Star of the Cape, 4 March 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 4

biMd mmy mm maim m mom m &a*Ur baked bv dipping Ihe W in daen cold water. Mid warming throngh in a bake oren. Kaah brand mi^bt bn ! that in thrown away it Ain wore goonrallj pnetioad than itia.

mnnhod potatoaa, three-quartern of a pound of batter,throe-quartern of pound annar, four egga, one gill of brandy, one Work the potatore and butter well to-

quick

• Umre Sronoi Oark.—Boat three egqn two minntoa, add one cap and - half of nagar, beat two minuien, o cup of flour and one teannoonfal cream of tartar, beat one minute, a half a cap of cold water with half a b apoonful of aoda and a apoonf ul of > tract of lemon, beat one minate, a one oup of-Sour, beat one minu Splendid. Arena Tn»ro*rn.-Peel nb largo pudding apploa; boil to a palp, mix with nagar, dor on and lemon-pod to taate; lot thia mixture aland till quite oold, then mix with it two onnooa of dried onrranU. Hake e light puff e o, end AH in with it e urge flet ng tin, end pour the mixture in. Coror it with the pantry, and bake half an hour in e hot oren.

crime. The four ooolioe all spoke at when they were eeked by the Coro- ___ die usual Hiring of questions, ntterly^oreignto the point *^~~~~ id their anawoe were aooompeniej ith a chorea of waiiiog by the twenty latiTee, and of malediotions by the .JOtrieuda. The hubbub was fearful, and the Coroner soon thought he had

had enough of it, body to bo sealed .

•aken away for burial, ho began to nake for hu chair without grring any rerdiet. Neither rolatirea nor fnenda aonld bear of thia, ao they kicked the 'otiin oyer, polled down the mat-ahed .hat waa doing duty for a oourt-honee, ind began to hustle the Coroner and

lie. His sedan-chair waa banged all and kept there, —*

enaned between h and the deceased's relative

friends, in which e fet

—For an Invalid with

preferable. One paper

poor one pint of oold upuu end let it diaeolve ; then edd one pint of boiling water, stir ' it wall, end edd

one pint *' r

of while

an one-half poand t it in molds, and place for as hour

— of law and pnnohingsomebody'ahcad, joined, the'fore front of the battle, fared badly, as tbs scattered chignons and back hair plentifully scattered on the ri ’ betokened, end a few of tho m prominent friends' noses bled, bat great barm was done in the scuffle.

clear of the crowd. Next day, when k d sufficiently recovered from his to: r, ho gave a verdict of willful murdr

a small quantity of oold milk, and me tomatoes. Thane she old be stirred in simultaneously with tho aoda; edd some rolled crack era and serve immediately. Thia la about equal to oyster Borax, a ounces; gum arable, 1 drachm; hot water (not boiling), 1 quart Stir, and aa toon as the Ingredients ere dissolved, add three tablespoonfuls of strong eplrilB of camphor. On retiring to rest wet the hair with the above liquid, and roll it in twists of paper, u To HiV* Coukud Bny drier.—After it is oold, and not dry aa a chip, pat it Into boiling water when it is pat on to oook, end do not take it out of the pot

Iho people ivoid being

stains soap. Mix some siareh to a thick paste with oold water, end spread it over the soaped places ; then expose the linen to the sun end air, end if the steins have not disappeared in three or four days, rub off the mixture end repeat the process with fresh soap' and starch. Afterwards dry it; wet it with oold wa-

Mr. Joseph Day, of Wenhan^some years ago, bought a small farm, on which was a cedar swamp of throe sores. The value of tho swamp was reoonked at $S0 aa sere, about the value of the wood ou it, It wee connected .with e pond whose surfaoe was but little below that of the swamp. A thinking, induatrious man, Mr. Day believed he might mike this swamp, apparently of up value, e source of greet profit, end about ten yean ego laid his plant accordingly. He worked at hie trade see shoemaker in the forenoon, and spout the afternoon on Ms land, aa much time aa possible on the swamp. He first cat off the wood, sailing it for MO an sore. He then lowered the outlet of tho pond so ee to bring its surface seven feet below the awamp, and ont ditches through the swamp, to drain it thoroughly. He dag out the stumps of the trees, many of them the remains of trees eutoi years ago. and that secured wood enough to last kis family for yeara. Ha took off two fast of mod, making about alx hundred oords to the sere, which he has sold for «l.Ms sold, or at the rate of S3,700 for the three acres. Some of the mud he burned with pieces of slump, and sold for <S per oonL After tho mnd was removed he planted ennthem for M S bnahel, or at the rate of

ive the awamp entirely ah berry meadow. He ***• "y *** sw the amount of *2,000, mainly from the mnd. When done he expects an income of M.OOO from the It should be added, what is certainly

by Mr. Day's own handk Wo know of no better example of what one man can do with m oedar swgmp, -0>r. J’loughTho following at prop* is of great interest k are cultivating plum trees, as any I have seen variant methods for kee ing these insects off plum trees, b

i while after bloesom-

—OT —-W born tho ooba alter the fruit ripens, as they will be found

full of

changer the ooba every f theory is this- that the

their eggs in the ooba in preference to doing so in the young ploma. Thollr.t season I triad It upSn one or two tram only, and in Iho summer waa rewarded feUoffwhen about halt grown. Next

trees, and the at #t delicious frui

i££5 p ! while ho

The Earthquake Terror of 1750. Of the memorable incidents ooi cted with the Foundry, tho earti taka of 1780 la still recorded. Ou tl hof February all London rocked tid fro With a strong convulsion, and —pie rushed Into the etreoleto buried in the tottering month later holding ice at tho Foundry chapel, dent chock passed beneath ... .he earth moved westward, eastward, and then westward again, followed by a loud noise like thunder. Wcaley hsd just given ont his text, when the Foundry was shaken violently, as if the roof would fall The women and eliildren cried out, but tho proaahor, changing hia text, road 1, '• Therefore, wo will not fear, gh the earth be moved, oto., ami filled his auditnoe with his own aken courage, Tho general terror almost to madness when an inprophot declared that on the 4 th of April another earthquake would level London end Westminster to tho excitement raged through , .... jo fetal day approached, Xnousands fled to the country. W&mea children ran through the streets the night before the ith of April,

Every opci

. filled through _ night With multitudes of id cl poor a waiting tho expected The churches were crowded rnaoonstomed worshippers. Whitefield stood np in Hyde Perk at ^3re^rilh'Ml*eo“rowrolre toen counted multitude ; end Charles Wesley, surrounded by ' "■ ‘ the Foundry, proa — sermon end chanted some inspiring hymns. The next day pieced away in quiet. The people oams beck to their houses, and Loudon has never slnoe felt so universal a terror as that year of the earthquakes.

There Urea in Ohio ooonty. not Whitesville, Daviess county, Ky., gentlemen whose name la Henry ' Tenner, egad fifty-seven years. I ver had e bed odd, 1ms never votir e President, haa never been to hie Onty-seat (Hartford), haa not voted nee 1861, though an old dtlsea, and m never bean to hia precino’ ■ieo. At the age of twmtyyears he Met, by straying, the only hone he ever owned, though he is now well-to-do farmer. He went to hunt ia mare, and failed in finding her, but found e wife end brought her homo instead. She is twenty-five yeert older : than he At the time of marriage her weight wee 288 pounds, Ms 123 pounds; now he weighs 230, end she ISO. At one time tinoo their marriage ' weighed exactly tho aame, via.: *“* ' one meal of victuals from sicl Fhan bo budt hia bouse, hr plank np a steep hill to lay the floor of e room 17x1# el two ’-it. and had six-plank seventeen feel left. - It ie Ms custom to go to s mill, three and fire miles, and cany the and meal, never using e horse, end yiug two bushels at e time. He has raised 8,000 pounds of tobeooo, besides other oropa, this year, and a horar has never been in the field. This ie tin usual crop he raiaea in the same man ner, never using a horse. He has novel hauled any firewood that he hu burned, rg it. Hie brother JonsroA weighing700 pounds -dam, walking e timber only about eight inches in width. The ' — —* —* fenced tee carrying all

placed ao u not to be tiro radiation of heat from the open doors, marked 120 degrees. In the Boe-

iring great mnaonlar effort at ..-s. In some of the open ' of glass making the ordinary si temperature la oonaideirably ove end the radiant beet to whloh the Mooted far exceeds 5 a Turkish bath the shambooms continue foe time in a moial atmi , res ranging from 106 to 110 degrees, enamel works men labor daily in a at Mover 000 degrees. On the Bed itoke’wiTu’ltf of these oaten doea any epecL or type of disease develop itself.

covers 8,111 scree and contains abont email. It ie forty miles from Bam.cjjy.g-

rasfflijspsp Every Day nn Xiioreiao in Flesh end Weight is Seen and Felt Tho Groat Blood Purifier

Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Tumor of 12 Tears Growth Cored by Had way's Resolvent PRICE $1.00 PER BOrriE. DR. RADWAT’S Perfect PnreatiTe aed ReplatinE Pills, r^sreway, retailing (rets