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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-9-1, Page 7WISCELLANEOES Manchester has 1307niles of tramways. Many mon have been capable of dieing a 'wise thiots, but very few a generoue thing. There ere 360 mountable in the 'United Statee each exceeding 10,000 feet in height, The band in any but a West-encl theatre usually consists of from eight to ten men. For every four thillings spent in Eugland an drink only a half -penny is expended on education. EllenTerry, the Lyceum actress, ie fam- ous as a lover a cets. She will frolic with her feline pets for hours. , The largest steam hammer in England is the huge piece of machinery in Woolwich . Arsenal, by means of which the monster Woolwich Infants are forged. Its striking fesece is 1,000 tons. pismare% is as fond of dogs as Ouida." Hisednseparable companions are two large Daniell hounds. At dinner they eat beside e' 'Master, and occasionally he feeds them 's own bands. The algest turret ship in the world— perhaps the largest battleship in existence —fel& Britiehbattleship Hood, which was launched at Chatham on July 30, 1891. The Hood has a displacement of 14,150 tons. Several years ago there was a law in Po- land which compelled every slanderer to walls on all fours through the streets of the town. " gest steam ferryboat in the world °innate built by the Pennsylvania Company to ply between New Jersey City. whale, recently captured in Arctic Waters, was found to have imbedded in its - side a harpoon that belonged to a whaling .• • •vessel that hod been out of service nearly half a century. A eingle glass eye can rarely be worn more than a year .tvithout being polished, for the surface becomes roughened by the action of the tears, &c., and irritates the ids as they rub over it. It is when a young fellow in love has lost his head that the girl in the case is likely to mercifully lay her own on his shoulders.— (Philadelphia. Times. , "Cool as a cucumberes;lis correct scientifi- cally. Investigators claim that that veges table usually has a temperature one degree less than the surrounding atmosphere, Chinese doctors merle the intervals be- tween doses of medicine by bending a stiek and lighting it. Th p patient takes the medi- cine when the fire reaches the bend. A disease peculiar to Japan is known as !cake, which is thought to be the result of a rice diet. The disease is a. slow degenera- tion of the nervous system and meadily inereasine weakness of the patient. The tramways in London consist of 117 miles of line; but these aro ehated by several companies, the North Metropolitan owning 41 miles, the London nearly 22, the Lon- don Street about 13, and five other com- panies 41 miles between them. The peseitge through the Stmz Canal grows shorter every year. According to the annual report the average duration is 23 hours. 31 minutes, some 35 minutes less than twelve months ago. This improvement is due to the °lean.° light enabling the vesset to continue their voyage at night. A . s eange custom is followed by Mexican. farmers. They use oxen of one colout• in the morning, and another color in the after- noon. They do not know why; but they know that it must be the right thing to do, because their forefathers did it. There is, perhaps, no more curious plaee on the. Pacifie seaboard than Iquique, which wassembarded by the Chilian fleet last year. It stk. .ds in A region where rain has never been k teem to fall. Nottingham Market Square is one of the • 'largest in the kingdom, occupying five and adtalf acres, all of it uncovered, and sur- e rounded with lofty buildings. The houses round it have projecting upper stories, forming a colonnade it front of the shops. The Wiest policeman in the United King- dom is Constable Daly, one of the members of the :Royal Irish Constabulary. Be is 6 feet 81 inches in height. Another member of the same fore, Sergeant Moffett, of Ballyshannon, stands 6 feet 51 inches. Paderewski, when travellieg, has his piano in his bedroom, and immediately on rising commences practising, and it a matter of great difficulty to get him away from it. When he was at Manchester in the winter of 1890, he remained there exactly forty-eight hours, and out of that time he was at the piano twenty-seven. One of the fastest voyages from China to New York was made in the summer of 1890 by the steamship Glenogle, of the Glen Line, Glasgow, which arrived from Amoy in forty-six days. The fastest time was by the alengiel of the same line—forty-three diva. The largest advertisement in the world is that of the "Glasgow News," cut in the shape of flower beds on the side of a hill back of Ardenlee, Scotland, The words "Glasgow News" can be seen and plainly read at a distance of four miles ; the length of each letter is 40 feet, the total length of the line 323 fob, and the area covered by the letters 14,845 feet. , One of the largest orchestras in the world is at a prison in Pennsylvania. Here a eightly concert is given by what is probably the strangest orchestra ever known, cou• sisting of about three hundred performers who never see one another. This prison is, perhaps, the only one in the world whete the inmates are allowed to cultivate the art of music, and the privilege is deeply appre- iated by them. The music begins precise:. six o'clock every evening, and ends at stroke of seveia. Stole One of Beecher's Sermons. Henry Ward Beecher once went in search of a brief rest to a small fishing vil- lage, where his appearance was apparently unknown. When Sunday came around he • went to the morriir.g service at the Congre- gational Church, and was nota little aston- ished to hear the preacher for the day, a very young man, rattle off one of his • (13eecher's) best sermons as an original dis- course. At the conclusion of the service the great preacher waited for a chat with the • yotmg man. Might I ask you how long it took you to compose the serrnon you preach- ed to us this morning ?" inquired its real author. "Oh, about six or seven hours,' was the rejoinder. " You must be a very • smart young man," said Beecher, "for it took me just five days to write that self. same sermon." After a careful but unblush. • ing scrutiny of the great' pulpi b orator, the youth remarked: I guess you're Ward Beecher, then?" A .gfave eocl was the only respoese. hen he Jaye nle apostle put out his hand, and grasping that of his celebrat- ed listener, exclaimed :• " Look here, Mr. • Beecher, yen just go on writing sermons lelte thet, As long as yeti do I shall never 'beetehamecl to preach eleeen." DoTs.AND iumEs pitOM A ‘SP004. The Deegan° over ail 111StICUPItellt With"S WIre es HDAtery. One of the Wildest, weirdest stories of the eupernaturel that has ever wine under the experience of mortal man is told by ft. IL Field, a telegraph operator at, Cincinnati.. Mr. Field is a very intelligent and eon- ecientious men, and he relates his fearful experience with a cendoe and earnestness that almost make one believe it in epite of its extreme improbability. "1 have been a telegraph operator for twenty-two years. I have told my story to at least a hundred people, and I have never met one yet who would believe that it was an actual fact, I know that it will be a severe test on your credulity, but my . exe perience is Gospel truth. I want you to un- derstand that I hew never, and do not now believe in the supernatural. 1 have never attended a *spiritualistic seance in .my life, and am rather inclined to wept the phil- osophy of Bob Ingersoll." Mr. Field Was quite reluctant about tell- ing his story for publication,butt finally consented to do so. He is an eetertaining tenter) and related the great event of his life with an ease that showed that he had told it before. It was several years ago," he began, "when I was much younger than I am now. I was assigned to night duty at a little station called Evansburg, in Pen- nsylvania, on the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad, I hadn't been around. the world very much, but fluttered myself that I had a good deal of mechanical genius Thei.office was in charge of an old fogy sort of a fellew named Jones. The telegraph instrument got out of adjustment, and I knew something about repairing it. Jones suggested that I take to my home an old- tashioned relay box and fit it up. Gled of the opportunity to show what I could do, carried the box to my boarding house one morning and put it on a shelf in an old cup- board and wenb to bed, intending to fix it after my Weep was over. I had been in bed, but a few minutes, and had not.got to sleep, when, to my surprise and astonushment, the armature, or what is otherwiee known as the lever on the instrument, began ticking. I was perfectly amazed, and thought there must be some mistake. To satisfy myself that I had mat been carried away by my imagination, for the ticking was faint and aubdued, I got out of bed., and, with fear and trembling, opened the cupboard door. I took the instrument in my hand and it continued to work, I put it on the table, but the sound it made was unintelligible. I turned the spring so that there would be less resistance, and then, in as clear and perfect Morse as I ever heard, the invisible person, spirit, or whatever it was, wrote " 'leo you get me 1' was so overcome that I inveluntarily answered 'Yes,' without putting it on the instrument. The unknown heard me, for again, in the beautiful writing, it continued: "'Thank God, atlasa My name is Charles Bleke. I am an old-timer. My parents who reside in Mount Pleasant, Le., have lost me. They don't know what my fate has been. I want you to write to my father, Homer Blake, at Mount Pleasant, Ia., and inform him that I died at Shreveport, Tex., of yel- low fever, on--,' I have forgotten the date, but it was several years prior to the date of this communication. I was frightened to death. My hair stood an end. My board- ing house was two miles from the telegraph Station, and there was no taegraph wire of any kind in that vicinity. I was a little dubious about the communication from the other world or from *somewhere, 1 will not undertake to say. Before venturing to write to Homer Blake, as directed, I picked up a Western Union tariff book which I had in my room to see if there was such a town as Mount Pleasant, Ia. I found that there was such a place, a fact that. I did not know be- fore, and that it was located on the Chica- go, Darlington and Quincy Railroad. To satisfy myself and not be taken in, I wrote a letter to the Postmaster at Mount Pleas- ant and asked him if he knew of any one in the vicinity named Homer Blake, and to give me what information he could, without telling him what I wanted it for. A few days later I received a reply, and I have his letter somewhere atm mg my effects, in which he said that Homer Blake bad lived in Mount Pleasant some years before, but that he had moved away, to what place he did not know. Blake, he informed me, bad two sons, one of whom, Charles, was supposed to be dead. and the other was a gram mer- chant in the far West." "Did you not pursue your investigations further ?" "No, I did not. The truth is I was scar- ed to death. I worked that wire for eiget- een months, levery once in a while I used to ask Jones if he heard the noise, and he laughed at me. He never believed my story, although the reply from the Postmaster at Mount Pleasant somewhat staggered him. I was actually so afraid to take the relay off that my hair used to stand on end, and'I never had any further communication with the hidden force that called itself Charles Blake. I shall never forget that experience as long as I live. People look so iateredul- ous and are so apt to believe me a crank or a spiritualist when I tell it that I never re- late it any more unless I am asked to do so.e What Caste Means,in A story just published in the Indian news- papers gives some idea of what caste means in that country. It appears that some time ago, in the neighborhood of Fyzabad, a man of the Ahir or cowherd caste was carrying a yoling calf home on his shoulders, when by some accident it slipped down and broke its neck. The -Brahmans declared him to be an outcast and sentenced him to the severest form of Hindu excommunication for six months. They further told him that he could not have committed a greater sin than causing the death of a cow, but, taking into, consideration that he was an uneducated man, they would deal very leniently with hisn. During the period of excommunication he was ordered to lead a life of mendicancy, and with a rope around his neck and a piece of the calf's, tail on his shoulder he was to perform pilgrimages to different Hindu shrines. The members of his family were forbidden to supply him with either shelter or food under a penal ty of under going similar excommunication. The Ahir recent- ly returned to his Village, but until after the purification ceremonies he must live in a temporary grass -thatched house which has been erected for him. A man of one of the lowest and most degraded castes has been selected to purify him. A barber, after shaving the delinquent and paring the nails of his fiends and toes, will make over the hair and nails to the low -caste attendant, who will burn them and also set bre to the hut. Then the Ahir is covered with cow - dung, after which he will take a plunge into the River Sarju and comeoistpurified. Even then he will not be re -admitted into caste - fellowship until he has feasted fifty Brah- mans and 100 of his brethren. Example is the school of mankind, and they will learn at no other. •CI:ildren Cry for Pitcher% Castorlai a;lalt eteee. 1- 1 • WHERE THE WHEAT WENT. • The 1891 crop of wheat was by fat' the largest in the history of Arnerice. The 1892 crop is likely to be one of the largest also, although more than 100,000,000 bushels less than that of 1891. It was confidently pre- dicated by statisticians of the Kansas sort that because of the exceedingly short erops of rye and wheat in Europe all the surplus of America's. immense crop would be needed to prevent famine in middle Europe, and an era of high prices would. follow. In view of the harvest of over 500,000,000 bushels this year, it is instructive to look over last year's trade and learn where the wheat of 1891 went and what it brought. The crop was placed at 611,780,0001)(18401s. The demand at home for food purposes took not far from 300,000,000 bushels. The seed sown last fall and this epilog amOunted to 50,000,000 more. The exports of wheats and flour reduced to wheat, were 224,831,- 483 bushel. This makes the total need and sold for export 580,834,000 bushels, leaving to go over into the current crop year 31,000,- 000 bushels. Some 20,000,000 bushels were ceeried over the previous year, so that America enters the new crop year with 50,- 000,000 bushels and the new crop. In August, 1891, when, calamite prophets were filling the papers and magazines with. columns of figures showing that the farmers should hold their wheat because they wokdd be sure to get $1,50 or $2 per bushel, No, 2 red wheat WM selling in New York at about $1.06 per bushel, In September the aver- age price was $1.03 3.4 • in October, $1.041 in November, $1.05 ; December, $L05 3-8 •,in January, $1.02 5.8; Febru- ary, $1 e'4, 3-8; in March, 99 cents; in April, 96e• ; in May, 90; and in. June, 871 cents. The July, 1591, price was 98 5-8 cents, and in July, 1890, it was 96 cents, there being little dtfference between the two years. But the prices from Mamie to June in each year shows the wide difference of 15 to 9,,,2 cents per bushel, the 1890 crop bringing that much more, The average for the whole year bee been $1 for tlie 1891 crop, while the average for the 1S90 crop was $1.06 7-8. America, has another large crop for sale, and European prospects are decidedly better than a year ago. European nations except Russia, always have to buy more or less wheat., and it is to Western Europe that this continent must look for a market for our exportable surplus, which this year will be not far from 200,000,000 bushels. During the five years previous to 1891 America ex- ported an average of about 137,000,000 bashels, but last year °win to the unusual I shortage in Europe it furnished about 225,- j 000,000 bushels. It is not likely that the whole of the sur• plus of 200,000,000 bushels will be needed this year, and the "visible supply "is like- ly to be greater at the end of the current year than for some time. Prices, therefore, are likely to remain quite level, altlsough speculators may cause an occasional limey, lasting a day or two, but showing little In- fluence in the long ruse Where the wheat crop of last year went, the crop of the cur- rent year will go, and there is uo unusnal demand for the American surplus, which is likely permanently to increase prices. The Happiness of One Woman in View. Mr. 8. (snappishly)--" Don't be • cor- recting that boy always, Sarah. Let nature take its course, won'e you?" Mrs. S. (layine aside the shingle) —" I'll do nothing of the sore. I don't intend that any woman shall have eitch a husband as I've got, if I can proventit." A hint as to how base ball might be play- ed at sea or on the lakes is given in the Pall Mall Budget's notes on a trip to Nor- way, in which a game of cricket on the packet is thus described: The ball was tied to about tweety yards of stout lino, Whenever it was knocked out to sea the fielders had to haul in the line'which gen- erally because entangled at this critical moment, and defied the excited efforts to release it ere the batsman had piled up the runs. AL other times the batsman would be lassoed by the line a etached to the ball and time had to be called to unravel him. The stews that Lord Aberdeen will its all probability be our next Governor-General will be received with satisfaction. He hes a strong liking for Canada, and during a residence of about a year in this country he became thoroughly popular with all classes of the people. It was expected at one time that he would be made Lord Lieutenant. of Ireland, e position which, during Mr. Gladstone's short term of office in 1S86, he filled so that he obtained a strong hold upon the affections of Irish- men. The duties of a Governor-General of Canada are mainly social and are not very onerous, and the office has often been filled by men whose great ability displayed after- wards in other fields, has nob been put to the test here. They have usually been men of genial disposition and good sense, and for many years past none of them has erred upon the side of straining the preroga- tive of the Crown he represents or acting against the counsel of his responsible advis- ers. Hence, though the people grumble a good deal about the expense of maintaining Rideau llalethere has been no other griev- ance which a radical reformer could use as an argument for abolishing the office. Lord Aberdeen if he comes, will be heartily wel- comed, and will be a worthy successor of the aenial gentleman who now fills the office and Of that statesman who is now burdened with the greater care of India. A ,correspondent asks for a summary of the game:laws of Manitoba. Here it is : "All kinds of deer, including antelope, elk, or wapiti, moose, reindeer, or caribou, or their fawns, cannot be shot at, hunted, trap. Ped, taken or killed between the 1st of De- cember and the lst of October. The grouse knownas prairie chicken and partridges, between the 1st of December and the 1st of September. Woodcock, plover, snipe and sandpipers, between the 1st of January and the 1st of August. All kind of wild duck, sea duck, widgeon, teal, wild Swan and wild goose (except the snow goose or wavey), between the 1st of May mil the 1st ot September. Otter fisher or pekoes, beaver, muskrat and sable between the 15th of May and the 1st of October. Marten, bettveee the 15th of April, and .the let of November. Nor can any of the animals and birds named be shot at, hunted, trap. pod, taken or killed on any Sunday. No birds or animals, except fur -bearing ani- mals, shall be trapped, nor shall any swiv- el guns, batteries or night lights, he used to kill swan, geese or ducks ; nor shall any beaver or muskrat house be destroyed at any time '• nor shall poison or poisonous bait be exposed for any animal or bird. No eggs of the birds mentioned may at any time be taken or had in possession. Tins act d.oes not apply to Indians on their re- serves. No person or corporation shoe' at • any time export any of the animals or birds mentioned. Persons without a domicile in the province must take out a license, cost- ing $25, to kill any of the animals or birds named ;' but the minister may grant a, free permit to a guest ole resident in the prov- iiice," NEWIA.NICA.1, AND SCIENTIFIC. Brick is to be made from. chipped gran 411A(1°plaalent has been issued for a lock whi can be eperated by a magnetized key. A recent invention is a shoe with a hing sole, for the perpose of facilitating putti it on or off, A chemist in Berlin claims that he adolisicnovheirpecilioatosgyrsatvenhiyof reproducing nate A London firm finds a windmill the in economic means of seeuring the moti power necessary to runt a dynamo, It has been found that tee same wire c be used for telegraphing and telephonin The experiment was recently tried a d tenets of three and one-half miles. A Chieago man has recently taken out patent for an electric pickpocket and co thief detector, winch apparatus is intende automatieally, to sound an alarm bell whe ever the wearer's personalproperty is int fered with. Luminous figures on street doors to rend the number ot houses visible at night is t newest patent of an electric company at Be lin, Germany. A street car in Fitchburg, fitted wit steel ball bearings as an experiment, h been run for several months with out bei oiled since it was first put in service, 13Iaudyte is the name given to the ne =eeriel made of Trinidad asphale aa waste rebber. It resists the beet of hi pressure steam end lasts well in the pre ence of oil and grease. There is a rock in Mn eke which for tells the weather, In fair weather wears A neutral tint, and when it is abo to rain it, turns a diegy red. Its temper ture increases and it appears as if it we beieg heated by an internal fire. Photographing under water has actuall been °exiled out, so it ie said. Experiment were inade in 1889 in the Mediterranean ascertain how far daylight penetrated uud the water. In very clear water, near Co ma, and eighteen miles from land, th limit of daylight was found by moms photographic plates to be 1,580 feet. Eugland has thirby•ffier astronomical 01 eervatoriee, America eighty-, Fran tie seve teen, Austria twenty-four, Italy twenty -on Russia fifteen and Belgium live, Bkssid these there are many private observatori all over the world. Among the 1,160 a tronomers of note, now living, about on halfthave private obeervatories. Brutes at Flap In aubriale the faculty of =name awakes very early, Our four -footed friend seem to be aware of this and make it a pa of their parental duties to amuse thei young. ferret will play with her kitten a eat with hors, a dog with her puppies. mare will play with her foal, though th writer from whom we quote has never see a cow try to amuse her cell nor any bird thole young. If their mothers do isot amus them the young ones invent genies of thei own. A flock of owes and lambs wore ono observed in adjoining fields, separeted by fence with several gaps in it. Follow ma leader" was the game most ie favour witl this flock, the biggest lamb leading roun the field and then jumping the gap, wit all the others following in single file ; an laanb that took the leap unusually wel would give two or three more enthtisiasti jumps out of sheer exaberant happines when it reached the other side. Fawns playa sort of cross touch from on side to the other, the " Leech" in each cast being by the tose. Little pigs are also grea, at combined play, which generally takes th form of races. Emulation seems to forn part of their amuaement, for their race seem always to have the winning eff the firs place for their object, and are quite differ ent from those combined rushes for food o causeless stampedes in which little pigs aro wont to indulge. Racing is ten emusemen natural to some animals, and being soon taught by others, becomes ono of their inos exciting paseirnes. Many horses, and al racing dogs, learn to be as keen et evinein as schoolboys. Birds delight in tbe free an fanciful use of their wings. There is all th differeuce possible between the flight of bird for "business " or pleasure ; and any kind on fine days will soar to vast heights fo pleasure alone. Are Horses Affectedby Change of Climate. Most undoubtedly horses are affected by change of climate, even in cases where the change may eventually do no harm, until they become acclimatised. Homes removed from this country to India feel the excess of heat just as much as their riders, and show signs of languor and fatigue in re- spect of work which hers would not give them the slightest troable. When horses are taken into high attitudes on the Andes or in Thibete the blood frequently starts from the mouth, ears and nose the rarity of the atmosphere affecting them just as injuriously as it does human beings who have not been born and bred at that eleva- tion. Horses again, suffer if removed to climates either marshy or darkened by dense forests—fresh air, dryness, and light being essential to their w.efl-being. Dark- ness and damp, which some animals delight and thrive in, are utterly uncongenial to horses. The neglect of this considera- tion, frequently seen in the construction and management of stables, says Professor Flower, is not only unkind to the animals, but very costly to their owners. PUREST9.STRONCEST, BEST. Coetains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, PilosPbat*s, or any Ininriants E. W. Q.ILLETTe Toronto. Opt., .te ad °g as 31 st ve 111 .q.' K. a at 3, a- r - Dr le r - ,h Is kg w de esseste, . aa e ee ' • • - e ae e s - "NrY:',.."-..,N. ',:,,,,s , , '', , ?.. C e' a - .. . • . e . a .4.V.N'ke%.‘kN.sit."%.,V.e==.1:44;;;;* . ,,, ",..... '',..,;,:a., -,...,,, .'4,1•;8,,:•`:.,!•>kU.si-,L",,..4.; "Catelterialg t recommend known to me." 111 $o. "The use its merits so of supererogation intelligent families within easyreach." Late Pastor Bloomingdale for Infants and Children. cli.. to D., Ave., City. Bowel adaptedto itassuperiorto anypresetiption If. 4.. Aamma, OxfordSt., Brooklyn, chtdrentbat N. Y., universal and seems a work Few aretbe keep Castona D.D., Ir„k city. Church. Tex Cerra= Castoriet Seim Stomach, 36113 Worms, gestiom Without insurious "For several your ' Ca -stet do so a.sit results,", "The Winthrop," Compiler, 77 cures Colic, Constipation, Diaxthosa. Eructation, gives sleep, and, promotes medication. --- a ,Castoria" is so well known that it to endorse it. who do not CARLOS Treitexe, New Reformed years I have recommended -eat' and shallalways continue kw =variably produced benedcial EPYTIX F. 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Ike• Manufactured only by Thamas Holloway, 78, New Oxford Street, late 593, Oxford Street, London. ,110 VI' Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots 7 -...'7 If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious, -.. Since Hath 13iit till All things Each earnest Ertch These Or lead The who forgets Habits strive ...1;tr,,, .....ri-4.......,.• Trust, to his children God's unbounded promised all things. nothing we reach our final home above, shall work out for us blessings longing, of our nets Inc aspiration—an of which we Nvill God giVe us when He sees to better things in Ills own wayl love canbe ill ; still. rest, pray, tis be 6 better •HE when we flay od -.........._., ........ ..... _.•..., HEAD -MAKER'S • '1I'ML421,61,W NEVER FAILS Iv an &WASTES FCR SALE BY ,8,11, ora'Avalami eeekee • ra ,...E•rac. *;711XM MEDICINE. deetETW4PRZ. eel ee ' man will always be remembered himself for others.• are soon assumed; but to strip them off, 'tis being fe e - 'eadaiget BEST COUGii SOLD ST DIIIOGISTO eee ' ' . -.... ....e.......e