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        <title>Cost of living in German towns</title>
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      <div>U 
m 
ZWICKAU. 
481 
villages, with an aggregate population of about 122,000. Thus, as regards the 
number of his customers, the Zwickau shopkeeper reaps all the advantage which 
he would enjoy if he were settled in a large town, while his burdens in respect 
of rent and other working expenses are relatively light. 
Owing to its elevated position, swept by frequent winds, Zwickau, though 
by no means free from smoke, is certainly free from the griminess which 
characterises some coal-mining towns in other parts of Germany ; e.g., 
Königshütte and Beuthen in Upper Silesia, and Bochum in the Rhineland. 
The house-fronts, like those of Chemnitz, are dull, the brick (which is the local 
building material) being more frequently exposed to view than covered with the 
painted stucco-work which contributes so much to the brightness of the streets 
of most German towns. At night the gas-lit streets are but little frequented, 
and the chief centres of attraction for all classes of the population are the 
restaurants of various grades as well as the spirit taverns, the latter being much 
frequented by workmen. 
The growth of the population of Zwickau has been steady and continuous 
during the whole period for which a record of its movement exists. In 1834 
the place was little more than a village with about 6,000 inhabitants. The 
population in 1871 and at each subsequent census, together with the inter-censal 
increases, was as follows :— 
Year. 
1871 
1875 
1880 
1885 
1890 
1895 
1900 
1905 
Population. 
27,322 
31,491 
35,005 
39,243 
44,198 
50,391 
55,830 
68,502 
Increase. 
Increase per cent. 
4,169 
3,514 
4,238 
4,955 
6,193 
5,439 
12,672 
15 3 
112 
121 
12 6 
14-0 
108 
22 7 
Part of the increase between the censuses of 1900 and 1905 was due to the 
incorporation within the town area of a number of outlying villages aggregating 
some 9,000 inhabitants. Judging by the figures since 1886 (the earliest year for 
which it has been possible to procure the requisite data), it would appear that 
the growth of the population has been due less to immigration than to the 
regular excess of births over deaths. This is shown by the following 
table i— 
Year. 
1886 
1887 
1888 
1889 
1890 
1891 
1892 
1893 
1894 
1895 
1896 
1897 
1898 
1899 
1900 
1901 
1902 
1903 
1904 
Births per 1,000 
of Population. 
38-7 
36- 9 
39 0 
393 
37- 5 
40-0 
34- 8 
35- 1 
347 
35-3 
36 5 
370 
351 
349 
35-0 
34-4 
33- 9 
346 
34- 4 
Deaths per 1,000 
of Population. 
Increase (+) or decrease (—) per 
1,000 of Population due to 
Difference between 
Birth-rate and 
Death-rate. 
28-7 
240 
26-0 
24-8 
26 6 
225 
26 6 
26-0 
21-9 
23 9 
23- 1 
24- 7 
226 
232 
23- 3 
225 
19-8 
24- 3 
230 
+ 10-0 
+ 12-9 
+ 13-0 
+ 14-5 
+ 10-9 
+ 17-5 
+ 8-2 
+ 9-1 
+ 12-8 
+ 11-4 
+ 13-4 
+ 123 
+ 12-5 
+ 11-7 
+ 11-7 
+ 11-9 
+ 14-1 
+ 10-3 
+ 11-4 
Difference between 
number of 
Immigrants and 
number 
of Emigrants. 
+ 16-4 
+ 86 
+ 8-7 
+ 7-1 
+ 10-8 
- 1-8 
+ 20-4 
+ 19-3 
29088 
3 P</div>
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