The Huron Expositor, 1877-03-30, Page 6a
\a.
6
A. Great English Dairy. .
"City n11k» is for the most part note?
worthy as being a very different fluid
from " cows' mak," but it is a curious
fact that London, thelargest city in the
civilized world, has the great advantage
of a supply of the latter kind of milk
from one large, company, the Aylesbnry
Dairy. This company has been in ex-
istence fifty years, and has a capital of a
quarter of a mlilion dollars. It has tWo
large factories tin the country, as wellies
a splendid building in London, which; ia
the headquarters of the selling depatt-
inent. Above 1000 gallons of milk tire
distributed daily in London to abOut
5000 families, 30 light carts being em-
ployed in the -delivery of the milk: 13e -
sides the retail sale, a vast quantity is
• sold tq the trade on its arrival at Pad-
• dington station, in. London. The total
• quantity of milk dealt with by the coin-
1pany is about 2,000 gallons daily, furn-
shed from about 50 farms. The contracts
with the farmers from whom the milk; is
Obtained, aro models of stringent deal-
ing for the seetirity of cleanliness aid
iurity. "No ! milk from any cow outof
ealth, or just calved, or just deprived
• IA her calf, or fug bought, .is to be sent.
All milk.is to he eooled in a refrigerator
down to 60 degrees before despatch, and
none is to be sent that has been bought.
The sender is to be liable for all damage
arising from neglect of any of these con-
ditions." For the security of their -mile-
, tomers in preventing. milk from filthy
farmhouses, or where the people or cat-
tle are diseased, the company have,'a
paid sanitary inspector, who makes oe-
easional inspections •of all their farm:;
they have in addition a medical board,
Who meet quarterly to receive the reports
Of the inspector and to make such sug-
gestions on it as may occur to them. Tito
company have also a well -arranged Bye -
tem for preventing those who deliver the
milk by retail from diluting it. Thus
every possible precaution is taken for
securing pure milk.
. The Aylesbury Company also supply
another want ; they can furnish an al-
inost unlimited supply of cream. At
the Swindon factory they can set for
cream 1500 gallons of milk in 800 squire
feet of milk -pans; and .if they get an
order for 400 quarts of cream on any
evening, it can •be despatched the, net
morning. The skim -milk is made into
cheese of poor quality ; and, having cons-,
plete arrangements for cheese -making,
auy day that the demand may fall off
for "new" or "whole" milk, the company
make cheese of the usual richness. InS
deed, this company combine milk -selling
and cheese -making, the former being the
most prominent feature. At the Derby
cheese factory they reverse this order of
things, selling their milk only when it
pays better than making it into cheese; i
It would seerne that cornpa.nies on a• l
similar scale, if managed with the same
honesty and business ability, might lind
a profitable field m our large cities. The
producerg," who are so much
troubled by the extortion of the "middle/
men," could take the whole busines into
their own hands by inaugurating such
an enterprise, People in the city would,
naturally prefer to buy of such a com-
pany,whose guarantee of the quality of
their milk would be indisputable, rather
e than to patronize the common run of
• irresponsible retailers. The latter would
then have to be honest in order to secure
any custom at all.—Boston Journal of
Chemistry. . •
What a Telephone Did.
Perkins, a •San Francisco broker;
bought two of Professor Bell's telephones,
and made connections between his office
and the parlor. He thought it would
be ,a pleasant thing to converse with his le
wife when business was slack, to inform s
her when he would go to dinner, and. to e
learn how often his youngest son fell Th
• down the cellar stairs during the day. th
One morning he was conversing by wire h
with his wife about a new bonnet, when
a broker came in to ask about some th
stocks. He "telephoned" to his wife vi
that he was busy, and without severing si
connection with the instrument, turned ev
to the broker and. opened negotiations in
for the purchase of Julia, Lady Byron, fr
and. other stocks. Mrs. Perkins, at the oth- ar
er end of the line, listened intently, and w
finally caught her husbands words, "I'll in
take Julia at 6 30." Her suspicions were la
• aroused; there was a woman in the case; to
Smnonsue
sin. Thit will stop the flow of candi-
dates for the bar. At the bar, as else-
• where in the trades and professions,
there is always room at the top. It is
estimated that there are six thousand
lawyers in New York,. and that about
ten per. cent. of them, or six' hundred,
find profitable employment, Whilst the
.balance fare as scantily as the unemploy-
• ed clerks.
The principal proprietor of One of the
daily papers sent his son in over-alls,
and with tin dinner pail in his hand, to
Hoe's machine shope, and he spent years
in mastering the • trade. The father
might have sent the boy to a desk in the
publication office, but had he done so he
would be fitting him for. a, poaition that
he can get filled for $9 per week, whilst
his son's skill as a practical! machinist is
worth five -fold what the genteel clerk's
time is worth. , ' •
A strong boy with an active brain and
a turn for inechanics, should!be kept
away from desks and running of errands.
Anything in the way of usefu practical
work with head and hands s ould have
the preference. The Harpers laid the
•foundation of fame and fortune in work-
ing at the "ease." Douhtless Peter
Cooper, whose !name will .go down the
centuries with benedictions Oa hismem-
ory, knew what
it was to do daily toil.
Those to -day Who are most Successful
in one walk or another, e those
who commenced life as practi al work-
ing men.
We canshardly commence oar second
centu better than by keeping our boys
away QM the genteelemployments, and
give,them a distaste for paper collars and
delicate hands. .
118 Way.
Mr. Brown, due of the most agreeable
of men when 'away from herne, who is
ever ready with . asm
smile and cheerful
word for strangers, thinks it with him, and
makes himself, specially ! unpleasant
to the little family which he ought to
brighten and to' bless by words of cheer
and love. But "hisways" are not ways
of pleasantness. 1 And so it cenaes to pass.
that his paths are not the paths of peace.
Like begets lik.,1; The savor of his prom-
ence, while the ood is on him, spreads
a pall on the spirits of the household;
coldness, petulance and general, discom-
fort reign. • Over the evening ' meal he
thaws and melte, and the better nature
flows; the children catch the returning
tide and begin to play in it ; the Man is
himself again, and the house is glad. It
is "his way" to be out of sorts when he
comes home. It is a bad way, La wicked
way, a mean way, and he olight to re-
pent of it and be reformed. Iylre. Green,
also, has her peeuliar way ; she speaks
well of no one save herself. • n all the
actions of her neighbors she sits in judg-
ment, and gives her opinion of .their con-
duct loudly, and i on every occasion. Her
children dread t bring their playmates
to her critical notice, as she seldom finds
anything to contmend in her dress, ap-
pearance or conduct; and her husband
never speaks of! his associates in pres-
ence' of his's wife, lest some new fault in
them be draggedite his unwilling know-
ledge. She casts a blight on all around
her, and darkens! home happiness with a
cloud of fault-finding and suspicion. Mr.
Grey resembles her, in this foible, but
his views are Wider, and take in the
whole world. Be .finds fault with things
as well as people — with communities
rather than indii4cluals. The newspaper
he enjoys in ,exact proportion. to the num-
ber of mistakes he finds in it. Society
is out of joint, in his judgment. No-
body knows how to do° anything as it
ought to be done. if they would only
t him run things for awhile he would
how them how to do it. Be is disgust -
d generally, and takes pains to say so.
is is his way. And. it is just about
e most disagreeable way a man can
ave. He forgets that other people are
nnoyed by his incessant grambline •
at most people love to to take a4heerful
sews of things, to look on the bright find de, to hope for, the best, to goad
en in the midst' of evil, and to try to
s
prove what can' be mended, and not to
et about what eantt be helped. An
my of fault-finders, as fault-finders,
ould not reform the world ; but it each
dividual tried to do right, society at
rge would soon turn its brightest side
ward criticism.
she burst into an animated soliloquy
which the faithful telephone carried to
the ears ofter husband and his custom
er. Julia
married 15 years—where's my rubbers—
just wait till I get hold of him." These
words, together with miscel:aneons tok-
ens of confusion and racket, denoted
• tiv e preparations for a sortie upon
• office. Perkins broke off his stock
gotiations and went home to appease
wife. The instruments were subsequi
ly removed.—San, Francisco Call.
Genteel Employments.
The Methodist, a New York pa er,
says: The counting -houses, banks,' in-
surance offices, and genteel employments;
are crowded and poorly paid. Ad'
tise, for a clerk, and you will have
plicants by the hundreds. The ma
ity will tell you that salary is no obje
• Mrs. Hayes's First Reception.
Mrs. Hayes .held her first drawing-
- room reception on Saturday afternoon.
• It was a brilliant affair; if the success of
• the reception may be measured by •the
size of the crowd and the variety and
elaborateness of the toilettes. It is
possible --for everybody says so—that
two thousand persons jammed in and out
of the White House to pay i aspect to its
new mistress. Such a concourse of
brains and beauty! And, looking at the
surface of things, beauty was uppermost
in the count. The mansion was redolent
!with blossoming azaleas and other rare
'fiewers. The large East Room became
'oppressively crowded before the Red,
Blue and state dining -rooms were thrown
open ; then everybody wanted to see
Mrs. Hayes at one. Several hundred
or less persons were wedged within the
doorway leading to the Blue Roorn,
where the President and Mrs. Hayes
twere stationed. • Of course they did not
get through, but the usher singled out
•several crushed costumes, and, as this
relieved the pressure, the elegant re-
mainder auddenly Popped into the pres-
ence of the Chief Magistrate, like unto
the shining efferveeence of champagne.
We. were in no hurty, and, as our posi-
tion commanded. a yiew of the situation,
we studied the limited endurance of
feminine fabrics with in,finite sympathy,
and learued a rare lesson -of patience and
politeness, for really not a word of annoy-
ance or discontent was uttered. Gentle-
men's beavers •sufferedthe most, and
many were. elevatecl upon canes, above
the pressure, like signals of distress for
want of brains. They afforded a humor-
ous parlor entertainment.
The President was in the best of spirits,
and made each and every one feel that
he or she was the special guest of the
occasion. So also di Mrs. Elayee, whose
comely face, gentle smile and winning
manners should compel the most obdur-
ate bachelor to forsake his ways at epee.
She wore a princesse dress of black silk,
*made very plain bi.4 elegant, with loops
and folds faced with blue silk. (This is
for those who are querying, "How was
she dressed ?") The sleeves and throat
finished with point lace, and a bunch of
geranium leaves AO violets were worn
instead of a brooch. Iler abundant black
hair, glossy • and fine, was smoothly
brushed oyer the tentples, coiled .behind,
and fastened with a tortoise -shell comb.
All of the ladies who aided her were
noticeable for their simple and rich
toilets. Not an exception could be taken,
ac -
his
ne-
his
nt-
er-
ap-
Or-
t ;
they have watched the papers long anal
have been Catching at straws. Here and
there in yqur bushel -basket of lettera
writer will say that he is in sheat
distress, his wife and little ones need
bread. Stich is the condition of things
with men who started in the genteel 'm-
ploYments. •
The carpenter of the first century
the 'Republic is not Ewilling that his
should roll up his sleeves and ply
plane,• aucl if he is willing his son is n
•Nols insleed, do the farmers' sons care
harrow their lives by kindly taking
of
on
he
t.
to
to
tht low. As a natural consequence lhe
farms are going into the hands of HAns
and Patrick, just as the good wholesoLe
food and liberal wages and good clean
bedrooms of the servants on Fifth Av-
.
enue go to Bridget and Gretchen, whilst •
Libby and Lotty work fat small wages in
the Shope, and havepoor food and a scant
quantity of it, and :bedrooms that are
very hovels as compared to the rooms of I
Bridget and Gretchen.
The rush is for the city; paper collars
and Paper cigars are cheap ; and delicate
• hands are fashionable, and the real pro-
• gresei and wealth of the world in "malt-
ing two blades of grass grow where but
one grew before," is ignored.
• The learned professions are crowded.
In11861 the law echool of Columbia
College numbered less than thirty. The
class for the current year exceeds 300.
The avenue of Columbia College has
been too inviting and easy. Dr. Dwight
makes a new and sensible regulation,
and hereafter candidates for the law
•school must stand an examination for
entry, and the test will be similar to
• that imposed by the colleges for admis-
,
rfr
fast ionable frippery being entirely'. absent,
and black silk and velvet was the favor-
itematerial with the greater portion of
all the ladies present. Is there to be a
revolution in dress as in democracy?
Little Fanny Hayes, a pleasant, win-
some 'child of ten or twelve summers, aa-
eunied her part in the reception with
childlike grace. Her dress of white
muslin was simple, with a sash of pale
pink ribbon and pink boots, and her
short hair was brushed back from an
intelligent, bright face. After the Presi-
dent and Mrs. Hayes had ended the re-
ception, she sat at the grand piano in the
Red Room, and taking Off her tiny white
gloves, sang to a small audience a funny
little rhyme, which.I was to remember
for my "little giri at home." As my
little girl is the world's, I told her she
should learn it. And this is the nursery
ditty which the little pet of the White
House sang, and I jotted down for my
little pets of other homes-:
Once there was a little kitty,
Whiter than snow;
In the barn she need to frolic,
A long time ago.
"NOW, you remember it,' said she,
and then we kissed her good -night and
strolled out through the corridor into the
conssrvatories.---[Correeporuience.Spring-
field Republican.
Remarkable Effects of Fear and
Joy
A trial of the effects of fear was once
made upon a condemned malefactor in
the following manner : A dog was bled
by the surgeons, and suffered to bleed to
death in the presence of the matt, the
surgeons talking all the while, and des-
oribing the gradual loss of blood, and of
course the gradual faintness of the dog
thereby ohcasioned ; and just before the
dog died they all exclaitned, "Now he is
going to die." They told the man that
he w1118 going to be bled to death in the
same way ; and accord4igly blindfolded
him, and tied up his arm. Then one of
them thrust a lancet iiito his arm, but
purposely missed the rein. But they
presently began . to describe the poor
man's gradual loss of blood, and of course
the consequent' faintness, and just before
the supposed death, the surgeons' all said
together, "Now he dies.' The male-
factor thought it was all reality, and
actaallY died, though ie had not lost
, above twenty I drops of blood. Almost
as remarkable was the o e of Chevalier
Jerre, who "was on ithe scaffold at
Troyes, had his hair cut off, thehandker-
chief before his eyes, and the sword was
in the executioner's hand to cut off his
head, but the king pardoned him: Being
taken up, his fear had so taken hold of
him that he could not stand nor speak.
They led him to bed and opened a vein,
but no blood would come." (Lord Staf-
ford's Letters.)—An excess of joy has
been attended tiometimes with as. bad an
effect. The lady Poynts, in the year
1566, by the ill -usage of her husband,
had almost lost her sight, her hearing,
and her speech, which. she recovered in
an instant on receipt of a kind letter
from Queen Elizabeth, but her joy was
so excessive that she died immediately
after kissing the Queen's letter.
•
Oheap and Durable Gates.
• I have just made gates to replace Borne
old-fashioned pairs of bars that I -ant
heartily tired of opening and shutting,
They are cheap, durable and very easily
made. Each gate is twelve 'feet ;in
length by four • feet • in height. Five
boards four inches wide are used, beside
batt,en and braces: Battens should be
placed on both sides making three thick-
nesses to nail through. It does not take
more than thirty-three feet of boards, •
worth perhaps sixty-six cents, to make
each. Add to that tea cents for nails,
and the value of one hour for your time,
and you have the whole expense. A.
gate of this kind will outlast a frame
one costing $4, and as no hinges are used,
that expenee is saved alsb. It is held in
position by means of a stake driven in
the ground four or five , inches from the
post; not in a straight line, but a little
more than the thickness of the gate to-
wards the drive -way, so that when open-
ed the gate can be turned half way roiled
and be parallel with the drive -way. It
is kept a few inches from the ground by
a strip, nailed to both stake and post, on
which one end rests when shut, and on
which it slides half its length and then
swings round as on a.pivot when opened.
The strip is usually placed under the
second board, in a space arranged for it,
by cutting away two ' of the battens.
This strip takes the place of hinges. A
gate of this kind can be made in much
less time and at as little expense as a pair
of bars, and is certainly much more con-
venient. —(Corresponde)jce Rural Borne.
Old Drinking Habits in Maine.
The Brunswick (Me.) Telegraph, prints
a communication, which, speaking of
residents of the adjoining town of Tops-
ham, 50 years ago, says : "In one family
of five persons, three of them would each
punish three pints of New -England rum.
every day ; the other two perhaps a little
• less. ,-Why I can be so specific, I was a
clerk in a store at Topsham and had
them for customers. Another instance :
we had an old man, who. was a customer
when I went there and was there when
I left, who purchased a pint and a half
of gin every day, and Saturday three
pints. He had it charged, paid his .bill
monthly, and never purchased another
article to wy recollection.- His family
consisted only of himself and wife, and
she an estimable woman, therefore he
must, have used all of it himself. The
aver ge sales at our store were at least
$10 er day, anounting to $3,000 per
ane m. • There were five other stores in
Top ham, and I have every reason to
beliefre that they sold as much rum as
we did. Brunswick had three times as
many stores, besides.three successful ho-
tels, (Topsham had none.) I think she
must have seld at least double the quan-
tity lof Topsham. With New -England
rim t 40 cents a gallon, and the best
of imjported liquors at $1, in almost every
familly in Topsham there was a drunkard
or drunkards, The evil became so great
that I the people grew alarmed. Two
generations of my own family on both
sides of the house suffered severely.
• •
•
DIVORCE MADE EASY.—It is said that
in Burmah when married persons desire
a divorce they light two candles, and
the one whose candle goes out first may
depart with the property which he or
she contributed to the domestic partner.
ship. There ought to be some safeguards
against blowing the lights or stimulating
the COnsurnptuni of the talls4 'in.anyun-
fair way ; but in any event civilization
in respect to martial contracts is farther
advanced in Burmah than even in some
of our Western States.
J ST RECEIVED AT 999
• ANOTHER LOT OF
PRIMEE'VNT SMI.A.SOINTTEAS,
4t PRICES to suit as TIMES.
Parties, buying byte Caddie will save money by oallieg at 999.
Go to 999 who e you will, get ten bars of brown soap for $L
Remember 99f is the place where the cheap sap pails are to be had.
FLO UR 4TD FEED CONSTANTLY ON HAND.
FREE DELIVERY.
999 OPPOSITE THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL.
A. W. SPARLING.
SPRING.
IDDMI.J10 (Sr CO_
1_4
SPRING. SPRING.
A RIVED THIS WEEK
ANOTHER LnT OF FANCY DRESS GOODS,
AT 10 CENTS PER: YARD.
CA.L14 AND. SEE THEM.
*-0-*
.1„
MARCH 30, 1877.
GANG PLOWS,
GANG PLOWS,
HILL PLOWS,
HILL PLOWS,
LAND ROLLERS, -
LAND ROLLERS,
FOB SALE AT THE
HURON FOUNDRY
AND MACHINE SHOP.
PLOWS And PLOW CASTINGS
• Made from the
CELEBRATED DIAMOND IRON.
Farm ers -would do well to call and examinebe
fore purchasing elsewhere.
WHITELAW & MORE.
1\TOTIICM.
NEW -SHOE SHOP.
THE undersigned begs to notify the inhabitant,
--a. of Seaforth and surrounding country that he commenced business
IN SEAFORTH,
In the Shopnext
wherehe1:tPento
ids llc'sarCron
e 1Pae.
The Custom Shoe Business
• IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. "
Tho 1Stook having been carefully selected, and
none batt
• FIRST-CLASS WORKMEN
WADDELL & CO. EMPLOYED,
'It 11 M 0-OLDENL 1 0 1•T_
DRESS G
ODS.
• DRESS GOODS.
CALL AND SEE THE SPLENDID STOCK
OF•
MSS G-001)8
AT
THE 001,_EN LION, SEAFORTH.
LO
GAN & JAlgI.ESON.
SEAFORTH MUISCAL INSTRUMENT EMPORIUM.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
THE BEST IN THE MARKET.
WILLSON & SCOTT,
• eMAIN STREET, SEAFORTH
GANG PLOWS,, GANG PLOWS,
AT
0.. C.. WILLSON'
OLD STAND.
Six different kinds of the following makes : .7aossit's Iron Frame Plow, of Guelph; Ge orge Gray's
Metal Frame Plow, of London; Port Perry Wood Frame ; Port Perry Iron Frame ; Th -a Uxbridge
Wood frame Swivel Wheel Plow; and the Brussels Plow. Also a Fall Stock of
MASSIE'S THISTLE CUTTERS AND ALL
KINDS OF GENERAL PURPOSE PLOWS.
•
Iron Harrows and all kinds anl styles of Agricultural Implements sucli as Straw Cutters, Grain
Crushers, Root Cutters, Sawing M chines, Large and Small Horse Pow ers, Reapers Mowers Sulky
Rakes, Threshing Machines, Land Rollers, and every implement in ths aranteed as
represented.
THE SEWII G MACHINE BUSINESS,
As usual, is prosperous, with the Florence at the head of the list. Twenty different styles and
makes to select from.
• A Stock of 13 terick's ;Patterns Always on Hand.
0- WILLSOl\T
And by strict attention to businees, the public
can rely on getting good value for their money.
REPAIRING done with .Yeatness
and Dispatch,.
485• J. • SCOTT:
KIDD'S HARDWARE
RECEIVED
• DIRECT FROM MANUFACTURERS
AMERICAN -CUT NAILS,
SPADES, SHOVELS, FORKS,
HOES AND RAKES,
• GLASS,- PAINTS, OILS, U.
FENCING WIRE
AND BUILDING HARDWARE
Of Every Description Cheap.
EAVE TROUGHS AND CONDUCT
-
• ING PIPE
Put up on the Shortest Notice and Warranted.
Special Inducements to Cash and`
Prompt Paying Customers.
• JOHN KIDD.
THE CONSOLIDATED BANK
OF CANADA.
CAPITAL - - S4.000.000.
CITY BANE OF MONTREAL, Incorporated 1833;
and ROYAL CANADIAN BANK,
Incorporated 1864.
SEAFORTH BRANCH.
DOMINION BLOCK, MAIN -ST.,.
SEAFORTH.
Drafts on New York Payable at an
Bank in the United States.
Bilia of Exchange on London payable
at all Chief Cities of the United Kingdom.
INTEREST PAID' ON DEPOSITS..
M. P. HAYES,
411 „MANAGER
THE SEAFORTH
INSURANCE AND LAND AGENCY..
• ALONZO STRONG
TS AGENT for Several First -Class Stock, Fire
'IL• and Life Insurance Companies, and is prepar-
ed to take risks on
THE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS.
Also Agent for several of the best Loan Socie-
ties.
Also Agent for the sale and purchase of Farm
and Village Property.
A NUMBER OF FIRST-CLASS IM-
PROVED FARMS FOR SALE.
$50,000 td Loan at S Per Cent.
Interest,
OFFICE—Over M. Morrison's Store, Main-St-
Seaforth.
ECLIPSE OATMEAL MILLS.
SEAFORTH.
NOW IN FULL OPERATION:
Oat Meal, Split Peas, Pot Barley,
Corn, Meal Chopped,
And All Kinds of Mill Feed. Constantly on Hand
Chopping done Tuesdays and Fridays. Oatmeal
exchanged for Oats. Highest price paid for Oats,
Peas and Barley.
412 • CURRIE & THOMSON.
20,000. BUSHELS OF CORN
COMING Per THE LONDON, HURON AND
BRUCE RAILWAY.
TEE Subscriber has now completed arrange-
ments with the growers in the West to furnish
a steady supply of -
SEED CORN AND OATSli
Also saes Feeding Corn, at lower, prices thane=
be Sappliainywhere in this County. The first
lot will be aloha in a fine days. Note the ad-
dress : D. '11cLENNAN, Grain Dealer, Brim-
field P. 0. Storehouse,Brac,efiel# station. 482
MACH 30,
How to Breath
Moat people breatl
more by aecident or
design; but, on the oth
of thousands at this p
suffering from. more or
tions of the lungs or t
faulty- mode of respi
words, because they
their mouth instead
mostriIs.1 The mouth
tions to perform in co
ing, -drinking, and s
nostrils have theirs,
breathing. In summe
respiring through the
evident as in the winte
is undoubtedly fraug
the person who comm
If any one breathes thr
channel, the nostrils,
over the mucous mem
-various chambers of
warmed to the tempers
before reaching the 11
takes in air between the
the mouth, the cold air
with the delicate lininl,
the throatand lungs, am
local chill, frequently er
Illation. Many persons,
• ing the reason why the'
wear respirators over t
winter, if they happen t
By doing this they dimi
of air which enters betw
virtually compei theins
through the nostrils.
attain just the same resi
• thelips closed, a habit'
Acquired, andeonduces t
natural way of breathii
that if people would S'
simple habit—in other
• would take for their re
."Shut your mouth?" thl
-immense diminution inel
of affection, viz.,-: those ei
-throat, which count man
victims in this country i
single year. Man is t
which has acquired the
often fatal habit of bit
the mouth, It commen
and becomes confirme
d
often engendering eonst
bronchitis, relaxed sore
other disease of the 11
which is set down, usual
cause altogether. In s
.short article, we ventm
readers to judge for thet
they step out in the in
fresh, but cold air, let tl
•Terence of feeling arising
Modes of breathing—thrb
and -between the lips.
ease they will -findthat t
easily and freely, yet wit
the fresh air, warmed to
- of the body by its contac
mucous membrane, is a
lungs; in the other as
in a. few inspirations bet
lips, the cold air, rushing
lungs, creates a feeling of
discomfort, and an attac
often comes on.
-HOW Marble Cu
An Italian marble -cut
ing sort of fellow. His WO
. adjoining the artist's slit
goes at 8 o'clock in the m
breakfast, without "even
He Cute away for an hour
-one of his ehildren bri
• thing to eat from home
of bread, some coffee.
• child (most -of them have
though) he brings his fo
tin pail. • At noon he
• rant and lunches, or, as
his collazione of cutlet,
• sausage with bread and p
egg, but always with win
- deal of it, say two large tv.
This -wine costs about 20
After staying in the restau
he returns te his work.
goes home, dressed not
• clothes in which he took
often well enough to bemi
artist himself. Here he
dine. He has soup, of
hot make a dinner wit
eggs, salad alwaye, eheese
plenty of wine, also, at
enness, however, is except
ended, he leaves his -wife
some pretext or otheie and
and drink with his cronies.
.for his family is estimated
couritants to be about 3333
the French and the -Germa
that direction.
Nursing- tb.e S
A writer in _the WaMh
proper care of the sick,
light, drinks, cleanliness,
of more importance tli
sinee a poor nurse may co
• the good done bya good ph
comfort of the patient
-vital importance. In fever
taut to have frequent cha
personal, and that of the be
when convenient,tchaite t
room—a large room—and
move the patient from one
that the bedding may be a
ed and washed, at least en
four hours. If such clot
removecl and put in the air,
wind once in six hours, the
feel refreshed by such effo
immense amount of morbid
atarilly escaping from the po
liness is next to godliness,"
can be clean during a high
great care,without frequent
change of clothes. Marne
_ ever needed while in bed,
acute diseases ; the beddin
.Alleiothing should be often
to make this easy, not exha
sick, the less of it the bes
moval is facilitated by ha
ments entirely open in fron
may be removed without ra
tient up, when that is exha
makes the washing of the
application of wet elothes,
and less exhausting.
AEy Life
Sir Edward Belcher, who
ly, was the son of Mr. Andr
and grandson of Jonathan B
Justice, and afterwards
Nova Scotia, was born at Ha
entered the navy in 1812and
tenant in 1818. He was p
battle of 'Algiers, and in 1
ointed assistant•snrveyor
echy on the Blossom, whi
a voyage ef discovery
Straits. In 1829 he was
the rank of commander. .
stoourvkeycon2ofrataadAforifeat cMoa.85t..
fitted out the Erebus and
.Arctic service. In 1836 he