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Rh management. The other morceaux are "Training the peach-tree," "Stick to the Farm," an article concluding with "We shall always sign 'speed the plow;' we shall always regard the American farmer, dressed for his employment (!) and tilling his grounds, as belonging to the order of real noblemen"—the less aristocratic Englander would limit himself to "Nature's gentleman;" "Why pork shrinks in the pot," and "Wheat-straw, its value as fodder." The eighth and last page opens with "Correspondence," and a letter signed Joseph Hall, headed "More results of 'civilization,'" and dated Ogden City, Sept. 8, 1860. It contains an account of occurrences resulting in the "death of one John Cornwell, a discharged government teamster, and, as is often the case with those Christians who are sent to civilize the 'Mormons' of these mountains, a corrupt, profane, and quarrelsome individual, who doted on belonging to the 'bully tribe.'" Then follows more news from San Pete County. A test of love (that capital story out of C.R. Leslie's autobiography). Siege of Magdeburg. A hard-shell sermon (preached at Oxford, England), a scrap illustrating the marvelous growth of Quincy, Illinois, and the Legend of the origin of the Piano-forte. The latter is followed by a valuable abstract containing a summary of meteorological observations, barometric and thermometric, for the month of August, 1860, at Great Salt Lake City, Utah, by W.W. Phelps, and concluding with a monthly journal. Then follow the deaths, six in number, and after one of them is inserted [Millennial Star, copy]. There are no marriages, and the Western papers, like those of the East, are still bégueules enough to consider advertising the birth of a child indelicate; at least that was the reason given to me. The last column contains the terms for advertising and the "fill-up" advertisements.

The "Mountaineer," whose motto is "Do what is right, let the consequence follow," is considered rather a secular paper. It appears on Saturdays, and the terms of subscription are $6 per annum; the occasional supplement is issued gratis. It formerly belonged to three lawyers, Messrs. Stout, Blair, and Ferguson; it has now passed into the hands of the two latter. Mr. Hosea Stout distinguished himself during the Nauvoo troubles; he was the captain of forty policemen who watched over the safety of Mr. Joseph Smith, and afterward went on missions to India and China. Major S.M. Blair served under General Sam. Houston in the Texan war of independence, and was a distinguished lawyer in the Southern States. A description of the "Deserét News" will apply to the "Mountaineer." I notice in the issue of Sep-