STATE RIGHTS DEMOCRAT. ABBOTT & BROWN. M. K. A.S10TT. I X. T. I ROW ir. OFFICE IN HXNNON'S BUILDING, FIRST STREET. ADVASCS: One year, $3; Sir Months $2; One Month, 50 ets. ; Single Copies, 12, ets. Correspondents writing over assumed signatures r anonymously, must mke known their proper names to the Editor, or no attention will be gWen to their communications. All Letters and Communications, whether on feuineM or for publication, should b addressed to Abbott A Brown. BUSINESS CARDS. tJFFICE OP COCMY SCH001 SUPERINTEND, J T WATERLOO, SIX MILES ABOVE LEB Ai anon, on the Santiam. Post office address, Lebanon. f w- MACK. r9n451y Co. School Superintendent. C- O- OUBL, 1TTORSEY AT I A W , SALEM, OREGON; TfiU praetice in all the Court of this State and TriU attend the Circuit Court terms in Lino county ani the entire District. Office in Watkinds Co s riek.npsUirs. T3n4Syl ITIXUAM DAVIDSON, Qc No. 64 rront Street, Adjoining the Telegraph Office, Portland, Oregon. QPEOIAL C0LLE0T0B OF CLAIMS. Boads, Promissory Notes, Book Accounts, and all other Claims will bo made a Specially, aad Promptly Collectod. jan30.-T4n24tf S. A. JOHNS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ALBANY. OREGON. ILIGENT attention wiil begiret i to f ness in Ma line. jao23T4n23tf. B PRICES GREATLY REDUCED! DR, E. II- GRIFFIX Proposes to . his rates for DenUl serriccs forth, year 1S59, as Mlowi. Tii : Full upper and lower st of Art. Teeth. 0 o $50 Pull upper or lower - " PiTOt teeth, $2,50 each. Filling Ueth, from $1 U $3eachcarity. Ertraetin. 5 cents per tooth. Cleansing. 50 cents to Other minor opera- tiots in proportion. Terms, U. 8. eoin or iu cquiTalent. - . . N. B. Office OTr Bentley's shoo store, in the Id post office building, P'"11, FTVck Albany, Oregon. DR. E- II. GRIFFIN. Dec. 30, 1S6S v4n29tf. N. II. CRANOR, ATTQBXET AB COUNSELLOR IT LAW, Orrica In Norcross' Briek Building, up-sUirs, Albany, Oregon, n C. A. BLACKLEY, FASHIONABLE BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM THE citiiens of Albany Vj at be has opened a Barbor Shop, on Main sire: , two doors above Parrish's Block, where be is pr rared to accom rnodato all who may desire anything ia the tonso rial lino. , He also states that his terrices can bo ha4 at any time, with due notice, to CALL FIGURES FOR PARTIES OR BALLS, n reasonable terms. dccH4nl7m4 JOIIX J. WHITNEY, .ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW and Notary Public Special attentions given to collections. OrriCE In the Court House. Albany. Oregon. T3n3Stf. 351. CANTERBURY, 31. D . Physician and Surgeon, CORVALLIS, OREGON. Office, B. R- Biddle's Drug Store. noTl4'68 r4n!3tf G. W. GRAY, D. D. GRADUATE OF THE CI3CISHATI DEIfTAL COLLEGE, WOULD INVITE ALL PERSONS DESIR ing Artificial teeth and first-class Dental Operation!, to give him a call. . Specimens of Vulcanite Base with gold plate linings, and other new styles of work, may be oen at his office, up itairs ia Parrish A Co.'i Brick, Albany, Oregon. Residence, corner of Second and Raker streets. aprll'68v3n34tf j. crownk t. fli. POWELL fc FliINX, A TTORNE YS A ND CO VNSELL ORS A T LA WAND SOLICITORS IN CHANCER Y, (L. Flinn, Notary Public.) ALBANY, Oregon. Collections and convey ances promptly attended to. oc20nl01y W. . HILT ABIDE L. BEDFIELD. IIIXTARIDEL &. CO., DEALERS IN GROCERIES AND PROVI sion, Wood and Willow Ware, Confection ry, Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes, Notions, etc. Store a Maine street, adjoining the Express office, Al bany, Oregon. se28v3n7tf BARROWS, Im BLAI5, S. E. TOUHG. Jf BARROWS cfe CO., pmrmAL $ cqjpfissrgN merchants TTfc EALERS in etp!e, Dry and Eancy Goods, aLf QrocBfiesi ' Hardware", Cutlery, Crockery, Boots and Shoes, 'Albany. Oregon, j Consignments solicited. c6n8tf - . ftLBAHY ATH HQUSEI THE UNDERSIGNED. TTQULD RESPECT fully inform ph citizens of Albany and ri inity that he has taken cbargp of this Establish ment, and, by keeping claai rooms and paying ,trict attention to business, expectf 'to suit all those i who may faTOr him with their patronage. Haying .heretofore carried on nothing but ! Flrst-Cliss Hair Dressing Salqqns, he expects to give entire satisfaction to alL ilChildien and Ladies' Hair neatly cut and hatapooed. JOSEPH WEBBER. apr4v3n33tf , r. BCSSELL, AjfCS ELKIIfS, Att'yatLaw. Notary Public. RUSSEII. & ELKINS, Office in Parrish' & Co.'s Block. First Street, ALBANY, OREGON. V ' HaTing taken into co-partnership James Elkins, K sq., Ex-Clerk of Linn connty, Oregon, we are e nabled to add to onr practice of law and oollee I ions, superior facilities for (fonvey anting, Examining Becor&s, ' ' AND ---''-- ; , , - - . Attending: to Probate Business,. Dee Is, Bonds, Contracts and Mortgages carefully drawn. Homestead and Pre-emption papers made and Claims secured. Sales of Real Estate negoti ated, and loans effected on Collateral securities on reasonable rates All business entrusted to them will be promptly atteiSedto. ' RUSSELL 4 ELKINS. 0:t,6,I868--T2B46tf STATE VOL. IV. ADVE11TISEMKNTS. STATE EIGHTS DEMOCRAT JOB PRINTING OFFICE, FIRST ST., ALBANY, OREGON. f f E lave connected with this offloe a first-class JOB OFFICE, and are prepared, at shortest notice, to fill, in the neatest manner, any order that may be scut us. Executed Speedily, and in a satis factory Style, at Prices CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST! Theatres, Concerts, and Publio Meetings, Accommodated at the Shortest .Notice MEN SUPPLIED WITH CARDS, BILLS. BILL-HEADS, BILLS LAD IX 'I. CIIKCKS, LETTER HEAD INGS, Ac. BALL CIRCULARS. ELECTION TICKETS. BALL TICKETS. CENSUS BLANKS, DRUGGISTS' LAUEI.S. LIQUOR LABELS. ORDERS OF DAN CINO. NOTES OF HAND. DRAY RECEIPTS, LEtlAL BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, CIRCULARS. BILLS OF FARE, PROGRAMMES. SHIPPING RECEIPTS. LOOKS AND PAMPHLETS, CATA LOGUES. AND BY-LAWS. All Orders Promptly Attended to ABBOTT ct BUOWN, "State Rights Democrat" Job Office. " PCRTIAN0 DAILY AND WEEKLY "COM M E II CI A L," TOR 1069. THE DAILY COMMERCIAL. ($i A YEAR), it puMUbed evtrr eTininr. Sunday except ed, and contains 20 eotirtuns : a fair tbam of which ia devoted to Editorial. !ic-t!ny, Nc, Polities, Correipondence. and a carefully prepared luuimarj of telegraphic aem. la politica, tb "Cotamerciar' i moit emphati cally Democratic. There will never b any u tion as to the character of our Democracy. We mean to labor fot the return and re-tstaMwhmtnt of constitutional law. We thai! tri to imtl ia the minds of the people thin truth that the C'.n ititurt n as it was before the cointDencemcnt of the late civil war, far exceeded in wisdutn and adapta tion to the happinei of frt-e people anjr imtru ment of the kind ever deviled by man. We ac cept the old Constitution with all its Raararu-r all its reqainrajenti with all the rt-jhu, rivUegci and instituiiom which existed under it. " Not one of those ia.nitutioni tot what were eBential to a lepublican Government. On no other plan than that marked out by our father can the Govern ment be maintained in iu parity. Our motto U The Old Union awl the Old Comtitution. Th "Wkeklt CuMMERcm." will contain twenty-eight columns f cloidy printed matter original and selected. The farmer, the promotion al man, the mechanic, the old and the roun, will find in it reading to their taatef. We shall not forget the yoanjr the bojs and girls. They are welcome to a corner in the Week ly, and they may look at every Lue witli a cer tainty of finding something for them. Merchant and buvinet men in the interior will find the Commercial perfectly reliable in market statia tics, Correipondanca fron; all parts of the State so licited. Clcbs.--Any person who will forward as a club of ten or more paying subscriber will receive one copy frea. BULL i DOW. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT, i.t H- BALTIMORE. ADMINISTRATOR OF the estate of Reuben R. Bloant, deceased, having filed his account in the County Court of the county of Linn, State of Oregon, praying a final settle ment of the same and to be discharged as such Adm'nietrator : Therefore, notice is hereby piv-n that said account and the settlement thereof will be beard and determined on Saturday, the Clh day of March , 18C9, at tbe Court House in tbe city of Albany, in said county, and all persons interested in said estate will file their objections to said account and tbe settlement thereof on or before said day. By order of said Court. S. A. JOHNS, Feb. 2, 869 n25w41 County Judge. NOTICE Or FINAL SETTLEMENT. J. C. WORTH. ADMINISTRATOR. AND Anna M. Worth, Administratrix, of the eKtate of John Q. A. Worth, deceased, have this day filed their account in the CouDty Court of Linn county, Oregon, praying for a final rettlement of the same, and to be discharged as such Administrators. Therefore, notice is hereby given that said appli cation and settlement will be heard and determin ed at the Court House in said county, on Tuesday, the Glh day of April, 18G9, and all persons interested in said estate are hereby required to file their objections to said account and tbe rettlement thereof on or before said day. By order of said Court. Feb. 6, 1869 n2Cw4.' S. A. J0IIN3. ' ' County Judge. N. n. CRAjron, Att'y for Adm'r.' ' EXECUTQITS NOTICE. "TLTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE undersigned has been appointed by the tl-iunty Uourt of Jjinn county, state or Oregon, Executor of the Estate of Spencer L. Snodcrass. deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to present them, with proper vouchers, to the undersigned, at bis resi dence in Harrisburg, Linn county, Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated Fbf 3, 1869. JOHN C. SNODGRASS, y4n25w4 Executor. AnmNISTRATOirS NOTICE, NOTICE 18 . HEREBY GIVEN THAT I, the undersigned, have been appointed, by the County Court of Linn county, btate of Ore eon, Administrator of the estate of Louis Gburob ill, deceased. .All persons haying claims against said estate are hereby requested tt present' them, with proper vouchers, to the undersigned, at his residence, ten miles boutn ot Albany, Linn conn ' ty, Oregon, within six montns from the date here Of. JAMES JVI. Oil UUCUILL. Dated. Jan. 23, 1869. Administrator. V4n24w4. FARM FOR SALE. THE SUBSCRIBER, LIVING FOUR MILES north of Albany on the Willamette river. offers his farm for sale. Said farm consists of 450 acres, all under fence ; 300 acres of good tilla ble land ; 160 acres in cnltivation ; good bouse and barn : an excellent well of water; a small or chard. I will sell this farm for to per acre one half cash down; tie b&lanoe on time to suit par ehawr. WJI. C. MILLER. Dee.lJ,8v4nl7rf ALBANY, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1869. V O K T 11 Y. AFTER THE BATTLE, BT MHS. JOHN L. rLAOO. A wast of land, a sodden plain, A lurid sunset sky. Mid clouds that fled and faded fast ' In ghostly phantasy ; A field uptarnud by trampling feet, A field up-piled with slain, With horse and rider blont in death Upon the battle plain. Tbe dying and the dead lio low ; For them no moro shall rise The evening moon, tbe midnight stars, Nur daylight's soft surprise. Tbcy wako no more t tcuderest oall, Nor aoo agin each home Where waiting hearts shall throb and break. When this day's tidings oome. Two soldiers lying as they fell Upon tbe roddened clay. In daytime foes, at night at peace, Breathing their lives away. Brave hearts bad stirred each manly breast, Fate only made them foes; And lying dying side by side, A softey feeling roie. 4,Our time is short," one faint voice said, "To-day we did our bcit," On different sidei: what matter now T To-morrow were at rest. Ltfd lies behind; I might not oare. For only my own sako. But far away are other hearts That thja day's work will break. Among few Hampshire's many hills There pray for me to-night A woman and a little girl, W.itb hair like golden light And as the thought broke forth at last The crj of anguish wild. That would not longer be suppressed "OGod! my wifo ray child r "And," said the other dying man, "AeroM the Georgia plain, There watch and wail for mo loved ones I'll never os again. A little child, with dark bright eyes. L'ach day awaits the door Tbe father's step, the father's kiss That never greet her more. To-day w sought aeh other's lives. Death let els alt that now ; For soon before God's mercy seat Together we hall bow, Forgive each oth-r while we may ; Lire' but a weary game: And. right r wrong, the morrow's sun "Will find us dead the same." The dying lip the pardon breathe, The dying bauds entwine ; The Uit ray dies, and over ail The tar from heaven shin ; And the litt'e girl with golden hair, TLe otxv with dark eyes bright, On Hampshire's bill atul GeorgU's plain, Wer fatherless that night. A .SETTLED POLICY OF THE 1'AItM. . The whole secret of the succawfu! far mer often lie in hi having a fixed rlan ff operations. Multitude have no plan but to mfet their initueJiatc necessities nod wake money by the easiest and seero- louiy shortest methods. If wol brioi hij;h price, they will gradually ptve up dairying and wcrk into heep, with the expectation of making their fortunes. If wool and mutton raising docn not pay, they .sell their flock at a great sacrifice. If hop are sixty cents a pound, they, inveM in hop pole and kiln for drying, and expect a audden wealth. If when in their yard, omo in full bearing, the prices fall off one half or more, they arc disgusted, and ready to blow up their yards, concluding the business will not pay. There arc men who are taking up a good thing a little too late to make moocy by it. 1 he farmer cannot afford this continual change. His business is less speculative than any other, and, af ter providiug for the wants of hi family and stock, hn should give his attention merely to the production of a few animal, crcps, or other products, on which he can rely to rat!e money. Any branch of farm industry, steadily followed, will bo found profitable. Dairying, in a year of short grass, might not pay well. Hut the years of drought arc exceptions, and the man who makes firstrate butter or cheese will find them a reliable source of income. Where a specialty is made of some onre crop, it ts particularly import ant that he should follow it meadiiy. The raising of hops or of tobacco re quire fixtures that arc useless in any other branch of farming, and the change involves a considerable loss of capital. Besides we are always learning in a busi ness to which we give habitual attention. and this knowledge U as much a part of our capital as the money invested in tools and In buildings. If a man should make potatoes his leading crop, ho should study to lessen the cost of production, and would resort to devices iu the preparation of manures, and in cultivation, quite un known to the farmer who pursues a caro less style of husbandry. He could. raise potatoes cheaper than his neighbors, by means of his improved methods, and if he Eold at the same price, make moro mQney. Whatever branch of farming you fallow, stick to it, if it is moderately profitable. Lay jour plans far ahead, and prepared for the exceptional years, when large profits come from high prices, or losses from unfavorable seasons. A mix ed husbandry is always the safest, and is not at all inconsistent with the cultivation of commercial crops, as tobacco, hops, flax, omon seed or vegetable seed of any kind, garden vegetables for market, fruits, etc. The introduction or these requires close calculation, definite plans and tnor ough business management, if success be attained. American AgriculturalUt. , B , hsBu ii i -- ti Old Parson M., of Torrington, Conn., was a queer sort of a maq. Ono time when Ins congregation had, most oi them, fairly disposed themselves for their alter nooq nap, he startled them as well as their ideas of propriety by asking-in his loudest tone, "What's the price of but ter r Two Montreal ladies rescued a skater from drowning, recently by tying their cloaks -together and hauling him out, while the frightened men of the party were running ashore lor help. A Virginia farmer says that with sheep and clover, he can make .anv land Dro- ductive unless it has the barrenness of the 6ands of Sahara. From tbe (Teon.) Press and Times, 23d. A TKUUIIiXi: INVENTION. Somo months ago a mechanical gonius, whoso namo wo are not at liberty to dis close, told us ho had an idea which ho was endeavoring to "work out" by which a very littlo army will bo irresistiblo against any number or enqmics. He promised to let us havo tho benefit of tho idea if he found that it could be made practica ble. Sinoo then ho has diligently worked at it every ovoning, Sunday notexceptod, bringing tt "out," ait ho calls it. During those months hi abstracted air, his isola tion, tho constant imcccssion of hopos and fears about tho success of his orojoct, which would be vuiblo on hi i'aco for days together, led many of his noighbors to tuppoio that he wa moro orlctu crazy. Ho brought his long audabsorbing labors to a ftucooHiiful termination about four days ago, and had the gratification of testing the utility of his perfected idea, with tho most comploto evidence of its practicability. The invention consists of a rango of guns of 0.7u bore and forty inches, mounted on a carriage of very simple structure to be hauled by one horse. Tho width of tho carriage be tween tho wheoht is ix feet. The gun barrels, twelve in number, are ranged apparently parallel to each other upoo tliu carriage. We say apparently, for their lino of fire is not strictly parallel, but divergent, no that at three hundred yard distance the twelve bullets sweep a lino of about thirty feot. They arc ranged at equal distances from each other, except in the middle, where there is a poce of ten iocht. into which is placed a telescope of considerable power, and a nice arrangement for adjusting the gun in taking aim. Thi contrivance enable the operator to send a bullet through the bull1 eye at Mxtccn hundred yards nine time out of ten. The tubes themselves aro rifled, and double the strength of or dinary rifle, ind are made strong at the breech by a band six inches broad and out-sixth thick. They are all loaded at the breech. The breech pcice are all connected by a rod, which i attached to a crank, one turn of which opens and shuts all the breech piece and load the pieces, for the breech pieces, by this mo tion, are brought in contact with twelve tube, placed immediately over the breeches, and containing the cartridges, the same turn extracting the cartridge from its tube, au i iuerting it with pre cision in it place in the gun. The gun are made ready f jr firing by a simple and rapid a motion as the turning of a crank. They arc fired by another slight motion, which drive twelve needles, in serted in the breech for the purpose, iuto the fulmirate with which the cartridges are covered. .So simple, sure and rapid are thcc movement, that twenty-seven rounds were fired in pixty-thrcc second, yesterday, at the place of trial, out an the Hyde s terry pike. The cartridge arc four inches in length, and do not CU: tircly explode until the ball is about half way out of the barrel, an effect which w produced by the nice arrangement of the material of which they are composed. hxcept the builet, the whole cartridge i combustible, and leaves nothing behind when fired off. The gun will send a ball three miles. The aim U always good at two thousand yards. At a trial yester day a line of plank, six inches broad, wis raised four feet from the ground and fired at fifteen hundred yards djstant.aqd oat of sixty shots forty-seven went through and tx others left marks upon the edges of the plank. The inventor is confident that a regiment of soldiers a mile and a half distant could bo all killed by one of these I'ollyferi (the name he has given them), in four minqlcs. In the hands of an intelligent, steady opera tor at least mpcty per cent, of tho halls fired will take effoct. The whole affair, when, in fighting trim weigh but five hun dred pounds, and is intended to be hauled by one horse and worked by two men, one to drive and tho other to operate The loading and firing apparatus ia so arranged that it can bo detached in a mo? ment, when the other part of the deadly engine becomes perfectly useless. Qne of them can be finished off complete, with horse, etc., for $1,000. The invent or, a young working mechanic, feels jubi lant at uc great success wmcn attcnuca the first trial of his important produc tion, which cost him so many months of toil aod all the means which he had at his command. He goes to Washington in about a week to push his fortune and to revolutionize the art of war. Courting in Church. A young gentleman, happening to sit at church in a pew adjoining one in which sat a ypung lady for whom he conceived a sud den ana violent passion, was desirous oi entering into a courtship on the spot, bnt the place .not being suitable for a formal declaration, the case suggested the follow ing plan : He politely handed his fair neighhor a Iiible opened, with a pin stuck in the lol lowin text : Second Epistle of John, verso 6th. "And now I beseech thee, lady, not as though I wrote a new commandment un to thee, but that which we had from the beginning, that we love one another. She returned it pointing to the second chapter of Ruth, verse 10th : , f'Then she fell on her face and bowed herself to the ground and said to hira : "Why have I found grace in thine eyes, seeing I am a stranger I He turned the hook pointing to the third Epistle of John "Having many things to write unto you I would not write with pen and ink, but I trust shortly to come unto you, and speek face to face, that our joy may be full." From tho above interview, a marriage m m . m f took place the ensuing wees. Miscegenation. The House of Rep resentatiyos of the Alabama Legislature has passed a bill . repealing all laws pro- hihiting - marriages 1 between : the blacks and whites. , .-. :.. M - 1 M llftsT ( OM31LMEMEXT OF THE WAR. It seems to bo pretty well established that President Lincoln, before the assault on Fort Sumter, was willing to recognize ho independence of the Southern Con federacy, and that he had taken active steps to that end. The lato develop ments about his proclamation to couth Carolina, announcing that purpose, only oonfirms his known previous official acts. He received unofficially the Commission ers from the Southern Confederacy for weeks, tor moro than a month after he was inaugurated ho did nothing to recov er the forts and other Government prop erty in the South. He was evidently un decided what to do when he journeyed to Wahmgton in tcbruary, 1801, declaring that " nobody had been hurt thus far. and suggesting that probably nobody would be hurt in the future by the South secession. Mr. ftewaru, his cccrctary oi btate, was declaring that it was but a "sixty days' business, and that by that time all would be settled. That also looked to a peaceful accommodation. which would recognize secession as an ac complished fact. It was the meeting of Northern Re publican Governors in tho latter part of .March and early in April. isOl, which changed the policy of the administration from peace to war from a recognition to the denial of tho recognition of the Southern Confederacy. The argument was ued privately by the Governors that a dismemberment of the Union would destroy the Republican party. Refore this meeting of the Governors the ted crsl Government had resolved on evacu ating Forts Pickens and Sumter, the on ly important fortresses in the South over which the Federal flag then floated. General Scott called every day for some time to get his dcfinUc orders to that pur pose, but with the hope, like " .Mi caw ber," that " something would turn up," they were delayed by the authorities. The Cincinnati Gazette considered it a wic measure to evacuate the forts. The Commercial was openly for recognizing Southern independence. The ew York Tribune, edited by Mr. Greeley, had strongly advocated it, and defended it up on the principles of 1770. The IndiAo- apohs Journal, the Columbus Journal, the Chicago Tribune, the Albany (V 1.) Journal, and many other Republican pa pers had protested agaiust any attempt to coerce the South. Chitf Justice Chase wa advocating thil policy in the Cabinet of Mr. Lincoln. The Republican ma jority in Congrtii, after tho South bid acceded, refused to pass any law mcreaa ing the artaj and naty for coercion pur poe. 4hoeiacti. with many others, showing the drift of Republican party sentiment at that time, are susceptible of the clearest proof. Long before these oc currences Senator Wade, President Lin coln and many others had cither directly ar indirectly, admitted the right t4 the South to withdraw from the Union, with out coercion, if she choose. Rut in the twinkling of an eya all this was altered. The administration and the Radical party resolved an coercion and war, and from that day to this they have been assiduous iu persecuting every one who did not change as soon as they did, and keep step to tho different kind of tunc wtucn was chosen lor tno entertain ment of the uanccra. There are thou sands yea,, tens and hundreds of thou sajids who ara cot aware of these facts, and when in duo time they are informed of them, it will break many popular idols to which they had formerly bowed in adoration. Tho fact that they were for punishing all those whom they had inoc ulatcd themselves with the expediency, if not the right, of recognizing secession, does not speak in their favor, and to tbe end of time will show them to be as ma licious as they were unjust and uuchari table. Acr having brought the a.qti-co- ercion sentiment into existence, they en ueavorcd to destroy it by arbitrary vio lence, and to suppress it by confining its advocates iq dungeons and fortresses. Cincinnati finouircr. nUTTUU VUOJf FIVE CQW, Ephriam Penrose of Rerks county, pa., sold from five cows 1,123 1-2 pounds of but ter in one year, commencing tho 1st ct May, 1807, whon they were first put to pasture. They were native cattle indi cating no striking marks of any parties lar breed, but ot medium size and well built. One week's trial gave 11 1-2, 1-4, 10 1-4, and two 8 pounds each. The ono giving 11 1-4 had her first calf, aud the two giving 8 pounds had been milked about three montns before the triaj. The family, always consisting of six; persons, and sometimes more, used freely of- milk, cream and butter from the same cows. The. butter used, they think., was not less than four pounds a week, making the yield from each cow about 266 pounds. Their food consisted of meadow grass, clover and timothy, and they always had access to running water. During the winter they had as much clover and tim othy hay as they would cat, and about 2 1-2 quarts of beans twice a day. They also had pumpkins the early part of win ter. The stable was warm, cleaned daily and well littered with straw. The cows were carded, curried jot brushed all the year. The above is not given because of the extraordinary yield, but is proportionably more man is uoiainea iu large aairics un der much stronger feeding, at least in concentrated food. The care taken in cleanliness was doubtless of much bene fit. It is a common saying that with horses curfying is half the feed j why then will not the same care taken with cattle be equally beneficial ? Practical Farmer. - If brooks are, as poets call them, the most joyous thing in nature, what aro they always murmuring about f - It costs the United States nearly four teen thousand , daUara to educato every eadetjtbat graduate at west roint. JLLS H A OGRATo NO. 27. A CRACK IN A HOG THOUGH. The following from a recent number of tho Prairie Farmer is almost equal to trankliD's story of the whistle : A few days ago a friend sent me word that every day he gave nearly twenty nans oi buttermilk: to a lot of hoat. nnri they scarcely improved at all. Thinks I, this is a breed of hotrs worth seeing. They must be of the sheet Iron kind. So I called on him, heard htm repeat the mourniui story, ana then visited the sty, in order to get a better view of the mi- racuious swine, l went into the pen. and, on closo examination, found a crack in the trough through which most of the conients ran away under tbe floor. Thinks T. hfirn ia thn (vnA r.f iU ('.ilnu. oi our agricultural brethren, When 1 see a farmer omittm? all im provement because of a little cost, selling in'. .... . ' .f an nis iartn stock:, to Duy bank: or rail road stock or morttraire stock, robbing his iana, witue, in reality he is also robbing nimseu, and his heir, thinks 1. mv friend. you have a crack in your hog trough. . . . " . nen i see a larmcr subscribing for a nan aozen political ana miscellaneous pa ners. and enendio? all his time in rear! lo'' them, while he doesn't read a sintde agricultural or horticultural journal, thinks l, to mysell. poor man, you have got a lartje and wide crack in vour hot? trough. When I see a farmer attendins all the political conventions, and knowing every man in town wno votes his ticket, aod yet, to save his neck, couldn't tell who is President of his Countv Atrrienltnral So. ciety. or where the Fair was held last year, i "unanimously come to the con- . t ' . ,t . .i ciuaion mat me poor soul has got a crack to his nog trough. When I see a farmer buying guano out wasting ashes and hen manure, try ing all sorts of experiments except intel ligent hard work and economy, gettin; tho choicest of seeds reirardlesa of cost then planting them regardless of cultiva- tion, growing tno variety of Iruit callo Sour Tart Needling, and sweetening i with suzar. pound for Dound. kcenin the front fields rich while tho Lack lot arc growing up with thistles, brier and eiuers, contributing to tno Ui;ocktaw In dian fund aod never giviog a cent to any agricultural society ; such a man, 1 will give a written guarantee, has got a crack in his hoir trouirh. and in his head also. ' r - When I sec a farmer allowing loose boards all over bis yard, fences down hinsjc off tho gate, manure in the barn yard. I cotac to the conclusion that hi has rrot a larsc crack in his ho? trouirh When I sea a farmer spending bis time traveling in a carriage, when he has to sell all his corn to d&v the hired heln and his hogs are so lean that they have to lean against the fence to tqucal, I rath cr lean to the conclusion that somebodi that stays at home will have a lien on the farm, and that some day the bottom will come entirely out of his hog trough. The Doo. Wo take the following from Mr. Rlaze's History of the Dog: "The dog possesses, iocontcstably, all the qualities of a sensible man; and I grieve to say, man has not in geqeral the noble qualities of the dog. We make a virtue cf gratitude, which is nothing but a duty ; thii virtue, this duty, aro inherent in the dog. We brand ingratitude, and yet all men are ungrateful. It is a vice which commences in the cradle, and grows with our growth ; together with selfishness, be comes almost always tho grand mover of human actions. The dog knows the word virtue; that which we dignify by this title, and admire as a rare thing and very rare it is, in truth constitutes his normal state. Where will you find a man always grateful, never seifi.h, push ing abnegation of self to the utmost lim its of possibility; without gain devoted even to death ; without ambition render ing ericc-rin short, forgetful of inju ries and mindful only of benefits receiv ed ? Seek him not, it would be a useless task ; but take tbe first dog you meet, and from the first moment he adopts you as his master, you will find in him all these qualities. He will love vou with out calculation entering into his affec tion. His greatest happiness will be to be near you ; and should you be reduced to beg your bread, not only will he aid you in this difficult trade, but he wouU not abandon you to loMow even a king in-, to his palace. Your friends will quit you in misfortune ; your .wife perhaps will forget her plighted troth; but your dog will remain always near you ; or if you dopart before him on the great voyage, he will accompany you to your last abode." Reaty Made Obituaries. Pack-, ard's Monthly, in describing the manner in which tho Tribune is conducted, gives the following curious item : "In tho bot tom drawers of ths cabinet we find a series of carefully written obituaries of distin gushed live men, all arranged alphabeti cally, and in charge of Dr. Wood. They are curiosities in their way. Here is a bulky one and as long as your arm. It is marked 'Peter Cooper.' Here is a sec ond, a Lilliputian roll, small enough to go into a needle case. We find this labeled 'The Life of Walt Whitman1 These ob ituaries aro often found very valualable when news of some celebrated person's death is reoeived at an early hour in the morning. Thaddeus StevensdiedasWasbr ingtoo, at midnight, yet a four column sketch ,of his life appeared in the Tribune of that morning. It had been put into type and was 'standing' when the news of his death was received. This was the case of Buchanan and Martin Van Ruren, though the latter cheated the office so long that the type was distributed, and the old man, with singular preverseness, died, within two days thereafter. The Biographical Bureau is, indeed, a rare feature." s Why is Ben Butler liko procrastina tiod? Because he is. '.'the thiet. of time" Bteals wnrtehes 1 3 RATES OP ADVERTISING s pxr t an; One Column, $100 ; Half Column, $60 ; Quarter Col on)!); $35. Transient Advertisements per Square often line or less, first insertion, $3 ; each subsequent Inser tion, $1. A square ii one Inch la space down the column, counting cuts, display lines, blanks, Ac, as solid matter. No advertisement to be considered less than a square, and all fractions counted a full square. All advertisement Inserted for a lei period than three months to be. regarded as tran, sient. ROAD 1AWI AMD MANNERS It is commonly said that everv one haa a right to half the road. This is practi- cany true, ana comes about in this wise, You and 1 meet upon tbe road onr leral rights arc exactly equal, and both have a ngni to go several ways without obstruc tion ; so, popularly we say I own half and you half. Tbe law steps in to facilitate matters, atd directs each to turn towards his right hand. This is true whatever tho load or the team; for if one can drive such a team that another can pass him but with ditftcuity, if at all, their rights aro no longer equal, This point becomes very important in winter, for it is no joke to turn your horse and all into tho deep snow, while your neihgbor goes smoothly along in the beaten path. No one has a. right so to load bis team as not to be able to giv up half the track to whoever de mands it, A footman may choose the part which pleases him or any portion of his right hand half of the way, and tbe team must yield it to him. This is clearly so in winter, and no man is obliged to go in tho snow for one or two horses. This is law, and the court awards it. The first requirement of the road mau ners is good nature, and an accommoda ting spirit. Do to others as you would have them do to you. Always be will ing to yield more than half the space, then yon will bo pretty sure to be equally well treated. They who exact inches will have inches exacted of them. It your neighbor has a heavy load, consult his convenience as far as possible; you may sometimes be loaded. It has became a practical rule of courtesy to turn for heavy teams, especially in winter, and when the roads are heavy. Rut remem ber it was a fayor, not your right, and you have a reciprocal duty to perform, and one which, I am sorry to observe, is not always borne in mind. When a team comes up behind yont that team has a right to a reasonable space and opportunity to pass on infactt to half the road for that purpose and your obstructing him in his lawful desire is both bad manners and bad law. If your load is heavy, do the best you can. n most cases the very least that can be asked is that you should stop. This is particularly so in the winter, when it is a heavy tax on a team to force it into a trot in deep snow, or deep mud, or frozen or ruts-r-mado necessary by your continuing to move on. Xorlhicestem Presbyterian. 4 OS II RIIOLISGS PAPERS. TftE GOOSE. . The goose is a grass animal, but don's., chaw her cud. They are good livers ; about one aker to, a goose is euuff, altho' there is sum folks who think that one goose tew 175 akera. is nearer rite. These two kalkulations arc so far apart that it is difficult tew tell now what will finally win: Rut I don't think if I had a farm of 175i akcrs, awl paid for, that I would sell it for half what it wu worth, just because I didn't have any goose upon it Geese stay well ; ome our best biogra phers say seventy years, and grow tuff to the lait They lay one egg at a time, about the size of a goose egg, in which the gosslin li r s hid. The gosslin iz the goose'a, babe. The goose don't suckle its young, but turns them out to pasture on somebody's;, yacnt lot. fhey seem to lack wisdom, but are con-, aidered sound on the goose. They are good eating, but not good; chawing; the reason of this remains a. profound sekret tew this day. When a female goose iz at work hatch-v ing she iz a hard bird to picas; she riles clcr up from the bottom in a minit, and will fight a yoke ot oxen if they show her. the least bit of sass. The goose is excellent for' feathers hich sheds every year hy the handfull. They aro also amphibecusses, besides, so vajral other kind of cusses. Mixed Races. The principle is laid down by many scientific men that crosses, between distinct species prove inferior and either are infertile, as in the familiar cases of the mule, or degenerate and dis-v. appear in a limited number of generations; while, in the case of mere varieties, the. crossing produces a progeny vitally supe-, jior to either progenitoi. It will be read ily seen what would be the bearing ofx such a law on the question of the unity, of the human race. . If the races, of men are separate species, mongrel races ought -to degenerate ; while they ought to, ba hardy and potent if of a single species., Agasaiz, in his Journey in Brazut strongly asserts that the numerous mongrel races between Spaniards, nezroes, and Indians. are far inferior in intelligence and moral, qualities to the pure races. The same is asserted bj Darwin, who quotes Humboldt to the same enect.- Ur. Livingston quotes : : i f.:.. !,. irij a COUimou Biij uo iu Aictva, mat vj uu made white men and negroes,: hut the. Devil made half-casts." Independent. A RICH joke is told on the radicals of Salem, Ind., which is said to have oo. curred during the late campaign. . An, extra train, loaded with jackasses, was transported over the -Louisville & New Albany Railroad. The, telegraphic operr fttnr nt Ralpm. a. hov. cettin wind of it. - -vi o" e set a rumor afloat that a large delegation of radicals would pass through at a cer-" tain hour. . Rumor increasing as it flew, said that many eminent speakers were board, and that bands of uusio ccon-: named the expedition. Immense crowds of enthusiatic Grant men repaired to. the depot, hat in hand, ready for the expect-' ed cheers. When the train thundered in, and the fabulous - ears, stuck his bead out of a stock car, and gave, vent, to a long, agonising hee-haw that fairly shook, the hills around, consternation seized the crowd and in two minutes not a radical j Was to lje ssen near the deot;,