mm For Saran: Bun:- ‘mdmhflflmhm .. 1mm“! magma - Pd.“ ,5. s. flumht' In WIT‘“ mm. 0:. bunl Manna-unrul- Retention-ll pineflldlmd'nd'h“ Ind ch. “mania: or din-Ind buns. hues bud-arm; i- neon-r] to put mm In flu clan condition which “enr- he but: ‘een. An inguium table on which w son the ban- in Ihown in the mun-mm. no. 2. mu m or any some can. Fig. I present. A View a! thn nble from above, nhowing the lien sad “so spout. A Iido View is shown in Fla 2, with the dnwen {or refine and bad m. benenh ‘be lieve. Thin useful contrinnee mny be nude in parable Ihlpe, and than legs can be folded to tint. i‘ can be bron ht into the house would, non-my dlyu. he leg: Its bolted :o the side: with one boll. each. The height of the tabla can he vuled by linking the leg- Ilnnt man or loan, and than ("tuned by 3 wooden pin in hole. bored to suit. A Ilide~ kuuotho Abe-n- Imm pour- â€! into an new npidly. Conformation of Dairy Cows. A prominent dniry nnthor'ny china tint 550 English idea of 3 new in but»! on the amine of the Shonhom. Ind hone. in more or lot: of I beef {on}. Anlwaring thin correspondent write: In follows lo the London Live chk Journnl. Then i- n herminï¬y comman belief thn: In ided der cow ought to he, wins my be armed, nag. limped, wide behind and wow forward. This, of course, menu arrow chesu, and nan-aw chest: A menu wnk mule. Granted, for the uke of ugument. m: Inch in tha proper com form-non of the Mall dairy cnw, it may be well to consider what. this lend: to. We Ill know the story of the ending of the experiment to gec I. bone to live an noth- ing. How well it. lncceeded up to n cer- lnu: point, ad would hnve been entirelyi Incceufnl had the horse lived; but, u‘ luck would hue it. the horse died when n- m-) n. ._. Iyltemnic Ind arefnlly-workad outmlnage. mum. in dniry utlle-bruding in future. We have Improved Ipplimcu by which, rich the lean ible trouble. not. only the qnnnzi‘y o! m" a cow my sin cm bodao urmined, but u de‘niw utim-w of the quality a! Inch milk can be u once abllin- ed. nncy pluuuu ; u. my.†u.-. u...â€" .. V_-_ and: of dnirymen and farmer. could, and donbclau would, willingly ntqat. And. I'nlh regud to Shortharnl u dairy mule, it can be conï¬dently Inserted um, I. they a prmnt. exist, they Ara pheno- manllly better chm could hue been ex- :cth of them oomidcrmg 1h“ they hnve en bred in web I haphazard vny, to fur Is their dairy mpnbiliziel ue concerned. We any :11 109k {orvtrd m u much more . .. 7,,LUIA_.__ _____ And .ï¬ than lbingl require much more min] caution “in they hu- yet Ind. Tho luyhuu’d Iny coroner! hln hmum "rind If. “minut- o! â€unluc- The tendency bu been to oven-lee a clue of cow: that. It celving. or menu, here an extrwrdinery beg development, when in everydey experience these big- hegged cow: way. And olun l 0, tell Ihort in two very Import-Int cum. They my give I greet qumtityo milk I' e ehort tune, but alter being egein in cell,thcy they, end may do. go at! quickly. And, egein, elthaugh giving 3 pest. qumtity of milk, the qnllity mey he so poor thet, {or I“ other purpoeee exeept milkulling, they ere lone thrilty then may of their neighbor:' with e_ lighter milh record. . I. _--- only one straw flood in the way of com- o H: eriment. ll we Ire to Er-séh mule 50 E mï¬l. we must Lxeed them with strong conglitutiona and, the: all, it in not you uliafnclorily settled ch“ we mm breed nude wirh nnrrow cheats if we Are to have high-elm milking norm. How does the mutter “and. at present? We hu'e the Channel hinnd :aule: essentially milk broedl. Ind we have the Ayrabires and Kerrie; “'ilh regud to the Chanel l-lnnd can-1e, we have in them cattle whore milking qualiï¬cations hue been most. curefully “tended to by emu-tron: oi breederl. Thole breeders, it]: their circumscribed bonndu'iel, but. f-vonble dim-tic nitnntions. have produc- sd 5 elm of Imull cowl lhn give milk of grater richneu :hm that of my other :reed. In the Ayrshire: end Kerriee we heve unell-nized mule. Imnll food can- enmerl end yet, camper-ï¬ve], epeeking. green milieu. While both the Aynhiree, end the Ken-rial are expected to live on huder fere. end ere enbject to greater climnlic herdshim thln‘lhe Channel le- lnnderl, the experts indniry cattle judging ere, end hue been, misting upon lining the Ayrshirel and Kerry came with the ume nerrow-cheer. development. In in found in the Janey. All practical (mule-breeders know where this must end. Sorry Isle: ere already cold of the constitutional weakness of one of the breeds, end in in only I melter of time, end the! 3 very little time, when, the eï¬'ecte 01 Inch a_ system of breeding will ehow themelvee. Ia it, necessary to hevo wrow chute in dniry cenle! How does ihe matter eund with Shortham muleâ€"came Ill-b, one: Lll then is sold or cu: be-eid for oLher breedz, no the dniry mule of England? Every one who he: had experience of- stock of deity Shorlhornl cu: look beck upon many n wide-chested, deep-milking cow. They can quote my I now â€giving [our [0 ï¬ve gallon of milk I do , milking steadily month After month [or v1- or nix months, Ind gredunlly settling down till Ihe was dried off After being in milk ten month; They can tell of I lean cow nl'uer ten monihl' milking end I now iullof fleeh end “bounce n next calving time, no full 0! Huh on Io Mminnken by mnny {or one of die beef-bred Iort. Such in no inncy picture; in in one ch t ten- 0( thon- ,, x 1. _ M-†....I at. presâ€"ant? “'e hive the nule: eucntially milk bral the Aynbirea and Kerrie: w the Chanel Inland and them cnule whose milkin hue been most. carelully immanen- oi breed :1. ’ ith Lheircircumacn‘ebcd 1 l. um! I)! sun :0an run rm non. 0! Moon “Managua-“Mum Ind 1|:me m avid-nu 0! than ovum who In" You in It: simply Inlgh tag «all car'- mil invariably goal fn nhqw um \he “I? common Iyflam o! dlpcnding umbzilkm' gun-ment- u :11: emf: ‘Inllk pover- u n aneu- nne. If“ munmo ion!» the bolls! sing to sag glut. milk-hr. prodnaon I. luv: 1 .4.) _‘._.LI.. W“ â€" a'-:----â€" â€"- râ€"v v ~ , co dopond n narrow-chested. 'vnklz‘ madman son. an outlook in an ‘ cnongh. It, on me 00m had. our Imus ’dp-ohuud can, m In- vnlmblo «Inn 52101 ought. m be. simply on tenant of neg- lect on we put of broaden, more in n gloriou pro-poof. And I wida ï¬eld «pill to every breads: of Sherman“. Honest Labor. . We hove very little respect (or the sir who in lo leaking in ulf-relpeet hand! on lobe nah-med of honeet work. She who endoevore to do whatever work her hendl‘ ï¬nd to do in the but end mole thorough menu. on by God’l low, mike- thet end the notion ï¬ne. It knot In much the work on the mine! it which It in done that en- inoblea the worker. A well-scrubbed floor in e much more nlelnl work then e hndly executed oil pointing in which rnnoh volu- oble emvu and other mound be: gone to wute. Intelligence and loithlnlneu tell in every department of work. Respect your work whomever that work mny he, end remember the: the but. hrighteet end when of men and women will relpeot you. Care of Milk in Berlin. At Herr Bollo'l lemon- dniry in Berlin Germmy, the milk iletrnined through wire Iievee covered with n cloth over which line gravel in sprinkled. After the milk in Ilained me gravel i- pnt in n hot. oven. that. my. germ- tht. my possibly have been “rained from the milk muybedeltroy- ed. The gravel in thus need for (ï¬lming the milk my number of times. For the bunker mule IL thin dairy both Iwoet. nnd Iour cream u‘e used. than made from Iweet cream commmding the higher price. Alter ihe camp-amen“ ï¬lled will; A particular kind a! milk Ire ï¬lled, the wagon illoched, Ind the milkmun who delivers it hue neces- to the supply only through the fnncau on thesides of the wagon. Admiral Tinge's fleet left part on Fri- day evening to convoy seven Itenmi treneporta conveying n large force of in tha‘ servme'o t a more I mirslty occnm-i pnnied the troops, which were to he landed near Wipi, from which int they were to belent to the from. lieu troops com- prised some artillery, but were manly comprised of infantry. Nothing Wu seen of the enemy until the Chinese fleet reach- ed the month of the Yale River, when n fleet of Japanese warship! were eighwd. Thereupon the transport; were hurried forward and two warships were cleared for notion. The efl'oru of the treneporte to lend the troops were successful, and most. f them were gotten ashore before the navel battle began. .. a ________ r ._ TWO'OI HER WARSHIPS SUNK AND TWO BURNED. BEINA'S NM IS URIPPLED A El: flaun' Slvnl Engnscmcnl In 1":ch [3th Fleet: flutter-SIX Hindi-rd Hen Drowncnl By I Tun-non alumnaâ€" 2.500 Illlcll In llll: Battle. A deeplwh from Tien-Taen aaylzâ€"A number of olï¬'oara who were engaged in the unval battle on tho Yalu River have arrived at Port. Arthur with half A dozen warship! bad 1y dammed and ï¬lled with wounded men. The Chin Yuen wu the fun vessel to open (in. and wu noon engaged with two annnue warship: of about. the same size, one “which is supposed u) have been the cruiser Chiyoda. Soon all of the vessel: of both fleeu were engaged. The China cruisers Chi-Yuan and King Yuen were my, and 600 oflicers and men on bond of than were drowned. - He felt Tint llc Wu nun: Pool"! but He Kept lulu Word. "I once had u: experience lint proved to me tin: there in honor Imong thiovea," lsid W. J. Barge-l. a Montreal drummer. It happened levers] you! ugo in I little town up in Manitoba. I retired to bed in the home) It Lhe Inn-l time, and pluceJ my watch ï¬nd pocket-book ï¬nder the pillow. After hnving been ulocp for tome time I win Iwnkened by hearing I “any noise in the room. v ,H,-;,,,u, " You can imngina I In: comidenhly sunled It. beholding unnn with I hundker- chief tied over hil hoe lunding by my bed- side. In hil hnnd W I duk Intern, which lhone lully on my Inca. He did not give me much time to think. but in n. gmfl' vuioo demlndsd my watch Ind money. I don’t. know whatever put. the idu into my held. but, nude-voting to be u calm u Will‘e- I nid : . u ,,- 4---â€- _I.--- a)..." up. a 7777‘ " Well, you are | cool one, lmnlt ny,’ hanpllod, " but you ulc (all ma whore your vnluable- "0,1 d I will pron-Illa not. m hum you. und luvs you in pure." “1 will (the you It you ward," nid I ; “ my watch in It. the jewaler'n being rapnlr- ed and every can I hue in locked up in tha uh domain." Ha lured Al me I mlnnlo or two, Al though trying to all by my flee i! I lud lpoken the Math. If. mun hnve convinced him. tor. muttering lomebhing I did nov. awhile turned on nil has] and walked out. :1 the room without. A ward. Only a few of the men struggling in the wnter Were picked up. The Chao Yung and Yeng Wei, in maneuvring for more Mun- tageoue positions, get. into shallow water and ran aground. The atranded vessels were helpless under the ï¬re of the big gun's of the .lupnnele ships end were ï¬nally eeb wreckn. IL slearedsome ofcho transporuhips were nunk,inclndingonewl: .yo troops hadno: yet lnndad The C'ninue lnsa in estimated “1500 killed and wonndcd, nnd the Japanese loss is supposed to be 1000. but none of the Chinese otï¬ccn giving accounts of the bnule know the nuns: or size of (be four vessels of the enemy which are alledged to have been taken. Taking the Chinese best View of the battle. in in plain that. the encounter has ranked in Marion-'j' crippling the naval "rough at China. W‘THI tell you exactly when the are will you promilo not to males: me In luvs me to ï¬qllh my deep?" . Erevgiï¬thï¬ enc‘my’l shells and beéams AN HONORABLE THIEF. RIVALS ALL GOLD FINDS. SIR I. FRASER TALKS OF THE RE CENT AUSTRALIAN DISCOVERY. Inn net the cools-Idle fen-nor, Ix ' lends Over 1.". Illee. Hourly All or 3 Which I.I Auru'enu Ill-LI. Ind MI I inm- n In Received, wun the m- ule fault In other Home. Poll! to u I’ll-n of Ira-elm Producllo- hr the nee-ll, [uncovered Gold Hello The reoont rioh diecovery of gold It Cool- gerdie, which hnbeen clhled iron: Anette- lie. prom to he one of the moat impor- tnnt ever nude lu thnt oolony. Fir Melcolm Frenrpgent generll for Weetern Anltrnlle in Eughnd, ln dlecnning the etrike the other dey lend the prewnt genentlon need not trouble about the pormnnenoy o! the gold mlning in thnt colony. He bel.-ved we were only etendiug upon the threshold Ind thel greater thingl ere yet to come. In ‘ July. 1889, name energetic gentlemen, led by W. Anltey, went on I pro-pooling tonr tonpoeltion ebont 300 milee eutwerd of ‘ Perth, when elmoet n legendary report had ‘ Ari-on thnt gold could he found in e district linoe nemed Yilgern. Theee gentlemen found thet the report was not I myth. u n ‘ gold centre nnmed Southern Cros- wu die- covered. in and eronnd whioh good peying reel- were found. In the some diltrioneome mile: north of Coolgerdie. I diuoovery had been mode which would room to eolipee Anything ever dieoovered in the world'e history. A hole 5 loot-I. inohea wide end 3 feet deep hnd yielded £10,000 ï¬rst. end then enough gold we. left to rule 200 _ weight. Thin reef wee outcroppad for e dingnce of hall a mile, end it wu believed . to be e deep one. “The onriferoul belt: of western Austro- lis." “id Sil M. Frau, “extend from the Dnndu hill. in lhe south to the 0rd river in the north, I diutmco of over 1,200 mile-.1 Of come it does not, follow that. cveryiiniic of Lhil ground in ouriferoua. butyhen you think of the wonderful dilcover nimndy mode it, in not. too much to expect. t Lthe greater rtion oi thin laud Will be found‘ to he go d-boariug. The utmost. energy hoe been brought :0 bear upon the construction of nilwoyl. The line to Coolgordin ho- boen compiebed to Southern Cross, 5 dia- toncn of 300 miles, lenvin over MO mile: to construct, which in to proceeded with on once, sud the line to Upper Murchison, n diltmce of 300’ miles, ir being rapidly coma!.esed-.. “i‘hia whl connzcnhe ï¬eldl with A good auporr. and thus gives the neceunr impe- tu to the rapid devalopment of the human. in is in contemplation xo con-truer. other line: to the more northern pm: or the cology to bring these districts into line. "The water supply of the western side of Australia 200 miles from the count is spasmodic in character. drenching rain, quite tropical, accumpunied by the most Violent thunder-storms, is precipitated on the thirsty soil. The average yearly ruin- jalljt Cpol ardie hos bzcu estimated-it twelve inc es In showers, or, ruther. de- luges, of short duration. It only remains for the ingenuity of man to catch and pro- serve ‘this beneï¬cial and nmple rainfall to provide {or every one ofo very'large colony of miners. Apart from this. ï¬rm water can be reedily obtained in most part: by deep sinking, and this has been found to be most useful in the extraction of gold,\xl. -lhougli not so good as ire h Weler. 0 course it can be condensed and then it ' ‘ ready for consumption. ‘ â€The prcmiet of the colony stated the olher day theta condenser capnble of he 0- ing 3.000 gallons oisalt water csn be ro~ cared for £150. Thirty thousand pounds has been already expended by the govern- ment in water conservation. so that after the next rain Coolgardie will be provided with an ample supply of water. The gov- ernment have been doing what is neceesary to keep the miners provided nod communi- cationopen :ofcourse. private companies must look after themselves. The climllte is' magniï¬cent, md most healthy: The government have given their consideration to the question of I mint-to be erected, no you see they have an idea that. there will be plenty of gold. Towns um apringmg up right and left. Uudoubt d' what. was -u_, _LA‘I.__,. yesterday tow n.’ A: to the tenure upon which the land in l held the Agent general Added : "The gov- ernment have. perhaps. been too liberal in this respect. Before they found they had an much hidden trensure 'they made con- trncu with certain syndicates, tha Hamp- den Plains Estate Company. for inltnucc, which own: I very large and imnorcant area of mining and pastoral land. Miner- who discovered a. gold nren w'cro rewarded with n picked chain It is only right that the men who ï¬rst light. the torch of progress shanld'have some beneï¬t from its mvs. The gold discovery in western Australia is neither a let-rel; nor a trick. Every day will show the world that it is one a! the moat wonderlul realities of the century." AW- . Such a short. childhood mny, At ï¬rst thought, possess Ichnrm (or lxyl in our colder climnle. BM it will be qmckly un- derstood than making boys into man u no 1n n they are old enough to feel that they would like to be men in not I wile idea. The Corennl, although gunning I certnin (‘agree of: queer kin of civllizn- Lion, are no: a people to be patterned after. ln Cores, if n young mnn'lipnrenu are not. I real lure enough mmâ€"chough he doeln' t, look it. In Mann, n u run-5 ....... - r'“‘“ _ rich, ha cen never ho a to become In by hII mrn «Rom. Aud.i be in not. I number 0! n noble (Amily he can never hope to renal: an united position. Al [or cour- e, the Coreen: hnve never uhown .mnch 0 that. Tho Corona men no not, in themselvu a good argument. {or I brie! clnldhood. In Conan, the tiny little kingdom over which China And annn are threatening to have luch a. dreadful row. the boys He called men u soon I: they reach the age of ten. They receive their ï¬nal mmu at. that age, and ammo the garment: of full- growu men, all except, the honehlir but, which they cannot. put. on until they have paused through A period of prob-Hon. Pei-- miuion to wonr the homehlir hut in the ï¬nnl m of zrnna[orming the Ininlhl hey into Boy: llnve nut 11 Short Chlhlhaonl In (are: A ucheme i; on (on; Io hue I bull ï¬ght oulv In )‘rJer, Col. THEY ARE MEN AT TEN a desert will zo-morrow be a large which inn- “In. have And An. I “I. About 165 rmln from Penn. “1 dunno 5' {on-u, “In line' when “'Empo," "Id ‘Ioon Albu- paging - dgnpolt like I llnle ‘Eifl'el Tower wlth Europl hum-[bod on one ude Ind Ann on the other. the ï¬nin come- “ IVA-1‘" .‘ Enrope |l Md (IA-h " no two smut little union!" Innonndod by ï¬n md blrchal, but. landing ml: in I little groan ï¬eld full 0! bntwrcnpu. The ï¬n uni pinel grow chiefly In zonal in the oxunllvo lama through which the line palm, and here md there the dlrk muses are relieved bZSFP‘Pl}: of. liglxcdqreen birch". .. .L- _:_..- A: ..--_ __, ,7, 'l r' - - ï¬um '1':th II the centre 01 the mini of the Dcmidufl'iunlly, und in [unnu- lor it. magnetic iron ore nnd {or it. nukchits. Thane: the line mn- llonglida a like, bill the umpmilea md lower- of Ehterinburg upon- in make the ma of the plenum. min- ins capital of s district {amount no: only fru- iron, copper |n|l gold. but for opull, beryll. jncimh, chryuollte, rhodonite And man other pnoioua mbulncea, of which auber specimen: on be mean in the Hermlugé in ‘35 Peterlhnrz. Eitl . Eknterinburx or from Kim - Ichluï¬', 90 miles beyond it. I bunch will constructed to cannon: the A111 with the Grant Siberinn R-ilwny n Cheliublmk or at some palm. I little lunhsr out. The Inner lino will run to Omsk on the Irllah. on either side of which work in nlroudy in progreu. Ar. Tun, lower down (hut river, lgreut uwmillhu been oon-tructed in order that. the van loruu bstwaen tho Obi And ihe lnish mny be utilized {or sleepers, while st. Kalibnn. dn the former river, large numban ol workmen are nlrnd collecbed. Shaman have been pnrcnue to bring rlill down the Yenluo, pan Krunoyank, upon which river t. line will run on to lrknuh on Like Bu nl. of the companies are phcex 410,435,:{111 Lhe Mach M SI The presenLcuh vnluo of hue mortgages Ind other securities tho investments on mor 151,57". The amount h yexu- was q'.’0.ls‘6.'1,37|, cm 37.7%. {or fun There compared “11h $03,179.14! in 1592. The amount 0! dwidemh declared during the year was $2,511,477, about. $51,000 less than in the year previous. The renlesmlo placed under morlguge in Ontario is placed at. 3100.781335 ; in Quebec, 39.151712 : mud in Nova Scotin $981,458 making A total of $10,916, Royal Apartments. It in said by n \iailor lately distinguish- ed by u. †command" from the Queen at Osborne lli'ar. the Indian room in the palm: in the moat splendid apartment in th world. nys the Boston Herald. Herelol’ore che Salon des Glace: It. Versailles and the famous salons in the curl» of the lam King of Bavaria have been unnppronclmble mull- els in royal interiorsâ€"but, the gallery at Versailles is now public. and no longer mudern, and the npnrunenu oi the unhappy Louis are closed lo all save aenunba' eyes. The Indian room was built. and deenrdted in commemoration of [be In-lisn Empire, and it in used solely for great banqueu and those Stute occasions demanding special grandeur. No photographs. if they were sllowcd to he primed. would do justice to the magniï¬cent scheme of decoration, which was the work of nalivo artiste dur- ing two years. In this regal room the Emperor William and all the royalties lately gathered ut the Cowcs regattas were assembled nnd the s ectaelo is described uheving been grsn beyond words. It. would seem us it the grout little Queen desired to impress on her real-or bum tious grandson the imgortance of England s env- «reign beneath t at splendid roolttce. and If so it Wu 0. success, so the German cour. tiers cannot say enough in praise of their surroundings on that occasion, Osborne House is the police least known to the Queen's subjects. It is in All senses 5 private residence, a seuide home. not to be invsded by sightseers, o: Windsor castle. or even Buckingham pnlnce. is when the court is Absent. Discovers a. Buried City. Frank B. Lonerlr, an English archaeolo- giat'of considerable note. who went to Mex- ico About two years ago to main A scientiï¬c research of the buried cities Ind other ruins in the state of Chlnru brings to Ounce informetion of the discovery of a hidden city in the wilds of one of the southern districts of that remote state. Mr. bonnrk Ipen‘ leveral weeks exploring the new found city, end claims to hnve mlde lomo discoveries among the nnoient rnine thnt will throw much light upon the early hip- tory of the country, and will create e sen- sntion in orchmologicnl circles when mule public. He is now preparing n lormsl announcement oi theeo discoveries. which he will 'give to the public in the course of a few weeks. He eaten that the city which he discovered hnd I pogtnlntion of fully 500,000 at the time the w cleanla declmetirm of its lnheblunte occurred ; thnt the street. ere broad Ind the build- ing: ere large end of u handsome architec- ture u ere new to be found in Mexico. DOMINION LOAN COMPANIES A SIGNPOST: .2 - â€". nu uuu| yum-ca a. 7: scér‘ljgï¬e‘j made of ripe fruit: 3 251 of mort- poun‘ in nhrine, the u, nnlc and mg a large cup of‘ul "I the' “M 'Ijhe use 0! the brine red for “"0“. [hi or strong flavor 55.1 35' n: \'egetable._ lcm'lng I n 150‘. The not!) the Vinegar and egnr into which gret A during the 1, . 1 Wu " m >.0001eu than Ill ‘y. :51. .0: ‘1 ore Aid All. Thn (mil; lesson in to the homkoepu whit buying and hand“ no to the fume:- -â€"3 very buy time. And Ibo {oel- quiu u éomplwently uH-uailï¬od whan tho lat. quince in "mind down" Ind Iholooh over bar well-ï¬lled lrn‘nolouv u the tumor wheu he lurvayl bin full bun- And gnu- ulna Gun, out-ups. junl, jelllel, pretence-â€" and picklm. For with null our weal. thing- we mun not forget the wide kppetim cruel, pnniculnrly slang Low lpring than we begin to gst “bilinnl.†Sagu- in I greet lonrco ol energy. but netm'e rem- edy for In in-eï¬ve liver in en mid. And ‘ dthcngh plcklel Ire probably not the meet inocnoiu form in which we can 3111in on! mvlng {or lomelhlng Iaur. they ere not, when pmperly nude Ind not enunln one". None for the digeetion then a. grant. muny the! thing: we indulge in. Much of the good or ill which relidee in . pickle in due to the vinoger with which it. i- mede. The pickling or white wine vino- glr of commerce in not. shove empicion. It ll mule by chemicall, end Iulphurie Icid llrguly enter- luto in eompoeition. 1: can the picklel, and in notion on the llning o! the Itomnch in very injurious. In use ie to benvoided. ‘ A few 0! ch: "ï¬rst. principles†of pickle- mtking us than : Do not use vinegar that. in too sarong; it. "can" Ind aofwm the pickles. Krep picklul tighhly covered ; vinegar is "killed" by expocurs to nir. -'1)o not, let vincgnr boil ; let in com: to the boil- ing point ; skim it necessary, And we at once. Never pm. pickle: in I jnr or crock chm. has held gran-e. Wherever poluble, gut picklel in cm- or bottles and ml whan 0%. Remember than [resting spoil: piglrlea. . . . W , Am: 5-- _L.. To keep icklel lound Ind ï¬rm when in Irina, Add El“ I bmhol of grape lenvca to a burel of cucumbers. The leaves also vully improve the color. If u auum rise- on top of pickles, levenl slices of horse- fldisb will cleu the Vlncgu' i! put. in the Jar. The housekeeper uaunlly makes encum- ber. tho hula of her supply 01 pickles. The smell-nixed, uhepely young fruit, ehout four inches long And In inch or so in diem‘ eler. ere preferred ; these. after being wiped with A soft cloth. no packed in l-yere with Inlt, preferably in stone or wood ; the juice of the cucumber with the salt iorms n brine in which they rsmsin till wanted for use. when they are ire-honed by honking three or {our dnyn in tepid water. renewed daily; then put into vineeer. Care must he uken to keep them under brine. and also under the vineglr. An old plate turned ovsr them with a weight. on top, does this nicely. There is no equal to the vinegar produced by the elow ncnlulnlion oi knit-juice, es when cider is convened into vinegar. It is the most healthy form, and the cleanest. Ind unrest. The failure of the apple crop tor the put two seasons has largely reduced ‘Ilie supply in lint. hernia and pure cider lvinegur has been hard to get. lint it ll so much more desirable for pickle-mnking and every ether culinary use, that every lnrmer'l wile should plan a year abuse In: an ample supply. All sour picklelwud all sweet pickle: not made of ripe fruit, are soaked twenty-{our houm in uhrine, the ueuul proponion be- ing a large cup of tall. 10 a gallon of wuer. The use ol the brine is to draw out the ac- Iid or strong lluvar of the green fruit. 01' vegetable, leaving the pulp ready 10 ab- sorb the vinegar and spices. The ï¬rst \"iu- agurinlo which green pickles are puv. usu- hull should be drawn olf, throw fresh added. The pickles wil without. fermenting. An old housekeeper who live: in a large village not It hundred miles from Chï¬mgo, declare: with great emphasis llmv. ii. is impossible to have too many cloeeu in a house. Our house is our calls. but. it. is a very untidy abiding place unless it. contains a great. many receptacle: for the clo!hiug and odds sud end: of every dezcriplion that, Mculnulnle in the beut~reguluted families Architects are often unwilling to mur, whnc they call. the nrliatic effect. of certain rooms in ihe house. When such is the case wardrobes must be provided, bu'. In these are oxpeunive, the busy ï¬ngers of the home wife must. be depended up") In provi‘le rubamules. A‘corner iu the room may be utilized as follows : 'lwo strips of wood as long as you desire and four inches wide by one inch thick ure screwed intolhc angle of the well. about nix leer. from the floor. b mrds Ire cm. all" to ï¬t in the corner and resting on these amps. this form: the roof. A hrnsa or wooden rod is then run across the from. of this board from well In wall and from which tho curlum is suspended by rings Cre- tonno, chinxz, elm, can be uzed for the drapery. Screw upon the under-ids of the roof Ind on the clean as mnny hooks u are re uired. A ahcli mly he innerted about. 'flcen inches below the roof Io which thghooka mny be luncheil. A closet like the one described will be found A great con- vcnicncc. Stretch e piece of muslin or paper acrou the upper IiJe of the roof lo keep cut. the dust. Like many of the melt. abundant, and therefore the cheaput. articles of diet, Ip- plex nre nluo one of the moat. whole- Iome. and am he served In A greater number of nppetizmg Ind delicious dishu than my other kind of home-grown fruit. And yet. if they were no more plentilul, Ind had no greater " keeping power" than pelches and pluml, we nhonld, no doubt, have no more nppreciltion of their vsluo. A celebrated teacher of cookery. whose word no up-m. dnte-houeowile would think of questioning. uyl thlt npplen can be served In nearly, or “in: a hundred delightful wnya. It. in :loubtfnl, however. if the mojority of home- wives are {omilinr with onequnrter of that number. To rova superiority of modern methods of non» ing one he: bug to compare pie uncle of zhln‘y-alicad Ipplel Iauénod with nlllpice. with one made of qulnerud And cored npplen flavored with a little lemon or vnnilln oxtnct; or compare the richnou and delicate nuunl flavor of Ip- ph sauce made of sour apple! ; pared, quar- tered and cored, Iweemned with angu- diuolvod in plenty of hot wuur, covered THE HOHE. All A“: out Pickles A Handy Wardrobe Apples. cloudy, nd oookad until wad-3r. without stirring. in | hot. oven vial tho old-minimal an“; or by “no. may of flu unipo- gin: '. Bnkqd Applu. â€"-Wuh Ind care unit uppin- : pho- lhem in shuns pm; ï¬ll the hollow of ml: upplo with “pr; put. 3 hit a! butter on the Inga, 611th. pun m 056' thixd the depth of the Ipplu vith “Ml. I-nd lake until tend". Eamon shun uro- (ully u: the urving dill: And dip the syrup over them. Serve cold, with Iweetoned whipped cream spread around them. Stewed Appluâ€" PM I mph] of mar. the nme Amount! of Inga, And {- {ew bit. of luck cinnamon. In In agnu uueepln Ind boil Ilowly Elma minutes. Pure and core eight medium-dud Apple! ; unngaon the batldm o! I nucepu: ro- mova the mice from the syrup Ind pour it. over the a plea : cover clmly Ind no: un- til under gun not. broken. Serve cald umh Iwutened whipped cram, antiï¬iy batten And "wound whim of eggs. Ste-med Applesâ€"Pm And can erect Ipplu. Cover the peringe end eorel with cold Inlet end etew twenty minutes. Strain 06‘ the liquid, edd new And I. little butter, end boil ten minnm. Sunni the npplen until tender, then mafnlly place in the nerving dieh. When the syrup in cold, flnvor wuh lemon, vmill- or spice. di it. over the prepared epplee end eerve co d. A thin ennui-xi poured Round the Ipplu is n dolizhblnl Addition. Compote of Appletâ€"Pare and core tut Ipplel‘, and plug them on the bome of In Ignte pudding mold. Fill the hollow of each app]: with lugu, guts I liule nutmeg over the lug“ Ind Luke. Pour one cupfulof boiling water over um unble- Ipoonfuln o! butter and {our of sugar; nucr the upples commence w blke unto them with Lhe syrup Ind repeat the but.- ing twice. Sift augu over the top u soon In taken {ram the oven, Ind nerve hot. AI [Ens-unusual! Illusion".r Tnnl c-n-dlnn ‘ Bnrely “HI led a new Blvnl I- Inn“. The lumen of this' country nixed 311 the barley then wee Imported by the United States before the passage of the McKinley lerili They probebly bargain for the name monopoly of the outside supply now that the duty is lawered sufï¬ciently to let. im- portation begin ngnin. But if Irumour that. comes by way of New York is not un‘fgunded, Cunediun barley in likely to meet. in the United Scams market I new rivnl from Russin. Two cargoe- ol barley ere [lid to be nuw in transit from Odessa on the Blink Sen. where the grnin is alleg- ed tn have lyeeu bought at 47¢ per bushel l of 48 paunds, cost, freight, insurnucc, and human to the aupermruy 0! our ouney, In. it. was naturally hoped [hit the ex-‘ periment in which it was the ï¬rst utep‘ might not. be nucceuful beyond the Wlldell drum: 0! it. author. 1! ma borle report- ed to be chipped from Odes“ hl been n mnlting grade. Onuno farmers might have suspected itlu be of the Image of that sold by them a! need to be planted in Finland, what-e hsving pro-pared it gave the nucleus of a crop to the south, whose product was coming back to the mlrkfl.‘ of hi: kindred. ' How the Iron Duke man. Old John was a ahoemukor, an Irishmnn, and IT! Ardent adrmirer 6f the duke of Well inglan. To describe khe battle 0! Waterloo wu hil rhief plenum. ï¬e alwnyu wound up the nannivc, sitting with his hummer poi-ed. hiI upset-clan pushed back on his orahold. uni his whole uppelnnce ind- ofllng the utmost. ambusuum. with \he words ; “An' the Duke 322.": he. Up. Gyarda, un' It 'em I ’ :n' wid lhn. limul- tanonully, u the um: time, Ill to (meet. the Gylrdl upped “1' Allen! 'om. An' lhu hauled It." .BARLEY FOR THE STATES )f our barley. [hit the ex- Lhe ï¬rm. {up nt perfection Lberc. The was grnulul ming on I deâ€" SIX m IN All OPEN BOAT DR!" HELPLEILY. In It. Ill“ all ml of Ill-hilly harks-112’ luv: to [In] Huh Cu to loop III: Ileana "II .I lay 5i: men were Add“ in the mackerel! Jepnneeeeenlorneuiysweek in ope) been, end the “cry of their enfl'u-ings il told balonerwrim hyone 0‘ “Mn. Thedxmenwznpenofihe crew of the British eeeler Chulozu G. Cox. end when they were Ion from the Ichoour the vale] wu Anchored 0E KmuhI-n. Albert. J enun, the writer of a» letter, ny- thlb eerly the next. morning offer the uhoom uchured us!- could he lean win ugh- out. M. Ielsnd three of the bow- pr on! titer them. “ We hid been heving fair luck n1] dong," Janeen writs, “ but never did we b“ so many see]- u on um. dly. By noon we were, u we thought, ebont ten mile: south of where the Ichooner hy. And we began to work beck Lowud her. Gun- were ï¬red u riguele, end noon line- were polled from bout to bout, md in ‘- precession Ire begun w hum. Im- th- Ichooner. Night came upon us It eel end with very little knowledge of where I" Were. The treealeroul ocun cunfllu h“ caught In, had in the duknees "- W" im- pouible to tell whether we were ZONE out. to an or toward abort. There were not. half a dozen nee bimuxhl in Illchree bonu md {cu 1:th- $419119: the heat increu‘ not. many hours b of fresh wuer kept our cm I: Vite! to lat. All nix of In (u- An Indeï¬nite period. The nit-union um: night I'u not. very planning. A [Impact of dud) from either .mrvnion or Lhifll. In: nol very comforting, And I" had: seemed to [eel it, u we at uhivering Ind Iilenl. in the duk- neu. Dlylight. found an in the sun. poaition, but [ha [03 Itill hung thick over the Ins-{see 0! 1h: cowl. It. In: bud work- rowing. Ind 00 relic" the monotony I few Iedl were sighed. Ind Dome of then fell to :he gm of the hunters. The few set biscuiu were divided Hound, and the little stock af water npidly dllnlfllthd. ne'e'med CI {It 01 mun-wing m din h-dr bggn pnlliq elflly designed us for I reput. A: darknen was coming down the nut. night a dim blue hue was 50-11 on the horizon. It. In: the Ind, and new hie took hold of us. but. Lb: nhnks oominn'l to keep us buy. Next morning we were close lo the bench, and L- the Lou: “era run inn) u cove lmund a point of Inud some lelneue took hold of them Ind carried I:- to their villige. Locust: in Central AEEHCZL "You htve rend about John t}: Bu)! iving upon Locust.- And wnld honey." 5 n clergymnn who bu been lnveiiing Centrnl Americu. “Well. htn‘a a iocu Ind he prodnccd from hi. pocket. lâ€"we‘ locust. IL doun'l. hop or jump. md had no Iamblancï¬ of life beanie, indeed. ii m nothing but Q gnu hem, looking like 3 huge cranberry-bun pod. II. it ï¬ve inch“ long and nlmosv. u bi; trouud n | bun-n1. hind I deep mthnguny-colored skin of hard eonsiveccy. “l hue eucl- many of them. They grow on tree. 1- elm: and full m the ground when ripe. Split. ihnm open Ind [hey coumn . yellow ““13“fo \looklmz like mun-n1. Mixed with “ier‘ it. mnkel I {My delirium uni nourilhing drink lhu will Imuin life {or I long time. it. mnkel I {My delirium uni nourilhing drink lhu will Imuin life {or I long time. One of the" pull will “Ilka I quul cl drink. And everybody um them. They my not bo the 10¢qu 01 John the Euplut. but. .1 undcnund ihn mhe me grow: in that land 0! lbs Bible." TI“! 50) LUST AT SEA l d our fore th mint, md it wu xem In no: I drop of the bong We HEMKLY