X, i t i rm on a nni LA t . : '4 VOL. i. ALBANY, LINN COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 01, 1806. NO. U. H w TATE RIGHTS DEMOCRAT. ; BilKD KVERY SATURDAY, S ALBANY, L1XSJ COt'STY,OG3f. " ' PUBLISHER AND EDITOR. crfi-.nt o surf nauiiae th. tl ra&aiagr 5s. riv.r yth. ir nM, East aU, Twi Elf, tf tt.Uaia Bualassa street. TEUMS: rca trsscaxrTxo!ti 'epy fbr One Year Copj nr Hli Months Payment to l W la dit la vtrjr . The Paper will not ! it ta ny adtlrcs ttUt rar4. ant th trm for wMcb it hU b "MUr(i t paid for. .Vo drpartmn wilt aui A (& trrf in mj VmMimv. . - , B. Timely rUt notice wUl be Wa to teWriber of the week en whWk feU tub wlm will enpSre. and unleti an order fx lu awwje, ; ac4gajntl wish the wotiey, be tfc & Taper at t AiMonitimeil to that altotv. . rca JmDtzhtxsxnq i Twt fca. Cfeare, .f Twl Lines, .r -;;, . Saatrtiss. - - $3 Ft lacfc iaeteeat Insertion 1 X3" A Literal R.dvcUoa firem tkcia tt t. Chtftrttrl?. Half Y.arlv and si.f Airertuerm, as 4 epos all Lajrtar gzs2al fjoxicai , . . U vrkiaf orer AMMMe4 eJjreatare Ceweye - ' mttt ake knu u tXui j.ropvr t aaeaymou. "K. er ae attcutUm U1 be givn imm to tb E- teJJuieaiik ! ijaieHnM, a-actac m All Loiter aal Ct. V- be t4rea(e4 to V(ie or for pabUoatiou, th tailor.' - - """"""' ' "'-. 111 - : " ' b. mtiM. K. H. CBASOR. - 1 CRANOR & nELII, ATmSlIS AH) CeCXSELiOSS AT U- ' f AMI AX Y, Owsron. ' ei. qui': tiiohxtox, COUNSELLOR AT UW. trill practice in the Saperior aul Ioferior CoarU of OrejoB. OFFICE at bit retidenca, one Bile Albany. JFebrttary !7, ISteV OIOHNEYS AND COUNSELLORS, t Zout daiai aA .9.n4 Title. Orego City, 0$a., Dee. J9, 1S65. A. ITnEELEK, NOTARY PUBLIC. t. J Albany, -Oregon. . -w-rtT.t. TtTTLT ATTEND TO THK W tmkln aekbowledcments of ImU Meirtcaea. aa4 Pewer of Attorney. AUo, Depositioea, Affidavit. Ae.. Ac OFFICE la tba Sew Cortaloaa ' Albany. Jaaaary J7, I86. ' dr. c. 7. cms; SURGEON DENTIST, ..mm Late Graduate of the J CiniBBaa ColK-ge otSi :-viUiXl? Datal S org cry, UXLIJ f 0-U eireia offer hU Profeatieaa! eerticee to tl Uiiee ef tail plce aaa rrounain5 tsuUJ. oVricl r tialra la Foer)e Brick BaUding, &eei4eeee alougnwe ct tee racioo uwa. Aibaey. Aat HUi, ISM. MHtf ..ASSAYIWG!V;- Ek-;TT- TRACy- CO ' (aCCCES SO B.S TO TiACT KIXOJ THE HI0HE3T"PSICE .AH) FOR COLD LEGAL TENDERS, ETC. rsnsrsG stocks eovgiit axd . ...... . SOU). riT-PTr -5S : Front street. rt dor north of Arriponi's. i a. yAi J. B. BOLMAH P AIIRISH & HOKMAN ;PO RTLAND, OON. ileai Ustate, Commercial and Steele Brokers, , "iil'aJ 'fntelllsrence and Col- t.i- - -. leclloa Aseota. itnitZX& S3 rictfsr Elock, Treat Street Ported. !. 0. ISfiS. G 'JITIT BROS. .lJirOHXE2iS AND DEALERS IN . fATCHX3 AI?D JEWELRY, .4 :::3,wiD silver vaee ' piIXJLTAIlY GOODS, CLOgKS, &c., &cn &a ITS.:p3:Frat'. Street," "Portland rortln4, Ie. o JSCS. ; . 5 - -.' .J TTill aitead in person to tlie - .?r?tiaa f Clsisf Aria is Ore j - as v&tifcT?', - ;; Af J jtothe EeUieawnt of AocoanU irith the rtAtr. TnASl?J. WAH, l;AY a?;3 FGST CFFIO' ' 1 TKE iIAS EUSiUI. 13 C3 PATEMT OFFICE I- .'.,: Fersou barinx Wsiaeai ms' bare it prompUj v'iaadai to,wi obtaia anformatioa from tune .fee, if deeired.' . , -, -:r "iypRrsj Ko. in SETESmi BTEEET, Z " . "TAIirXGTOX CITY. D. C. aa28 '::;rfjuGT received! IIF RAUrXrt.3 SATS' - FKA5 euee lUxtaei Sugar. .: . . . ALSO - 7 rjn?? Uca we are eeUiat - - FLETSCHXEE 4 CO A!iy,Sfteabr30m5- ' Till: EXEMPTION OF FEOEIIAE li().M)S Fit ON TAAATIO.I. Th. Ctnciniiftti Enquirer, in nn aAe article on the suhject of the exemption of Uovcrnmcnt Bonds from taxation in the States, e&ys : The acts of Co.grea under which the boncla were issued declare that they ahull not be taxable by the States. Thov are the first laws eter enacted bj Congress which aRsutned to interfere in the internal regulation, of the local bodies politic the first to supersede aud obstruct Htoto pov eminent. If they are constitutional, Htatc Sovernment lies at the mercy of Congress, to be extinguished whenever it shall suit the convenience of thnt liody to prosecute th. work of extinguishment. When Con pess has attained jurisdiction over a sub ject, its jurisdiction is plenary; and if, for example, it can prohibit State taxation in one form, or orer one spoeies of property. i ran in otner iorms. ana over other specjes. It can destroy, t a single blow, the "revenues of a State, release its people from taxation, prohibit its officers from levy and collection, and annihilate the body politio by a paralysis of - its financial machinery. Taking this view of the sub ject, it would aeem incredible that it was intended by the framcra of the Republic to place in such hands power so dangerous. Laws are binding which are made in . A .a .-a pursuance or tne uonstttution, and no others. AVe do not remember to have seen it stated that the laws which release the National securities from State taxa tion were iu pursuance of the Constitution. IC as we haro affirmed tboe, thcro is no basis for such laws in that instrument, it follows that the laws themwclvcR, so far as t&er sjssaiue to supersede or control State m?uob, are of no validity. I hey may so far represent mm obligation subsisting be- twees the Xstwo and the bondholder as to entity the hUer to receive back from National treasury the amounts he pays ttu taxes ; but that the National Uov- ernment c . .A. A i icn of .State y that State the re. ; " i uK"iHM property i, . propo..00 mg upon absurdity. irmimnnt ir we have sfcCn , " upon the legal question here t "rea, at least on tho side of those who re P osed to taxation. Tho argumcute t. u ally have taken a personal direction, con sisting of suggestions of disloyalty and of treasonable indifference to the National honor and good faith, which arc consider ably better calculated to irritate their op ponents than to convince, it may te an unpleasant state of circumstances when National honor and State rights are at issuo; but we must all admit that qucs. tions in respect to the latter are not, of j necessity, finally determinable in the forum of the former. In what the Na tional honor consists may bo matter of opinion j tho rights of the States as inde pendent, self-regulating political corpora tions are matters of fact. It is no concern of ours that the issue upon the State tax ation of National promises has assumed a party complexion. Being so, it is all the more iaeumbent upon both parties to make appeal to reason as the umpire, and to enforce their opinions with lair argu ment: and, for a party which Bets its claims to infallibility so high, the lie pub lican is certainly most extr.Tagantly reti cent if the field of ratiocination We have no desire to treat the honor argument for. in one sense, it is an ar gumentunfairly. It is predicated upon the asumtuption that these bonds were ksncd av . time of extreme National peril; aad that the clause providing to relieve them from the burden of State taxation was essential" to their efficacy as a means of relUf from sv'ch peril, and was, there fore, done ander tne pressure of that par amount necessity wich, as a primary law of nature, overrides a.id, for the time be ing, suspend air statutes and constitu tions. This may have bfen ; we will not stop here to deny it; aor will we deny that there may be occasions vnen me law of necessity rises to the cona'ition of a - ' . .i l supreme rule of human conduct. . It may have been very expedient to hold ot the idea that the. National bonds would not taxed by the State governments ; and still very improper to attempt to compel tho States, which were parties neither to the peril nor to the arrangement, to establish precedent of btate subordination, lor the purpose of carrying it into effect. The law of paramount necessity expires with its occasion. It can not perpetuate itself is endless financial or political con sequences. It is not reToltlttonary ia its operation ; aud a3 soon as it expires, laws and constitutions revive, and, taking things as they find them, go on as they did before the temporary susrtjwision. White Man's Day. -In the House of Representatives on the 5th 6f Februa ry, Mr. Koss, of Illinois, moyed an amend ment ot the rules so tnat one aay in sir of the time spent . by Congress might be devoted to public business to be call ed the " White Man's Day." Of course the resolution was tabled instantly. 1 he Rcmp Congress,' finds it better worth while to try to save the Republican party than to restore the union: ana so, instead f taking care of, the national affairs of thirty Bullions of people, it spends all its labors upon the local affairs of six or eight millions who are quite capable of manag ing them for themselves. One of these davs the thirty millions will wake up and drive .out ihesfl wretched 7 fanatics, 5who ra nrafitMns etrangu'atifcB upon the po litical and commercial lift the Repub lic. That will be the," white man's day . a .BiwiB,lent of .ie Rural American says : For a good dairy cow, choose one with a striped hoof ; she will never fail. A cow with ark hoofs may be good for-a large f milk, hat it will not be rich. For a medium cow, choose one with part of the hoof striped, or any other color except dark. " y - A Western debating society lately discuss ed the ouestion. whether a rooster g knowl edge of "daylight was the result of observa- i ton or tostinec From Artemn YVanTi New Book. AHTIIIII VAltI OS l AHttlSU. Tho Barclay County Agricultural So ciety having seriously invited the author of this volume to nddrcss them on the oc casion of their next annual fair, lie wrote to the l'resident of the Society as follows: Nr.w York, June VI, 1805. Dr.AR.Sia: I have the honor to ac knowledge the receipt of your Utter of the oth inn., in which you invite me to deliver an address before your excellent Agricultural Society. I feci flattered, and think I will come Perhaps, meanwhile, a brief history ol my experience ns nn agriculturist, will ie acceptable ; and as that history no doubt contains suggestions of great value to tho entire agricultural community, I have concluded to write you through the press. I have been an houcst old farmer for some four years. My farm is in the interior of Maine Unfortunately my lunds are clovou tnilos troni tho railroad, hlevcn miles is quite a distance to haul immense quantities of wheat, corn, rye, and oafs, butas I haven t any to haul, I do not have to suffer much on that account. My farm is more especially a grass farm My neighbors told me so at first, and, as an evidence that they were Bincere in that opiuion, they turned their cows on to it tho moment I went off " lecturinc." These cows are now quite fat. I take pride in these cows, in fact, and I am glad that I own a grass farm. Two vears am 1 tri(il altpin raiainrr I bought fifty lambs and turned tficm Ioote on my broad and beautiful acres. it was pleasant on hrignt niornin;n to ftroll leisurely out to the farm in my dressing eown. with a eiirar in uiv mouth. and watch those innocent little la tubs as they danced gaily o'er tho hill side. Watching their saucy capers reminded me of caper sauce, and it occurred to me that I should have some very fino catinjj wnen tncy grew up to bo muttons." My gentlo shepherd, Mr. Eli Perkins. t-id, 44 Ye must have some shepherd dogs. I ha i no very prcciso idea as to what shepherd dogs were, but I assumed a rath er profound Took, and said : " We must, jli. I spoko to you about thM some time ngd 1 I wrote to my old friend, Mr. Dexter H. roueit, ot iioston, jor two snepnerd lnr Mr. i'oUctt is an uoucsi old larui cr himse bvt I thought he knew about shepherd doK. Ho accordingly forsook far more tuiporurui Dusmew w vwmmw date, and tho dogs came forthwth. They were eplendid creatures suua-colored, hale-cyed, loug-tailed. anv! shapely-jawed. We led them proudly to the news. 4 Turn them in, Eli," I sa'd. Eli turned them in. They went in at once, and kiPod twen ty of my best lambs in about four minutes and a half. My friend had made some trifling .mis take in the breed ot dogs. These dogs were not partial to sheep. " W ell, did you ever? I certainly never had. There wero pools of blood on the green sward, and fragments of wool and raw lamb chops lay round in confused heaps. nt- j 1.1 L.i. 1 . I 1, 110 UUgs wuum imvu uccu rent iraw w Boston that night, had they not suddenly died that afternoon of a throat distemper. It wasn't a swelling of the throat, it wasn t dhuhoria. It was a violent opening oi the throat, extending: lrom ear to ear. .Thus closed their lifo-storics. Thus ended their interesting tails. . . m B 'a 4 ' I failed as a raiser ot lambs. As a sheepist I was not a success. ; Last Summer Mr. Perkins siu !,; " I think we'd better cut some grass thii sea son, sir." We cut some trass. . To me the new mown hay is very sweet and nice. The brilliant tieorge Arnold sings .about it, in beautiful verse down in Jersey every bummer; so does the bril liant Aldrich, at Portsmouth, New Ilamp shire. And yet I doubt if either of these men know the price of a ton of hay to day. But new mown hay is a really une thin?. It is eood for man and beast. We hired four honest farmers to assist us, and we led them gayly to the meadows I was going to mow my sell. . I saw the sturdy peasants go round onct" erc I dipped my flashing scythe into the ta.'l, green grass. tt you ready r said J!. i'erkins. "I am rel" "Then follow us!" I followed t.'iem. Followed then,' rather too closely, evi dently, for a white haired old man, who immediately followea iur. rerums, caucu nnon us to halt.- Thei? iQ a hrm voice ne said to his son. who was ;ust ahead of me, John change places witJ me, I hain t pot loner to live, anvbow. . 1 onder berry in' ground will soon have these old bones, and it's no matter whether rm earned there with one leg off and terrible gashes in the other or not! But you- Jofxa vou are voung. The old man changed places witn, nis son, aud a eaim smne oi recognition m up his wrinkled face, as he said, " ow, sir, I am ready I'M : r ' m mm MBS e What mean you, old man r ' 1 said " I mean that if you continner to bran'- ish. that blade as you have been branch ing it. vou will slash hell out of some of us before we're an hour older.". There was some reason mingled with this old white-haired peasant's profanity: It was true that I had twice escaped mow ing off his son's legs, and his father was perhaps naturally enough alarmed. I went down and sat under a tree. "I never know'd a literary man in my life," I overheard the old man aay, " that know'd anything. i Mr. Perkins was not as valuable to me this season as I fancied he would be. Every afternoon he disappeared from the field reeularlv. and remained absent some two hours. He said it was headache j he inherited it from his mother; his mother was often taken ia that way, and suffered a great deal J'erkiriK lip, in u largo wet rug, und nay he il-lt better.' t)no afternoon it so huppeucd lliat I soon followed tho invalid to tho Iiouho. and us I iicnred the porch, I heard a 11' tualu voice euergetinatly observe, " You' stop 1" It was the Voice of the hired girl, and she added," I'll holler loMr. Browul" O no, iNancy," 1 heard the invulid E. Perkins soothingly say: 41 Mr. Brown kuowa I love you; Mr. Brown ofitl" approves This vran pleasant for Mr. Prown. I peered cautiously throngrt the kitch en blinds, and, however unnatural it limy appear, the lips of Mr. Perkins and my hired girl were very near together. i?he said, 44 You sha'nt do so," and ho tin goal. She also said hhe would get right up and go away, aud, as an evidence that she was thoroughly in earnest about it, she re mained where she a. ' They are married now and Mr. Perkins is troubled uo moro with the headache. This year we are planting corn. Mr. Perkins writes me lhat 41 on accounts of no skare krows being put us, krows cum and digged fust crop up, hut soon got an other iu. Old BUhee who was fraid youd cut hi sons legs off says you bet go and stan up in field yrrself with dressiu ground on gesses krows will keep away. This made boys in storo larf, no More terday from oura respectful 44 Em Pkiikins, 'his letter." My friend, Mr. I. T. T. Moore, of the Rural New Yorker, thinks, if 1 41 keep on," 1 will get iu the poor house in about two years. If you think the lioneat old farmers ol Barclay County want mo, I will coiiio. Yours truly, ClIAKLKS BttOWN. Thad. Ktevetui Fitly Itevlewed. The New lork Evening Post, one of tho ableft Abolition organs io the coun try, thus commented upon the course of Radical Thad. Stevens in the House on a recent occasion : Mr. Stevens exhibited his native dis like of freedom, and his propensity to tyrannize over others, in his effort to cut off debate on th. new amendment, by moving the previous nucstion. That so important a matter ns a fundamental change of the organic law, binding mil lions of peoplo for ages, perhaps, both in regard to the mode of their taxation and their representation, should be hurried through Congress by the mere machinery of the rules shows the estimate which Mr. Stevens puts upon our democratic modes. He would govern the House and govern the country, as he announces it to be his intention to govern the South for the next ten years, by arbitrary laws and the whip and tho snur. B'ortnnately there was good ssnsc enough in the House to defeat tho scheme of the arch enemy of dcmcnocratic institutions, land get the amendment debated. Thus far, i is true, no really sound objection to the principal proposed bas been stated, buttt is a crreirt satisfaction to the people, inlccd it is indispensable to the consent of tho public mind to a."f fundamental change, that it should be a:!cusscd. It is tho vory es seucc of our sy.stem, one of its signal beau ties, that no one person, no party, no or ganization of any sort, has any moral right to impose its conclusions upon others, or to dictate what wo shall think or what we shall do ; but all Bides are asked to engage in the debate, and th. whole body ot the nation decides. Under this method, no doubt, a great many crude opinions are uttered j con ceited or tanatical persons and pretentious party leaders succeeded in getting their notions into a certain vogue; temporary impulses of tho people themselves carry away their judgments; but so long as dis cussion is free, so long as thought of eve ry man to bo heard is acknowledged, so long as Governor's messages and legisla tive debates, and speeches at public meet ings, and the "able articles" of the jour nals may bo printed and read, there will be a curative for these temporary mis chiefs. The process may bo tedious; it may offend our superior intelligence and our aesthetic tastes; but tho result of dis cussion is, that the highest wisdom iu the community will somewhere get said. Dis cussion winnows the chaff from the wheat ; it triturates the raw material of thought into digestible material; it finally trans forms the rude amorphous mass into or ganic substance, assimilating it with the finest tissues and weaving it into the most substantial fabric of the living whole. A Chance for Somxer to Howl.-The Montgomery (Ala.) Advertisor relates the following horrible incident which Senator Sumner, instead of placing in his scrap book of horrors, can make the subject of Congres sional investigation, and which will afford him and the saintly Grecly & Co. a theme for .a howl that will meet public sympathy A gentleman lrom mew lorit, wno came down the road yesterday, reports that at Opelika a negro girl, some 16 or 17 years old, came in with her ears cut off close to her . 1, 1 ll 'i !. J - t neau, anu anegeu mac it was uone uy a man in United States uniform, because she would not let him do .violence to her person. No notice has been taken of the outrage by the military ; authorities. Such inhumanities should be ferreted out and the guilty parties punished severely, whosver they may be. Where the civil authority has not power to act th. military certainly has; and we trust. between to two, no acts oi me juna "win ce allowed to disgrace the community. ! A-nassencer swearing terriblv in the Bos ton and Providence Railroad was approached by a voung minister ..with more seal than discretion, who said to him abruptly: f My dear sir, do you know where you are going? You are going straight to boll." 44 Just my d d luck p. replied tho man, looking tho minister in the lace with an alarmed air, and suddenly fumbling for his check, 44 1 bought a ticket tor rrovidence!" A man passing through a gateway in the dark hit his nose against the post. 44 1 wish that post was in hell," said he. " Botter wish it somewhere else,'coolly remarked a bystander, 44 you might run toul it agan." At the end of two hours, Mr would ro-appear with his dune iiiNToitY rt itirizi:i. The Petersburg (Va.) Index thus sar eastieally hits off Hie growing tendency of lauding and glorifying and worshipping New -England at tho expense oft truth, justice and dignity on the part of the peo ple in other sections of the country : We suggest, thnt hereafter all scholastic- edneatiou shall be by law, conveyed in question and answers, that all tlio an swers fhall constat of the word New Eng land, or New Eitghuidcr, or some inflec tion or mod idea t ion of tho same substan tives a inny be pertinent to eaeh enqui ry, together with such particular n may nerve to do justice to individual localiliu's in New England. Iiet us illustrate by sonic random ex ample from (.Irooian History: , Who let the Artrmautic expedition f Squire Jason, a Boston merchant in the wool trade Wltfre was Troy fcituuted J On PnHnmaq noddy Hay. Who settled Buotin? A colony of New Hollanders. Where was Alexander the (Jrcat boru ? In Rhode Island. Why was he called Tho Great? Because after conquering Newport Isl and ho cried because he had no pungy to cross over to the main land. What was the Acropolis? The siiuimor resideuco of tho Mayor of Concord on the White Mountains. Who led tho Trojans at the siege of Troy ? " J lector, a sport," of tho Boston P. R. What was the war about? A New England pehool uinrni. Where was Maccdon ? I n the Northern part of New England. Where was Athens ? In the Southern ditto, ditto, Ac. &c. Our private opinion and belief is that there are authentic documents now in the library of Yalo College or they will be thcro when needed to prove that Bunk er Hill Monument marks the Bite of Bab ylon the Mighty, that Carthage was no more nor less than Portland, Ostium Na hant, and Boston, io fact, Athens: that Homer was professor of Belles Lcttres at Harvard, and I'niinurus a member of tho Cambridge Yacht club; that Priscian taught a grammar school nt Montpelier, and Archimedes was a private tutor of chemistry iu Concord ; that St. Peter was Cape Cod lishcrruao, d St. Matthew a collector of the internal revenue at Ston ing! on ; that Phidias owned a brown-stone quarry in Maine, and Socrates founded the Atlantic Mouthly ; that tho Acide mia was the walk under the elm tress at New Hcavon. and tho Colossus of Rhodes a statue which strided from Nantncket .to Martha's Vineyard ; that Plymouth Rock is all that is left of the Tower of Babel. and the Connecticut river ran through Paradise; that Stonington is tho site of Tyre, and Mernuiae fast colors, the dyes that made that city famous; that the old temple of Diana at Ephesus was not burn ed, but is now Faneuil Hall, and that Herodotus and Wendell Phillips were the same persons; that tho fablo of Romulus and his brother being suckled by a wolf (input) arose from the circumstance that their mother was the first Vcrmonter who looped her dresses ; that Mercury was the ancient uamo of Ben Butler's family, and that Iifcc everything else in New England, the fumTIy has gone on perfecting itself lrom tho start; that the suu shines six hours per diem more on that favored spot than any other between the poles; and that Noah's family was so much elated at an alliance with the Webstcrs of Massa chusetts, that they got up a dictionary to commemorate that lact ; that St. Patrick was Head Uentrr of a Fenian Circle m Bangor, and St. Andrew kept a distillery in Jjowcll; and finally, that the millent um will begin in Boston, and will not be allowed to extend beyond its limits, ex cept by a two-thirds vote of tho tax-payers of that heavenly city, excluding all who have at any time in their most secret thoughts expressed a doubt of the propri ety of hanging Jeff Davis and General Lee on a sour apple tree. How absurd, then, to write a book to prove to us that bam. Adams, and not Jefferson, was the founder of the Demo cratic party. Why, we stand ready to admit that Washington was born in Con necticut, that Virginia was a county of Rhode Island, and that we owe our lives, our reasons, and our daily bread, as we owe our wooden nutmegs and painted hams, exclusively to New England. Pray, lump the business gentlemen, and do not prolong the agony. Qcarrelixg. If anything in the world will make a man feel badly, except pinching his ' fingers in the crack of a door, it is, un- i! . 1 , - i ! quesuouaDiy, a quarrel, o man ever iaus to think less of himself after it than before. It degrades him in the eyes of othersj and what is worse, blunts his sensibilities on the one hand, and increases the power of pas- sionaie irmaDUiry on ine otner. xuo iruui is, the more peaceably and quietly we get on, the better for our neighbors. In nine cases out often, the better course is, if a man cheats you, quit dealing with him ; if ne is auusive, quit nis compan j ; uuu i uv slanders you, take care to live so that no body will believe him. No matter who he is, or how he misuses you, the wisest way is to let him alone ; for their is nothing better than this cool, calm and quiet way oi aeai ing with the wrongs we meet with. RrvrDT for Kicking Cows. Cows, says a cotemporary, seldom kick without some trrvwl reason for it. -""Teats are sometimes chf-pped or the udder tender harsh handling : . t . a 1 i O i-' hurt them, ana tney kick. : Domeumen iou and fiharn fincnr Tlfnls (Hit their teatS &U sometimes the milker pulls the long hairs on the udder while . milking. Shear off the innr, l.n im nnfc Ion 9 finders nails close, bathe .ttonrxul tonta with warm water, and grease VIIUUMVU - F KJ them well with lard, and always treat a cow gently. She will never fcicit unless someiniDg kuvta nor fT ah a fpnrn & renetition of former hurts. When handled gentle, cows like to be milked. When treated otherwise, they will kick and hold ub their milk. It is quite ai nnnsistAnt. tn whin a sick child to stop its crying as to whip or kick a cow to prevent CorreniionilefK-B Fort Wayne (Incl.,) linom-rat. who jovi;hm? Mrmtin, Emtoks: We have seen that Eastern capital has direct control of eight Senatorial Committees, and that the great Northwest has tho chairmanship of but uitie Committees in the Semite: and small ns is the number compared with Now England's control of Senate Com mittees, we find upon examination that six of the nine who pretend to represent Northwestern interests, are actually rep resentatives f Eastern capital, and that in fact the Northwest, with its nine mill ions of population, has but three chair tnatifhips in the Senate Committee; and that the Middle States, with their popu lation of over seven millions, have but two, while the six New England State?, with a population of but thrco millions, havo directly and indirectly control of fourteen Senatorial Committees tht number being two more than their whole Senatorial delegation -while the four Middle States, with Maryland and eleven of the Western States, which combined have a population nearly 18,000,001), and a Senatorial delegation of thirty-two, have the. chairmanship of five Senatorial Com mittees, three of which are Patents, Pri vate Land Claims, and Pensions, being one chsirman of a Committee to . every 8.000,000 of population. Again, we ask, 44 Who Governs ?" The answer is New England capital, which controls fourteen Senate Committees, being one for every 214,285 of population. And the people West talk of ,4Kclf-govcrnnient," talk ol " republican institutions," of "equal and exact justice," of extending our glorious practice of governmental equality to all mankind; which, in reality, means that we would like to enlarge tfio field of the Eastern capitalist's oppressions, to extend the area of unjust tariff, shoddy manu factures, non-specie paying bankers, and pound -of -flesh bondholders. Western agriculturists howled against the aristoc racy of slaveholders, while they now assist in creating a manufacturing aris tocracy, which places a tariff of twenty per cent, specie and forty per cent, ad valorem upon all woollen goods manufac tured in foreign countries, and at the same time admit foreign wool to be im ported by paying a duty of only four and a half cents. Hence, we see that that which is necessary to the Western labor er, as an article of wearing apparel, and which the New England manufacturer has lor sale, cannot be imported into this country without paying an enormous duty ; while that which if produced by Wc.trn labor (wool), and which the Eastern manufacturer is compelled to purchase, ia admitted almost duty free. But we arc told we must protect " home industry." Why not, then, protect tho agriculturist in the production of wool, and more particularly so, as it is nlinost the only article of home product which the Government can give protection to? But that would Dot be giving the manu facturers a "fair show," according to the capitalist's idea of fairness. Can any just reason be given why Government should load woollen goods with tariffs and duties, and permit wool to come in almost duty free ? Why should railroad iron pay a high duty? an article that all Western labor ers arc interested id"; for if railroads cost large sums per mile for construction, the cost of transportation must be corres pondingly high. Every dollar per ton added to tho cost of railroad iron by tar ns and duties increases necessarily the cost of transportation, thereby increasing the burthens of the Western farmers in getting their' produce to market. But the iron manufacturers' at the East de mand protection at 'the expense of the farmers, mechanics, and railroad compa nies ; and of course the Government that legislates for the few at the expense of tho many, and that protects Eastern cap ital at the expense of Western labor and Western capital, yields the point. KcspcctiuIIy, , . a, P. Koubke. . Fenian Informers. Chas. Dickens thus aptly describes a "Fenian informer:" In Irish political trials there is a regu lar performer, who always comes on and lends a specially dramatic interest to the whole.! This' ia the informer, as he is known to the crowd ; the approver, as he is more courteously ' known to the law. It is dramatic to see this actor's entrance: his furtive glance at the galleries, as if. there were enemies there ready to spring on him; his timorous answers to the almost contemptuous ' questioning of the crown lawyers, who seem anxious to have done with the "dirty work;" his gradual gathering of confidence as he feels safe ; his cowering look as the prisoner s coun sel advance to grapple with him; his fawning explanations and self-justification ; his falling back- on brazen impu dence and bravado as he is obliged to confess some fresh piece of treachery; his half-savage and defiant confession as he is brought to bay, and the truth wrung from him; and the bitter scowl of secret rage at the skillful counsel who has forced him to make a degrading picture of himself. It were almost to, be. wished that this mode of proving guilt were not known to our law, though it must be admitted that it is always introduced with reluctance, and thrown in as a make-weight: and that on this occasion all parties concerned seem to rest very little on the "informer s assist ance.-' 3J'-'i; f i';-"'- .. '; ' 5 Johk Wentwohth. -The Mountain Dem ocrat says : The Sacramento Union is a great admirer of, as it calls him.n 4 Btal wart John Wentworth," and is in every way worthy of tne aamiraxion oi inai jnamc&i eoouuy cou corn. "J He and h conductors of the Union are congenial spirits. A fellow feeling makes them wondrous kind, i - Who is 44 stal wart John Wentworth?'? The Buffalo (N Y.) Advertiser, a Republican, paper, says Wanttfnith iaKAinuul Mmint mfi.rt.in Congress, and his1 colleague, , Col. . John J. Hardin, accused him, on the floor of the House, of breaking open his (IPs) desk and stealing a letter, and denounced him as 44 a liar, a thief and a coward." It is almost needless to say the 41 stalwart John went worth ' did not resent the deadly insult. A ORtrX'rT CHIEF 1'TIC1V "Thad. Stevens' sudden anxiety to re-f peal so much of the Congressional test oath as prohibited Southern attorneys from practising in the South created much surprise at the time, and its. led iff much discussion since among those jpot.. fully in the secret. It seems that asiuaUy caucus of the faithful met at Mr. Clfe' on Saturday evening, where the' wnofef subject was informally discussed. ' Jodgr Chose is understood to have said that tba law was clearly against the oath, that th.. question now before the Supreme Court involved the whole principle, aad niunt soon be decided, and recommended the' course pursued by Stevens rm the follow? ing Monday as the best teeth xl for re-, lieving him from the necessity (f jsaking. a disagreeable decision,, and th party from possoMing a roost unwwdly pbant." New York Herald. ' ' ' . So it seems that the Chief Justice of tho Supreme. Court of the United States diKgraces his position by inviting caus cues to his houf to decide upoo what action the party vall take upon political ' subjects, and upil decisions which are to ' come from his court. The Suprem.'j Court of the United States is to be run , by 44 a small caucus of the faithful.'' W"., have fallen on Jdrange time?, "truly There was once in this country some re- gard for propriety, some respect shown-' for the positions men held, particularly when they reached the Supreme Court ofj the United States. Judges d?sircd t7r attain and retain an individual character, and to mark their official positUa by th efforts of their abilities, their upright ness, and their freedom from even contact , with the various political creeds and measures of the day. But now, individ- uala, personal character, official Kffiitioui candidates, party measures, legislative' acts, and judicial decisions, are all throws! i into that modern centralized in pisition , of the Republican party, called a caucus. And its edicts are fate. No wonder that tho days of honest - men have passed."'-' Dishonest men bide their ifciqaily under ; the plea of the rule of oar cantos- No . wonder that great men have disappeared from our councils, where '.very man" i . but the nwuth-plece of a caucus.1 No'' wonder thatw. have bo independent roea when they sell their eoascienc. a:id jndg- l ment and eonls to the keeping of a mid . . night cabal, "When the wicked rale., the people mourn," is a troth of Scrip- .' turo which is being exemplified tor our!'f day to its perfection. The first thing to' : bo done is to break up this monstrous iay iquity of caucus rule. , , Backbone People. It is with mca i as with Animals; you tnay dlviie them- into two classes, vertebra ted and invert bra ted. Animals remarkable for dignity and elevation in the scale of existence ar. , vertebrated or backboned; their back- bones give the eminence aud place; all animals to which we apply the trim "io- i ferior" want this backbone, and they ear only crawl or creep, because they are ia vertebrated. . We have . often thought, when looking among men, that this is the great distinction we notice between thera' ' the successful and the unsuccessful, ' the principled and the unprincipled, the -true ami the. false. The school-master,- as he bids farswell to his pupil about to enter the great world of business end ae tion, says: "I know they will nevtr maka J anything out of that boy -t hero is bo backbone in him." Jenkins, the grocer,, -t looks doubtful at his apprentice, at,d sya 4 as he shakes his head, "Ah I I wish I 'r had never had anything to do with thai"2 lad ; I doubt there is. no backbone im' him." And Thompson, the architect,, r refuses to have anything to do with- v building the row of houses, " For " says he, " there's no knowing where to find'"4 Williams, who wants me to build ' them ; ' he has no backbone.7 These are e astos 'f ary modes of speech, and they rej resent)V , tho simple truth of life. We recoil jat stinctively from the touch of the spider and the wasp, the leech and the slug; and we recoil as instinctively froia that ' large class of persons of whom these litth creatures are a sort of moral analogy, be, .? cause they have no backbone. They caa 8 ting sometimes ; they can weave a brittle' web sometimes; they leave here audi there a elimy trail ; they can draw blood; nx but the instincts of society and huiianity recoil from them. They have ho baekw bone. ' . " Greelt Among lira Feiixds. The follow ing story is told about Horace Greeley r ' . ' The distinguished journalist was eamine one after nooD, more abstracted and sbvenlj than usual, from the isible llouser wtere he locks himself in every day and labors on bis . . 4 American Conflict," when he happened to be swallowed up in the crowd of vagrants and thieves that are daily sent fro m the . Tombs (city prison) toBlackwelTs Isiisd, iu M the East river. The white-coated pi ii lose- pher, finding himself in such eonapaa y ' deavored to get out of it : but a xealcan Dos-,. , berry, thinking, from his costuae, tas. he was a vagrant desirous or escaping, stiX t him by the collar end marchea Bwua " t?e boat, amid tne jeers ot me enter "ane wretches who believed bim to be one of their crew. Greeley protested again aoct again that he had several editorial to write for the Tribune, and must not be detained ; but this declaration caused the policeman to declare , that the "old cove was crajry," and m ast go . to the Lunatic Asylum. Tha boat, fall ct' malefactors, had already steamed out is to the river, when some one ia the vessel reoet jQised I Horace Greeley -taad as a hornet, and wing some very stroug expletives by this iisse 'l and released him from his disagreeabl. pre- ' dicament, greatly to the, delight of the per-. f plexed editor, and to the profound KKUtlica- . tion of the over-earnest policemexu ' - -' ! StriCIDAL Cow. -Th .lani it&m im m. m committing suicide, which remarkable event i - 3 . 1 1 1 . i sm uavo usppeneaiu csujves&ss, rssw . York. A local paper gravely states th at the , i cow was seen to walk detiV!Ani1v n(nl, river near the Coxeokie Ferry, and wliea ia 1 a a a. i J aooui iwo or turee ie oi water, e&o Iaia s down and tried to get head under watt r, but 'r was prevented by her horn from accoxiplish, her object. She then came out of th. water " and . again mad. th. attempt-: .The. third v time she put her head under water aai hell it there until she feil over dad '