ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Thursday Morning, March 16, 1860. FKEE HOMES FOK FItEE MEN. BFiIBCH HOK. G. A. GROW, OF PENNSYLVANIA, In the House of Representatives, Fob. '29, ISfiO. The Ifouao being !n the Committee of tho Wliofc on the state of the L'uiotu Mr. GROW said i Mr. CHAIRMAN : At the close of the Rev "olution the colonies claimed dominion, based •upon their respective colonial grants from the frown of Great Britian, over an uninhabited Wilderness of two hundred and twenty million acres of land, extending to the Mississippi on "the west, and the Canadas on tho uorth. The 'disposition 'df these lands became a subject of 'controversy between the colonics even before the Confederation, and was an early obstacle to the 'Organization of any government for the Sprtrtecrticm'tff fhe'fr'commoo interests. The 'cotofrtes, whosccharter from the Crown tiYewted 'oYdf rtftflc '(f( the nuoccupied lands, claimed, in Vhe language of the instructions of Maryland iu *tO herdclegates in Con gress : " That a country unsettled at the commence ment of this war, claimed by tire British Crown and coded to it by the treaty at Uaris, if wrested from the common eneniy by the blood and treasure of the thirteen State's, Should be considered as a common property, subject to be parceled out by Congress into free, convenient, and independent governments, tin such manner and at such times as the wis dom of that assembly shall hereafter direct." The propriety and the justice of ceding these .lands to the Confederation, to be thus parceled out into free a&t-d uxfejjendent States, having become the topic of discission everywhere iu the colonies, Congress, iu order to allay the •controversy and remove the only remaining sihstacle to a final ratification of the Articles of Confederation, declared by resolution, on the 10th Ooctber, 1180 : " That the unappropriated lands which may 'oe ceded*or•relinquished to the United States 'by any particular State " * * " .shall lie disposed of tor the common benefit of the United States ; and be settled and formed into distinct republican States, which shall become members of the Federal Union, :and have the same rights of sovereignty, free dom, and independence, as the other States, • t kc. That III>• said lauds thilll be granted or stilled a I such timet, and under swk regulations ■as shall hereafter he agreed an by the I'nited Slates in Congress assembled, or nine or more the pchfec Hands claimed by the colonies at the dlosc of the Revolution, were ceded to the General Government to be •settled and disposed of " under snrh rrguSa •fions as shall hereafter be agreed on by the C. 8. in Congress assembled." Since that time the Government has acquir ed, by treaty, of France, the Louisiana pur chase ; of Spain, the Floridas ; of Mexico, Vtab, New Mexico, and California ; contain ing, altogether, over twelve hundred million ttrres of land. So the General Government, fey cessions from the original States aptr ehases from other nations, has acquired, ex clusively df water, as computed by the Com missioner f the Land Office, fourteen hun ted ami fifty million acres of public lands ; *>f which there have been sold, to September 30, 1858,0ne hundred and forty-seven milliou, eighty-eight thousand two hundred and sev enty four acres ; and otherwise disposed of in grants aud donations to individuals, corpora tions, companies, aud Stale, as per annexed riM." .'.O. c ' u d' 0 {? grants since 30tb June, 1807, r tsvp ;fipttdt£d pillion seven bun ,dced aud seventy acresj £eav,mg the iwlkic jauds belonging to ibaGoir vernment undisposed on t&e £kth &eptemb.h*ied the arm of industry? It needs are lengthy drssertutPioii to portray its evils. Its history in the 'Old World h written in B sighs and tears. Under its influence you behold there tiie proudest ami most splendid aristocracies side Jay side with the most abject and debased people ; vast manors hemmed in by hedges as a spotting ground for the nobil ity, while men arc dying beside the inclosure for the want of land to till. Under its blight tug 'influenceyou behold industry in rags, and patience in despair. Such are some of the fruits of >lr.nd monopoly in the Old World ; and skaE We permit its seeds to vegetate in the virgin soil of the New ? Our present sys tem is subject to like evils, uot so gceatt in magnitude perhaps, bet similar in Uind. Of the three hundred and eighty-eight mil lion eight hundred and fifty-eight thousand three hundred and twenty five acres of land disposed of by the Government to September 30, 1859, one hundred and forty seven m ilion eighty eight thousand two hundred and seventy three acres were sol 1 for cosh,and two hundred and focty-onc million seven hundred and seventy thousand and fifty-two acres were do nated in grants to individuals, corporations, and States. The Government had received from the sales of the public lands, as appears from the re port of the Commissioner of the Land Office, to June 30, 1833. one hundred and forty-two million two liundred and figlitv-tree thousaud four hundred and seventy-eight dollars, to which add thirty-eight million three hundred and thirty-six thousand one hundred and sixty dollars and ninety cents, received since that time, would m-ike the gross e.uionnt received from die lauds to September 30, 1809, one hundred ud eighty million six hundred aud nineteen thousaud six hundred and thirty eight dollars and ninety cents ; while the en tire cost, including purchase tnonev, extinguish ing of ludian title, surveying, and managing, has been, for the same period, ninety-one mil lion nine huuurcd aud niuety-four thousaud and thirteen dollars, leaving a net revenue to the Government, over and above all cost, of eighty-eight million six hundred and twenty five thousand six hundred aud twenty live dol lars and uiucty cents ; with oue hundred and JWhUioo "in® hundred and seventy thousand Uue iwudred aud forty one acres surveyed but unsold, of which eighty million acres are subject to private entry. Of the one hundred and forty-seven mil lion eighty-eight thousand two hundred and seventy-three acres sold by the Government, not more than one half of it, probably, was bought at Government rates by the actual .cultivator ; the .other half, f sssume, cost the cultivator, on an average, at least four dollars per acre over tlio Government price. So he would pay, on seventy three million live hun dred anJ forty-four thousand one hundred and thirty-six acres, being one half the qnantity sold by the Government, two hundred and niuety-four million oue hundred and seventy six thousaud five hundred aud fortyfour dol lars. On the two'hundred and forty-one mil lion seven hundred and seventy thousaud aud fifty-two acres donated to individuals, com panies, and jStates, including over seventy mil lion acres for school purposes, aud over fifty million acres for railroads and internal improve ments, I assume that the cultivator must pay PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. on an average for these lands at least five dol lars per acre, making the sum of twelve hnn dred and eight million eight huudred and fifty thousand two hundred aud sixty dollars. The actual cultivator, then, will have to pay to the Government and to the speculator for these lands, if the foregoing estimate of prices bj correct, at least sixteen hundred and eighty three million six hundred and forty-six thous and tour hundred nntl forty-two dollars and ninety cents, of which eighty-eight million six hundred ant! twenty-five thousand six hundred and twenty-five dollars and ninety cents has been paid, in net reveuue, into the Treasury of the United Stutes ; the balance to be ab sorbed by the speculator. The Government, by its existing land pol icy, has thus cansed to be abstracted from the earnings of its hardy pioneers almost seventeen hundred million dollars for the mere privilege of enjoying one of God's bounties to man. This large amount has been abstracted from the sons of toil without rendering any equivalent, save a permit from the State to occupy a wilderness, to ..which not a day or hour of man's labor has been applied to change it from the condition in which the God of na ture made it. Why should Governments seize upon any of the bounties of God to man, and make them a source of revenue ? While the earth was created for the whole human family, and was made its abiding place through the pilgrimage of this life, and since the hour of the primal curse, "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread," mau has been forced to the cultivation of the soil to obtain substance j for himself and the means of promoting the j welfare of the race, why should Governments j west from him the right to apply his labor to j such unoccupied portion of the earth's surface j a; may be necessary for his support until he has contributed to the revenues of the State i any more than to permit him to breathe the air, enjoy the sunlight, or quaff from the rills and rivers of the earth? It would be just as rightful, were it possible to be done, to survey the atmosphere off into quai tor sections, and transfer it by parchment titles; divide the sun into quantum of rays, and dole it out to grop ng mortals at a price ; or arch over the waters of the earth into vast reservoris, and sell it to dying men. In tlie language of re marks heretofore made on this why has this claim of man to monopolize any of the gifts of God to man been confined, by le gal codes, to the soil alone ? Is there any other reason tlrtit that it is a right which, having its origin in feudal times—under a sys tem that regarded man but as an appendage of the soil that he tilled, and whose life, lib erty. and happiucse w ere but means of in erca-ing the pleasures, pampering the passions and appetites of his liege lord—and, having once found a place ill the books, it has been retained by the reverence which man is wont to pay to the past and to time honored pre cedents? The hnuian mind is so constituted that it is prone to regard as right eotne down to ns approved by long usage, and and hallowed by gray age. It is a claim that had its origin with the kindred idea that roval Mood flows only in the veins of an exclusive few, whose souls arc more ethereal, because born amid the glitter of courts, and cradled maid the pomp of lords and confers and, therefore, they are to "bo 'installed RS rulers and lawgivers of the race. Most of tke evils that a ill ct society have hud their origin in violence and wrong enacted into law by the experience if the past, and retaiued by the prejudice of the present. 1- it not time you swept from your statute boofc its still lingering reiics of feudalism ? blotted out the principles ingrafted upon it by the narrow-minded policy of other times, and adapted the legislation of the country to the spirit of the age, and Che true ideas of man's rights &ad relations to his government.? For if a man has a right on earth, he has a right to land enough to rear a habitation on. If he has a right to live, he has a right to the free use of whatever nature had pro vid d for his sustenance—air to breathe, wa ter to dritik, and laud enough to cultivate for his subsistence ; for these are the necessary sirM m iispensible means for tire enjoyment of his inalienable rights of " life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." And is it for a Gov ernment that claims to dispense equal and ex act justice to all classes of meu, and that has laid down correct principles in its great chart of hatn&n rights, to violate those principles, and its s Umn declaration is its legislative enacttr.ents ? The straggle between ehpital and labor is an unequal one at best. It is a struggle be tween the boues and sinews of men aud dol lars and cents. And iu that struggle, is it for the Government to stretch" forth its arm to aid the strong against the weak ! Shall it continue, by its legislation, to elevate and en rich idleness ou the wail aud the woe of in dustry ? For if the rule be correct as applied to Gov ernments as well as individuals, that what ever a person permits another to do, havidg the right aod means to prevent it, he does him self, then indeed is the Government respousi for all the evils that may result from specula tion nnd land monopoly in jour public domain. For it ic .not denied that Congress has the power to make any regulations for the dis posal of these lands, not injurious to the gene ral welfare.. Now, when a new tract is sur veyed, and you opeu your land office and ex pose it to sale, the man with most money is the lmgest purchaser. The most desirable and available 'locations are seized upon by tire cajr italists of the country, who seek thut kiud of investment. Tour settler who chances not to have a preemption right, or to be there at the time of sale, when he comes to seek a home for himself and his family, must pay the speculator three or four hundred per cent, ou his invest ment, or eucouuter the trials aud hardships of a still more remote border life. And thus, under the operation of laws that you call equal and just, yon take from the settler three or four dollars per acre, and put it in the j>ocket of the speculator—thus, by the operatiou of your law, abstracting so much of his bard carn ipgs for the beuefit ofoepilul: for not au hour of " RESARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." labor has been applied to the land since it was sold by the Government, nor is it more valua ble to the seller, lias not the laborer a right to complain of legislation that compels him to endure greater toils aud hard?hips, or contri bute a portion of his earnings for the benefit of the capitalist ? But not upon the capitalist or the speculator as it proper that the blame should fall. Man must seek a livelihood, and do business under the laws of the country ; and whatever rights he may acquire under the- laws, though they may be wrong, yet the well-being of society requires that they be re spected and faithfully observed. If a person engage in a business legalized by the laws,and uses no fraud or deception in its pursuit, and evils result to the community,let them apply the remedy to the pioper source ; that, is, to the law-making power. The laws and the law makers are responsible for whatever evils nec essarily grow out of their enactments. In order to secure the labor its earnings, so far as is possible, by legislative action, aud to strengthen the elements of national greatness j and power, why should not the legislation of j the country be so changed as to prevent for the future tbe'evilso f land monopoly,by setting ; apart the vast and unoccupied territories of the 1 Union, and consecrating them forever in free homes for free men f Mr. MAVXAIU). May Ihe allowed to ask my friend from Pennsylvania a question ? Mr. GROW. Certainly. Mr. MAYNAIID. It is this ; whether he is in favor,or otherwise,of allowing the old sol dier or his assignee to locate his land warrant on the public domain Mr. GROW. I always answer questions that are pertinent to the point under discus sion, not otherwise. 1 aui not arguing any question about land warrants, but about the proper disposition to be made of the public lands. Ido not see the applicability of' the gentleman's question ; and must therefore pass it by, as I do not wish to be diverted from my argument. Mr'MAYXARH. The gentleman is mis taken about the object of my question. Mr. GROW. 1 would provide in our land policy for securing homesteads To actual set tlers ; and whatever bounties the Government should grant to the old soldiers, 1 would have made in uiouey aud not in land warrants,which are bought in most cases by the speculator as an easier and cheaper mode of acquiring the public lands. So only facilitate land monopoly. The men who go forth at the call of their country to uphold its standard aud viudicate its honor, are deserving, it is true,of a tnorp substantial reward than tears to the dead and thanks to the living ; but tltere arc soldiers of peace as well as o f war, and though no waving plume beckous them on to glory or to death, their dying scene its oft a crimson one. Thcv full leading the van of civilization aloqg untrodden paths, and are buried in the dust of its advancing •columns. Xo monumcut marks the scone of deadly strife ; tio stone their resting jlace ; the wir.ds sighingthroagli the branches of the forest alone sing their re quiem. Yet they are the meritorious men of tlie Republic. The achievements ot your pioneer army, from the day they tirst drove back the Indian tribes from the Atlantic sea board to the present hou-, hare been the ac hievements of science and civilization over the elements, the wilderness, and the savage. If rewards or bounties are to be granted for true heroism in the progress of the race, none is more deserving than the pioneer who ex pels the savage and the wild beast, and opens in the wilderness a home for scieace and path way for civilization. " her victories No less renowned than war.*' The paths of glory teo longer lead over smoking towns and crimsoned fields, hut a long the lanes aitd by-ways of human misery and \joe, where the bones and sinews of man are struggling with the elements, with the unre lenting obstacles of nature, and the not less un merciful obstacles of a false civilization. The noblest achievement ru this worlds'spilgrimage is to raise the fa Men from their degradation ; oootlic the broken-hearted, dry the tears of woe, and alleviate the sufferings of the unfor tunate iu their pathway to the tomb. " Go say to the raging sea, le stiß ; Bid the wild, lawless winds obey thy will ; Preach to the Storm, and reason with despair ; But Veil not mintry'a sua that life is fair."' if you would lead the erring back to virtue end to honor, give him a home—give him a hearth.roud, with spires and turrets crowned ; Not bays and bload-armed ports. Where, laughing at the storm, rich navies tide ; Not stirred and spangled courts, Where low-browed baseness wafts perfume to pride. No : men,high-minded men. • * * • Men, who their duty know, But know their rights, and knowing, dare maintain ; Prevent the long-aimed Mow, And crush the tyrant while they rend the chain ; These constitute a State. The prosperity of States depends not on the mats of wealth, but its distribution. That country is greatest and most glorious in which there is the greatest number of happy firesides. And if you would make the fireside happy, raise the fallen from their degredatiori, elevate the servile from their groveling pursuits to the rights and dignity of men, you must first place within their reach the means for supply ing their pressing physicu l wants, so that re ligion can exert its ituluence ou the soul and soothe the weary pilgrim iu his pathway to the tomb. * What justice cart there be in 'lie legislation ot a country by which the earnings of its la bor are abstracted for any purpose without re turning an equivalent ? But as a question of revenue, merely, it would be to the advantage of the Government to grant these lands in homesteads to actual cultivators, if thereby it was to induce the settlement of the wilderness, instead of selling them to the speculator with out settlement. The revenue to the Govern ment from the lands, if considered annual, is the interest on the purchase money; which wou'd be on a quarter section, at one dollar and twenty five cents per acre, the interest on two hundred dollars, equal, ut six per cent., to twelve dollars per year. But as the revenue of the General Govern ment ; with the exception of the sales of the lauds) is derived almost wholly from duties on imported articles consumed in the country ; the amount collected depends upon the quantity consumed. On an average each individual consumes of inqwrled articles about eleven dol'ars worth per year, (see statement of Reg ister of the Treasury, appended",) and calling seven the average number of a family, then each family consumes annually seveuty-tive dollars' worth of import* d articles, upon which a duty of uot less than twenty dollars was paid. So the Government would be the gainer of eight dollars per year on each q°rter section, by giving it away to a settler in preference to selling it without settlement. In addition, as you cheapen the necessities and comforts of life, or increase men's means to pay fot them, you increase their consumption ; and iu the same, proportion as you increase the means to pay for imports, you increase the consumption of home products aud manufactures ; so thut the settlement of the wilderness by a thriving population i as much the interest of the old States as of the new. The amount now re ceived by the Government of the settler for the luud, would enable him io furnish himself with the necessary stock and implements to commence its cultivation. For the purposes of education, building rail roads, opening all the avenues of trade, and of subduing the wilderness, the best disposition to be made of these lands is to grant them in limited quantities to the settler, and thus se cure him in his earnings, by which he would have the means to surround himself with com fort and make his fireside happy ; to erect the school bouse, the church, aud all the other ornaments of a higher civilization, aud rear his children educated and respected members of society. This policy will not only add to the revenues of the General Government and tho-taxablo property of the new States, but will increase the productive industry and com merce of the whole country, while strengthen ing all the eleaients of national eicatuess. The first step in the decline of empires is the neglect of their agricultural interest, and with its decay crumbles national power. It is the great fact stamped ou all the ruins that strew the pathway of civilization. When the world's unwritten history shall bo correctly de ciphered, the record of the rise, progress, and fall of empires will he but tlm history of the rise, development, and decline of agriculture. Hooke, lit describing the condition of agricul ture among the Romans more than two thou sand years ago, the process of absorption of the lauds by the rich, and their consequent eul tivation by slaves, furnishes the studeot of history with the secret causes that undcrmiucd VOL. XX. —NO. 41. the empire and destroyed its liberties. I read from book six, chapter seven, of his History of Rome, volume two, page 522 : " From the earliest times of Rome, ty had been the custom of the Romans, when they subdued any of the nations in Italy, to deprive thein of a part of their territory. A portion of these lands was sold, and the rest given to the poorer citizens ; on conditions, says Ap plan, of their paying annually a tenth of tho corn and a fifth of the fruits of trees, besides a number of great and small cattle. In pro cess of time, the rich, by various means, got possession of tho lands destiued for the subsis tence of the poor." * * * * " The rich and the mighty contrived to pos sess themselves of the lands of their poor : neighbors. At first they held these acquisi tions under borrowed names ; afterwards open ly in their own. To cultivate the farms they | employed foreign slaves ; so that Italy was in danger of losing its inhabitants of free condi tion, (who had no encouragement to marry, no means to educate children,) and of being overrun with slaves and barbarians, that had neither affection for the Republic nor interest in her preservation. " Tiberius Gracchus, now a Tribune of tho people, uudertook to remedy these disorders. * * * # * * * " Never, says Plutarch, was proposed a law more mild and gentle against iniquity and op pression ; yet the rich made a mighty clamor about the hardship of being stript of their houses, their lands, their inheritances, the bu rial-places of their ancestors." * * " The poor, on the other hand, complained of the extreme indigence to which they were reduced, and of their inability to bring up children.— They enumerated the many battles where they had fought in defense of the Republic; not withstanding which "they were allowed no share of the public lands ; nay, the usurpers, to cultivate them, chose rather to employ foreigners and slaves than citizens of Heme.— Gruichuss view was not to make poor men rich, but to strengthen the Republic, by au in crease of useful members, upon which ho thought the safely and welfare of Italy de pended. The insurrection aud war oi' tho slaves in Sicily, who were not yet quelled, furnished him with sufficient urgument for ex patiating on the danger of filling Italy with slaves." * * * * * ' * " lie a>ked the rich whether they preferred a slave to a citizen ; a man unqualified to serve in war to a soldier ; an alien to a inenj bet' of the Republic ; and which they thought would be more zealous for its interest ? Then, ns to the misery of the poor; "The wild beasts of Italy have *aves and dens to shelter them ; but the people, who expose their lives for the defense of Italy, are allowed nothing but the light and air ; they wander up and down with their wives and children, without house and without habitation. Our generals mock the soldiers ; when, iu battle, they ex hort them to fight for their sepulchres aud their household gods ; for, amongst all that great number of Ih m nis, there is not one who lias either a domestic altar, or a scpulcher of bis ancestors. They fight and die, solely to maintain the riches and luxury of others; aud arc stiled the lords of the universe, while they have not a single foot of ground in their pos session." Smith, in the second volume, page 291, of his Greek and Roman biographical dictionary, speaking of Tiberius Gracchus, and the rea sons for his proposed legislation, says : " liis brother Cuius related, in some of his works, that Tiberias, on his inarch to Spain, in (R. C.) 137, as he was passing through Etruria, observed with grief and indignation the deserted state of that fertile country ; thousands of foreign slaves in chains were em ployed in cultivating the land and tending the flocks |wn the immense estates of the wealthy, while the poorer classes of Roman citizens, who were thus thrown out of employment, had scarcely their daily bread, or a clod of earth to call their own. lie is said to have been roused through that circumstance to exert him self iu endeavoring to remedy this evil.'' Had the policy advocated by Gracchus, of distributing the public funds among the land less citizens of the nation, been adopted, the Roman lit-lds would have been cultivated bv free men instead of slaves, and there would have been a race of men to stay the ravages of the barbarian. Tho eternal city would not tlieu have fallen an easy prey to the Goth and Vandal; but the star of her empire might have waved in triumph long after the ivy twined her broken columns. With homos ami firesides to defend, the arms and hearts of au independent yeomanry are a surer and mare impregnable defense than battlement, wall, or tower. While the popu lation of u country are the proprietors of the land which they till, they have an interest to surround their firesides, with comfort and make their homes happy—the great incentive to industry, frugality, and sobriety. It is such habits alone that givesecority to a govern ment and form the real elemcuts of national greatness and power. National disasters are not the growth of a day, bat the fruit of long years of injustice and wrong. The seeds planted by talse, per nicious legislation, often require ages to germ inate and ripen into their harvests of ruin and death. The most pernicious dT all the baleful seeds of national existence, is a policy that de rdjiges its labor. Whenever agricultural la bor becomes dishonorable, it will, of course, be confined to those who have no interest in the soil they till ; and when the laborer ceases to have any interest in the lund be cultivates, he ceases to have a stake in the advancement and good order of society, for he has nothing to lose, nothing to defend, nothing to hope for. The associations of an independent free hold are eminently calculated to enable and eicvate the possessor. It is the life spring of •a manly national character, and of a generous patriotism ; a patriotism that rushes to the de fense of the country and the vindication of its honor, with the same zeal end alacrity that i| SEE roi'RTn PACE.