The Exeter Times, 1889-12-5, Page 4ROAKON NQ.
: /*lin him 38.000t.
Sixty Neapolitan ohnrethes have been con -
clammed far destruction for be make of
extenaive improVeMente of the 04 -
At the Paris Exhibition of 1867 the the -
&tree took in $2,100,000, at the Exhibition of
1878 $2.600,000, and in 1889 $3,050,000.
The Freneh taxes produoed 3,000,000
franos len last August and 4,000,000 francs
has last September than in the corresponding
mouths of last year.
The Society foe* Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals in Swizeriand has resolved to ban-
ish mute from the republic on the ground
that they are killing off the birds.
The artisio wealth of the Paris municipal-
ity in peintings, sculpture, engraving:1, 9c3.,
la estimated at $2,500,000, outside of the
• get treatures owned by che nation.
•illitik
Paris butler won last month the one
•mired thousand dollars' prize in the
. xhibition lottery. His wife runia the goat
carriagea for babies in the Tuileries' gar-
den.
iDaring 1889 slightly over a hundred mill-
ion dollars worth of gold has been dug from
the earth ontthe four continent's ; the largest
quantity one irom Australia, and South
Africa. Africa is looking up.
German papers assert that both exEmpress
Frederick and her sister, Princess Alice,
regularly reported to their mother, Queen
'Victoria, the smote of Germany'e diplomatic
and military operations during 1870.
The membere of the royal Savoy dynasty
that had long been buried under ohurchea at
• Turin were recently exhumed and re -entomb-
ed in the ancestral gepulohre at St Michael'a
Abbey, in the high mounteine of Savoy.
ghah is to thoroughly convinced that
the aco.dent to his ttain was a cunning, plot
devised for his destruction that mince hit
return to Teheran he has refused to receive
Prince Dalgoreuki, the Runkle Minister.
The French radical Deputiee propose to
introduce the most revolutionary motionsin
the Assembly.as soon au it le entirely organ'
ized, among others ono for the abolition of
the regular army and the concordat with
Rome.
The greatest beer drinkers are theme of
Munich. They drink 492 litres per yes.;
against Vienna's 296, London's 254 Berlin's
240, and Paris's 22. This costa the Munich
inhabitants on an average $30 a head an
'finally,
Experiments with a new explosive called
miswrite, which is M dynamite as 100 to 70,
have recently been made in Austria, and are
said to have aucceeded so well that the in-
vention has been purchased for miliatry pun.
poses exoltusively.
During the hat two yeare the Italian army
haa beenincreased by 30,000 men, 200 field
guns, and 6,000 cavalry. Never was the
army so numerous or powerfully organized
as at present, under the attempt to keep up
with Germany's military step.
The tallest chimney in the world is now
building near Freiberg in Saxony. It will
be 460 feet high, with an inside diameter
of,23 feet at the bottom, and 16 feet 6 inches
at the top. It will take a million and a
half of bricks and the cost is $30,000.
The German naval authorities are said' to
have been making experiments lately with
a torpedo boat built of compressed paper.
The vessel is eleven feet long and was
found to show great strength and mor e elas-
ticity when rammed by another boat.
n — The gala coach in which the Princess Soph.
hie, recently married to the Crown Prince of
Greece, rode to her wedding was built for
the Count de Chambord in expectation of
riding in it to his coronation. The King of
Greece bought the coach for 26.000 francs.
A great scandal exiete at Bologna in regard
to its staple, sausages, which have lately
been fraudulently made of diseased horse
meat, mixed with perk. Fereign importers
reftned to take such stuff, and the cityra
brand in this specialty now studs below
par.
The debt of the city of Paris amounta to
790 francs for every man, woman and child
within the city limbs, In Freakfert the
debt is equivalent to 317 francs per head, in
Milan to 218, in Berlin to 154, in the Hague
to 136, in Brussels, the most heavily in-
debted of all European cities], to 1,605.
A Parisian architect, proud of his magretio
powers, sent] the bonne amie of one of his
friends to sleep the oeher day, and could not
rouse her. Two hours' hard work by a
chemist were necessary to bring her to con.
aciousness, and then the amateur mesmerizer
and his friends found themselves in custody.
Since 1882 eighty two miles of streets have
been built, paved, and drained in Rome, at
a cost of 630,000,000, and 3,000 houses erect-
ed in large, modern blocks, where old
quartere formerly etc o.1, and tive new bridges
thrown acme] the Tiber. In comiequence of
these improvementa the old city has been so
changed that the visitor of twenty years ago
would hardly recognize it. •'t
The profits of the tables at Monte Carlo
last year were greater than in any previous
year; in fact, they were so satisfactory that
the company decided to enlarge the Casino,
and the work haa been proceeding rapidly
all through the summer. So far there have
been very few visitors to Monte Carlo this
season, and only five tables in the centre
room are being played at.
The Convent of Trappists at Mont des
Cats, near Lille, France, has been suppreencl
by the Geyer nment, and those of its inmates
who are aliens have been ordered to leave
the oeuentry within twenty.four hours. The
measure, though perfectly legal, has aroused
the indignation of the leading Catholic organ.
Its motive is that there were too many for-
eigners in the brotherhood.
MAN;RATING TIGERS.
nets ,about therm Aceumulated
.At the last meeting of the Betobay Natural
History Society, Mr. Gilbert, a well-known
allikaree, reed a paper on man-eating tigers,
of which a brief report is given in the Landon
Timm He says that the popular idea of the
man eatetnie wholly incorrente He ia come
manly suppoaed to be "an old brute, more
often decrepit than otherwise, perhapt lamed
from eome former wooed, with his teeth
broken and his skin always mangy, unable
from hie infirmities to kill game, but obliged
to conceal himself near a village path and
then to pounce on some solitary human being
and devour him, never attacking when there
are more then two or thrempersone together,
and alwaye displaying great cunning.'
Sir William Hunter takes this view, and
describes the mom:eater as generally an old
beast disabled from overtaking his usual
prey, and who seems to accumulate 'his tale
of victims in eheer cruelty rather than for
food. Sir WilliannHunterementions a man-
eater who was known to have killed 108
people in three yeare, and another ;which
killed an average of SO persons a year for
the same period. A third °ended 13 villages
to be abandoned wad,250 tquare miles of land
to be thrown out of cultivation. A fourth
killed 127 pereons in a year and atopped a
public road for many weette.
Mr. Gilbert, however, says that these views
as to the man-eater are quite erroneous.
They are not different from the ordinary tiger
which liven on game end bullocks, brit he don
not say why they become man-eatere. Sir
Joseph Fayrer suggests that it is by the ac-
cident of having onoe tasted human flesh and
then finding all other fleih insipid,
Mr. Gilbert mentions certain famous man
eaters. One, a tigress, in theNagpur district,
has a foncinems for the employeeof the Bengal.
Nagpur Railway, frequentatract of country
only about nine square miles in areaaand ia
possessed of extraordinary cunning and an
daoity. This year, up to Jane, she had killed
soma people, besides wounding others. She
lives in a rooky and precipitous spur, in
which there is a heavy bamboo and other
jungle. Several apringe of water rise at the
foot of the scarp, and there is a cave whioh
shows many signs of being need by her and
her family. A big stone just outside the en
trance is scored deep and long with many
scratches of their claws. In February last,
In broad daylight, she carried off one of a
gang of permanent. way men from under the
eyes of his companions. She has been shot
at many times and her cubs killed but she
has got off scatheless. Sometimes the men -
eater traverees very long distances. Thus
the Jettnaar man-eater, which was killed by
an officer of the Forest Department, after
killing a man in one place, would kill another
twenty miles off the next night. This one
also a tigress, frequented a belt of the Him"!
layas 5,0C° to 10,000 feet high, was eventu
ally killed 8,000 feet above the sea. Bat
none of the manteatere recorded by Mr. Gil-
bert were decrepit or worn out. They were
strong, handsome beasts in their prirae.
A European in New Guinea.
The late Dr. Blaclety, the Ruesian ethnole
ogist had some of the most remarkable ad-
ventures among the New Guinea natives
that have befallen any modern explorer.
He was a rather peculiar man, and though
he had a thrillinr story to tell, nothing could
induce him to write a popular account of his
experiencee. He was engaged when he died
in preparing a purely scientific, account of
hie long investigation among the savages of
the Pacific, and nobody would ever have
known ot his hair breadth escapes if he had
not told them to friends who gave them cur-
rency.
Considering Dr. Maaley's character lb is
rather amusing to hear from Dr. Finsoh of
the undignified expedients to which Maclay
had to resort to get alonghvith the savages
he was the first to visit on the Maolay coast,
New Guinea .Finsch learned the facts partly
trom the natives whom he reetntly visited.
Maclay had excellent reason for a while to
believe that he would be killed mileas he
could maintain the character of a super-
natural being. He thoroughly convinced the
natives that ha drepped from the moon. He
had some fireworks with him, and now and
then when he could do so without being
closely observed he would set off a piece.
The natives gave him credit for being able
to spout fire whenever hepleased. They were
euro aloe neat he could fly, for sometimes
when they left him at one village he was
the first to greet them when they reached
another. He had taken pains to inform him-
self of various short out through the timber,
and when he knew a travelling party intend-
ed to make a little detour he would clip it
through the woods for the sole purpose of
creating a sensation. In many other ways he
made a sort of mountebank of himielf, all of
whioh must have been decidedly dietatteful
to one who thought it beneath him to write
a popular amount of his travels.
American wild turkeys have been success.
fully acclimatized in Austria on that portion
of the estate of Count Brenner which is
known as the Denubian meadows, and great
flocks of them are to be seen in his forests.
It is said that a brown Norfolk turkey in
England may be made to resemble the
American wild bird in color and flavor by
cramming it with walnuts, soaked in water,
for a week before lb Is killed,
GLAND% rairu RE Q HEN.
The Wean Woman Whe WIN Probably
Wed Prince Albert Tieter.
I hear from a high Englieh source, nye a
Perla letter to the NewYork "Teibune " 'that
the Fniatrese Feodore of Sohleswig Holstein,
who did the Eiffel, tower the other day,
chaperoned by her elderly maiden aunt,
Amelie, of the same house, le in all liken,
hood the coming Prinons Albert "rioter of
Wales. She is a sister of the German ent
press and a niece of Prince °Medan, nee
dull old husband of the best of Queen Tic-
toriassaaughters, is going on 16, looks a
good aort of girl, and is almost pretty. But
she is not likely to improve when the bloom
of youth departs, and she wants witurome
gloom Evidently she has not come to her
full height., When she does she will prob-
ably be as tall as her imperal sister.
The queen would like to secure her the
crow') of Great Britian, because she h de
emended from her majeatyn mother, the
druthese of Kenn whose that huaband RAI
Priooe Leiningen. Prinoess Feodore has
been a great deal here with a party of ariato-
cratio Eoglieh friends, some of whom are
connections of her aunairalaw on the meter,
nal side °canteen Glekthen. Count Glen,
ohen abandoned his highborn German
status to marry Laura Seymour, and is a
profesaional sculptor, high in the queen's
fever. Against German etiquette she has been
latterly styling them both serene highnessee.
An objection to the proposed royal matoh is
that the young lady's mother is in a mad-
house. There is already 'more than a
touch of insanity in the royal family of Eng-
land.
The Future of Cities.
We can draw no reliable inferences for
this age beyond the, present century as to
the growth of cities. The growth of chin
of this century is without parallel or pre
cedent in previous ages. Rome reached a
population variously estimated from 500,000
to 2,250,000 (say 1,000,000), and was the
only great city in Europe a000rding to a
mordern standard. Alexandria with a popu-
lation of between 500,000 and 1,000,000.
was the one city of the first rank in Africa.
Jerusalem was alone in Asia. In the Middle
Ages there was no city of great size. Lon-
don 300 years ago was mnoh malice than
Boston; 200 years ago it had 670,000 people
—lees than Chicago claims. It was not
until the American Revolution that London
was as large as Philadelphia is to -day.
Fifty years ago it did nob equal present
New York and Brooklyn. In 1880 the
population waa 5500000. The growth of
European cities during the present century
has been marvellous. While hundreds of
square miles in Scotland have been depopu
leted the eitiee grow. Three Sootch men
out of every four live in the city.
In 1881 England and Wales had 60 per
cent. cif their population in oities,and the rate
of inoreaee the last two decadee has been
two and a half timegreater for the city
than for the rural population, and this
deepite the former reason for the exletence
of cities, whioh has disappeared in the ace
ourity from sievage beasts and bands of rob
bers, and while railways and telegrams have
modified the lonelinese and desolation of the
country home, and while:the appreciation of
the attractione of mountain, field and wood
has greatly increased. The preeent is the
age of great cities, the future will be the
age of greater cities.
While Belgium has increased 11 per
cent. in population, its capital, Brimsele, has gained 20 ; the increase of the
oapital of Denmark to the inoreasa of the
whole country as 2 to 1; in Sweden that of
its capital is as 4 to 1, and in Norway ae 10
to 1. With a stationary population in Prat -
Hie, the increase in Berlin is 25 per cent.,
and the same in Se Petersburg and Ranh,
and in France and Paris.
In the lust 120 years preceding 1800, Lon
don increased In po pniation only 50 per cent,
or one-half of 1 par cent. In the eighty efx
years since 1800 it has increased 500 per
cent. The average annual rate of increase
between 1861 and 1881 was 2.39 per cont.
A Poisonous Practice.
If housekeeperes everywhere would start
and maintain a crusade against the rale of
undrawn poultry in the markets or by
farmer o it would work a most wholesome
hygienic reform. It ie a vicious practice, an
abuse, in fact, than people have endured as
they have many other abuses, because there
is no remedy exoept in concerted action or
legislation. It is impossible to keep un•
drawn poultry even a few hours; without
the beginning of putrefaction from the
effects of the gases from the undigested food
in the "crop' and intestines. The longer it
la kept, the more of thhpoison goes into the
flesh, and in the majority of canes the
poultry then reaches the kitchen from the
market is eartaally unfit for food. Housekeepere could well afford to pay a larger
price to have the poultry dressed immediate-
ly upon being killed—they pay for much
weight that is thrown away, as it is, besides
having left a mass of poisoned fleah. It is
urged that some people prefer the,
flavor of
undressed poultry, but that fact only
makes the matter the more alarming, since
it indicates that we are cultivating a taste
for putrid meat. Can we not have a
reform ?—[Good Honeekeeping.
Baron Dounezel, a French officer proposes
that Frauoe and Germany should Agile on
a new principle, each country to have 100,
000 men on Me aide only, At the same
time, he is liberal in his offers to Germany,
and says that time country may have 10,000
Italians to help it, Of course the Baron le
certain that France would remain master of
the field. Germany would then have nothing
to do but give up Alsaos-Lorraine and her
atanding arrniee.
The Czer to 'Old to be in oonstant dread
of assassination, and this state of overpresent
fear, added to the hereditary melancholy of
the Romanoff family, has so utterly shatter
ed his nerves that for days together he is
praotioally not reeponeible for his actions
He also snaokes incessantly, and not only an
deavors to sustain his spirits by copious
libationof champagne and brandy, buil hat
taken to drugging hinagellf with chloral.
' French Housekeeping.
In an article on "A French Woman at
Home" in the "Ledies Journal," Dorothea
says :— She helps to cook the dinner she has
bought—for servants are wasteful with the
charcoal and she knows to an inch how little
she can use. In that marvellous place—a
French kitchen—where two or three little
holes in a stove cook such delicate dishoe,
and perform such culinary feata as our great
roaring coal fires have no conoeption of —
she Rite about like a fairy, creating magical
menu out of raw material of the most ordin
ary description.
Yes though a lady born and bred, refined,
elegant, and agreeable in society, a belle le
her way, yet she does not think it beneath hen
dignity to lighten the household expenses by
practical economy and activity.
The dinner of a French family is cheap anti
simple. There is always a soup, the meat of
the stew•pan—eometimes, if nob strict in ex-
penditure, another plate of meat—generally
two vegetables, dressed and eaten separably,
and sometimes, not alwayei, a sweet dish;
if nob that, a little fruit such as may be the
cheapest and in the ripeat season.
But there is very little in each thing, and
12 is rather in arrangement than in materiae
that they appear rich. The idea that the
French are gourmands in private life is in
oorreoe. They spend little in eating and,
they eat inferior things though their cook-
ery is rather a science than a mere accident
of civilizetion. At home the gre.%11 aim of
the Frenoh is to save any self-sac:1Mo° that
will lead to this result is cheerfully under-
taken, more especially in eating than in tht
mere luxury of mere idlenese.
No French woman will epend a cent te
save herself trouble. She would rather wora
like a dray horse to buy an extra yard oi
ribbon or a new pair ot gloves than 112 on
the isoften sofa in the world in plead fine
ladyiem, with crumpled gauze or bare hands,
,-.41141,1180.-41
A Great Race.
"The human race is a great one," said
he.
"Yee," said the widow to whom he was
engaged ; "I arn now on the second lap."
Great Praise.
"What do you think of that fora erre,/
quilt ? '
"Perfect'. You should dend it to the asy-
lum."
Joseph Darby, the phenomenal Etiglith
jumper, en Ootoleor 24, while fulfiling an
engagement at the eltating rink, Ashton
under -Lyne, essayed the feat of beating the
record for one and two single abrading jermps
withetit weights. He proved sncoessful,
clearing 11 feet S inches at one jump, and
diet:twee of 23 feet 11 inches in two jetsam
• JOHN LA]ATT'S
Indian Pale 4Ie aid XXX Srown Stout
Highest awaras ana Medals for Purity and Excel-
lenee at Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia,
1876; Canada, 1876; Australia, 1877; and
Paris, Prance, 1878.
TESTIMONIALS SELECTED:
Prof .H H Croft, Public: Analyst, Toronto, Says Rnd it
to be perfeetly sound containing no impurities or adultor.
atio t.s, and oan strongly recommend it as perfectly pure and
a very superior malt liquor/
l'olna 13 Edwaros, Professor of Chemistry, Montreal, says:
"1 find them to be remarkably soun.1 ales, brewed from
pure ll3alt and hops
Rev. P; J. Ed. Page, Professor of Chemistry, Laval tre,ver
say, Quebec. says ;—"I have analyzed the Indian. Pale,AAle
manufactured b yJohn Labatt, London, Ontario, and J,ayo
found it a light ale containing but little alcohol, of a deli-
cious flavor, and di a 17133.), agreeable taste and superior
quality, and compares with the best imported ales. I have
also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of tho same brewery,
which is of excellent quality; its flavor is very agreeable ;
it is a tonic more energetio than the above ale, for it is a
little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage-
ously with any imported article.
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR XT.
The Irish mile is 2,240 yards.
The Swiss mile is 9,153 yards.
The Italian mile is 1,766 yards.
The Scotch mile is 1,984 garde.
The Thecae naile is 1,808 yards.
The German mile is 2,106 yardi.
The Arabian mile is 2,143 yards.
The Turkish mile is 1,826 yards.
The Flemiela mile is 6,869 ear&
The Vienna poet mile is 8,296 yards.
The Homan mile is 1,628 or 2,025 yards.
The Worst mile is 1,167,or 1,337 rinds.
The Dutch and Pruseian mile is 6,480
par&
The Sweat& and Dailieh mileli 7,31,1
yards,
The English and American mile in 1,76n
yards.
The goods of all kinds landed at the Ler
don docke by 'tea eanottnt to some 1200,,6
MO or 18, 000,000 tone a year
ethtzman&
MANUFACTURERS OF
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PIANOFORTES.
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A
THE
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to 290 Zing Street West Toronto, Ont,
W torCL,nottsis a will there'll a Way—to
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ko'c
44,ec% -ateee.°;,
c, e, nenn.° ae(' it,
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Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, 78, New Oxford Street,
late 533, Oxford Street, London.
re -Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots'
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
xeter Lumber Yard
The Undersigned wishes -to inform the public in general thatjhe) keeps
—constantly in stock—
All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL
DRESSED OR UNDRESSED.
A. large stock of Hemlock always on hand at mill prices. Flooring, Sidi,
dressed—inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Dont
Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, &c.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY.--Corapetition challenged. The best and. MI
largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1.
All dressed lumber thoroughly seasoned and ready for use No shrinkea
assured. A call will bear out the above.
H E OLD ESTABLISHED Jas.Willis Manager
G. HOLTIMA
AGENT:
Hay Township Farmers' Mut
ual Fire Insurance Coe
-
A BUBBLY FARRIERS' COMPANY.
Live Stook Also enured, when in tho fielda
or on the road in charge of owner, or sotrant,
aleomanufacturer of the Improved Surprii
washer and Wringer Machines. Agent f
Tomb Stench; and the Wateon amplomentt
Undertaking Promply attended to.
G. ITOLTZMAN.
Zurich,
at, • `;, • 74T,,,
alTrn NO ip74Piessimaross AMIDESISSIAX.,,,Perinadentliton
tflIrUll mail note guaranteed. SitiiirS, and Eazpetires raid. Peet
liiir adtaratiges to beginners. Stock complete, trith fast -Selling spooialtle
0117.T.PI7' :TREF,. Ws guarantee what 402 adVCA'aSe. Write iitlaONV
• nrtena., eilunreferymen, 'Rochester, ea, Y. This house lo reliable.)
1.1