'VFor cultivating the fielda of corn, chile, and beans that are tilled to feed the Indians, and of cotton to clothe then, there are fifty pairs of cart-oxen, thirty of which are driven in yoke. There are also traces, ploughs, ploughshares, fifty axes, forty pickaxes, twenty-two crowbars, and twenty-five sickles. For hauling stone, wood,and other things there are twelve carts. For carpentering they have the ordinary tools, such as adzes, chisels, planes, picks, hammers, saws, and plummets. For use in repairing their implements they have an anvil, tonga, a screw, mallets, hammers, files, and other things connected with a forge. *' In the large room where the grain is kept there are at present about eighteen hundred bushels of corn and some beans. These supplies are to feed the Indians. ''The mission owns a ranch upon which is a stone house about twenty-five yards long. It has an arched portico, and is divided into three rooms. The3e are occupied by the families that care for the stock, which consists of one hundred and fifteen gentle horses, one thousand one hundred and fifteen head of cattle, two thousand three hundred sheep and goats, two hundred mares, fifteen jennies, and eighteen saddle mules. A "rhe mission and the ranch have the necessary corrals. For the irrigation of the fields there is a fine main aqueduct.^ Fen.18-21 Gar 55-60