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The Exeter Times, 1888-4-26, Page 6leorlearMettege.r.:1.1.1M9.44ell• .„ "Did ;ft Know 't was Loaded" May do for a stupid: boy,8 cactom ; but what can be said for the perent who soes his child languishing daily mei fella to recognize the want at tonio akia blood -madder Ferinerly, a canine of bittere, or sulphur and molasses, 'tvas the rule n welleregu 1 et ea remit lea t lett now aU intelligeut housebolds keep Ayeris Sarsaparilla, tvhich is at once pleaaant to the taste, and the most seatching and affectiae blood medicine ever discoVered, Nathan S. Cleveland, 27 E, Canton st., Boston, writes "My daughter, tIONV 21 years old, was hi pertectaith ntil a year ago when she begen to complain of latigue, headache, debility, dizziness, indigestion, and loss of appetite,. I coin tended that all hor complaints originated au impure blood, aud induced her to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. This medicine 400u. reatored her blood -making organs to healthy action, and in thui time ratiatab- lished her former health. I ilnd Aye's Sarsaparilla a most valuable remedy for the lessitude and debility incident to spring time." J. Castright, Brooklyn Power Co., Brooklyn, N, Y., eays : "As a Spring Medicine, I find a splendia substitute for the cildrtime compounds in Ayer's Sarsaparilla, with a few doses or Ayer's Pills. After their Ule, I feel free:her said stronger to go through the summer," Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPAUED EY Dr. J. C. Ayer. 44 00., Lowell, Mass. Wee at; six bottles, $6. Worth $5 a nettle. THE 'EXETER 'MIES... Is palms ae a every Thursday inocuing,at the Ti MS STEAM HUNTING HOUSE mato-street, neari y o isp osi te rittou's Je'welei y Sorete;()ub.tyJ hn White & Son, l'rt- to, incurs. OV ADVIIttTISING First insertion, per line ..10 canto.' So ch s a !meg serti..u.per line e mime To Meer° ittiertion, advert isioneuti- should be sent in notlater than Wednesday morning Aur;"r 0 ft PE CNTING Dan tt:TelarieT is one f the U.IeStLUU best equipped in the County taixou. All N: c;) u arabtoo. to ea will receiv ur prompt attention. 4f.* ,..».•‘--.2"All,Vt...MA**1!tli41"447,a1-111411.434a744‘31**/"4"413t4a pond of raieins, one teaepeonful each of oin• Damon, cloves arid nutmeg. Heat all together /Were Wing. This quaatity will make six pies and will keep well if not ell used at oue bali log. COCOANUT CANE :—.One cup of sugar, ono. half cup of butter, ono -half cup of milk, hi wh holm cu pful of d essic ted cocoanut has been soaked an hour, two eggs one scant tea. spoonful of soda and two teaspoonfuls of cream tartar, and two cups of Nur. QOCOANUI!Pi mhIlalf oup of butter, one and ahelf elms of elegem half a cup of milk, two and a.heif cupfuls of flour, yolks et four eggs and one whole egg, half a tea. spoonful of cream tartar and iourth teaspoon- ful ef soda. Bake in four lemma. Beat the whites of the eggs to a froth, and make stiff with pow tiered sugar and a little flour. Put hetween eaeli layer of cake the froatingi then the eleasiheted cocoanut, and frost the top. Cneem Bue—Oxietegg one and one-half cups of ugar, one and oniehalf tablespoons ot ileum one cup of milk. Bake with a bet, tom crust only. 0II000iATE CASE OE PIE :—Two cups of the feels older now in some ways than she sugar, one cup of butter, tour eggs, four cups HOUSE1101...a.). . The DaUghter at Home. In one encePt a Chriatiaa land is the daughtertl ileme regarded as a precious thieg. .Everywhere in the heathen world, Li yeu have been bora into the family of either prince or peaemat, there would have been the deepeet 'regret and shame, lt is very difficult, to make Cauadien girls under. tend the feeling with which gild children aro eecciamel among the people, for inatance, a chine, or cl India, where the prieciptil use WiliCO a girl can be put in her parent'? eyea is her future sale to somebody as his wife. ledeed, the whole home idea is built ripen the love of Christ, and home, as we mideretend it, is quite tamoeeible in la heath- en land. Our deughter at homc da the diviner et htir mother and the very light and pride or bee father's enos. We wth suppose her to he where ymi roMollie, jeet trippieg gayly ea 10 that enchanted grouud where the "brook end river meee" She is not very far beyond, her childhood, yet she has not. quite reached womanhood, Strange to say, will feel by end by, and sho ia sensitive to of flour, two tompooefuls cream tartar, true a degree about betng treated as a child, al- though now and then, especially in the half hour just before becbtime, she dearly loves to cuddle up to her mother and have a real ehildith couficlential talk. This leads to my first thought for you, of two eggs, two cups of suger and a little dear Mollie, end that is "Bo sure to have lemon. . mother for your best friend." It is not right Ponetio Fnum Ceitn.—One pound each of their as you grow up and form other 'Wee the flour, sugar, butter and raisins, two pounds deer mother ahould be left out alone in the of ourralitg, eneweef pound el gruel citron, sold, timidly hoveriag la the background one ounce each of mace, cinnamon, grated when you have company, and seeing herself nutmeg, cloves and eight eggs. Bake in a tie trop in the rush mad whirl of your gayety. paperdined pan. Butter the paper. Girls would not make the mistakes they, ttiton do if their =Ahem were in their full JELLY CUSTARD PIE.—One cup of sugar, a meal stimulates the ciroulation of the blood etre and one-half cups of butter, four eggs, confidence. I cannot conceive of a girl's through the vearsols. A glees of water earryieg on an absurd flirtation with her ,.offir_ cup of apple or currant jelly ;bake in washes out the mucus, partially distends fether's gardener or eloping with the coach. "a Pawl'. 2 a the stomach, wakes up peristalres and pre. . . _ r DI ZG.---Slx imam es seeeee man prepering herself a whole life -time of nafticctz, -un it , .. pares the alimentary canal for the morning teaspoonful mitt, one cup of milk, one tea- spoonful lemon. This will do for Aix tins. Filling :—Two cups of sweet chocolate, grated, oae cup sugar, one oup of milk ; boil until thick, For frosting, take the whites 1.1EALTH. Drinking Water at Meals, Opinions differ as to the effect of the free ingestion of water at meal times, but the mew meet generally received is prob- ably that it dilutes the gastric) ides, and so retards digestion. Apart from the feet that a moderate delay in the process 15 by no meene a diettdvantaee, as Sir William Roberts bee shown in his explanation of the popularity of tea and coffee, it is more than doubtful vrhether any such effect is in reality produced. When ingested dur. ing meals water may do good by weshing ont the digested food and exposing the incligested post more thoroughly to the ac- tion of the digeetive ferments. Pepsin is a oatalyptio body, and a? given quantity will work almost indefinttely pro. vided the pep-stenes are removed as they are formed. The good effeota of water, drunk freely before motile, ham however, another benefieiel resulawit washes away the notices 'which is secreted by the mama membrane during the intervals of repose, en i favors peristalsis of the whole aliment. ary tract. The membran,e thus cleansed is in a much liN44.00rsdition to reeeive food and convert it into soluble compounds. The accumulation of mucus is especially well marked in the morning, when the gastric walls are covered with a thick, tent Wens layer. Food entering the stomach at this time will become covered with this ten- acious coating, whioh for a time protects it from the action of the gastric ferments, and so retards di,gestron. The tubular coetraot. ed stomeoh, with ite puckered mucus lining and visoid °entente, a normal condition in the morning before breakfast, is not suitable to receive food. Exerciae before partaking of ism, if she were in the hebit of telling her wreikeduess through her silly sentimental. addyolksyeuolthl:Leef 6;11h:eel Peglegr 4vacr;ebgen$ro.otaniaste.;,i meal. Observation has shown that nondr- Anteing lfgaids pass directly through the mother all her daily c xperiencea and accept. Corn starch, at of hot milk • boil uu e . . 000 'Pat ' "tubular stomach, and even if food. be is thickens, theu set away to cool ; when present, they only mix with it to a alight ree,dy to serve, pour over the top the whites extent. According to Dr. Leuf, who has of the eggs beaten to a froth. . made this subject a apecial study, cold Dame PUDEING.—One cup or sugar, four water should be riven to persona who have sufficient vitalityto reaot, and hot water to ing that beat mend s sincere lovreg advice. The daughter at home should be very seicet end attentive to her father. Fathers i and daughters are often united in bonds of Ithe trueat, moat devoted atiaohmenteand a tablespoonfuls ot corn starch; stirring girl inisees. something beautiful in lite who I constantly ; add three beaten eggs flavor does not know the delight of companionship 1 and sweeten ;'pour over it a custard made with her father. Ode cif the most charming I of three eggs, two tableapoona of sugar, one wome.n whom I have ever met acted during pint of milk, nutmeg and a pinch of salt. a period of eight girlish years as her father's — amanuenais, writing his !lemmas cut for Notes. , him at his dictation, looking out his re wad fer- mura ea,ner to love a woman than to qdrinking from the fotm• l• Decisions Regarding- 1Z e7F- papers. A ny person who takes a paperre&ulailyfrom he p ost-o dice,tvhether directed in his name or anctt.er's. or whether ho has subscribed or not is responsible for )riyin 2 a person or ors his paper discontinued no must pay all aireare or the publisher may continuo to send it until the (Alt is made, and thou collect the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the office or not. 1 8 in S 11 i t s X subscriptions, the snit may be instituted in the place where the paper is pub- lished, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of niges away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to 1-,ake newspapers or peliodicals from the post. office, or reinot Mg and leaving them uncalled for is prima facie evidence of in teutionalfraul Exeter Butcher Shop, R.DAVIS, Butcher General Dealer eLI. mans ST— U as tomer s supplied TUESDAYS, T arm Ss DAYS AND SATUBDAYS tbeir residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. M Di Ar 1 PENNYROYAL WAFERS. Prescription of a physician who has had a life long experience in treating Is used monthly with perfect suceess by over 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, safe, effectuaL Ladies askmvourdrug- gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and take no substituto,.or inclose post- age for sealedparticulars. Sold by all druggists, $1 -per box. Address TEE ETJRIZEA CHEMICAL CO.. Dzeaorr, ssat Sold in Exeter by 3. W. Browning, C. Lutz, and all druggists. 13 li sample box of goods' and we will send you frees, royal, valuable Sen die cents postage that will put you in the way of making snore money at once. than anything; /Mae in America. Both sexes 'of all ages can live at home and work. in spare tim e, or all the time, Capital not roquirud . We wilt start you. Immense pay sui e for those who start at Once. BT111SON 1; Co .Portialic Maine . napproached for eem,gtelhee_reerr. -ell Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FRIEL c G :....... _ _f r_ne _ [ L.1 ‘ , L ----------,A,„ - –6–,...,— -, • j , -. 'A.... , tainsenees, of old literature, of whichdeeply he was fend. enclerstand her. The other dam I read of a sharplymentested The leading woman physician in England,' London, England, deduced from the tables one in the courts and was struck with the Mrs. (earner Anderson, makes 6'50,000 of Drs. Farr and Edmunds, the ;i,.,,,..in- ilhe sewers were disinfested by a strong solution of comely° sublimete, and militia. ated ducts opened. As a result the epidem- ic:, which was rauidly increasing virulence, Was stayed almost at mace. In leas than a week new craw) ceased to appear. Typhoid fever usually results front the use of coatarn. inated water, ,This ease, however'amens to confirca the teeobbags rot emirrent qarman authority, that the disease may be oonuntne hated through the xneclimn of the air. D. Cutler says iltthat.oeds, trepepsia is a physi olog,ical oin. The lower creatures, which we call. bretes, by intuition observe those laws of health which men, with his intelligence, dienbeys. Doctor B. Baker, F, teretarn of the Michigan Stet° Board of Health, has recent- ly called attention to the fact that quaran- tine does not deal. with the most serious dire ,earies. Cholera and email -pox kill very feW 'people in We country, while diphtheria and scarlatina carry off thousands every year, No quarantine law' is thorough.going which does not exclude all contagious diseases, as well as smallpox, cholera., and yellowlever.i Oetting sick is like eliding down hill,easy and, often fascinating. Getting well is like climbing hacking agate Often, too, the health climber has to drag after him a keavy sled load of sanitary sins., An outbreak of tyrotoxicon poisoning from cheese, recently occurred at Hunting- ton, Ind. A number of persons were seri- ously ill. One case proved fatal. Cheese is AU unsafe article of food, besides beidg het d to digest, and it promoter of dyspepsie. A Filtering Cistern. In yours and other papers I have seen di- rections for building hltering cistemer. For the benefit of your readers I give you my experience. In 1867, just outside of the water limits near the manufacturieg, coal smoke district in St. Louis, I built one, and another in 1376 in this county (Calhetue Ill.) on a farm, both in the same manner. The St. Louis eistern, after being in Use twenty years, filtering smoky and coal dust water, without any change or repairs, and is still a perfect filter, 'tis needless to say that the the others, In chronic gastric catarrh it as cistern one farm in this county as ale° afford - extremely beneficial to drink warm or hot ing sweet wateri clear as crystal. water before meals, and salt is maid in most I The main materna in both cases were cases to add to the geed effect produced._ twelve feet deep said eight feet in diameter, [British Medical Examiner. capacity abont 200 barrels each. Two feet from the matside circumference I dug a small receiver she feet deep and four deet in . diameter bored a hole from the edge of the Sonar years ago the Statistical Congress at bottom of the receiver into the side of the cistern and cemented them both. I then built a solid brick wall, arched outward, of Statistics of Sickness and Death. f tot simaily stated thee "Misa -- sits by year. teresting facts ref3peoting sickness and I hard (not gur lazed) brick, from the bottom to her fa,ther's aide the most interested and The Indiana women' prison and ref.orma- deatwh h, ich preach important sanitary sem the top ot the receiver, one cose of the certainly the most interesting person in the , tory, near Indianapolis, is managed exclu- mons without tlae aid of comment :— room.' There, seed I to myself, ir an en. 1 sively by women. "01 one thousand persoas at the age of stance of friendship between father and Marion Harland says that the coming thirty, it is probable that ten will die in the daughter. woman will have her own bank account current year; that there will be ten perma- As fathers grew gray and middie-aged What a relief that will be to the poor bus. nent invalids, and an average of twenty sick they long for the little tender attentione bands. for the year. vrhich nobody can give so graoefiilly as their A slice of raw onions well rubbed over the "01 one thousand persona at the age of daughters. The helping hand when father roots of the hair upon eoing to bed is one of seventy, it is probable that a hundred will the very best things tor any unwholesome condition of it. Green, greener, greenest are the tints of the future—and the hat or bonnet that es- capes a green bow, upholding a spray of flowers, will be something in the nature of a rarity. Both hats and bonnets grow larger— puts on his heavy cot, the last little settling touch removing. a stray speck of dust before he goes to busmees, the kiss of weleorne when hereturna at evening, ought to ba part of his daily life with his girls. If he loves music, Kitty or Susie ought always to be ready to play for him and sing to him. Many a time I should think the good man would have a little speculation in though architecturally their lines are so his heart as to whore all the money had much of the last season's that the effect is gone which he had spent in paying expen- that of looking backward through a =gril- 1 the masters, since his pretty daughter was fyiug glue. A Louisiana lady, who was once famous for her wealth and the number of her slaves, now earns a few cents a day by picking cot- ton on the plantation that was her own be. fore the war. Although a woman can't throw a stone, or sharpen a pencil, or climb a tree, she can sit on her feet in cold weather, and that's so at a loss when asked to play simple airs or sing simple songs. If I were again a girl, ' aed & daughter at home, I would know how to play what my father liked, I would learn the games of chess or checkers which pleas. ed him, and in one or another way I would : set myeelf to entertain and amuse him, so 1 that the home evenings should be full .of in. tereat d f " . i This would be partly for my brother's soinething a matt can't do to save hie blessed sake as well as for my father's. There comes supercilious soul. a period in the lives of growndop boys when Fashion has decreed that a woman may they strain a little at the leash which binds now go into a restaurant and order her din. them to the fireside. They resent control nem without lenng accompanied by. a male and regard authority as intrusive and in. escort. The absent male person la ahead milting to their manliaese. Now is the sis- the amount of her check—unless he happens ter's hour. She ehould be a person of re- to be her husband. some:es, making the evenings attractive, Out in Syracuse, 16 miles from the Color - bringing pleasant young people in, manag- ado line, on the Santa Fe road, the town ing affairs in such a way that without his council is composed entirely of women, dreaming how it is done her brother finds They are bright, active, energetic business the home attractions superior to any which women, and it has been said of them that can be offered elsewhere. they are doing better work than the body Theme are light parts of the housekeeping of men who composed the previoua council. in which the daughter at home can relieve Itis the only council of women hi the United re during the year, and three hundred will be sick or become chronic invalide. "1± is estimated that of every thousand of population there will be fif -seven sick, Scotland; in Ireland; sixty-seven head of three feet, without any increase of on an average, for the year, in inland and I passed through the wall, after there was a fifty. in France ; seventy.six in Germany; ninety- depth—i. e. it was filtered as fast as it ran four in Austria ; eighty.nine in Italy and lin when there was a three-foot portiere Spain; seventy-one in Holland; fifty-seven Care should be taken that the bottom of the filter is so raised and sloped toward the bottom layer of brick in the wall that all the water may run out leavina its bottom brick laid on the flat, in hydraulic cement, using care that no cement covered the edges of the brick. The water from the °endue- torawas turned into the receiver or fitter on the side opposite the outlet into the ciatern, and had to paes through the brick in the wall before entering the cisterns. A "man hole" was left so that the chest, leaves, ete„ could be swept up and taken out °tithe fil- ter. It was a surpriae to me when I saw that with 3,000 feet of roof, all the water that run into the filter in the heaviest rains in Denmark ; and fifty-five in the United States. , The most salubrious of these coun tri cs Ireland. . . dry, otherwise unless frequently cleaned, the . "The average number of days of sickness deposit in warm weather may become fetid. 1 per adult inhabitant in the principal eiviliz. I had at SI. Louis a sand and charcoal filter countries of the globe, is fourteen and two. made in the bottom of my receiver, which tenths. In the United States itis ten and soon became foul so that I threw it away, five -tenths. "The average loss per oent. of income from sickness in the United States is two and nine -tenths; in England, three; in France, three and fivertenths ; 10 Germany, three and nine -tenths ; a.nd in Russia, five and five -tenths." Milk and Meat. and euhatituted the brick ivall. The atiyan. tages of this mode of trite/mg over any other 1 have seen are: The water being filtered before entering, the cistern is always sweet. It can be cleaned at any time when the water in the cistern is below the bottom of the receiver. All the extra cost is the brick wall and the two feet of sewer pipe; tor the receiver is just so much more storage capacrty. It witl last a life -time. VVhen A precept of the Mosaic law prohibited the brick become dry the pores are reopened the uee of milk and meat at the same meal and they are aeain ready to do their` work, At least this seems to have been the idea, and the cistern is always clean. We never held by the Talmudists, and now taught and practiced by orthodox Jews and Jewish rabbis. There has lately been quite a little discussion of the question in New York, by rabbis, °herniate, doctors, and journalists, without getting at the root of the matter. There is, doubtless, a physiologicel reason for the prohibition. Meat does not generate have to pump out the water to. clean the cistern. Use hard salmon brick for the wall, FLASHES FROM THE TELEGRAPH ter mother, as in the care of the parlors, of States, germs in milk, as one chemist asserted, but The Russian war flotilla at, Azof will be the eilver, the makine of clesaerts, the mend- Mra. Solly, who hex lecturecl and written a mixture of meat and xxillk undergoes de- reinforced by twelve torpedo boats which mg, the teaching of ilia younger chill•en. much on the subject, lays dovnt six rules for 1 cay with great readiness; and when placed have been ordered in Frame. The sweet, pure boa of one such daug ter young ladies to guide them in carrying on 1 in a stomach not prompt in itit digestive 1 itis said the Pope has instructed Arch - rises before me as I write. I met her yes - ;conversation. They are :—Talk as little as processes, is pretty certain to undergo septic I giegep waled to compile a report on the terday in a muddy street down town. A drizzling rain was failing, and the pedes. possible about yourself; do riot monopolize Changes. This is chiefly because milk is Ii National League for comparison with Mgr. the talk but aim to lead others to talk ; never digested but slightly in the stomach, beidec,Persieo's report. triana/who :dipped and splashed along, their ! • • • umbrellas battling the occasional gusts, It is reported that the Czar's journey to their feet smattered, their general air that of the CaucaSus has been postponed in cense. contradict , do not allow a pause m convex- more r3tcLily' digesteti by tbe panereatie sation, but do ot exhaust the subject., ; do jilice. 1Vleatischielly digested m the stomach. not jump from subject to subject, but lead The milk in retained in the stomach weeily from one to another. during the three to five hours required diecomforn looked as though they wished quence of the outbreak of a separatist move - for the digestion of the meat. In spite of wintry breezes and ;ripple' g When taken by itself, milk leaves the A settlement has been affected between themselves well indoors out of aueli weather. meat, headed by the nobility of Georgia. air, we women are beginning to think about stoinach• in about two hours, as shown by the Ilamiltou master builders and the em - our sprieg gown's. It is well to decide what Dr. Beatirriont's experimenes upon St. Mar- ployees, which, it is believed, will terminate we are going to wear now, before warm tin. The unnatural delay' in the Stomach the labour troubles in that city for this weather occupations come crowding upon es nta v thing of the adag by getting the sewing out of the wav, A, self is led to undergo clecompcmition also. 8 Chicago capitalists have purchased frona gained causes the milk to fermenn and the meat it - us, to say noe 0 visit to one of the big irnportieg dry -goods This is doubtless the true explanation of the Mr. It, Tough, of Sudbury, an interest in homes willenable us to form a shrewd guess experience which leads many persons to the Tough and Stobie gold mine for $32,000 suppose that they cannot use milk. They a,nd have invested $70,000 in ma...hinery to say it makes them " bilious," which means simply that they have indigestion when they operate the mine. The eentenoe of Rev. Father 1.41(Fe,dde.n, USemmitte•agrees perfectly with fruits and who was sentenced to three. menthe lals • ' • • h veretables P rams, less satiefactorily net g . ris.onm.ent for holdiug matt landlord and We have met huudreds of pertains who anti police meetivgg, on hie appeal to the thought they could not use milk, but who 1 Dublin courts, was increased to six months. were able tc 'use it with impunity as soon as The Berlin correspondent of the Lencion they learned and avoided the use of milk Lancet believes that peritracheitis, with and meat at the same meal. Milk is a pymmia, is present in the ease of the Em - natural food for man. Flesh is air uneatur- peror and the general medical opinion re- al diet, for which an eatirrlcal appetite has garde' his end as very near. been created by indulgence. At a recent meeting of the committee on a re Presently I met my ,enowdrop of a girl— L - suddenly —. 8,nd we both exclaimed with pleasure. She was buying Sunday -school sandy, she told me, and I happen to know that sash errands are .among the constant happenings of her day. To care for an in- valid mother, to be eyes and hands for a busy father, to overlook the wardrobes, manners and morals of little sisters, and to have time to answer everybody's call et as to the prevailing styles for the comieg every and any moment are the aweet duties 808500- accepted by this young girl, who is my ideal The morphia habit among women is much of a dettghter at home. more common in Philadelphia, says The The daughter at home should Maud quiet. Times of that city, than many reimpose. Even in the late severe weather women, young and old, could be seen hurrying to the drug stereo, and hi most cases the only BELL( COr y GlielP111 011t lybu t firtnlyfor temperance, for good morals, and for reverence to Grad. If her friends of the other ger know that Miss—receives none to her favor who are opposed to re- medmine they were after was morphia in its ligion, that she will not countenance young different forms. The moat fashionable men who ate profane or of doubtful virtue, method of indulgence ie by hypodermic in. Irfnis--will be a public benefactor. Very jeetion arid rime of the syringes used are O. 80 S. GIDLFY sedgy anm d gently may her influence be ex. gold arid silver mounted and both expeneive erted, yet nevertheless it will be fat, if she and elaborate. UNDERTAKERS! ----- D Furniture M uiraourePs —ra YCJIAL STOCK OF— Furniture, Coffins, Caskets, everything in tho above 1 Inc, to moo immediate wants. reftioes to be dazzled by any one, however agreealole, who is not known to be living a pure life. ST. CLAIR TUNNEL, WrerldiMeing Actively Pe rosecuted n Seth OheiCe Receipts, Sidee ase River—Size or the Rare. CELEEY Sour.—Cut up three or four sticks DETROIT, April 23.—The St, Clair Thin of celery small, and boil till quite soft, then nel Oompatty is still actively prosecuting drain it. Make two quarts of milk hot, the work, which wee commeimed last week. , stir in two mimes of butter and tome ealt A forte of fifty men it employed. on both and pepper. Add the celery, sad serve in a sides of the river, which will be increased hot tureen with al diah of fried breed,cubes. to fifty on each aide in a few daye. Two EGOS AND MuSrutooMs.--Wash some month& work will be expended in prelimina mutihroonas well in. cold water ; put them ary preparations before the work of driving into a sterairig pan with two mimes of butter, the tunnel from both ends is commeteed. half a teaspoonftil of salt, and a little white The here will have an outside circumferenoe pepper ; stand them over the fire tiefil they of 21 feet. The brick aidea will be 2t feet are thoroughly heeteclt thea turn into a in thickners, leaving anrinterior diameter of shallow bairibendith, end break over them 16 feet. The worktwill be done by en iron sufficient eggs to oovete being careful to keep shield forced ahead from the brick lin- the yelks sprinkle weer the top rotate mg by hydraulic pressure. The brick work breed.otumbe, &let with salt and pepper, willbe enclosed in an iron ciroular sheath and bake 10quick oven five rninutea, about an inert and in'thickneas. The Setve With buttered toast. tunnel Will be illuminated by electricity. Moen Acinvos MEAT.—Two dime of sugari /1 no ditteult obstructiene are encountered, ono tup of molassee, ono cup of rolled emelt. like gas veinsf 'old& admit water, the work ere, three cups of water, one and one,half will be completed in terelve menthe from cups vinegar, one.kalf cup of butter, oneshalf d t We have one of the vety best Hearses in the County, And rune:rale furnished itna oonaucted xtremely low pricrm, DxtEgitEilt Seerultn 4es. Typhoid Feve—r from Sewer Gas. proposition was presented frem Rev. Dr. the Division of heDiocese ot Ontario, a An Outbreak of typhoid fever recently rem Mountain offering to give $5,000 towatele an eurred at the Industrial School located at episcopal residence, andto go to England Adrian, itfiche in which twentrone girls and and endeavour to/raise $10,000 toward the one teacher eurfored from the disease, which endowment fuud, on certain condition. was of a very severe typo. In five cases, the diseage was fatal, An investigation shown - A Great Commander's Astrologers, ea thee through improper conatruotion of the Sewerage system, sewer gas was allowed to 1 In Resnxi Achined's account a the warsof escape into the basements, a portion of 1 Turkey with Ruesia he imaigns one of eight whith ie in earth building used as a laundry. reasone for the success of the Russian arms to Bach of eeeerai buildings was found to be the fact that the Turks marched math war contamieeted With fiEnver gas. The effectS "when Saturn and Mars were in eonjunction of the sewer gas Was hatenaified by helm., with the eine of 'dimmer," 'So convinced was feat cobetruotion and 'improper managehient hie master the Sultan of the influenee of the of the ventilating system, instead of taking oboes that he sent,Resmi to Berlin with itt- 'ir from out -edema, the steam coils were ateuctiots to obtain froth the evemfortunate supplied with air from the basements, which Frederiok of Prussia, the some of hiaaucoese tvas contaminated with gages from the sower and the lean of throe of his best aatrologers, and from other eourcer, Frederick took the ambassador to a window of Lis pelace which commanded a square filled A flat match safe, intended to be worn as with soldiers, " To lead throe) to victory," a watch chasm, is of a size auitable for tvaX he said, " Ihatrethree edviaere—Experieriee, matches and has a smell ring for suspensionDiaiplin,arid Ilconointe, Thee° end there from the chain. It ia made of either eilver only ate my aetrologers; and,thia is the secret or gold, but without:ornanientation of any reiliVIS Doctor Once saki that the secret of good I math. 01101E40n in keeping; the 1 ead cool, the feet warm, and the bowels open. Had this eminent physician lived ill our day, Rad known the merits of Ayer's Pills as an aperient, he wotua certainly have reeommeaded them, as $o many of his distinguished SUCCeSSors are doing. The celebrated Dr. ll'arnsworth, of Norwich, Conn., recommends Ayer's Pills as the beat of all remedies for " Intermittent Fevers." Dr. I. E. Fowler, of Bridgeport, enne says: " A.yer's Pills are highly and universally spoken of by the people about here. I make daily use of them. in my practice." tt Dr. Mayhew, of New 13eiltrord, Nam., says: "Having prescribed many thou- sands of Ayer's Pilla, in my practice, I eau miliesitatiegly pronounce them the best cathartic in use." The Massachusetts State Arisayer, Dr. A., A. Hayes, certifies : "1 have made a easeful analysis of. Ayer's Pills. They 'contain the active peinciples of wen - known drugs, isolated from inert mat- ter, which plan is, chemically speaking, of great importance to their usefulness, it insures activity, certainty, and unis fertility of effect. Ayer's Pills contain no metallic or mineral substance, but the virtues of vegetable remedies in skillful combination." Ayer's Pills Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer &fie., Dowell,Mass. Sold by an Lieraiere In Medicine. How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culver. well's Celebrated Essay on the radical cure of ErattuATOMMEA or incapacity induced by excess or °any indiscretion. The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' enecessful practice, that the alarming consequences of self- abuse may be radically cured ; pointing out a mode of pure at once simple, certain and effi-ctual, by moans of which every sufferer, no 112:Igor what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply,. pri. vately and radically. ta" This meture should be in the hands of every youth and every man in the land. Sent under seal, 1/1 a plain envelope, to any ad- dress, post-paid, on receipt of four csnts, or two postage stamps. .Address THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO. 41 Ann Street, New York. Post Office Box 450 4586-ly ADVERTISERS can learn the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressin Geo. P. Rowell & Co, le mspaper Advertising Bureau, 0 Spruce St., Now York. Send Itlets. for 100 -Page Pezzualllet, The Great English Prescription. A successful Medicine used over 30 years in thousands of cases. (lures Spermatorrhea, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by abuse. Six nsj packages Indi sr eti o over-exertion.reohena Guaranteedn.ortoCuilrArEtheRrsi Fail. Ask your Druggist for The Great English l'reserletion, take no substitute. One package Si. Six $5, by mail. Write for Pamphlet. Address Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich. For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, Exeter, and all druggists. Cinders in the .Eye. In a conversation, some time ago, with a Chicago oculist, a writer in the Chicago Jour- nal received some useful information about getting railroad cinders and other mo'tett out of the eye, which, although ibis not riew, should be known by every one who is in the habit of travelling, that the inner surface of the eyelids are ridged in such a way as to promote tho moving of email particles tom, ward the inner corners of the eyes, where the duct opens tvhich leads into the nose. This is the particular fact on which his advice is based, and which also shows the extreme folly of the method usually adopted to extract cinders from the eye. This me- thod is to double up the torefinger, and gouge into the afflieted eyo it is red as a beet, and suffused with tears. Some horri- ble contortions of the eounteuence are thrown as if to amid, ' Now, the only effect that elicit a course can have is to grind the cinder into the cor- rugations of the eyelid, and keep it there for a week until the inflammation aubables. The proper way to do is to catch up the eye. lid by the skin, and pull it away from the eyeball gently and repeatedly. This not only instantly relievca the pain, but pro- motes the sbilting of the cinder'. in themight direction. In almost every case this will be found a speedy afid painlees remedy. Soaroif y Of Tater In England, The searcity of weter in mantie,rge towns in Great, Britain is cateriug naltch alarm. The city of Liverpool, and the sister city, , Maircheater, are in groat clanger of a Water famine, the former having only abont ten days, supply in the mosetvoirs. A proponal., to bring sea water in mains from the coast to the large inland towns of England has been made by Mr. Ellis Lover, of Maateheater, end has been received with mueri favour by the "mesa and public. Mr Leverie proposi- tion is to lay pipea.for sea water, aide by tilde with the fresh waler supply, and that the sea water shouirt be lewd for baths, closets, watering streets, fleshing sewerF3, and in otthiguishing firee. l'or all this, arid many other purposes,- ace, water is more efficient: than fresh water. TIM object Mr. Le.ver has in view is to ecotorniee the fresh water supply. The question is foroing itaelf upon the attendee of the British Parliament and a propos 1 is being made to appoint- a royal oommission to enquire into the water supply of Great tritain, Ths Xing of the Belgians is also alive to the importance of this eubject, and. has offered a prize of 25,- 000 francs for the best treetire on gator supply of large towns. which you are quite at liberty to ihripert to my goon idea(); the Sultan Mustapha," o