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Show An agricultural contemporary telling of Marshall Mar-shall Field's great stock farm, says: "His herd of short horn cattle comprises some of the most famous Herfords in this country." Under tho English distinction of Longhorns and Shorthorns, that might be permissible, but ' in this country Shorthorns and Herefords are as much distinct breeds as Devons and Holstiens, and stock men will laugh at our contemporary's item, for tho Shorthorn breeders and Hereford breeders have boen intense rivals for a century past. Our contemporary con-temporary thinks Mr. Field did not learn farming from Horace Greeley. But can our contemporary Ufove that it did not? We believe that Mr. Greeley djq notf knqw a. Hereford from a Shorthorn When Patti comes next winter to give us an- H other fai-ewell, she ought to lecture rathor than H sing, or at least ought to dove-tail a lecture be- tween songs, the lecture to oxplaln how sho has '' laughed old ago out of countenance and moves H joyously in tho sunshino of perpetual youth. It is said the secret is that she has always lived close to Nature, that sho has kept regular hours, M has been abstemious in eating and drinking, has M been most careful that tho Avork which it Is tho M duty of the pores of tho skin to perform is novor M forced back upon the vital organs, and that Avhile her lips have been singing sho has tried to keop M a song of hope trilling in hor heart. It Avould bo M good if sho Avould oxplaln tho secret to hor audi- M ences. H |