.? ' SE P ?i t THE ADVERTISER. THE ADVERTISER O.W.rAlHBROTHZ-. T.C.R-CXXft. FJLIRBROTIIER & HACRER, Publisher- -Preprleter. " U- te A n tr. rAiTnxR. ?. o. hacxeiu F.ilRBUOTHER & HACKER, paMUnera and Proprietors. published Every Thursday Morning AT BROWNVILLE, NEBRASKA. , I ADVERTISING RATES. Onclnch.one y-r - Two'tnches.one year - .,..- $19 C3 . "15 CO Ech succeeding inch, per y- C Co Legal sdrrtbte-t3 at legal rates Oc nqnare". i(Hlurf Nonpareil, or less) first csertlon. fl.CO; achsubs(H;nctit Insertion. 60c. 7 All transient advertisements nt ba paid for In advance. l TERMS, IN ADVANCE t .82 00 . X 00 50 I One copy, elx moniQB- .mnr. three months it ! 3- No paper sent fronitheofnce until paid for. J c ESTABLISHED 1856. BROWNVTLLE, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1875. VOL. 20 NO. 19. -.1 BEADING HATTEIt OX EVERY PAGE Oldest Paper in tlto State OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY. B ( - . V v , i " . Published by special permission of Harper Brothers. A GOOD INVESTMENT. A STORY OP THE GEEAT REBELLION. CHAPTER I. Rmote from cities lived a swain, Unvexed with all the cares of gain." Flaming Rock Is on the easterly elde of Smoky Creek, one of I lie many beautiful streams of the wilder and more picturesque parts of Southern 0bo. The rock arisen precipitously to a height of more than two hund red feet from the le"el of tho pool at Jta base. It Is of bituminous Blate, so abundant In combustible matter that one day It took fire near the bottom, and continued to burn until a freshet came to putouttheflatnes, six months afterward : whence come the name6 of "Flaming Rock," and "Smoky Creek." On a slight rise of ground at tho opposite aide of tho creek stands a log cabin, and near It are a log corn-crib and ox-stnble, both under one roof. The buildings were conbtructed by the present owner In fee when ho began to make his "clearing," but hovenev er since then beon repaired by any body. Over a large part of the level ground forming the middle of tho val ley tho creek strays at random, Its clear water made brilliant by flowing, rippling, and dashing over an uneven bed of perfectly black slate. Between thoBtreatn and the hill on the west are two small fields, poorly fenced, bearing stunted growths of corn. Ex tending beyond theo, and Including the base of the hill up to where it be comes precipitous, is an Imperfeotly cleared space, partly occupied by tumpB and hushes, where rattle snakes Inhabit, and partly covered with patches of blue-grass and white clover, where hogs and other cattle sometimes range. The hill beyond Is, like all others of the region in ques tion, very high, exceedingly steep, covered with a heavy growth of tim ber. Within the stable, before an empty rack and manger, o pair of lean little steers stand and chew the cud. On a stump Just without the door of the Cibln the proprietor of the domain, the creator of It all if destroying the beautUul forest with axe and fire may be called creating sits and chews to bacco. Old Bill Hngnn. lord of the soil tho' hebe, and central figure of the scene, Is dressed, to tell the truth, no better than any landless ragamuffin. Cer tainly no land-holdor of any land where men wear clothes at all. except our own, was ever seen with hat, shirt, breeches, and suspenders such as make thp costume of this one. Nor does his wife, J Betsey, as she itands in the door-way behind him, appear to any better advantage. Her hRggard buterrect form Is covered In part by an old calico gown, faded, but not with washing; torn In many plac es, but nowhere patched or darned ; -upplemented where deficient with a red flannel petticoat, and under that with a Bhift, perhaps; the jupon and eklrt, such an they are, being distend ed at the bottom with a bamboo hoop. No cap adorns her tangled locks of Iron-gray, and her feet are aB bare as her head. In appearance a very hag, there is no reason for doubting Bhe Is really one. Had sho been a saint, she could not have lived thirty-five years with Bill Hagan and borne him sons and daughters. She can scratch, bite, gouge, get drunk when she can ob tain whisky, steal, whenever in that poor neighborhood she can lay hands on any thing that is a subject of theft, and has a gift for scolding such as few women are blessed with. She has been known to stand in that door way, close behind where her husband sits, and, with arms akimbo and wag ging head, storm at the man until she fell down in a vertigo. It should be added that In this she la encouraged arid led on by the rook, which has an admirable echo, and always responds promptly and distinctly to whatever she says, sometimes blaspheming frightfully in doing so. In thelrearller married life Bill used to knook his wife down whenever her scolding became tiresome; but he learned by experience that Bhe and her ally were too much for him, since they could keep up the din even after she was down, and he finally gave over the gentle discipline. Both of them attend all the religious meet ings held In that wild and Inaccessi ble district, and both have repeatedly "got religion" after tho fashion of the country, and been several times ad mitted to membership In the Method ist church. Queer Christians they are, to be sure; but they are of a queer community, concerning which an old elder who once rode in that circuit said, "If it is the Lord'H will to have a church on Smoky Creek, He must take people jest as they be." The old couple were alone together alone and lonesome for two days before the opening of this story, their on ob, sixteen years old, and the last of their surviving brood who re mained at home, had run away, and, bat was worse In the old man's opinion, taken with him his father's "fle, a weapon that was In snmn none- lhe same as a crutch to Its owner, mc, from long habit of taking it "h him wherever he went, It had become almost Impossible togoahnn 'ed steps from ttie door without it " fact, when he had tried, on that very morning to stroll up the valley out of ear-shot of Betsey's voice and the black rock's echo, he had not been ablo to get any considerable distance away, so returned and resumed his seat on the stump, where he remain ed, saying nothing and doing it, while the sun of July mounted to mid-heaven, and tho oxen, with the yoke BtHI on their necks, waited Idly In the pen. Bob had been a real comfort to IiIb mother and father. While he re mained about homo he -was always doing something to furnish the one with text or pretext for a scolding; and In occaslonaly threshing out his wild oats with a hoop-pole, the other enjoyed a satisfaction which only a parent can know. But Bob was gone, such as he was; gone from his home, such as It was. Though barely sixteen years of age, according to the tenth row of notches cut upon one of the house-logs, the many stories of battle he had heard told by soldiers returned from the war of the rebellion had roused up the wolf that was in his young blood, as it is in tlio blood of all humanity, so that he longed to be where men were killing each other, and resolved to seek thesporton the first opportunity. Very opportunely for him there came the raid of John Morgan into Ohio, which all know, was in the month of July, 1863. News of the movements of the raiding forc?s through the country lying to the northward had from time to time been brought by travelers passing down the valley, and the last report, which had oome late lu the afternoon of the day be fore the boy disappeared, was that the main body was expected to reach Piketon, a village twenty miles dis tant, some time during the next day. And thus, Instead of Bob's going to war, war was actually coming to Bob, and he accepted the Issue. Waiting only for night to come and cover his movements, he quitted his eheetleeB little bed in the loft as soon as the snores of the old people acquired the proper intonation, descended to their apartment by means of three pegs driven into the logs of the house to serve the purpose of the more costly luxury of a ladder, noiselessly remov ed from its hooks over the fire-place a very old rifle, with its soant supply of ammunition, stole out iuto the uight, and took his way up the creek. Con sidering as he went what plan of cam paign should be adopted, ho decided to make for a point where he would be likely to strike Morgan's line of march several miles before it reached Piketou und the level country of the Scioto Valley, his design being to hang upon the skirts of his enemy and harrass his flanks. Thin was very good generalship, it must be ad mitted, and subject to only the one criticism, that it amounted to "bush whacking," as warfare in the retail way is termed, the retailers being con sidered as without the merciful palo of the laws of war, and liable to be shot or hung whenever captured. Af ter ascending the valley of the creek for a distance of five or six miles, and in eolng that distance, crossing the devious stream fifty times, he struck off abruptly to the right, and mount ing by a rough sled track that came down over the edge of the nose, as it were, of a spur from the hill which bordered that side of the valley, reach ed one of the peculiar roads which are found rnnnlng along all the summits or ridges of the 6teep and narrow hills of that country. These "ridge roads," so important to the inhabitants, form a system of ready-made highways, fur nished by nature, with the hills they render accessible, free of cost to coun ty or township treasury. Just as they are to-day they seem always to have been. Trodden formerly by tho In dians, as now by the whites, they are kept open as much by the hoofa of beasts a& the feet of men. The trav elBr on one of them finds himself shel tered for the larger part of the way with interlacing branches of trees which border it, though occasionally he will traverse open reaches where the sun-blest ground Is covered with a coarse grass, or If too poor to bear that, decked with wild flags, pansies, and roseB. Sometimes he will meet with tme of those almost mysterious shallow basins of water called "bear wallows," that seem to exist without any drainage adequate to fill them. Even when the later heats of summer dry up wells, and drlv the creek in the neighboring valley to hidlng nlaces beneath its gravelly bed, the bear-wallow, though It grows narrow er and shallower daily, seldom or never is found entirely empty. Bob turned into the ridge road and kept In it until he had gone twenty five or thirty miles, crossing the head waters of a good many creeks and "runs," but without descending into any of their valleys or ravines. Tho' the ridge, and the roadwith it. crook ed and turned iu an amazing manner and though branches from it led off toward every spur to the right or left, hiB knowledge of-the habits of the hills and ways of the forest saved him from going astray, even after he had passed beyond the limits af any of his previous wanderings. And when, at length, nbont the, middle of the fore noon, he halted on a bald summit, or "knob," that overlooked a wide and fertile well-peopled valley, such as he had never before seen, he knew per fectly well where he was, and that his objective point was reached. There was a tall white oak near the knob, from whose top a better survey could be made than from where he stood ; so. leaving his gun at the foot of the tree, he climbed till he reached the highest limb that would bear his weight, and, seating himself astride It, with IiIb arms embracing the body, looked off. The bird's. eye view thuB obtained covered five or six miles of the creek bottom; and what he saw there soon satisfied Bob that his Information bad been correct, na well as his Inferences thence derived namely, that Mor gan's forces must come that way, and could not ho long In coming, either. The commotion of the inhabitants showed their panic to be great. Cat tle and teams were being driven off in all directions hut one. From the nearer parts of the valley shouts and cries came faintly up to the ear, and away in the distance, beyond reach of hearing, there could through that clear atmopphere be discerned Lilli putian people running about hither and thither, every little head of a family and all the little members of it behaving very much as they would If their house was on fire. After one or two hours the scene became quiet. The cattle had been driven away, all wheel vehicles had disappeared, and so had most of the inhabitants, though some of them still remained by their property and homes, animated by a noble resolve to face the danger they knew to be coming. By this time the boy began to feel hunger. Ho slid down from bjs perch resumed his gun, nnd descended Into a "cove" at the head of a ravine whose course was toward the valley, and clambered along over great mass es of rock fallen from theledgee above and which roughly paved the bed of a torrent accustomed to roar there in times of rain, till he reached n little pool, or pocket of water. There, seat ed on a square block of stone, whose covering of velvet and plush, if it had been real instead of imitation, as it was, and as were all the beautiful hangings of that ohamber In the hills, might have cost n cavalryman's equip ment, he took from his only pocket a couple of "dodgers" favorite nnd ap propriate fooil of bush-whackers ai.d ate them for his breakfast, drinking during the meal one or more gallons of the water, which last he accom plished by making a notch In the edge of the platform of soft sandstone over which the sleuder surplus of the pool trickled away, deep enough to draw Into a single stream all the over flow, and then putting his under lip to the notch and letting the water en ter his mouth as it would. It ought to be mentioned that the element lost none of its thirst-quenching property for Bob merely because during the repastanother bushwhack er of somewhat different species ap peared and marched boidly up to the edgo of the pool, where he drank his fill. This one was arrayed in butter nut and black : his motto was "Don't tiead on me;" and the other, after killing him, counted eleven rattles in his tail. The search after water had carried the lad well down toward the foot of the hill, and on his goiug a little fur ther the view opened on a cleared field, occupying a swell of ground at the base a portion of one of the val ley farms, Inclosed on the nearer side by a stone and rail fence, and on the further bounded by a highway. The distance across this field was no more than a convenient rifle-sliot, and the low wall of stone afforded as good a breastwork as any free-shooter could wish. Before postitig himself Bob moved along the fence to a point where it was crossed at right angles by a path that led directly up a point of the hill, nnd thence back to the place of his first look-out. It was the highest part of the field, and com manded a clear view for two or three miles up the road. Besides this, the path would afford a most excellent way of retreat. So there, after first inspecting the condition of his piece and his resources of powder and lead, caps, patches, and grease, he took up his position ; that is to say, seated himself behind the fence. He was well placed ; neither Grant nor Gari baldi could have posted him better. He looked up the valley, but no Morgan's man was to be discerned. He listened with open mouth as well as ears, but no hostile souud was heard. He fell to reflecting on the situation, and so reflecting fell asleep. While he slept the whole scene was transformed, and when, an hour later he woke up, astounding Impressions burdened his every sense. Field, for est, and hill were fraught with life and movement. A Btifldd. low-toned thunder spoke from the ground ; dust filled the air; a rifle-shot was heard, and then several more, and distant shout6. Then, beneath a rolling dust cloud about a mile away, the head of a column of horsemen came, advanc ing at a trot. A distinct sound of hoofa from the opposite hill drew his attention, and roused him to astonish ment and something of alarm, as he saw there a squadron of horsemen moving rnpldly along its ridge road, parallel with the movement of the main body, but so far in advance of it sb to have already passed the point opposite him. An instant later he bpcame aware thata similar squadron, moving like the other parallel to the central force, was" even then trampl ing along the ridge back of him, and had actually crossed the junction of his path of escape with the road by which he had come, cutting off his well planned retreat, and bringing to naught his whole art of war. Bob, my boy, the Philistines are upon you! You are outflanked, outgeneraled, outdone ! Arouse ! rally your forces ! hold a council of war to decide quick ly as a council can what next to do! Bob couldn't. His head grew hot, hia eyes dim ; his tongue and mouth became dry, his heart thumped his ribs; some thing choked him and stopped his breath ; be reeled and fell back upon the ground where' the dead leaves rat tled under his quaking limbs. The symptoms will be easily reooguiz ed aB those of the "buck fever," with its attendant ague, such as every hunter is, once in his life, attacked with, when for the first time a deer presents itself In all its forest-born in nocence, dignity, and pride to the aim of his weapon. Bob was a hunt er, and once before had felt the fever; but never before had he beheld bucks such as those which now by hun dreds careered down upon him, every steed in the herd a blooded animal, and nearly every rider too: dare-devil, born jockey, and natural dead shot. Bob couldn't. But buck fever 1b an acute disease, not a chronic one, and where the con stitution is courageous, soon passes off. As none of the horsemen on the hill nt his back had passed within sight of our hero If so the scstrpd hoy might be called there was sufficient time before those in the valh-j came up for him to recover, first his senses, tlieu his strength, and lastly, his cour age nnd resolution ; and some min utes before the foremost of the col umn had got abreast of tlie ambush he had thrust his gun half-way thro' an opening in the wall, cocked it. and made quite ready. No sooner, how ever, did ho "sight," or try to sight, the horseman In question, a fine spec imen of manhood by-the-way, ani a perfect stranger to Bob, than the thumping against the ribs again be gan, and he was obliged to desist. Re covering his nerves again, a few min utes later, he tried once more on an other stranger, but failed ; and ho on for several attempts ; and although he was gradual! acquiring steadiness, yet by the time he got really In con dition to shoot with good aim half the column hod gone by. And then an other difficulty arose. He had been looking into the faces of his foes as they trotted along, and had seen they were human faces like his own. He had been getting acquainted with them, ns it were. Many of them seemed boys no older than himself; they were of his kind, and his heart grew averse to shooting them. In fine, he abandoned all intention of killinganybc dy that day, and resolved to peaceably retreat as soon as It should be safe to do so. Figuratively speaking, the angel of mercy had de scended, and was weeping warm tears into the powder in the pan of Bob's blunderbuss, just as is represented in the celebrated old picture of "Abra ham offering up Isaac." But right here the devil must put In a word, in form of a rifle-shot that resounded from the opposite hill, about a quar ter of a mile up the road, and which seemed to cause disturbance among a group of stragglers who were pressing forward their tired horses. Three or four of these at once dismounted and dashed into the woods, while a few of the others discharged their pieces in the same direction, and the restseem ed to occupy themselves with some objecton the ground. Bob's attention was concentrated on the pursuit which was plainly being made after a broth er bushwhacker not too soft-hearted to pull a trigger. Tho chase lasted some considerable time, and when two of the pursuers emerged from the forest, dragging between them a poor hatless wretch, none of the raiders remained in eight except a small body, a kind of rear-guard, that had just been halted In front of Bob's po sition, and a few of the stragglers, who still remained opposite the place where the shot was fired. The cap tor brought their prisoner across the creek, and up to the officer command ing the rear guard. "Who have you there?" the officer demanded. "A bush-whaoker, colonel," was answered. "Why did you bring him here then? You know well enough what to do. Take him over there" (pointing to the woods immediately behind where Boh lay) "and leave him." The men, obedient to the command whose meaning all understood, began to let down the bars of the field, wlien a young officer came galloping down the road, and suddenly pulled Iu his horse beside whpre the prisoner. whose legs were doubling under him. was being held up. Instantly dis mounting, the new-comer drew a re volver and discharged it thrice at the doomed man, who dropped dead. A fourth shot wbb then heard, and the young officer himself fell. A whole volley scatteringly followed. The fourth shot was Bob's, and the scat tering volley was all aimed at him as he sprang up the steep hill, swift as a deer. He was hotly followed, and by as agile woodmen as himself, and would hardly have escaped had he not beforehand well considered his re treat. Without attempting to do his running in the thickets which covered the hill-sides, or among the rocks in the beaten way which led him up to the ridge road, followed that road a short distance only, then dashed through a thicket at the head of a cove, and gained a side path on the top of a spur which he knew diverged from the main ridge a little further on ; followed that till, nearlng the point of the spur, its direotion became obscure; then, quickly dodging round a hollow tree whose lower opening was on the side opposite the quarter whence pursuit came, and was con cealed by undergrowth, he sprang in to it and began to clamber upward. He might have continued till he em erged at the upper opening in the tree top, through which, forty feet above, he could see daylight pouring in, but feared he would make loo much noise in doing so, as each movement de tached masses of rotten wood that fell rattling to the bottom, so contented himself with attaining a convenient resting-place ten feet from the ground. There he remained while the pursuit came up, swept by, fatigued Itself, and was given over, and remained for a good while longer, fn the apprehen sion that his enemies might still be lurking near, having only pretended to give up the search ; in this overes timating his own importance, as ve all are apt to do. At length he tho't it safe, not to descend and continue his flight, but to mount to the top, and there see what could be seen. Elevating then from the hole only his head and arms, he hung by the el bows, with the rpst of him concealed in the hollow trunk, and looked about on every side, until, perfectly re-assured at last, he scrambled out, and descending by the more pleasant out side of the tree, started on the road homeward. As he feared to return to the main ridge road, our hero, as he may now be truly called, since he has drawn blood, descended the point of the spur by a path that led into a small creek or run, and followed its course until It entered the valley of a considerable stream, whose general direction was parallel with that In which Morgan's force was moving. Here he paused, and was looking to discover a point by which he could mount to the ridge of the hill on the further side of the stream, when the sound of Norsemen approaching from up the road Bent him to cover in a thicket of sumac. Lying close, and carefully avoiding to stir the bushes or breathe too loud, he was able, un detected, to observe a party of five go by, all of them evidently Morgan's men, of whom the hindmost was leading a sixth animal with empty saddle, to which was fastened a pair of old-fashioned saddle-bags. But they had hardly passed him before thej' halted-to allow their horses to drink in a deep, clear pool at the roots of a sycamore stump. While there, the one who rode at the head of the party examined his watch, then a pocket-compass, and af terward looked around him. Some thing there was In his features that reminded the boy of a face he had Been before, and that impressed him painfully. After making his survey the officer, for such he was, said to the man nearest him, who seemed of much rougher aspect than the rest of them, "Brown, have we not gone far enough on this course?" "I think wo have, lieutenant," re plied Brown. "I reckon, If we take up this p'int right yer, and bear to the east, we'll come shortly on the main ridge about seven miles below where we left it. By pushing on smart we kin be thar before they all get by." "How do you happen to know so much about this infernal abolition country?" asked auother of the men as the officer moved further on. "When I lived in Cavern County. Kaintuck, I was in the horse busi ness, and that sometimes brought me over yer." "The horse business! oh, I under stand. Cavern County horse-dealers sell a good many more than they buy. They have a way, too, of swapping horses." Not this remark, but the laugh of the others, caused Brown to redden, and say, "I want to know what you and John Morgan and the whole lot are doing but swapping horaeB?" "Oh, this Ih war." "Is it?" rejoined Brown ; "then I'd like to see jest a little fighting to prove it. Since we crossed the river about all we've done has been a runnin' off horses and dry goods. Pretty fast runnin' it's been, too." Further criticism on the conduct of the war was interrupted by one of the men exclaiming, as he looked back. "Why, where's old Hector? Lieu tenant, Hector's missing." The lieutenant made no reply, seeming to occupy himself solely with examining the path up the point "which Brown had indicated, and which seemed almost too rugged for horses to ascend ; but another of the party said, in rather a low tone, "Don't you know he left him to take care of the body?" "This way. men !" cried theofficer, as his horse sprang up the hill. The others followed, one by one, imitating their leader in not dismounting; and he spirited amlmals, jaded as they were, achieved the difficult ascent without one false step. But the Ied hore, whose hridle was held by the last of the part', on reaching a place where the path was too contracted to admit of two going abreast, reared, broke loose, and, wheeling round, dashed down the hill again. "Go back and lead her up," said one. "Let her alone," said another; she'll follow Cast onough iff half a minute, and a good deal better than you can lead her." The last speaker was right, so far as this, that the mare halted at the foot of the hill, and was, in fact, turning again to recommence the ascent, when Bob, darting from hia thicket, seized the trailing bridle, leaped Into the va cant saddle, and when the raiders stopped on the summit to give their horses breath, the young bushwhack er was galloping her at full speed up the creek, more than a mile away. Fifteen minutes later he had reached a place of safety, where dismounting he flung himself on the ground to rest until it should be dark enough for him to venture back to the spot near hia first ambush, where he had dropped the rifle, and to the hollow tree where he had concealed the pouch and horn, without which he by no means dared return to his father's house. Mean while, holding tightly by the bridle the mare he had adopted, though al lowing her to crop what grass wa3 near, he begart to meditate on his too exploits the first, emptying a sad dle; the second, filling one. Itisnot to be wondered at that he could better bear to think on the last than the first. As the animal moved around him he could see blood spots on the leather. He recalled what tbe horseman had said of a negro being left behind In care of a corpse. The shadows were darkening in the forest. For the first time since the bush-whacker was born he felt averse to being alone, and for the first time, too, his imagin ation began to act, making the shad ows of the trees take unpleasant shapes ob they grew darker and dark er. (To be continued.) This Btory is pnbltnhed by Messrs. Harper Bros., N. Y., complete, nnd will be sent by them to any part of the united States, post age prepaid, on receipt of fifty cents. Flax Culture in the United States. Flax la said to be fast becoming a popular crop in the West, because of its certainty in returning a profit to the farmer, sure because it defies the ravages of the chinch bug, and ma tures too early for the locust. Hence it is thought to be destined to increase steadily in production, notonly forits profit, but as a Western agriculture. The straw, however, does not yet seem to be utilized to the extent de sirable and necessary to obtain the full benefit of this crop. Thedemand for the fibre properly handled is almost unlimited, while the straw Is nearly worthless to the farmer, being inju rious rather than a benefit as food for stock. The straw at present Is mainly produced from thin sowing, which produces branchy straws, the greater part of which can be utilized In the manufacture of bagging tow for "bail ing stuff.'" The chief demand for this raw material Is for cotton bailing and for cordage. The demand for the former purpose may be approximatad by the production of cotton, which annually makes about 4,000,000 bales of. cotton, requiring 24.000.000 yanls bagging cloth, about 12.000.000 yards of which aro manufactured In the United States, and nearly all from im ported stock. Jute butts are import ed largely for their manufacture, but our western contemporaries, among them the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. claim that domestic flax can be raised and manufactured more cheaply, and that the product Is better for bagging. The increased imports of raw hemp in the United States for 1874 over 1873 was 6.6)o tons. There is manuiac tured in the United States of cordage and twines to the value of $8,970,382; flax, dressed, $15,000. We also Im ported In 1874, ending June 30th, of vegetable fibre, except cotton, to the value of $26,208,628; 64.942 tones of which was raw material, costing $6. 313.033. Upon this showing of de mand and statement of superiority of domestic over Imported raw material, the western farmers are urged to ex tend the culture of flax indefinitely, as a more safe and profitable crop than any other. Selling Corn. An experienced grain farmer ndvl Bes'tosell no corn in the ear; have all you sell shelled. A hand shelling machine.will answer if your crop Is a small one; If large, get one to be worked by a horse-power. Neither will cost a great deal, and we are very certain that the cob, if crushed, then steamed and fed to your cattle, will be worth more to you in a single winter than the price of a corn-shel-!er, whether you get a small or large one. We helieve there Is ono-third as much nutriment In a bushel of cobs as there Is In a hushel or grain, and we do know that cows and oxen fed upon three pecks of the steamed! or crushed cobs, in addition to the usual quantity of hay or tops of fod der, wlllkeep fat. Then why haul your cobs to market to be given away? It costs a3 much to carry a bushel of cobs to the market as It doea a bushel of corn. Shell your corn, leave your coin at home to nourish your cattle, and through them your land; and where vou now pend one bushel of corn, you will be able to transport two for the same money. Indian Dumplings. Mix your meal with water that almost boils; make them up and put them in to boil about twenty minutes moderate ly ; they will come to pieces if they boil hard. Some prefer to stir np the Imeal with hot water and put It in a clean cloth, as they are apt to break If not properly managed. Axj. hour will coolr it in tbls.wav.. THE MONKYIESS MAN. This beautiful poem was composed years ago by Henry Stanton, Maysvllle, Ky. Such gems of poetry are not often met with, writ ten by authors whose namesare never known In history: Is there no place on the fnco of the earth. Where charity dwellcth, where virtue hna birth? "Where bosoms In kindness and mercy will heave, And the poor and the wretched shall ask and receive? Is there no place on earth where a knock from tho poor Will bring a kind angel to open the door? Ah ! search tho wide world whereveryou can There is no open door for the moneyless man. Go look In the hall whore the chnodeller light Drives off with Its splendor the darkness of night; Where the rich hanging velvet, in shadowy fold. Sweeps gracefully down, with Its trimmings of gold. And mirrors of silver take up and renew In long lighted vistas tho 'wllderlng view : Go there in your patches, and find If you can A welcoming smile for tho moneyless man. Go look In your church of the cloud-reaching spire, Which gives back to the sun his same look of Are, Where the arches and columns are gorgeous within, And tho walls seem as puro as a soul without sin ; Go down the long aisle see the rich and the great, In the pomp and the pride of their worldly estate; "Walk down In your patches, and find if you can. Who opens a pew for a moneyless man. Go look to your Judges, in dark flowing gown With the scales wherein law welgheth equity down; Where he frowns on the weak and smiles on strong. And punishes right while hejustlfles wrong; Where Jurors their lips on the Bible have laid, To render a verdict they've already made; Go there in the court room, and find If you can, Any law for tbe cose of the moneyless man. Go look In the banks, where Mammon has told His hundreds and thousands of silver and gold; Where, safe from tho hands of the starving and poor, Lies pile upon pile of the glittering ore; Walk up to the counter ah, there you may stay, Till your limbs havogrown old and your hair turns gray, And you'll find at tho bank not one of the clan With money to lend to a moneyless man. Then go to your hovel no raven has fed The wife who has suffered so long for her bread ; Kneel down by her pallet and kiss the death frost From the lips of the angel yonr poverty lost Then turn in your agony upward to God, And bless while it Btnltes you, the chasten ing rod; And you'll find at tbe end of your life's little span. There's welcome above for tho moneyless man. The President's Warning. Two classes are vexed nt the Presi dent's speech at Des Moines. The first are those who dislike General Grant, and are annoyed to see liirn say what is so wise and striking and sug gestive. Tho second are those who dislike what he said and are annoyed to see it havi the weight and authori ty of the nation's Chief Magistrate. But the great body of thinking men everywhere earneatly respond to what was said, and aro very glacfto remem ber who said it. President Grant's speech is a clear, terse and dignified expression of the common feeling entertained by patri otic and thinking men. It says en ough, and not too much. It is skill ful iu statement, nest in composition and just In spirit. It shows that the President is a keen observer of the course of events and is in sympathy with the true sentiment of the coun try. The question to which he directs attention Is rapidly rising to the larg est proportions, nnd the manifesta tions of priestly purpose show that the danger to our system of popular education is not fanciful but real and imminent. Albang Journal. High and Dry A few daya ago Butcher Robinson's large New Foundland dog cooled him self iu the canal, and after swimming faraway from his point of entrance, he tried to get out where the wall was high up from the watet. He made many iuetfectual attempts to do it, aud failed. Gov. Smith's shepherd dog eaw hia difficulty, ran about to get assistance, but none coming, when the big water dog put up his paws to make one more effort to get out, the knowing Scotch coolly grabbed him by the neck as one grabs a brother by the hand to help him out or overa difficult place, and he was landed high, if not dry, much to the joy of both. Manchester (V. Y.) Bulletin. An Oregon exchange lately came out with the assertion that all the la dies In town were wearing "Govern ernmentsocks." Thengonlzed editor tore all the hair out of bis head, shot seventeen holes In the compositor, and chafed the proof-reader into the mountains with a shot-gun. He then slipped back in the night and barrica- ded himself In his office, where he spent three days in talking through the key-hole to the enraged females, try tng to convince them that he wrote "Garibaldi sacks." A "Society for the Protection of Birds Useful to the Farmer," is one of the societies in a French Department. All nests found are reported to the so- ciety, and protected by it. Last year I the. society protected 214 nesjtei DoVt Cut te -l0rse'sIFr- We have wondered ouruSocIety for the Protection of Dumb Animals" has not before this sent out a procla mation, ordering- every owner of a horse to look to the horse's frog. What wonhl be thought of those parents who have tho care of children, if, when they begin to purcharee shoes for the little ones, they should begin and paro away the thick flesh from the heel of the foot? and then say, "This needs cutting off; it la too thick and ungainly, nnd we wish to make it smooth and even, and out it down level with the rest of the foot." If nature gave to human a thick cartilage of forty or a hundred thick nesses upon the heel of the foot, wa it not to receive the firstsolid pressure of tho foot, nnd by thlsTne'ans gave the whole foot and limb, and its cord and tissues, from such a severe jar aa Is felt when one steps heavily upon' the fore part of the foot alone? Reason, common-sense, and nature all teach us that the heel of man's foot and the frog of the horse's foot are wisely ordained to receive the first and heavy pressure of the tread, and any act that mars nature's plans must necessarily injure man or horse.- California Farmer".- In a recent speech by Brlgham Young to the conference of the Mor mon Church, the following was used:' Education renders a boy useless. All our Congressmen' and Gbvernors" of State8 and public officers are the apawn of free schoola. Those men never performed a day's useful labor in their lives, and they would be far more valuable to the community If they would lay down their robes of office and go to work in the corn-field. Would you have your children grow up maudlin and worthless ? I had no schooling, yet God ohose me for ono of the most exalted positions on earth. Your college professors, and men cun ning In all the wisdom of the Egyp tians, often want'aroeal, whllel have laid up my millions, and can buy ev ery Congressman, every preacher, and' every editor in the country. Go away to your cornfields! I am opposed to" free schools; and understand me, al though you came begging to me on your knees, I will not give you one dollar to eduoateanother man's child. Brlgham understands very well that It Is Mi rough the ignorance of hia followers that be has been able as he: has. Chdrnlngr During the progress of churning a' certain uniformity of temperature' must be observed or the butter will be' soft and spongy, Instead of being Arm nnd compact. The agitation, also, of the cream should be regular neither" too quick nor too slow. If the agita tion is tooquiok, the butter will make' and unmake itself before the churner Is aware of it, as too rapid motion in duces fermentation, which when it has reached a certain point, la entire ly destructive to anything like the possibility of making even moderate-' Jy good or well tasting butter. The" best temperature for the" oreatn In' churning i8from fifty toslxty degrees. Willard's Practical Dairy Husbandry. Hasty Podding. Boll some wa ter and thldken w'ltb' flour, as yon' would for thin starch; sift somo coarse meal and stir in until it la quite thick; keep it boiling all the time you are putting in the meal, which' must be done gradually; salt to trie' taste; boil it well; put it in a bowl and turn out. Eat with' cream and molasses. Baked Fish. Take a middling sized fish or a very large black' flab, make a stuffing of bread, a littlo pork chopped fine, sweet herbs, an onion, salt and pepper; place the fish In a bake-pan with a little water, sufficient to keep it moist; add a glass of red wine, a little flour aud butter.' RtPr and Indian Drop Cakes. One pint of Indian meal', one-half pint of rye meal, two eggs, two spoon fuls of molasses, a little salt; work it with cold milk so as to drop fror'a" spoon into hot fat; be sure to have a smooth batter. Child "Doea the Lord take the pa pers?" Mother "No, my child ; why do you ask?" Child "Oh. I thought he didn't, it takes our ministerso long to tell Him about things !" Every ono must find out for him self the key to the riddle of life. 16' is of no use to have It told. Some do' not hear, while others misunderstand it. Veal Sausages. Chop equal quantities of lean veal and fat pork, a handful of sage, a little salt ; beat all: In a mortar and roll out. "If you Intend to hug me don't dV It suddenly, because the chair you are' Bitting on has a broken leg, and you might get a tumble. Precoolons boy, munching the frul of the date tree. "Mamma, If I eat dates enough, will I grow up tor be an almanac? Zeb Crummet says wise menTear.' more from fools than fools- doifrom them. - . """ Hods have become very cheap wr b$er. Is. going dor : JS