288 JVotice to Subscribers. [Nov. 



Some and even many object to our Journal because they can- 

 not understand it; it is too scientific. Well, admit it, we mean 

 to make it so, and if farmers are determined to remain in igno- 

 rance, it shall not be our fault. If they are determined to remain 

 in the back ground of knowledge we can't help it. We shall 

 not make it any the less scientific to accommodate any person. 

 If people will not think, if they will not cultivate that part of 

 themselves, which makes them men, and intelligent men, we can't 

 help it. But we shall not give the pages of our Journal to mat- 

 ter which our subscribers can read without exercising some of 

 their mental powers. Instead of making the work less scientific 

 for the accommodation of a few lazy men, we design to make it 

 more so, and if any are displeased with it on this account, let 

 them pay up for what they have had and stop it. 



Another fact we wish to remind our subscribers of, and it is 

 this; that this work was reduced in its price from three to two dol- 

 lars per annum, for the purpose of accommodating our mail sub- 

 scribers, so that they could afford to pay its postage. We hope 

 however some arrangements may be made by which its postage 

 may be reduced. We are aware that most of the monthlies pay 

 only newspaper postage which gives them an advantage over 

 those which are published in a pamphlet form. This subject, we 

 shall speak of in the December number. For the present we only 

 ask of our friends, an examination of the work since its establish- 

 ment, and satisfy themselves whether it merits their continued 

 support. 



