526 Anfwers to the 
Queries of 2 cE. 
x 
CAMBRIDGE. 
COUNTY OF 
: HOUSES. || PERSONS. lloccvpations. 
PARISH, 
TOWNSH i 8 ot ? Bybow Perions Perfons {| TOTAL 
OR S- |many bi Pid eats, ae 
3 ~ {Fami- = 3 employ in Frade, rag 
Extra-paroc hial Place. ies Wee S edn. A-|Menufic | PERSONS. 
at ay cupied. | gricul- ilps 
ture. Z 
ei ae slg Eid ar | 
HUNOGRED OF « { ; 
[0 COS) O01 (ORM See ype 794 + 1,015 || 2,559 2,568 || 2,043 508 || 4,727 
AER Ra NC Bh 406| 614 || 1,353] 1,455 || 4,340] 2951) 4 808 
EARS SR CRN a 372| 442 || 1,109 ee 5741) 152|| 9,861 
PORE Cael chee hee a tae 629! 809 || 1,890] 1,944], 1,106) 4601] 3,834 
Tighe vd c) ee, SW Mig Need ea er ey eRe Pea ee 306 3539 893 914, | 702 176 1,805 
Raa Nee Sc eR 596| 780 |] 1,839] 1,849] 1,053}  3294]1 3.688 
Bora thO was: cel Cla LCM 445 533 || 1,255) 1,264 | 1,444 902 9,519 
Papwyortas i oe 728| 856 || 2,091 1,984 | 1,547| 17911 4,005 
Pekiacha ode Ve a 726-1) 1,680| 1,487 i 1,513) 294 35447 
Serie | te Qa ARORA 509} 631 || 1,468|.1,498 ||. 500] 4481] 2,967 
Stake: Gara We belly Lop 1,335 | 1,468 || 3,262] 5,378 | 2443) 8751 6,640 
PPM IO we icc ee ad SLO CEO Ase Ae LY, 738 162 3,265 
Wethe erley Ng ee he a 485 658 1,449} 1,466 i 1,102 161 9,915 
Mihiteeerd. (oe. 381} 515 || 984] 4 125) 496} 260}! 2,109 
TOWN AND UNIVERSITY OF | | 
enbridpets C0 Wu. as 1,691] 2,078 || 4,964) 5,125 92} 1,368]|| 10,087 
ISLE -OF | 
2 gale a 5 oi a! 5,996 | 6,999 |116,059 16,540 ||11,364 | 6,694 )| 32,599 
16,159 9 119,269 | 44,081 | £5,265 ||98,054 [11,988 || 89,549 
! 
(To be continued). 
To the Editor i the Monthly Magazine. 
SIR, 
S vou have not deemed the queries 
A of J.C. (page qoq of vol. X.) un- 
worthy of a place 1 in your Magazine, you 
wil] not, per i be lefs ready to infert 
the following anfwers tothem :- 
1. Rain or river water will leave no 
fediments of esrthy particles in the bottom 
of the tea-kett'e 5 and I am ailured by 
people of veraci:y and experience, that in - 
velf-Is in which river water has been boiled 
every day for ten years together, no incruf. 
taticn has been vifible. Much, doubtlefs, 
depends on the nature of the water which 
3s ufed; and though your Correfpondent 
micht properly en ugh chject to bis tea 
being made of rain wa’er, ef, ecially if it 
hhad not been recentiy obtained, he could, 
2 Mee have no objection to the occafional 
@ of river water, wiich, at certain times, 
3s bs nel ly palatable and wholefome as any 
other. 
2. Erbe eafiett, and probably the beft, 
mode of clearing a tea-ketile fiom the in- 
cruftations which it may have acquired, 
is to boil in it river or rain water, whick 
in a fhort time will cleanfe the bottom and 
fides of the veflel. I have known this fre. 
quently done by perfons, when the fpout 
has been nearly hopped by incruftations, 
though, as your Correlpondent rightly ob. 
ferves, ‘a kettle, with an inch thick lin- 
ing of folid ftone, muft neceflarily require 
a much longer time, and amuch greater 
quantitv cf coal to make it boil, than a 
clean veffcl in which the water is fepa od 
from the fire by the interpofition of a thin 
plate of metal only.” 
Though the fubje&ts have no affinity 
with each other : allow me a few words on 
‘the pronusciation of proper names, 
which has been treated of by Philoprepon 
(p. 302-303, Vol. X.) I think, wich 
your Correfpondent, that much i impropri- 
ety prevails relpecling the pronunciation 
of words of Greek origin, and that we 
ovent to fay, Kebés, Stagyerite, Iphighenia, 
&c, Ssme regard ought doubtlefs to be 
paid to eupheny; and a public fpecker, 
whe 
. 
