Star of the Cape, 20 October 1875 IIIF issue link — Page 4

dry. Afterwurd n put in gluu jnn wd oo Thors ia good n

dog oonTeyod the diaooao. Ho hod potirnt, on.I hi* h*£*doubUo*o booome imigrgnotod with tho molori*. Garry bo*

it i( hobitaolly ooton thoy will in irm of yooro offoct tho floohy tiwiae, ond nltimotoly tho okin. Thoji " hue of mnuy Anglo.Indian* i* nr •nn-lmrning at ‘ ' ■• • •

half a pint of oour milk, or bnttonnilk, two toaoupfal* of angar, ono Uacupfal of bnttor, and-tlmo ogg* wrll boaton; add to tin* a toaapoonfnl of aalorsta* diamlrod in hot water, a toaapoonfnl of •alt, hull a nutmeg grated, and a lee•poonfnl of powdered cinnamon ; *ift in flour enough to make a amooth dough; roll it out not quite* quarter of an Inch think ; out In '«nnU' oblong piece* f divide one end in three or four part* like Anger*, and WU: t* pUtt them owe, each other. Fry them in boiling lard. Tbeoe oakea maybe' dut In rtripe and the enda Joined, to make a ring, or in any other ahtpe. WlBtertM Gpltl*. It i* a well eettled principle In pfcyiiology that all animal Ufa la supported or anataioed by the oombuotion of food In the ktomach, chiefly through the aotfow - that the colder the oil-

er them. Oarer them with a doth and let lie twenty-four hour*; the cabbage on a uere. and ^ i clean Jar, which ohould be well with allspice, whole pepper, and ■Hood ginger. Poor over it oold ri: and tie iv closely over. Ooooainrr Pcddixo Mix a grated noanut With half a pound of powdered white angar, add a quarter of a pound of Ted butter, beat up six egg*, leaving half the whites, then one grated nutmeg. Let all be will.mixed. The dixh to be lined with pie crust of the following proportions: One pound of flour, three quarten of a pound of but-

ypu CM «vt it), with a krout-cutter. pat both in a wooden bowl, chop together, sprin- .. ..... . • jimaiei H stand for

lijnU. put in an

place, and It will keep for month*. To Behotb Mrtnww.—Make e ws, eolation of ohlarids of hme in wot (about a heaped up teupoanfal to quirt of water), •train ft, carefully *i e garmantinto it; at

n the am for a

to aeglec* keeping IheooUie warm and dry by proper houatug and protection during the wear* weather of our whiter. Animal* left out in barn yard* or 'dpee cattle alied* during the winter seseon innrisblyloaefle*. u it 1* almost impomible for them to eel enough to ■apply the beat needed to keep them comfortable, in good condition, or in n healthy atato. Yet ncthiugik more common throughout many porta of our oonh-^ try titan to see stock thus -treated, exposed td ruin, snow, oleet and frost dar-

probablyReceive lie appropriate ment hereafter, not nr* takes ears to punish ben all violation* of bar gnat low of compensation, so that he who (teola from hi* animal* that which properly belong* to them Ond which ilia hi* dnty entmdly find* thst ha loro* all

w writh wvrm

leuea and oaU-intaraat alike nqnin that animal* should bs wMl r *

Min I n sty. the manure beep mer featiforou* odarat Good, fnab, clean water, and tnndanoa, ia oos of tho moat important iqnisitch for milch oow*. and ohould be in oonvadieut plaoea, when stool ' bo required to travel long diataiwa ■lake.their thirst. If opting* and running streams cannot be had, a good wall, with windmill and pomp, make* an efficient •ubatonco, and the waste , if necessary, be oonduolad .back the well, oo aa to keep up a constant supply of good fresh water.— WUlanfi Practical Putter Book. IIlata tm the Haaaahal*. iBTnuwn Pi*.—Out off tho legs ol the birds; soaaoa them with herbs and ; lay in the dish, and be-

If of the privilege hi* property nved from forfeiture and hia family from dishonor. In some oountrti act of suicide is looked upon *a'b *nd frequently the son* of Ih* aoU-mur-denr on rewarded for the conn. their father with important appointments and promotions. The Stoics, the " plea of Zeno, taught that suicide

had nothing to fear after death, ho |U liberty it became irksome to him. Pytho- • hold that no m*n h*d the right' > hi* poet without an order from 1 ,'a life woo hia o< he could diapoeo of it as be pleased. Egeaina woe laid to be ao eloquent praise of death that hundred* who heard him mode away with thonuwlvea, and

ordered Egeain* away from Alexandria, ' tho people at ones cam* to theii cue Urns in France poison waa fur. niahed to *U who could give aatiafactory that it' was better far them to die o live. A cobbler who had deter do it with eclat; oo, having prepared hispoiaon, he began a latter which woe to be read after hia daath, and to be ialt*.i of throughout tho province. He started th * quotation, and oontinnod:

The TVifiwM critiqaee severely the kind of literature provided for boy* and girl*, which, say* tho editor, is too often flabby, gushing and pretentious. It *tipt* muscle and end* in mu*h; it

English model* *s it well -*e be. little thst 1* ‘rich, strong and healthy it, and yet it is the at off, outside text-books, that ohiefly help* to make " brain* of •eboolboy* and girls been the ogee of twelve and sixteen. When the supply f»ll* the young people naturally not alow to take up those ■el* which are even more weak and

le really wise and accomplished- undn steads very well bow to awaken and t

beat thought and the noblest literary __iner. If nothing but a novel appeals at preeent to tho young girl’s capacity, give her * novel; bullet H be a standard In licraotipUon and execution. There ;not much danger of surfeiting ohllren with writing too old for them; thoroughly knows how the A*Ida of history may be modp to 'hlortnm under

Is of India 9d meritorious, bat the adf-immola-alpyresof

would defeat an English or Gen Itasaian regiment of equal nt Nothing ia recorded of our forefather* could not do, uniem it b s tho reenlte of i long training of tho eye continued foi generationa. The moat civilised am! luxurious family that ever existed, thi European royal caste, is physically aa big, as healthy aud os powerful as any people ob whom wo .have any account sen accept Thieni’ Frenchr’a Gaul in all bodily conditions, and with an increased power of keeping alive, which may bo partly twing to improved condition* of living, rat it is probably owing still more to developed vitality. There ia no evidence that oven the feeble rooee are feebler than they became after their Aral mow him and the birth of baa multiplied like the ids has had no ad ran. and till lately no portioular advantage of food. Phyaical condition depends on phyaical oonditiona, and why should a race better fed, clothed and better housed than it

MortiAed at-what they looked upon as an ignominy, many ’ suicide. Under an-

that the auioida of an accused person should entail upon him the dishonor that would have attached to him had hia •ime been proved. Among the early Christiana there wo* i ardent longing for martyrdom, and Oder tho inAuenoe of Tertullian’i saying, •• Tho blood of the martyr* is the ■codof the church,’’ number* of thorn fell viotiau to their religion* fantHdam. A biabope' council ia the fifth century

wed rite*. In the time of Louis IX. of Prenoe tho body of tho iraloid* ibjeoted to the groaMst indiguiIt WaC token from tho house through an opening mode for the purpooe, wo* horribly mutilated and buriedat night. No moaa wxa allowed for the ral of the dead man, but the charitably Isposed were permitted to prey for its •pan if they felt iuoliiied. Mahomet oxpraaaiy forbids suieide in 10 Koran, and the crime ia extoaataly

The Roman Oathollos, the Greeks, and Protaotant Epiaoopol ohurohea prohibit th* reading of tho burial service over the .body of Statute law of England prohibits it in *U aaae*. Attheiima of th*~ '

in England,

of today ore aa large as Egypt, or larger. The people of the " gn* have all the bearing and more the also of the Roman soldiery. No feat la recorded aa nsual with Greek athletes which English acrobat* oould

■d of berries! Compare and the Iriggqr Indian, rare clothe* t Tl» wearing if burdesjome—whielf the rmy doctor* in India a*

out-walked, outrawum. or strangled any German that Tsdtns ever ' about, bnt they enable him to live to seventy instead of dying at fortyfive, aa two thousand year* ago be, then probably a slave bred for the arena, would have done. even under the beat oonditlons, advances but very little in phyaical capacities, ia true; but then

o the most powerful of the old im ig force*, tho survival of the fitStill an advance ia perceptible in joint, and w* question whether s Greek ** immer would *per have crossed from Dover to Galois, just as strongly sa question whether the ancient world w poeoeased a hone which would have aohteved a place at Epsom. Why should row feeble in civilisation any more

Halted BUtre President*.

only surviving ex-Prertdent. After the death of Washington, then the only exPreeudent, lu 1799, upward of twentysix year* elapsed before another death, the number of living ax-PrandenU then inoraaiing to four. Tho greatest number living at ono time was five, in 1862,

Hoop* from MoeroTi* to th. bUa'a(JJ*)boa ' "

At-the Dubuque

homely horse celled T*ehai* waa y race. Ho began by winning the 8:16 nee, tber. 8 mlnntee, 2ri6, SriO, n two heat* of the 2:35race, when it waa entered thst he had * better reeord'than the reoe he was trotting In. HI* driver denied this *oft impeach- ' rad challenged proof. Thejndgea him up to the aloud and kboat this time be had gt wrath up, aud swore he would trick worth looking at. In the third heat be let, the sleepy horse out distanced tbs whole field easily, outj all others oul of tho chanoo of second, third, and fourth money. The ‘ ig of tho army in Flanders was ; compared to those horsemen re looped. Tho air got so hot that Lothoir and Ilia driver lit out in the night with several thrasaud dollars pull- > the greenim who played with him v During the Bailing of pools the truer bought tho field 82 against 86, jd in the end aoooped tho whole busines. The query is: * Who ia Lothoir, >d whore did he come from I" Nobody nows further thou the owner said imn from Canada. At all events he ic eyeteeth ol the ahorprat boraemc iwr. and did it oo handsomely t they did not discover it urxil ho had

potitors, and won new honors erica. They have just bora swarded — grand modal of honor la the bee' cabinet or parlor organs, at tbs World’ Lins, the capital of nppe

Or Isaoalels sad rinp Oaorf* fipaer, ire aged thirty yaan, liariig a wlfa and Alldran. waa hangal lo rayattavllla. Oa_

One trial of Dobbins' (Cragin A.Oo., PhDadel,

i you a flra believer in tte u after. Give’ it that trial, pi

grocer ho* it, or will get it.

uaeal depot at NagaasU, Japan, ava bMD adjust*,! at tbs department, ia money account la ebort (M.TU. Ho

ths rate nr forty ml threogh the walla, wrecking ths tr instantly kfillng the engineer an'

me&summ

l$490

| Geo. P. Rowell a Cn |

AGENTS ,>VANTED K.’t;

a~\££Z%J&VX alffU^L

PRINTERS 1 ROLLERS

50

“S

Crnmjra ru

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The venerable Arobdesoon Soott, ol unborn. Quebec, aayt that be ittfferw' maT'Sree weehe ,lbl| r ef'm^'psnrTl* 1 fisESHKSri

m ftS SSS*ain ttJ . .oranea and sxpanee of carrlege hire at it of tVOO-OOd. Enropean plan. * l*o more hixuriooely for the money

Ibt'anxSv

"SpMwniaigSL *“■

MAPS $t CHARTS

ghL

THE $50,000 BONANZA

SMITH ORGAN 00,

gjjggjaaiaip DONTfeip

Ace: it Wanted jn Everr Totn

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Pi-.a-.rj.Tre-y.-rr.yl.yr HEW YORK TRIBUNE. The Leading American Newspaper. THK BUST ADUBTIalNd >iri>ir.W, COME AND *SEE ' "~s^Ege:‘

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Shining River! ,ur. | y.Ma.t~'--

TV WgitVri «1 Modern Chemlxtry. Samparlai and Us Aarfata. DE. BABWAY’8 Sarsapari Ilian Resolvent, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. wrai^-naeii r ^la l e*wwMele? > Bm* eew^eerfeeat; - eewsn, rad trarrara, M

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flimtux. Tl K 'oo 11) M i l ulii. u "u , tlii'fii uja * “ u rni,s : i7?ifmjfr nT ” DR. RADWAY’8 RE6DLATING PILLS