Sheboygan Daily Herald (Newspaper) - January 16, 1879, Madison, Wisconsin r SNOWED a tbat tbo rear under The old tbat war Bow rainy will bloom in I wonder oat of hw and with blade and Gem her garments to mjr Over tbe knoll In tbo valley yonder bloomed and When tbe snow hii gone that drifted them under Will they hoot up and bloom anew 1 wUd Mid a alant pelted Bnt o I lent Jewel If I walk that when bare melted Will tbe 1 lore or and nt out ofa tranee will it waken to heart M the r abdw Hopes and dreami of in f Facet tbat that perished old Of IBM Mif I How at the of f MAT'S LUCK It IB luckt said Mat He walked gloomily to the window and looked on the vivid green oi the croquet lawn on white red rotes clustering about the on the old tending his ip the amid a ol sunshine glow of si Mat ed to be with seemed oppressive as a cage He threw open the French windows drew a long breath And his into pockets ot nfa falling into a careless lounging attitude peculiar to fingers came in ft brought it to light It waf addressed a woman's handwriting to Matt Curtis Esq M D A played about that lips as lie how was that superscription to the known to rich and poor for mites as young Curtis With a air he drew forth the brief His face darkened as he perused it Miss Bellue Would be glad to have a few minutes conversation with Mr Curtis sarcastic r other glance at the delicate paper the firm square dark until the the face seemed completely altered it Mat Her hand never trembled there is not s waver ing Why most girls would cry their eyes out while writing such a note as that to their lovers He crushed the offending missive into a crumpled ball as he spoke and ad- dressed a few more to the fair unbefitting a or the hearing of the young lady who lessly entered in time indistinctly to catch them more than 20 but with a serene and queenly grace ol movement a gravely beautiful aii air just now of haughty disgust Pardon she says icily so In a conversation Is probably of confidential nature with a flaming face a quick deprecating gesture a courteous getic bow and speech that somehow in their confused humility as a gentleman I trust indeed you did not hear it- I earnestly crave forgiveness if you did t Sho contemptuously dismisses the matter with the slightest wave of a little jeweled hand Cold hard proud she looks and her words have a clear-cut suggestive of newly clipped coins I sent for answered Mat defiantly His is dying dark hard expression is returning Just my it seems to repeat To beg an answer to three continues Misa Bellue Mat bows thursto hia hands into the deep shooting pockets once more rind resumes the careless lounging attitude Have you entered your name withstanding ray as a man rider lor tho autumn Have you in truth gone to the old habit ot dropping into the corn or three nights in the week to how superb was the ring of in her drink ale and smoke in company with the boora repeats Mat sturdily Is it indeed true that on leaving that inn last night you involved self in a poaching ing down the keeper and helping one of the poachers to says Mat with a kind of sullen Miss Bellue draws something from her white linger and hold it out Mat's hand comes out of and grasps it It ia woman's engagement ring looked at each contrast in the two faces com- posed calm haughtily indifferent Hia blankly astonished angry agitated by that he pleads The serene the of her face answer him Con you not make he cried Can you not understand tbat mad young blood like mine must find some excitement i greater than mixing pills and powders and lotions or ing through sick rooms all dayf It is pitiful to aee how he watches her while he speaks and notes the same fixed mute changeless answer At least let me explain I can do so to your satisfaction I think I he says dubiously it to your finger and reserve judgment till you hear the And he holds the ring toward great clumsy hand somewhat Still audible reply A faint shake of the head a look of polite incredulity is all Do you he asks His appealing Juji face It does change drop ied in stem bows slightly and room He leaves the house passing the window to gain the road but ing neither to the right nor to the left Hia head is erect hia hands aie out of once I ISL THi ml iv transformation takes place in the room Bellue proves bji a series of actions essentially feminine First she IfiVe token irbm the floor then she kisses it and it away rushes up stairs to watch her lover out of sight for a quarter of a mite of so she a retreating log and smaller in the distance He never once looked back the regular march of his steps never faltered a turn of the toad hid him from sight amort un- dignified position and cried until her pretty eyes were red K W all all offer i i t t j i from his bed and with expertness struck a liT some and house ar in the sky were K Mat speed with e in his mind I hefty en it may not be the Where is hei shouted to two la borers along as swiftly as boots and ponderous habits of progression would let them Joyce's sur farmer Thank The next house to the but not enough to endanger Mat's suspense gave place to a thrill excitement it was hia young blood asserting Bashing through a gateway he tan over a girl her hands hi impotent Miss i r back at v on a hat and thp thickest shawl you have the panic-stricken girl Mil afterwards did it to her he had no right to issue such instructions When she returned it waa to find out t my lie grumbled idling fingers If they had been babies now I might have gained some credit at the same risk I The stable in furt scouted Mat He did not wail for the information to be An ardent lover of horseflesh it was an appeal to his sympathies that sent round in a state of breathless i It Wan on fire j tbe horses were With terror tWo or throe rustics were making ed and fruitless attempts drag them the poor animals resisted with their might A little of men looked idly and despairingly Jim run the barn and get three or four empty sacks atad a rope By a sack over each animal's head and neck thus it by passing a round forelegs and setting strong arms to haul and by a little organization of but until efforts a rescue was All the horses were saved ex- cept one poor smothered by the smoke Farmer Joyce came up with a grimy hand extended in honest gratitude Thank you kindly sir I don't mind for the ricks and the are all insured but it went to my heart to bear them poor brutes scream Mat gave his left right was bound up a chief The old rector joined them Miss Bellue leaning on his arm The danger is over now Joyce I think Mat come with me Mat danced at the averted face of the young lady and misconstrued it She was in truth ashamed to meet his eye The contrast between hia coolness and courage and her physical cowardice humbled her She had come down that pedestal propriety from which she had presumed to judge him ao harshly but he did not suspect it I have burnt my hand and arm my luck 1 said Mat I must hurry home at once to dress them He took off his hat as he spoke enough with the left hand and turned away is a fine fellow Agnes that lover of yours said the rector but his manner is rather abrupt to-night What ails Never mind mind There was a kind of wail in Misa voice A thought the tor sagely my attitude muat be one of dignified pok and he quietly to himself at the conceit Mat was dressing his burns iu the gery whop tbe outer door opened and his father entered Who called you up It was my turn to-night It should be explained that young Mat and the old doctor were partners The old doctor made no reply He sat down in a low chair and began to fan himself with a broad straw hat Mat looking up in sui prise saw that he ghastly pale that hia eyes had a look of horror in them that his whole appearance waa that ofa man who had terrible Mat touched hia arm gently What is it Doctor Curtis lips moved twice be- fore any sound then he uttered but one Cholera t Upon Mat's face there came a faint reflection of hia father's fear The scourge had been raging with frightful i TheytWk proach pure hei No t distant fof it ofte tine it hy id wbe Mr Bonnet a man of good means fled with his wife and family Mat and the old doctor were No or or now Iff Mat went from house to house hopeful word for every poor tern wretch who shuddered at hia own fears Then his father the old Poor old When the evil be had dreaded really to i him and seized upon him he grew strong tried to h t a sinking Jad I he said when Mat ik encouraging from I have I juot expect to live much longer in the ordinary course of nature Don't blink f fie truth boy I shall be glad to die in the harness Miss watched the funeral pro cession from that name upper window which she had before put to a similar use Very contrive was Miss Bellue in days A horrible dread had taken of her with the report of cholera in the village She fought against it herself for it she tried to A turnip waa lately produced in county Cal gs in Missouri that their haunches county C on seven acres without irrigation fertile soil genial climate of induced 80.610 une was finished last week The building and very As soon aa the college ie be ready fpr reception of IT'S pretty nearly d be- een the tanners and the lawyers in the Illinois legislature Tbat body is composed of forty-six lawyers forty-one thirteen merchants eleven and two editors London the council of the Hereford Herd Book come to decision in all sea aa to the reception or rejection of entries and hope to be able very shortly to place it in the hands of the printer Certificates of entries for volume 10 are bulls and 788 cows Colorado Cattle will a meeting in Denver on of January It will be largely attended by representative cattle men from Kansas and New Mexico propose to organise for self-protection ane Tor it i i herself tp the beds of fires hi western Nebraska and set by Indians are reported to have burned over such extended districts as to cause fears that of cattle will be starved before the new grass but trembling limbs refused to carry It was constitutional physical cowardice and every ing tale of Mat's calm heroism in- creased her and her love that unconscious gaVe him double and admiration for gentleman His father's death work but he did not spare himself He snatched food rest sleep when and bow he could until the epidemic died out almost then as the last ease was in a of he sickened My luok has said Mat a smile I can be spared now the work is done Miss Bellue heard the news the same pour A housemaid to whom she had done some little kindness ran off to the rectory to tell her Miss Bellue gave an order i or axia went straight to jier father's study Papa Mat ia stricken now I Bless my said the rector in great excitement Poor poor I have told Jenkins to put the horses to the brougham and the keeper to get the green ready and the old gentleman looked very bewildered And you must fetch ed Miss Bellue calmly i He shall not be left to the nursing of those ignorant she insisted resolutely He shall be brought here or I will assuredly go to him The rector had yielded to her all her life He shook his head in sore Are1 you not dear A peculiar smile lighted ner pale beautiful countenance Not now A similar was almost first one put state the Mat in a convalescent Were you not afraid Perfect love casteth rejoined softly out fear she Bayard Taylor and His iQ W In Cleveland Herald Bayard Taylor wrote a beautiful hand He detested blind and slovenly writing and used to say that any man write plainly who would make an effort His manuscript was the delight of ers Mr Taylor wrote quietly and ily and produced a great deal more copy in a given time than any one would suppose him capable of Who observed his apparent ease and absence of hurry He was rather careless in his dress but not like Horace enough so to he conspicuous He liked a stout plain suit of clothes that could be worn a long time a sray overcoat and a broad-brimmed slouch hat He was a hearty eater and was fond of the German national beverage which he habitually drank at dinner In religion he might have been clasped as a Unitarian or Deist though he had a great reverence for the faith Quaker ancestors In hiS later years the desire for travel wore off he used to set out on a journey with reluctance After seeing and knowing well all the great cities of the world his preference was New York He often said he would rather live there than in any European capital Taylor's wife was the daughter of the celebrated German astronomer Prof Hansen She is a lady of fine culture and able literary talent A school history of Germany written by her husband for use in American schools was ly translated by her into German Their daughter Lilian closely resembles her father as he appeared in his youthful days Taylor built the house near nett square where his parents still live and where they celebrated their golden wedding nearly ten years ago Hei called the place and hoped to pass his there A from Ottawa to the to It is that should con- grew agree with the prayer of the ex- council of the United States board and appoint a committee to confer with a similar com- appointed by the house of com- mons of Canada to arrange the basis for a reciprocity treaty with Canada the government in order to relieve it- self from the danger of directly offend- ing its protectionist friends will cause of its supporters to the subject to the nouae of parliament THE new legislature con- tains planters forty-four lawyers four merchants four cians one miller and one insurance agent comes AT a late meeting of a committee of the Suffolk Stud Book Association in }t was resolved that entries for the first volume of the Stud Book should on March I that the list of subscribers to whom alone copies he issued except with sion of the committee would close at an early date i THE first of American meats into Germany some years ago resulted in failure The season pounds were of the best quality sewn in thick canvas and kept While on constructed for the and kept cool b SONS Co Orleans in- their annual report a larger area of rice planted than usual in Louisiana The yield is hardly up to earlier expectations but the quality will be better than last season The crop of waa 000 that of 1878 79 is estimated at barrels THE oats fiends are again in the sections where live newspapers are not taken The men who do not believe in book farming are the ones swindled with this new oats at a bushel They have been known in the west among reading farmers for forty years and of no tical value but that makes no ence to tjie farmer whose cupidity tempts him to put faith in oily gammon Farmer THE best whitewash for poultry Into the whitewash pail drop a teaspoonful of soft-boiled rice and mix thoroughly Then pour into quart of water say ten or twelve drops of Crude carbolic acid Mix this into the rest and swab the interior qf with it For outside luse rock salt boiled and dispense with carbolic NO other preparation of whitewash equals thia for poultry houses hogs are now worth bnt from to cents a pound in our market and yet we are importing bacon and hama from the east and it costs the consumer from 16 to 13 cents a pound t It would seem fhat here is a margin for good to those who have the means to uy and the skill to convert them into the articles above-named That just as bacon and hams can be in California aa in any other country has often been proven by the doing it and yet have few slaughtering establishments in the state where slaughtering is carried on systematically and where bacon and cured fjr general Paper A THING to have in the house is a jar or of Pour water over the quantify is not important as only a amount will be and cork up for use A spoonful oi clear liquid stirred into milk cream or bread sponge in danger of souring will prevent that catastrophe It also cleanses bottles etc that have unpleasant odor A person who needs miln but whose di- gestion is so weak as not to it will find nb inconvenience if into a glass of the lacteal fluid ia stirred a of The difference in taste is not perceptible era sends us the following from a local paper and aaka who can beat it Mr Mathias Wellendorf of St Mary's Ek county Fa haa an acre of ground from which he thia year ed 150 bushels of turnips 110 bushels 60 ff corn li L of and loada of The 40 cents pumpkins at a load which makes a grand total of aa the proceeds of one ANIMALS IK FARM the usual methods and ex- tent and variety of crops must in every by local tions there is a lesson of practical dom to be learned from the prevalent tendency to increase meat production in Great Britain France and Germany which the of the United States should heed Already in thia country the demand for meit of higher grades of quality both for home use and for- eign shipment is beginning to exercise some influence upon the extension of the culture of clover millets and other forage plants and in keeping up to a high point production out too ruinous a reduction in price Could beet sugar be made with profit here it would prove a powerful lus to and high culture While maize the clovers and various grasses win be our main reliance for Feeding and fattening there ia great needed for variety and especially for more succulent winter forage an in- crease of cabbages Swedes etc Wheat will be a minor interest as it is already in the older states except in the new soils of the higher and elevated of the Kocky Mountain system where its culture aa a specialty will rage yet for a considerable period Elsewhere enterprising ists should address themselves to fuf study of the questions of rural omy and animal physiology involved in the problem of successful meat York Tribune IDA LEWIS Newport Heroine by Her Friend Paul Boynton at the Wash 1 are Ungrateful r New York January Sid Paul Boynton had an ment on the patrol river front last night with the newsboy When the latter made bis round it was snowing and the captain postponed his tramp some pleasant night He ed from a visit to an old friend Ida Lewis the Newport heroine Jait even ing Boynton found Ida at the wash tub The captain says it is most ing that so little has been done for Ida Lewie She saved altogether eleven lives and the rusks she ran were ble Grace Darling in England did not save so many lives and yet she has been pensioned and cared for in every way The salary Ida gets aa keeper of the Lime Bock light Is not enough to support herself and her mother in com- fort Ida married seven years ago but lived only one year with her husband He wanted to be supported by his wife and was kicked out Tbe British Premier's Peerage is reported to have a desire that his title shall not become extinct on his death The patent of nobility which ia a document in Latin Betting forth the reasons why his royal mistress has graciously pleased to raise him to the house of Lords con- taps the usual clause of limitation that title and its privileges should de- only to the male heirs of his body lawfully batten It happens that Lord never had such an heir or heirs But there ia a way by which the earldom can be con- such aa was resorted to several years ago in Lord case It may be remembered that in ber 1830 when Henry Brougham then the moat popular of British subjects accepted the office of Lord Chancellor much against his venerable mother's advice and desire he was raised to the peerage as Baron Brougham and the second title as of a branch of an ancient and Noble Border family In 1360 not having a son he obtained a new patent of nobility with what ia called a special remainder to his youngest and surviving brother William at that time Master ui Chancery In 1868 the great Lord Brougham died and waa succeeded under the second patent by his brother who is now in his year and has several BOOB Disraeli's case much resembles this He hat no son He had a sister who is dead and of his two brothers James who waa a commissioner of Indian ex- some years back leaving hia little fortune to the fortunate and distinguished head of the family There remains only Ralph Disraeli who hia brother's age or influence is of an in the house of a salary of year and the near prospect of succeeding to the principal clerkship with a IK no other business does year the present occupant being ad- in years Mr Ralph Disraeli has one son Coningsby Disraeli called in remembrance of one of hia uncle's famous political novels less if Lord Beaconsfield expressed a wish to that would receive queen's such as waa ed to Lord Brougham to have and negligence work so much mischief as in the handling of milk Wooden are unfit for use in the dairy be- it is next to impossible to keep them clean while tin pails are easily cleansed Sugar Of milk when dried into a is very difficult to dissolve and can only be removed by careful washing and scalding Ae fumes of stagnant slops when conveyed to the milk carry with them the seeds of de- struction which readily multiply and u It may afford a crumb of comfort to American ate ing the results of to know that English writers Mr Caird have forcibly summed up the broad view of the present state ot ters when they tell us that quite one- half of each loaf consumed in England is of foreign origin that part of their meat and daisy produce to them from across the sea and that almost the entire additions may hereafter be sought to fill the lation must be drawn from other lands A VALUABLE ACHE One of our patent of nobility containing a special remainder clause continuing the peerage to his brother to whom as bis reviving relative his property may be expected to pass after his demise That property consists of the estate of manor estimated aa worth per annum and personalty arising from the bequests of his late wife from his deceased brother and a Jewish lady who made him her heir out of sheer admiration cf his talents Thia may make a probable total of Ralph Disraeli though he could not continue to perform clerical duties in tbe heuse of lords would be reasonably well provided for if a peer with a party income considerably over f Tux English duty on tobacco amounts to a year Herr thit the total coal production of the world for 1870 waa Great Britain mind tons and United each tons 767.691 tout tonat putt of the world Sir Joseph Hooker late president of I the royal society boa received a com- from the i stating that the range of observation ot i the late transit of Venus a i distance from the sun of to milaa One hundred yeau ago not a pound coal not a foof of ma had been burned In thli country No iron were used and no con- toe beat em- ployed until Dr iron framed fire place which still bean his name Itii announced that there will be an international exhibition of sea aad river fishing material at Berlin In 1880 Thia exhibition will contain not than nine A programme will be atnf abroad giving all to who may to forward In considering and geological time Mr William Davien that the heat which the earth once received from moon to be taken into account by that at one the moon mutt have an Influence Milk like that of a or aun M Liais the director of the Bto de Janeiro observatory has begun the great work of telegraph the longitude of Rio in com- parison with Greenwich When the operation tave beett the geographical position of every city in southern America will be known with At a recent meeting of the Scientific association at Dublin John Evans F R ft president delivered an before the geological section in which he gave a sketch of a recent theory of a gradual change of the axil of the earth for glacial marks on our He favored the theory and quoted three or four writers in support of it giving dates of the articles no one of which was prior to 1877 The merit of the discovery is now claimed for Mr W K who first advanced the view and supported it by argument in a work entitled Darwin and published in 1867 Much of the speculations regarding the question Are the elements reminds one of the statement made several years ago to some by an old I hev traveled good he said seen a good deal In I hev to the tbat everything o an an the only thing that troubles me is a chist What the blin in the had to do with the was not very clear but there can be no doubt of the of the and of the reasoning of many of those who have indulged in sweeping Ntw York In consequence of CoL Gordon experiment with elephants in the equatorial provinces of Egypt and his advice to travelers to use them in exploring expeditions from the East Coast to which we referred on Aug 81 we hear tbat an attempt been made to induce the authorities to un- the taming of an African for the above-named purpose We regret however to learn that an unfavorable answer has been received it being understood that the Seyyid has set his heart on having a light line of railway to the Victoria though it does not appear quite clear where the necessary funds are to come from for such an expensive Academy Methylic alcohol is used in many of the industrial arts On entering a tory or laboratory where it is employed its presence is soon detected and the of the people engaged there indicate ill-health M has taken pains to discovered if methylic alcohol is really deleterious to health He kept animals from eight to sixteen months in apartments where the air though constantly renewed was charged with the vapor of this kind of alcohol The result was that the livers of these animals showed enlargement and fatty degeneration A similar departure from healthful structure was discovered in the muscular fibres of the heart in the cells in the uriniferous tubes and in the lung cells There also more or less congestion of the nervous It may easily be imagined what must be the condition of those who work in the clone and lated the atmosphere of which ia saturated with the fumes of methylic alcohol A Paris letter M de Lessens whose activity puts to shame the strength and powers of endurance of men who have only reached half his age just returned from a short trip to Tunis He bad a double object in visiting tbe can coast to bring home the remains of a brother who died out there and to investigate the possibility and ity of letting the waters of the ranean into the desert of Sahara so to convert a great portion of that late expanse into an inland sea M de Lesseps tnat the Arab of the south of the Aures keep up the dition of there having existed in former times a sea in that neighborhood from five to six hundred leagues in circum- ference he also has been enabled to disprove the idea that the formation of a new lake would do away with the oasis for he discovered that these are all from fifteen to forty above the level of tbe sea whereas the desert itself is below the level Traces of Bo- man did not those wonderful colonisers been found in the desert and among them the of an amphitheatre like that in Borne POWDERED resin thrown between an iron pulley and a leather bek to prevent the belt from slipping