Richard Nugent, Editor The whole art of Government consists in toe art of being honest. Jefferson. siid Publisher VOL. I. STRDUDSBURG, MONROE. COUNTY, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1840, No 45. 3BBSBR JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN. TrcnT! t r!nll.irs ner annum in advance Two dollars and a quarter, half ycarly.-and if not paid before the end of the year Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their pa- pers oy a carrier 01 ow5iu'"vUT.UJw ; mv, ujiuwui, Win hi Mmmptl 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra. No naners iliscontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except at UlC option oi uiuxiuiiui. tr-7AcJrertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar: twenty-five cunts forevcrv subsequent insertion ; larger ones in proportion, liberal discount will bo made to yearly advertisers. ID All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. Having a general assortment of large elegant plain and orna mental lype, we are prepared to execute every ues cription of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Sfotes, Blank Beceipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. Trinted with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. JPOETItY. Tip and Tyler. Tune Green grow the Rushes 0. The " Cabin" boys required a song And so I've come to bring it, 0; And if you'ffbear with me so long, I'll stay and try to .sing it, too. (Chorus.) Then here's to each faithful Whig; And every lovely Smiler, too; For honest Lads and Lasses fair, Are all for " Tip and Tyler, too? T6o long our land has been the sport Of Hickory poles and knavery: And thoughtful men began to fear Our certain doom was slavery. , But here's to, &c. The' Hero qf the Hermitage Had gull'd the folks so gloriously, That all he did, and all he said, Was greeted most uproariously. But here's to, &c. And when his crew had fobbed our gold And nought -was left but dross for us He marches off, and tells the world, " I leave this people prosperous? But here's to, &c. The "little Fox" then seized the " Spoils? And did himself congratulate ; But Whigs detected all his wiles, And'warn'd him to absquatulate! So here's to, &c He tried to make his Treasury Notes The offices of Specie do: He plann'd a Standing Army next,' -v And call'd it all Militia, too J But here's to, &c. And then, as if to make our Tars All d-mn his eyes, and winkers, too His Secretary taunts the Brave, '- As " Cobblers? u Louts," and "Tinkers? 0! But here's to, &c. But why prolong the hateful tale Of knaves, and deeds, so scurvy, 01 The.People, in their wrath, have" sent . The Spoilers topsy turvy, 0. ' '. " So here's to, &c. Their doom, long since, was thus declar'd By one who is no novice, 0: - " The Penitentiary will reclaim J ' "Itsfugitivet in Office? 0! 1 ' . -So here's to, &c. , Then let Columbia's sons rejoice, ? -From Kennebec to Iowa; . . -1 . And let their notes of gladness far' Mid Rocky Mountains die away.' ' So here's to, &c The'U say the Whigs are noisy Blades At timss, we own, it may be so: We've holed the Fox of Kinderhook And waken'd Kendall's Babies, 0! -So here's to, &c. For noise, and Foxhunts, such as this, We think we have our reasons, 0: But now we'll settle down in peace, t, And hope for better seasons, O, , -So here's to, &c. May every Lass throughout the land, Make up her mind, and marry soon; And he to whom she gives her hand, Support the Patriot Harrison! Then here's to each faithful Whig3 And every lovely Smiler, too: fror honest Lads, and Lasses fair, Are ali for " Tip and Tyler, too? f M.I. II.. .J I. J ... "You're a fool," said a coxcomb, one. day ,to a, clown' And the answer lie got was a-queer one; "Why, dang it! you partly sayrtrue, I. must owni 'If I ben't quite a fool, I be near one," AN ELOQUENT ADDRESS, JSY HJLCJBLOJLAS SJI5iE,13, Esq. At tiie PIfiiladolpisia Agricultural 3x5i5Eiio52s - tjentlemen we are assembled to witness our first exhibition since the recent donation by the State. Our society, while engaged with all its own resources m improving our agriculture, appealed to the .Legislature, as consisting main ly of farmers, and asked, that wliile so many millions were expended in the transportation of our prouueuons, someinmg snouid be given lo assist in rendering those productions themselves more abundant and more valuable. According ly a law was passed, placing, every year, at the disposal of the Society a sum of fifty dollars for each member of the Legislature for the city and county of Philadelphia, to be paid out of tne taxes to be raised within the city and coun ty. 1 his, though small in amount, is impor tanl from its examplo; nor in entering upon the tirst enjoyment ol it, should we omit our thank to the Legislature for this mark of regard for the- farming interest, to the members from the city and county who liberally supported it, and more especially to those members of this society to whose exertions we owe the success of this ap plication among whom it would be great injus tice not to name George W. Roberts, R. T. Potts, and Captain Thomas Hayes: but in an especial manner are the acknowledgements of all farmers due to Mr. James Gowen, who is always in the front rank where public spirit or private liberality is needed. Ihe Society have thought that no employ ment of the additional means confided to them, would be so useful as to bring the farmers to gether, exhibit tho best specimens of their in dustry; and by small but honorable premiums to encourage a generous competition in every branch of farming productions. The prizes for i ..... . tne best crops must be decided at a later part of the season. But the exhibition of farming stock, and. farming implements, is now before you; and it is made my duty to add something appropriate to the decision. This I do cheer fully and what I shall say will be very plain, very practical, and, as you will learn with pleas ure, very short. My purpose is to say a few words about the real condition of farming in Pennsylvania its natural advantanges its ac quired means; and then suggest such improve ments as may make our farms more productive. There are perhaps few portions of the earth more favored by nature than Pennsylvania. Her soil is excellent and various; while even the parts least adapted in themselves for agri- culture, airman tne best encouragement to it, for the hills which reject the plough, are filled with coal and iron, which collect large masses of people to be fed by the farmers. Her cli mate is a happ)' medium between the long win ters of northern regions, which close the earth for so many months against farm labour, and consume so much of its produce in carrying the farm stock over long months of idleness, and, on the other side, the unvarying heat of south ern latitudes, often unhealthy and unproductive, where both man and cattle, degenerate. In this climate almost every production may be natural ized, so that in point of soil and season, arid va riety of productiveness, Pennsylvania is distin guished. These natural advantages she has also' the means ofimproving by artificial means; for the limestone, so great -an element in farming, is found everywhere, in great abundance. Plaster of Paris is obtained easily and at low prices, from her neighbor New York: the large cities furnish vast supplies of animal manure; while, on the other side of tho Delaware, lies a great belt of green sand, erroneously called marl, an original deposit of the ocean, where, among bones of extinguished races of animals, and rel ics of a submerged world, there is brought up this sand, highly useful even in its natural state, and if mixed with lime, as it should be, of great efficacy. The tmpleincnts of husbandry come next in order, and these we have of the very best kind, much belter than similar implements in Europe lighter; more easily handled; and there are one or two m common use with us, such for in stance as the horse-rake, and that giant instru ment the cradle, which are unknown or unused abroad. In truth, our people have had so much to do. with comparatively small means that their ingenuity has been tasked to invent the mdst efficient instrument, and to make the most ac tive use of them. Thus there are two words in almost all languages, and well defined in most dictionaries, but of which Europeans have scarcely an idea, and these are the axe and the plough. To cut down a tree, the great business of America settlers, is a strange event to a Eu ropean farmer. And then it may make us smile to see, as we may on the continent of Europe, at the present time, a whole drove of horses I. have myself actually seen eight in a single plough; and sometimes the whole" quadruped force of the farm, three or four cows, and per haps a bull or two, with the aid of several hor ses, toiling slowly through tho great work of turning up the sod nay, even in some parts of England, at this moment, may be seen six large horses, with two fullgroyvn men, returning from the field after having ploughed duiing the day, three-quarters of an. acre where one of our ploughmen, with a pair of horses, would have got through an acre or an acre and a half. From the implements let us turn to our stock of animals. v And first of our Horses: Beginning .with the highest blooded stock, I think it probable that the United Stales possess quite as good a race as there is in Europe. The prevailing opinion is, that the Arabian Horse is the original of that, animal. I doubt the historical fact; but if it be so, ho is the pa rent stock of the horse, just as the father of all apples is the. Crab, which has been sweetened by cultivation into the Bell-flour. Undoubted ly, the Arabian has improved the English Horse; has given him finer sinews, more com pact bones, and greater intelligence, till the cross, has become avowedly the first of his kind. The truth is, that a race is but a quick -succession of long jumps, and the little light Arab is out jumped by the gigantic stride of the stronger, larger, longer-legged English Horse, who has beaten him on.Iiis own sands in the East, and would distance him on any course in Europe. Indeed, the very first Arabian imported into England two centuries ago, called the Markman Arabian, was constantly beaten; and my im pression ia, that no Arabian. horse ever did win a race in England. The belief of our breeders is, that whatever good there may be in the Ara bian is exceedingly slow in-showing itself; that he has already given to the English horse all he can give,, and that it is on tlie whole safer to adhere to the highest bred English stock., rather lhan risk lis degeneracy by any inferior mix ture. Our blood horses, therefore, come direct ly from England; and it is rather odd that the ivinsr ot Jimgiand s stables, winle mere was a king and he had stables, furnished the highest priced horses for republican America. Of the comparative estimation of the English and Ara bian Horse, we have lately seen a striking ex ample. The Imaum of Muscat sent to the Pres ident of the United Stales two Arabian Horses, which, from the character of the giver, we are bound to presume were of the highest class. These horses were sold at public auction; and no one could be found to give more for them than six hundred and fifty dollars for one, and six hundred and seventy-five for the other. Now, in the same neighborhood where these were sold, are very spirited breeders, who would not buy these Arabians at even so low a rate, but who had actually bought from the stables of tho King of England, at the price of twenty five thousand dollars, a favorite horse, Priam, one of whose colts is in the exhibition here. Even as between the English breed and our own, the impression on this side of the water is, that for some time past the tendency of Eng lish breeding is rather to encourage speed than bottom; that their horses are becoming leggy, and that the descendants of the English stock, in this country, hate more endurance, more bot tom for long heats, than their English ancestors. The question, whenever it is tested, will be de cided perhaps by a few seconds. This style of horses, although the use to which he is gene rally applied, is out of the way of the farmer, is yet very interesting lo us; for his good qualities all come down through the inferior races; and the Godolphin Arabian, to which the English Horse owes much of his superiority was actu ally a cart horse m Pans. Our ordinary race of farm horses is extreme ly good. The warmth and variableness of the climate have settled down the stiff and heavy frame of the European Horse, and given us a race of quick, alert animals, admirably fitted to second the activity of the farmer, himself. So with respect to Cattle, we have almost every variety, and the best of all the varieties. The emigrants often bring their best and favor ite animal, the passenger vessels bring cows to give milk, during their voyages, and be then profitably sold here; and these are generally of the highest kind; commerce imports, from eve ry quarter, the animals which will pay best, and are therefore the beat at home; and, spirited breeders have gone into the English market and brought over some of the highest priced animals. Tho result is, that we have a great accumula tion of stock of every description. There am the Alderneys, with their rich milk, itself a cream. Tho Ayrshires, copious givers of milk strongly inclined to butter, with forms fitted for the butcher. The devons, an ancient race, brought by the first settlers of New England, and indicating their descent by their strong re semblance to the improved Devons, with which our stock has been of late years abundantly re cruited. Fitted, by their milkiness, for the dai ry, by their delicate flush for the knife, by their quickness for the plough, they claim to be sec ond to no other race: and if second to any, on ly to the Short horned Durham, which is so fa miliar to us all as to require no description, which undoubtedly now unites the greatest mass of suffrages in iis favor, as combining the qualities of abundant milk, of easy fattening, of early maturity, and of excellent food, more than any other race of horned cattle. Of Sheep, too, we have all the varieties. 1 he Leicester, with their early fitness for the knife, and their large, carcases and large wool -the Merino, for. its t mailer yiell of rich wool ihe Southdown, excellent for both wool and carcass and, finally, wc have a less known breed cojning into reputation ; it is the Tunisian, or broad-tailed sheep; originally sought mainly for the carcase, bin, having proved itself very hardy, well acclimated vhen crossed by other breeds, so as to acquire a finer wool, it may become a standard stock among us. Nor are we less favoured in Sici7ie. : - We have all the breeds;; among others pe culiarly our own is what is called the Chester county breed, and the Berkshire breed, just coming into great and deserved estimation among us. Even the common breeds that run about without knowing their extraction,- are often admirable. I remember well that Penn sylvania Quaker farmer, Jacob Brown, comr mander-in-chief of the American Army during the last war, told me how much he was struck by the beauty of the hogs which he saw run ning about Philadelphia ; and I have since of ten had, occasion to admire them. Of all these various animals we have spe cimens now before us which we may all ex amine, and if wo desire to obtain them at rea sonable rates ; and no one can doubt the real economy to a farmer of possessing these im proved breeds. An inferior animal lake's as much trouble and as much food as a good one, and then the care and the exnense are often thrown away upon cattle that will give neither milk nor beef. How many stunted milk cows do we see who may be said to go dry all the year round how many steers who, after em- tying a whole corn crib, at last, in the spring look like the crib itself, all ribs without, and all hollow inside! But crossing and training have created animals who turn at once into milk or beef every thing we put into them who give plenty of milk, if you want milk, and plenty of fat, if you desire beef, and who, coming earli er into the dairy or the market, save a whole year's expense of feeding. I hope, therefore, that we may profit by the present opportunity of improving our slock, and encourage the spir ited .breeders who place the means of doing it in our power. Nor are the productions of Pennsylvania les3 numerous than iis animals. The great staples are wheat, rye, barley, oats, buckwheat and above all; Indian com, a plant not estimated in Europe, but one of the most valuable presents which the new world has made to thu old worth almost all others in the extent of its yield and the variety of its uses: with a stalk ten or fifteen feet high, every inch of which is useful in the barn-yard, and a grain which to men supplies a variety of healthful and de licious dishes, and to cattle is ihe quickest Tat tener while it gives the last exquisite flavor to their flesh. Having thus spoken of ihd advantages which we Pennsylvania farmers enjoy, proceed to the less agreeable, but more profitable inquiry why our farms are not productive as they ought to be and I make ihe comparison between Penn sylvania and England, on the whole, the best farming country in Europe ; and our English friends must understand, that while we amuse ourselves occasionally with some of their pe culiarities, we pay them the - highest compli ment we can, by proposing them as the con stant models of our farming. Now why is it with all the natural advantages in our lavor, the English farmers beat us? I will tell you. what 1 think of it. In the first place We do riot do justice to our own profession. Farming is not liked, either among the young people because it is consid ered a lonely exile from gaiety or among the calculating, because it is thought unproductive. This last, is I think a total misapprehension ; and, as I regard its correction as essential to our success, I venture to say that farming ought to be more profitable in Pennsylvania than in England. The common notion is that the high price of- labor in Pennsylvania makes farming unproductive, and the opinion is repeated with out examination, till at last it is generally be lieved. Now tho. productiveness of farming, like the productiveness of every other occupa tion, depends on ihe expense of raising an ar ticle and tho price you can get for it when it is raised. These expenses are the rent of the land, the taxes, the manure, the prices of labor tng cattle, of laboring implements, and of labor- ing men. Tho land which can be rented in America for two or threo dollars, could not be rented in England under 10 or 12 dollars an ac,ro so that already the land itself cost throe or four times as much. When you have got posses sion of-the land, tho tax gatherer, and the tithe man soon make their appearance, and take from tho farmer fifty three' per cent, on his rent. -Here there are no tithes, and the tax out of the immediate' vicinity of the city improvements, would scarcely be one-tenth of the English tax. so that while on an English farm of two hundred acres' the rent and charges, would be about $3,000 The same rent and charges would here be 700 Making at, once a' difference of $2,300 Next, nllmandres are.cheapar in Pennsylva- cheaper In themselves, and rendered more cheap by the facilities of transportation. Laboring horses are about one-fourth cheaper in Pennsylvania; and moreover, the work which two horses do in England is generally done here by one. Cows, too are much cheaper here. Laboring implements are cheaper and better, the wood being so much lower priced and dur able. Of ail these elements of work, there re mains only laboring men who are cheaper in England; they are cheaper by about 30 or 33 per cent.; but even say that wages are 50 per cent, higher in Pennsylvania than hi England. But then, although the nominal rate of waes is, higher, yet you actually get more work done for the money. The climate gives you more long working days than can be relied upon in the climate of England, where om-door work is necessarily much suspended,' and the Amer ican laborer works better, for the very reason that he i3 paid better. And the proof, which seems decisive is that although mouey wages are higher here, piece-work, contract-work whether to dig a canal or to reap a field, is done cheaper in America. And, accordingly, one of our most intelligent Philadelphia county far mers, Mr. Walker an Englishman, always' de clared that his farm work was done twenty per cent, cheaper in Pennsylvania, than in England. But supposing it to be higher labor is only one of the elements for we have seen that the rents are three or four times as hiph taxes ten times as high manures, implements, cattle, all dearer and far overbalancing any difference of wages, were it even real. Let us now see what arc the prices obtained for what Is raised. "Wheat ia higher in Enafajid flesh markets are higher. But wheat forma only one-forth of the crop; and on the otfier hand, the great staple, wool, is dearer here;; potatoes ate twice or thrice as high here; and, therefore, the English compete with us in our own market ; turnips, cabbages, all vegetables generally dearer; so that, after all, taking tha average, farm produce ia not higher, or very little higher, in England, while all the materi als of raising it arc much higher there so thaS on the whole, farming ought to be as lucrative in Pennsylvania, as in England. With regard to wages it may sound strange ly, yet I believe it to be true, that the real in terest of all farmers is, that wages should be high, and for this reason. A laboring man is not a mere machine;-a human poor-box, into whose mouth is put a daily number of cents never to re-appear, but a living being with wants and desires, which he will not fail to gratify the moment he possesses the means. If he can earn only a scanty pittance, just enough to keep him alive, he starves on accordingly his food, bread and water, a half-fed, halfclad, wholly untaught animal, with a useless mouth full of carnivorous teeth. But if his wages in crease, he instantly enjoys them in comforts ; in clothes for himself and family; and as he ri ses in the scale, ventures on the taste of meat. He employs a shoe-maker; a tailor; a hatter; a butcher; and these in turn, purchase the mate rials of their trade from the farmer himself. The laborer becomes thus a customer of him self, and the prayer of other customers and the farmer receives back with abundant interest the .difference which he advances in the first instance between high wages and low wages. It is for this reason that one of our shre.wdst farmers used to ssy, yes,. give our labourers good wages, and they will buy our beef. Thu3, too, tho bounties of Providence go round, a be neficent circle and, after making the labourer better fed, better clad, better taught in short, a better man, the farmer himself is richer for the very benefits he dispenses. Depend upon it, there is no surer sign o national prosperi ty than high wages and God grant that for many a long year it may be the lot of otic countrymen, who subsist by the labour of their hands, to work well and to live well. And now we come to the real reason whjr our crops do not equal those of England. It is, that our farms are all too large; too large for iho means we employ in farming them, Agri culture is the only pursuit I know, where the owner does not employ his capital in his bust-, noss. He rents or buys a large farm, and then has nothing left to stock it with. He might as well rent a large store without goods enough to fill a single corner of it. In England, itls supposed necessary, before renting land, that the teuant should have a working capital, of thirty or forty dollars an acre, to employ. It is calculated thai, besides lime and otlmr en riching suhstaiu-es, the cost of the mere animal manures applied to the soil of England, amoums. to three hundred millions of dvlhj -Deing moro than the rnlue of the vvnole of its foreig.t com morco. 1 et n6 grateful soil yields back wiih interest -SJ1 that is thus lavished upon it. And, sq it would do here, if we would only trust the earth with any portion of our capital. But this we rare-do. A farmer who has made any money' spends it not in his business, but in some oth--er occupation. He buys more land when ua, ought to buy more manure; or he puts out his money in some joint stock company, to convert sunshine into moonshine; or else he buys shares in some gold mine or lead mine. Rely upon. nia-