OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1903,. """" THE' AVERAGE' BRAIN. Mrbat It Welnrh and the Number v Cell It Contain. Whether it be the brain cell of i jrlowworin or one trembling with tb lannonles of "Tristan und Isolde" tin Muff it is made of to much the same It is a difference of structure apparent ly rather than of material. And tli chemical difference between a brain o, nerve cell and that of the muscles 01 the skin seems reducible mainly to t difference in the proportion of two sub stances water and phosphorus. Lean beef, for example, is irom 70 to 80 pel cent water; the brain is from 90 to 0a per cent water. And a brain or nerve cell may contain from Ave to ten times us much phosphorus as, let us say, the cells of the liver or the heart. The ac tual quantity Is of course extremely small by weight but a fraction of 1 per cent. About three pounds avoirdupois of this very complex phospborlzed stuff make up an average human brain. There is a lot more of It distributed down one's spinal column, and little plexuses all over the body wherever a group of muscles are to toe moved, and others still, the sensory or feeling uorves, which are everywhere. It is hard to find a cubical kalf inch outside the bones where they are aot All told, the nervous substance, which for the ake of making its functions clear I have called tlie matter which thinks, forms a not Inconsiderable por tion of the body outside of the bony skeleton. It is made up of .distinct and separated units, for the imast part ex tremely minute, though eome attain a length of two or three fet. These units, for lack of a more misleading name, are called cells. The "cells" which run from the small of your back down into your logs and wiggle the same or Inform you when a member of the family is stubbed, are the longest. Those of the brain are mostly so mall us to tax the powers of the microscope, Their average length would be meas ured in thonwimlths of an inch. There 0 0 u have bee many attempfs"'f6"uget'"at their actuad number. It is certainly large. Computations for the brain alone range from 600,000,000 upward. One, due, I think, to Waldeyer, sets the total number of brain cells (average) at 1,60(M)OQ,'000,000. This would mean a brain population exceeding the known population of the earth. Carl Snyder la Harper's Magazine. FACTS ABOUT FOLKS. Boys grow more regularly than girls. The memory which acts quickest acts best Urban life decreases stature from five years of ageiou. Firstborn .children exceed later bora In stature and w eight. Children born in summer are taller than those born In winter. Ited and yellow are visible at greater distances than green and blue. Truant boys are inferior in weight, height and chest girth to boys in gen eral. Dull children are lighter and preco cious children heavier than the average child. Great men, though often absentmind ed, have strong memories on the lines of their interests. Healthy men ought to weigh an addi tional five pounds for every Inch in height beyond .sixty-one inches, at which height thej ought to weigh 120 pounds. DaldneHR Cuned by Fear. Several carefully .observed cases of falling hair from emotion have been recorded, but the following is probably one of the most curious: A normally healthy farmer, thirty-eight years of age, saw his child thrown out of a cart and trampled upon by a tnule. He sup posed It killed and experienced in his fright and tension a sensation of chill iness and tension In the head and face. The child escaped with a few bruises, but the father's hair, beard nnA eyoirp'i'onviiienced to droD out ""X T7aFT o j r fu n I Mki kbWU l kUIINUMMMWsl HmH's'j( Jyj L ..J ,,, irx y Wore Attractions to the square foot than was.ever displayed in the state. Every feature will be worth coming to see. the next day; and ty the end of the week he was entirely bald. A new growth of hair appeared in time, but much finer. London Answers. Curing: a Snake Bite. This is how the Indians of Central America cure a snake bite: They pin the unlucky patient to the ground and wind strong creepers above and below the bite until they nt into the flesh. Then they apply a live coal to tho wound to cauterize M: and follow that up by rubbing In a mixture of chewed tobacco and crushed garlic. By this time the victim is nearly mad with pain and ready to kill everybody in sight especially when he finds, as he often does, that the snake was not venomous. Fleaned Him. "I think we might give Bridget a dollar more a week," said the family man. 'What?" exclaimed his wife. "I set her to work cleaning the parlor today, and you should see the way she left It" "I did. That's what influenced me. I noticed she fixed the piano with the keyboard close up against the wail." Philadelphia Ledger. A LlteralUt. Wealthy Citlzen-But I said distinct ly In my advertisement that I wanted "a reliable colored coachman," and you are a red faced Irishman. Applicant But sure, sor, Isn't red as reliable a color as black J Baltimore American. Dividing the Deck. "Now, Johnny," said the teacher, who had been describing a war ship to the class, "how Is the deck divided?" "A deck Is divided." replied the bright Iwy, "into spades, hearts, dia monds -id clubs." Philadelphia Preaft fion't think that every sad eyed wo man yon meet 1ms loved mid lost. She may have loved and got him. Lyre. "E E Jl M r r i 3BRASS EGG LORE. Eggs constitute the most universal human food of animal origin. Dover eggs are esteemed a great del icacy in England and Germany. The flavor of eggs may be influenced by the food eaten by laying hens. Hens' eggs have a white or brown color, but ducks' eggs are bluish white. Hens' and ducks' eggs are commonly offered In our market but turkey eggs are seldom eaten. In Virginia gulls' eggs are commonly eaten, and In Texas the eggs of terns and herons are gathered along the coast Turtle eggs are highly prized in coun tries where they are abundant and, though once commonly eaten in Amer ica, are now seldom offered. On an average a hen's egg is two and a quarter inches long and one and three-quurter inches wide at the broad est point and weighs two ounces. Kecent oiliciul government figures show that eggs and poultry in the east ern states constitute from one-twelfth to one-sixth of the total value of all farm products. Cnrea For Inaoninia. To an overworked little woman who suffers from Insomnia an old doctor delivered himself as follows: "Shun all the devices one hears so much about such as counting up to 6,000. They are maddening. Never take night baths if their action is too stimulating. Go in for a few physical exercises. Including deep breathing. After the exercises walk backward on tiptoe round the room until forty or fifty steps have been taken. When In bed, relax the body completely. Take long, slow, deep breaths, and If you must think of something Imagine your self surrounded and supported by a soft, strong, gray cloud which is bear ing you off to slumberland. Drinking n glass of warm milk just before retir ing sometimes hastens the trip." New York Press. BANDS yy Fireworks that will Paint the Sky Red The amusements will he so concentrated that you will not hare to wait Queer Looking Worml, New Zealand, Australia, the Samoan and the Solomon Islands as well as portions of the Hawaiian group are the homes of various species of worms with thick, heavy bodies and with a well defined neck connecting the body with a head that is a startling remind er of that of the monkey. In the Sand wich Islands they are called "me-ta-lu-ki," which means "creeper with a child's bead." An old New Zealand legend says that at one time they were of immense proportions and threatened the extinction of all human life on the Islands. The Old Man's Snake Story. "And you say the snake was fifteen feet long?" "Well, suh, he looked dat long w'en he stretched his full length ter strike me." "But a snake never strikes unless he's In 'coil." "Marse Tom," said the old man, "we better end dls conversation right whar It Is. Either I'm a nnchul bo'n liar or long drinkin' hez made you a fust cla authority on snakes!" Atlanta Coa-v-tutlon. Only One Bar. "Yes, I think he'd be a poet if it were not for one thing." "What's that?" "He Isn't rich enough to be able to Indulge In unprofitable pleasures." "But poets are often poor." "Well, he Isn't poor enough to be ut terly discouraged either." Chicago Post Sympathy. "Oh, let me like a soldier die!" ex claimed the leading man of the barn stormers. "Oh, If I only had a gun!" exclaimed some one In the gallery in a tone that savored of genula sympathy. Chicago News. Beware of the man whose dog dis likes to follow him. New York Life. H ft, , i ,l I sf.:' "" iiiiniiili1 r mm annul 3 THE SCOLD'S BRIDLE. Brutal Pnnlnhment to Which Women Were Once Subjected. The brank, or scold's bridle, or gos sip's bridle, was neither more nor les than a muzzle. It was in general use in Great Britain from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, and in Scot land as well women were muzzled for certain offenses, some at least of then more Imaginary than real. The Instru ment of torture, even a dog's leather. muzzle, is uncomfortable; how much more the scold's muzzle? It consisted, according to a high authority, Mr. W. Jewitt, of a kind of crown or frame work of Iron, which was locked upon the head, and It was armed In front with a gag, a plate or a sharp cutting knife or point, which was placed in the poor woman's mouth so as to prevent her moving her tongue, or it was so placed that if she did move it or at tempt to speak it was cut In a most frightful manner. With this cage up on her head and with the gag firmly pressed and locked against her tongue the miserable creature, whose sole of fending perhaps was that she raised her voice in defense of her social rights against a brutal and besotted husband or had spoken honest truth of some one high in office in her town, was pa raded through the streets, led by a chain by the hand of a bellman, the beadle or the constable or chained toJ the pillory, the whipping post or mar ket cross, to be subjected to every con ceivable Insult and degradation, with out even the power left her of asking for mercy or of promising amendment! for the future, and when the punish ment was over she was turned out from the town hall or the place where the brutal punishment had been In flicted, maimed,' disfigured, bleeding, faint and degraded, to be the subject of comment and jeering among her neighbors and to be reviled by her per secutors. Fireside Magazine. A chimney of 115 feet height will without danger, sway ten inches in a wjnd. Zj - i