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Office, ehittai , Square, S.. W.! Corner; ,atiite,Old Sta. nd. TEIVVIS OF 'PLTALICATiOg : The; ApRALD .&.. EXPOSITOR is . 01)fished, weakly; on a douide royal sheet, at DOL: LARS, per annum, payable within three months froin'the time of subscribing; on mivo•nerians AND PIPIT 'OENTEI, at the mill of the No subscription will be taken :for less thin six and Re paper ditcontinued until ulliti.: rearitgesare paid, except .at ,the option of th: publisher, and a failute ! to notify. a.dieContinu• mice will considered a 'new': erigegcmcnt. • . • Advertising will . ,be•dorrenn ,thonsuatterms• .„: Letteis Co insure attention must be Post'paid. ' . -• TICE WORTH 0,,r WOMAN. 'TOM Tfirr GERMAN Or ECIIILLES. Honored be WomAri!. she beams on tIM sight, Graceful and fair, - like a being of light Scatters arnimd her wheree'ver she strays; Roses Of bliss 0n• our thorn-covered "‘Vaie; Roses or Paradise, sent from above, To be gathered and twined in a garland of love MAN, on Paskiiiii% stormy oscan,, Tossed by surgeti mountain high, , Courts the burricsine's commotion, , Spurns tit reason's feeble cry., Loud the tempest roars around him, Loud the tempest roars yithin,, , Flashing lights of hope confound him, .Stun'il with Life's incessant din. Wonnin invites him With bliss in bar smile, 'ro ecasefrom his toil and be happy awhile: WhiapeVing wopittgly—eolne to my bower—, (in not in search of the phantom of power— I and wealth aro, illusory—come Happiness temples of Ilome Matt With fht.y stern and savage, - Persecutes his brother man, lieeklcss if Ire bless or ravage, • Action! nction-stillhis plan. Now creating; now destroying, . • Ceaseless Wishes tear his breast; E Yerßeeln gt . Still to be, but nev6;tilest. Worivin,conttnted in' silent reliose, Enjoys in its beauty Life's lloWer us it bIoWS, And waters and tends it with innocent heart; • Far richer than man. with his treasures of.nie, And ‘viser_hylor m the.cireles ennfin'd, ' Than In; with his science and lights ofttre mind. . Coldly to himself confining, . . ' Man disdains the gentler arts . ; • li:nowelli not the bliss arising . Frorn the interchange of hearts. Slowly tbrough his hosoin stealing, Floss the 'genial current-on, ~ 'Till hy age'sfro'st congealing, It is hardened into stone. She, like theJtarp tleit instinctively rings, - Aslltenight-bresthing zephyr soft sighs onthe strings, Responds to each impulse with iteady reply, Whether sorrow or pleasure her sympathy try; And tear-drops and smiles on her countenance play, Like the sunshine and sholvers of a morning in May. Through the range of Itian's dominion, Terror is the ruling word— And the standard of opinion • Is the temper of the sword. Strife exults, stud pity blushing, From the scene departing flies, • here,to battle madly rushing. Brother upon brothcr 'Woman commands with a milder control-- She rules by enchantment the realms of the soul ; As she glances around in the liblSt of her smile; 'Tile war of the passions is hushed for n while, And discord, content from his fury to cease, Reposes entranced on the pillows of peace. I= GOY. SE WA RD'S ADDRESS, At the Annual .Fair of ~ the New York State Ag ricultural. Society. .AT TIIE CAPITOL, ALBANY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 FELLOW emzxxs:---The display of ani mal and vegetable productions, the exposi tions of culture and the trial ofimplements of tillage, under the patronage of the New York State Agricultural Society, are com pleted; and it only remains to confer the civic prizes which have b?en so honorably won. Shall scenes so animating though 's° peaceful, so instructive though so simple,. pass without comment? • If :our country has a citizen the philanthropy and learned in the phil osephy.of agriculture ; eminent in.politicel wisdom and. transcendent in. eloquence, here are his fortimMul his theme. ~Such a citizen 'you' have sxpected'to hear. Let mY - temeritY in assuming-the place he has left, vacant and others have declined ; And an apology in the gratitude which the abundant , kindness of my fellow-Citizens has inspired.*- • • In that - time-worn: .Tow - Orwhich - tells of niany.a deed of, , treachery and tyranny,the , . British Governmerit exhibits the armor and arms of Kings, Nobles, Knights, Soldiers, and Seamen; *he have borne the strndard of , Sr: • George 'arottitd 'the' circumference , of the Globe.''_Franee, milt!), pride more re-: fimreit displays the galleries of the Louvre, , thechefs d'ouvre:Of .her. artists (with. what ) slif-y*retains productions of the pencil and: the chisel ,of•••which , N.apoleon despoiled the, nations' of Europe., • These ,•nloiithents; excite VdMiritleit;: . but they • leave generous and: en`. moved; owhile4he benevolent. tnindfrecog rates in 'the aXet‘ theplew anti'the , loath; Okeittiret ! 'cliiiizitiott . :' and " 4 hihnitilty,-;ind tirk 6 *ai,it,relAt'AY - (oo44.'' , o l ::v,ari hove . tl#cv; e!llkelJ itihmensti, of ..secial, life that arts'nielidY - ofriamental have ever pro. duced,t, ; lieed:tve Overvalue( •• our :stri. cul tu rat intreniiiini t (Or: besteti-vicaigerated , a , e l l'1111.?:Art;nw ~lntl el rArebid‘eab oxpot! , thA, • , ,F, fii Q2311; I‘, .1: I'2 $25.4“: NEE inferiority of our such 00i8$ci. the Univeitiities of Europei , and• the defiiiency, 1:4 1 our, arti inns in learning and 'exPerichte. live May yet maintain that all scienti(ic4e4uirements here, andall inventions, pass immediately ,to the general Useand 'coniiihnte directly to the general -welfare. Such are now our means of ditrusing and 'Preierving heer ledge, that no reallyuseful invention - can either be lost or fait to he employed in every region " — Of 'our conctry. let this estivel,", ' r, • • --;;•L', 7 i.-4-=‘!,Pastoralb , _ sweet And rurally , pagnificeptp. : . be prestified, and:t4e . inereasing emulation of our yeomanry and' inechanies maintaia ed,, and the. ellect . Will. be seen not'only . hi the improvement of 'Agriculture, liqt in the amelioration of the -character of the Peo ple. Thirty years before the Revolution ary war, at a celebt.ation in Nlassachusitte, the Matrons and..Maridens of Boston peared on the Mall, each industriouslyply ing the busy ; spinning-wheel. ,Need it then-eXcite Stifprizie that our sister State now excels with the shuttle, and extorts Wealth from the - fladds, the- ice: and the rocks? The, character of a people may be studied in their amusements. The war like Greeks fixed their epochs on the re= currence of the Glympic . games. The luisbandmen of Switzerland at stated per-. iods celebrate,the introduction of the vine. Well may• we, then,' continue ovations in honor of Agriculture, Fltiethiwhile they give cxpsessiim to national rejoicing pro- Inote . the welfare of our country' and the good-of. FARMERS of NEW Yonx- - --•you, .wise -ly in every district end every region the . .various speCies_ _of : plants—and adopting-such as find our soil, and climate most congenial; in introducing new bra - bate of culture and mechanic industry; in choos ing but of-domestic and .finieign_ Steck the animal's Which propagate most rapidly,with the least expenseof subsistenee,and yield the largest returns:'for the . ,husbaridman's rare; in:stimulating )livention to the dis covery of new_prineiples of tillage, ma chines and implements, fur increasing -the fertility of the soil-and-the -productiyeness of human labor. But these efforts alone; well conceived and bettefieent as they arei do not fulfil the responsibilities .of the American farmer. • 'Similar exertions, though less effective, have been made by the tillers of the earth in every age,. how ever benighted, and in'every country, how ever subjected. The God of Natbre has given•us a territory stretching through fifty degrees'of longitude with almost the breath of the'temperate zone, embosoming unmet.- 9115 lakes and traversed...by capacious rivers. Every variety of soil north of the tropics, and every Mineral reconrse,with mountain' forest and plain, are abundantly supplied. We, stand in relation to this wide territOry . not unlike the progenitor of our race in re gard to, the earth , over which he received dominion from the Almighty. He has per muted us tq learn wisdom from the rugged experience of almost sixty centuries and establish a system of goiernment new and peculiar, which, while it effectually se cures personal rights and domestic tran- ' quility,does not favor war, and is not adap- 1 ted to aggression;, *Melt chastens avarice and represses ambition, which favors equal-' ity, subdues individual power, , and stimu,- lates, strengthens and combines the power, of the masses—a system resting on the, consent and kept in action only by the agency of the governed. To these advan tages is added a social organization which rejects in every form the principles - of in-' voluntary or reluctant labor and gradation among the members 'of,the State, and by offering equal rewards calls forth the equal industry and enterprise of every citizen.--. These peculiarities of our political and so- cial condition indicate an era in civilization and ~inspire a generous -confidence that it may lie our privilege to open for our rice the way to a brighter and better destiny than has yet attained. Hitherte civilized men,'enslaved or oppres sed, haie whether, edVaneement from the savage state of ,existence , was blessing,„ and , have struggled for liberty as if mere libertylwas the end of human •achievertient. But ,We have learned' that civil' liberty is . only one '.of the conditions of human happiness; and is .desirable ‘o4y,.,bec a u e e, it favors that social 'attvanietiient '!which , in the.'eve'rful j filling of mankind, • 'Agricultdfrat . improvement Atatefbetin'' last, ti t 'it should be'first:'' 'B ' y' Agricultute ,, nations exist;. 4 auppnyta, and oodles maniiindt it furnishes the. •resources for,.protettion end defence, and the moans even of rtYnral''im peo*OniViii and 'lntellectital'''etiliiiia;iori even.S,lates,,may,,exist by , excrcisin the. mecht.miplArt#,,ox,bygnii)g:dnwn 'to: the sea in ships 'but' there.. !nun- nevertheless be sqmiwlierei some larger 'agriefilititral'iOnP indispensable even in spel. ferfnk..4)3oCie ty. t •I'; Tin t ' Ag i,cessoiy, tninerale,., tran, , Aaadi copper, aqd ati!ar , y6l cause they ; are erttploy e d in o.o:o'griatdi tuo;iortn ptnparing , its . oTtiattplinnitfoatii ;4.41304.40146440100t)W,00ntient P11 4616 41 1 44600(0Vi00i',4,1*5"i4 a 4 IFY‘Ei-f‘zyl'fimi !,3 2(9141152 MEM MEE S ~ ~li i,'s: t... - , '.' ' •• , 11. , 8 EXP:OI3I:7OIt?'O77 , MY'LIV.I 4 N . . . . • ~ ":f.",• 41;040, 4 141+- 1 11MUCM , ' 01 1 .011 fPnat36 6 = • X - * /t i asics•gmli:** =ME of . imlustry. , Other interests may rise and fall,; anoroiltei' nieseett :may • ;cembine; , ':oll4 solve' and 'reeontiribei'and the' agricultural mass be`seatiely'affdeted, but* : •the•Whele . body - politie eympathise whin this interest is:cleprevietl stul`this class suffers . . oPt4aces and lords'tnay flourish or rna,l , fade,...' A ,breath can make them, as mbristith. bait:nada; ; But, .a bold peasantry, their oouritry,'4 pride,l—..• When once destroyed, can never be-supplied:, • •Itis an viottu respnneibility c ; of the ; Ameriean .people to‘testore the "netural:and pinper'', order of venterits, by renovating, agriculture - - for this Ie the ten, dency r of our , institutions ; Motile]. in other that -society ' , ..necessarily consists, of, tv4.Claiies::- . =the ruling feti and the governed :'many.:.! The :Islip. pre-de, signated; tinder: the: ; meet governorent as the "laboring the polished countries of ,the santry,". and in the ruder North as "Serfs," Here we know, not as. a class, Serfs, . Pea santry, or Poor, and the laboring many constitute - . seciety. Whether designedly or not, they who apply. to our condition analogies deriVed from monarchical or. aris tocratic States would mislead us, and those &Calve themselves who expect that our government will operate otherwise than for the 'security and , benefit of the . masses.—; The Legislators of .our country— are_ its citizens; and , since the predominating mass of citizens consists of tillers of the .soh the American-: Farmer is the America' Statesman.-_ government, therefore, necessarily tends to sustain and promote agrieulture : In Europe the cost of land fit for tilling is twice or three. times greater, than here; the priCe of labor here is more than double harm Eitt'epO. - -Qur land is, flierefore tivated imperfectly,' and its pToductkins are • • seldom Ninal to one half its capacity. Titus one of•our . great :advantages is. counter . - balanced by a deficiency of physical force Notwithstanding our pOptilation intignients with unprecedented rapidity, by domestic increase and_immigration-yet_ such- is the naild for-labor and 'service in commer cial tOwns;and in the improvement of roads _4rttl rivers, aridso .attractive are our new settlements in the West, that the deficiency • of labor continues the same, -and its value -.ordinary, circumstances conitantly increases. Immigration 'therefore is an auxiliary to agriculture. The condition of' society in.EurOpe fa vors immigration. The nations are repos.: ing after long and exhausting wars. The masses increase in disproportion to dick territory and subsistence ; and althiiugh • n 'democratic spirit is abroad, slowly reno vating their institutions, there is still a rest-, less desire to participate in • our social ad vantages and enjoy our perfect liberty.— But with the sturdy, enterprising and vir tuous immigrant, there -Will also arrive on our shores; the infirm; the indolent and the depraved, while a change of home and country is always liable to be attended by accident and misfortune. These circum :stancea increase the charges for public charity and justice in our populous cities, and hence their inhabitants often' regard immigration as itself a-calamity. But aside from all questions of humanity—if we com pare thisincidental misfortune with the ad- , dition to the national wealth and strength derived from the one hundred thousand im_ migrants which annually disperse them selves over the country, and take into con sideration the increase of our physical strength by their descendants, we find ey , ery principle of political econdmy sanc tioning the policy of our ancestor's, which freely opened" our ports and offered.an asy= lum to the exiles of every 'land. Nor.need I urge before such an enlightened assem bly,, that predjudices against emigrants and . apprehensions of danger. from their Imo ! c ation, :are as unwise as they are tingen 'roue. The experience of mankind has proen that nrititUal intereourse and most intimate relations between the. various branches of ihe-human family ate indisz pensible to the progress of civilization and htlittanity4 The Agricuiturai interest, ttiough the, last to suffer, is always slowest in recovering froltrany national - AssoCiations in other departments if deranged may be re netted' Capital deStrOyed may be suppli ed, and masses eiterborhe may recovery' nut,AgrienitureSMO6 entlibtraided.. with difficulty restored:: •War; however hatift:; abler or necessary, Or belqierit may-stint= ulate 'production' for a' Neilson, iff, national evil, and in its least desolating (Orin ie destrtietiVe• agricultural prOSPerity,'-‘— To',cultiVaa t he. diaposition.and thel'arts• of of peate,. - 71iTid - to — eaTa - domestic disturbange areiMportatit, therefore, not` merely to the improdetitent but to the, prosperity, of agrictilitTre. Airipultute can never:flourtah where its rewards are precation's or inferior in ,Valii& to those'obtained in Ottieidepartinerifit'Of &tatty.. PerPefuar,eafeis,_necessary 01 1 ishrtl!e4nribalta/tP subjected. -?,,;lfencti•lhem.kietessityl:ofy ati' I economical= conduit ;.tif, publia , iiffstrel4cif ilia` `robing ' thos'e '; inland'"`oiimmunlcatPone itlh,Veli thl t •• •' • , qirkART9O9OPPS3P.II/EMeiAtiP;o4ool , 4 l 4 C c dr u l D ßOßP , an 4 4 l Moh-***Ordd-r B V a secure, adviiititgersia ;Markets C T 'either at home, in abroad :iiiderations are„ so ~,familiars that , they, need not , be dwelt upon, notwithstanding their aCknowlUdgetliniportanee. The . . preservation of eqliality among the people in rpgaid to eonstitutienal,and legal, rights, and perpetual aaherarice to the poll, ,cy wide!) . by liwe regulatin:gdescandanti; devises and trusts, prevents the undne ac cUmulation of eetates, and , indispensable to agricultural prosperity. 11.4 - , thist-policy, co-operating with the advantages of our positions , which he made the•agricul 'Ural 'class here a community of free-hold ers, in contrast with the systems of other countries under which land , are cultivated by tenants, the reward of whose labors pass to the benefit of landlords. Not only waa the 'primal curse' of labor universal, but acquiescence in it was wisely made a condition of health, happiness, wis dom and virtue. This condition, however, implies that equal rewards are allowed to mankind, while equal labor is exacted from them. Whatever institution, then, on any pretext, relieves any portion of ajeci-mreu nity of the necessity of labor, or withholds its incentives or excludes them from equal competition for its rewards, not only is un equal and unjust, but,- by diminishing the whole amount of „social labor, increases the - burthen of those on whom the subsistetice of society depends. We are bit accustom ed to recognise this important truth in the operations• of domestic servitude. But every' form , of unequal ' legislation, every custom and every prejudice which causes any mass or portion of a mass to abate their efforts to secure independence and wealth, _opeiates_in- the same manner r a' Ithouglr to a less extent. .o . While the -patrons of agriculture will . keepteadily in view-these principles, their most strenuous efforts must be exerted for the diffusion . of knowledge. To knOwledge we are indebted for whatever - of ease or Security we enjoy; and the safety and hap : . pinese otevery' civiliZed comrnity_ net . overborne' by foreign oppression are exact lyin proportion to its intellectual cultivation. So also; as a general proposition, individ- . mid - prosper and exert influence according to the standard of their„attainments. The truth 'applies also to Inassee in a communi ty. The Agribult - Oral class here, as . well as in every other 'country, notwithstanding their numbers, enjoy comparatively inade gnat& compensation and abated influence, because they have a lower standard of ed ucation than other classes. There is' not, as is often.supposrd, a certain amount of knowledge which it is profitable .for the farmer to possess and dangerous to exceed. Learned men sometimes fail in this honor able pursuit; but not in consequence of their acquirementS, and the number of such . is ,vastly less than those who fail through ig norance. It isalac't, Which hoWever mor tifying cannot be too freelyconfessed or toe often published,, that an inferior educe; tion is held sufficient for those who are des : tined to the occupation ''of. 'Agriculture.— The standard' established for them is set= dom as high as .the ) full course of instruc tion given in ottr common schools, and con sists in an ability to read, but scarcely With pleasure: or advantage ; to write without fa-. cility or accuracy, and to perform simple processes. in the art of numbers, Higher attainments than these are allowed to all , .....• other classes. The mechanic and the ar tizan are at least 'instructed in the nature and properties of the substances Whichrthey nee; and in the principles and combination of the mechanical powers they employ; , while each piofeSsion jealiatialy gOards la gainst the intriision of any candidate, who, however Skillal in its particular mysteries; has not completed a course of scientific et classical learning: There ie no just reason fat this discrimination. The dornestic,'SO cial and civil teeptmsibilitiea or the farmer ate precisely the Same with thoge of evetY other citizen, while the phliticat ptitier of his claie is irresistible`; i'll'ireparatiott of the soil lo receive a geitii; the culture of the plant, rte r pfeteetion ag ainst, aCeitletitf,' .., ~.. and the gathering of the fruit--eaiehvf;these appariintly•simple'opetatinnejikiplyee'Prirl- , .. eiples4 noteneit Mate -ientindiie than' do the Studies of the learned.piofeeeiOne: Ev ery other tlnpertritent.of !Edit :dry' Bait 'WiIL. liegly ieeei`ved aid from 'iciietiece: In riiech abiaili iile la** .iii poWei, and motionode . s 6 Welt tititiewiloroff there aehievetiventit to s hit:inati' eti'ergY 'Wai once :deified', inside-. rotate; are '66y; end fairiiliall: .“ . The' Wand is nn* alrnoit.ntiti‘enititiiati 'in ehe•fabiicatiori of cloths: 0 Animal power is higintting.in 0-diSpeneed*illi . iylneonietiOn'otilthe land and the intercourse betiireen natienti.eepe rated. hy 'se:its, ~. heiefokitn: so .diffietill. and,' LuneertainiAlt.rendered. speedy 'Brd:regular by'''h `use'' - I.' i''' m . Mit A: '' li ' ' `,the e o.sea .. - gricu ure is. regaided , ae.involiingtio'lewa; of natute,tie-: . ( 14ii11i10 ., 04Pt .' . 0 .0 , 004 .0 01 4 .0"9i01 4 0 . 'P: oitit'„::,PhypidaLno4+o.;.iti; en ti* tide ti . ' , .06 0i) 1 :Y)401444*, 4..0414#0, 1 !-#:0 1 ,M. - Vituiteftillk.exPended Althiitingt - thilinti - efle`e . :Ot`..eireeki;iff the66 l ll;gipi 4 the, i'000;; vediotougiwth"C 61 tiV4tOri:Akett:. tOOlibiiig" itYo'oitie ‘ k !Pig ''Ot'ffe tt i' ititTiriiinte'#hieli lieve heeti:inett . ttOetittilj'' Sreet.eneiL-elOW, ; .eil7. Yltticeilieli - tiEsititOt.dtet ; Winn's( tit, 011 AO 44040444 . .:40i. , *0k:;4*14/0 raiiidliiitipioiingOnie; of int manliits . In& 26 1842 . ( MOOE 14446' pit 0004 is 'elietired''.by • , • to eOnipplopveii, ed and'statienat*'•.Bili Andependent.of the w hiclOthliehatilC4'OW*4 owes to'ag ricultuEe, geelOgY, rir'airlonittiritl.6h66ll6o;'.6o' of •aniknal ; phyeitilog,' **h... hive tieerilabl ,Ijiryy; begi•Johnson andiantti'and our own, el, - 'Wereuniversally known and applied, the, 'productiveness orthe'' soil would :beineal enlably increased.. Regarding the etinett : tion of the. l agrieultural class, , then; only in thelight ofecOnininy, its impOrtanceca`n natTbe over estimated. : Rut this is its least inieresting..aspect., Education is necessa ry.to elevate:the agricultural masses to their just eminence,and to secure their enlighteii:- ed idiot) in the 'Conduct of government and of the various interests of social life. 7 —; -Praiseslif agriculture & acknowledgments of the purity, patriotism and wisdom of those who pursue that most peacefuLeall log. are the never-failing themes of all who .court their suffrages. 'Yet it a sad truth that the interests of agriculture and pose . who subsist by it are often considered sub ordin nd sometimes injuriously neg ed. The avenues to preferment are 'o en to all, but they are seldom traVelled y• the farmer. .Questioni of peace, and war, of revenue, of commerce, of curren cy,.of manufactures, of physical impriwe ment, of free and foreign labor, of educe , lion, are too often discussed ancideeided witliOutjust consideration' of their bearing upOn •the interests of agriculture. The reason is obvious. The art of agriculture is learned from imitation and habit. Those rwlioa - re diatineiho that pursuit, are• not" early instructed_ in-the PripOiples_ government, or its relations to other states. in their own legal rights,'their civil duties, the• pathology of - the human - . constitution, the nature of the substanceiCivith svhich - agrieulturc is concerned, or their properties, or'the la - ws regulatinetheir - development, or even in_ the simple art Of .tracing geo metrical lines and calculating their contents, net to speak of the range -a physical and exact seieticee history_ancl ethice,elassical learning, We philosophy of. language and the art of eloqtience.. Those attainments, though open to all , are reached exclusively by other classes, and ,the farmer in mature years, is sent to the Press for political in struction ; to the Clergy he must yield implicit confidence ; 'must depend upon the Lawyer for the defence of his simplest rights, upon the Physician for information whether he is diseased, upon the proll;ssor .for eiplan'ations of the properties of the soil he cultivates. anclupon the Civil Engi neer for even the measurement of his acres. When such dependence upon these vari ous classes is established, can it be a mat ter or surprise, that precedence is conceded to them in the various departments of, soci ety ? Let me not be misunderstood: I depreciate not the influence of . the learned classes, and I would 'promote by every proper means their higher improvement-- nor-would I excite jealousy against them, or in the least diminish the respect or con fidence they enjoy—butlAesire to see 'the agricultural class ,equally elevated; for that purpose I would stimlate Ahem tti etirrei podding attainments: This is the true theory of republican institutions. *hen it is carried intd ptaetleal and complete op- eratioii; and not until then; shalt We enjoy a regular; safe, equal and enlightened ad niliiistratitie of civil government. Your task, then, is iroihing less than . revolution—a revolution, however; tike all your wsuite, will be pence ful.and beneficial. ITim aim no blows at PS' goVernment of fie Country, or theydw er, the prosperity; or the:influence of any dais of hi citiiens; PO contrary{ you will reniler them all the aid and all the . stip- pert they need. Nor Will you justly. en- men as innovation, and . which perpetual couhter the °I/position of any cla3s, rar, all ly. though falsely, corn'plaini . that Man are equally `interested with youreerves in kind degenerate without making an -effort die great work You hnve undertaken? and; to check the pragresd of error. upon' Which depend' the. Stability and per- be redirded as visionary by, those who fnatteliEe of out' institutions and the hopes donaidee'skill hi acquiring ' end' success ih of mankind/ w fetalaing :Wealth asibe — perTeetion', .cf hd The agency required Ibis .great work malt N . iiscronii . but you virtilleniember that is aliemly, prepared and awaits your, such as these deldonf bestow their connte den: The pritn'eyi sehoOrs; the yol'uilearY hence upon the benefaCtors ,of niankir,l , rel ish mental the Seadenlic Serit- -1 nor does Fertile° ,alvdays., ditilioguiih' them inaries;amt WhiCh you're- by her &Ors. liortitax . MORRIB,. the fi 'qtlife alitady fournited,'Etha of the ItoMtutiOn, died a banktiiPC. rioti'ett. Yu our schbot`library an' Ceitts*; oik rriot4' efficient auxiliarY is l'iirdis' l o4; ‘Yksesi 3 eiricag. idvocete of inland navigation'' in', the last scarcely thijpassed by the invention of Cad- ' erearity in rniie; of Fatiif and Fulton.- With pride the Stranger's burying .anti plentaire• I add,' that' this" 'ilent Wee , eald'ofJESl4 . " HAWL - e*, tielkonitfet;` ground. The tiii. .New= - ed - the feaeibiiiii arid imtoo.#n?!. York; Jires 'WarisWoltidi.2 Theselibra noes canal 'fioxii, YAKS Erie , the _ . ;rice,'which plitetd rtiM'Ott:' - eVery'mf; son river , 'weft 40(11 toith'.from` a‘ debtor's gle