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WE N S A OR I G U DI.MNAIN J-1EU NELGEC..[xK~ABY;~AJAe -.-.- SUs ~J~ff~RALD ESDaY OILG - - 16K64r C. ekc -3 dva Dee "'a - vab1e-ddress " eeio "ration,, wi : - - are dev ered ". --r t te Court ue and appretative * ! ts.saaa conse S}eusertai ate 4 et a f of sori --- o lrtioni, have beeo Stopzed; we are - - a i aie skible wil, - -.2e,gue order and f - * - =- f be'ooves a p oge nat.do .- ' e Ipnsa espn :o the - ts gteto -iO k r d - t, Za. g oelous * * *WTsbr Sek-or aire~o - - rz . ha:- al ' - 4d otton f --wan organd - d- trefomer ~s~'t*, et an d. if .*be' * koriegt i* iv erl - ~jb~se,ande .o,e ofyar,sws din eeraaT 4i oisjiion n bay he - -11 trid Badath .. - .g-I no sufcet anr -e - itnt~~ beaind? -s.h }n taD tbe -~ .m~ -il - *. -.- and som lish factories, to tend to the vin- I yard, to preserve the orchard, to raise stock, to the careful and close cultivation of the grains, to improve the land, to build towns and villages, and protect the earn ings Qf his neighbors ? You know him well and you can answer these questions better than I. And this subject may be viewed in yet an- ] other light. Did you ever. earn estly reflect,.how the State is to bear the&taxation for the support Of an extraordinarily large. indi gent population, from . hich no contributions can-be gathered,-and the epecial -and) liberal' care for who2n-the laws-of the Union have imposed? . Besides, hefeafter our eoloied population will be largely! i eoncerned irf raming the laws of 1 our o a State and .it. is their al- i ready expressed potiey, that the ] lands must pay the costs of the eisinincealth. Their old- people will have td be anyiported by the State,and their youth will grow up-r arith-no.tiona of their political im- 1 portanee; in habitsof idleness and'. ready tabeeomebacks andpimpsof the desiguing, selfish aid fanatical savious of the hun}an. race. This 1 is the-eeriain result of their natural_ indolence, of the si dden -ehange, of th'er social status and of the indieues, that - are now- .beset ting:.them Even. in this m'at- 1 ter of rm rationthey have al- 1 ireadycei s iritrueted and taken 1 thea .Tstand. I was- infbrict a . f.w days::go by-ene of ouzt Law Jdges, that; the- freedmen 'have J herkmeetings and made it a prin cipil corier stone of their plat- [' forin, to oppose immigration-what- i ever.- Whatdoes this imaport? If . the iidustitias-and well:mcaninj eolored people bou!d comlprehenE -1 their own trueinterests and- have . the least idea of the real .pros peiity of the State and- tkeir-awn,i they-_ would scout at the^ baiT. of a s coloied iepublic of'South Carolina, i and they would tihderstand 'tat. i increase -of .popalation is an- in crease of neans ;'that it will take a' bndred years before in. the i South laber will exceed the de-1 ma4- aad.tbat-the capital and in- 1 dustrybrought in by the farmer I and purehhsers- of lsnds increases I rhei t hanee of suecess and ] ip*rity.. ,Bit alas! the egloredj mand oei not. reason, but wil 1 bidly IIlow 'the teaebings Qfbis poitiesi master and maiipuator oatle.oainnt-orthorr fractio:n, and ;he prunptibgs of -bis selfish 'enceite -and- passions. -This is ouTr great- danger, an'd together itlour ewn wsnt of energy.and Q(it.iddispositionm to encourage imi imitatonwill certaTnly retard~ our reuperation.If' our colored peo pte could'only be. -made. to- -know tiirguejriends;- all might yet be well. It is eurious to observe the abidinga~ttwachment'of the whites ofth'eSoumth for their forinier:slaves, in spite of all the Numniliatlogs and incovenieiEces. they~ have . been1 inadtx suffer.- But it is. all of no use:~ Th.olord man has been anghtto look for'his material ad vaucemiest ik .politieal' influenas and it wilequiteo the ,experience eftyears, to expei -notions, -which talg exactly 'withm his selfe este and indd1lenta. L.e .s -look a hmoa' ply the effect of.ii a son nge Newherry baea ht ppltd of about 2009O-nd a.oored-of about. 100 4%j 11'iytefanfe rhise fabuk .saist. ta colored of thou4 20-. Self interest governs -te:Qettaja-ofie'r& iyajority of, diaB1id?d/n'ai espcia.lly the ru~de aLgt ige4trcanbe easiest iefu eced by their immediate nee%ssi- . Cisand their miomentary passione: N6 incentiVe 'eiin be compated to greed an4. mbition. Is thecre one among the proprietors of New berry so dull as not to apply.these views to himself. Do you want to be rpresented-in. gpurIeiIl ture.by 'oloret. epe~aws?~ Dogg .wan&eour' .uL .of -eonm misiiers'to bL .~omnposed -of coe itiabai If- y~ ou.1 note objct on, acMat of.folor M$iai recollection Qf youeinit pride4 jou would surely object 'Me be taxed by those;1'hat do not repre det-ar-bap.prty. And where ta fyo46t s v.ation, where is bu~idy1 I it not in' an in &~#.~da ipondence of the wthit'io uaiod, - nd -in .that A,nd'a where is that to enmefroa ifyou do not--by afi means promote imigration"? If yom1iedow' ofany othar ab6de of averting this:th?eatenxrg.r eon tingeaicy, say so, and.w1k-oriut spedil5, for it is.high tiame. iBut~ if yoU.do - not, can there, be .-any-] thinrg teo costly to save the State and your children.- from snam~ba miorui"'But, Tht me-not.a pelto:yotr .aprebensions-/ whenr cane sodi you, t bat immigration. a source of certain and unpre ceented prosptrity. It has been said, that "as in the-conrulsions of nature, so in the revolutions of es tablished society, in the sufferings >fcommunities and the desolations )f cities, towns and homesteads, the evil is generally but transitory, )ften resulting in accelerated pros perity, by the sweeping off of the eebler elements and bringing new nergies and resources into action." Before the war the Southern States were producers of.. in an aual value of 400 millions dollars n cotton, rice, tobacco, sugar, na ral stores, &c., all raw products, which they exported and sol'd. Fhef iyt"e not tnanifacturers or ~porteis to any considerable ex tent; and the proceeds of their ales were appropriated to the payment of articles, that were purchased at the North. The pro: Iuce of the West, the nanufrtet tures.of the East and the imports )f the Middle States, all f>uud their way to the South for sale, to n -extent, equal- to the produc tions of that region. Could the South grow rich upon such a sys em ? But we were comfortable tnd a refined people. .Perhaps so. knd yet our comfort has been de 'ied by many of our most intelli en-t planters and our refinement aas created the jealousy -of the uritan, and has become the great st cause of his, bitter and relent. ess p.ersecition;. Hencoforth the south must go into a system of arming and do her own .nanufai. uriag. .I do not wish tobe under stOd as opposing plantationa, they f d only extensive farms after all. Bit I'nica to say, that a systen >f small farms should be encour-' igdd as an auxiliaryto the plant ar; and small-farmers sbouldbo fa. Aiituted in -every neighborlhood, instead of -being -looked upon with rn picien -and speedily bought out s. formerly. The plti ter - will prefer the staple products -to the clysioerdf the cereal8, the farm r on : the contrary will pay.- his rst attention to the food platis tnd then to the staples. I remuein gr very well, how gladly in 1861 ;he itjort_was received, tiat here nd there in the Southern States provisions had been raised plenti 4lly, and it was deemed worthy of 3peciai mention, that the German *rmers in Texas had raised great faantities of wheat., rye,. barley %nd corn. And may not the farm r be ;'great as the planter ?- The atfe like the other tills the ASpd and cultivates the soil, only- with this dfifernce, as I have already mentioned, that the farrner~ bases bisprosperity upon the-food pro ~anots mid the, planter upon the staple articles of commerce. But do yda odtihue to~ plarite if you prefer,. nd lef the immigrant cornie tofarm. A gentlernian wrote me from New York a few weeks ago, if he had the control of affairs, the South .shokl not plarit a singTe pound'6f cotton, to punish the New England..nabobs-for their blogd-y tpprbssion. I do not agree M'th him at alf. Let us raise- as mijh ctton as we car -long. with, our oiri prov~isions .of :every -kind, stcek; fi-uit, etc., -and -thea et uis maifaetjwra our cotton first and send it .omarket afterwards. A mcnd ofocotton will triple its \alue m jliread drify anid tht machinery. is ot.s very expensive 'bot - that it eight be had by combined ac t-ionr. Besides Jet us mnultigly our iidjutry1.n every i'esppeet, and let uast the immigrant and ~the im ngtant's capital to help us. - Just here'it oecurs to me,.o~ -mj ingt be curious to kearzt the 'product of a large German Larrnier. I copy a register from a prominent agricul tural work -as follows: "Wheat, rye, barley, oats, peas, beans, 4-n tils, millet, buck-wheat,, clove:r seeds, flax seeds, fruits, vegetables, potatoes, horses, oxen, cows, hogs, alves, sheep, fowls, buttei, 'cheese. ilk1 rool; flax, ski ns, ho'ney, wax, b6eflatC%any." Reported as hiu eisntore.The gez;tariety of this poduce will be bsen'ed, and the- general' re ult#i are some~times astonishing. And they havebneed to be so, tAhQ retaope o afarm~ of saeh a de sription, of on~e or two -thoind, acres. beingp6rm 10,000 to 50,O0r Thaler per year. But you wyill again observe, that there is'nt an- article mantioned,-which joui cild not raise here with .facility an&>roflt and have'yottr cotton bides! To explan thet#o ar ticles-'.'eer ?.fd -randy"' I amay mention,- that in -Europe -every large agi'iIturil' establishinent as-adi*tilleryand brewery con nected witk bich add doubly to its .profita.Eret in heclearpro dfe of the nnufatred -a-tield, andsotly ib the WaN as.a ml naNla food~for fattening stock, - Eniane A Aemnanded' f're. t rade as a manufacturing country, anxious to sell the commodities she prc duced, in the best markets and to import in lieu thereof; what were to her the hixuries. of human ex istence, such as corn, p6rk, beef, flour, etc. Oar North-eastern States demanded protectlon by a high tariff for the purpose of secu ring the profits of the agricultural consumption of manufactured goods at their mwn rates. Our! Southern States *anted free trcde, to choose the best market for the sale of their staple and- the lowest fbr their-purchases. But the rich est and most independent country is that which ctig supply all lwr necessaries and ltxuries from pro ducts at home and- yet have enough to spare of staple articles, to make a market wherever she pleases. And this is. precisely -what our South can do. She need -not fear tariffs nor manufaeturing competition: But she wants ad ditional popiilation and capital- to be successful. "A people, which possesses cotton as a principal product of its own soil, could in crease beyond precedent in the production of that class of fabric, which now enters the most large, ly into huian contnp.tioni and which holds" the highest rank -in, the industrial occupations of th6 world." Sir Matoi Peto, in his recent work on the resonnes and prospe-ts of A merica, says : .froim retarns made to the-govern ments of Frusgia and -Bavatrh for seven yeais' by emigrants, 'who left these countries with offiial permission, it.appears, that they earriedeach to America an average amount of 180 dollars in. cash. The United States - officials calcs late, that the - immigrants have brought into the country not' lcss than 400.000,000 dollars in <-ash, bisides the much superior values re'1resentcd by their pliysical, in-! telectual and, mpral. powv-ers." I have already on a former occa sion referred to the above suject. It strik!s 'tfe;. t4rtit if any one would only take "he J.tble to calculate the amount above men tioned in-iaterest and conipounid interest in proportion to the inui gratif from 1820 till now, the cx tr&ordinary developments of ~our Western States might easily be Ac counted for. I-'will not~howeve detain - you: by -going ovei- this ground again, and II should not have- mentioned. even this much, were it net necessary to- combat again and again with the unwhole- I some prejudices against -the for eigner. -I have hsard gentleien of intelligence ridicule the lan guage of the sti-anger as a .discor dent jabber. Others have object ed to his.unbecoming garb or .his foreign mnam;7ers. Others again have averred; that the majoiity of the immigrants are thrift[ess 'and': inbeeite palipers. and- depende;nts, who are incapable of gaining theii subsistance any where or of takingt care of it when cariied. The New~ York Comnmissionerw-in their offi ,ial' report in. 1855 say.:2.t would be obviously- erroneons t mieasure theiffects of immigration among us by ib.e :necessitous or -wortEless few, and- overlook the great-bulk of direetly an opposite! chaacter. -Aoptiig the l.aetor ys the legitimate~ test,it mightMb shown, that the vast inlux.of'for-f eign - 'apitol,s skill:e and labor~ throtgh 'this chaninel has beeni ingalary advietageoua to this} count-r'y?'' I afust herb -aifor givesds of two geitlemeli ot4df owrn ltate, if 1' menion.~.their' naines in eonnection with this sibject. Mfr. Farrel plants oosane; of the Islands near Charleston with near seventy hands, .m#3tly] industrious Irishmen, -and he is confident, thatsAbe~ result of his venture will c,ompare favourably with the most prosperous. Mr. Kennedy of Si ydistriot wrote mae r eeitly Liit ome time agg, he got ofte fimiy and twVo other men,, whd id not underst*nd~a w6rd of. g@ish mneh ,ad ~T,uble at firat3u ev~al redidy geurd mihn knoiwledge of onr Jabgae. AhI 0 add i w4lsaN. oyu for .the eneour een. of eyour giMt enter:prize, ta idte pe e,msost faithful shid cent peent 1abprbi-) I bye eyer"had i my -impoy aui- KIt 'will- be impossihie and, it whcild - perhaps I be tirenome/tio repeat all the" ar gmments, that I bave -aLredy ad vaned ixkfavor of.immigration ad not one of whichd& -been e6htro veted. I-commneieed to agita~te thi matter in xaf gribbibed letter. to {overk1or Perry. in -'1865.7'M speehin'"the. tegisture in' 1865', -aid my-report in 18686, togethey with my ecent--address at Flo ence, have all been published anid embody fiearly all the ayvaflab!e t.ioncd many'matters, which I did not wish to repeat to-day. Ap prehensions have been expressed as to the experne of the keeping of European employees in view of' their habits of living, which I had then explained. I stated at the time;.that I adverted .to that sub ject-merely for information, and I have not the least f'ar of any dif ficulty in that regard. Where men are dispgsed well to .-'ne an other and endeavouring to be mi tualy agreeable, no cause .of coin p)hitit can arise; which cannot be very easily arranged: The great abjection, thtt the Southern planf -rs urge against the scheme seens to be the incompatibility of Euro pern labor with large plantations,' and their minds are so biassed in favour of that time-honored sys tenm,. that tht bare sugestion of_ tiy other plan of industry makes them -feel uncotfort4ble. But this is the result of habit, and yet. I re peat again, I want:to keep every f'reedmman in the. State, if I can.' and I would not object. for a mo ment to let every planter, that finds it profitable . and tas the nieanti. continue hispresentsystem of agriculture. I understand very well.. that very refdrm must .be initiated, softly and- t-ha"t every change "in .habits -aud long' estab Iished usages is like tearing the affections and alnostliketlhe bear ing of a beloved one to "that 'r discovered countr'y, from w}hose bour e:~ no tiaveller returns. At the same-tine P would" again urge,-that'a system of smallfarims as an auxiliary to. the .plitntion I system is not oUly invaluable, but. now a vitkl n.ecessity, and that. every land ownersiould-eonti4bute by a sale of such . portions of lis. dlomtins. as h0' can conveniatly., spare at a low price,.to that.object: A receirt agriuliralariter says: The'mistaken ai.bition .fi o- nizi twice. as naich hid ds >'ne.an thoro;ghly maiure--or profiuably cultivate, i the great . agri<nlturat sin of this country. Ths,.- who I commit it by,beginning wrong, too frequently centinue wrong. Own_ inrany acres is the sole idea. High eultivation ofa small. tract, is one of which they have .little kewledge.-And yet, in ou' ~own State, in 1865, one. of our _chanee lors ha Wraised .cotton on highly ranired anid cultivated groui at the^rate of over -2600 pounda to the aerc: The applicationais p1ain, but I arm sorry to think, that ther. wil'ha lly be one to make ft. It is-probabto, that the ~tide of emigration to Anii-ies, which corn meneed~ to set 'in -strongly- about 1825, was occasioned by 41.i open-! ing oit of the North-Western States in t-hat~ year and by the .proepept-I affodd of obtaininig -land in thei country at exceedingly low - atos. The opportun@y of settling themi selves jo districts, .where htads could be Jhad, whioh they coulfd etrItivate 'vith profit a-nd where the 'eward of industry. is onb gien)yg eertgn,.. was irrestible:i Throughout .rturope n passion to becom'e the owner ofland is uni vrsal.'whilst' the diffculty of gratifying it. is infiuitely greater than with us,. It is:fromn this uni vere.glpassiosn, that the vast an-. durat irniigration to t his cottn,tr-y derive'sits- miglity ~ imiilse. Ap grciating this and requiring an increase of populahtion. Why sjiould vif'not, livmg.~ 0500 aras;'$iv away 1& -acres1it a -nmnatT-ien and>tterebyv sirv-e 'he Stater and ' yourselffttheb same time. In- Il pebebility such proedure~ wealid in s few year~s double .you the value ofs-your remaini.g lands. Wha.t tre .your landaorth. now? -What SQu can dultivato andj muist necessai-ily use is wo:rthjustj so~much is what youir incied e therefrom amounts to ; the balaniceJ i worth nothing, and it'is justI now a positive expense, exceptig fo>r the prospects of the future. Bat auch a fut'ure as now awaitsI yo,wihoLtthe increase and pre po.nderence of the white popula tin wlf bring no enhancement of.ries, but may possibly totally eilpI -every-acre of your p lan ta-i tions. . General, Butler tells- us;, ttiith,that wvhere the land is bsld4 inTarge!rac'ts by the employer, t be tilled -by the employed, t here e'a be no jurst and -true field for the exercise of Ripablicari citizen ship. And it is one of the' press-, ing exigencies of the counttry, a* thervey bsois of roeonstruction, that seine plan must . be' devisede,j by which'-the land.s of the: South mhay' be-divided among these,1wbo shaocppy anid tilb,thenj" Wjll any msane man in: hs.treni1itf hokl o'astraw&I wh'en che ~ean grasp tbe strong an~d saTing Hmb'[ What i nothvalue of'lahds ini N rgy Is it worth now, what it ..e waeth in 18n ? Or nervhans I there is no rate at all? No one can tell what .it is 'vorth. or whether it i' worth anything. Land is always cheap,wherc labor is uncertain and scarce. When ever laboring power increases and . becomes productive, lands. rise in value accordingly. In the sparsely populated regions of' America an acre of land tnuy be earned by one days labor, whereas in Belgium, llaohind, Germany, England and France it.will take the labor of rearly three months, only to pay the rent for an acre of land, and the labor of five years will hardly be enough to purchase it. Our Stiite has, area enough for four millions ,inhabitants, and lands! will )ot brnig r,i f inashiufn pri e, our resunrces wil! not be fully:developed. nor wi!i odiagoldcn agc appear. until our people ate that inumncreus. And the nearer you approach that degrce of popu lation, the nearer willyou approach the maximuni di-gree 6f wealth. and prosperity, and whoever helps to effect sitch an, end is a lenrfac tor of his fellow-citizens and- a wvorthy son of his ifiather State. You know the wealth: and powr and, influence of Massaihusetts, the great enemy of South Carelina. She has not quite-8 millions acres of area, yOn.have 19-milions. But. she. has one and a quarter millions population to your 700,000-. and. her income is 289 millions :per ananm to your 49 millions. What a differeice, i. here, and yet tbe. difere4ce might.lhave been al.in your favor. It is curiogs, that ts principle and iincontro ertible. fact is demonstrated everv daw-"h the- Utited States under alost every -one's' be and Set should fail to be Qbscrve4 by any. bud a very few. In our pwn; city of Charleston t,he great fire of 1838 caused t-he erection of -numnern buildings. and the infu3therefbr 'of "a lrge 'number of ~ihekhanics and laborcrs.i nd: iat wa the reixlt.? - The city property. i crcase( argely:. in'vlue, hundreds of small houses were erected- on grcens and- fatm-groundo;.and' her boundaries had -t. --4e . exterided. Ala, these times are gone, a cit. of 50:000 has riied' down to 35;000,,and the va1ue of .propevty,4 has decreased moie than -po . .onably:. Let the town. of' : ew berry; increasi just double in popu-a latiertand*ihr lots will' assuredlyT double in value, 'andI am- eertain, if our State could doubleiber tchite population, evey acre of berlands woidd be worth at least' twice whiat i iis 'worth now; anid t)here fore,' vhatevei- saerifices arsead now.. to facilitate-.so- desirable: * bevond v"a(ue and' prie. The 'on. Ro.bt. Walker, forni ~secetary of athe Treasyry, has made the cfeiulaton; 'that if. thbe Jan'ds'.in the slave States Were -birogt; upl t-e'value of ithe ranf' of -trioe freo S'tates, 'their -additionst YaWke: would be- 5,859.246 &16 :do l's Alas, South 'Carolin.a Slas ~helped1 to pooleflaFontat thee new Straen 1 of' the nhijonK whit'st *her oiin. white jiopulatin IAas ine.ese4 amiost' the slow est..ot any. A butt he was iverse to 'divi4qWhis plantation. amd 'therefore , fonr of them had to gb a$rodadni'4il~ to mnake and intisaae th'e' riehes of the Sou.tla-west.: It se.om ou tired. into' tiejead f anj you rJir1ess younger . sons, that.:.y remaining in' their. n1othber tt thev. mig ht-make a fortum'e iaffid as anywhere-else. Anid gd't,E u1mWy Europelms and&othat sfinfl g% h~aYe come -hero -a.nd have found'their utmost pirspeiy. ft has been sai(?gered by amn. that the Coolie e Lulbe imported to'take'the place rf'thedIabor'that. by beeni Iose. Wouk you go through -another aboliiir . after' a-term of-years? But the erfee of~i a good helthy Chinaman is from4 150 to 300 dollars tos.imnort, be: sides his wa'ges, wvhich are over a hundred dollars a year. They are said to be good, steady laborers. but vicious' and..lirtily immoral. And.then -t.here. is this besides in ife way of such a projeEt, that the, olicy of cle GeneTral Governmment dutn-of.g raees Iqued'"to service and labor being entrary t 1 the true 'inteist and Ia.w ' the U. 8. -thwould enti3 contrrf -to. the tru n~f S~outh CrlinA to fetm' piy the variety otf raee~ ir In Virginia~ great effoAtsare" me in encouragemgent-.oI imn migratto'n, batt it is @ a great tatthe-native.resident'alekk w5th 1L' cohnessiand slispicion, apon 'iew smers. I must confess that -the a apprehen.sion of your prejudices': me more than anything elea: I' - has taken mhe two years of.p - sistent and earnest efforts toca-. this measure through your -i lature and the strong .opposition was based upon uothing better, - thato bare prejudice. iwofild '" you now to re$eet, and-i"f yod - y-lude. that this is yo -orrly i i _ - and hope-ofrelief, short.ofNei , .-* youi' - iihtive' land, -tha :yo - llen stiive to o.+re ereT -- thi g, your- o.wn .prejudiee. - - inconvt mienves necet'atily 4o progress, a4-all and n t,dy.w will co-operate h,eartily to; . - the object 4-t last. It wa4 - - as an objectiori, that seinaiby - -" aid Gernns had fought --aga ns in the late wair:' ut, havo - . the Irish anrd Gern iTn - - South ahnost uneniYm'lfn -t for-onr a se? Wha lni" dobt'- - me brave nian req@re-of the hether, - - Uhan that he h betftertijk g peofA, aniong whor lis liv'I ? The 15v,000,adopted elt!ea; .-tfs - ' were mem bers of the t - aimiea. noid..nt be s 'qg t heir..ceord, if ifi1a.dn O;tY be'g"' _ hate~belen 'btav .p.n - th~ latjn-. - al.~st Cause. -o - * after all. if anv teatcd 4 earth cai afor to o rgice conquerot=: it is the' eole;6 . - Sonth. 'Tor,' never -b - heroic contest m-nindim i --. was glory earned in gr eea 2 -, fusion, noi ever -better- deser . - - Ys. the Sontherapee*eea .pdi - - to forgive their4ofe:t..t ik grw * sut3erings, All thoi; joss,-t present disfunc_hise ent. - - ticlo'pjn-essioir-foi th - page, which .histiji wit up in.scribe to. their. ' lot us neve st fbo":. to eelude o=ot er ar-t. - those that want eto bed*9 - - friends =an<I bt'ette . - desire to cowae Stbr.iU; 0w. - _ ' with- the jtention ofheana - - - fri-:-i rifa3 Fr RoMal,yes, or smN - - --"" fbr our enemies l1 not' comze develop oi-soi., to.pe e." . itwill be in.h frune -Mu ta "-. piraps anid -keem :we chanc.f6rt~ v,t know r nd tkeir'day i t --1"A" a pfre All ak of - -".k" chunee:f'dr is vid mtL 'd - - ' ' dtraiot wish to fore th .Mi $ - all ShOWl take is sendigs - ing interest in it and -_.; by -degress.' Jr yo : noueed a *,t - .' noe encouraeients. - f" white me'ehlni.e,ly Ne urged tioiri!e tMgo - have Ifandt ito ~ I the, that inerese of popdt 0A a desirabletry to mUye.ne sn&t4M.+ nients aswfltt'iwgt.'.Wbeut. pited yqurs3fQMot - #dIeratko for te ~enett - 'tb WiVstbntsc iek ida; bich:hi t3emfithjirseed ver$ain- qnutities o - 44#,461- thie - tynese~4e r a pk ve keoetia Igybeeid toftned,. . that eve'y~ryt'4e sIOieys nilk. fbr vhich %& . - s In' Peniisyv3&aaiIae the farmers aetgl to market thesi- p dce, which can be done"i manner in bulk, where the '4 frmer would lack the opportunity. In this manner too you. can es tablish factories of many kinds however small the beginning miay have to be. Fellow-Citizens of Nowherry ' The day will surely come. when Darlington will e1aim with just nride of having been- the firsts inl his movement. Let New'ber13 S-the secoaid.. Every distridt .rn te 8tits:abuld have an Immi iomStasy,thO object of got nb, ft -enly to lughthe 1mnirn @ cevY ne another iHe. ~grirulture;iRt adv e