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NEW, ODD, INTERESTING.

—-tTiro inhabitants of South America eat serpents, lizards, and centipedes.

The Bank of England suspended cash payments twice —once in 1G96, and secondly in 1797.

The use of sights on cannon for aiming did not commend itself until tho beginning of the nineteenth century.

A man respires, that is, draws in breath, sixteen to twenty times a minute, or twenty thousand times a day.

There have been twenty-seven eases of insanity in the Bavarian Itoyal family during the last hundred years.

Pine-apple juice is stated by a wellknown doctor to be a most powerful digestive.

The oldest manuscript written on cotton paper in England is in the British Museum, and it bears date t 049.

Needles were first made in 1543, when the making- of ten was a good clay’s work.

Some of the largest ocean steamers can be converted into armed cruisers in thirty hours.

A penny is estimated to change hands about 128,000 times in the course of its life.

(Two hundred penny-in-thc-slot machines which supply newspapers, are now installed in Beilin.

Pineapples are so plentiful in Natal at certain seasons mat tiicv are not worth carting- to market, and so are often given to pigs.

Tho common .slang word “mash” is from a beautiful gipsy word, “mafada,” which means “to charm by the eyes.”

Sir James Cbrichton-Browne once emphasised the •curative value of light. Sunlight, he remarked, wi.l cure more of our ailments than any other single agent.

It is now stated that the world will be over-peopled at the end of • 175 years. This brings us to the year 2,051, when the population at the present rate of increase, will be 5,994 million people.

A curious s wc.U in Canada produces sand instead of water. The sand comes up in a fine stream like a fountain. The force which drives it to the surface from a depth-of 100 ft. has not yet been discovered.

It is estimated that the average amount of power lost in overcoming frictidn in machinery and mill work is 50 per cent, of the gross power, the loss occurring" at the lubricated surface.

The British Museum has books written on bricks, tiles, ovstcrshells, bones, and flat stones, together with manuscripts on bark, on leaves, on ivory, leather, parchment, papyrus, lead, iron, copper, and wood.

In the.forty years between 1792 and 1832 there were outstanding notes of the Bank of England, presumed to have been lost or destroyed, amounting to £1,330,000 odd, every shilling of which was clear profit to the Bank

As illustrating the excellence of the paper (which is made from unused linen scraps) upon which Bank- of England notes are printed, it is stated that when one of these notes is twisted into a rope it will sustain a weight of 358 pounds.

One of the few millionaires possessed by Spain is working as an ordinary workman in a soap manufactory at Berlin. He owns the largest soap factory in Madrid, but wishes personally to learn the difference between the German and French modes of making soap.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAIPO19140728.2.6

Bibliographic details

Waipa Post, Volume VII, Issue 334, 28 July 1914, Page 1

Word Count
510

NEW, ODD, INTERESTING. Waipa Post, Volume VII, Issue 334, 28 July 1914, Page 1

NEW, ODD, INTERESTING. Waipa Post, Volume VII, Issue 334, 28 July 1914, Page 1

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