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The Brussels Post, 1891-10-23, Page 7OcT, 23, 1S01 i-TOUSEHOLD. chaste them so elierop at this memento of he year, that a few sensgeetions how to prepare Mann in various ways for winter nee will be appreciated hotteiskeerre. It givea the following reelpee ; Its1 1.1: .1 1114,y, —Melt dm getoptie from the Milne, pub in 0 steno jar, stand it: ke 1 1 le of Avatar ; cover the top, and boil elewly one 11011V. Strain through a jellydstg and s • tieezi• 0111 the Mhos Measure, and Le every Pim allow 0 pound of sinew. Put the joss in a pi:oservedwiCe. flea the sugait When 110 juteu has bo110,1 tweet y minutest, add the istigtor stir until it dis- elves, and Mt NM until 'it ; take up all glasees, cover, and sot away, tt telt ,i4u, —Pit I p the grapos ; put the skine in a trait and the pulps in moother ; whoa all are prepared, put tho pulps in a kettle awl bring to 0 belling point ; then run 111l'ellgil 00111.111101., 10 1.1.11110V0 the mods ; teld the ek ins, and measure, allowing luilf a pin of emote to a pint ef the ; put in to kettle and boil until atilf, etirring to pro - yea Wicking. 1 11,1 Patisaltvks, —Make symip of lb pellna of sugior and a pia of water. Have it very thick. l'icic ripe, perfect grapes from the stem, pa in the syrup, and boil slowly until clear and done. CRAPS; ;war r, --Mash ripe (Crapes of Strong !laver, antl stand in warm plow° for three er foto, days ; then put it telly - bag tool lin drip slowly. _Measure the juice, aud to co say pMt allow two poen of sugar ; mix the juice and sugar and set 01'00 tho lire in a kettle of water, ma' stir until the sugar distiolves ; then take from the lire and stand 11,11110 to cool, orild; bee ;1,• and ern*. This myrup is a beautiful celering for ices, jellies, and other eweelanettts, (111.1P11 .1b1.3.101.11..1111,1.-111111 very ripe grapes through a c terse sieve, to remove the seeds. Putt he pool and juice in a salleenall, ;ohm. weighing; adi a, little winos to keep from bareing; cook half an hour, and :old half a pound of sugar to evory pound. of pulp: lmil stireing all the time, to prevent el 1.. icing, unMl thiek. 1.11torics Cs X3 ell 1 1: 141'111 1,,-11rIke syrup of :sugar and water; select, perfect getopee, leaving the small stems on; drop in the syrup and let heat; put in 0/1110, seem. lima with the syrup, and seal. Sri tee ( 1 es eics.—Talze ton pounds of grapes on 1110 stems. Boil a quart of vine- gar, in wind: ElisSOIVO 1110 pentode of sugar ; llavor wi Mt eine:onion, 111000, allspice, clefts. cool ginger. 1'ut, the grapes in as jar end pour ova' boiling hot. Seal immediately. Guam; Wise, —Piek ripe geapes frem the stems, mash, and lot stand twenty-four homer. Strain, and aild three pounds of sugar to every gallon of juiue. l'at in a can, let stand twenty-four hours; strain, eeturn to the oasis, let ferment, and stop tightly. It le " CO111111011." So are 1 110 1.11110'.1 awl 1110 arehl tux s1;1;!,,, So aro 1 he ,(11111,.. in 1 he eltildven's Common the 11 le 33.. Of (1111001, 11 111,, 0111, \vIii 11 111, '1'1 11.'1'1" '41141- 131333,33i1 111, 04, they me common. Contmen I Itc mins., 111 Its glewinv green; Sto ie the asoor's glietenies ”beett; Ctlinnont I lirhur., lpvo 1qui ;kre 1111. gain pi eartn. Common Inc. frograneti r, oy Juno; So Is the noserotie burr e;,1 01000. Hu arc the towertne, mesas hills. - Su axe the wi Et ering, t eh:Sling rills. Common the beeet lful noe a the fall; So le le• min whieh is over el,: Common I he rain, wit It its pat tering feet; So 14 the 111.(3111 wide)) naily lile4son 110 1011, 11 Is commun. So Is the sea in its unrest 1CIssing forever he earth', brown breast.: So ;11,1 V0530 01 mmyer, P.:vermin.° ;nerving 1110 ambient air, So unto all are the prolnIsea" elven, So um. all k 1110 helm (if 10 aVenl C0111111011 11131 143,1 100111 1110 b1.0110y tio the NV111011 19 ett.s. Messed ho (Ion, 1.1,11111110M Ennomy and " bleonntny and hettriling 131110 widely dill:gent thing. alt hough the ono too often inietaken for the alley. The true law of life is re rie.0100, to use, te pass ou." 'rhos saya a mdpfsi article. It 10 IViii110111 10 matzo provioion tor the fitture. Foe the impre- videut se 1 shifGees I have small respict. It is les it'f dile 1 epook, bat of what is use,. lesA to i peksossor that might do another good 0:0: era, seye Wri1111. ill 000(1 House. keel ,ole. 1 et eitt till garret and desol with emit oll elro limo, I 1r. hot) flu/niter, , 1,0010, 'This to won e eiol :nide the he. loran lit e:11.illbf 101' V13,131 Itle-i4 tiling,. 1)1,0 poor [00,11 M11111111100 y.1110 g,.11•110 and wraps that are on t of sry:, tu f Abele, and 10111 . W11011 the y (00 Making OVer moms, if it ever arioves, 16 to 1 the new miterial efel cost of work vt, ill Mid you to thraide upou now and the old, growing older, is still on 1101111. Pai1,1 y0:(1' gamily:de ; there is to world of ;!,1 el for sumo ,01E1 ill 1 11.301, 110111e ens:denary barrel 3001110 rejoice should yon see., ie te :oval its contents, 1/o not. totos,1 eve:, ool t r tun posy. If you allow yottr house to to cumbered, moth and rust will corrupt. It IS htiv of 11:1 Wee 1 hat nothing be lost, Flverything gravitates o Lind use, FolloW laie and send ohl books, maga- shim) ma papers to those W110 lia113 110 meney to buy them. .Ploey 011 1 be a godsend to many hungering an d thirsting for this very sort of mind food, and you will be enshrined in 111011' memory, especially 1 the paidtages you send are 1111/011011 '' pees on." You will understate' the compound intorteA, that ac- crues If there is positively no other 1140 for old briikenolown furniture, let it ez, split up fer kindling. It hi bettor so than to fill up and gather dust and be eoneigned to the wood, pile 11 t lest. 1 few :all ft family live without o store. reole for useful, no ie led articles? What felly o till it, with useless trumpery ! Lei avers i;S:to thst van FiefTe fee eonvenience te Set e I, p,ist,ed on ; otherwise attar (Mt and clear ere If true the t the 01aXi11111111 of good houeekeeping is the nothinuton of ohl trumpery, our honeekeepere will rouse to tho toolijoet. Ilentombor there is that that scam:rah, vet inereaseth. Seorets of Happy. Wedlock, 11kspu cm 11 ot her's individuality. Do not try to 1110111 the other's ideas, or pri it eiples, or minims to the pattern of your OW11, Seek to in ['nonce each other only by the pOW01' Of higher example. liy yonr worthiness and cultrtro nuthe the other proud a you, and do not feel that marriage gives you any right to demand, or dictate, er criticise. 'Maintain end allow the same freedom that exists between good and pure friends. Never ask persouttl guanines nor seek explanations, for you are not a hundredth part as responeible for moth other 0.0 you isro apt to illiagille. Let your love be founded in admiration aud friendship, Strive tio eerrect your own faults and study to make the other happy, and be ex- ceedingly careful that you never reverse this rule. Keep your refined and gentle inatiner for 1110 homo. Never refer to a mistake that Wall Made with good intentions, When a wrong is petitioned, bury it in oblivion. Consider tho other's honor yotir own, and shield each other's weaknesses with sacred jealousy. Remember that ill-tempoe nearly always comes of disappointment or overwork or physical suffering. Treat cetelo other as courteously in pri. vate as you would your friends in the deem. ingloom. Never alloAv intimitey to become familiar. Be rivals in generosity, and lot misunder- standings die foe want of words. 00110110r marriage ae the partnership of equals, Shore the joys and sorrows of life, its toils and paefits, as equal partners should. --- A Matron to I/tautens. Girls, don't think that every. 'young num who calls npon you once or twice is in lovo with you. Don't Lank because you 0,00 prettier Ginn your neighbor across tho way and hove pret- tier gowns that itt is rh.shb to try to flirt from your front stoop with hor beau when he calls upon her. Don't astonish your friends end acquaint. mums with magnificent gowns, while your mother wears cheap bombazine aud n, cloak and bonnet that every one can see have done at least live yoare' eery ice. Don't show up lily-white taper fingers if 11011S 1100 Beillrefl wilh work. Dim't be always drumming on the piano yottr visitors call. Don't expeot that a matt's intentions aro sincere until he informs you in plain English that they aro. Don't Mut to a man tha you liko him and that ho 10 your Meal, and that, you wouldn't mitel loaclint the stato of singlo•blessednoss it " Barkb, Dire't. maize yourself obnoxious by appear- • 1 .1 sooty at placrat you know to bolds 11, 11.1til 60 young man has a fear in tut eiq emelt Amin corner ho comes to lest Ito will meet you. Don't accept yotto wedding outiltfrom the hands of yittr lover. arapea, So many families raise grapes in thoir own yards, and thew) who do not can pm. Carker, in the 1,01111e' 1 env Clempanion Golden lhoughts for Every Day. AT omlay— t's wiser being good than bad ; IC.0,110(11. hang meek han tierce ; 111 ter being Sane than mad. Al; o 11 110P0 is, a 01111 pierce The thickest 0101111 earth over stretched; That after Lost, returns 0110 First, Though a Wide eeilinfL40 round be fetched ; Thal W11111 13034,10 11030, can% end worst, Nor Avhat God bieet, Onee, prOVO accurst "[Robert Browniug. Tuesday—Soeiety is Ole atmosphere of souls and we necessarily imbibe from it soinething which is either infectious or salu- brious. The society of virtuous persons is enjoyed beyond thoie company, while vice (sums a eling luta solitude. The society or unmpany you keep is both the indication of your character and the former of it. In vicious society, 37011 Will feel your reverence foe the dictates of conscience svear olf, and that mune, at which atogels bow and devils tremble, you hear contemned and abused. Tho Bible will supply material for uumencing jest or impious builbonery ; the consequences of this will be a preetioal Je- ri:Won feom virtue, he principles will be- come sapped, the fences of conscience broken down ; and when debauchery has corrupted the close:toter, a total Meanies will take piece and the el !thee will glory iu his shame. —(AiMnymous. Wednesday— How poor, how rich, how abinet, hew august, How irartmlicate, how wonderful -Is Ma 11 1 How neseing wonder Ilo who made him such 1 Who 0e:11.01,0d in our make /mph etrango ex- tremee From different natures marvelously inked, (lemma Inn eranitelte of 11 Want worlds; Distinguished link In Being's endless chain ! Midway from Nothhig to the Dotty I A beam et lunioal, sullied and absorlfd I Though milled 101111 dishonored, still divine 1 m n inhume of great noes absolute an heir a gloss. I a teal oh lld of dust I ;Wide:. Menai a insect 1111101 to I .1, worm a gen 1-1 trouble at myself, And 111 101 self am lost —Edward Young. Th torsdity—Man regards his century or hie halfmentury as the culmivation of light, as co festal day, to which all other centuries letel only as week attys. He knows mily two golden ages—the one at the beginning of tho world, and the one at the end of it. - by which he understands only his own ; ho finds history to be like groat woodst, in the middle of which aro silence, night birds, itnol birds of prey, and wionse boaters ouly are tilled with light and song. —Jean Paul Rich- ter. Triday— WW1 spade and ralzo she sought hor garden 'When bright brown thrushes singing camo, T—o 11,11r00111.10 the hedge. Sang she, too, with pure alm Au graceless:growth to harems out and not LOMIl aught unseemly, Cold the day or hot She deived and woozloci, thinking thus to shanie Moro eareloss gardening ; end to win a name For toothsome fruit which should nob he for- got. P0111 plents, watare, het increase Must, imme from Cloth Through unseen faults of fence Crain foxee, while tired nature ctionsed sons 00a$0 Of care. Health mune, but no am shining, Hence Thu new series failed 10 bloom. Tho old bloom dead— Alas! my batrarm hope, she sighing sad, —.11/ary 11. D Saturday—There must not only be living union with Him, through His word, but that union must be ion abiding . one. John sets this forth in his seoond epistle, at the ninth verso. " Whosoever trionsgreseeth, and obidetli not in the doctrine of Christ, hath nob God. Ho that abicleth in the doctrine of Gloria, ho hall beth the Father and tho Son, '' And agan in III John Y., 4 : " I hero no greater joy than to hoar theb my ehildren well: in the limith.," To abide in the truth is not nectemsnally always fm melerstand or comprehend the full force and significance of it, but it is to etirrender the whole heart: and will to Cheist, se being tho 'roe th, and to continue steadfastly in Him, giving the heart and conscience Ilp ontiroly te the authority of His word, willing always to lib will, to event Ifis " tesching 011 pohns, wad all His teeelling on every pomt" I may not be able to comprehend the mystery of His onenees with the Pallor, hoot .1. :tempt: it, se 1 me and abide in it. I may not understiond the mystery of the non, birth, boot I accept it as true to me if hes novo on ifim through whom it 114 proinieed 10 Mo' I may not understand how His death sot, too hoc from gttilt and oondom- nation, yet accept it as being true and rest in its—Dr, l'enttenst. THE BRUSSELS POST. 11.020%021C000.10011•04611142112703210:0.11121F1211=11111/000000060111011011,2=arota A.GRIOT.ILTUR A L. i'estilent Insects, :111., James Floicher, eid °undo:4kt of (loveriuno)1 of Canada, obtained 11111e11 ered 1 for hie addreem preeitlent of the Association of Emote:tile Cattomologiets tot the recent meeting of that impertont. body. Mr, Flotelter claimed that there W110 BO branch of praetival togrieulture nunra no- portanee to 1110 farmer Goan entomology, mos 1 ha no:11111 that the yahoo of farm prod be lost, and also of that whieb might bv saved by taking the advice/ of competent entoniologiets, far greater than was generally believed., bcurtit of the etudies and researches, both of 10131011e0 0.1111 (101,01011 11/ tIliti Science was every year being more tuel noon revog. Tho groat, drawhack lay in the often wilful ignorance ef growers and 00110111110rH W110 refused to heed the his trototiou awl counsel given them end thus ,jeopardizeil the loss of 0 great poet of their labor. Air. Floteber dwelt 1A1.101110 length on the wive». tages derived from experiment stations. 1 fo eetininted that fully ten per cent. of the crops of the eon Linea W1114 encrilieed by the ravages a deetructive ineects, 111:11 were virtually miinipetled, But this preportion would leseen yearly 110W that entianolemeni enquiry for sr:Laical ends and corm:snow ding prom:adieu me:uterus lind been synte111. atized on both eidee of the line. --- Value of Good Aotion, Next to soundness, and far more deslrablo that perfect symmetry, is the pesse. don good action, toe without it en Ohio wile ex- cellent animal is incelculably dope:elated, both in value and neefulnese. Good and true amien is very frequently, but not in variably, nesooiated wit h poricot outlet ow.; but the lroolie•Siiiii illay 100 ;templed i 0'13 denote iti fairly 11 ;ma conformation, for defeetive or slovenly aethet ean only arise 31 smuel animal. from an one, lull distribu- tion of physical power, U11 frem R. want of Feminine ov plack. In many horses good, bold :talon is all evidence id powee, and the heuviee the horse the better he should 1T101113 ill both trot and walk. (Moil aetion in ell lenses generally coin, eides with symmetrical and definite propor- tions, ant theee the experienced eye of the horseman can ittliekly diecorn, while front 1110111 be can arrive at to toleraldy.eatisfeciory conehision as to what the horse he is scrutinizing is capable of doing in the way of wook, toel also to sumo extent as to the (Milli 11'8 Thie is the close with heavy draft horses too less than with others, 11 has been recognized that a tense required to move heavy weights must be himself weighty, and also endowed with geeat muscular power, evidenced by large 11100003 lar development all over. He must also bo near the ground, thnt is, comparatively short, powerful limbs. He likewise shall possess strong, sound feet, broad back and. loins, deep uhest and ribs, pronfinenfi shoulders, svide between his fore- legs and wide frost croup to hooks. He should stand firm aud square, fore litnbs well outside of him and the fore feet: in direct line with the body, the hind ones slightly pointing outword ; the prezterns 41.11111 be flieieutly 1 Ow neat:: e lasticity ton cl freedoon in action, without being too slanting, all johns and 011101110 should be well detined and the limbs clean and Proportionate. For the purpose of homey draft, the ne. eessity of excellent conformation of the hind limbs is of far more importance than the sylometry of the anterior extremities. Horace sequired for lighter and quiet:00 work in pair hoese vans may be upstanding they 0110111(1 poseess depth of rill, plenty of heart room and all 00sential qualifications for oleo - follows. Oattle for England. Mr. W. E, Cochrane, of the Cochrane Ranch 00., is in town to -day on his way to Strathmore, fecnn where he is about to ;ship 1,073 head of beef cattle to alontreal en route for England. There will be three train loads, the first of which will be des- patched on Wednesday. The mottle consist of Polled Angne, Herefords, Shorthorns, etc., and including 504 steers, ao5 spayed heifers and 174 dry cows, representing in value here in Alberta of about S50,000 ; and are said to be tho finest lot that over lef 1 Gm Canadian Northwest. Ala 00011. nine will aetiompany the stock to Begland. 4Calgary Herald. Ootswold The present Cotswold sheep is a %lost ion, provoment upon the eel ellen limed, which Wilt represented by tonna& horger but to very :mars° aohnal, with long lege end veey light in the forequarters. They were a bards- moue, however, ismiellent breeders, aud were bred excleeively cm the 11)1100nd fated in the toilleye of the Severn and Thames. Their wad was very long and their fleece heavy, which wore the particular features that first drew to these sheep the intention that led to their improvement and the prod intion of the present elegant Cutswold, The improved Cotswold was produeed by a mixture of Cots. ivold and Leicester blood, and by this cross a more compnet fratne secured, together with a modification of all the undesirable aharacteristid of the original animal. At present a standard Cotswold possesses it moclorately.small head, good brcalth be- tween Goo oyes and nostrils, withoute how. ever, having short and Omit appearance ; the eoloe of the (moo may be white or some. what mixed with gay or dappled with brown ; the nose is dark and the nostells wide the eye in mild in appearance but prominent ; the ears me broad and long ; the shoulder is broad aud full, and the two shoulders are so joined that no hollow exists ; the mutton tho foreleg comes pretty well doem to the knee ; the breast is broad and the legs well spelt, with Lb full, deep chest ; baelc and loin broad, and flat and straight ; belly eteaight ; ..quartere long and ; the wool is long min lustrons. This briefly -is fb desoription of the Caswobl, aid the pninte stated are the important once of the standard of excellence aclopted by the American Cots- wold Association. harvesting and Storm4 Potatoes, If possibl the potatoee should be dug end harvested diming 0, dry spell. If harvested in wet weather Cho mold will cling to them so thisti they will have to Ito washed et put &wily in this dirty contlitien, Appearnuees cotton for a greet deal in the sale of articles, and muddy.petatoft will not sell half so well as; elettn, bright shining tubers. When tho thim for harvesting the potatoes has come, will not do much harm to lot them remain in the soil a few :lap or a week later until proper weether is ILL hand. 'Phis, or mosso, miplins more especially to crops growing 111 heavy, muddy soils, but, on dry, Ismer:11y soils it does not have the 1111111e POW; 10,314 'Chat 111'0 wet: at hareeeting are more liltely to roe philter than those that aro dry mud elean, This is another' hem to consider. What to clo with the potatoes immediately miter harvesting is a most important nes. tiona eiell them immediately limn the ohl, if possible, and it is mueb bettor to rooeivo a few eents less per bushel in this way than to carry them to the HI 3/V311011811 14114 take vare of them foe mon 1 Its. There iH in shrinkage, rot and chesty when 110,7 aro Hi 01,1 (Way for menthe, beeides the note personal lithor and time, When avenge. eau be made beforehand with p111.3 e1111110111, either 1 lie 10,14111.y or 10 some mot oity, 11114 only 00 many petatoes 00 eon 10; shipped in nooks or barrels 110(1,00 night, III tine way labor isles:toned, and the crop i:i 1113111011011 The )10111100m tha aro to be kept, should be meattered out on the barn iloor no in lanne M11110000 where there is plenty of eirottla• tion of freelt air, They may be piled three feet, thick, tied 1 theee is a great eirenlation of air, they will dry fast enough. They may even bo waelieil in this Way by throwing pails of water over thent ana this 11111011 Learn. 1,111111 10 lel, IA10 mud cline to them, The pot Miele need thie drying place before beiug stored away for the winter. l'hey should Ito kept. in south a cool, well yenta- ated Once until in dimger of being injured by the frosts. Thon they can bo etortel away permanently for the winter. liut the cpiention again conies up, Wouhl it not pay butte:. to nell them off before filling tho cellars with them 11 me sh sinkage and loss front rot will take plaee if etered hi the oellar. Although every fanner Moe to de. cede for himself in this matter it is well to consider how much is made by holding 11 utintitiesof 1100.031003 o veto —I W. E. :Farmer, 10 ./ incrican Cultivator, When to Water Horses, Srippose the hoese is just brought to the stablit from work or driving. In this ease only a 1011, swallows 01 water should be given until lie gets 000l. If he is then to be ted at (thee he should hove not mom than two or three quarts of wirer. But, if loo tii stand an hour before fee:1111g he may have a pail- ful of water and i Will largely be aimed:oil or pass through t lie small intestines into the comonn or largo inteethie. This is a reser. voir holding al tont twiee as emelt as thy stomach. it will here do no Mani. Pan if this nineunt of wider were given just befiire feeding it wouhl weaken the digestive pow er of the Moon:tell, dilute the gastric jaice and 10 apt te eause indigestion. Anti if imoilo wider is taken immediately after eating, it is liable to wash the cinnents of the etomach into the intestines, where iligestiou of e. buinirmids oannot properly take plume, awl is liable to cause fermentation and liberation of gases, whit:limey produce distension, colic and in flam atom It will be Se011 by this that when just a little water is given immediately before feeding and the food is masticated and moistened. with the saliva, it goes into the stionnell and receives the ull power of the gastrie juice, dissolving out all the albumi- noids and then passes into the intestines and undergoes further digestion for morbidly. drittes. If the horse is to return to work very soon after eating only a few smarts of watee should be allowed. Tho above remarks are made upon general priuciples. But if the horse is fed on hay or other coarse foilder, moistened and mixed ivith grein food, which must be thoroughly masticated before being swallowed, causing a proper flow of saliva, which becomes a sullicient moisture of the stomach for the prepor action of the gastric jaice, there is Less liability to injury by modification in watering.—Klountry Gentleman. Fresh Meat for 'Fowls. While -nobody of very great experience in caring foe poultvy will pretend that furnish. hog them with mere or loos meat in some form is not essential to their good condition and to aid in the production of eggs, the imestion with many is, " When and what kind of meat shall we procure to supply the needs of our folv18 ?" We reply tha tho thing is more attainable than at !Met view appears possible. lu the first place far more scraps of meat might be made available in every household than all are aware of. Any bits of dry or forgotten relics of roasts or broils or soups may be carefully out into bits and served in small quanbities every day to your flock, The avidity with which these are devoured invite to 11011f efforts to supply their wants awl by consulting y0110 butcher you will find the livers, lungs mid hearts of the creatures kollod in the shambles will often be sold at extremely low rates and after being boiled furnish a rich and exhilarating, repast to your fowls. A sheep'e head, though formid- able in spite:Irma° end clumsy to Moodie, is the uext best thing ; and when it is chopped in fine pieces with a dull ex and packed in n, large doener pot and boiled till the meet and brains drop front the litmus, you will bo astonished, not nnly at the groat amount of rich food thus obtained, but the greed - Mem whioh yone flock manifest to diepese of it. An occasional meal of this mea—that is, to meal which alleles oreey lion at tenet three or four lumps of meat, the size of to hazel nut—will tell in favor of thrift. We are often asked whether spoiled or tainted most nosy be fad to fowle with im- poinity. W eroy yes, provided 11 10 well cooked. It seems to be followed with no ill results generally. Tho hen is not it cletonly feeder, anyhow. Sho revels in a steaming dunghill. Even if fed exclusively on tint cleanest, nicest provendor, the contents of hot: gizzard tore always offensive to the 1111011 when diseected immediately lifter dealt, ob perfectly fresh, sweet meat is to be pre - 'erred. —[Americau Poultry Yard, The Prinoe of Wales' Debts, " The exact financial position of the Prince of Wales," says Tothotiehere, editor of the London Truth, in an article on " Bug- lish Royalty," which he contributes to the October Forum, " is not koown, 'Thera have been enmors flint he hi greatly in debt ; but I question their eons:duns, When tho prince Oa= of age, he became possessed of the accumulations realized during his min- ority from the Duchy of Comma 11. A. por- tion of them Was expended in the purchaeo of the Sandringham estate, nail the remain- der became his. With this nest -egg, with an Moo= of ell 10,000 par ninomn, ono of eloopoo fer his wife, a forum:0 provision for 1110 ohildree, and ivith Marlborough Houee !sent up for hurl at the mobilo cost, them muted no reason why his exponditere should online his memos. hospitalitiee nee not greater thau doom of the French President, who, with le011 than Ilttlf 1110 ill. come, does not got into debt." — Moral Acadia. Said J. S. Ford, the Ionia humorist, the other day : 1( During the past 14111111113W I nabitiell six delightful weolzs in Amodio, Neva Scotia, the mole famoue by LougfelloW's " Beano:him," I lemma that 1i° 1111111 111131 boon ariseSed there for fifty years ; that the Itativem ;;;-•• r 11,elioil their doore ; that, plutitet,i,n) v 1110,110W11. and that south a condition of tistlies oonlidenee nuil mend purity existed se tield not pro- bably be duplicated on the Ameeican (1011. talent, Yet the litoptist Missionary Sodas, hes 0000 fit to send a mismionary down there to convert the natives, 1 hare been ever slime I canto baek what a litho easy job that tmsstonary must have, 1 110011Y MO UNTAIN MEP, The Monter Itonird. In the perenit a Reeky Mommein stheep, 11n; Mutter, to be vies:04.44 011141 haVii Puniness for tho inotuttaios, ;atm foot, !mod wind, awl 0 heed tei lietglit will turn. 'cheat rept tee, Willi pit I hoirio and liersereralle0, Will, Howler Inter, as 1110 limier gains expe; 10;vs, reward hitn with ample rettlio Sometimes, however, tho tun -spiel ed \call Moppets end t he following tale will 00000 1011 examplo, 11,'o w.sre outlying well 111.1 111 110 111011111111 110, al111 most, any hoer of the day sheep could be neon with glasses, There were t wo fine rtune in particular 1111.1 0011 1.011111 see iL1/01113 11 Mile and half from camp, otratopying the slope of a roolzy poiii ot. prommitery that jutted out front a spur of the range, SOW, due eare, Mid not, making a sound, I made 0, 110,011 stieyessful etalk. Peering over 1 110 ledge 1 juin raised my head enough 10 he sure my gaud; wam mtill there. wore there, sure enough, within seventy - live yards of ine, totally uneonseious of danger, when a' 1 of a they eprang to their feet and ilitebeil away from belinv as though poseeesed of a devil. I fired Mistily, but, of course ntiesel, turning, tried to rtm back to head 1 !tun oil, wonder- ing wIt 11 hail startled t out, as I knew I had 100,(1 mi 1,0100, 11, a few ;•010113110 1 had the mortnication of seeing my woo111.110 victims lentielino aeroess the narrow ledge that separatird Glom fret; the mountain, If trei- MOM, I thought with matisfasition that at least one would tneet its death from niy companion in billing, but, Mae olthough the nuns almost. kimeizeil him down, his cart ridge missed fire. Roesonthes oty slmes, soon joimel my cott!pat, he; an() 11011 1 he eitrione 1- V0111 Itre 1111I 1,3,on 131,3,1m eobjeet of, 11 0001114 1 II,11 1 1.1.1a rebe11341 1, Well iloWn on 1 110 proilloil1 ory, I dike tt11.13eil iL cougar lt ieb e tly these for the wane porpose I byli33, 1 Wii lel) liall 810011111y 1'0110 37,331 Ith, ;Li penee.,Iral toRatell the sheep, Old \Yr/oily (leAerilf,..1 it OA /0 ly amusing—I SW3111:10., 11, eve after t It.; lb1111.4, ma the panther sneek'ing tlii1V11 11p1111 me. The " Depression" of idlen•iss. One of the most stigeostive and interesting of he papers wl,1,111 have Leen coiled hall! by the pre.sent agitation with regard to the condition of out, taredog poptiladen te that ou " Aoriculturel 1 b•pressom 111 tode et 'rime,' contributed by President 1) ivitl Starr Jorilau, of the Leland e1tionford, 1.7111 versity, 0 direr, t hi, to the October Forum. laraeiden Jordan mislaid tos that ttgri eiti tur- al depression 11, this country is due ithietly to the idle habits of moat of our farmers. lie cites as an illustration to thie theory his experi ince one ilay when the train in 1011011 lie travelling stopped:1E a little town no Indians, called Cloverdale A commercial traveller, doaling in groceries and tate, ce, got off; EL emote of live chickens was put on ; wed the ears shorted again, stopping of a troin was no rare sight in that Village, for it happens two or three time every day. The people had no welcome foe the commercial trowel. let ; no tears were 0110,1 over the tleparture of the eloick,tos yot on the station steps I summed forty moo osel Imp, who were there \slum the trzoin eadte boys, wlin ought t s have been at work in the fields ; village boys, W1111 might, have been doing aonialohig, sienewien is, every interest of economics and eistheties alike calling them from the village, :owl off to the fill.11113. 1:Wi3 111011 1111011lielf I,/ all the inteiness of the 000 thm. The s.,litary passeuger went lois own way. The rest 'were there because they hail not the 111,31'a, b1l'ell4til to go am-Ny.110.e else, They stool there on the suotioto steps, ea:100110d ghosts, ilcad to all life and hope, with enly imam enough to stand around and gape." President .Tortlan regarils state of affairs as typhatl of that- which very generally prevails in those farming districts where depreseion" exists. lie fiade only one remedy for it and that iz industry. If the farmers are " eternally vigilant," he believes that they will prosper, He does not deny that the farmers Hie handicaped by bad laws aml bail roads, tan he believes that these evils are merely he:Mental sad that they will in time redress': themselves. There is plenty of food for thought in Isis paper, and no farmee in the country should fail to reedit. About Eirearits, :Firearms, us distinguiehed from artillery, alienated about the pear 1 364, when aid " bauttuantious '' Were Made Perouse 00. Perugia. IIton losuite were used at, the elem. AFr.ote in 1 4 1 3 ana 141 toneea ill 1430. Tebee for. tiring balls Will gunpowder, eapable of lraing held in the hand and called see," piens," came into use in Eloglend u1 14 ; and in 147 1 600 Flemings, ormed with hand- guns, each of which requited two men to manage, accompanied Edward IV. when he land od tot Ravenemus A. corps of argue - boomers Ives formed in 1 4713 and in 15 10 the Swise had 500 cavalrymen, armed with hand -guns, doing service) in Italy. The wheoldock pietol had become quite oconmon in Germany as early as 1512, but its use did not spread to other European countries un- til nearly a quarter of 0 eentury later. By the use of " light firearms '' at the Battle of Pavia, February 24111, 1 525. the lipaniarde defeated Francis I, of France. Pavia was the first considerable battle in which tiro. arms were used. Muskets was first used by the Deice of Alva against the Flemings in 1567 ; they were introduced hoto tho French army in 16 14. The firelook came into uso in 1 6(1!) and the fftil aboa 1 671. A braem firearm called a "Miley gun," in the shape of a walking sane, was luvented in 1112, Mit Wail 110Ver very generally adolitN1, The next stop forward was the invention of tho '1 harpoon " gun, this iu 1781. Forsythe took out his patent, for ignitiug gunpowder on the peroussiou principle April 1 1, 1607. l'ereuesion caps were first used by the Freeth army no 1830, and by 1 llo English in ll358. Shiee that, time there haVO been many improvements in tirearme in both the Old and tho Now worlds. Wore romale attire .A.11 His Lifo, ISlaily examples aro 11101011 of women dreseing as men, but until lately no ease has been kuown of a man going about diuguised ail a W01111111, A Man Lamed Sismel, eeventy- Iwo years oltl, employed 14,1 000lo, Wa0 tali ea 00 1110 hospi1 lo; :1aiet A it , oine, Paris, itefferhos from gran lit is. M ititalson, IL01111011 1. 01 1111'1 dr, se, foi a woman, Ito was talseit the wood reseerts1 tor members of the wad, 1 33. ; 11 l 1 1' ;.,1,13.1 I'M 111V ' ,a., w,1111, ; I.; 4oh., ettaa 114 Si311.1 s•.) s 1 i1•1 1,r 001, 11, 1,1 ... ho dos esat: -011 by I " ,..!„.1,,/ in in ,ler deter. 11.1100 whalwr he Ned' boi military iterviee. When he woos sleventeen yeats 1M Wont a eervion all to a form 'n Lin -sur -Mer. lie remained there eleveit „ set st, Ito learned 1 0 cook at Cann and wont to Paris, where ho was employed as cook for ferty year , eithee 111 prit, frinilies or in boss' scheme, 7 UTE FOREIGN NEWS. 0,4I0 a rertioin portioa of the Ural di01,0101. 00111118 are 1110 only working male used, somo lorgo fame poseeseing a hundred earn- . The reoeipts of the Bayreuth F00111'161 0,11101111led 10 S1 08,000, a great financial nueoess, Next, year there will be ton perform:Levee of 11 Parstial," seven of the " ei0lersiiiger," and three of TIL111111111180r." There ie no doubt, gap tlie London that " the contuntes of British and gYricolkiemeLt;litoriste at 1101 Paris opera, ure diss The most oar:et:mate town 111 Franco 000108 1,0 Y.Veloi. poptIltailth Of 8,1100 1130 41,03•0300,1 groat ly ..111, 0 1 110 11101 00118U13, 10111 almost outitedy :till 'lei the males. There are 31/0 11101•0 1101141,13s than 141311f 10118, 50 1nore wooded wenten Minn marriel men, fuel S1S more widow,: than widowers. .A commit tee a Frenell tolreet is said to have ileadeit to reeotallete 1 the adoption a a lettest plate for the Whim ry, mode of nino parts of eoplair and one of ;,111n,inum, equal to 0 steel plate of hree tams the 1h:elutes% It will only Ira worn in time of action. offisers lo 'Ming hnuorery monk lute aecount there are 2,11ao Generals in the I 1rith4; artily, or nearly trio fm every hun- dred soldiers:, Itim•nite of Serawak. Boraeo, has suceessor nas tteereell that he oball hie 11.51 Ihe age of 1 7. There o rs two ilitegers to France, eayie ,1 ules ;sinew. " (10roso,y 1:1,11 The nranior leso Moot! tent ,itiet, cron. smelt, Mu the diolgee triad moeialise; had Prwl°11"`"1 licooke, „s ille1131(%e(1 Alice lite 100grus; at Beds. A areitik; 0' Prowl:men have made a hart> of wore': strings twisted front etripst of Amerloan tir. 'rimy pl sy on is with leather :dors,' civets d with resin, mai the tone is deser11,tel tos inderfolly per, A Prenell Judge Hemmed 00 an ioteresting argument the pi:ellen whether to, veloci- pede is 0, eerriags and 0111+,01 to the radio- aryre2111al for eat vying Limes bicyclist having rin,i en without a Ism p. The peoseent ion commode') ;hoc iseyele waa eerriage, ittosteuch 1113 it 11;113( in,trunient of iranspiesathin en ;wheels. defen- den 00111143.1 argued that tioe bieyelist was. a 1%01 80111411, 1 110 bicycle taking the place of the horse. TSe Judge decided favor of Goa view. The 1 Segos Danish hound 110W living is thought ti, ledmig to tile Czar. It was presents u 1 to the Czarimon, few yeareagobother falls er, the 0ing of Deumark, The dog is gener• ally found in, the hall leading. to the Czar's private apartments, and the Lanperor places geeat eentideece in the moral efiect ot his presence. Shibata Zeshin, the greatest worker in Sap anose lacquer ever known, has juet died a_ the Roe of 83. His work first attramed at tention in 1 844. It was a votive tablet in the shrine of Ole villege of Oji, Lear Tokio, where it soil. 10, Zeshin began to paint fane 10110,1,,111111v.ortzeol up to within live days of Ids 'Pee year1y itinealays' pitgriauga to tito ',twine of Oar Istily 01 the Dionss at lieti:zirit has 1:0•111 hel 1 with geeat fervor, Notre I /moo les Danes 10 tlie patron of seafitring people, mid is greeds- venerated by tile men ougag- is 1 o the leelend tieheriee, W110 leave INA. 1 irk M April anti return in September. They immediately visit the ehrine and offer their prayers. '1 Russiau notitity ire le compr.rativoly tos wretched iiremn =oat ees na the pensanory, In Ostuber there will be nearly 900 estatee belonging to nobles sold by etiction at the hist:wee of the State Bank that lias loaned them money on morgagoe. The estates. will bring far less than their mortgage value,. un account of the inability of Jews, foreign- ers, or foreign syndicates to acquire landed' property. At the meeting of the Tokio Tokyotawai, a society formed for geographical, historical, and commute:lid imptiry, the Chinese repro - :mutative Li, known there as Lord Li attraada great deal of attention by au addrees on the two great Oriental countries. '' the Eiett," the speaker observed, " there are otilsi two independent, Motions—Japan and China. If we unite it is easy for us to outdistance European nations, widish rise mid fan in turns, and none of whieli have an antiquity equal to ones." The Korean _Mini. ster likened his emontry " a bud which. would soon bloom," TM: (Airman Soe1aliste are in a very- per. turbed state. Two weeks ago at Berlin a meeting of the it trty 000010/lea a. serious disagroement hommen tho Allen and the J Amgen, the old mei young seutiona The yeung fellows say that otouial democratic ideas cannot be realized by parliamentary tuition, anti thin the proment leaders are timid to uselessneee. A nieniber, wbo defended. the present lenders, Bohol, Liebk- neeht, and Geillenberger, said that the latter bad spent more yenrs in prison than many of the young mon had been Soeitolists ; but if the latter wanted to make to revolu- tion they might do it on thole (Aim responsi- bility. After prolonged excitement resolus Mous wi re passed in favor of the present leaders, but:11100h is expected ab the meeting Outober at Italie. Sine° the chme of tho Chiliton revolution much attention bas liecu peicl in Germany to the ueeds of the German navy hi ease of' South Aniericon disturbances, and thero are loud denuteds for more swift cruisers of the style of the ships of the white squadron. The slowness of the frigate Leipsio and the corvettes alexaudrine and Sophie in their voyage from Tokio to Valparaiso has been the text of noielo bitter criticism. After commenting upon the sixty-four day voyage from Tokio to Valparalect, a MIAMI writer in the go/nisehe 1Z, Now says " 14'hoever has been ignorant of this ehould learn from the Cloilian revolotion Goa, howeverbign.na powerful a, man.of -war is, such slowness is disastrous to its useftilues0 in emergencies. w1. mess is one of the first requirements in the navy of toolny." A romorlable foature of the great French nionieuvrea Wad the precision with width the troops marched into camp after to day's 14 0010. ' They moceil easily entmgh," SONS 1..11 Finglis1111111,11 who was present, 11 and the ortillers. got from tho field rapidly anti in beautifill're der." Despite tho heat the men Were 11lIVLir 1310N -01,01y falgoedi and upon tho toppeartuera of A, high oilleor or functionary of Gm War Who, nover foiled to salute with tholes issien t 1ra Ilsom perele. The new artillet y 10,10 i00011 IA) 011,01,1y NA:WV With 1,110 matt Ph el I '1,1 111 IN, 1111/. 1 1111.11 PIN of older loodchi 111.1 110110. 1 :spertsz eccompruiled e. soy bat y te net,. Goo number of diss ara, sees 11.101. ',14,11,11111,11..1;17g'11:' i111111,X1, srliouhlering teas ti pot holly c edi Able. All the tpe,ir rii,lesi,Wassme,,nonneerd itreid required by tht. troops was baked in fi 111 ovens, six of which, in 13er•Sur-Anbe, turned 001 10,000 loaves in en afternoon.