The Exeter Times, 1889-4-25, Page 7LATE CAKE NWS.
Pan-Blavist Intrigelen-Austria's Aftlieti011
—The Impeess /dad,
The triumph1tthe Ruseophile party in
Moutnanie &elst the pokaer of the 'King
to enemata the secret treaty with Auetria.
Premier Cartargi does not (weasel his enmity
against the, triple° Alliance. In Thursday's
debate in the Chamber on the country's
foreign volley he refused to pledge the Min-
41try to aotibn against Pan-Slavist intrigueo
or to negotiiite -a eompikob vritli Reside,
l�wing tho latter 'Nifty to mereh through
Roumania to occupy )3ulgaeek.
It is rep 'ted thet the King will abdioate
Ullfeefl 'he Ministry in overturned, The
Servian government is also Ressophile. M.
Riclics, receiving the Realm) Minister to-
day, deolared that the Regents would do
their utmost to strengthen the bonds of
friendship between Russia, and Servia.
t e
&MAU'S AFFLICTIoNS.
Advioes groin :Vienna 'state* that the Eta.
press of Austria. leiksibeen °Awaked by the
family malady—ineenity. She auffere from
long spells of melancholia and entertains
delusions, accusing heraelf of the death el
Crown Prince Rudolph.
She is possessed with ideas of suicide,
thinking to leave the Emperor free to
remarry.
Sometimee ehe dandles a cushion or a
pillow, thinking it a mite „bornbelt to ths
throne. TheAmperor in greatly affected,
He suffer" from insomnia and has no zest for
work, taking only a languid interest in
State affaire. It is retorted that •he has
oonsultedahettla Next; Kelnoicy andCount
von Taffee upon the advisability of abditab
' ing in favor of his nephew Franz. It is also
said that he wrote to the Pope deolaiing
that he longed,for rani and wished to retire,
tind that the Pepe's response, urging 'upon
him the necessity of submitting to the de-
crees of God, combined with the protests of
the Ministers, Wetted him in the meantime
to remain upoh the throne.
The disoontent in Turkey is becoming
very (merlons. A correspondent at Pera
'writes that Glaciate, especially in the re-
moter provinces, having received ,no salaries
for nearly twoo years, are mincing .eery
possible piastre out of the wretched tax-
payers, and not half of the proceeds find its
way into the imperial treasury. Array offi-
cers and men alike are clamoring loudly for
some of their arrears of pay, and their atti-
tude is at times so threatening as to afford
juatification fer fears of the military rebel-
lion which the Ministers arenznown to enter-
tain. Meanwhile the Sultan calmly exacts
the uttermost farthing due to him, and goo!
on witlitie pleaeurees with Oriental indiffer-
ence to the hard fate of his unhappy sub-
jects. For a week past he has been spend-
ing money even faster than his oomplaisent
Ministers could collect it, and there :are
rumors thee the Grand Vidor has had to
contrad a -private loan at exorbitant inter-
aydrOphObia Cram',
Woosnitni ()Moo April 15,--4 remark.
able recovery from en attif.Ok,o; the greatly
dreaded hydrophobia has iont About , trans.
piren in Mies county. The &filleted pereon
is a 11.yeer-old son of Je,oela Ihrkley,
Well-to•do farmer, who resides ten miles
northeast of here. Eight years ago the boy,
then, ikbout 2i- years of age, was bitten on
the upper lip by the family dog. The amain°
appeared to be all right at that time, but
later on manifested signs of madoese and was
killed. Nothing serioue was thoughleof the
lacy's injury, and the wound soop heeled up
Six weeks ago young Barieley mune', home
from school and oomplained of feeling un-
well. A phyonoian Wee celled in and the
boy's envie= we aut./wed; to be museular,
rheumatism, as his entire musoular system
appeared to be.partially paralyzed. ' Elie
condition became worse, and other physician
were called in for consultation. The patient
became eubjed to paroxylime during which
he would growl and bark like a dog and
attempt to snep,at and bite persone around
bine The paroxysm began by the boy's
panting „rend sticking out his tongue. His
eyes would become glawy and he Would
remain in this state aboat twenty minutes
and then sink litto,a partially paralytic oon•
ditione While in a paronyare he was posseee-
ed of great strength anti was bound to his
bed, and two men were netucesary to hold his
hands back. A consultation was held, and
the ailment pronounced hydrophobia. The
attending phyeicians looked upon rabie
poison as a selflimiting infeotion, and sat
about to bridge the ease °Ter the aottve per.
lod of the,poieon. Large •closee of aoonite
were given to blunt the seminary nerves of
the ithroat and cesophagus, hydrate of
ohloral, tri obviate rthReesness and prodnoe
•sleep, and selyolate of eagle, to oounteract
the rabic poison if lb depended upon a fer-
raenefor ite aotion. The paroxysms grew
leas 'frequent and it is now two weeks
since the patient experienced the :laid one.
He sits up in bed and does not evince a de-
sire to bite. His voice has regained its nua.
era" sound, he is all right mentally, and the
ehydolans pronounce him out of danger.
est.
POREIGN NOTES.
A daughter has been born to Prince Oscar
of Sweden, who lash year abandoned his
chancepf the crown inorder to marry Miss
Ebbe Munok.
Ceylon people are interested in a rivalry
e as to who shall find the highest palm tree.
An English railroad builder named Cantrell
made the first record. at 110 (feet, but Mr.
--Paton-Cray has jeep shown a palm 117 foeb
high, and takes the medal.
The Rev. Dr. J. M. Beckley, writing of
Spain, says: "Bribeiy is general in Spain.
Almost anything can be done with a fee.
Nob more than forty per cent. of the taxes
levied by the Government cen be collected.
Mayor e of cities get rich in a year. One at
least of the moat important cities is destitute
of credit. No one will lend ib any money.
Spaniards so distrust eaoh other that money
fa not forthcoming for great public works.
The English menage the water Works, the
street care, and almost everythirigielse." • -
An aged peasant at Klausenberg in
Transylvania, when he went.no an orphan-
age to ask aid for an adopted child, seated
that he was 103 years old and that he had
walked two days' journey from his native
village. He rarely had tasted meat, and
had lived all his life on oat bread and corn
porridge. He had not tasted wine for
peen, because he had never the money to -go
to the villege tavern. When he was taken
to a photogre,pherti he was -frightened, and
inquired whether he would survive the
operation.
4111111.1111110.11118,
ZalrattLS Bas,
When a patten t is suffering from fever.
and the skin is hot and dry, a saleratue bath
is often found to give at least temporary
relief. This bath can be given to the patient
in the bed, without removing the bedclothes,
or his own clothing.
Have the weber as hob as it can be borne
with isaleratue dissolved in it. in the propor-
tion al perharis half a cupful to a quart of
the water.
Wet a sponge in this, and them squeeze
it so dry that there will be no danger of
dripping. Bathe the face and hands I first,
and dry theta 'instantly with a soft towel.
Then putting your own hand and arm be-
neath%he bedclothes'bold them up bridge-
Ilgbt keep the olothes from the sponge,
and, at the sable time, push back the night.
dress or undershirt of the patient, so that
with the other hand you can pass the warm,
damp sponge over his body.
• Take a limited surface each time and dry
it quickly, before attempting the next. All
this is done beneath the bedclothes so that
no air can get in to chill the body. PUSh
up the deem so ad to bathe the erne in the
same way.
,
It le slow and careful work, but not diffi-
mite and the relief and comfort afforded-,
even if not permanent, will repay the effort.
These baths may ,be given ono a day, or
in some oases at morning and at night.
Herr Lindauer, travelling on the 'Ake of
Como recently, gave a waiter a paper of
diamonds, telling hlmahat it was a tip, and
reads similar presents to others. The police
asked him Some queatione, and he replied
that he lived upon diamonds and he paid
with diamonds, whereupon he proceeded to
swallow several of the precious stones.
Ile, was locked up in an asylum and his
friends ant for. He han nearly $50,000
worth of diamonds in his pothession at the
time. The waiter to whom he gave the dia-
mond tip threw. away-thS stones, sr:peening
they were bits of glue, or says he did.
A traveller who recently returned from
Pekin aeserts that there is plenty to emelt
in that city,' hat eery !idle to see. • Most of
the show places finch as the Temple of Hea-
ven and the -Marble Bridge have tine by one
been olosed-to:onteide Berbarianfiewho can,
not even teribe their way. The houses are
all very low and mean, the streets are wholly
unpaved, and are always very muddy and
very dusty, and,a0 there are no sewers or
cesspools the filthinees of the town is hides.
oribable. •'He adds that the public buildings
• are mall, and ia a tumhie•down condition,
and the nearest one atm gee to the Emperor's
•paten is to climb to the top of some build-
ing outdate the snored enolosure and Bur-
reptitiotiay peep over the wall through an
opera glass. Even then he does nob see
.much.
Two different systems haye mainly been
resorted to on the elevated railroads in Ger-
many, for cleminiehhig the noise of, Waine on
their.vieduota, and, with fair success. One
of these .consiste in bolting to the bridge
etructure long troughe of sheet iron about
sixteen ,inchostwieleeso set or arranged ths,t
e rail will coin° in ,the centre' of ,each the
troughs ere then -filled With gravel, in the
middle of 'which, is, „buried the lormetedimil
thnber carrying the tail, and the space be-
tweenthe troughs . is covered with iron
plates, on which it spread a thin layer of
gravel, The etepoict'oo#10d, which hat,' been
adopted; as., possessing a greater degree of
efficiencY than theokithery coulee in placing
a continnoneeierimi of shallow iron Wetighe
&bona graelfeeli eenspie-atong the One of tba
tracks. These .are filled, with gravel, en
which the ties and rail. are laid.
The genuine mutton -leg 'leave 11 One of
the festures of Moly
The Skipping -Rope.
The spring is upon us, and with it comes
a number of praotioes, more or less injurious
so humanity, but as regular in their attend-.
moo upon the season as is the sun itself. In
these days of prohibitory amendments there
are some things:that are ia need of , such
treatment that have nob been mentioned, -
end among those ie the skipping-rope. Let'
us have an ediot against thie destroyer of
youth. Every year brings its list of victims
so thie perniciorte prectioe, feeetiorisly :salted -
sport, Every year aide to lengthen the list
of women who have been oondemned to a
life of invalidism by this skipping-rope bled -
new. Solemn has decided that the exudes
has only evil effects, so why is it not sensi-
ble to protect the little ones who cannot com-
prehend the Ark that they run in practicing
it, by ineerdiotizie its manufacture and sale?
It in malleable, and will meet with a grate-
ful eupport from parents and guardians.—
tlloston Home Journal.
Took Him Off His Guard.
They were Bitting close together in about
as dark a oorner of the visitors' gallery as
they could find, watching the proceediogs of
a night session of Congress.
What is It, Chawley, that man on the
platform tusked the others ?"
"That is the Speaker, my dear," Charley
explained; " he is just getting ready to put
the measure before the House to vote, nd
he asked, 'Are you ready for the goes -
tion ?' "
"Yes, Chawley," she sighed as she drew
a little clowir, au though to make roam for
four more visitors on a crowded seat, "yes,
Chavoley, I think I az."
Then they went out into the oalm, starry
night. Congress had no more attractions
for them.
He Warmed Them up at Last.
"Ladies and gentlemen," send the man -
wee, amain in front of the onrtain at the
end of the fourth eta, "we hate just discov-
ered the mitres of the Wiling temperature,
from whioh you have doubtless been suffer.
Mg. The honse has been on fire for nearly
half an hour. In assuring you of my regret
at the occurrence and the unavoidable necess-
ity of bringing the performance to a close
you wilt permit ineeto express my heartfelt
joy duct we have succeeded at lest in thor-
oughly ;earthing up a Boston Mulience."
— tChicago Tribune.
The Reason Why.
"John," ;Aid Mrs Hawkins, as they were
going Mime' from church, "Why did the
minieter 'call the dove that brought took a
green twig to the ark "he "I don't knows,"
replied John; "tiniest that it wen that if
the dove hen been a female she couldn't
have kept her mouth oloeed long enough to
get the' bough to the ark ; and there was ill -
feeling in that honsehold ,all the rent of the
The Book Canvasser.
Let me tell you onfidentially
Of mon who, deferentially,
Will " chin" to 7ott potentially,
By the quarter boar or less.
You may frown and scowl malignantly!
You may elam the door indignantly,
emile on You benignently,
If you say yee.
Their forte le affability,
They're men of marked civility,
Of moist pronounced humility—
Oa this I lay some stream.
By reasoning quite synthetical,
They'll prove that you're poetioal
And far from epathetical,
It you eay yes.
They're public benefactors,
And, while they have detractors,
As who hoe not 1 The fact 18,
And this you nmet confess,
They broaden human kuowledge
Without any aid from oollege.
This mut% you will acknowledge,
If you inky yes.
The fund of inrormation
Revealed in oonversiktion
With mon of any station
Or outykardlorm Of dress,
Shows clearly to the skeptioe,1
That, in matter's intellectual, .
You're sure to be effectual,
If you say yes.
I've a feeling that's fraternal
For these visitors diurnal
And "droppers in" noeturnal,
' Which I always will express,
And the height of my ambition
Ie to better their condition,
Which our only reach fruition.
When we all say yes.
• Old -Fashioned Prohibition.
In 1654 the General Court of Connecticut
ordered the confiscation of "all Barbadoes
liquor commonly called 'Rain Kill Devil' "
wan:13'4°111d he landed within th e j aried lotion
of the Commonwealth. Theorder was direct-
ed spinet the growing practice of selling
liquor to the Indians.
But six years before the Court had found it
necessary to cheek the indulgence of white
men in wine and Wong drink. It had there-
fore ordered: "That no inhabitant in any
town ohould continue in a tavern or victual'.
ing-house in the town in which he lived more
than half an hoar at a time, drinking wine,
beer, or hot water."
Tee abuses arising from the use of tobacco
also attraoted the attention of the court
The law•makers ordered that no person un-
der the age of twenty years, nor any one un-
accustomed to its use, ehould take the weed
until he had obtained "a certificate under the
hand of some who are approved, for know-
ledge and skill in phisicke, that it is usaful
for him, and that he has reoeived licence from
the Court for tbe same." ,
An order was also passed "for the regulat.
ing of those who had already made lb neces-
sary Ifor their use," width ordained "that no
man inahe colony shall take, any tobacco pub-
lics:poly in the street, nor in the field or woods
unless When travelling at least ten miles, or
abthoordinary tirae of repeat, commonly call-
ed dinner; or if it be not then taken, yet
not above once in the day at most, and then
not in company with any other."
The constables were &rooted to present the
names of such as transginesed the act to the
court.
•
Flat Heftleal.
Janitor—Rave you any children, air
Mr. ; three.
Janlidt-1 osn't Jet on hay,. thin biti
them. . •
• "Mr. SidloY—Iltii my children ait 'ail
Janttor—It doors 5 make no difference. '
Mr., Kirby—They live' out in Chicago.
Janitme—Cian't help it, sir; the owner
mole he won't rent to nobody who had ChM -
ren tinder no olninrastanoes.
Woman's Works in Fiction.
It is women who write most of the Eng-
lish and American novels, though men still
ply that industry, and it la 970Mell who are
most popular in tbeir novels. What has
sold so well as " Uncle Tom"? Who in
France was read so much as George Sand? or
in England as Charlotte Bronte end George
Eliot? or in Sweden as Fredrika Bremer? or
in &aerie% as Miss Alood, or now in all
countries as Mrs. Ward? No wonder that
thee great sucoessee and many others thee]
could be named tempt women to write many
poor novels and some good ones, the major-
ity beingenediocre, however, or neither good
nor bad. Bat mediocrity in a novel is now
much higher in quality than it used to be,
the novel -writing talent having grown by
cultivation, until the fourth -rate novelist
can write better than any but the first rem
author °Mild fifty years ago.—Springfield
Republican.
A Sea Serpent Story.
NovlaSootia papers are printing the story
of Robert Outhouse, of Tiverton, who olaims
that early last month he had an encounter
with a sea serpent while out in a boat with
his son. He says an object of enormous aze
appeared alongside and attacked the boat.
He etrack it with his boathook, catching it
about eight feet irom theta% The leogth
wae something like thirty feel:. A desperate
battle ensued, which lasted nearly an hour,
and ended in the monster regaining its free-
dom. The creative was eighteen inthes in
diameter, ite ooloura dingy blue;, its head
wail as round as a globe ; month nearly in
the centre, and when open 'it reyealed a
large tooth about two finales long on each
side; along the !met jaw was a row of teeth
in each jaw, nearly an ineh long; the colour
of the Hondo of the month Was like the
brightest chrome yellow.
• Magistrate • (to prisoner) —"Were you
born in Pennsylvany?" Prisoner—" yes,
sir." Magistrate—"Brought up in that
State!" Prisoner —"Yes; I have been
brought up in Pennsylvany, and every other
State in the Union, too."
A man down in Nova Scotia has been
heavily fined for minding +false news to a
lootki paper. The nueristrate before who
the case Oalne pointed out hew ratioh tb
proprietor of a newspaper depended upoo
the good faith of hie informants in localities
where he might have no per/lona' knowledge
to guide hhn. The praobleal joker or malt -
(nowt falsifier who _may think ib rd,ther
clever thing to take in a newspaper in this
wey will for the future Mk wise in remeinber-
ing that it is a dangerous game to pley, ems
if the editor is neither+ pugnacious nor a good
JOHN LABATT'S
Indian PaleAle andXXXBrown Stout
Highest awards and liedale for Purity and Excel-
lence at Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia,
1878; Canada, 176; Australia, 1877; and
Paris, I ranee, 1878.
„ TESTIMONIALS SELECTED:
Prof IL Croft, Pablio Analyst, Toronto, says :—'q find it
to be perfectly sound containing no impurities; oradulter-
atio'
rd; o.nd can strongly recommend it as perfectly puro and
a verysuperior malt,hg nor,"
John B Edwaros, Professor of Chemistry, Montreal, says:
'I iind them to be remarkably so un ales, brewed from
pure:malt mut hope
Bev. P: J. Md. Page.Professor of C horoistry, Laval Dn,ver
Pity, Quebec. says :—"I have analyzed the Indian Pa te,' Ale
manufaetured b y John Labatt, London, Ontario and P.,e.ye
found it a light ale, eon taining but little alcohol', of a
eious novo, and of a very a,greeabie taste 'and superior
quality, and compares with the best imported ales. have
also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of the 'mune brewer)",
whiola is of exoellent qualitY; its ftayor is very agreeable ;
it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a
little richer in alcohol, and can he compared advantage-
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ASK YOUR, (.ROVER FOR IT.
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1
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•
11180. Oxford $e, Brooklyn, la T. nelegoeitit ineurities medice,tiao.
• THE Carrel:7a Country, 77 Murray Street N.
Ammlege••••1141•11.00
09- -7
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do‘ 1.6 4,(P \*E,
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410
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it ineY be dangerous to thy anything at
all thatmghtb� utilized as an .mtetieS ter
thiSCiiielegtirit,.iinladylike and often peini.
clone babit,, the dhixong of gultifYhOt ibe
trtttirtheuld bo teia:, Pet', De .`Aetiiptidttitiai"
g#in .ohewing °urea certain
•oases.Of'dySpepsis4.Mid reports a oure in the
instanCe of a Men Whose trouble wee 'that
after Mealil, and Until digestionmae complet.
ad, and digestion occupied a very long those,
he had otto in hie etoinecli, a disoornfortiog
:feelhico. Of illness; and & tende,ney to erktetin
tion of teed.. ClieWhig gum fOr an houratter
eachmeal fi.aallyeffeotCd a. pate: So, per,
• haps, If rotteie aft,ected in a similar way, he
may try gum. But the gtnn should be good.
Ther 15 enothat merit ie. gum•oheitiog: it. •
elfardi exorcise to *MI develops the jaws.
lint that doesn't omint f�' muoh ; the gum.
chewers are nearl$, all bidding women.
co
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Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, TS, Now Oxford. Street,
late 538, Oxford Street, Loudon.
Purehasers should lOok to the Label on the Bozos and Pots:
If the address; is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. 1
m,B,c)-4-x3:33um•TT'
Live Stobk Association,
(inco.rvom,.ted.)
Home Office-liooni 1), Arcade, Toronto,
In the life department thie esiociation pro-
Vi'le' itideninite for eicknossand addidento and
aSfuStaneete the relatives of de.
odailed Mani ens at tssrn;s nvailahlo
• in the info Stook department tWo.thirds
in-
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loollestists for Ate:Mite envited, , Stied for
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SUM
O:W..'1.1034st How:Restored
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41 Ann Street New York
Post Office Box 450 4i584-ty
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