K 03LLAS AND FIFTY 0313 PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : TlMirsday Morning, April 16, 18£3. Sdcttcb (From the Washington Daily Chronicle.) THE NATION'S TRAVAIL. BT U. U COBB. T-;<> pains we feel. the the pangs that rend, Pierede a nobler birth Than any since the world began ; In which all ancient good ahall blend With nil held iu reserve lor earth, Anil to accrue to man. The mingling doubts, and hopes, and fears. Of good or ill to come, Are monitors of coining change ; They whisper in unwilling ears Of facts and ultiinatcs, the suia Within man's finite range. The skies are daik, the fields are red. Our homes resound with wails ; The earth shakes with the tread of hosts, And gapes to swallow op the dead ; The sea is lashed by sulphurous gales Along our Camiog coasts. All faith in man,and higher things, Seems dying at the root, Blight by the canke: of distrust. And lies, aud hatreds, ail the springs Of human action so pollute, That Hope returns to dust. Tor, see : without, the open foe With arms assail the State ; While Brutus whets the traitor's knife Wilhin.aud waits lo strike the blow IJ j'.v can the nation wrest tront late Its dear, iiuj erilled li'e ? 'Tis thus man reasons. Were his sight Made limitless in scope, lie should In re reach all happenings, And i< ad (Jen's ultimate aright; A..d L.iLh should ri-e again, and Hope Miiould soar on tireless wings. \ All -t'fe i i healthful. 'Tis the growth Of MJII is, and grosser things ; I'hc germ tights upward to the sun ; And nature seais with nature wroth When tempests flip their awful wings, And earthquakes feud aud stun. For strife is life, and life i.* strife, And peace is stagnant death ; M ■ h wrestling makes the perfect man, And leads to high- r realms of life ; Acti--ii i-. made his vital breath !a the Almighty plan. ' ■ ;: v.sy. The e arc ccepa Within deeps more profound ; And li Tits supernal crown the heights Wh Lot mortal visi.>n sweeps ; A . In.'',-, beyond the outer bound That finite reason lights. The fathomless and open sea, That turges at the pol" 3 01 ill is mysterious being, laves The throne-foot <>t infinity ; And to that central point our souls Adventure ou the waves. Baffled by head-winds, tempest tost Menaced by angry skies. And breakers, smiting sunken reef*, II"pe dies the death ; then faith is lost; Ti: a reason stumbles ; theu arise Wild theories and beliefs. Bat this we know • Truth cannot die ; Ami Right is Truth's right hand , Truth's high emprise i- human weal : And all past records testily Tint what Truth will, to stand, EIIAI.I. ST.VND, Unharmed of fire, or steel. 11l is c 111 aiteo it s. Farming Hints For April. I EN'CES. One of the earliest tasks thai claims the fanner's attention is reps icing feu- C'S. Systematic managers, whose farms are divided by common rail structures, after hav lug determined how long they will continue, six years, divide their whole farm into six P'rts, mid repair a sixth each year; this keeps "ii in good order without further trouble, and without having too much to attend to in one seusoti, and but little another Board fences should b annually examined throughout their whole length, and loose boards nailed tight.— New board fences should never be battened ou the face or joints over the posts, as the practice tends to cause decay; but in the eour-e of fifteen or twenty years, when the ends begin to rot and become loosentd, bat tens will secure and make them stronger for several years longer. If farmers are able to replace their old worm fences by post and rail, hoard, or stone fences, they should begin cn one tide and construct a certain amount each Jear, keeping a register of the same. Then, iu f utnre years, when repairs are needed, they tan go through iu the same way aod in the same number of years. The importance of good fences is well under stood lay those who have observed the differ ence between crops safe from all intruders,and lho-e occasionally trodden down and ruined ; between moving on with the work without in ferruption, and the frequent annoyance of tapping important operations, to ruu alter in truding cattle, colts and pigs. •MEADOWS —As soon us these are dry enough to hear feet without injury to the turf, they should he carefully picked of all loose projecl- In g stones, which might injure a mowing ma chine, and then well rolled, so as to make the •Hllace as smooth and perfect as possible Stumps should be dug or pulled out, acciden tal brush or other rubbish removed, and small hillocks levelled down. The farmer who has 'een a mowing machine broken, at a cost of hve dullars, and a delay of a day, by a stone that might have been removed iu live minutes, will appreciate the importance, comfort and •coaotny of a smooth surface. There is some Satisfaction in the reflection that new farm rua chientry is going to copel the adoption of a smoother and more perfect kind of farming. Much is lost by the imperfect thin, and un seeding cf meadows. Bare spots and thin grass, amounting as they very often do, to one-fourth of the whole sin face, would make a total loss of five acres in every twenty acre meadow. Some times the los 3 amounts to much more. The importance of thick and even seeding is not sufficiently appreciated.— Thin or hare patches in existing meadows may be covered with grass by running over the m-udow with n fine tooth harrow the first day the surface is dry, then sowing a mixture of clover and timothy and rolling the seed in If the meadow has heen tup-Uresstd with fine manure in autumn or winter, the harrowing will mix it with the surface, and assist the ger ruination of the seed, as well us its subsequent vigorous growth. Meadows which were top dressed with coatse manure in autumn or winter, which was more or less spread in lumps, should be har rowed as early as possible, so as to break those lumps and spread the whole uniformly. Cat tle droppings, on meadows or pastures, should be Ouely beaten to pieces and we!! scattered over the surface, as soon as the frost will ad mit, and before the frost lias uli disappeared from the sou of a change in circumstauces, or for any cause, a portion of be lieve thev ought to have thier rights more ex actiy fit lined or more fuiiy explained in the constitution, it is their duty, in accordance with i\s provisions, to seek a remedy byway of amendment to that instrument ; and it is the duty of all the states to concur in such amendments rs may be found necessary to in sure i qua! mid exact j-stice to all " In order, therefore, to announce to the country the sentiments of this Convention, re specting not on!}' the remedy which should be .sought for existing discontents, but also to communicate to the public what we believe to be the patriotic sentiment of the country, we adopt tiie following resolutions : Resolved, That this Convention recognises ilie well understood propositin that tiie Consti tution of the United States gives no power to Congress, or any branch of the federal govern ment., to interfere iu any manner with slavery iu any of the states ; and we are assured by abundant testimony that neither of the great political organizations existing in the country contemplates a violation of the spirit of the constitution in this regard, or the procuring of any amendment thereof, by which Congress,or any department of the general government, shall ever have jurisdiction.over slavery iu any of the states. Resolved, That the constitution was ordain ed and established, as set forth in the pream ble, by the people of the United States, in or der to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general wel fare and secure the blessings of liberty to themselves and their posterity ; and when the people of any state are not iu full enjoyment of all the benefits intended to be secured to them by the constitution, or their rights un der it are disregarded.their tranquility disturb ed, their prosperity retarded, or their liberty imperilled by the people of any other state, full and edequate redress can aud ought to be provided for such greviances. Resolved, That the Constitution of the Unit ed States, and the acts of Congress in pursu ance thereof, are the supreme law of the land, to which every citiz