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The Exeter Times, 1890-10-16, Page 8iatestFrom Eurape &.Panic in London—The GermauKaiser on a hunt—The Queen of Roumania meets. Victoria, London teas seized the other day With a. t eritable panic upon the announcementthat the men employed by.' the Gas Light and Coke Company were about to strike. The company supplies three-fourths of London with gas, and its customers include 260 banks, 175 hospitals and dispensaries, 17 prisons andbarracks, 672 churches and chap. els, 200 schools, 60 theatres and music halls, 530 railway stations, signal boxes, and of- fices; 40 newspaper offices, 261 Government and municipal offices, 4 palaces, 300 clubs, 207 hotels, and 6 great markets. Enormous • interests were therefore at stake, and the million or niore people directly concerned read with much satisfaction alongside the report of the projected strike the announce• ntent that a thousand soldiers had been par- .tled at Chatham, really at a moment's no- tice to try their hands at gas making. The unionists were quite unprepared to fight the British Army as well as the capitalists, anti so promptly and prudently climbed down and repudiated any intention of resorting to a, strike. The company, having shown its pmt-er and influence in exalted quarters, graciously accepted the men's assurances, and the storm rolled away. Kaiser Wilhelm is at the Austrian Enlper- cr's hunting estate at Muerziteg in the Styria= nal zonal costume, which is described ns picturesque, but which the young man• arch thoaght well to supplement with a brown cloak of homespun cloth, and a brown felt hat with a green band aid a rosette of chamois hair. This Emery was nosh be- draggled on the first day of the hunt, which was carried on amid a storm of snow and hail, but the Kaiser was very nuich pleased, as he managed to kill two chamois, while the King of Saxony bagged only one, with three ;;oats thrown in, and the Austrian Em- peror ehnt nothing at all. The Kaiser'ssport was nearly spoiled by an amorous old lady who had.followed him from Berlin with a view to declare her passion amid the roman- tic eurneuntlings of the Styrian Alps. She at t rally in:utatted to get within bailing dia. tame of the beloved object, and was about t(' begin her declaration despite the howling storm, when she was seized by the keepers arta' dragged away. Onl • a half hour was given her to dry out, and she was then sent ha•:k to'lenna, whereat the latest ae,'.tunts sht' was awaitthg her loved one, fully assured t2 his affection. The Queen of Roumania directly she re- tnrnt'cl front Ireland was seized by the bards of Wales again, and they have continued right up to tate present time to compose r"tlt•s w lu"lh they invariably send her, to pre sent addresses whenever she ventures out of doors, and to give small Welsh trifles upon every coneetvable occasion. Carmen Sy lva took the best course open to her. She gave the people her blessing, and fled to Bal. • moral to see Queen Victoria, At Balmoral 'he found such an array of royalty awaiting her as seldom awaits any ',rarest in England. Albert Edward and his young heir, Beatrice and the Battenberg Prince, the Duchess of 1 Albany, and others waited upon the plat- form for her, and the Roumanian Queen could have taken no exceptiontothowarmth of her welcome, Indeed, the unusual hearti- ness of the English royal greeting has given rise to rumors of a )ftesible alliance between one of the Prince of Wales's daughters and Prince Ferdinand, heir to the Roumanian throne. Ferdinand is the nephew of King Charles. He is 23 years of ate, and has lived almost entirely in Germany. Ho has remained absent from Bucharest while any hope remained of a direct heir being barn to King Charles, but now that hope has been abandoned and political considerations de- mand his presence in the Roumanian capit- al. The Modem Girl The question was asked the other day "whether the modern girl is more selfish and self-absorbed titan girls used to be," and we find it a very hard thing to answer. There is undoubtedly one great plague spot that is spreading over our land—over the minds of our people, particularly over the educated class—over the aspirations and generous impulses of the young and that is the love of money and the attendant luxuries that the possession of money brings. That this mammon worship is on the increase no one can doubt ; that through it our girls have deteriorated is unfortunately true. What money brings is aceotmted tbe great, almost the only good, and what wonder is it that in this atmosphere the higher natures of our women are dwarfed and undeveloped? In this reign of selfishness, greed and sloth preponderates; but while we watch the butterflies of fashion disporting them- selves in the gilded atmosphere, let us not forget that these do not constitute the ma- jority, and that in many a home where 'things go wrong" and trials and troubles enter, our girls are developing into nobler womanhood. Therefore we say that girls are not really more selfish and self-absorbed nowadays than they used to be. When the crucial test of trouble is applied, in nine cases out of ten our daughters will cheer- fully give up all that seemed to them de- sirable and "make a sunshine in a shady place." Fussy Women. • A fussy woman is bad at all times to en- dure, but in illness her fussiness is a cause of actual harm to the patient, and a source of more thau usual discomfort to all with whom she comes into contact. Calmness can be attained, and is often chained by most excitable temperaments, and that is the best calmness after all. A very strong nature that has mastered itself as to be able to restrain all ill -placed display of emotion, and that can, while feeliug ..very strongly, yet keep command of voice and manner, is a great comfort and support to those around. No fear of being taken for cold and .unsym- pathetic, for, in spite of your quiet tone, low voice and restrained manner, your sym- pathy and feeling will make themselves ap- parent ; for, remember, real coldness a- '1 indifference to suffering is a :ging to guard against'. It matters not what the object is that a man aspires to be worthy of, and proposes as a model of imitation, if he does but be- lieve it to be excellent. Dr. Wilberforce, when asked why a certain noble lord who was notoriously deaf was put on a Royal Commission, the Bishop replied, "'I can only suppose that it was considered. desirable, 121 these days of flux nrtd change, to have something definite (deaf hilt) I". FBESONALS. .Cardinal Newman used to be an accom- plished performer on the violin, much to the scandal of some of his more austere asso ciates, who did not believe in "fiddling." Of late years, however, a weakness in his fingers kept him from using his favorite mut- sisal instrument, Mrs. Emily Pfeiffer, the English poet, who died a few months since, has given all her private fortune, . •witit the consent and approbation of her husband, to various edu- cational and charitable establishments for women. The bequest is valued at sixty or seventytbousand pounds. The heart o£ Cambetta was removed and embalmed after his death, and Paul Bert, who had the matter in charge, intended to place it in the memorial erected to the states. man in Paris. This was not done, however, ° and as M. Bert diediu Tonquin several years ago without leaving any memorandum in re- gard to the matter, the heart is supposed to be lost. Will Carleton, the popular author of Farm Ballads, is a broad -shouldered, erect, handsome man, looking like a soldier rather than a poet, and like a very well dressed IN Street man rather than like either. He is a greatfatorite asalecturer, isacapital mimie, au excellent story -teller, and "it he he not fellow of the best kings, is at least the hest king of good fellows Joseph Medill, editor of the Chicago Tri- bune, is reported to be one of the richest newspaper men in the United States, his fortune being estimate' at fro►it 4,000,000 to 85,000,00Q, He has three slaughters, but no son to succeed hun in the large busi• ness that he has built up. He is sixty -live years of age and spends from eight to ten boors a day in the 7 rihsne oiiiee. Madame Christine Nilsson had a narrow escape from serious injury, if not death, the other day, as she was leaving Paris for a visit to Switzerland. In trying to entero railway carriage just as the train started, she slipped, and felt between the carriage and the platform. The train was stopped atonee. however, and she was taken to her home, suffering from the shock and slight bruises. Mrs. Kendal, who is shortly to return to America, is a great favorite of the Queen, on account of her domesticity and homely way of hvirg, Her five children, she de •laces, keep her poor, since they are all to be dress- ed, educated, and launched in life. She is an indulgent and attentive mother, a model house -keeper, an economical shopper, a rigid ehurehgoe•, and in every way didarent from rI te pttptdar notion of a successful society actress,. Alphonso XIII. of Spain, if lie were old enough to talk plainly, would probably for. initiate the traditional Spanish opinion that the King can do no wrong. It is related of him that he was eating his luncheon of chicken as it was Queen hlizabeth's habit to eat hers, when his attendant said, reprov Maly, "Sire, Kings do not eat with their fingers." To which the baby tranquilly re- sponded, "This king does," and went on un- disturbed. Among the other recent accidental triumphs of English women must be includ- ed that of Miss Ann Francis Piercy, of the London Sehool of Medicine for "'omen, At tbe intermediate examination in iuedicine in the University of London she gained triple fire$; class honors, taking first place, with ex- hibition mid a gold medal, in materia medi- ca, and second place, with a gold medal in anatomy. Miss Piercy also excelled in pity. siology and histology, and was bracketed equal with two male candidates for the first class. Henry Arthur Jones,. the English drama• tist, is sleight in figure and about forty years old. He was born on a small farm in Buckinghamshire, sad at the age of thir- teen began earning his own living. When he was eighteen years old he visited Lon- don as a commercial traveller, and saw his first theatrical performance. So delighted was he that he then determined to become a playwright, and -for the next nine years devoted his time to writing plays, which no one would produce. His fame began in 1870, when Wilson Barrett accepted �1 Clerical Error, a clever little work which every other London manager had rejected. Mr. Jones now stands at the head of his profession. He lives in London, has a happy and helpful wife, and is the father of several children, . - Mr. J. A. Froude, the eminent historian, was apersotmi friend of Cardinal Newman in tbe. Littlemore days; but in later years they .became divided on account of Mr. I+roade's'fieree• antagonism to the 'Catholic Church. It is a curious fact that Mr. Froude, who was a clergyman of the Anglican Church, seceded from it. But instead of following Newman and Cardinal Manning, he became a broad thinker, and the historian of that epoch in English history when the contest between Rome and England was at its highest, and when Elizabeth, guided by Burleigh anclWalsingham, reluctantly eman- cipated the English Church from the rule of the papacy. Anyone who passes by the great Edison Laboratory at Orange, N. J., by night, is apt to find the lights burning, no matter what the hour. Edison is an indefatigable worker, and he pays little heed to the pas- sageof time when occupied with a new experi- ment or some fresh investigation. To this spirit of perseverance he owes much of his success. A day or two ago a gentleman who was visiting his laboratory, anti whose son was about to enter upon his first employ- ment, asked Edison to give him a motto for the boy, so that he might have it as stimulus and guide. Mr. Edison laughed a little at the novel request, and then said : "Well! I'll give him this: 'Never look at the clock. Tho young Duke of Newcastle has just sold his fine country seat and estate. of Work- sop Manor to a Mr. John Robinson, hook - maker and liquor ambler of i1'ottingham. Early inthe century, an ancestorofthe present Duke of Newcastle bought the estate, when he could ill afford it, merely in order to prevent any parvbnu of a merchant ormama, factuier settling in 'tile nes hborhood ! Into ,1 "the" the charmed region of t Dukertes of Clumber Park and Welbeck Abbey, of Thor- esby Hall and Harclwieke Hall and Rufford. Abbey, this nubonding representative ofthe old English would allow no lesserbeing,than a peer to intrude. Yet, on the bankruptcy of the late Duke, the family seat itself, Clam- ber Park, passed into the temporary posses Sion of dr. Fox, the' umbrella maker; and now Worksop Manor and its beautiful park 280 acres passes into the hands of a man who owes his position solely to beer and betting. Obeyed "De Speret." An old negro was found casting a net in a preserved frill pond. " I 'save caught you at last," exclaimed the owner. " Stand right -where you axe. If you try to run I'll shoot you. What are you stealing my fish for ?" took yere, you duan call dis steatite feesh, does you "Of course I do, you trifling seonedrel 1" " Well, ef dot's de ease day's er p'int o' diffutice betwixt us, I calls it .,'ligion, salt." " You call it what?" "'Ligion, salt; (let's what I calls it. Peter and John Wall de'ciples, when da felt 'ligious, tuck er net, an' went an' ketch some feesh, an' now, when rte sperit dun moved me, en' I has conte 'cortlin' ter de set iptttr' an' granter east de net, w y yere you conic an' calls the er thief. Ez 'ligious er man ez you ez onghter be 'shamed o' yo se'£. 11"y, I reckon of you haler libed in do ole days ant Nader seed' Peter er feeshin', you would got after him, too. Dar was jes sick nett er libin' at dat time, sal, an' whet did da do? Da strayed off latter de golden cal o"niquity an' let de feesh o' righteousness er lone. De speret moved me ter come off down yere an' cast chis yere net an"jest ter de speret. "I object to you stealing my fish, you trifling rascal.' "I waft stealin' ye' fees'', salt. I jest castiu de net like de sperit tole me to do," " So you haven't taken any fish ?" "No, salt, core I ain't; but I kain't hep it if desperet tole me ter cast de net." "What have you got in that haat" "Dia bag right yew!" " Yes, that bag right there." " Wbat'sIgot innit'' "That's what ]+said." "" 'all, salt, I put er few feesh in yere jest ter keep'erit from Win' proud its de flesh. :Ewa is moustus proud 50100 time, salt, an' I jes winder show 'em day's either thing ez pude coming dawn putty low." " Yes, and. I'll just show you there's such a thing as going to jail." " What 1 "Gaze I folletcd de speret an' tuck de pride ituten de resit? Wall, I sees one thing 'nighty el'ar,' Der ain't no men er non folieriit' de speret den days. I.f Peter l was yere now ye' cl git'gusted, wid de white folks alt' go off down pander wicl cls nig, gers. Now, sal, ef you treater disgrace wo sc'i by takin' 10e ter jail l'se trill 'Memphis Avalanche. Avalanche, The Truth Stands. During a certaitl voyage Wessel the mate, who Uceame: intoxicated si to attend to his rarely committed th excused Mini and attended concluding with this: "" The mate has been drunk all clay*." Next day the mate was an sleek and resumed his duties. Looking its the log he discovered the entry the captain had made and ventured to remonstrate with Ins =per. lar: ""'What was theneed, sir," he asked, "of putting that down on the logy" Wasn't it truer'' asked the captain. "Yes, sir ; but it doesn't seem necessary to enter it an the log." ""'fell,"said the captain, "since it was true, it had better stand; it had ocular stand." `l'hencxt day the captain had occasion to look at the log, and at the end of the entry which the mate had made was found this item : "The captain has been sober all day." The oapptun summoned the mate and undered: "'\''ltatdid ontnc•:n'titin down that entry? Am I not sober every day y., "" " Yes, sir • but wasn't it true t ""Why, of course it was true!" "" Well, then, sir," said the nate, "" since it was true I think it had better stand; it had better stand." He Had a Wife at Home, "1 have "a little Bible at 'tome," said the bad man, "" that in 1563 I wrestled from n Sunday -school class of nineteen. I haven't opened it since, and it is as new and clean as the day I got it." ""Bring it down some day* ; I'd Iiko to see it," said his friend, carelessly. The next day the bad man came into his friend's office, and throwing a little half worn out book on the desk, said : "" There she is, old man, but I was a little wrong about its condition:" " I should say so," said tate other. " How does it happen that this little book- is so badly wore, when you thought it was clean and all right at home?" " Well;' said the badman, and his voice was a bit husky, " the truth . of the matter is, I've got a little wife up at the house and a couple of young ones. They sometimes rummage through my things" gage of a, Down -East usually kept the log, One day and was unable duty. i s the man very s offence the eaptain tided to theloghiniself, tlt y by putting A Remarkable Litter of Kittens. , 17011M WAYNE, Iea., Sept. 30.—Henry Nies, the clerk at'tho natural gas well, is the possessor of a remarkable cat, which he keeps at his home on 'West Main street. Last evening the cat gave birth to five kit- tens, all alive. One peculiarity about the litter is the fact that although there are five kittens, they are all together from the mid- dle of the back to their tails. There seems to be a union of the flesh and vital organs, which are united in a peculiar manner: The kitten or kittens has, or have, five distinct heads, and ten front feet, well developed. There are but five hind feet each kitten hav- ing one. The feline Siamese quintette seem to be perfectly healthful. Will they Beat the Trotters? The bicyclists are gaining very fast on the trotters this year. At the close of the rac- inv, season of 1889 the best mile record ever made by a trotting horse in harness was 2 minutes R1 seconds. There it still remains, and the chance that Mauch 8. will be depriv- ed of first honors this year is a very slight ono. At the close of last year the best time for one mile ever made on a bicycle was 2 minutes 26 4-0 seconds. .Now it is 2 minutes 20 3-5 seconds. One more such advance and the wheeisman would be less than three seconds behind the trotter. Even now the fact that the racing horse starts his mile when under full headway, while the, bicyclist, starts from a stand, makes the distance less than thgrecords would indicate. The pros- pect is certainly fair that men on wheels propelled by • themselves will yet beat the best time of the fastest trotting horses in the world. For any distance beyond three miles the•bicycle record is already the lower of the two, and for short bursts of spend the wheelsmen seem to be the fester. Wife : " James, do you know that you are a very small man ?"—Husband : "'How ricliculous ! I am nearly six feet in height." Wife : " That makes no difference ; when- ever I ask yon for mono/ to go shopping you are always short." Science serves only to give us an idea of the extent of our ignoranee. JOHN LABATIT'S. Indian Pare die and XXX 'grown Stour Highest awarrs ata Medals for Purity and Excel lence at Centennial Exhibition,- Phil adelpbia, 1876; Canada, 1876 ; Anstrelia, 1877 ; end Paris, Frtiance, 1878. • TESTIMONIALS SELECTS') CTED : Prot,H R Croft, Public Ainlyst, Tomtit*, says:-" i find to Depetrectlysouttdcoata,iuinatto impurities or etARlter- atio s, sad cau stnangly tee ortw,eaa it as perfectly pure and a very superioe melt liquor," ,John 13 k:dw.t'as, Professor of Olzemistr9r,3iontr.ntl, says: 'lead teem to be remarkably metal ales. browed from purenaalt and hops sityeQaehea,slya::-- IItiayseaituiyia theInid Lavas PalotAtee mane .,turedb YJottn t tb.ttt, load au, Ontatio, and Rasa found it a light ale, containing but little alcabol, of a deli - Cierra flaver.:tnd of a very agreeable t't,te and =eerier quality, en.1r naparetwit's the best imported elect. r itthe also aurlyzed the parser XXX Stoat. of the same brewery, which isofe;cellent quality• its flavor is very -agreeable; it is a tonie more energetic titan the above ale, for it is a little richer inaleohol, awl can ha Compared advantage- ously wititany imported article, ASK YOUR onocaR volt IT. eintzman& Co MANUFACTURERS OF Grand1, Square Upright PIANOFORTES' The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion. Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use. The Heintzxnan Pianos are noted far 'hoax h'a11, Eich, Pure Singing Tome, Their finely Regulated Delicate Touch, Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Factory: -West THE EXETE1e. TIMES. Is published every Thursday morn ng,at TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE lain-street,siearlyopposito Frttou's Jowolery stat e, Exeter,Unt.,by John 'White & aone,Pro- nrietors. naTns aF XAvEnTt9t\o . irstln, t o per i n,1 et lino 10 cents Nisch subSetimi ttinsertiou,per lire......3cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should o swain notiaterthan Wednesday morning OurJOf PRINTI\G DEP 1ItTi'ttl NT is one Ube largest anti best ()Quipped in the Unuuty f Huron, All work entrusted to us will rceosv 11 prompt attention_ Decisions ltegarcliug +7 WS - papers. Any personwhotakeon paperrettulatlyfrom be post-otilce, whether directed in his namo or mother's, or whether he has subsoribed or net is responsible for payment. 2 If it person ordure his paper discontinued nemustp3y ail arrears or tho publisher may aontinuc t•1 send it until the l'aysuont is nlado, and then c Meet the -whole amount, whether rhe paper is token from tue office or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suttmay be natttutedin the place where the paper is pub. , Jailed, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of luilee away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to 'also newspapers or poilodicalsfrom the post- affioe, or removing and leaving them uncalled or is prima facie evidence of intentional Iran r F� -WILL POSITIVELY CUR CBPi��PS, HMS RI TIE STfiMIG6i Bowel Complaints, Diarrhoea tal —AND ALL— SU MIR ER COMPLAINTS KEEP A BOTTLE IN THE HOUSE. l+ OL) RV o 1 0- g7 rAi_t= laws, h ind wandering cored. Books learnei in one leading. 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Price, $2, Toronto Medicine Co, .•: a+ the npp001nuce 07' It reduced to , 'Co'L'onto. Ont. nhnut the fiftieth part of Its bunt, Itis n y to nnt07, tWe 041171/1;01/0115!1d1u' tyboleu 0h70o0wteyloeu. 0111071n0,onde"toilYgem00li0dm 41 l47 n i1, y rat lrns ,, e•om l ho gtnPgw, th- nut rr. Writ era n ll rax press charges . Address, 11. IL\LLE'11&CU.mos Ci SO, a, UII LASD, tiAalt - THE ®J;,.A rTJME3,R