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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1879)
im t I THE EEb CLOUD CHIEF. JI. L. THOJI IS PnWWif r. ,, UED CLOUD, " - NEBRASKA. FAITH. I-alu wnuli) I hoM my lamnnl life nlolt I.lkij ontlcr tow it built liirfli above the " rwl; SHaltnt, ttinuicli tniie'jU ruve nr wind ItlllW clt, fl r. UioiikIi tho Hky il(solvfi In tenrsof Kor ilitrknc jia-"; stonnw-luill not nblilc. IHtli" putliiic mill tho fojj li punt. Alti-r tin Mirrow of tliu i-bbln title 1 uc sIiikIiik Hood rvturiM In Joy at laU Tlt nlvbt li lonniid imln wHRhnliraxlly; lt.it i. ml will hold Ills world above riwpatr. Is tit lo tin c-a-t, w lii-re up tin lucid nky 'll.-ltioiiiini; i-HiiiIm' 1 lio day ilinJl yet bo I ilr' Cflia Thnrttr, in Scrilmrr for AwjtttU MYHTEUIES. 1iyii tuia J liufii'itn ft'r.rltf-r.nfl 111, f-flvfll hi MM-ntfd h :inl my lf't tin; iresi'tl , j 'print: lit 7i-Ktiut(i' tnrlotlioui lnlnh, j t xii'-tit u o ift vudot my brvust. I To- ihiy b .Njitur' I urn fttiown ' Hit iijiirvelom figments nloiio. I !Iiik' r m 1it tbf iliiMes tbroiur, W itb coldfii illc on Mipplf stfin. And tMrult'MN of UiHr lit-Mtitj. Inn.? To mii-II tin-impuln- ul'II k tli:m. And wfinili'rincly my houI riwlwn a 1 Jiu rcMUiiccifuut til tin-Ijiiv! I e:in not pral-f tin ftni-rnltl mwlt lii-l pomp ol IfiKth'MiiiiiC clover IWT1, Nor tlint Krt'fii radl:iiif tit tin n-i-iN 1 1 at i-li-iu fj tin- m;ir-li with i'ti'U:r ifiiri. Sl it v riMit lu-i-il uloni: I jriw '1 In" n.inn-Ii' tliui mutlf tin-in 'hi' Tlle-i- lilou-oiiilni? tri-fi Ahfnci' odor llouH 1 lie itlll-ffil llvillrl's Joy Inf IIM-. 1 lii xtatlf trliN lloiii fi-athi n'd throat , I'll'ICH liw Willi MlrilllKU boAlldlTIIIDIIlt! In all tiling lovi'lv 1 would K,n" I hi inW.r of their lovclltiusnl V.iA wlilli-1 mti-c, tho westvtint; day liii-. fioui tint horizon's damask ulr; 1 in- imttoral illit.mri-si turn untv; Ni'w mj-ti'rj tlri'juMis oviTywhcrt'; And hitfh niKtit Itrliiict pMi'iti d from thrall. Tin itil:Ii!l-,t niyitfrv of all -lUlgnr 1'aircrU, in Vvulh'M Cvinjntnlon. 77; I'JANO FlESh. I' li.uk to tlii strains id tin' Jinllm,' piano '1 ht IIohI lil:; tho witlN id a KatliL-rin -"llll Tl"kli'. tlii, link, from i-iiiht In tint I'Xfiiini;, Ujinlil", tltim, tluni, till pai-t tvM in tin morn. B Arpi-K;l'is. strivra'o. midiinti. tranpiillo, 9 oi dotoii', alli'io, iiiictimaioii-i' A I ol it Innt ol tin- mainpiilallon ill u iiiuslc-htuiek ml-- in u iii'iuhb.'iriiiK Iioiihc. Kit' n-t'ti Inn by daj. Shi-'n M fair us nn miKi'l, With dark, waving hair ntiil t'yes spaiklin bright, but boi'i-r ltnuijllC'ht! is In tlu'daytlmi', Tlii'ili-vil posi'iHi's luThouI in tin night. "'I In' -swi'i't I5y and lly," nltli ountIi"s va I lilt loll". '! jii Init Ibisoof Suiutncr!" )' louKlmllng HIM'. "Tin "toi in," by llllnd Thhimh, with liidious llitindiT, ud othi-r wild tliiiu 'tlnH lull my n'post;. 9l idol!." iiiu-ic fioui ba'-s drums to bagplpfs, I 'il iU m tln stniliiMof Ap'illo's nui'i't hoiij;. Z woiv)iIi i:---liii. ISi'i-tliovi'ii, mill Vi'ldi, I or Aiibi'i mid Wi'Iiit 1 paiufiillv Ioiik; lint In tir In-r mnti'iti'iil iiitiM pri'tation !iu;.'lr. dink, piukli' pink, Kinuildi' xruui ruuip, lxipiidli'lorturi' of nuricnlatjim 'luopt'V loop, pooki'V rook, pltlllkl'V JilllUK pltunji! Xan 1'orX. Sim. .11 ki:. A Story of CortMV.iil and Mlihlijan. Mitr::trct Nialo, .1 jrirl of 20 or thcru- "ibouti, Mil 011 n low, brond stont: jit I he ftlf of the Hill" t hut overhung tlio soa. Hit f,:iUirc.' were irretxiilur, liutshu lisul n firtai'i litrk, rypsy-lik' henuty of her own. Hit brown Mini jjown flung rlo-oly about her; Jut hut hud fallen , Lurl;,;intl IiunpeMvltMnly hy Ihe strings; 1 :irol woolen .simwl was wraj))el arountl 1 lier lKiulkIer.4, one end trailing over tho . .icanl, gniv herbago. Her hands were' naspeii about lier knees; there was a hard, fc-'-t look about the tuifliuiling mouth; ami the ryes, that, were .sonie- " times nio.st temler, hatl a dangerous lijhl in them as they gazed steadfastly oil" over the datkening sea to a disLant horion, still red with the reflected glow 'if the smmet. At si little distance, but with his back toward her, anil his steel-blue ees just jis .steadily bent in the opposite direc tion, ood Matthew Krickson, a hand some young fellow enough, in the rough dre-s of a twiner, tall, strong and riidily, with a fui, curling, chestnut bsard, ttiitl leiir of the same rich color. A blue ribb in dangled from his left hand. TI'tTC hud evidently been a quarrel, sind a Imvc quarrel in a straggling miu iiit hamlet on the. northwest coast of Knglaud does not difler greatly from one in a scattered fishing hamlet on the eastern cost of Maine. Forms of speech may differ, but love and anger are much tho .same the wide world over. As for the queer, quaint dialect iti which this especial pair of lovers poured forth their mutual grievances, no attempt will be made to reproduce it here. You may fc bo sure they S'lid, in Cornish fashion, yo" for "vou," and "tiwd" for "told," aiul""ta" for "thou," and canna" for "can not " ttulall that shall be taken for granted, if not for your ease and comfort, at least for mine Tired of the silence at length, the 1 young miner sauntered away with an air of assumed indifference, and picking tip a handful of pebbles, slowly tossed them, one by one, into tho waves below. Margaret's eyes did not waver, but none the less did she follow every motion of his hand. Having watched the fall of his last pebble, he came back and stood behind her, winding the ribbon round his finger to its evident detriment. " So you will not wear it, Meg?" he said at last. ' No, I will not," e.he answered, with out turning her heard. "Why do you jr-ex me? There's no more to be said 6out it." " But why, Meg?" and he laid his hand on her shoulder as with an attempt .it reconciliation. "Tell mo why. pfcrely you can do no less." " Because because I can't abide blue, Matt Erickson. It's hateful to me." " Hat I like it, Meg! and if you cared for 111c you would bo glad to wear a blue ribbon to the fair when 1 ask it." "Why did you buy it?" she asked shortly, turning towards him by a hair's breadth. "Not to please me, that's sure!" "Ves; to please you and to please myself. Cousin Jenny wears ribbons as blue its her own eyes, and I am sure you can not say they are not pretty. You ie just stubborn, Meg." She sat for a moment as if turned to stone. Then she blazed out: "'Jenny!' Jenny!' I am tired of 'Jenny!' Sho has tnrned your head with her flirting ways liko a butterfly, and her yellow hair and her finery. Give your blue ribbon to her, and take her to the fair for I'll not wear it." "And you'll not go to the fair, either?" said Matt, intones of suppress ed passion. " Is that what you mean." " I'll not go with you," she answer ed, growing cool herself as she grew augry. " Yet it's likely enough that I may go. There aro plenty of lads who would bo glad to take mo with no rib bons at all." With a strong effort the young man put the curb upon his tongue, but his face darkened. " You'll go with me or no one, Meg," he said. " This is aU nonsense and we to be married next Michaelmas! But come," and he pnt out his hand to raise her from the stone; " it grows cars." Meg, still angry but willing to be pacified if she must, allowed him to as sist her, and stood, beside her stalwart lover with burning cheeks and down cast ees. She rather liked, on the whole, his tacit refusal to defend him- tsell ami uia iiiiSLuiiui. way 01 icmng hpr it was " all nonsense." But just at this moment, as iil-luck would have it, a small brown-paper parcel dropped from the folds of her shawl. Matt rtooped to pick it up. It burst open and a yard or two of scarlet ribbon rip pled over bis fingers. Now our poor Meg, not to be outdone by the fair Jenny, had bought this rib bon herself that very evening, meaning to wear it to the fair next week. But it so happened that when Matt went to Mother Marlcy's shop to buy his own blue love token, he bad found Dan Wil lis there the only man in Rysdyk whose rivalship he had ever feared. And Dan was buying a ribbon precisely like this. Mother Marley had wrapped it in this very piece of paper, Matt was sure, and he had seen Dan put it in his pocket and walk off with it. And now, here it was I His gift was spurned, then, and his rival's accepted ; and all Meg's talk about Jenny wat a ! mere subterfuge an excuse for a quar rel, j It was easy to eec now why she had i been so irritable of late, and so prone to j bike offense. But a man could not stand every thing, and if Meg preferred Dan Willis to him, why so be it. Yet if she would not wear his love token she certainly should not wear Dan's. Ho hardly meant to do it; he was Horry the next minute. But what he did, as the tide of passion swept him off his feet for an instant, was to wind the two ribbons into a knot and throw them vehemently into the sea. "There!" be cried, "that'd sctucu once for all." "And something else is settled, too, Matt Erickson," retorted Meg, in a white heat. "There'll be no marriage for us next Michaelmas, no marriage then or ever! You would strike me some day, f jr aught I know, if I should choose to wear a red knot rather than a blue. I'll not run the risk. I'll have nothing more to saj to you while the stars shine," and darting round the cliff, she was haif way down to the beach be fore he ever thought of stopping her. The next day Kricks'jn, magnanimous, great-hedrted fellow that he was, after all, having gotten oVer his quarrel from Meg's standpoint, it occurred to him that he might have drawn uncalled-for inferences. Dan Willis might have a dozen sweethearts who all liked red rib bons for aught he knew. And how like a fool he had behaved, losing histemper like a hot-headed biy and throwing Meg's poor little trinkets over tho cliff. No wonder she was afraid to tru-t him. More than one husband in Uysdyk was in the habit of beuting his wife on as slight provocation as the hue of a rib bon ; and it was not strange that a high spiriletl girl like Meg should decline to run the risk after she had once seen him in a furj'. As for Jenny, she had come in be tween him and Meg. Ho could see it now. But she was going homo thu dr.y after tho fair, and ho would seo Meg that very night and tell her so For he did not dream that all was indeed over between them. He could hardly wait for the hour to leave tho initio. He changed his soiled clothes, ate his supper hurriedly, and was soon on his wiiy to Meg, stopping as he went to buy another ribbon red, this time, and broader and richer and handsomer than the one he had robbed her of. Then ho went on through the crook ed, scattered little village till ho reach ed tho Widow Nealo's cottage, just on the outskirts. To his surprise ho found the tloor locked and tho shutters closed. As ho stood in his perplexity, a white-haired urchin who was turning somersaults near by shouted : " Ho, you, Mutt Krick son! It's no good to wait there; tho widow and Meg have gone away." "Gone? Where?" "Don't know. To France, like enough or to Ameriky or to London or somewheres. They took a big box and a bundle, antl they don't know but they'll stay forever'n over. Meg said so," and, making a rotating wheel of himself, the lad vanished rouud the cor ner. lust then tho door of tho nearest cot tage opened and a woman's face looked out It was growing dark. "Is it you, Erickson! There's no one at home in tho house there. But I have something hero 1 was to give 3'ou when you came this way." His face was stern and set and white in the fading light, as ho took tho little packet from the woman's hand. " Where have they gone? ' was all he said. " I don't just know. To visit some of their kinfolk a great way off," the widow said. "Oh! but she's a close mouthed one, she i.s and Me;'s a bit liko her. They're not gossipy folk. You never get much out of them," she add ed, with an injured air. "No; but I've found thorn good neighbors enough, but they're rather high and mighty for commoners." A3 soon sis he was out of sight Mat thew Erickson opened tho packet. He knew what was in it before he untied tho knot, a string of curiously-carved beads with a strange, foreign, spicy odor, that ho had bought of a wander ing sailor and fastened around Meg's neck one happy night, and two or three other trifles he had given her. And ho foundjthis note, slowly and painfully written, badly spelled, perhaps, and not punctuated at all. But what of that? Tho meaning was plain enough; all too plain, Matt thought, as he drew his hand across his 0303 as if to clear his vision : "I gave you back your troth last night. Here are the beads, and tho sil ver piece, and tho heron feathers. Now all is over between us." Here she had evidently hesitated a momcut, wonder ing if her words were strong enough; for, on tho line below sho had written, as with an echo from the prayer-book reverberating in her oars : " Forever and forever, amen. Mar garet Neale." Not Meg, his Meg, his proud, high spirited sweetheart but Margaret Neale! It set her at such an immeas urable distance from him. "All is over between us." As if she were dead and buried out of his sight. And he had spoken to James Ray about the snug eottage beyond tho bay; and they were to have been married at Michaelmas! He knew enough of tho Widow Neale's habits to ask no more questions of the neighbors. As one of them had said, she was close-mouthed. He know sho had a sister living in Scotland, for whom Meg was named ; but where even he did not know. Scotland was like a distant, foreign land to the people in Rysdyk. But the widow had money enough to go to Scotland or farther if she wished, even on short notice. She had never worked in the mines, neither had Meg. Sho had a comfortable annuity, left her by her old mistress ; for she had served in a great family before she married John Neale. Month after month-passed. Michael mas was over, the winter came and went, and Rysdyk knew no more of her or of Meg than when they left. The silence, the void, grew unendurable to Matt. With the early spring he carried into effect what had been the one dream of his life before he learned to love Meg. America was the land of promise for miners as well as others, ana had he not a friend who worked in the great iron miaes at Ishpeming, Michigan, on the shores of the wonderful Northern lake that was itself, almost as large as all England ? He had no father or mother, only a half uncle whose house had been the only home he had ever known. What better could he do than to seek work and forgetfulness together where there would be nothing to remind him of the past? So when one fine morning nearly a year after her sudden flitting, the neigh bors awoke to find the door of Widow Neale's cottage ajar and the shutters open, the firt bit of news Meg beard was that Matt Erickson had gone to America. It ptruck her like a blow. Now, in deed, he had dropped out of her lif3 as utterly as, months since, she had drop ped out of his. For she, too, had had time to repent. Almost before the blue hills of Scotland bad dawned uon her sight she had repented in dust and aihca How foolish she had been, like a child who throws awav if! bread and in a pet and goes to bed hungry. Why had she not worn the bine ribbon to please her lover, even if she did not like it? As for Jenny Wut what nonsense was that! She would have been ashamed of Matt if he had nol been kihd to her. To be sure, he had been cros and had thrown away her ribbon. But then he was a man, and men were Btrong and masterful and could not bear con tradiction, and she had angered him bj her foolish persistence. Ah! If she could but undo it all, and have her tall, brave, handsome lover back again! Once in a while, as the yeara went on, at rare intervals news of him came back to Rysdyk. Ho was well; he had fair wages, though gold was not to be had for the gathering in America any more than in England; he had been promot ed and had charge of a gang of men. At length there wa t long Interval of silence. Then came floating rumors of ill ; and then after awhile a letter in a strange handwriting, a letter to his un cle, who had died three weeks before it came. There had been a bad accident in the mines an explosion; and in tho effort to save others, Matthew Erickson hail himsalf received dangerous Injuries. No one thought he could live. But now, after months, he was slowly re-j covering, if recovery it could be called. For he was blind. The poisonous vapors had destroyed his sight. It was five years since he went way lire 3 cars lhal hail brought many changes to Meg. It was a sobered, thoughtful woman, not a hot-tempered girl, who knelt by tho Widow Neale's side a week after the letter Came, and said: " It was I who drove him away Matt Erickson," she said. " We hail a little quarrel, just a few idle words about a ribbon, and I tol I hiii in n'silh anger I would have no more to say to him while tho stars shone. And now thn do not shine for him, for he is blind -blind. O, mother, I can nut lire, I can not bear it." " Yes, you will live, child," tho will ow answered quickly. " We can bear an3' thing, we women. Your father was brought in to me dead killed in those mines when you were scarce three years old, 1113' Meg, and I an aliYe yet.' " But this is worse than death," she cried passionately. " Mother, do 3-011 hear? Ho who was ni3 plighted hus band is blind, in a far, strange country. I must go and bring him home, home to Uysdyk." Sho hnd risen from hor mother's arni3 and stood buf jro her in tho moonlight, pale, resolute, with lu-r hands clasped rigidly. " (Jive me ni3 dowr3', mother, and let me go," she said. " Di not de ny me this thing. I am well and strong, and, if I do say it, 1 am quick-vittcd ; I can make m' way. I shall come b:tck safely. Let me go, mother." Their talk lasted far into tho night. But with jt wo have no more to do, nor the details by which a little money was made to go a great way. For, after many tears, tho witlow consente 1 that Meg should tako her dowry and spend it as she chose If they had been more worldly-wise thc3r would have known how to accomplish their purpose through tho agency of others. As it was, they s-iw no other way than for Meg to do herself the thing sho wanted done. Oh, that weary, weary journe3"! Whv was the world so wide, tho way so long? Meg kept up a bravo heart until the boisterous ocean was crossed, and she had made her wa3 as far as Buffalo, where sho hail been told to tako the steamer for Marquette It seemed to her that she-had traveled the width of the whole wide earth already, since her foot lirit fell upon the soil of the strange new world. ' Where wai she going? Would she ever fintj Matt? Sailing on and on penetrating nature's secret places, where the loot of man had never trod den. So it seemed to her. Could human kind live in theso vast, wild wilder nesses? Itwaslikoa new birth when, after many da3's, tho steamer entered the beautiful b.T of Marquette, and the fair 3'oung city rose before her astonish ed eyes, its while cliffs gleaming in tho sun, its greon shores sweeping down ward to tho water's edge. She was near her goal at last. For Ishpeming was about fifteen miles awa3' up tho railroad, and thither she went by the first train. How rough and wild it all was! And how the charred and blackened pine trees tower ed aloft like grim giants, and pointed their ghastly Jiugcrs at her as she swept through their solitude! " Can 3ou tell me where to find a man called Matthew Erickson?" she asked of tho depot-master, trembling from head to foot. "Erickson? Erickson? Blown up in the mines a year or so ago, wasn't he? Ho stajs at Sam A3res's, the En glishman's, I believe. Just ycr go round that corner, ma'am, then turn to the right and go up the hill or stav! Let mo lock up and I'll go with you? Ever been in Ishpeming before? No? I thought you looked liko a stranger in these parts." He left her at Sara Ayres's gate, hav ing opened it gallantly wnen he saw that her cold fingers were unfit to do her bidding. A kindly fared woman came to the door and bade her welcome. Meg's story was soon told. " And you have come all this long way to take Erickson home again?" her eyes filling. " God bles3 you, dear, for I'm sure He sent you. We've done the best we could for him, but 3ou are his sister?" "No, I'm afriend a neighbor. There was no ono else," she said, simply. " What's your name? I'll tell him." "No matter about my name; say a friend from the old country." The woman came back presently. " Be careful," she said, " he's weak yet. But I want to tell you something, just to keep your heart up, for he looks like a ghost. There was a great doctor from New York up here last week to look at his poor eyes, and he told Sam there was a chance for him yet just one chance in a hundred." "Does he know it?" asked Meg, tremulously, her color coming and go ing. She wa3 but a woman after all. Only blindness would have brought her there. " No, and you must not tell him. The doctor said so most particularly. Will you go np now?" He had been sitting in the sun by the window all day brooding. They had been very kind to him, these people, but kindness wears itself out after awhile. What was to become of him? The wages he had laid up were wasting away. The early Northern winter would soon set in. He shivered as he thought of the fierce winds, the pitiless, drifting snows. There was nothing a blind man could do here ! If he were only at home in Rysdyk! Would Meg be sorry for him, he wondered, if she knew how desolate he was, how lonely in this strange land? If he were at home he could learn to weave baskets like old Timothy. Here he was just a dead weight, "Some oneto see him from the old country!" He turned his sightless eyes toward the door where Meg was entering noise less as a spirit, and his face kindled eagerly. Noiiclejuly she closed the door behind her. He wa to changed, so white and worn, that her own heart stopped its pulsation for a moment She feared any sadden shock might overcome him. She dared net pcak lest he should know bcr voice Strange that she bad not thought of thh before, He put out his hand vaguely, feeling the presence he could not e. " You are vcrv welcome," he ald. " Bat I do not know who it is. Who are you?" He thought it was some kindly En glishman, who having beard of his mis fortunes had come to speak a word of chi-er and comfort. She gave him her band, still silently. A woman's hand ! 1 swift thrill shot through his frame and his face fluthed. Holding herw-'lf tiil with a mighty ef fort Meg knelt Jby hii side, laying her head upon his knee His hind touched her hair, her fore head his lips. She gave a low cry, trembling like a leaf. " Speak to me, quick," he whispered hoarsely. "Matt!" " O, Meg, my Meg!" SuruUiy After noon. Economy in French Kitchen. We believe that the French cooks have the reputation of being tho most eco nomical cooks of all nations, and the subjoined extract from a very gosip3 and interesting article in an exchange shows how matters are looked after in the French kitchen " Suppose that one e?g is left, or ono potato. Here, Bridget, or the house wife herself, sys, 'one is not worth keeping,' and throws tbera into the swill-tub. The French housewife is not temptc 1 by that unhappy institution al wa3s 3'awning at hand. On the contra ry, s"ipos3 tho e.'rg Is soft-boiled ; she drops it into a tin-cup, and makes it hard-boiled at once. One hard-boiled egg chopped fine is what she needs in composing a salad, and the French housekeeper is wise in behalf of good health, of good taste and of the beaut3 and variety of her table, to have salads innumerable-as many kinds of salads as Bottom bail of wigs. There is the egg the salad shall grace the tea-table. Or, there in the one potato. Your French housewife knows the value of soup; she does not make a huge soup antl expect her familv to dine upon it:, 3ho does Hot have her soup always Of one kind she varies the kind; and she has a small dNh of soup as a prelude to our dinner; hero she serves health and variety. The potato nice' cut in wedges shall be one of tho ingredients of her "up. Tho beginning of her soup is generally of bones. Sho has a stone jar and tho bonis aro usually trimmed clo-ely out of tho uncooked meat, sprinkled with salt and peper, and put in this jar, over which a cloth is tied, ami it is kept in a very cool place Almost evcr3 day, with a tew bones ami a variety as to other ingredients, sh? will concoct a wonderful soup a white soup, a brown soup, a clear soup, a vegetable soup, and tho spoonful of beans or peas, the few slices of tomato, the remnant of tho rice or the macaroni shall not be ignoniinioudly cast out, but the soup shall be as Is most convenient to the stock on hand, and all those fragments, ncathy kept, are to go therein. The French are not remarkably religious, but they do follow up the monition, 'gather up the fragments that nothing be lost.' In one of our families, sup pose that we have a cup of milk left from breakfast; in our closet is a slice or two of spongo or cupcake, a small saucer of jelly or preserve. In the American household tho milk is fre quently thrown out or one of the chil dren is 'bidden to drink it up.' Biddy adds the jelly or preserve to her own breakfast, 'so sho can have tho saucer to wash ' The cake is given to tho chil dren as an interlude to meals, to spoil their appetites. Lo! the foreign house wife! The cup of milk with an egg, a little flavoring and a trifle of thickening turns to custard; tho cake is cut in thin nieces, spread with tho conscrvo and laid in a white pudding dish; the cus tard is poured over it; it goes for ten minutes into the oven ; the white of an other og is, with alittlosugar, convert ed into a meringue, and spread on top; now the yelk of the second egg is beaten with a little cream or milk, and sugar and spice, into a sauce, or instead of tho cream a little home-made wine or the juice left from some canned fruit is used, and hero is a sauce for the dessert. Wo eat it. Delicious! What dainty, extravagant things theso foreign people uso. Instead, wo -Americans would have thrown away the chief part of the dish, and would have provided for des ert a huge pie, more costly and not half so wholesome." What There Is in Wheat. The wheat grain is a fruit consisting of a seed and its coverings. All the middle part of the grain is occupied by large, thin cells, full of a powdery sub stance, which contains nearly all the starch of the wheat. Outside tho cen tral starchy mass is a single row of squarish cells filled with yellowish ma terial, very rich in nitrogenou?, that is, tlcih forming matter. Beyond this again there are six thin coats or coverings, containing much mineral matter, both of potash and phosphates. The outer most coat is of but little value. The mill products of these coverings of the seed are peculiarly rich in nutriment, and fine flower is robbed of a large per centage of valuable and nutritious food. Middlings not only contain more fibrin and mineral matter than fine flour, but also more fat. The fibrous matter, or outer coat, which is indigestible, forms one-sixth of the bran, but not onc-hun-dreth of the fine flour. Wheat contains the greatest quantity of gluten and the smallest of starch : rye, a medium pro portion of both, while in barley, oats, and corn, the largest proportion of starcn and the smallest of gluten are to be found. In practice 100 pounds of flour will make from 133 to 137 pounds of bread, a good average being 136 pounds; hence a barrel of 196 pounds should yield 226 one-pound loaves. American Miller. Bishop Simpson is severe on min isters who use tobacco. He says that some congregations are unwilling to have them for pastors, and that in many Christian homes they are unwelcome as guests. He does not see the propri etj" of a brother who smokes, chews, and spits intruding himself as a com forter into the chamber of an invalid. He says that in many instances, the of fense to the invalid by the unsavory perfume of the tobacco-using ministers is so great as to counterbalance any spiritual advantage from the visit. The Bishop, moreover, says that he knows of instances of promising young men who by over indulgence in the weed, have been sent to untimely graves. To Wash Chktz. Make a lather of tho best soft-soap, and 1 tablespoonful of vinegar and a pinch of salt to every quart, a larger proportion to rinsing water; rinsing quickly and the colors will be as good as new. . m m Borden Parker Bowne, one of the youngest and most popular of the pro fessors of the new Boston University, was a few years ago the driver of a hay truck. m George Claget, while engaged in digging a well near Caledonia, O., wu killed by fire-damp. i Silk-culture isprogreasingfavorably in West Feliciana, La, FARM TOPICS. KiLLiJto CoLORAfO BKrrtrJi Tfcke a tcapoonful of Pari grwn and a gill of planter to three gallon of water. My neighbor, who caluralc bO acre. uw fire tab!epoonfal of grcea sd a gal lon of plaster to a barrel of water I had Tl rows, and treated 30 of them with a tablespoonfal of pcion in thrt gallons of water oa Saturday. TbU neighbor cnt me word on Sunday to use the planter. I did to on Monday. Tuesday I had to go over the art SO row again. Thoe where the plwter was ued were thrrj daj afterwaxd much greener and taller, and Hill show a better growth and color. This I think much the chf api and bet manage ment for largo vine For small oar I take a fruit ctn, punch holes in, the bot tom, nail a lath to the inide of the can for a handle, and sprinkle tho i'aris green with SO or tf'l or eicn 70 times It bulk of piaster. If i can do thi while the dew is on I do m , if not I put it on when the vines are diy, only stopping for a heavy wind. An active man can poison five or six acres a day in thu way in a field of small vines. CONTKOLMMl VlCIOlS HORSKS. A new and very simple method of train ing viciou hores was exhibited in West l'hlladelphut recently nnd the manner in which some of tho wildest horses were ubdued was astonishing. The firt trial was that of a kicking ot " bucking " mare, which her owner said had allowed no rider on her back for a period of five years. Sho became tame and gentle in about as many min utes, and allowed herself to be ridden about without a sign of her former wildness. The mean by which the re sult was accomplished consisted of a piece of light rope, which was pased around the front jaw of the mare, jut above the upper teeth, crossed in her mouth and thence secured back to her neck It was claimed that no horso will kick or jump when thus secured, and that a " bucking " horse, after re ceiving the treatment a few time-, will abandon his vicious ways torover. A very simple methyl was also shown bj which a kicking horso could be shod It consists in connecting the animal's head and tail 1)3 means of a ropo fasten d to tho tail and then to tho bit, and drawn tightly enough to incline tho horse's head to one side. This, it is claimed, makes It absolutely impossible for the horso to kick on tho side of the ' rope. At the same exhibition, a horm, ' which for man3" years hail to be bound ' on the ground to bo shod, suffered tho blacksmith to operato on him without attempting to kick while secured in tho manner described. i Hot wkathkk mh.k and I'lkkv CritM. I can assuru our ehteso-mak-ing friends in Missouri and elsewhere, ' who have milk hat in hot weather, faulty by reason of irregular milking or ( other cause makes floating or puffy curds, or makes curds so bird that they will not bear acid without becoming crumbly and Insipid when pressed, that , they need notdejpalr of making a sound, marketable, wholesome and desirable i cheese, by a little variation from the common methods of making, if they will provido a place for curing it which . will maintain a temperature between GO and 80; a temperature of 71 being tho . most desirable. When night and morn-' ing's milk are mixed the following course Ls advised: Air tho milk as much as possible, and kep it cool enough to remain sweet. Use rennet moderately; only enough to cause curd ing in 20 minutes if applied at 8t-, or in 15 minutes if applied at 90 No whe3', either sweet or sour, should be used either in the milk or in the prepara tion of rennet. The common practice of soaking rennet in whey, and of put ting it into milk, to hurry a response to the hot iron test is always objection- .. I I. 1 i J !tl aoic, out more epccmn so when hot weather milk is to be treated. Whey once separated from the curd should have no further connec tion with cheese-making. Rennets should always be soaked in weak brine I pound of salt to one gallon of water and often enough to keep the strip pings sweet and pure. If preferred, rennet extract at the rate of 1 ounce to 300 pounds of milk may be used in tho place of rennet Cut tho curd early antl very fine, so as o make tho separation of the whc3 M rapi-'! and comploto as possible. Heat not higher than 'J0, and not faster than a degree in 2 minutes. Stir enough to secure even heating and to keep the curd fine till it is dipped, or the whey is drawn. Dip when the curd has become so firm that upon pressing in the hand it will open a part as the hand is opened. Do not wait for the whey to sour or for any hot-iron test, but dip nlwas beforo souring becomes j apparent. Stir enough to keep the curd I draining freely, and to keep it fine! enough for salting evcnlj till it begins to feel soft and silky and to have a Tittle ' cheesy odor. This usually requires I from 1 to 3 hours, according to the ripe ness of the rail before setting, the j quality of the rennet used antl i the temperature at which the curd is j kept. The hot iron may be used as an . aid in ditorminig when to salt. Whon I a piece of curd is pressed upon the hot iron, if it gives a smell of burned milk, ' it is too immature for salting, and should remain longer in the sink and , kept fine and warm. When upon ap-1 fdication to the iron it begins to give a ' ittle odor of toasted cheese, it will be ready for salting. If sweet smelling it l may "then be salted with two and a half to three or more pounds of salt to 1,000 pounds of milk, according to the moist ure retained and the degree of firmness and time of keeping desired. The ope rator mu3t find by trial the proper amount of salt and use his judgment, remembering that salt (not acid) is the best agent for making cheese firm and I tiurauiti. u iuu curu is uiuuutai ui w puffy, or has any unusual odor, stirring in the sink may continue longer than usual, or till it becomes firmer and the odor is gone or begins to die awav, and then using a little more salt that would JJ otherwise be required. The influence of the rennet retained in the curd, if allowed time and opportunity to act, will J remove the cause of the odor and puffi ness. The conditions necessary are that the curd be kept fairly I warm and free from contact with fermenting whey. The presence of j such whey counteracts this peculiar power of rennet and hence the necessity of dipping such cards sweet and of giv ing them good drainage and extra time in the sink before setting and pressing, i ana oi sailing mem nigner. out euros should not lie too long in the sink, or they will not close up well on pressing. , When curds become full of gas and spongy, the whey which is separating inside of the lumps fills into the holes t made by the gas and is retained in the curd, instead of draining away as it should. When by pressing this is forced out ol the cord it becomes "white whey," and washes away more or less of the salt, and often so much as to leave the cheese too fresh, and consequently too soft and porous and short-lived, li curds remain puffy when ripe enough to salt, they should be pressed for a short time to expel the whey, and then brok en up and salted and pot to press again, or so much salt used that enough will be left after all the whey may be carried off to give the desired firmness and durability. Two pounds ef salt to 100 poands of dry pressed curd will be a fair average of salt to be permanently retained in the cheese. This quantity will be safe to begin with. Afterward it may be in creased or diminished as locality or cir enmstaccas may require. Uneven and defective salting is the greatest cause of the trocbl with cy card. bca t wter rrljdseJ ta ikw U ci tst ibt ed caa ro: b cvrrctlj sja3Ai"d. and it prrn rrra I atltn t pccid till li ii pmd oot in lit fora of white whrr, MiA which prodocr card that are hard and CTBtaby upos tie derelopajent of a tilt! aridity boM t treated wiia a lrli taorv rBSl Wan msal, and th curd alwaj dippod i: aad aaltcd nuhsr Usl. la otW rvtfp:t ! may be tnaaared Hke aaT other m!lk T6 . It .irwr&i, in A 1". Tni'ine M.YTS FOR THE HOUSEHOLD. rut TBLr. OatmesJ Cake To a plat of m-aJ add enough water to make It tir h'ke pancake batter, ksmc with a Utile ah and bvic In a ihalkiw pan for ?0 min ute in a hot of en. Oat tucal lolI To a quart of milk allow 3 well teau-n ejTg, -1 tea cup of Graham flur and a little alt, beat all thoroughly together and bale is hot gem iron Stufied TotuaUxM Cut n halrr ind hollow out in center, tako what ever culd mcAl you hare, chop with onion, wrae herbs crumb of bread, and add to it '2 yelks of rgg; all up jour tomatoes anil put in a battered pan , let them bake awly Baking powdCr Biscuit .Sift 1 quirts o !lur, 3 cren tablrpofcftti o! baking-powder and a litilo lt togeth er. Mix in 1 tableiHKnful of butter or lard, or, Wtter, half of each, and tir In nearly a quart of Swert miilk, carefully, so a to gel just enough Knead lit tle as possible, roll out, cut into bl cultii, antl bake in a quick oven Little kneading and rjulcit akln are essen tial. Baktd Ek'g l'lant Pare, cut Into li'c of about half an inch in thicknra and place in cool, lted water for ? hours. Then drain, wipo with a eloth and lxil until louder enough to mash like- potatoes. Make vety smooth, odd ? or H tablcipoonful of weet cream, salt and poppef wlh r little chuppd parsley. Turn into n buttered bahinij disb, cover the top with bread-crumbs ami bake half an hour. Rhode Island Succotnsh (J od uc cottsh wants tender young corn. Have a dozen oar, ami remove with a -harp knifti tho kernels. If your corn is tough, do not cut too cloo to tho cob. String a quart of young bean ami cut them in ihrfo. Boll tho beans with the corn, in i pint of water. Itod for quite three-quarters of an hour. When cooked, cover closely, ndd a piece of butter, n tea'pnonful of salt antl some pepper. If cream is obtainable, add 4 pint at tho conclusion. Apple Bread Peel and chop tory tine 1 pint of nice apples antl put to 1 quart of Indian meni that has been clded and left to cool Beat to a cream I egg and 4 teiipoonful of butter, and add to the meat with 4 teapoonful of salt. If tho apples aro sour, add .' ta hlcspoonfuls of sugar, but sweet apples aru much the best Ali with rich milk if sweet apples, with cjld water if sour, ( to rather a stiff dough, and bake imme diately. Potato Bread: Boil A or largo po. tattKJS, mah them smooth while hot, add a piece of butter tho sire of an eg-, a tablespoonful of sugar, a !ciponniul of salt, and a pint of warm water Bent 3 teacups of fl-uir with another pint of warm wator, till freo from lumps, and then mix with the potatoes. Dissolve a cake of yeast and a toaspoonful of soda, each in a tcarup of warm water, and boat all well together. It makes n thin batter and should be set in a warm place over night. In tho morning sift 3 quarts of flour into tho bread-pin, with a little salt. Pour the sponge, which will bo full of bubbles If tho yeast was good, Into a cavity in tho middlo and knead for lite or ten minutes. Cov er with a cloth and sot into a warm plncc for nn hour or longer, or until it has ri-en to double its usual sir.a. Then divide into four loaves and kneatf thor oughly and pnt into tins; when light again, bake in a moderate oven, half or three-quarter of an hour. MISCKI.I.ANKofS. Tho taste of fish may bo removed very effectively from steol knives and forks by rubbing with fresh orange or lemon peel. To Renovate a Black Chin Hat; Ad 1 to 1 pint cold water a tcaspoonful of spirits of ammonia; uso with a soft tooth or nail brush; whon clean rinso with coltl water and place in the nun to dry. Do not soak or scrub sufficiently to destroj-the shape. It will look as gootl as new. Glass jirs will not be broken when boiling-hot fruit is poured into thorn if they aro placed on tho foids of a cloth wet in cither warm or cold water. A silver spoon placed in a j ir or glass be fore boiling hot water or fruit is poured in it will also keep the glass from frac ture. Sweeping, though a common prar tiee, should not be done according to tho rule laid down for all great achieve ments in life do not "begin at the bot tom of the ladder " (or the stair, as tho case may be,) for ascension to the high est, part "of your dwelling. Begin at the top of the " topmost " room, and, with hair and hands protected, 9weep the walls well, destroying the " skillful " spider, who toils and spins that you may find no le'uurc for idling. Having closed all doors of wardrobes, closet3 and con necting rooms, dampened the broom, 6prinkTcd tho floor (if carpeted, with damp meal, othrwise, with water), sweep the dirt into the hall, closing the door behintl vou. When each room has been treated, sweep the hall and stair way, each room below, and lastly, the hall below, taking the dirt out the back door on to a dustpan, or box set with one side beneath the projection of porch, or last step. By this lime the dust will hs,ve settled above, and you may go to work vigorously with a duster made of the soft feathers of a turkey, sewed with stout thread around a handle with a notch in it for holding an occasional wrap of the thread. The inside of each feather should be oat, in constructing a duster, causing it to re semble an expanding convolvulas, or petunia, with green morocco calyx for concealing the penends and stitches. The broken handle of a parasol is a good fouatlation to work upon, and Ls usually furnished with "hook or crook" for hanging it up If not, tie a red tape around one of the delicate grooves. When done sweeping and dusting, wipe up spots upoa the door or carpet, and leave the rooms to air. How They Settle a Lawsalt la Irelaatf. A couple in Ireland were recently sentenced to matrimony in rather a curious way. A young man and a young woman were contesting possesion of a piece of property, the one claiming under an old lease, the other under an old will. "It just strikes me," said the Judge, "that there is a pleasant and easy way to terminate this old lawsuit. The plaintiff appears to be a respectable young man, and this a very nice young woman. They can both get married and live happily on the farm. If they go on with law proceedings it will be all frittered away between the lawyer?, who, I am sure, are not tmgallant enough to wish the marriage not to come off." The lady blushed and the young man stammered they " liked each other a little bit;" so a verdict waa en tered for the plaintiff, on condition of his promise to marry the defer dect within two months, a stay of exectt on being put to the verdict till the mar riage ceremony should be completed. Xax. OxtK 4 or rt-j par tad cot sp T max cikk t . ft a taKerpootifal o Wur lata AfcM d fry aaUl bw. TVa pet law a keui wlU rrtf &a7 cfcrtf? okra. 4 or -3 lew 1V4 tHa 4 7 &izl oaioa, h t r 'K twUt wa'rr ard bad. or rir far. Ja7 for 3 host. 5-a with better, ot tad rapper. ms4 U hkJ UUeke wtta Ut &CKSX Ink ad frail taia any t rwv r-1 by cilOC ha cllk ttr wI !s j the UU dv so Injury to li CKt dchca-l coter AfU w a his J. H t Jeoon wlH Mwrr fer Uktejf it!a sl of wht JT411. iTlt U of d a mt lalaf cvisnx!. H wtU rre b svkt a wU AmtBo&u U reUC caiot li t br rJ4$. A niitrs ct37-ol d o ot powiiejcd Urt aad twa prv ! pw drred ujcor prink ied pB t " w hen cvvk rwarixw f rri'l Mvlfcevst them . tU l X W- " Uwatl M tlta-'l 4t rltXK eUliC ! ' - LMt Kr4i"l . ' - - .4NtVr! ,ll. I Av W r4 l4 (lu tUr U AU' Att Tu T Ut ertr.tumtml ! r t a-t u r f It uio it )Mtelt t-K v li ;- i ttufcutV Att-lte lr J , .Um T fc, rUlifc-3 1 1mW , KUW. Mm- ! t te. f. tb iimi i I'. Ml. ul tSt )U; iikhM !. K i Ik-1-' - ' wSti U tmMt 10. AH ln.W i it man" t the CJoetunatl (WiwMf i - m i ! '" Cw J fkot:, Ht !mI .TJ Tot, fiortcwrrsu ,rttti i ft SUfiV. rii(iii'. ,. aSTHMA'"1' t rw.it tOk fii. S2Q00 A VWUkU J. ta Mr t nwiti l! aM lNriAI,-. VOUNQ I rn 144. MEN t?ntt r ' rffe ai.oX 1 I !- -K " Afrnt Vntrl ." Nl mlfriji.l.Wkh. Trip rttrih1 -v '" " I lH. ,-j. ,, ivn )"t ! Umi l l&li Aj w " -" Mjwvfara: l" t l!M UMi f -u. &rifHi.'iiH, r. i,,;i AGENTS. READ THIS. Ml l(ttdl ln IkT 9! c v .. -fr.-. 4iUtiMMIUtUiNkOI mUl,l "rxBRYANT A tTrtATTON am TKi.r.mi tvii ui.i t.ut:. m.i .uu. m. lrai. Uhal mux-it t ('Mtk. oi tw cilivaw. PERPETUAL Sorghum Evajwrator. 115. $20. 125. CHEAP AID DURIStt, .. t i CHAPMAN h. CO., P ASCNTS WANTCD OR THE HIST0RYW0RLD it ffl . Ilj t )V I lt lft MI!Tn J1 I.Kt Iiftx'i -r I hi n t"if r lt to-nl rirtlt. It Ut,f' !M.U ...r.t It .!: t f .ftin 5?- tl rir trtt-i. Ut At wwt h; it ri 5 rrtrr rt a - f.tli rit A"-f- uiioMi. n in imiimi ro . st. u.u m D.H.LAMBERSON, m. wtj tunrr XI. S3 XWX INO-TON'BJ (KLCRRiTKR RREKN LOIOmi IlifiVfl, Shot-CJuaH, HetolTcra, CARTRIDGES. SHELLS, PRIMERS. 4o. ttv ft. l,immr .zmmesm r.f Mrb n Armt U P' tm mj UBW hrr4 tump tor IlliwUitnl CUJsa tW v-l Im rnwiu. jn but M.. Cktraco. UL ITHe AUBURN PORTRAIT COMPANY rr-ltaUonuin In t '. I-I i i JtKtul rnita (liitxl t HtM. HKf't : t .. 114 iirnrrf fiirt, .iH.uni, . I. Tho only 25 Cont AGUEltEMEDY IN THE WORLD. A safe and reliable substitute for Quinine. The bcit known remedy for all diseases caused by Malarial Poisonlngt beintj a preventive as well as a certain cure for FEVER and AGUE, Dumb Ague. Aguo Cake, Remittent, Intermittent Fo yers, Kidnoy Disease, Liver and Bowel Complaints, Dys pepsia and Conoral Debility ; the best general Tonic for Debili tated System. Price, 25 certi per box. SoldbyallDruttnn thi'town. Mailed on receipt of pnee by DUNDA8 DICK & C, 35 Woctter Street New York. Explanatory book mailed h'R&Z on application. B -. m m.r pa im ' (K.tb!la4 173). Live-Stock Commission, EA53A3 CITY ST0:Z-TA2D3, KO. Kwutfn'tniivi i r. iwnMT-i llibrr.il AdiaHcr. tua.tr u lliiitom. HURON ST. SCqflOLUr.t: Vr OGGIDENTALIS. KO ALOES! HOaUIKISE! NO POISONOUS DRUGS XJLJ "V JZ3H. and AOUJJ. OflEi HOT XFFECT THE KEID AUSEJTE THE STCNICh OR G?;? TKE ICXIUL. A kt ffJ &1 lt Ttt4s I T fret DlKrvv II cw pm'ss MiJuUI jjj Tmb e rctr.'Oi. ' Uifttna. IX xti u Msva ta tX-Uj tMt.jJ rrrtrnllii( tttnrrUwM mnH ljttlrj. I tr rMUcfvws ! I i 1 ij-urx ;-rin rjrtrr- 'ix t-j r f r tk ! ui tx D ulUrr lwirji i ni ' t ttjtn U IZ4 Soli i t It H . I ArSt k U Zm vX, TA HA SIT W U. CLlCS; BUrHAKUZlt it ( U. J. htXCS. A. A. V. C. MILLER, Proprietors, 7tt H)llHj(lll JKHM(I.U(. GRAEFENBERG TBGETABLK Wdsit wtf known, car ' MALARIAL DISEASES, HEADACHE. BILIOUS NESS. IND1CESHON a-ii FEVERS. Tht PIL.L.S Tens uo the m "d rgiter h alta is , mass ;twrai d6Mtyaa ail Drujrzrtts. ' Rsrvcusfssss. a. jr. K..S r. 3" E1!3. "i1 "aa JtaaXafcMv raaaaava W& ill 1 1 m4r CTrfiatalalaM mm A(Smmm 'mmtm wmrmm mm abtbmt aamiM aiSiayp ltlr Am . cum X Indian Blood Syrup, utxiATonr. 77 W. 34 St, Rtv Ttfi City. f .i., l !" . . M m-. "- - - -"""- ,1-4 W M . lnjl.y U tv ,,j- --!- . K. r ..- in if tii,iiii - at. iMt .4 - . ' am W .i I w '" tt.ttmmm a , lnwi IWf "" fc ""."" hM4 MM. M f-X- "S TTI w .i. -- t m . H f Mm4 . ...km pM M ... -i vat M, I M T, - W1 k4 t tltivuMHt mm W . Mrf ttrK j U Mvti aw a "' . . " " WakametkU. tho MedWno Maa. M b... -. - ' " itlk l.. l.i-' - ltrt ..r...1 f fV I, .ru Mfwa. I Itf. t Mia M ll I4J. ft rrlm " -l. li raiint. ik. III-I iMt.l ' .. M. ..VM.l i.jh.. tl .. Slrlh. Ii4 ll(f ff-lr I, rairln m- ktl4 n4 tar llll., r.l.il.lU a , .- ' -j-a.,raijaMr. jpritjpi, XutluNn. VJr. AU a fell U -f- Edwin Eastman In India i,tr ' n. Iiim jnorn ih (QaBin r A - 'tw C M MM Ji.' 1trmrnl H ! t.Trtt fM mrxmm1 iv l' ..vt tuMiri at Mtiamn 1ui1t. tx f ; ' utnn- antl MmaU mf 4 u ta Mia tff ar U - Tha Ivt4k aT tW IMMm. t1M ,rtMt. at iuvy4 tftl'i'At'" 'fcT Mr. SoVBta. itB ! -iU, M ik w.-v ram tin lltl i ri r a 'j-srrt iMmi'tlWiWrttii a i4li'lll U rMmtn-Mt U mMtmm rw Maattfvi44 m- It Jjn. sa4 U im,mtt fcal 6ar tJlU irl U l"tl M Or. 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