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About The Weekly enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1868-1871 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1871)
J yoii. o OREGON CITY, OSIECJON," FRIDAY, SlSPTISSllSISK. 8, 1871. NO. 44. "C ' Eks&ifea g sksdjSai DiiHJo o o o 1 " 1 1 o O l)c iUccklij (Enterprise. 'Democratic paper, FOB THE Business rvian, the Farmer Jfti Ae JVliu7.lr CIRCLE. ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY 13 Y A. NOLTNER, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. OFFICE la Dr. Thessing's Bikk Building. 0 TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION: Single Copy one year, in advance, $2 50 TERMS of ADVERTISING : Transient advertisement, including all le-raJ notices, sq. of 12 lines, 1 w.$ 2 50 For e.icli subsequent insertion 1 00 One Column, one year $120 00 n.Lif " " 0 Qiarter " " Business Card, 1 square one year. . . 40 12 ga 'Remittances to be made at the risk o Subscribers, and at the expense of Agents. ROOK AND JOB PRINTING. j?3 'Pie Enterprise office is supplied with beautiful, approved styles of type, and mod ern MACHINE PitliSSES, which will enable he Proprietor to do Job Printing at all times Neat, Quick and Cheap ! si- Work solicited. AH Basinets transactions upon a Specie basis. B USINESS (J A II D S CU.WIL.CS K. W All KEN, Attorney at Law, Oregon City, Oregon. Sept.lG:ly. JOIIX M. BACON, Importer and Dealer in STATION'KUY, PEUFUM EilY. &c, Ac, Or'pgon Cit if, Oregon. At Cimrma if: IVariieF old stand, lately oc cup'ud by S. Acktrman, Main trtet. lo tf , JOHN FLEMING, LH, A I. J'.ii 1A B93K3 m STATIONERY, LV MYKKS" FIRE-PROOF BRICK. MUX STItKKT, Oli'T.ON CITY, I'HECON. mack a WELCH, OrFICK-I.! (3. Id Fe'!w-. Ten.. corer land. oi l;-i''st and All 1 1 of T'ue patron a si- o ' tbo-e "esH-:n' supi-rior oper.ttio is i s i n !MeC'a! ieqoe-l. Ni.iousox ide !'o'- th.' aitilKt w; suction of teeth. gf"A. ti.icia! iecui be; cr ihaij the best," fcod at cheap i.s the ckc-ipcjl. Doc. 2i:Lf Dr. J, H. HATCH, DENTIST. The patronage of those desiring rirst Class Vprations, is respectfully solicited. Satisfaction in all cases guaranteed. X. U. Xl'ruis O.cydt- administered for the P;iiules.s Extraction of Teeth. Otkick In Weigant's new building, west side of First street, between Alder and Mor risou streets, Portland, Oregon. "Live and Let Live." F 7 1 ELDS & STRICKLER, DEALERS IX PSOVISiOMS, GROCERIES, COUNTRY PRODUCE, &c, T ClIOICL.Q WIN ES and liquors. i 13T At the old stand of Wortman & Fields I Oiegon Cit. , Oregon. l3tf O 7 IT. WATKIXS, M. D., SURniiON". PoitTLAxn, OnKGtn. OFFICE Odd Fellows' Temple, corner First and Vlder streets Residence corner of Main and Seventh streets. W. F. HICxHFIELD, Established since IS 10, at the old stand, Miin Street, Oregon. City, Oregon. o An Assortment or v atcne?, jew elry, and Seth Thomas weight Clocks, all of which are warranted to be as represented. Renainnirs done on snort, notice, i ind thankful for past favors. CLAUK GREENMAK, City Drayman, OREO OX CITY. .93- All orders for the delivery of merchan dise or packages and freisrht of whatever des cription.to any part of the city, will be exe cuted promptly and with care. J(EV YORK HOTEL, (nentrebes ftafibauiO No. 17 Front Street, opposite the Mail steam sVp'anding, Portland. Oregon. H. K0THF05. J. J. WILXENS, PROPRIETORS. Ciard ner Week 5 00 . G 00 . 1 00 with T.odff'n;;. . Dav A. G. AVALLTNG'S o Pioneer Book Bindery. OIIEGO X I A X I? U I L, n I X G , Corner of Front ami Airier Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. BLANK ROOKS RULED and ROUND to anv desired pattern p.MJLiT? OOKS, MAGAZINES, NEWS 41 'i 1 ' ;c-- bound in eve-v vaelv of style known to the trade. V5ndeartofr0m C0UQtr promptly at- V V The next State Fair. The next State Fair ought to be, and we have good reason to be lieve will be, the best Fair ever held in Oregon, it it does not in fact surpass in real merit anv other Agricultural Fair ever held "on the Pacific Coast. The want of easy and speedy transportation, so long felt, and for so many 3-ears pre venting thousands of persons at tending the Fair, will be, to some extent, remedied this year. Most of the east side counties can now avail themselves of railroad facili ties to attend the Fair. Thou sands of people in the towns along the railroad can attend the Fair during the day, and sleep in com fort in their own homes at night. 1 hese accommodations will not only bring out the people, but will also bring out horses, cattle, live stock, manufactured articles, etc., for exhibition. The more people to look on, therefore the more im portant to have your articles there for them to see. In the European States, and also now in the Eastern States, the annual fairs have be come the great days of the year for distant farmers to sell or ex change stock, and accommodate and promote each other's interests, as well as to generally advance the cause of agriculture and general improvement and progress in the country. Let farmers in Oregon look upon the annual Fair as their institution, tor their benefit and ad vantage, and not a mere holiday for sport, and so go the rounds of the side-show deformities, monsters, and oddities, that take your money and render no equivalent in infor mation or useful lesson. Of course, everybody will un bend at the Fair, and all will enjoy themselves. This is right, and as it should be. The Fairs should be the place to renew and revise old friendships, meet friends from dis- j tant counties, and make new friends; and it is also the best place of any in the world to purchase improved stock, compare and select the best from rival ma chines, compare and select the most desirable iruits, see the works of domestic art which will most adorn and beautify your homes, and generally to set every man and women a peg higer up in the scrile ot knowledge and valuable information, worth ten times the trouble and cost of going to the Fair, and which you cannot prob ably get in any other way. Col. Tag'jart, of national tame and rep utation, as a writer, speaker, and agriculturist, and a great friend to Oregon, will be here to make the annual address, which in itself will be worth a long trip to hear. Then, let us urge every triend ot Oregon, every friend of agriculture, and every wide-awake. farmer and mechanic, to attend the next State Fair. Not only come your selves, but bring your wives and children, and camp out among those beautiful oaks at the grounds. Urge vour neighbors to come. Bring your stock, your fruits, vege tables, and domestic manufactures. Remember the special premiums livnoil ond lilftrl" Oil n "bread and butter" politicians ! now is your chance to see the best article in that line. Come up and see the good, honest housewives of all Oregon make good, honest bread and butter; and from their noble labors, go back to your homes and give the people a good, fair, square deal at the primaries next spring. Let us have a new "departure'' from the old, beaten tack of our Fairs a departure that is not only "new," but also good. The Managers are doing their duty, and everything will be in readiness for a successful Fair. Oregon Farmer. The Cincinnati Gazette states that Mr. Harrison, the Chairman of the Kadical State Committe of Ohio, has just levied a contribution upon all the clerks in the Govern ment employ in Washington, of one per cent, upon their salaries, and has notified them that they arc expected to go home, at their own expense, and vote. A great many of them voted in Washington, last Spring, at the election for officers of the new District Government, and the Democratic Committee have secured a lift of all such, and will use it against such as offer to "repeat" in October. The Philadelphia Age tells the Democrats of that city that they must look out for theseduplicating clerks, who vote at least once in Washington, and then act as re peaters and rounders in Philadel phia. It says the- have voted in Philadelphia, and will do so again, unless prevented. The Springfield Republican is of the opinion that Grant is surround ed by the most blundering set of advisers that any President ever had. Either this is the case or he never takes the advice of his ad visers except when they advise him to blunder, or take a drink. Principles Demand it Forty millions of people in the United States are daily consuming those articles on -which a high pro tective tariff is imposed. About one million of that number, includ ing capitalists and operatives em ployed, are engaged in the protluc tlon of those articles on which the tariff is most oppressive. The theory of protection is that this tax, called tariff, must be im posed on the products of foreign labor, that home labor may there by be exempted from foreign com petition. From this state of facts but one conclusion can be drawn : That thirty-nine men must be sub jected to a heavy tax that a cer tain occupation may be made profitable for one. This is not only manifest injustice, but a direct vio lation of that fundamental princi ple of our government, that all legislation and all taxation should regard "the greatest good of the greatest number." If this were the onlv reason which could be given, we should be justified in de manding Free Trade, which op presses no one and confers a like advantage upon all. A fundamental principle of trade, which has been recognized by all the writers of political econ omy, from Adam Smith to Perry is '"The right of every one to buy where he can buy the cheapest, and sell where he can sell dearest." Apply this principle to the present state 01 trade.- ror example: Fabrics which can be bought in the United States for one dollar per yard, cost less than half that price in the European market. Under the principle above stated, our merchants should be allowed the right to select the most advant ageous place to purchase. Here :he law interfere 1 and robs them of the right. A tax, so heavy, is placed on article or iuiropean 1 1 T manufacture by legal enactment, that our merchants are prohibited from the advantages of foreign trade, and our citizens from the benefits of foreign prices and com petitor On this ground we de mand Free Trade, which, violating 110 principle, gives every man his natural civil rights. It is no exen-e to say, "the tariff is levied on foriegn manufactures for the purposes of revenue, which would be seriously diminished." K educe the tariff to one-third its present raes; and it is clear to the dullest comprehension that three times the present amount of impor tation would ensue, and the whole amount of revenue thereby remain wholly unaffected. Nations, like men, have natural adaptations. England, owing to A. the natural humidity of her cli mate, can produce six per cent, more cloth, from a given amount ot raw material, tnan we 111 the United States. Xature seems to have specially adapted her for the manufacture of cotton and woolen goods. And any protective tariff or other legislative enactment which attempts to take from her a natural occupation, is simply a statute of the State set up against a law of nature. No nation can attain to the highest prosperity while such violent practices and unnatural laws exist. It is folly to argue, "a great fi nancial crisis would ensue, if we were to abolish our protective tar iff" This is the very reason it should be abolished. If we have a commercial structure built up, which can only stand by being up held, at great expense, by the strong arm of government, let us without delay pull away the artifi cial prop and let the useless and rotten structure tumble. The very fact that the threatened crisis would be great, and is daily grow ing greater by delay, is a strong argument that the application of the remedy should be immediate. Perhans the weakest argument the protectionist advances is, "such a step Avould throw thousands out of employment and subject them to starvation and want." It is im possible to throw people, who are willing to work, out of employ ment in a country like ours, whose territory is ample for 200,000,000 of inhabitants, and whose undevel oped resources are exhaustless. On this very ground, we say give us Free Trade, that our citizens may be taken, if necessary, from unprofitable pursuits, and directed to the growth and development of the country. But, in reality, the removal of the restrictions on trade and commerce, would not lessen the d( maud for manufacturing la bor. Y e have advatages Here that will always enable us to pro duce staple art ieles of consumption without levying heavy taxes on the consumers tor the benefit, not of 7 the operatives, but of the manu facturing capitalists. S, F. l,rtUi iter. EverT plain girl has one conso lation though not a pretty young 1 . i .1 . -ii :i 1 i- , Kiuy, sne win, 11 sue lives, be a pretty old girl. A Dreadful Death- a .baby dies of hydrophobia it TEARS ITS CLOTHING, BARKS LIKE A DOG, FOAMS AT THE MOUTH THREE PERSONS EE- QUIRED TO HOLD IT J fFrom the Chicago Republican, Aug. P,j A little son of John McGinnis an employee of the stock yards uied last Saturday ot hydrophobia. The age of the child was one year and nine months. The facts pre liminary in the sickness are indis putable, and syptomsr of the dis ease stamp-it unmistakably as the horrible malady mentioned. The case is a somewhat singular one, and therefore we give it with some particularity of detail. Very few cases are now on record of the fearful complaint attacking one so young. The position taken by certain authorities that the disease is simply of the imagination, is here proved to be untenable. An unreasonable infant, just BEGINNING TO PRATTLE, is not likely to be so disturbed by the imaginary physical troubles as to be in this manner hurried out of the world. The child was bitten a little over a month ago. The mother had one day seated itTon the ground at the back door of the house when a large Newfoundland dog belonging to a butcher named Shuler, living in the neighborhood, came suddenly rushing up to the child and bit it. No one about the house had seen this animal pre viously. Til REE UGLY WOUNDS Avere inflicted upon the tender in fant by the raving animal one at the side of the left temple, another between the eyes, and the third on the top of the head near the edge of the hair. The brute showed every symptom of madness, foam ing at the mouth, snapping at everything it passed, without stop ping to vent its rage upon any particular object. Having bitten the infant, it started off' after a chicken that happened to be near, went under the house, ami then ran off lo Mr. Shuler" s. There it took shelter under the house, and remained there for an hour. or two until killed by policemen. There was the usual hue-and-cry in the neighborhood t he mother with HER RLE E DING CHILD IN HER ARMS adding fuel to the flame and in creasing the excitement. The publL indignation was greatly in creased by the protracted opposi tion of Shuler to the killing of his dog. The rabid animal during its wanderings had bitten another dog which paid the penalty of its mis fortune by instant death. The wounds upon the child soon healed only one slight scar on the nose remaining. The matter faded from the recollection of the par ents. Last Wednesday morning the infant began to show singular signs of irritation, and commenced tearing off its clothes, and at the same time uttering LOW WAILING CRIES, and complaining of thirst. But when water was offered to it the most distressing writhing of the jaws and convulsive movements of the face and throat followed. No one seemed at first to know the real cause of the trouble. The startled mother did all in her power to restore her inlant to case and quiet. Thinking it might be sullcring from the heat, she took off some of its clothing. The wise women of the neighborhood gathered in and gave their diag noses of the disease. Some said the complaint was diphtheria, and some said the poor little thing was teething. All day Wednesday the little sufferer exhibited the same symptoms, seeming however all the time to suffer more acutely. It pulled and tugged at its cloth big with such energy as to tear off the buttons, GNASHED ITS TEETH and threw its arms around in the most agonized manner. This continued until Friday night neither the mother nor the child leeping. The infant took no nour ishment during ail this time, and when water was offered went into convulsions, seeming to reject it with horror. Dr. W. W. Goodman, living at the Hock Island Car Works, was summoned on Friday evening. He at once told the grief-stricken par ents that their child was dying of hydrophobia, and nothing could be done to r-ave it. He adminis tered morphia without effect. The child was apparently in the last . - 1 T . tage oi tne disease, in its con vulsions it seemed endowed with r R i: i i: R N AT URAL STRENGTH. requiring three persons to hold it. The foam when issued from the it It was stained with blood. It uttered an incessant whine which those about it compared to the u-hinin"- of a dog. Whenever the hands of those attending it ap proached its face the 1 COURTESY OF BANCROFT EFFORTS TO RITE, were manifestly canine. Although but just commencing to talk, it re peatedly uttered the word "dog" during the night preceding its death, as if it had somehow in its deceased infantile brain mysteri ously associated the idea of its present sufferings with its being bitten a month defore. At 8 o'clock on Saturday, DEATH CAME TO THE RELIEF of the sufferer. From Wednes day morning until this hour no nourishment and not a dron of water had passed its lips. The case is a peculiar one, and should attract the general attention of the medical world. To Make Mischief. Keep your eye on your neighbors. Take care of them. Do not let them stir without watching. They may do something wrong if you do To be sure, you never knew them to do anything bad, but it may he on your account they have not. Per haps if it had not been for your care they might have disgraced themselves a long time ago. There fore do not relax any effort to keep them where they ought to be. N ever mind your own business that will take care of itself. There is a man passu 'g along he is looking over the fence be t-us- picious of him ; perhaps he con templates stealing, some of these dark nights ; there is no knowing what queer fancies he may have got into his head. If you find any symptoms of any one passing out ot the path ot duty, tell every one else that you see, and be particular to see a great many. It is a good way to circulate such things, though it mav not benefit vourself or any one else in particular. lo Keep something going silence is a 1 read ful thing; though it was said there was silence in heaven for the space of half an hour, let not any such thing occur upon earth : it would be too much for this mundane sphere. If alter all your watchful care, you cannot see anvwmig out 01 the way in any one, you may be sure it is not because they have not done anything bad ; perhaps in an unguarded moment you lost sight of them throw out hints that they are no better than they should be, that you should not wonder if the people found out what they were after a while, then they may not carry their head so gh. Keep it going, and some one mav take the hint and begin to help you along after a while then there will be music and every thing will work to a charm. When to Dry a Heifer. It is generally conceded nowadays that to raise a cow which will give the most milk m proportion to the amount of feed she gets, the heifer should come in at two years old, or earlier; that for months previous to her calving, her udder should be frequently manipulated, so as to cause a tendency of blood to it, and its larger development; that he should calve fat ; that alter calving she should be milked three times a day, as near eight hours apart as possible; that this should be kept up as long as her udder tills, and after this twice a day; that she should be milked close up to her second calving, which should take place at the end of the year. Vll this is to develop to as high a degree as possible the milk-produc ing tendency. Ot course the growing, young-bearing, and milk producing animal should be fed with nutritious icon m abundance, and be warmly stabled in winter. A New York wholesale grocer, ho has become rich in his busi w ness, has lately made the following revelation. He savs his rule al ways was, when he sold a bill of goods on credit, to immediately subscribe for the local paper of his j debtor. So long as his customer advertised liberally and vigorously, he rested easy, but as soon as he began to contract his advertising space, he took the fact as an evi dence that there was trouble ahead, and he invariably went for his debt. "For," said he, "the man who feels too poor to make his business known is too poor to do business." The withdrawal of an advertisement i a weakness that business men are not slow to ob serve. After many years of observa tion, the Jievolutio? has discovered that, as a rule, woman is expected to be found fault with and adored; courted, married, quarreled with, deserted, divorced ; played with and plagued, and only really ven erated when she becomes a mother and goes to heaven. "I do so envy Eve," said a mar ried lady to a friend. "How so !" asked the friend. "Because her husband could never badger her about how his mother used do things." LIBRARY, Marrying a Corpse- THE DEAD RETURNED TO A FRENCH STORY. LIFE- T-r-j . . , WO firnwnsmovn nnfo clvnn. - ,.-t,ws- ly united in f nendship,had each one child, ot different sexes, who eany contracted a strong mclina- r , iwnwi v.n , u-iii oi municipal government is cherished by the parents, and they I attended by many evils, but what were flattered with the expeeta- j ever maybe the evils of the s0 tio:, of being joined together for j called Tammany Government it hie. Lnfortunately, at the time j lias given to the city of New York they thought themselves on the ! one of the best charters in the point of completing this long-j country. However much tenden-wished-fbr union, a man far ad- ! cy prevails in the ring to steal or vaiiced in years, and po-esscd of j rob the tax-payers it is limited to an immense fortune, cast his eyes ! two per cent, and cannot possibly on the young lady and made hon- J plunder any more. If Chicago orable propoals; her parents j was blessed "with a government of could not resist the temptation of ; thieves like Tweed and Conolly.the a son-m law m such amia nt cir cumstances, and forced her to com- As soon as the knot was tied she strictly enjoined her former lover never to see her, ami patient ly submitted toher fate; but the anxiety of her mind preyed upon her body and threw her into :t lingering disorder which apparent ly carried her off, and she was con signed to the grave. As soon as the news of this melancholy event readied her lov er his afllcAion was doubled be ing deprived of all hopes of her widowhood : but recollecting that in her -youth she had been for some time in a lethargy, his hopes revived and hurried him to the place of her. burial, where a good bribe procured the sexton's per mission to dig her up, which he performed, and removed her to a place of safety, where, by proper methods, he revived the almost ex tinguished spark of life. Great was her surprise at find ing the state she had been in, and probably as great was her pleasure at the means by which she had been recalled from the grave. As soon as she was sufficiently re covered, the lover laid his claim; and his reasons supported by a powerful inclination on her side, were too strong for her to resist ; but as France was no longer a place of safety for them, they agreed to remove to England, where they continued for ten years, when a strong inclination for visit ing their native land seized them, which they thought they might safely gratify, and accordingly performed the voyage. The lady was so unfortunate as to be known by her old husband, whom she met in a public walk, and all endeavors to disguise her self were ineffectual. He laid his claim to her before a Court of jus tice, and the lover defended his right, alleging the hus band by burying her had forfeited his title, and that he had acquired a just one by freeing her from the grave and delivering her from the jaws of death. These reasons, whatever weight they might have in a Court where love presided, seemed to have lit tle effect upon the grave sages of the law; and the lady and her lover, not thinking it safe to wait the determination of the Court, prudently retired out of the king dom. . . . A Washington paper says that a few evenings ago two of the most noted women suffragists of that city, with their husbands, went into a restaurant and asked for oysters. The proprietor in vited them to a private room, which they declined, saying, "Oh, no! we want to do just as the men do." They went to the raw box the epiartette of them and ate raw oysters until the four got outside of two dozen raw, when they called for four glasses of ale, and drank them down as though they had been used to oysters and ale. A fire proof fence can be made by following these directions : "Make a wash of one part fine sand and one part wood ashes, well sifted and three parts lime ground up with oil, and mix them well together. Apply this to the fence with a brush the first coat thin, the second thick. This adherer, to the boards or planks so strongly as to resist either an iron tool or fire. md is, besides, impenetrable by water. 55 A negro, named Lowery, leads a nana ot black savages in the swamps of Robeson county, North Carolina. He makes inroads, as Indians are wont, upon the white settlements, and ravages and plun ders and destroys. People on the highways are waylaid and shot, and terror pervades the whole country. One hundred and fifty men, led by the Sheriff of the county, have been gathered to ex terminate the black freebooters. A bloody conflict is anticipated. m i r Louisiana has lately produced a six-pound turnip in the neighbor hood of New Orleans, but still it is not happy. Facts vs. Falsehood. The Radical newspapers areju bulent oyer the wrongs of Tam ilian v. SomP of tllO vrV.nnt ;,,o ! " - . v-vi.ii u loocica ! l.r.,-,. fC 1 .1 . t.. ,iac- auoiucu not a nttie amuse- ! ment. Now, there are no candid thinkers in this country who will j not admit that the prevailing svs- burdens on our tax-payers would be many millions lighter. If our J. B. Pices and li. 13. Masons had been limited to two per cent, for all taxes, as in New York, our tax payers would be happy if the Court House ring had stolen the last dollar. Will the two Tri bunes please give these facts to their readers ? The thieving rings of New York City must conduct the city government and cover their larcenies from two per cent, of the assessments. The very honest Radical government of Chicago assescs, this year, 5 7-10, and that of Boston 4 "s-3. Should not our over taxed people exclaim, "If Mayor Hall, Tweed and Con olley are thieves, in mercy send us some Dernoeratie thieves to take the place of our honest Radicals. Chicago once had a Democrat of the Tammany thieving school by the name of Frank Sherman. This Tammanyite Mayor administered the city government, including all the stealing, for less than a million a year, during the late unpleasant ness, when a dollar greenback was worth an average of forty cents. Chicago became very honest and elected a very honest and loyal gentleman by the name of J. B. Rice, for Mayor. This very honest man spent four millions a year, when a greenback dollar was worth eighty cents. Will the two Tribunes explain why it is that a very dishonest, thieving Democrat official cost the city so much less than the very honest Radical official. e are seeking for light : we cannot see whv It should cost three or four times as much to administer the city gov ernment in the interests of God and humanity than it does in the interests of the devil and thieves. "Render unto the Cassar the things which are Ca?sar's, and unto God the things which are God's. Chi cago Democrat. Of all the schools there is none like that of, home, and of teachers, O either for good or evil, there is none like the mother. Her con duct is ever before the child as the example; her words arc the seed falling upon the virgin soil, and producing a luxuriant harvest, either of good or evil. It is not in the power of her instructions to make him a great man, for that is generally determined by a law of the God of nature; but, if he in herit talents, she may add to them that virtue without which mere talent is a splendid deformity. If he be destitute of extraordinary gilts of genius the greater should be her efforts to develop in their strongest growth, such power as he does possess; to teach him the value of industry, system and per- severence; above all to imbue hint with love to God ami love to raan so that if he be not fitted to com mand, he may learn to be a useful citizen; a good man; honest in his dealings; charitable to the poor; true to his friends, and forgiving to his enemies. Such a character is worth more to its possessor and to society, than the most exhalted intellectual endowment unaccom panied by moral excellence. It will produce happiness in the world; the respect and confidence of men ; and be remembered in death with love and veneration. The Best Farm Record. The best farm record is the head. A man should be so familiar with his business that he has it at allUmcs ready to mind the whole field o should be open before him, to add ed to or taken from as is necessary. This in advance for one or more years, as occasion may require. If he has to rely upon a written rec ord (unless he is a large landhold er), it is evident he is not familiar with his business. There are some things it is good to jot down, so as to refer to in the future. These are the crops of the farm, expenses, ttc. Butfor what is to do on an or dinary farm, it needs to be jotted only in memory. Self-interest will keep it there, and clear enough, to operate with. The United States harbors thir teen thousand tooth-tinkers. Ben Butler's eye ought to pre serve well because it equints. 0 - G O O o o o O O o O o o o 0 o o o o o 0 0 o 0 0 o