-.- T o *?-- ' ••'. V" '••'• 13,201.. 0
~ .Jiie, aong-standiiig...dispute ..betwcSen Cottar-nud the miners at Cardroua lias at Jenglh' been settled by the latter payiug the sum of £3OO for "ten acres of the agricultural ldasehold-'held by the former. The ''Argus' hopes that no more agricultural leasjes. in 'that, district will require to be bought out at the value of £3O an .acre.
•■- is -agitaiins: tliesubject jof cremation^of the dead in ; England. lie not only 1 repeats all the arguments in support of this disposition of ;hut demonstrates that, at the present day,; when the science of hygiene has made; puch progress, 'arid' especially in a country" like Great Britain,;; where every -inch :d£ ground has Its value, and where* the ula lion i s put. of. proportion to t'hearea/ of <he soil, it--gh : buia-be uudersfoorl:iha^ : t;he. organic iirinciples emanating from decayed corpses both poison the water and; engender endemic.'maladies. /;■.:-!/ : '- ; -■'-;? Very good butter it is stated, is pre-" pared now by a buttcr : Oinanufacfory: at New York, 'according foiiowing process :—Agents, are employed to visit slaughter-houses/and: buy up all the beef suet. . This :is carted- to"the factory and cleansed. Then it is put into meat choppers and minced- flae. : It is; afterwards.';. placed in &■ boiler with:-as.much water ,in bulk .as itself, A steam--pipe is introduced "among;' the particles of 'suet,.'. andtheyjiro melted. The refuse of the;rne;mbranc goes to the bottom of the water,; -the oily removed.; This consists of butter matter and. stear-1 ; inc. A temperature of 80 deg, melts:the i former, and leaves the stearine a,t;thebot-: torn. Tlie-'butter matter or cream is drawn off;: about 13 per cent;; of (fresh? milk 33 added and the necessary salt and Ihe whole is churned for -ten or fifteen; rain utes. The result is.. Orange county; butter at about one half ;the usual cost. ; The stearine is soldat 12e.- a -pound'-to the candle-maker, and the refuse"at 7c.;a v pound to the manuiacturcr of /food ;fqr : ' cattle. A company with a-capital-of; 500,000-dols.: has been organised for: the manufacture^ a>nd it is expected,that tlie dividends 1 will amount to 100: per cent. In the:mean-. lime a.lchennst in France is reported to ; hnje made milk from grass, - hut as : the milk thus'made.is much more costly than old-fashioned milk," his discovery- is' not; likely to be so profitable us, that;of:''.the : butler manufacturers.—' Pall; Mall ; Gazette. 11 ..;:'.v'■':./. - : - /;://.::-;:::V:: : -::/ ■■
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MIC18731024.2.24
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Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume IV, Issue 242, 24 October 1873, Page 7
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389Untitled Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume IV, Issue 242, 24 October 1873, Page 7
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