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THE ADMIt COUNTY NEWSr
VOLUME 4 COLUMBIA ADAIR COUNTY KENTUCKY WEDNESDAY AUGUST 21 1901 NUMBER 41
L tiTUf I ILL JMBECTOiilt jiT Russell Postmaster
pn1LUECTbRY
rTblydCIaOifoa Uy InJanuary third Mo >yIn Septeitbor <
Judge WVTJoaesrai fCircuit s Attorney N II W uroDIrW Hurt
Clerk JnoBCoffey
COUNTY Coont Flrat Monday in each mont-hJuagoJ W ButlerCounty Attorney Jasa rcctt JrClerkT R StultsJailerS HMitcliell-XsBeisor G A DradsbawJSurveyor R T McCaffreeSchool SuptW D JonesCoroner Leonard Fletcher
1ITV C003T Regularcourt second Monday in
achraonthiilieJ W
acne Cordon lontJOIDeTTIGGTtiJIiCH DIRECTORY
PRESniTBRJANBUHICSVILIB STREET Rev T F Walters
f pastor Services second and fourth Sundaesneach month Sundayschoel atO a m tvetyabbaih Prayer meeting every Wednesday
night-
tMKTIIOOIBT-
BcnKSviLtBi
STBEET Rov W P GordonI
pastor Services first Sunday its each monthSundayschool every Sabbath at 9 n nt Prayermeeting Thursday night
DAPr33T
GIl c tSSUn0SrEETRitet + tIC Sarvlces third Sauday to oack month
I IadapM one l es y Ssbbatfc at 9 a ta Prayerctolfng Tuesday night
CHHISTIANC-
AliFBELMVlLLB PjXC Eld Z T WHliCKS
Pa Service First Sunday in each
to Sundayschool every Sabbatb at9 awlUapr m retie g Wednesday night
LODGESisttASONICnu LODOENo 63 F and A t ECguv-
Vf in their halt over bank on FrteachlT It STULTS SecjCOLUMBIA Cnn run H A M No7 meets
first Monday night In each month-J K MOBBKU1T P
W W BUADSHAW Secretary
New Carriagej
and Wagon Shop
0tI have leased the 1t C Euban1
a
shop and will giro
Carriage fit Wagon Itforkspecial attention Work donebyme will be firstclass Pro-
duce
¬
taken in return for work
j S F EUBANK
Hancock HotelBURKSVILLE STREET
Columbia Kyt
JUNIU5 HANCOCK Prop1 0fiE The above Hotel has been re¬
fitted repainted and is now ready for
tic comfortable accommodation of
guests Table supplied with the best
the narketaffords Rates reasonable
1OoQd sample room reed stable at¬
tached
Pumps Hosts BeltingPACKINGi
BOILER TUBES
Well Casing Iron PipeGeneral Brass and Iron Goods
for Water Gas and Steam
Mill and Factory Supplies
THE AHRENS oiT111GI cotINCORPORATFD
525320 W Main St
Louisville Kentucky
PARSON MOSS r CO
BLACKSMITHSWOODWORKERS
COLUMBIA KENTUCKY
it We are prepared to doany kind of work In
our line in firstclass order We havebeen in the business for 25 years and
know how to do workOur prices are as low
and terms as reasonabley as any firstclass mechanics We will
j take country produce
1atmarhetvalue Giveus call Shop near Mill Cu
Always atlond strictly to BusinessTho test pills for Bilious People intforleys Little Liver Pills becausethey al attend Striotly to bttsioeai Safcarebatad Ont a dose BoMb
i
i-
I
QUEER CAPERSr
Cut by an Electric Fan in a Business ¬
mans Private Office
I had a curious experience with anelectric fan during the recent hotspell said a gentleman who has anoffice in one of the large buildingsabove Canal street to a New OrleansTimesDemocrat writer and theexperience was not altogether pleas¬
ant It was really a very harrowingexperience and for awhile I was some-
what¬
perplexed over the situation Iwas for a few minutes a Hindu con-vert for I believed in the doctrine ofreincarnation firmly I saw it allright in my office The fan bad sud ¬
denly taken on some of the attributesof a living pulsing being and it cutall kinds of capers I had concludedthat I would put thejan onalowshelf-in the corner of my office and some
distance from my desk The shelfwas only a few inches from the floor
In moving the fan about I had short ¬
ened the amount of insulated wirenecessary and had a considernblesurplusage piled up by the fan IJeallythere was enough rope to reach across
the office The fan had been carelessly fastened to the shelf ZzzzipBefore 1 could realize what had hap ¬
pened the fan had scampered fromthe shelf to the floor and was doingsort of oriental hoochiecoochie as itrushed toward me It was coining ata good pace too I could not get be-hind it on account of the narrownessof the space in time office The fanswitched its course a bit doing a sortof side step as if tempting me to slipin behind it and I was about to makethe break when time whirring memberwhirled back in the other directionThe violence of the turn caused thefan to topple over on its face and theinstrument proceeded to clean up theoffice I got out andshut thedoor be-hind me I heard thegrind and jostlein the office until I got tiredand thenI peeped in The furyof the fan hadsubsidedsomewhat and the riotousmember had buzzed back into thecorner of the room near my desk Islipped stealthily into the office gotmy hand on the crank and turned the
power off The fan had lost severalof its wings while on a rampage andhad otherwise injured itself I had
it repaired and put backon the shelf >
but since that time I hnveused a chainsand a padlock to keep the fan in itsplace
r
COMMON WILD PLANTS
Accurate Knowledge of Them OftenProves Extremely Valuable
A curious case is reported fromMr8ll Pu which goes to show thato knowledge of common wild plantsIs extremely valuable says the NewYork Time Three boys ate some
berries which looked like wild grapesand hi a short time were seized withconvulsions and died The action ofthe poison was so much like that of
strychnine that a worthy farnipr gyps
accused of putting that drug iptocider to punish the boysforstealingitFortunately for the farmer he hadnot bought any poison to kill bugs onhis crops and so escaped a serioustime for nothing could be provedagainst him Local physicians sentspecimens of the berries found in theboys pockets to Prof Thomas Meehan of the Academy of Natural Sci¬
ences in Philadelphia and he identi ¬
fled them as moon seed In his reporthe said Theplpntiatlmeinoonseed-
appropriately so called from theforma of the seed within the pulpund botanically menispermum canadense It is very closely related to thewellknown poisonous drug cocculusindicus of the pharmacists The ac ¬
tion of the poison is saidto be similar
strychnineTimethe English ivy but aremuch smallerand thinner The vine is of slendergrowth reaching the height of aboutten feet in the season In the fall andwinter there is nothing to be seen butthe clusters of shining black berriesresembling the frost grape and chil-
dren¬
may readily believe they aregathering and eating gropes Fortu-nately
¬
theplant is not very commonThis plant may indeed be ufJcommonbut it is a good thing to know that itexists
CATCHING THE AUTOMOBILIST
Accurate Little Chronometers Aid Policein Judging Their Speed
In the daily war for supremacy nowwaged in Paris between thepolice andthe motornipn the former are con ¬
stantly devising fresh methods forcatching the latter in the act of fur-
ious driving According to a Chi¬
cago Daily News dispatch the authorities have just mlda pew move blip ¬
vesting in a large stock higtpricedchronometers Special policemenhave beenprovided with these instru¬
ments and sent to theBois de Bou ¬
logno to watch offending automo-
bilists The policeman takes up hisJETrftid pVagiveri spot the distanceJfoni which to anothcrDoinl inv W
nas previously been accurately meas-
ured¬
When a motorman passes thefirst placethe policeman times himduring his progress to the second andwhen lie reaches the latter invariablynabs him for furious driving In ninecases out of ten the automobilist canonly plead guilty when confrontedbythe unimpeachable evidence of histime taken on a firstclass chronom-
eter¬
A Big Slaughter of Cats
A hundred Ions of cats tails weresold in one lot in London for
ornamenting ladies wearing apparelAssuming that an average cats tailwould weigh a couple of ounces thiswouldmean that no fewer thanl792000 pussies had been killed just tosupply this one consignment-
LABOUCHERE IN HIS YOUTH
Noted Englishman Had as Ready a WitThen as Now
Labouchere says Joseph ITatton inThe People was sent by the Britishminister to look after some Irishpatriots at Boston Taking up hisquarters at a small hotel he enteredhis name as Smith If you have anidle hour in almost anyi American cityyou can get into a game of drawor anything else in theway of gambleIn the evening of his arrival the at ¬
tache incontinently entered gamingestablishment and lost all the moneyhe had except half a dollar Then hewent to bed satisfied ne doubt withhis prowess Thenext day t1w bailiffsseized on the hotel for debt and allguests were requested to pay theirbills and take away theirluggage La ¬
bouchere could not pay andcouldnot therefore take away his luggageAll he could do was to write to Wash¬
ington for a remittance and wait twodays for its arrival Theo first day hewalked about and spent his half dol ¬
lar on food It was summer and heslept on a bench on the common Inthe morning he went to the bay tohave a wash independent of all thecares and troubles of civilization
buylmimselfhe grew very hungry and entered arestaurant and ordered dinner with ¬
out any clear idea of how he was topay the bill except to leave his coatin pledge
And here comes in an example ofyoung Laboucheres luck temperedby a ready wit As the hungry andfor the lime being penniless attacheate his dinner he observed that all thewaiters were Irishmen and that theynot only continually stared at himbnt were evidently discussing himwithone another A guilty con ¬
science induced him to think that thiswas because oI his impecunious ap¬
pearance and that they were makingcalculations as to the value of hisclothes At last one of them ap ¬
proached their anxious customer andin a low voice said I beg your pardon8irjareyon the patrjotMeagherNow this patriot was a gentlemanwho had aided Smith OBrien in hisIrish rising and had been sent toAustralia and had escaped thence totheUnited States
It was my business to look afterpatriots said Labouchere telling methe story so I put my finger beforenvy lips and said Hush at the sametime casting my eyes up to the ceilingas though I saw a vision of Erin beck¬
oning me It was felt at once that Iwas Meagher The choicest viandswere placed bcforemeanimostexcel7lent wine When I had done justiceto all the good things 1 went to thebar and boldly asked form bill Theproprietor also an Irishman saidFrom a man likeyou who has suf ¬
fered in the good cause I can take nomoney allow a brother patriot toshake hands with you I allowedhim He further allowed the wait ¬
ers to shake hands with himand thenstalked forthwith time stern resolvedbut somewhat condescending airwhich he had seen assumed by patriotsin exile Again he slept on the com ¬
mon again he washed in the bayThen hewent to the post office got hismoney and breakfasted
JoOWNING BOOKS
Better Than BdrrowiogYoe BecomeMore Familiar with Them
In a newspaper was recently print¬
ed a letter from a book lover assertingthat books were of little use tomho only borrowed them or receivedthem as gifts Heobjectec asliuskinalso did to cheap books and said hewas almost convinced that if thepheapest books post five dollars prmore the world would bebetter off1
Np doubt says the editor of StJJichplas this is an extreme stateinept and would have to besxpressedmore Cautiously tobe true Yet thereis some truth in th idea that booksmay be too plentiful and too easy tobuy Therei a likeness bet-
ween lrbrariesandsehoolsin this re ¬
spent Thsboy tir girl in a big schoolis not be elro form friendships
y
as u 114 a smaiicr scnooi Vi Iiwe thereis too wide a choice there is less inti¬
macy So in the library A large li¬
brary is not so likely to become fa¬
miliar and valued as a smaller collec ¬
tion wellchczenThe very company of books is edu ¬
cating As one sits before thebookcases and glances at his favorite vol-
umes¬
it is as if each said a word ortwoor suggested thought Thus a boyseye may fall upon his copy of TomBrown at Rugby and in his mindrises the remembrance of the greathareandhounds run in which Tomand East and the Tadpole struggledso pluckily anti at last held that de ¬
lightful little interview with Dr Ar¬
nold or visions of Easts tricks on oldMartin There is no need to open thebookone breathes its healthful airat the mere sight of its title So fromeach old favorite there comes a friend ¬
ly greeting and we recall the pleasanthours spent in its company-
A great orator said Books arethe windows through which thesoullooks out A home without books islike a room without windows Noman has a right to bring up childrenwithout surrounding them withhooks if he has the meanS to buybooks
HOT WEATHER IN THE SLUMS
Swift Trolley Cars Stir Up the AirBringing Temporary Relief
Speaking of fans and warm weath-
er¬
said a gentleman to a Xew Oi ¬
leans TimesDemocrat reporter 1
have made an interesting observationduring the last few days Along someof the narrow streets of New Orleansand in the poorer quarters where thehouses are jammed up together untilit would stein almost impossible forthe air to circulate at a111 guess onewould find the greatest amount ofsuffering And it was in a section ofthis sort where the people werepanting for breath that 1 made the obser¬
vation The fan is a great thing iivthehot season just so one does not haveto fan ones tell If the cooling ef¬
fect can be obtained wtthout any ex ¬
penditure of muscular energy somuch the better Now this is whathappens in some of the narrowstreetswhere electric cars brush alongatregular intervals The street car sagreat fan Where they run down sonic
of the narrower thoroughfares sweep ¬
ing by the windows with considerablevelocity they do a world of good in acooling way and I have watched theoccupants of houses crowd to the win¬
dows just to get the benefit of thebreeze caused by the rapid motion of
the car In these streets the air isbankedand circulates but little un ¬
less there happens to be a sweepingwind in the direction the street runsThe car churns this air upsweeps itout so that fresher air may rush infrom above andfrom the side streetsand hence the street car becomes agreat advantage to the persons wholive along the narrow streets and inthe tenements that are crowded close
togetherELMLEAVEDGOLDENROD
Has the Broad Thin Leaves of a ShadePlant
It is well known that when a plantgrows in shady places it is likely tohave a greater leaf area than whenit grows in the open sunshine Itmust pause a larger surface to col ¬
the when the latter is com-
parativply¬
dip Now most of thegoldeprpds live in the open fieldshaying rather parrpw leaves but theexquisite elm leaved goldenrod lives
win woods and copses where the shadows are thick and direct sunshipe isa fleeting thing And so we find thatthis species has the broad thin leavegof a shadeplant leaves with well k ¬
veloped stems but otherwise to sim¬
ilar to those of the elmtree as to givethis goldenrod its distinctive nameBut it gives a touch of color to throe
somber shades of the woods that wewould not willingly do withoutClarence Moores Weed win WomansHome Companion
A book on the ears as an index ofcharacter having been published byan English author a learned reviewerDr A Keith mentions his own elab ¬
orate study of the ears of more than40000 people including 800 crim¬
finals and 2000 insane perSlons besidesthose of 300 apes He was forced toconclude that the ears gave no clewto personal traits
He Would See Through ItIf you want to tell a fish story do
not tell it toa man who was raised onthe river He knows too much aboutit Washington la Democrat
muses ora Kicn Manbyfoolsla Democrat
Geed Advice
Go it alone Don t usey our bestt
DailyNewsF i
LIME WATER FOR STRE2T3
Would Be Productive of Sanitary Ciafm n Hot Weather
Dr A EC owes writing to a med¬
ical Journal suggests that the use of
lime water prepared fresh for water ¬
ing the streets in hot weather would
prove to be a practice i iccuctive of
sanitary comfort The advantagesclaimed for the practice are said to Itthose first of aggregating togetherloose particles of manure and thusto prevent them from being diffusedby the wind second of exercisingcrtain antiseptic action third of pre-
serving¬
wood paving and fourth ofrenderingwood less slippery Theidea should be worth considering bythe local authorities intrusted withthe care of the streets and an ener¬
getic surveyor might make trial of DrEddowes plan on an experimentalbasis Lime we are told is employednear Vienna for the disinfection ofsewage Collected in one of threetanks a days sewage is mixedwithfresh milk of lime in the proportionof from oneto two percent Themixture settles for 48 hours then theclear eflluent water is drainedoffThe sediment remaining is usedasmanure Its valuein this latter direc ¬
tion is alleged to be great The ef¬
fluent was said to be clearer than thewater in adjoining mountain streamsI may remark that lime has long beenused for purifying sewage From sixto 12 grains of lime are employed pergallon of sewage Time objection tothis method is the rapid putrefactionof the sewage if too much lime is add ¬
ed while it is said that as the organicmatters in suspension are alone affect¬
ed purification is defective and themanure of no value London Chron-icle
¬
MRS CORNELIUS VANDERBILT
How She Eelpid the Commodore on theRoad to Fortune
A woman played a large part inlaying the foundations of the fortunesof the house of Vanderbilt The firstCornelius Vanderbijt married at theage of 20 and a ycarlaterbecamecaptam n of a small steamboat plying be ¬
tween New York and New BrunswickN J Passengers were numerous andmany persons went to New Brunswickand back by boat for the pleasure ofthe trip Others when the boatreached New Brunswick got intotages and were driven across the stateto another steamerwhich took themdown the Delaware Of course theywanted something to eat and hereMrs Vanderbilt saw her opportunityNew Brunswicks hotelor halfwayhouse was dirty and ill kept MrsVanderbilt suggested to her husbandthat they should take the hotel refitit and run it in a style that wouldattract guests Vanderbilt leased thehotel but as the scheme was hiswifes he told her she might run itand have the profits Mrs Vanderbiltoverhauled the house and named itBellona hall after the steamship Bellona which her husband then com ¬
manded The fame of Bellona ballsoon spread to New York and par ¬
ties were made up to visit it becauseof the excellent fare to be foundthere It also increased the profits ofthe line for which Capt Vanderbiltworked and his salary was increasedto 2000 a year Mrs Vanderbilt for12 years managed Bellona hall withprofit to herself and pleasure to herguests Success
BERIBERI
Fever That Was Oas Time the Scourge-of Japans Navy
Nothing is more remarkable thanthe record relating to kakke or bedberi its it is known in the Philip-pines
¬
the dreaded fever which usedatone time to be such a scourgein theJapanese navy In 1883 thelas yearof the old system of diet there were1236 cases oUt of a total force of5340 men being a ratio of 231 casesper 1000 of force says the ChicagoBecordIIerald The deaths were 49In 1898 the total number of cases was16 out ofa force of 18126 being aratio of 87 per 1000 The number ofdeaths was one In fact by a judicioussystem of diet kakke may be said tohave been driven out of the navy al¬
together The daily food of a man inthe Japanese navy is now approxi-mately
¬
onehalf pound of bread twofifthsOfa pound of meat twgthirdsof a pound of rice fivesixteenths of apoundof vegetables together withsmall quantities of preserved pieatand fish fresh fish cracked wheatbeans flour tea sugar and roastedbarley No less remarkable is thesteady increase of body weight thatIhas taken place since1884 when 4heimproved system of diet began to beoperative The average weight inthat year was 121 pounds approxi ¬
mately and it thenceforth increasedregularly year by year until in 1898the figure was 130pounds
Salt gsed lmtndOB
London consmnes 11 tons ofult a-
dav >s o< > S
BEDFELLOWS IN MEXICOI
Traveler Spsnls an Unpleasant Nightin Company with Lizards
I had arather unhappy experienceonce myself said a listener butit was at a time when my nervcouldnot stand a great deal and theshock was no surprise to me I wasreally happy when I found that myeyes had played meno trick and thatthe things about me were real thingsI had journeyeddown into Mexico forthe purpose of spending some timeThe trip was partly a business tripand partly for such pleasure as I couldget out of an experience in a countrythat was new to me I ought to sayhere that I had never been in a trop ¬
ical country My life had been spentin the north and whatever I knewabout many of the forms of life intropical sections was altogether the ¬
oretical I had merely read aboutmany of thin things but I learned aft ¬thingsIments when my mind was inclined toconjure with tIle horrors of unevensleep Well I found myself in Mex ¬
ico I was in the wilds of Mexicoand that where one could find butfew of the comforts known to themore advanced ways of living Istoppedwith an old Mexican onenight and he put me in a dumpy lit¬
tle room off to myself I slept on thefloor or rather I started to sleep onthe floor and it was a dirt floor atthat I coiled up on a mattress madeof some light material I had justclosed my eyes when I felt somethingscramble rapidly over my foreheadIt startled me a bit but 1 kept cooland still to see if it would happen
agatnIthappenedinlesstimethanit takes
to tell it This thing kept up untilthe experiment was disorganizing mynerves and I could stand it no longerI got up and started out and I feltthe same thing happening to my feetPartly panicstricken I rushed intotime room of the old Mexican Some-
thing¬
in yonder I said pointing to¬
ward my room He took in the sit ¬
uation at once andassured me thatitwas all right He struck light andwent to the room with me to assureme that there was no danger WhenI got backto my room I w paralyzedCrawling over the walls of the hutandscramping over the floor over themattress on which I had lain and run ¬
ning here and there and everywherewas a perfect army of lizards of allsizes ages and varieties I told theMexican to leave me the light andthat I would occupy the room for thenight And so I did But I did notsleep for I did not want the lizardshowever harmless andcompanionablethey might be to convert my face andforehead into a promenade Thiswoundup my experience in Mexicoand I scampered pver the border assoon as possible and since that timethe wilder regions in the tropics havehad no fascination for meN 0TimesDemocrat
AN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT
Curious Thou Disastrous Experiencein a French Forest
A lady was entering the forest ofSt Germain near Paris in an auto ¬
mobile recently when the machinerybecame out of order The passengersbrought the car to a standstill in or¬
der to overhaul the engines when al-
most¬
immediately a violent explosionpccurred and the car was envelopedin flames The passengers had a nar-row
¬
escape The liquid fuel in thereservoir of the car overflowed and be¬
came ignited and it was feared thatthe burning stream of oil wouldrunamong the bushes fringing the roadsetting them alight in which eventtheforest would have been involved andwidespread damage caused The for-
est¬
fire however was averted by thefellingof a few trees and the cuttingaway of the undergrowth in the vicin-ity
¬
of the burning vehicle The mo ¬
tor car burned fiercely for about anhour leaving only a mass of tangledsteel and ironwork The valueof theautomobile was 5000ScientificAmerican
A Rich Negro
Peter Postell who died recently atHopkinsville Ky was said to be then
richest negro in the south He was60 years old had been a slave in hisyouth and has left an estate valued at
500000
criiIa tftleatWaa
Help Help I gurgled thedrowning man as he was about tosinkforthe last time
i Wha Vs the matters yelled thelounger on thcwhar1un aint deepCant you walk out
Of course gasped the other sar ¬myhoesThen he Eank London Answers
Me SHOWS ItYou neednt tell ann that lie is
gettiagold IIeks0Wa3tTA 1
4
HOUSERENTING IN LONDON
Long Leases and Few Advantajei UTenants the Rule
In London one cannot rent a housefor less than seven years and the ten-
ant¬
must pay all the taxes and makehis own repairs The average Englishman who rents his house must putupwith a score of worries and incon¬
veniences which his American cousinknows nothing about
The American householder saysthe New York World if anything goeswrong merely sends for his landlordIn London the landlord sends for thetenant and requires him to insure theproperty in the bargain-
It is usually impossible for a Lendoner to estimate with any accuracywhat a house will cost to rent Thecatual rental paid to the owner of thehouse is but a small part of the ex ¬
pense A house whichwill rent fer2000 in New York can usually be
secured in London for about 300 a
yearThisrentis not paid to the owner
of the land but to some ground land ¬
lord who in turn rents it from an ¬
other lessee and so on The propertyis frequently removed dozen timesin this way from the original ownerIt is practically impossible to buy landin
LondonThespeculator or boomer in
London rarely buys any land Hemerely rents it for a long period sayof 99 years and builds upon it Theneach house is sublet to individual ten ¬
ants for longperiodsThese latest landlords have as ¬
sumed all responsibilities and on reresponsibilities ¬
first place it is only possible to leasethe house for a period of seven 14 or21 years It is besides impossible togive it up no matter what may hap ¬
pen until the lease has expired Thetenant has the privilege however ofsubletting the house if he is luckyenough tofind a tenant
The London leases have manytricky little clauses which would notbe tolerated by Americans The ten ¬
ant is bound to keep the house insuredand to pay the premiums
He must pay the taxes the waterrate keep the drains in order paintthe entire house inside and out onceevery three years and must put it inperfecta condition to the satisfactionof the agent at the end of the term be-fore moving out
Putting the house in order is usual ¬
ly an important item After an occu ¬
pation of seven years a property is sureto depreciate more or less It is notunusual for a tenant to spend thou ¬
sands of dollars in repairs when on thepoint of leaving
Most Londonihouscs are far behindthose of New York in point of con ¬
venience Many of the expensivehouses are without bathrooms or ade¬
quate plumbing or the apparatus forproviding hot and cold water If atenant wants any of these things homust of course put them in at his own
expenseItthe same with the appliances
for heating Most London houseshave no system of heating whateverbeyond the open grates in the roomsThese must be kept in order of courseby the tenant-
English houses are moreover serv¬
antkillers In New York itwould boimpossible to get servants to put upwith such inconveniences at any price
A CURIOUS PHENOMENON
Chalk Rocks Cut Up Strange Capers IB
French AlpsA curious phenomenon was ob ¬
served at the village of Le Ghazil inthe French Alps recently Onedaytoward evening the inhabitants weredisturbed by a loud rumbling in thevicinity of Mont Farand which in ¬
creased in intensity Looking towardthe scene of the disturbance the viI ¬
lagers were further startled by seeingbright flashes of fire At first the unusual spectacle was attributed to vol ¬
cane agencies and a party of civil en-
gineers¬
set out to examine the causeof the phenomenon They discovered that the intense dry heat hadcaused the chalkrocks on the summitof the mountain to crack and to breakaway in all directions These reekshad descended the mountain like anavalanche and being thickly veinedwith silex in descending they hadstruck one another with terrific forcescattering brilliant showers of sparksin all directions with suohrapiditythat they resembled one single she tof flame Scientific American
The creariuc osttenaciousof lifejs the common sSSbpolyp If one bs
thereiultdozen sections making as many ani ¬
mals They may be turned inside outwhen they apparentlj njoy themselves just as well as before if twobe divided and placed end to end theresult wilLbeamonsterb vinganeactit sack extremity
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