keatdenoa on Loon at itraet, between Third and Fourth. UEO. W. QEARnART. Ilearfield. Feb. 4,1874. ..n. a. HAoaar r R EAD&HAGERTY, FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE AGENCY. jJ-O-Offic. In Or.bam Building, M.rk.t .treet. Clearfleld, ..... Peon'a. Jun. 15, UHl-tf THOMAS H. FORCEE, DBALBB IB GENERAL MERCHANDISE. bHAHAMTOIf, Pa. AIo,.xtnelT. manufaotum and dealer In Rquara Timber and Sawed Lumbar of all alndl. 'Ord.ri aollolud and all bllle promptly jyl7J fllfod. I. SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER ABB PBALBB IB Wtttchos,' Clocks and Jowolry, ffraAam'. Htm, Marktl Slrttt, CLEAR FIELD, PA. All kind, of repairing In my line promptly at ended to. Jan. lit, 17. Clearfleld Nursery. ENCOUKAGK UOMK INDUSTRY fplIB ttnderalfrned, baring eMahliihod a Nur I aerr on the 'Pike, ahut half way between Clearfleld and CurwenaviHn, fa prepared to fnr nifh all kfndi of FKL IT THKKS, (atandard and dwarf.) Krerjrrcent, bhruMiery, Grape Vinea, OooneKerry, Lewton Dlarktmrry, tStrawherry, and Haipberry Vinea. Ato, (Siberian Crab Treea, Qui nee, and early aoarlet Hhabarb, Ac. Ordera promptly attended to. Addreai, i. v. n niMiu, aep20-fl".y Cur wen .mil, Pa. JABBt BBRR. cAaauLL l.. Binm.B. Clearfield Insurance Agency. KKttlt ft II I -.', Jettiln, Reprea.nt th. following and othor HritHiluf Co'l Cimpanl.!. Aaaera. Lirerpool London A fllnbe U. S. Rr..t..1nl.8 Lreomlng on mutual Ae.ah plan..... A,tl00,0tl1 Pbrrnli, of 1 1 en for J, Conn 1.824,08 Ineuranoe Co. of North America fl,tJI,r74 North Uritl.h A Mero.ntlle U. S. Br I.7KI.8M Sootil.h Commercial U. B. Branch.... 87..I4. Watertown 784,81. Trerelet. (Lire k Accident) - 4,iHS.4i4 Oftie. en Market rtt., opp. Court Ilouee, Clear fleld, I'e. June I. '7 If. Insurance Agency OF WILLIAM C. HELMBOLD, Palton Mtlotk, Curtrtnurlllf, Pa. Companies Represented i Commercial Union Ina. Co., A .0,088,7" 5S Fireman'. Fond Inc. Co., Ancle I.l8n,0l7a. Union Inauranee Co.. A.rel 1,020.11:17 V8 Trarelere' Aeciilent Inc. Co.. Aorta.. MlrMHtlX Northern Ine. Co. of N.w York Aa'ta 848.KVU 00 In.urenc placed ob all kindi of property at equitable rete. uurwenaritte ra , reo. in, moi-.i. THE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Newark, N. t. INCORPORATED I84. PURELY MUTUAL. Aaarra, Jan. 1, ISKI, aa aw.rl.loed by Eiartlnlng uommiBaioaere af MeeaaebuRtt.. Okie and New J, .1J,728,81S 18 l.ti.ii.inea ae atated br the came. 8l,rll,4:a 8k Stinr-li'l by Maae ehu'a rll.n.l.ru.. e,i.,.iri ue St arLi a by New Y.rk Standard... ,888,.llt Is All pellelM noaf.rfeltabl. afl.r eio.d yeart Inweipeneeat l.rgedlrtdend. de elered and paid erery year eloca ergen li.tlen : anipl. eurplue : ..rrender raloei moat liberal loeeel promptly adjuated and paid. OrrtrBR f LEWIS C. OROVKR, PeaetmiaT. JAMES B. PKARH"N, Vrca-pBRitnT. En. L DoaaiRe, Fee'y. Tnao, MraarT,lr... PUTTKH A KK1K8, Mat. Aginta, IJJ nei- Bul Itreet, Pbll.d.lpble, I'a. K. M M'ENAI.I.V.SpwialAg.nt. OIB.. la lineeop e bnlldlBg, Mark.l Itrwl, Cl.arfl.ld, Pa. s. l-a.ai.ir. ' mm am HIGH FAB MING AND HOME CDLTUEE. THE FUTURE OF EAST PENNSYLVA NIA FARMING. NKW CIIOPM AND HEW METHODS. DELIVERED nEFORK THE CU M1IEI1LAND VALLEY EDITOIIIAL ASSOCIATION AT THE TRI-aTATE (PENNSYLVANIA, MARYLAND AND WENT VlnOINIA) ORANOERrl' AND rARUERs' PIC NIC, WILLI A)I8' GROVE, CUM BERLAND CO., PA., SEPT. 2, 1881, BY W. U. I1EN BKI., or LANCASTER, PHNaVLVAKIA. - . Fellow Citizens : Granger, Far mers and Editors, Ladies and Gentle men. l it bo kcd what placo hah the editorial profession in this celebra tion, or what rilit is thoro for the in trusion ol a discussion ot agricultural topics in a convention of editors, lot it ue answered that the lunction of the press, in the present suprcmaey of its estate, is to rococnize and review ev ery interest which concerns the iron oral well'uro, and hence especially to note tho progross and the prospocts ui mo oiticBi ana oosv continuing pur suit of man, that first occupation in which ho was engaged, tho one by which he chiefly subsists and in which ho rcalir.es his greatest dignity, bcBt maintains his independence and most fully realiicB his individuality. ior nceu i say now manv ol tho two thousand million printed sheets which fall from tho nowspapor presses of this country each year find lodg ment in its agricultural communities; nor to what extent in turn tho great forco of avorago unblio oninion to which press nnd politicians bow is is moulded and toned among those whoso Dere ere .pent, wboae minda are bent To follow the uaeful plow. 1 shall not yield myself to tempta tion lo indulge in the lomance of agri culture. Tho primary occupation of man and tho basio wealth ot nations, it is tho self existent pursuit of human activity, in which there can be no dis aalron) overproduction, into which surplus industry can ever and again oo profitably directed, whero the ro sources ot capital and tho energy of luuor can nnu engagement without Inclion and tho prosperity of which is, on the whole, as sure and certain as its universality is cssunliul to mail's moral development nnd motorial com lort. In overy ago and climo and un der all conditions of tho woild's life tho farmer has been the cornerstone of tho social and tho national struct ure. Tho statesman and moralist, philosopherand economist have always recognized his vitul importance. Tho plow is pictured on Thoban palace, r,gypiian toniD, r.irurian vaso and Grecian bass relicts. In Utopia, too will remember, that farm houses wore built over tho whole country and of eacn lumily ol lorty a ecoro wero sent in rotation every two years trom tho cities lo lurms, that all might acquiro some knowledge of the tillage of the sou. oaiu uaniel Wohster. "All na tionel wealth depends upon an enlight ened agriculture.' OUR NATIONAL DOMAIN. To us as a nation has it been left to illustruto this in a peculiar manner and upon a magnitudo ot sealo never before dreamed of. Hall of our adult popu Intion ate engaged in this pursuit, and 71 per cent, of our farms aro occupied by their ownors. Wo bavo a system ol landholdings that upholds iroo gov ernment and supplies healthy blood for tho body politic, a domain sufficient to supply tho whole world's demands for breadstutis, and so many acros availablo for wheat culture that oven the proBont enormous yield would not seed all the land. Ho wide-roaching is that domain that tho flour from tho first harvested whoatof Georgia roach es us almost beforo the Spring seeding ol llio .Northwest baa begun. Wo exhibit an incroaso in cereal product of nearly ono hundred per cent, in tho last docado, Irom a country furrowed so lately with the plowshare ol war, and yet wo bavo a homo mark ot and domcstio consumption for !J5 por cent, ot what wo raise. Swollon as wo aro with pride in our manufuo lures, there is nearly as much capital invested in our Icathor intorosts lumber, and tho investment in flour mills is greater than tho total value ol all our iron manutacturcs. How marvelous tho contrast with our rival lor the supremacy ol nations, onco celohraled for the number of its land proprietors, in whose united king dom now, with its advance of popula tion, tho total number ot land owners has shrunk from 181,000 in lObS and 250,000 in 17H0 to 170,000 in 1870, whero S23 individuals own a fifth ol tho land and not one in thirty is a land owner, whero half of Scotland is partitioned among a dor.cn, and all of Ireland scarcely knows as many own ors of the soil as a single county in Pennsylvania; with Germany, whose icasantry quit their fathorland by lundreds of thousands for a home hero; and with Russia plagued by tho problem of her frocd surlsl Tho very branches of agriculture: in which wo are rising Into eminence aro decaying in the mother country ; and what with the rot in sheep husbandry thoro, the decline in the profitableness of dairy ing, tho losses in the production of animal food, and tho diminution of wheat culture, tho prospocts of now markets lor tho American surplus are Btcadily enhancing. AtlltlCI'LTUHAL PROBLEMS. (flowing as the picture is, it is not to he lorgotten that theso boundless resourscs and this marvelous develop ment are not without their problems. As tho originul Divino mandate pro scribed that tho Adamio tillor ot tho vineyard should only cat his bread in tho sweat ol his brow and ait under the sholter of his vino and fig tree lor the tending of thorn, so the pursuit ot agriculture has over since boon accom panied with tolls and boset with dim eultics, and every step of Its advanco has been crossed with new problems worthy of the most Intelligent inrcsti gation. It is to some of theso that I would direct attention now, the more especially as they concorn a majority of those gathered hore, scarcely ven turing howovor, to more than suggest thorn for tho application of your in) lor experience to their solution. The most casual observer of the drill ot population and ot agricultural development In this country has no ticed that the centre of production baa Bteadily moved toward the Northwest. Hcven lentliS of the entire wheat crop is grown in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, California and Wisconsin; while Illinois, lowaj end Missouri alone produced in 1879 upward of eight hundred million bush els ot corn, or more than the yield of the entire country in 1809. Hanging upon our Northern boundaries are the great wheat fields of tho future, those two hundred or more millions of virgin acres in tho valleys ol the liua river, the Peace, the Athabasca and the Saskatchewan, producing a suponor gram, and yiolding after thirty-five years the increased production ot thir ty bushels to tbo aero, showing no signs of exhaustion after that long use without fortilinors. Tho immense grazing grounds of the Southwest whero ton thousand hordscan food, no one in another's sight and our enor mous railroad development, bringing those distant fields closer to market than you wero a half century ago, need only bo suggested to remind you how Dcoessfully tb husbandmen of those cheaper fat lands and the herds men of that rich grassy domain can excel tho farmors ot Eastern Pennsyl vania in some former special features ot agriculture hero. Now, on the othor hand, the demand for market supplies is onlarging and coming nearer to our doors. The vastly increasing population of our seaboard citios and tho growing manu facturing interests of our own State mako the immediate district which 1 now have in mind tho centre of a population comprising many millions, whoso tastes lor luxuries and the ministry to whoso necessities afford opportunity for tho successful intro duction of now methods and diversified products. A consideration collateral to tho Westward drill of population, enter prise and agricultural development, which has been ono of dcop concorn to intelligent farmors, has been tho tendency of tho bcBt blood and brains to quit the pursuits of tho lathers and lot go the plow handles for city lilo, attracted by tho bustle of its business activity, tho dash of mercantile specu lation or tho glitter of social life, too oflon only to bo shipwrecked on tho rocks ot bunkuplcy or ruined in th whirl of fashionahlo dissipation. 1 am not unmindful that tho country and tho farm havo been tho nursery and training school of many of our bright est and strongest intellects ; that the vigor and breadth of mind so essential to tho best success in any sphoro bavo been nowhoro so well nourished as in tho pursuits of agricultural lifo, and that over and again wo must look to it to traco the early steps of Borne Dlruiely gifted man, Whoae life in low relate began, And on a humMe village g reen ! Who a o Moving up from high to higher, Rrflomea, on Fortune'a erowning alope, Tbe pillar of a penple'a hnpe, The centre of tb. worU a dcair. Tho fact remains that farm lilo lias too long still i' red tho reproach from thoso who might most have adorned il that it iB not congenial to tho devel opment of social culture. Illrill FARM1NO. To thoso, thon, who seek to find wherein lie the future enhanced profit and pleasure ot this pursuit which is your common interest, 1 anBWor that the luturoof farming in this peculiarly iavorcd and advanced region lies in High Farming and Homo Culture. Tlmy will accompany each othor, and their development will bo contempo raneous. For whatever tends to give moro intelligent direction to agricul ture will enhanco its profits and hoitco its pleasures; and with the promotion ot scientific regulation there must come greater comforts of living ; the necossity for investigation will lead to broader learning, and tho application of now methods impel each genera tion to tho elevation of this calling in its moral as well as matorial aspects. SMALL FARMS. Increasing fertility and productive ness, resulting in advanced prices for land, must lead to a Bubdivison of farms. To no small extent is tho per fection ot our tillage duo to tbo original Pennsylvania policy of small land grants, and as tho years roll on it will bo found that filty acres aro moro productive than a hundred, and twen ty five moro productive than fifty. I am not suro that tho timo is far dis tant when wo will realizo "ten acres enough" as more than the droam of a book farmer. Mississippi, with double as many plantations as beforo the war, but avoraging only hall tho sizo, pro duces twice as much cotton now as thon. Franco, with far loss area than Texas, owes her production of wheat, nearly as large as ours, her horses and cattle, almost as many, and hor sheep moro, to tho system ot small land holdings. It is lo tho thrift of her pooplo, their accurate, and economical cultivation of small parcels of ground, that she owes tho rucupcrativo power which bus mado hor a marvel among nations and tho admiration of the en- tiro world. Ihoro iB no poverty so pitiful as land poverty and no farmer so destitute as ono who owns too much Many a one who might bavo grown rich on (iflv aeros. which he could nnv for, has starved on a hundred, for naif or which lie was in debt and paid in terest. Indeed, I am far from being convinced that ovory owner. larmor cannot most profitably work exactly as much land aa he can buy and pay lor. CLOSER FARMINtl. The subdivision of farms by tho future farmer of East Pennsylvania means a chango and a diversity ol products, no less than tho competition ot othor sections. For it is plain that if an aero can be mado to produce 1 100, whore before lour acros produced S-'5 each, tho samo area will support just lour times the former amount ot agricultural occupation, whether by new methods and increased care the yield is of tho same product as before or by the introduction of a now inter est the cultivation of tho land is turned to belter advantage Up to a certain point thoro can be no doubt that two blades of grasa may be mado to grow where only ono grew ; and where the farmor who now raises filtocn bushels of whoat to the aero might raise thir ty, or who now grows forty bushels of corn might produce eighty or ono hundred, he has not yet given such a fair trial to his present opportunities f ) ontillo him to experiment with an increased acreage or to turn his lands to now crops. The future farmer of East Pennsylvania will first of all, by all molhods not exhaustive of tho soil, so till his lands as to get the larg est available yioldof the crops which he now cultivates with profit NEW CROPS. Beyond that his Interest will be fonnrlin the introduction ol now crops. Besido a close caro lor all improved varieties of the present ordinary co rcals and few sufficiently realize tho importance of selecting sooda with abundant caution for their qualities ot fertility the Eastern Pennsylvania farmor must boon tbe lookout lor now intorosts in the selection ol his product!. Tbe cultivation of tobacco, now no longer a novelty or experiment, baa reached its greatest development in that country which even before its general introduction had roachod tho front placo in American agricultural districts and now tur out-ranks all others, Its profits aro notably largo, ana suinciont time nus elapsed to dis sipato all fears of thu most apprehen sive ior the exhaustion of tho soil, The Lancaster county fumor, rejoicing in his gross recoipta of from 8150 to SliOO por acre tor bis tobacco, has diacovored tho secret and the sufficiency of am ply replenishing all the drain upon his soil by the application of stablo ma nure, tho production of which is f.ct unprofitable in itself ; and aflor twon-ty-fivo years fair trial I am supported by all tho facts when 1 deoluro that the strength of th tobacco lands ol Lancaster and tho aeneitl fertility ol its furms on low of which tobacco la not now grown is far greater than whon its culture began. To an audi ence of intelligent farmers 1 nood not enter into furlhor details than to sav tbat tho fair avcrago yield per acre nets to tuo owner ol the soil 10U por season,. and tho profits lo the croppor ot ono man's labor lor six months av erage 82110. Surely no branch of turm labor yet become common in this lec tion can show results commonsumto with theso. Incidontially tho etTect oi this interest upon the matorial de velopment of tho community, tbe im mense worehouBos erected for its han dling, the employment furnished to thousands of laborers, tho exchange of monoy and tho groat stimulus givon to trado are an unmixed good. Inci dentally the increased number of cat tle and horbcs required to be fed to supply tho larger demand lor manuro has been in itself a source of profit. 1 cannot look far onough into tho lu lu ro to see w hen tho farmor ol Eastern Pennsylvania will abandon so lucrative an interest as tobacco culture. Tho cultivation of tho sugar beet is slowly but surely making its way to tho attention of our (armors. It ulti mate practicability and profit can hardly bo doubted. With little over a tenth as great acrcago in potatoes in 1880 as of wheat the yield was nearly a third in valuo, a fact which forcibly illustrates too improved uses 10 which lands near market may bo devoted under tho system of high larming hxpenmonts with onions, lor tho sale ot which thoro is nover dulltoss and our increased immigration gives no causo to despair of porpotu.l markets for potatoes and onions ex libit much more striking comparison, and the developed possibilities or seven hun dred bushels to tho aero point to an industry which will mork a most profitable departure in Etst Pennsyl vania larming. Of tho profits of fruit raiBinir and truck gardening tho duta aro less ac cessible and tho experience of thoso who ongago in them may vary moro widely, but of their certainty in tho long run thoro can bo no reasonable doubt. With constantly incroasine demand, duo no more to tho increasing population than to improved tasto, an enlarged desire tor luxuries and a ro gard for tho sanitary uses of vegeta bles and fruit, the garden and orchard may be widoned upon ovory form in Eastern Pennsylvania with assuran ces of a sale investment. No longer nood ho who plants an orchard wait for another generation to pluck the lruit, but my middle aged hearer can yot realizo lor himselt tho profits from such an ontorprise fully eqnal to the ordinary branches ol his agricultural operations. A gentleman who now gathers from If! acres of orchard 5,000 biishols ot apples realises on his invest mont a lar greater percentage than your wheat ruier, tho corn grower or ovon tho tobacco uoor. To a lar greater extent than now will the fu lure faimcr of Eastorn Pennsylvania bo a horticulturist. DAIRYING. Dairying, perhaps, is an industry, the spread of which may bo dotermin ed by local causes, though tho new and advanced ideas on tho feeding of cauio ami tno institution ot tho co-operative scheme of crcamonca aocm to bo doslined to' revolutionize tbo old notions of milk, checso and butter pro ducin;' farms. Year by year the radi- ua of tho dairy interest has reached lurthorout Irom tho great cities. Tho choeso-making farms of tho country are rapidly increasing in number. Thoro is yot to bo found a more profit able system of farming than tho milk lurms ot tho estern Rescrvo or ono more conducivo to social comfort and intellectual progress, and its imitation on an improved scalo may yet bo a feature of our local farming. SILK PRODUCTION. Despito tbo ridiculous memory of tho mortis muiticaults movement ol a generation ago I am hopeful that be fore your sons die many a farm in this vicinity will ho crowned by suc cessful efforts at silk culture, realizing tho early colonial idea whon the Vir ginia Assembly offered a prizo of fllty pounds of tobacco lor each pound of wounu sua produced, when overy land owner was required to plant and fonco twelve mulberry trees lor each 100 acres, and when Gov. Law, ol Connec ticut, arrayed in tho line dross ot a hundred and thirty years ago, had a silk coat and stockings of domestic manufacture. Thus tur 1 havo dealt mainly with tho variety ot productions and tho in creased yield ot tho future larmcr on these lands. Moro immediately is ho concerned about tho application ol improved mothods lo his present In terests. FENCINd. The subdivision ot tho lands implies an increase of fencing, a consideration involving largely unappreciated and often unmeasured expense. With the increasing scarcity ot material, tho item of fencing has really become an enormous ono, the total value offences in this Stato alone footing np two hundred million dollars and the annual cost of them being estimated at ton millions. In part tho rapidly intro duced barbed wire fence meets this problem, but in tho main I am satis fied that tho future farmer will abolish insido fencing. Evon ilriasturingdoes not becomo a lost art with tbo improv ed science of larming, a portable fence will meet all lis requirements, and except this inside fences will become a relic ol stupidity; tbe land occupied by them will be devoted to protitahlo production, unsightly "cornors" or leaning lines of drunken rail fences will no longer oiiend the eye and mar the landscape, and nought save boun daries of contentious neighbors, in namo alono, will require to be thus marked. EN81LAUE. Theoretically and practically tho novel scheme ofensilago seems to rec ommend Itself to the approbation of those who nave given it lair minded attention. Its cllect uiton stock, for REPUBLICAN. beef or dairy product, is not only not dololorious, but highly beneficial, in creasing the wholosomencss of milk, chooso aud butter, while in practical operation it prcsonts tho remarkable exhibit of supporting a largely in creased herd on the formor numbor of acres; and their increased manuro in turn vastly strengthens tho land and supports increased productiveness. 1 bo astonishing claim ol Mr. Mills, tbe exponent of tbe system in this country, is to support on a givon number of acres from hvo to ten timos tho same number of dairy cows, at tho reduced expense of scarcoly ono sovonth that of tbo old systom. Evon should theso claims upon an average trial havo to be discontinued by two-thirds, ensi lage must bo a feature of future farm ing in Eastern Pennsylvania. IMPROVED MACHINERY. To an audionce, the memories of many whom run back to the flail and sioklo, and in tho prosenco ot mis spienoio display all about us of improved farm machinery, 1 need not speak of tbe importance to well direct ed and profitable larming of tho best appliances. Tbe economy ot powor, ot timo and matorial in farm labor has stimulated the native genius ol Yankoe inventive powor to bis host efforts in bohalf of better mechanical agencios for thoso who till tbe soil. In 1820 two men and fivo horses wore cngagod continuously for twelve weeks in threshing 1,300 bushels of wheat; forty yoars lator.onaCaliforniafurm, 40,318 bushels ot grain wore harvested, threshed, cleaned and stored in thirty six days by twenty-two bands, and in tho wheatfiolds of the Red ilivcr coun ties a stoam throshor and gang now count the threshing ot 2,000 bushels per day fair work. I nocd not pursuo this vivid componson to depict the part which improvod machinery will play in tho dovolnpment of Eastorn Pennsylvania farming in tho years near at hand. Undor the samo head I bog you to considor the great num ber of details which ore sometimes classed as "conveniences," though such features of improved farm life as ico houses, wind mill pumps or othor de vices to supply wator constantly and abundantly without manual labor, tho application of horse or stoam powor to all practical branches of labor, and tho countless devices ot the tool honso. carriage bouse, barn and held which do tho work of an hour in fivo minutes, aro now necessities to successful farm ing iu this soction. A late traveler in tho South watched with a curious in terest which taught him tbo lesson of a great page in our national history three men who spont a wholo after noon twisting a rope lor a well, and UBcd in the work thread that had cost morcthun the required rope could havo oocn bought lor. FERTILIZERS. Tho nature and value ol fertilizers. tho analysis of all commercial manures and tho relative cost and worth of ani mal fertilizers will bo a subject to on gage tho Intelligent attontion of the (armor. A recent statute of Pennsyl vania enactment will greatly aid him but he needs to bo on tho careful look out none tho less to socuro tho really vaiuamo and nutritious material than to avoid tbo Iraudulont and worthless Tho coming farmer on this soil will bo a chemist in bis way; and no clo. ment of his success will bo of greater efficiency than his discrimination in this respmit. You havo read of Duns ton Pillar on tho Lincoln Heath, tho only light houso evor known on land, set there in tho middlo ot tho last con tury to guido bolated travelers over tho long stretch ot dreary wasteland. Now it stands in tho midst, of a tertilo and highly-cultivated region with no barren moors in sight from its top mado to blossom by the culture of turnips and tho application of phos- phatus. Tbe successful return to the soil of tho sewago and excrement of our great cities is an unsolved problem as yet and 100 sowago farms on trial in England give no satisfactory report. Tho ultimately cortain solution of this vexed question can havo no moro promising Sold lo bo worked out upon than in this dependency upon tour cities oi tuo ursi rana. OOOD STOCK. Regarding tho valuo of improved stock in such a plan of larming as I havo in view, 1 am sure 1 need notoc cupy much ot your timo and mine. Juno and experience have lully vindi catcd tho marked tendency of tbo ad vanced Amoncan larmcr to introduce better blood into his barnyard and stablo. 1 nocd not now speak ol tho monumental examples ot (10,000 paid in this country lor a single cow or Jl 1,000 lor a sheep, norol the princely prices oi our race horses, nor ol ttie marvellous number whoso record dis tanccs thoso figures which onco stood as a synonym for spood, nor of tho total valuo ot the live stock on Ameri can larms, alono far out-topping tho colossal Ugures ot our war debt onough to assert the demonstrated fact that carelul breeding of good stock is in tho iiitorest of profitable farming to suggest anothor important direction in which the energy and enterprise of tno coming larmor ot Ivastern JL'cnn sylvania must and will be devoted. It is in tbe near future that tho mild eyed Aldornoy, the spiritod Hamblotonian, tho sturdy Forchoron, tho fut and fleocy Cotswold, tho sleek and Bhapoly Berkshire and the hard fleshed end steady-laying Plymouth Hock will bo the delight of our farmors as tho rule and not ihe exception. Jirainago, irrigation, auhsoiling, tho rotation of crops and nutrition ol ani mals, tho quality of scods, tho growth, tho nature, the contagions spread and the extermination ol weeds, tho utiliza tion of wastes, and a few of many othor questions in methods of farming, to which ita foremost exponents aro gradually turning profitable attention, and in tho settlement of which tho ad vanced agriculturist will find great gain. Yt ith all of theso the successful lurmor will unito tho gcnoral princi ples of mothodicat business man agement, a system of closely kept accounts, a debtor and a creditor atato mont of every interest, a balanco sheet for each department, sothat gainsmBy be computed and lossos detected, leaks topped and breaks mended. HOMR CULTURE. Under such conditions there cannot fail to be a marked advanco in the social lilo and in tho development ol what may not inaptly be designated as "culture" in thoso whoso lines are east in the pursuits of the term. The quality of tbo labor which will engage tbefarraor'sattontion andlhoimprovod modes ol doing it, are bound to lead him to habits of study and tho enjoy ment ot refinements, whieh will con tribute to the comfort and dignity no loss than they will enhance the profits of his occupation. The accumulation of wealth, the spread of Intelligence, the lighter employments and the quickor association of man and man will all tend to make more musical "the song of the Bower" and moro congenial tho life of thoso "who t.ar Th.mett.d ew.rd with ipade and ebare." FORESTRY. Closely related with what I havo hitherto referred to, and strongly con ducing to tho higher view ot farm lifo, is tho comprehensive subjoctof "Iroo planting," whothor considorod with a view only to tho profits and pleasure of fruit production or iu regard to lorcsiry, toe preservation and replen ishing of wasting limber lands. I bavo only time to refer you to cortain well ostublisbod facts to domonstruto the necessity for greater attention to this interest. Mahomet said : "Tbe tree is father of the rain." With the extinc tion of tho torosU tbo powor ot the springs and tho regularity of the streams, vital elomonls of agricultural prosperity, bave vislily been most un favorably affected ; tho Winters havo becomo more open and tbe Summers less moist ; the climate more variable, Ihe winds moro destructive and or chards less prolific. Ensuing climate sovoritics are as latal to the farmor as feebleness or Btorility of soils; whdo tho removal of the protection onco afforded him by timber bolts on ele vated ridges, to broak tho forco of the storms, has ofton more than offsot in creased fertility or greater acreage under cultivation. The maintenance of provision of proper shatlo in pastur ing places, by waters, around shed and stablo, bavo invariably been found to bo compensated by a saving or increase of strength, milk, tut and fleece. In short, 1 venture the opinion upon com petent authority that in any consider able area of cultivated country the not productivoncss ot a givon acreogo will bo increased rather tbnn diminished by leaving or planting ono-tilth ol it in good limbor growth ; and this propor tion iisnouiu uo me aim oi ine com ing farmor to maintain or establish. Experiments with the maplc.cotopa. lo cust, tho black walnut, tho wild cherry and a largo varietyof other trcosBhow that abundant and sufficiont profits may be realized at least twice in overy generation lor tho farmer, who, of all men, lives most for tho morro and con bido bis timo for return to any safo investment. "Woodman paro that tree," is with him a sonnd busi ness principle no less than a matter of healthy sentiment. 1 have the greater confidence that tho success of this in terest lies in individual caro of it, stimulated by tho universal recognition of its importance. It has howovor been tho subject of governmental pro tection and patronage in nearly all ad vanced stutos for many years, sinco at loast 1770 when Frederick the Great established a courso of theoretical in struction in forestry. Sinco thon Gor many, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland, Italy, Franco, Spain, Portugal, bwodeu, IftiBsia and Denmark bavo erected schools of forestry, and England sonde pupils to tbo French school at Nancy, to bo trained for the management of forests in hor colonies. In our own country the older States like Massa- chusetts and Connecticut, sensitive to tho loss ot their timber lands, givo pa ternal care to thoir restoration, and many wostorn Stntea enjoin and en courage tree planting, and tboir poople havo mado "arbor day" a festival of general observance. Tho State and National Government can largoly aid and must be deponded upon lor the dissemination ol inlormation on the subject, ospociallyas regards the adap tion of soil and climale and tho intro dnction of exogenous treos. 1 look with confidence to the day whon, as has been auggostod, it shall bo tho aim of railroads every where to mark their lines by continuous belts ol trees, thus improving and making profitable their right of way, erecting shelter for the adjoining fields, and heightening tho beauty ol the landscape. Nor would il be an unprofitable duty of tho town ship roadmastor to plant such groallul shade along every dusty highway. Decaying Spuin sets an imiiresivo ex- amplo by tho beautiful custom of ber poople to plant by the roadside the cast-off seed of fruit there eaten. Above the commercial view of this question is the senlimontul considcra tion, which must appeal with forco to overy lover of nature, from the dullest clod that overy rested in the noon shado to the farmor onlhusiasl who delights in the rugged beauty ol tho gnarled and lightning-defying oak, who watches each year with now in terest the wondor of the flowering chestnut, its fruitage and tho fall of tho leal; whoso every senso of the n'stholic is gratified in tho matchless boauty ol tbe singlo drooping elm, most picturesque ot all our trees, and who, in tho vernal freshuoss ot tho woodlands or tho gorgeous autumn glory ol tho forests reads ovor and over tho miraclo ot nature. In my own county I know a larmor whoeo eyesight had boon gratified for many years by a splendid tree which stood in a httlo knoll upon a noighbor s Hold. At last, when cuniditv and tho calcu lation of ita worth by tho cord had resolved upon its destruction, the sub ject ol my admiration paid the owner his lull price ol tho wood it might real izo to lot it stand, a crown to tho land scape aud a momorial to tho right sense of a Lancastor county larmor. You may believe mo bo was no mere sentimentalist whon I toll yon that his buttoralways brought tho highest pneo in the market and tho plough never struck astono on his land. Tbe com ing farmer hero will be a forester. LOCAL POLITICS. II o will bo a politician too, In tbe hestsonso of tho word, watchful for tho dignity, tho honor and the prosperity ol all publio administration. Realiz ing tho boneticonco ot local sclf.gov- ernmcnt ho will approciato and banish tho baleful spiiit ol partisanship from the selection of local officials. For no such curse has fallen upon our politi cal system as the prevailing ideas that tho lines of local and National politics run parallol, whereas they should cross at right anglos. Tho abundant caro ol and most intelligent provision lor tbo public schools, regard less of what, alas I wo call "politics"; and honest, capable and progressive supervision ol the public roads will be tho objects of chief political concorn to the future farmer. It Is my opinion that in the Intelligent laying-out, grading, mecadamizmg and smoothing of roads, the erection and protection of free britlgca, tho general employment of road scrapers, the ar rangement ol breaks and watercourses, tho erection of finger boards, and othor duties of the supervisor our east ern counties show most lamentable lack, and that the resulting losses and wear and tear aggregate doublo the increasod road tax that would ensue trom a properdiachargoof these dutioa, by better men than are usually electod to porlorm thorn. Indeed it ia a matter of conviction that, for the advanced state of the leading counties of Eastern Pennsylvania, toll bridges and turn pikes are relics ol primitive conditions and should spoodily bo abolished. Tbe publio should now support these ways of travol necoBsary for the public con venience. In tho richest rural county in tbo Commonwealth It is the re proach of Its capital city a centre of trado and population before the revolu tion that almost every road leading into it is oostructod by a toll-bar, tbo rates being noarly as bigh as railroad fares ; and so general is the "mbargo on trado that oven on ono of tbe public stroets, within tho limits ot Lancas- tor, a corporation, by tho grace ot legislative deformity, swings its gate across the dilghway, and publio eenti ment is dull to an imposition which is as great as that tor which our lathers raised tbe tempest in a tea-pot in Bos ton a century ago. BROADER LEARNINO. The study of no science nor art limn the wholo rango ot liboialeul ture will be inconsistent witb, or lack opportunity for development in tbo ex perience of tho educated and advanced larmor ot tho luture. Most of a plainly, will the very extondod study of tho natural science claim bis atten tion and sorvo his practical purposes. isolany, no loss than cbemistrv, is study w hich must engage tho attention, and it will soon enchain tho interest of tbo scientific farmer; and to him who, in tho long Winter nights of leisure or in tho gray dawn of an early rising instinctively turns his cvoa to tho beauties and wondors ot tbo hoavens, tbo science ot astronomy, now mado popular and full of pootry and legend, will bo a source of entertainment and profit. Walking with his boad among tbe stars and his feet amid the flowers, inuaung tno tragranco ot nature, awed by hor grandeur, inspired by her eloquence and entranced by ber beauty, tno larmor loots his lordship ovor na ture and his kinship with its creator. Tho employ mont of steam power for Htrm work opens a wide field ot inter- estingand practical education ; goology may teach tho constituents of tho soil and chemistry dissolve them ; scientific forecasts of tho weather are a develop ment ot metoorology, the dim ot possi bilities of which are of tremendous im portance to the agriculturalist, involv ing not only the probabilities" ot tho weather, but its nicasurablo control. Ho may yet ndo tho whirlwind and direct tho storm. Partial relief from drouth and regulation ot rain-fall aro not beyond (he dream ol our modorn scionce which sots its ladders against tho sky. COMFORTS OF LIVING. The selection of eligiblo locations for buildings; thoir proper arrangement and most convenient construction ; the sanitary regulatiou of tboir relative position, so that tout odors and ill drains may not offend tho senses &nd poison the atmosphere ; the erec tion of farm bouses with a vlow to propor architectural effect, for the beauty ot tho landscapo and tho com tort and economy ot their occupants tho encouragement and practice of floriculture ; the refinements of homo lilo, in the cultivation of music, liters ture and tbo fine arts; tho accnmula tion of private libraries; tbo diffusion of local and agricultural newspapers and periodicals, are a few of many othor signs of the higher agricultural lifo, now happily outcroping in this community and caicuiatod to boar rich fruit in oarly generations. To them may bo added the liberal patron ago and earnost maintenance in evory sec tion ol regular associations aud ex hibits calculated to dissominale agri cultural information, to test now and competing implements, to investigato and rolieve diseases ot stock or failure ot crops, to discuss and pass judgment upon now methods, to expose trauds. and, in general, to promotoull the ends oi agriculture. Secure as tho past of tbo East Penn sylvania farmer is, his future may yet bo better. His opportunities are such that ho nood fear no competition in their dovolopmont. Improved modos and a versatility of resources promise abundant return for his investment and his labor, whilo tho steadily improving retinoments ot homo lilo and social culture will lend charm lo tho old monotony and average tho long periods of dullness snccooded by stretches of overwork. Horace Orooley, who know far moro about farming and did more for it than he usually is creditod witb, said : "The highosttraition of all labor is man." Of no industry is this so true as of an enlightened and progress ive agriculture. For sevon hundred years a stone post near Cairo has marked the riso and ovorflow of the rivor and sot the timo fur old Egypt's fostival of rejoic ing that her harvost was assured. Far down tho centuries the prosperity of our agricultural interests shall continue lo be tho Kilometer of national great ness and tho sign to all people of our advancement in the march ot civiliza tion. Speed tb. plow and ipeet the harrow ( Peae end plenty eend abroad. Better fer the apede and narrow Than tbe oannon or the eword. Koch Invention, each improvement, Render, week oppr.a.lon'e rod f Every l(n and .v.ry movement Bringa ua nearer truth and Uod. WOMEN IN THE POST OFFICES. Women aro coming to the front moro and moro as officeholders. Twen ty fivo years ago a female postmaster was something novel. Wbunovor, bo foro the war, a woman was put in chargo of a postoffico it was a vory insignificant one, paving but a low dollars a year, and llio circumstancoa waa talked all ovor the country as a remarkable incident. Now the dear creatures get tairly lucrative positions in the postal sorvice, and Ihcy bear a continually-increasing ratio to tho male handlers ot the mails. Of seven appointments mado the other day to Presidential postofficus so called be cause the I'resident appoints the post masters instead ot tbo Postmaster donorul three were women I Thus tho world mayea.l'hltadclphialtccord. It is surprising that a paper distin guished for accuracy of statement as is the uecora should make a historical blunder so gross as ia contained in the foregoing. 1 ho deroronce of the slave holders toward the fair sex always bordered closely npon the knightly, aud tho administrations of slsvnhnld- ing Presidents abound with appoint ments of women to postoniccs, though whole circumstances favored thoy named sons of widows aa the officer, from a sentiment of delicacy not en tertained in the Eastern States, in order that tho widow might obtain tbe advantages dorived from oflico without incurring its humiliation. An anocdote in point: Mrs. Dick son (we belie.'o the widow ol a meri torious soldier) was for many years postmistress at Lancaster, Pa., then one of the most important offices in tho State. Upon the advent of Gen Harrison to the Presidency, Democratic postmasters were removed at tho rate of hundreds daily, and in the Lancas-1 tor otvse it was only a question of who should be appointed Mrs. Dickson's successor. But before a result waa reached, in some remarks denunciatory of the sweeping removals, Mr. Buchan an said In tbe Senate tbat even Mrs. Dickson, tbe widow of soldier, not a politician, who waa an exceptionally efficient officer was to be removed to make room for a hungry male office seeker, and he proceeded to eulogize tbe lady in warm and somewhat afloo tionate terma. Mr. Clay replied, with much wit and humor, that he inferred from his bachelor friond from Penn sylvania had matrimonial designs, and that if he would avow them as a pos sible result ho would pledgo bis honor that the lady should not bo disturbed in her official relations to the Senator. Mr. Buchanan replied tbat the lady's assent was ol courso essential ; that he bad not yo( obtainod it ; that she would undoubtedly fool much annoyed in having tbo matter thus publicly spokon of, but if that was the condition of ber continuance in the postoffice, successful negotiations might be the result. Mr. Clay impotuously retorted mat tbo courtship should not be dis turbed by removal from office ; and all future attempts to remove Mrs. Dick son wore confronted with a personal and earnest request in writing on file in the department from Mr. Clay tbat under no circumstances should the lady be superseded. She remained in office many years afterward. Clinton vemocral. EDUCATIONAL. BY M. L. McQUOWN. Oopy furnl.hed by A. R. Road Tho School Board of Ponn townshin have adopted the Lippincott series of readers. The School Boards of Bradv town. ship bave purcbasod a school map of ronnsyivaniaior each of their schools. The Chost and Jordan townshin School Boards bave purchased patent school furniture for some of their school houses. The schools of Curwensville and Clearfield boroughs, oponed lor a six months term on Monday, Septemhor 12. The attendance at the opening was large. Miss Clara Barrett, of Clearfield, has been omployod as teacher in the Pub ic Schools of Iloutzdale. and Miss Marie Moore, of West Clearfield, in the Osceola Public Schools. A very successful educational meot- ng was held in the Bculah Church, at Rumey, on the evening ol Soplember 1st. Also in the Baptist Church, at Ansonville, Wednesday evening, Sop tembor 8. Teachers witb good certificates and not already employed, might do well oy corresponding with either ot tbe following Secretaries : Dr. Ai. Thorn, Kylortown; Jamos C. Owons, Now v ashington ; it. Jr . Dunbar, Woatover: D. B. Schoonover, Grahamton. The following are the appointments mado for the week ending September 10th: A'noj (oicnjniii Now Millport, Mr. Slaogcnhaopt; Turkey Hilt, James Ifobinson; May Hill. Mr. Barto. Cove Run, Pleasant Dale and other places to bosuppliod. Salary, 126 per month. Jordan township Ansonville, Jennie Neff; Patterson, J. B. Smith; Whit- more, 1 homas r erran ; Johnson, Lewis Wright; Glen Run, Lydia Hewitt; Fruit Hill, Elmer Fink. Salary, 131) por month. Ponnville can boast of a good Liter ary Sooioty, which meets every two weeks in the Town Hall. The Hall is a two-story building, the lowor story of which ia partly ocennied aa a atore room by McDonald & Spencer. The npper story is well fitted np with a stage, drop-curtain, and sceneries, and is supplied with an organ and a good library. Among the late accessions to the library is Apploton's New American Cyclopndia. The Hall will aeat an audience of about four hundred. It ia an educational enterprise vory credita ble to tho community in and around Ponnville. rROUKAHMKS. Theory represents that all pupils in the common schools can be taught the same things in tho same time and with the same amount of effort. Fa?tsshow that it cannot bo done. Any teacbor who cannot get down from a stilted programme und assist a pupil in trouble makes a signal failure. Teacher, if you bavo got a programme, based upon some dogmatized theory, to which yon aro trying to cramp a common school, tear il down. If you are a toacher of experience, did you never notice the discouraged, grieved look of a pupil whom you refused to assist simply be cause your programme said you must not f Did you never see a pupil wast ing his time, and bave him tell you he did not know what to do? There isa pupil that needs your help, and you can givo it if you will leave that pro gramme. orEXixa the schools. Practically, the school yoar begins in Soptombor. At this moment mill ions of children are soon wending their way along tho city streets, along the highway in the conntry towards tho school-room, Hundreds of thousands of toachers will wolcome them. Cer tainly ono cannot but be filled with doep emolinn whon be contemplates the sccno. For the occasion is furnish ed for oxorting an influence tbat will last forever. H'Aflf faith there is in the school. Could we by some magic means see Ibis Immense army of children on their way, wo should comprehend more clearly the expoctant fooling in the minds of tho parents. Tboy tool that they can part with their preoioua chil dren tiocauBO tho toacher will do them a greater good. What inadequate prparation hat been made by many communitiet I Neg lected, unsightly buildings ; neglected and unsightly furniture. These things produco lasting impressions. One gen eration accustomed to such a scene, thinks it good onough for the next Uncomtortablo scats, no apparatus, no attractive features are the rale. There is no advance on the past. As tho teaching was last year, so it will be this yoar. 1 here waa a young un tried person in the toacber'a place last year, and there is another of tho same sort this year. The routino of classes in reading, etc., pursues its round. Tho activity demanded by childhood is suppressed ; thoro soon settled down on tho children a stupor Just such as precoded last vacation. The teaeher deali Kith the fact! of arithmetic, etc., but omits the facte cf life. The children learn to recite the words in their books, but they learn nothing of nature, nothing of science, nothing of what is close al band. Let us not undervalue the brave and con scientious teachers in our land, but let na ask, Have they a slock of general knowledge t Bits of biography and history, lacts about cities, events, a knowlcdgo of authors and Inventors, a comprehension of the way in which tho world's work is carried on how these brighten the pupil's path I The vxrrk in the schools it too often not in accordance vtth the prinaplci of education. The course of study is fol lowed closely, there are questions and answors, but queerly enough no edu cational processes. The power teach lies in the teacher not in the thing learned. Skill dovisee a way in which a piece of glass shall make an invisible thing to be clearly seen. Skill, we say, does this; it is skill in the teacher tbat teaches N. Y. School Journal.