c. F. READ ik •H. H. FRAZIER, EDITORS. ! OCTOBER. DT LTD!♦ A. CALDWILL. The years grows splendid ! on the mountain-steep Now lingers long the warm and gorgeous light, . Dying by slow degrees into the-deep, • Delicious might. The final triumph of the perfect year, ittses the woods magnificent array; Deyord,' the purple mountain heights appear, And , slope away. - - The elm. With mttsical, slow motion, laves Fib; long, lithe branches in the tender air: While from h i s top the garsOrdello wave' • Her scarlet hair. 'Where Spring first bid her violets 'aeath the fern, Where Summer's fingers oped, fold after fold, 'The odorous, wild, red roSe's heart, now hum '• The leaVes of gold. The luftiest hill, the lowliest flowering herb, The fairest fruit of season and of clime, •All wear alike the mood of the superb Autumnal time Sow Nature pOIIN her last and noblest wine! • Like some Itacchante beside the singing stream% Reclnes thz• - ctrzhauted Day, wraptin divine, Impassioned dreams, - ••' Rat where the painted leaves are fatting 'fast, Among the vales, beyond the Euthest There 'sits a shadow, dim, and sad, and vast, And lingers still. • And still we hear a voice among the hills, A voice that mourns among the haunted woods, And with the ttivsi"ery of its soriew Milk • The-solitudes. • For while gay Autumn gilds the fruit and leaf, And cloth lief...fairest festal garments wear, Lo, Time, all noiseless, in his mighty sheaf - . Rinds up the year. mighty sheaf which never is unbound! The Reaper whom our souls beseech in vain! The lovCd, lost years that never may be found, - Or loved again ! • - ADDRESS BY E. GUYER, ESQ. . Delit'ered 6rfore the .I:St.tt7E.IIANNA CM:NTT AG RICULTURAL SOCIETY., at their Annual Fair, September 2:L 1557. BROTHER FARM ritS is:ob v iously need less to dilate.on the - importance of agriculture as a branch of human industry, _before an American audience"; yet I - have •alwaym tipuzlit tluit, even here, the subject is not. sulfieiently regarded, and that those engaged in it have not those civil ad ‘ vantages and social. distinctions they so eminently merit. ‘‘' hen we remember that agriculture affords employni ! etit to illogt of the laborers of the world; that: by.it comes nearly all the wealth which sustains modern comenunities; and a great proportion of comforts, and luxuries 6f lif, we have an itikiii.g of- its niagnitude.— Should all the world's- farmers cease to sow. to plain, to . rear, and .to gather-in, an anarchy • Would-spring out of this horde (if .id lers, which no human power - could control; and s t ares: tien would makes burial more terrific : than' the deluge. . . . . I:(.lleetions like these bring to mind. the stupendous interests involved in this vocation, and point 'clearli o to• the duty which all owe it. •But liesidr. a few Vague -and. general compliments 'which politicians occasionally bestowon agriculture, what have_goveniments done to advance it ? Comparatively nothing ; and, unaided, poor • men have carried it Go ward to its present,position, while the super abundant wealtrad extraordinary exertions of nations have - been lavished. on commerce' and manufactures. This is both short-sighted and unjust. The firs use a nation can have /40 material wealth t t ec ith a ont age ieilltUre, and to build this up is, therefore, a first and last duty ; and the second, because it is not only it hindFance to general prospoity, but abso lutely unfair to raise up one set of laborers at. the eXp£lls 4 .• • er. •It is true that, of late years; ' e indicatingtto states the correct • • t, excepting trifling'do• nations. not' .... . .- done for the 4 4utling millions" who work out the nations' blessings through agriculttire. Nor is it denied that the light of science is - tiag ail rays across 400 the farmer's path. H ady itnplernents, , deep,. plowing, drainage, mntrated - fertilizers, &e.... are all helping; b t.thesii. aid chiefly the fancy farmer. Wh . the practical farmer would use them, gene 'lly he is not - able to purchase; and when • he ability to buy has been brought about y hard', work, he is un able to use, and loses interest in them. "Be-_ sides, he .is so. often d eived by imperfectly_ made, articles, and hig ly lauded cheats, that be fears to trust these lights in the distance. They frequently pro): a lags, and this eteates distrust. Hence. too, we haVe this sneering at Boek-farming among tillers of the soil, be lieving as they do,these appliances to be only other contrivances of labor-hating wits to de fraud them. • 1 . In order to illustrate more forcibly the po sition I assume.. namely, that the agriculturist is not properly appreciated, or suitably re warded, tor the benefits be confers on com munity, 1 will give a brief biography of: one of the early settlers of Bradford county, per sonifying thereby the life of toil and hardships which thousands of her farmer s; mid those of her - sister Susquehanna. have had to endure. • At the 'lac! of one.and-twenty, John Lin coln left his , paternal fireside, to commence the warfare of life, his principle capital con sisting in his ability to-:work. To -this he was used trnm childhood... Of book learning he had but little. lie could read, write, and figure in the fundamental rules of arithmetic. His father owned' a - small farm, north of New London, Connecticut, and on it raised a large family. fIE could give his children little, save good advice. To ; John he gave fifty dollars on leaving home. With this the young man started to the Connecticut river, where he found employment for a year; but hearing of cheap lands in Pennsylvanis:, he could hardly wait until this year was'up, so eager wars he to get a piece fur himself; and with one hundred dollars in his. 'pocket, Sean find him on his Way hither. Fle stopped on the Chemung rivet, not far from the press' nt site 1.4 . Elmira,where ho engaged, fon short terms, with different fanners, mean time inquiring diligtmtly for, land. This was soon found, in what is.at present Wells town= Ship, Bradford, county, - Penn. The lot he purci,aj . was 'fifteen. miles from the river, and covered with a.dense forest. .After tak ing every precaution that suggested itself to his-mind, to be sure that he was on his own land, he commenced chopping ,and clearing. When he had gone over four acres, he worked u month fur the use of a pair of 'cattle and a chain the same length of time. - Then. procur ing the assistance of another young emigrant from New England, he cut a road nine miles in length, through the woods, to his clearing. His reuzli sled was then loaded - up with a . . - . . . . . ..,„ . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . - -__._-- - -- ------.--- -- - - - - -- • .1 ' • . . . -... . . . . . . . . - , . , . - , . , 1 . . . . . .....- - ' . . . . •..• . . . . , . . . ... . . . . /... , . .. . . , , . . . . 1 . . ' . .. - : 1 .. . _lx _... t .: - _ . . . . i . . . - • sack of coarse meal, i small iron pan, some newly made hay, and, drawing them to his fallow, the work of logging was commenced in gdod earnest. It would take 'too long to detail minutely the trialS orl this first clearing. The timber was heavy, and the lifting of course severe. Sometimes he and his companion were almost discouraged. They were several times, drenched withrain; in their - bed and shelter ot .•hen;lock boughs . ;' and their meal soured from expesure; but :they struggled through, .and procuring, with great difficulty, three bushels of wheat, it. was - harrowed . in with a wooden drag. Our hero Was now some in debt. .fie relied, hOwever, on getting work to help him out. This he sought . and found with Lemuel Griswold, who lived on a farm, on the Oats below 'Newtown; Now this 'Squire -aris vrold, as he was called, had also removed from. the East,but with a family of three daughters, and two sons, and several years previous to John Lincoln's departure from the place of - his nativity. The 'Squire's two oldeskdaugh . ters -were married. Jane was ninenen years old, !old-sip:Rat home; and a rollicking young woman 810 wmk - - . iCardessly reared amidst work, and on simple food, she grew up strorg and full of animal life. Morning, noun, and night, the surrounding .hills echoed back the ;shrill tones of her song, as ; she plied her busy hands; and at the gatherings of the young folks in the neighborhood, she laughed the loudest, danced the longest, and frolicked the most excessively'. This working wo. • man, in less than a year, became the wife of John Lincoln .; she oeipeehim to gather the Wheat on his fallow, the deer and other wild animals hail not ',des.iroyed ; and she daubed the Mud . on their lonely log c4le, while he chinked it. She'brciuggt him, too, alifig with her industiious hitii44, her earn e st nature, and loving heart, a -Cow, a present from her par ents ; and-two Months after the removal of the pair to their rude wild _home, this cow was killed by the filling of a tree. l,,cannot tell hoW sorrowful Mr.and Mr .Linco ln weie at this mishap.' ' Time and hope, however, those ebre:alls for human maladies, assuaged their grief ; .and :,that too, occasioned by the selling of their next year's crop in the ground, nn the note given for a cow to replace the one killed, Mil . .But a deeper trouble soon came on this !fumble, yet noble and courageous pair. 'ln . logging-the third 'fallow chopped at hia new home; John-Lincoln had his leg broken, two days before hi 4 second child was born ; yet his wife walked to Newtown, for a physician, crying all the way., This new. disaster turned out a sore affliction. That season no crop was put out, and the store of provision. on hand, *as small.' Cold weather, too, was on hand ; and for four months, that heroic wo man carried, through a forest, and by 'a path, from a mill fight miles distant; all the cc-rn meal; the only food that was consumed in her lowly- dwelling, during that winter of ad versity. It was a dismal period. - At night; thewolves howled piteously, - and threatened her sheep. Sometimes she had to take these into the house,. to save then,. So with her chickens. Then she had the -little stock- to teed, and the wood to get; but she worked bravely on. 'And when John Lincoln was again able to go out, his only pair of three years-old steers and seven sheep, the only stock he had, &ire a cow, were driven off, to pay the millei; leaving the 'Doctor's bill,- and sundry ether, claims unsatisfied. It wall a gloorr.y out-going to him , and his heart al most sank in despair, when the prospeet be fore him looked him full in the fee?. , But hope again cane to his relief, and time mel. lowed.- hia sorrow. Ilia wife, too, who had wept more during the last five months, than she had ever sung before, in the.same length of time, began to be hopeful, when she saw John was able to go to work. True, tbrongh bungling setting of the he,-was lama, and would be . -so for life; but he was still l iwith her, and that comforted her. In good earnest they again began the strug gle; and in two years, the evils of this disas ter Were nearly - repaired. Clearing was ad ded to clearing; year by year, by that reso lute man and woman. He chopping all day. and spending some nights in going to mill, and others, in picking up and.burnmg on' the .By means such as these, in a few years,they had cows and oxen • bat riot with. out severe losses. Mr. Lincoln had bought -his land under a Connecticut title. This turned out to be worthless, and he was oblig ed to pay for his land a second time. Then he lost a fourth of his cleared land, through mistake in the bounding lines. Still John Lincoln and his wife worked on. Sickness now prostrated her. From this she recov % ered ; but was' blind for a year afterwards,t from its effects. Not Yielding -Yet, nor yet despairing of final success, the battle with ad versity wag continued, until twenty-five years had elapsed: During this period, many oth ers had made beginnings in the woods around them, and with various results. Some re mained only a year, not being, able to stand it longer. Others remained two, some three years, and then gave up hope and their im provements together ; while -a few, like the Lincolna, would not yield. On the farm oftbe latter, thre were now seventy acres tinder fence, some of it, of stone. A frame barn and • substantial frame house occupied the place of those of logs, of other days. With in a few years, Mr. -Lincoln had received from his father's estate, three- hundred col tars; and his wife • had obtained; in the Jaime way, two hundred dollars. With this money _; they bad built, involving themselves, in the enterprise, an' debt• of five hundred-dollars ; but they had a farm' worth three thoneand. Yes, that dread wilderness, which was val ued at one dollar per acre twenty-five ye a rs before, was converted into a farm. 'And how ! Through sweat, that was little less than blood; through tears, that wore furrows into the cheeps of youth and beauty ; and anguish of heart, that drove two : mortals to an early grave. Yes, that fitithful, glorious pair were not destined long to enjoy their improved home. ' Exposure, hard wort, and scanty fare, broke down early an otherwise , good physical frame, and John 'Lincoln work ed no more, after his house was finished.— During five years he lingered, and then died, - arid his trustful loving wife to the last, over burdened with care, and her spirit tortured beyond' endurance, 'by the darkness of the road she - had traveled through life, became melancholy. yes, that wildly joyous girl, whose youthful song end merry laugh made glad the rude habitations around her early home, saddened .to despondency with life's confliiit • indoUt if fearful that her John would go hens; before - her; her sorrow pressed into, the rive t three months before. boardrilif, 66 FREmDcl iamp and trouble - together. " At...the time of her demise, Mr. Lincoln was too weak to attend the funeral ; but - gathering ;strength i a few days, be required his children to m e him t i . a bed on a sleigh, and take bins to th grave. There, alone,and in feeble strains, he t isang to the departed spirit of his. faithful . ccinlxtnion : "Ye living-men, come view the -d, Where ,you must shortly lie." And a - requiem it was, worthy th living and the dead, and more sublime. ban the • grandest composition ever tuned in o :har mony in of great ones of the é rth; Thus lived and thus died one pais of the pioneers of the now flourishing county of Bradford. •Ofien has my heart saddened, when-memory called up the scenes ihrough which they passed, their love for eat other, and their - fidelity to life. • Oh, they . 4r - served better thatethey had : and who has lieard : of their hardships, or cares for their sucringe ? Ah, echo comes back empty, like he first dove sent from the ark. • Nor is t story Of their a ffl ictions ended. John • incoltf r s . i e long sickness, ' and additional rcve s, . in creased his indebtedness to sevente u hun- • dred.dollars, at the time of his death. This . finally took his hard-earned proper y from his children. So they had nothing lett,' but the example of their parents' lives ; and, for its results, was it worth - fidlowing f Each child of the seven, of these worthy I but un fortunate workers, had to cornmencb in the . woods, and rehearse the drama alter, I have only faintly- sketched. That of. 4716.4 C., the oldest, appears yet more ' terrible- i; its be -, ginning. FOr•three 'dines hii log bin and tbklittle iniproved surrounding were swept` away. Yet be faltered not, nor yet u sing to battle, he triumphed at last. reelai ing the burial place of his unsuccessful fi4ier and .broken-hearted mother, and is noWquietly, and as happily as mortal well can passing i away in vigorous old age, the evening of that life hich had such a dark morning 4 Nair, brother flirmers, you ask,-,llthy this episode!? This, I trust wil . l becomchOanifest . as I priticeed: And first,-1 claim thaf the ear native I have giVen, is not an isolated occur ence ;•for every . fertile hill and blooming vale in Bradford, has, connected wit h . its ear- • ly history, a. tale of woe equal to th o'ne just 1 given, and the bread, beauteous fief sof Sus. quehanna, could, if able to speak," tell of hardships endured, privations suffered, con; tumely and poverty patiently . borne With,aixi by hearts as hopeful of bi;tter think, as lov ing, as faithful, and minds as sei sitive ' as those who surround me in this ask; bly, the • recital of which would make you cep ; as Ii l hope none of you have wept for a I mg tirne. Ye., fellow-citizens, it is the commonness of i these untold and indescribable lives of grief, which so immensely aggravates :Olt evil.— Terrible misfortunes overtake Merl and wo men, in, all pursuits and stations of Ire. These are looked tur,and because of rare oecurrence, •as well as because they are evil:ain't* come,. we pity the sufferers . , and pass th r. But when a whole class of Jaen and w anon, I:14 come a sacrifice to tho public weal,ibecom4 l a national calamity, and deserves. not 0n1y . .. E. our Sympathy, Vut our earnest etions to alle viate. It is-to this end, I labor to-clay. Who enjoys the fruit of the pati nt toil of John Lincoln ? and his devoted wife and their hardy copatnots 2 The fields the cleared, brought nom Ist to their bruised . les, no cordial to the etuhitteredlnindi i declining, years, yet they produced abundant. y.' Hun. dreds and thousandslive off the products of the &nits which these heroic workers prepar ed, and they will continue to slimily food aor ages to come. In addition, goverimenc d e ... rives a heavy revenue from them. Why, it is said, "He is a benefactor, whoes two blades of grass grow where but on grew be fore;" and what,shall be . said of hose who a inak tore from these mountains and v ley: their primeval - forests, and nature's reggedness, an? made them "run with fatness 1' doing this too, in .winter's bitter blast, with little clothing, mid with still less food; and; in sum; mer's sun no comforts, no relaiation from necessitous pressure; bearing the oiling yoke until the cof fi n hid it from view. '' Are such as these not benefactors ? .A.y,thousand times more so than many who . ha .e fame.— We refer with just pride to the wonderful fortitude whie# carried the sold ers of our Revolutionary'vrar,through the ho rid winter at Valley-Forge, and other tryi g scenes; a l but they. were of short duration. I Nor were ' they any more severe than those which the pioneers had to contend with du ins a life time. Panegyric has been exhau-ted on the noble perseverance of the one, wb le the 'oth er has no honor in the _land, yet .. eserves it no less. . _ 1,-- And compare- the lives of oat of our prominent politicians with that o JohtiLin coin, and how they sink into insvificance ! In youth, going -to school, thence to college, the law-office ' oongress, and even the Presi dency of the Republic. As lawyqrs, getting rich on the hard earnings o f. therpoor ; and a ft as politicians, fi lling their coffer* overflow, out of the taxes collected , from e tiller of. the soil. Yet,'Such men, partisan editors fre quently call great, and what .a isnomer it . is! But few of them have crea any 'hen- ' efactions for their specie', or impliihed any good for their ou,untry. s ir lives are the lives of politicians, and 'these mostly made up of selfishness and. arrogance.. Tell 4 me not that they have superior i wiled, for it is not true. I know a dosed hardwork ing, unknown tartnets,.wito, if y had the same opportunities, could display as much of all that is noble, in the head aqd heart, as characterizes most of the parties teferred to. But yon-atikovity is this not know n, , for in our day merit is -generally found (Out. In , the first pixie the interrogatory may ell be met by asking, why the eartb-op settler _received no benefit of all the good be wrought. Many of these had merits, as m and their work deserved great reward • y , the one is unnoticed, - and the other denied f But there are other solutions. One is, tha k the farmer 'does not use the prow, to pa Bak to' the world column after_ column of fa ,sotne lauda tion of fe l ls preonal acts;` finds ...'. deal of the notoriety statesman have,' .. es in' this way —they .verk frequently wring it • them. selves.' Bo while the fanner *ekes's, i t ut 4 plow; aows, p ] ants , and . gstliertt In, tAti l t men may'llvOri d the earth be, lied as a habitation; the wily politician 'w 'tee in blaz ing lettees in 'the sky, that bent e a famous speech for bunkum, or played Macititivill In some other way, to chest thipePple into the belief that be only is great.. gip& it cable; that the useritoriouitiller oftlselpoit, an d his iterfecitpd manhood; :main uoitilown,iuSip unrcw*ClUat arra.4. l ..,coVi fir" 1 . 4 4: -..alt AtlP* MONTROSE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1857. R Y AISD WRONG."' principled schemer, secure hitit riches and honor. There is, however, still another solution, More commanding in Its application, and more general in its infhieUce, than any yet named ; and which, more than all others, I desire to present to, and impress upon the attention of this intelligent assembly. • The one is edueated—the other is not; and herein lies the wonderful disparity .that pre vails in social life, between men of ,equal parts ; and which, above all, and beyond all, is the most pOtent in hindering the farmer f rom ookiyieg all del - benefits of civilized life. Yes, it is education the Gilmer needs, and has needed ever since organized commu nities existed. It is eidknated that nearly seven-eighths of the enlighterw i d portion of mankind, are engaged in tillink r the earth,and that the remaining eighth does all the gov erning, makes most of the public sentiment, and enjoys meat of the luxuries, mental ar.d physical • and this, only because • it has the greater lire of the education. There is pro portionally is much bright brains, in its in herent form, in the seven-eighths, as in the one-eighth • but it is not. eultivatml. Science i is proud, beesuse it is certain ; and, t tnakis its possessor superior and confident. .• It is fur this reason that the professional man is as proverbially presumptuous as the yeoman is modest. The former has assu.medithe con trol naturally ; - and the latter has, as sponta neously, submitted. As a matter of course, as well as of necessity, ,the one proVided for himself, at the expense of the other. 'lf the farmer would only read, as he Works, this would not be so. His delving is' into the earth. lie should peer into books ; and just in the ratio that be does not, is he sliort-sight ed. Work be dues—works gloriously,— without which the social edifice must crum ble; but he keeps too remote the mental and physical sciences, fur his personal, and the world's interest. Let us look, only , fire mo ment. at shut he has lust. Through medi cine and law, the ono 'mystified by empiri cism, and the other befogged by pettifogging chicanery, the laboring man has lost, and . i s losing annually millione upon Millions of money. besides destroying health and life,and fomenting strife, trerlful to individuals, and sowing the seeds of an antagonism which threatens ruin. These things need not be, and exist only because we do not resid enough. Fur the laws of health are ftw and simple, and easily comprehended; and jurisprudence - means nothing more than reciptal rights and duties. Every man should know these, and to,know them, is money and .power.— But inconsequence of the absence of educa tion as an associate, farm labor has been dis graced. This, too, is wrong, and does great • injury, coming as it does front perverted taste and gross ignorance. , For how much more healthful, dignified and conscience-ap proving, is it, to inhale the exhalations of the new-Mown. hay, withering _the ,precious laden sheaves of grain, and the golden fret, than dressing the foul_ ulcers of the debauchee, or defending the villanous desperado from the joist vengeance of the law . Now look in another direction. The man ufactoring and commercial interests of our. country, early invoked aid and protection against disasters at sea and competition from abroad. And millions of the dearly earned money of the farmer 'collected through im ports, has been expendedin building up these classes; until merchants have bernine princes in wealth, and the wholesale worker in ,the raw material revels in riches. This was well enough. I object not to it.; but to the neg lect extended to the tiller of the soil. • Now the.pioneersithe John and:Jesse Lin toles, who prepared the .surrounding glossy meadows for our enjoyment, did More, ten thousand timecraore, fur the prosperity of , our almost illimitable, and inimitable coun try, than all the iron-turn:tees and , spirming jennies ever created : yet who hsathought of. calling on the government to help the settler, by giving him a bounty on his work I Nu one; nor was this aid withheld =because it was not sorely needed. Will any one pre tend that the merchant and manufacturer struggled through as many perverse obstacles as did the ,piotteer 'I No one of sane mind will. Why, navies and light-bowies were ctested_to protect the property of those al ready rich. It was capital the- government aided.. It was to make the rich richer. The settler has no means, except that in his strong will and muscular power ; and by these, her culean labors have been perforated, not for himself, but for us, fur the_government, -and coming generations. He brought light and civilization into the dark foreattof America, amidst perils and' cheerless poverty enough to daunt the stoutest heart, but he could have no bounty for his enterprise,,and • no one to plead for a mitigation of his, not tosay hard ships only, but positive suffering. Was this politic, so far as the' general prosperity of the country was concerned'? Surely not. . Then, is it right, in a government predicated on the doctrine that all are equal, to lay burdens on the many, for the benefit of a few •No one will have the hardihood o, claim this. Only a iew years' ago, the whole country was disturbed by the - clamor raised for 'Proteciiie•Tariff, among the manufacturing and conimercial ranks, when thousands of poor farmers, who were making beginnings on the unbroken prairies of the . West, had to haul their Whtst'sixty and seventy miles, and then sell it at forty cents perbushel, and take fading calico at twenty-five cents per yard, in pay ! And to help, it along, gov ernment sold_ away the farms of' these set tlers, improvements'and all, because they could not, et, this rate, pay - the dollar and twenty-five cents per acre which ,it unjustly exacted for the laud be had taken up ! the whole being still further aggravated by tak ing the money which this lend ' brought, to aid in. the shipment of wheat frotn abroad, for breed and starch for the New England manufacturers! I 'become excited, and my blood state witli.nuivering velocity, whenev er think this 'enormous outrage, peeps trated•yesrly, as It is, by the settled polity _ of the country. Farmers and laborers, these wrongs.urer imposed epaulets, chief' ly.•beistsse you bare not reed sad learned ; and 'aphid will con tinue to swindle you, so long as vou *word books.. If the John and Jesse Lineolus. of 14'004i:hopping andfalloW'burniiiimatories, bed bevn our rulers MA law•Mikeri; as they shetildhaveleen, would theie robberies-of .thetu their succeletors bavpen as they Innie happened, and are , hsppemnit Never. And why were they not, and sre • ngil , our ndeno acid law-makeri I Solely bo• Mutat thai dij aotoind,arik_ not; educate ea that lama , Farmers, I havi not time to point out a tithe of the toms you sustain by your indif. ference to truthful education. • Would that I could arouse you to your true interests in this Metter ! You owe it to yourselves, to your children, and to your country, :to edu cate' more thoroughly. D eed my voice, for .1 am one of your number. I too, have chop ped and burned fallOws, and Logged fur days and weeks; and it dues my very soul - good. to shake the brawny band of.the sooty-faced man whO piles up the blaCkened timber. ' I know his.toils, and sympathize most deeply with him. Then heed my words, farmers.— Take counsel together over when I re peat,' educate, educate, educate. - And by education, I do not mean the bungling reading, writing and ciphering les sons your children get in the dingy hovels hung by the road's side. They afford no more light to 'the mind, than to the highway, in which they stand, in midnight darkness. They are only distorted spectres, furhidding approach. Nor do I mean the . tinseled flummery of boarding schools ; or galvanized Latin lessons of the three months rural ac ademies. These do .not educate. Educe- tion is experience, and the properly educated young men of twenty-one, has the practical knowledge of the•man of sixty ; and can your young unlettered boys of seventeen, and list less girls of fifteen years, impart this ? About as much as they can teach stones to talk. No, farmers ! Discard all these.— Build school-houses equal to your meeting houses, and employ better men, if they can be found, to fill them, not occasionally either, but constantly, to instruct your children in book-learning, and the practical duties and courtesies of social life. Do this, if it takes 'half your farnts. Do this, and joy will come to your hearts, and our nation will be cover ed with glory. Government should establish an agricultu ral school and experimental farm in , every county of the Union, where the fiirmer's sons oould be made familiar with the chemist's laboratory, the botanist's class-books ' and the laws of mechanism. This the farmer's right, and the well-being of the nation de mands it. If this were done, a tide of pros perity, wealth, and national glory would come, that would east into the shade all.past experience. And when will this be done ? When the farmer edueates, and takes the rule into his own hands. Not before. Grasp ing. capital and selfish politicians have so much to look atter, occupy and divert so much of the time of our legislation in their schemes ut personal aggrandizement, that the necessary fiscal appropriations can hardly be carried through that immense slough, the Congress of the United States. Little., there. fore, can be expected until the 'farmer, the worker. the "hewer of wood, and drawer of water," rises' from his sleep of ages, and reigns over the land, that peace, plenty, and halcyon summer may come to the nations of the earth. And that he will, is jiist as cer tain as that to-morrow's sun will rise. Al ready light is radiating the horizon of his heretofore darkened sky. Farmers and workers, have, and are, to some extent, edu cating; and intelligent, liberal-minded-.men, in other callings, are striving with these, to awaken public attention to the wants of this long neglected interest. Through their •ef forts, the government is distributing *Meng farmers seeds .gratuitously. Despise not little things. This is a beginning in the right direction, of your approximating noon-day glory. Then we have agricultural journals, and societies, and above, all, a farmers high school, 'throwing light on our path, and tend ing to lighten our task and beautify our cal ling. True, the hazy fiiekerings of thine dis tant lights, distort the objects before us, and cause - us falls and bruises; but the icy in crustation which has so long manacled our minds down to thsfsrtb we worked, is giv ing way before theqp-coming sun, and the early shoots of A living, beauteous green, are already manifesting , themselves. In order still further to impress upon my audience the disadvantages to the- country, and the difficulties which stand in the way of the progress of the farmers, allow me to. ii. lustrate by giving the experience of another actual beginner, in fitrming, in our county, but of a very different character from that of John Lincoln. Fifteen years ago, a young Couple, whom I shall call Wiiliam..and Mary Fletcher, left . one of. our eastern cities, and removed to Bradford County, with the view of farming. This lady and gentleman had 'been reared and educated in the city, and had imbibed all the peculiar fastidiousness about. dress, and the foibles of etiquette, common to large towns. They were married young, and Mr. Fletcher started in business as a nle'rehant. In five years be failed, but managed to save a few thousand dollars, out of the wreck.— Being now out o: employment, and-having a poetic idea of agriculture, be bought a farm in the wildest and poorest locality of our . county. This property had been under cul tivation quite a number of years and the, buildings were respectable. On , all sides, however,it was surrounded with dense hemlock forests, which new settlers were just - begin ning tq break into, at the time of the purchase alluded to. Mk F. had read accounts of ex traordinary crops, and the improved methods of raising theta; which oceastunally appeared' in newspapers at that time ; bet, beyond this, very little; and, as to practical farming, he ;bad not the remotest coneeption. Ile had ' not planted a seed of any kind ; and all-in all, was about as green a subject, for a far mer, as can well be imagined. Both be and his lady had exalted ideas of-the .ease, great , profits and beauty of this. calling ; and, of ' t course, were most sanguine of success and happiness in it. The road to their new home Was rough, especially the list three miles, which surpassed enytbing they had ever, dreamed of beft.pre. At first, the ever-chang ing landscape, with mounterrn and valley, hill and•dale, coming and. receding; now passing gong the water's edge, bordered with craggy ' rocks, and wild gnarled trees; and then on high peaks 6 . l where:distanee fends enchant ment to dm view ;" and, =ore than all, the .miqestie grandeur end velvety green. of , the hemlock and pine; as they approached the north, brought frequent exelstnations id: miration from the travelers'; bist towards the last,' the roots of :the latter—fearfully: plenty :.uo,y fielding—over which they to pass, brought groans of ominousinr.part, ; and the fi ne city vehicle, with `spolOsi no "bigger than Your finger; talked ot Ziegler. This eine bet too loon, and the journey-wits • fin. isbed in a rode seut E drairer .br a pair ef halt starved stmts.- ..Tbe -foisting. .wAth - Which . *et 14 started,. and. wbO. 1 H. H. FRAZIER, PUBLISHER"---VOL8;NO. 446 them on the - ,way, Was by this time nearly crushed. Isr. and Mrs. Fetcher's bruises soon got well; and as they healed, th3lr spir its revived. They brought with them a good 'supplyo broadcloths, silks, cambrick, handkerchiefs, gaitered-boots, .kid gloves, silk hose," frilled garments, cologne, musk, and household fur niture to correspond. Light plows, barrow; and harness, were! also brought in.. The dwelling house was remodeled, and well fill ed with closets, all of which had ezeelleit lock's placed on them. The new corners, with-their finery, created a stir among the settlers; and their singular manners were the general tbeme of converse. tion. Curiosity prompted a few of the in habitants to make excuses to come and see for themselves. At first Mrs. Fletcher was frightened at the plainness of these' people, , but when she fuund they were. harmless, she would allow them to come on the veranda ; and after a while, she would even play on the piano fur them. Then help must be had, and these neighbors being willing to work, the likeliest looking among them were se lected to assist, or, rather, to do the work in the house and on the farm. For neither Mr or Mrs. Fletcher - 11 A ever done any heavy work, nor was it their intention to. do any Hors es,,osen cows, sheep, hogs, and poul try, were procured, and provender for all, and it was•no small trouble and. expense .to get all • these things together: The`•' people thought Mr. Fletcher very. rich; end money was extremely scarce among them ; and though . wanting to sell, they a:lo-Nl enormous • prices for every article. When- these matters were attended to, the garden wax ~,assailed with fresh . hands and new implements.• The'men thought it Was too early—it being the first of April—and plainly ; hinted as much: 11Lr. Fletcher received these adMonitions kindly, and believing he could contrive some way to obviate the cold and frost, on early plants; the work was contin- ued, his mind deeply set on planning. - When the borders were ready. Mr. F. conceived he had discovered, in .the few hours it took to prepare them; a sure:remedy against, frost. Full of this idea, and imagining what a won- der he would start among his men, if notover the countryfor he „intended to publiiih his discovery—he had holes ,made; one inch in diameter and eight inches deep, over his gar den beds. Hie radish, bean, pea, lettuce, and cabbage seeds, were then carefully_ p!ac. ed at the bottom of these nicely made boles, and the whole as nicely covered: I assure you, the frost did not hurt any of the plants that sprang from that seed, and it is needless to say that mine of it came up. ' - His, garden finished, Mr. Fletcher prepar ed fur planting. For the reason , that the soil .was black, he selected a low, wet piece of groUnd fur his corn. This he had plowed and prepared with great exactness. Having heard that crows and ground squirrels take up young corn, and having read that if the seed was tarred they would not, he had his well-coat ed with this resinous material. But he had to replant, for not a spear came tips Then -he sent to the city for guano. Of this article, as a fertilizer, he had heard much, but had no idea of its appearance. When.it came, its strong smell induced Mr. Fletcher to think it was spoiled, and he eras very angry for.a° time, at the supposed cheat. A gentlemen from a distance, however; suggested as it was bird,' manure' it could not have an aromatic odor, and that it had not, was , no evidence against the quality of the 'article. So it was concluded to use it. Withal, Mr. Fletcher was a humane, and an ingenious inan, and fearing that the smelt of the guano would sicken his men, he cut pieces of sponge into a peculiar shape, filled Ahern with cologne, and had them fastened over the mputh and nose of James and Philip.' Thus' 'fortified, these men went to work with the guano, Placing it 'ea the tender corn; but it did nut make it grow, and Mr, Fletcher.had to buy all -the corn he consumed for that year, notwithstand ing his _care and expense. Besides, James and Philip's faces - were worse for the cologne. It burned, and prodUced a tickling sensation. .This caused the men to rub with their un washed hands, which poisoned, and nearly proved the end of the two. Mr. Fletcher's 'kindness .to his "men; in striving t) mitigate the effects ut. labor on their person; 'induced them to impose= on him. Thus, James thought, as spading and cutting sod in thtgarden was hard on shoes, he should be supplied with that article, :in addition to his wages, which were already pretty well up; and,. in picking stone, Buck. skin mittens had, to be; supplied, to save the hands. . The order and system established on this farm, under Mr. Fletcher's regime, was re markable. Every thing was constantly un der, lot* and key. Every thing that-was con sumed, was weighed, and every thing that was produced, was weighed. The grain, the hity and grass, the animals ate ; and the bread and meat, the 'family and help ate ; all wax weighed out to each, and separately, as consumed. The eggs, because it was discov ered they were of different sizes ' ',were weigh; ed, as beit.g , a more just method of determin ing their ezaci value. But I hdye not time, nor would your pa tienee beiti with a minute recital of, all the singular pro ce sses, and, their results,. of Mr. Fletcher's twining operations. You can well imagine, that the incongruity of the means to the end, frequently, produced failures. And the settlers around; as well as the hired help, construed the watchfulness about the farm, into suspicious of their honesty, so they sought ways to pay back. Thus, Biddy thought the wood and water consumed about the bouse,l should also be weighed and locked up,though they were profusely abundant ; and • James and Philip would spend a good ,deal' of time in going for the granary key, and carrying:it back, often making two' journeys where one would hare served just as well., At onetime, the smoke-houie was chained and lo cked, .to the garden fence. At &Dottier, the warn house was . Chained and locked' to an apple- _ Then Mr. F. and his lady dressed too much fur the glen they' were in. This was made sport-ot A few of the young men bad lung rake made of flashy tuition, and placed on 'their 'cheek shirts; and some. of the , girls placed the same kind of article, enormginkly large, on pantalets prepared for the pOrpose. Thus dressed, they came to the intketiugs and timidity schools, Mr. Fletcher tonic -pains to get up at his re donee. For,yrith the “Cif• .lion of foibles„ the result , of early train ing, he was a good titling, and highly useful in his present locality, dot% Ids 'utmost while, , there to freak fkinday os tgai g h schools; and improve the roads. Ile - and his companion felt sensibly than reproofs. It was not their remotest inten tion to offend, or s Flo injustice to the peopis around them. It was hoivever, but tonsil. dent, that they had done the one, and pin!s baps, the other. Over this the,y grieved, Then the - absence of every thing like Rosie. ty, began to press heavily -upon .thein, The sudden transition front a densely populated city, to as dense a alirest, was foreshadowing bitter _fruit and it was becoming daitytrawe palpable to Mr. Fletcher that he was out of his element. In vain be strove to suit him. self to the position he was in. In via ebe pained - his body, and mortified his pride. to appease lit angry neighbors. He walrus. ing hard lessone, about this time. He was spirited and energetic, and finding that the people he had about him, were disc: posed, not only to ridicule 4 but to take ad vantage of his ignorance of country life, he discharged most of them; and worked himself. This, too, went hard. Many times he sat down and wept over the folly that had bro`i him to this plight. Then his wife begarr re ally to be miserable. At first, her mind was occupied in the arrangements going on-in her new home. . This and the novelty of, the 'scenes mound diverted her attention go '- time.' Then the birds came, and chirped- so Merrily ; and the frogs in the little pond, not far distant, gave tokens of wonderful glee its. the evenings. Besides, the forest trees wets . putting 'on their summer dress; and their shooting leaves, and budding flowers, begird. ed for a while: the tedious hours that-were , geuink longer and lo,nger. When these flit'. ed to rouse the drooping spirits, books were resorted to, fOr diversion. Stillorearisome hours came, and yet more wearisome days; and finally, birds, trees, flowers, and books, ceased to charm. Later - they became irk. some, and Mrs. Fletcher -could think , of notho ing but titU privileges, the society, and friends, she had left behind. Her wild; -wild home, - became abhorrent. She-was homesick t iind wept bitterly. ' ' , '-_ . Suffice it, that in a short time, Mr. Fletch• • er exhausted most of his ineans, on his farm. The gaudy bubble that flitted before his eyes, when leaving the city; had vanished; and left him a sadder man. ii. was now evident the farm whuld nut yield him a living; , So gatheririg up - what was left, he returned to- - • e the pla of his nativity, where- ihe was -pro vided ith a clerkship: by a relative. .- Thi4 adventure is a-reality ; and the trials of the Fletchers were only a little less. than" those•of the Lincoln: ' ' ' - iow Suppose Mr. Fletcher, had no rel!s tiiies in the city, to find employment for him, as is the case with many. whop) there. What would havebecome of him and his family in such a contingency'l They must live.' Per haps, at first, be would baye resorted to ques tionable means to secure this; then, step-by step, lima evil to crime. _Yes- s it is want of employment—necessity, - _whick drives two thirds of thsse oho go to ruin, to the vortex of despair, before they indulge in wrong; doing ; and had they employment, they - would become tolgt able,- many of them (food ci t izens. Ansi, by neglecting agriculture. goveimment has indirectly ; aided in producing *fearful amount of crime; until the iskl lanthrispist and economist -are alike alarmed fur its safety. For, if faem:labor was made attractive and remunerative, the idlers of our cities would be drawn to it. the govern. theist would give land and bounty for impror ing, establish agricultural schools, and riper: 'mental farms, dignity and succepa would ac crue to those who embark in it. ,TheFleteb ers, who sought in it a livelihood, and brought capital, enterprise, and taste, with them, need not sink for wantof knowledge of.agricelture, or be driven out, by the rudeness of an- un lettered neighborhood. The beneficial, re sults of such s procedure, on the part of our government, can'hardly ist- estimated. . -The products of the country would double in five years, and crime would almost • oesae. ;tin stead, government gives the land toe:Mlles& corporations, to speculate on. This keeps back improvement, and increases wealth in the hands of slew ; and produces corruption among these, and discontent among the ma -ny. Besides, government expends millions in making Commerce profitable, and has long given bounty to manufactures, thereby draw itig capital and enterprise into these pursuits. Why not do so, in respect to agricultural It will afford employment told/ the idlers in the land ;:and who can estimate the pod, that would flow' through - to . the 'natio% Mail these were tilling the soil 1 And all that is -necessary to draw them into it, is fergovern- - ment to do by it as it 'has done by( Com merce and Manufacture. ; Why not do this) -The influence of agriculture on society, is bet ter than either of these other great - industrial pursuits, end for this reason, too, it deserve* every encou ragemen t . men a governments can give to it. But when we took at it, as an ele rnent of human society, and remember -that all must sink without. and that -all `human progress depends on it, it is amazing that_Men and governments are so 'blind to the true in tereats of the nation and humanity, as to over look the demands of this calling, or weaken it by advancing the interests of others. As all depends on this ; all should strive to eko; vote it. - • But no, this. great essential, this health-be getting, elevating, and laborious emplohnent, fraught, as It is, with so many blessinOto rnugt be mole a rack of cruel -tortures , ,tothe 'Lincoln's. and a hideous deformity to the Fletchers., No, the privations of the one, is opening a wilderness, are not enough to de. ter; and whco,%y reason of insurmountable difficulties, he cannot pay for his land„it must be sold away from him--,improverneeti and '1 all—and the money , taken to tuivanee com merce. And the other can . have no, return for capital eshiusted in efforts to .raise . the. fitrtner's profession. This is not only but it is outrageously whiust.Not onlyerush ing in its effects on agricultureN as 'a , pursuit. - but invoking ruin on the COurstry at larite..- Oh, when will men;and governments be wisel. And now. P.llow•citizens, a few words eou cerning your duty to your own igricidtnral 1 do not say too much, when I tell you 'that it deserves your liveUeatsympatblesand most earnest support. It has the p tdis. bickering*, and jealcnodes, .o( ai ted ig. norance to contend with. I doubt not; a nd every inteliigent'man of the 0131111 % . rbetheM - Wafer, ltiet*lei Inereltent..la**; 40c= . tor owes it to hheselt and MS country, to bogi it up, by every means in his porn.. ITor,_ just Or proportinn as the farmil is Oita Ell