Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1903)
HEARD BY AN OLD MAN. "V Here in my easy chair I sit, An old, old man before the fire, ' Deaf to all sounds of every day And dead to every past desire. Perhaps the failing outward sense Quickens the spirit's inner ear, For sitting here before the fire You'd scarce believe the sounds I hear. All this long afternoon I heard The brook in the old orchard sing Just -as .it used to, on the farm, When first the grass grew green in spring. Y.ou know ' that gurgling, gladsome noise ' Thi voipa of wntpr wild witli elea When it has burst its icy bond . And finds itself alert and free. The birds, too, in the beech-tree grove, I hear them, as in days of $'or . When I went forth at break of day, Call through the sunrise hush once more. And that one bird that nested high I thought she had a silver throat A trickle of clear melody, . It thrills me oft, her slender note. My mother's voice, too oh, so plain It calls across the fading light: "Come, children, time to leave your play; Come in the house, 'tis almost night!" metimes when you have left the room. And I alone am sitting here, I speak the answer right out loud, "Yes, yes, I'm coming, mother dear!" Then there's one song comes back to me, Your mother sang it, my dear wife, i. slender girl dressed all in white, First time I saw her .in my life. She used to carol like a bird 'Tis an old-fashioned song, I know, But day by day I hear her still Singing, "John Anderson, my Jo." I sometimes think that when I go To join her in the angel throng Tier voice, above the heav'nly hymn Will rise once more in that loved song. An old, old man and common speech Rut seldom achPH mv dulled ear: Yet 'sitting here before the fire Yon'ri scarce hpHpvA the sounds I hear. Youth's Companion. RS. MASON Is what we call in in our village "a character," and as such I dearly love a , chat with her when she Is In the hu- ternoon I called to remind her of the annual rummage sale. She Is a regu lar purchaser, "but priding herself on not feel at all called upon to approve in the abstract of Institutions In whose benefits she is quite ready to partici pate. . "Roomage sales? I don't hold with em! I call it a-nisultin' of the Al mighty, the gentry offering Him their cast-off clothes and What not!" she said tartly. "Teck my word for 't, the gentry gets their fun out o' them sales same as bazars, and times they gets the best bargains, too." "I don't see how that can be," I said; "the gentry don't buy at rummage sales." "Don't they?" she chuckled. "Much you know about it. The best bargain ever I seed was got at a rummage sale. Sit 'ee down, and donnut fidget wi' yer chair, and I'll tell 'ee how It cum about. Twas worth half-a-sov-erelgp to me. '. ' "I was a slip of a girl, in service at Squoire Hargreaves, at the hall. Well, they had a guverness there for the children; a tall, handsome lass she was, e nmnil ad If fihA wen fl dnhp --" "Her father had been what" they call a millionaire, but he lost all his money, and the daughter, -who had been to college and was a great schollard, went out to help earn a living for the family. Before that she'd been engaged to be married, but It was broken off when her father lost his money. ' J "WelL one day I was cleaning the outside windows of the schoolroom when Mrs. Hargreaves comes In, and, 'Miss Alwyn,' says she, 1 want you to help the vicar's daughter, Miss Rogers, at the roomage sale.' So Miss Alwyn said she would. "On the days of the sale, Mary, the housemaid, told me she'd asked Miss "Alwvn for anv of her old thlnes to send to the parish ball. Miss Alwyn Just looked up,- and said: "'Very weiL Mary, you can take what's hanging on the end peg In my room; I' have nothing else I could spare." "There was a pink frock as fitted Mary and a lavender muslin gown. ' " 'Mary,' I said, there's a mistake. Miss Alwyh's always kept that put by so careful Jn her drawer, with sprigs of rosemary between; she don't mean that.' " .: "But Mary wouldn't listen. She'd set her heart on the lavender gown and took It down to the parish hall herself, for we two servants had a holiday for the afternoon. "Mary took the dresses to 'Miss Rog ers stall and got : them priced. She bought the pink one, but the lavender was too'dear. 'I can't think,' says Miss Rogers, 'how anyone comes to send it. It's quite a Parisian creation.' "There was a Mr. Bartram as was staying with the vicar standing by, and he laughed. 'Let's see the creation,' he said; and then he: looked startled. 'Where did that come from?' he says, shortlike; and Miss Rogers said, 'from Mrs. Hargreaves.' 'Hargreaves! I don't know such a name! But it is it must be the same gown!' he muttered. Then I knew that he was Miss Alwyn's for mer young gentleman and what Mary had done. . "Mr. Bartram tried to turn off all the seriousness of the joke. 'Look here!' he says, 'that's too smarta gown for your village folk. In the Interests of paro chial morality, I want to' buy ItH " - "So he paid the price and went off without seeing the other stalls. J "Presently Miss Rogers, as was keep ing the stall, wanted to go away for something ' and. asked me to keep an eye on things. Miss Alwan had sold her lot, and came round to see how we was gettin on. - "In a moment she catches sight of th gown, and 'Oh T she 1 cries, 'My HERR JAtf KUBELIK AND COUNTESS . - ' ; . - - Kubelik's romantic engagement to the Hungarian countess, who Ir de-' clared to be the most beautiful woman of her country, continues to form the subject of -articles In European newspapers, and periodicals; and many stories are told of the Intense devotion of the couple to each other. lavender dress! How came that here? I must have it back; there has been a mistake!' So I told Mary, miss,' says I; 'but now it's sold.' 'Sold!' she cries, with her face as white as my aprxm. .'.No matter, I will buy It again. How much was given?' Two sovereigns; says I. She seemed a bit set back at that, but she pulled out: her purse. 'Fortunately I have as much,' she said. 'Make it right for me, Betty.' And not staying for a 'By. your leave!' she catches up the gown and offs with It hanging over her arm. I ran after her to wrap it up, but, lor' bless you! Bhe never took no heed. So I came back to the stalL Mr. Bartram had returned. 'I've come for my bargain,' says he, smiling it. 'Oh, sir,' says I. 'Miss Rog ers left me In charge of her stall and I've sold Itr 'Sold It?' said he. 'But it was sold! I bought It! 'I'm very sorry, sir,' says I; 'but the young lady as Is governess at Mrs, Hargreaves took It and left this for you,' and r showed him the money. 'But I don't understand. Why Is she so anxious for it? he says. 'Well, you see, 'twas her dress, and only sent by mistake,' I answered back. 'Her dress Mrs. Hargreaves' gover ness! vvnat is ner namer ne asKs. Miss Clarice Alwyn,' says I. - And I could have laughed out loud, for with that he was off and away down the lane and all the folks looking after him. " ; ' "They were leaning on the stile lead lug to 'squire's fields, and the gown had fallen between them. As I came near I heard him say, 'And you wrote the letter because your father lost his money? 'Of course. I did. How could I keep you bound to a beggar? she made answer. 'And I thought it was because you didn't love met be cried. Oh, Robert, how could you!' she said. And with that they looked up and saw me. I dropped a curtesy. Miss Alwyn blushed. 'Flease'm, . youe dropped your frock,' says I, demure-like. And at that Mr. Bartram laughs quit hearty. 'Betty,' says he, 1 see you'v grassed the story. Here's half a sover eign. Run along, and tell Mrs. Har DIVORCED BARONESS : " frnM - if mWi'V I - Baroness. Wolfbauer,. a granddaughter of the famous Bishop Ames, of the Methodist Church, and .daughter of a United States army captain, com mitted suicide by shooting In a hotel In Jersey . City, N. J. ; The baroness, who was also known as -Irs. Louise Ames Van Weik-Wolfbauer,-was re cently divorced from Baron. Wolfbauer, an Austrian, In South Dakota, Baron Wolfbauer Is In the sugar business in Cuba, with omces in New Tork.' Her first husband was Otto Van Weik, now a postofflce Inspector, from whom she also was divorced. , HIS FIANCEE MARIANNE CSAKY SZELL I m ffM greaves Miss Alwyn's found a bargain at the rummage sale, and won't be baok to tea.' " New York Daily News. , Creating a Waterfall. When the waters of the Niagara River were made t6 flow ovec turbines to give electric power and light to the city of Buffalo it was considered a great revolutionary feat of engineer ing. But at Niagara the dam and the fall were there from the beginning. The power was ready to the rough it had only to be applied to the ma chinery. When, however, it was pro posed to utilize the speed and force of the Hudson River and to ' turn them into the power that lights towns, runs street railways and vitalizes factory plants the problem was a . different one." The river was there, but the fall had to be created, and to do this it would be necessary to build one of the largest dams ever- constructed, a walL.ln fact,. 1,400 feet long and. 154 feet high, at certain points. No such barrier, great or small, had ever been placed across a river of a volume and flow equal to that of the Hudson just above Glens Falls, N. -Y., yet this has now been successfully accomplished. Leslie's Monthly. Exchange of Compliments. The village sexton. In addition to be ing a gravedigger, acted as a stonecut ter, house repairer and furniture mov er. ' '"''' ' The local doctor, having obtained a more lucrative appointment In anoth er county, employed the sexton to as sist In his removal. When it came to . settling up - ac counts the doctor deducted an old contra account due by the sexton. He wrote at the same time, objecting to the charge made for removing his fur niture: - . "If this was steady, It would pay much better than gravedlgging.' The sexton replied: "Indadc, Ol wud be glad to 'are a steady job; gravedigglng U very slack since you left." Spare Moments. WHO KILLED HERSELF. "WHITE COAL OF FRANCE, Glacial Streams of the Alpine Besrlon " Put' to Work. ; There has been quite a great deal of activity In the past few years in .the development of the1 glacial streams- of Alpine France, says the Philadelphia Record, and the torrents" which until recently flowed aimlessly through that country have In many cases been put to useful labor and the engineers have designs on a number of others. One of the chief spirits in this movement to utilize "the mountain "streams is M. Merges, a well-known engineer, and he has estimated the hydraulic forces of France at 10,000,000 horse power. This is more than Sufficient to" drive: all the industries' of . the .country. According to his figures(the 25,000' miles of rail roads in France' -'maker '-use of 4,000,000 horse powefr and the other industries of the country require 2,500,000. making a total of 6,500,000 horse power. ; In most cases the', method of making use of the wafer has" been t&" divert"" It: and conduct it to "a "point where it c&u economically be availed of. Large pipes of metal bring? the j-water from . vast heights. A section 'of one , of these great conduits is a . few inches less than eleven feet in diameter, or about the same size as-the tunnel under the Thames at London, : but the latter ia less than 100 feet In length, while, those In the mountains of France are in some Instances' of great length. The one spoken of, which is laid near Grenoble, which is the "white-coal capital," is over 15,000 feet . long. A -"-little ever 8,000 feet of this is of steel and the rest Is of wired cement. At. La,ncey, a few miles northeast of Grenoble, the water which gives pow er to mills of various kinds and to the electrical plant which lights the" valley of the Graisivairdan and maintains Its several tramway systems is brought byxthree successive faHs, whose total Is 6,560 feet. Light Is furnished to the houses' and farms of the vicinity at a Very moder ate cost. For example: Per year. First lamp, ten candlepower. . . .?4.S2 Second lamp, ten candlepower. , 2.8& Three . lamps, five candlepower -.. -each. 2.89 Total for five lamps, 35 can- ' dlepower ...$10.G1 - An average of $2.12 per lamp per year. . , - . - In 1863 it was deemed a bold achievement to bring water: from a height of 260 feet, as at Uriagef but now M. Berges has succeeded in canal izing a fall of 1,640 feet and another of 1,804 feet. At Epierre (Sa volet M. Joya used a fall of 1,935 feet and at Chapareillan (twenty-five miles from Genobie) another of 2,040 feet The eel has two separate hearts. One beats sixty, the other 160 times a min ute. ; : -' ','' - A large numbr of swans from Russia and North Germany wintered on the Swiss lakes. The boa and python have the largest number of ribs of any animals, the number being 320 pairs. Near. Tiverton Devonshire, there is to be. seen a blackbird with a white head and a speckled back. A, curious butterfly exists in India. The male has the' left '" wing yellow and the right one red; the female has these colors reversed. The house fly is very rapid in flight, Its wings making 800 beats a second. In which time it-goes twenty-five feet. When alarmed the rate is increased to that of fifty feet a second. It has often been stated that sixty miles an hour was the utmost rate at which a swallow could fly. Recent ex .periments upon- Oompetgne" and Ant werp proved that a swallow In a hurry can cover 128 miles In an hour. When feeding, the stride of an os trich Is from twenty to twenty-two. inches; when walking, but not feeding, twenty-six Inches, and when terrified eleven, and a half to fourteen feet, or at the rat of about twenty-! ve miles an hour. Originally the common or domestic goat was a native of the highlands of Asia. Naturalists generally regard it as having descended from an animal found in the Caucasus Mountains and the hill country of Persia, called In the Persian language,the .pesang. New kinds of living burtrflles can be produced from existing forms by great ly Increasing or decreasing the temper ature of the place where the butterflies are kept A. difference In coloring and even In form has thus been obtained by Prof. Fischer in recent experiments. if On the Way Borne. A wind Is a wind, . from . whatever quarter it may clow. . So the jght the hotel-keeper in the Scottish Highlands, of whom a tourist asked: . "Is this a good place, do you think, for a person with weak lungs?" "Nane better, sir, nane better," was the encouraging reply. "I have been advised to settle In a place where there is a south .wind. Does It blow much here?" "Oh, aye," was the answer. . "If s aye the south wind that blaws here. "But It's blowing from the - north now!" ' . ' - '- ' "Oh, aye, sir. it's a' - one. ' It's the south wind a' the same, sir," on its road baek again." r - -' ' ; A Mere Myth. : "! "Welcome," cried a voice, as Char on's boat grounded on the "trans Stygian beach. " - "' '.....' ' - " ". ' ; "Who are you?" inquired the newly arrived shade. 'I can't see you at all." "No wonder," replied the voice. "I never had even a ghost of a chance to exist I'm : the man -under the ' bed that the old maids are still looking for." Philadelphia Press. 1. ; ' If a girl has a long head, she will postpone the marriage' Indefinitely rather than go to live with his folks. , If you like any one, his mistakes are almost as easy to. excuse as your own; OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Science and Disease. THE warfare. of science with disease Is one of those ever-old and ever-new contests which have a fasclna- I tlon for many, minds1."' While the training of special ists has doubtless "done much to effect cures in lndl- vidual cases, arid'while the, experiments of investiga tors - have certainly enlarged the boundaries " of - human knowledge respecting disease neither of contributed so much toward the control more important maladies that annually as the gradual spread of elementary knowledge respecting disease among increasing numbers of the earth's Inhabit ants.' The immortal Jenrier has for more than a century had the credit of discovering the efficacy of vaccination and so of "saving the lives of millions; yet It is probably true that he gained his knowledge of cow-pox, the method of disseminating it among- human beings, and the protec tion it afforded against .smallpox from folk of Gloucestershire, who had Ions world owes him a debt of gratitude the information-!he had gained, but covery or-generalization, in science. Pasteur worked out from many contributing sources a consistent theory of germ diseases, and following his reasoning perfected. the antl-toxlri treatment of the greatest contribution of pure science to the specific treatment of disease. In the case of typhoid. fever, while science has 'done much in investigating the causes of its epidemics, only the gradual education of the public to the protection of its food and water supplies can ever put an end to its ravages. Fortunately, the public is growing more and more alive to the importance of auch protection, and the death rate from typhus is , decreasing. Only the co operation of large numbers of widely scattered people can destroy the malaria-burdened, mosquito; yellow fever intelligent action by a single local health board, like that of Havana, will suffice practically to con quer the disease. "Tuberculosis, again, is clearly prevent able by the spread of knowledge that consumptive sputum must be disinfected; and the end of cholera Infantum waits on the growth of the simple practice of sterilizing milk for lnfaats. - - . - - ,. In all these various directions while science has been the pioneer it remains for the slow spread of. elementary knowledge among the people to work the cure. Current Literature. .' . ( A Disappearing Race. TWO decades ago the native population of the Esqui maux lands, Labrador, Greenland and Alaska, was 80,000. To-day the population of these countries Is only 15,000 a decrease of 50 per cent At this rate the Esquimaux will soon have vanished off the face of the earth. : There is something about this evanescence of race as a totality which is more than dramatic it I tragic. This In spite of the fact that the Eskimos are only one of the inferior df visions of the great human family. The disappearance of a distinct subdivision of humanity as a whole shows how dubious is the when the question Is considered with regard to the destiny of human beings in their relation to the great march of historic progress. One naturally thinks of the disappear ance, of the Indians in the United States as a parallel. But great asls the decline of their branch of the human commonwealth within recent years, it cannot relatively equal the losses sustained by the Esquimaux. Buffalo En How the New Law Hits Bankrupts. ' MEASURE of great Importance to business men and lawyers and, Indeed, to the whole com munityIs the bill which was signed by he President recently, and by which "the bank A ruptcy ,.law of 1898 was materially amended. We observe. In the first place, that by the new law pre ferred creditors of a person who soon afterward becomes a bankrupt are not debarred from having ed upon by afallure to surrender the amount received. In pursuance of a' decision of the United States Supreme THE MORALS OF MANNERS. "Now, Aunt . Margaret, It is a rainy afternoon, and 1 want to have it 'out with you about my bkd manners, as you call them. I'v been here Just a week, and you'have spoken to me seven times about my behavior. Here's the list as nearly as Lean remember it "You told me 1 mustn't whisper in church, even about something In the ermon. That was the first day I was here, and it wasn't a very good begin ning, was rt? - - - "Monday I talked too loudly on the street Wednesday I. was scolded for eating a chocolate bonbon in a street car, though I was dreadfully hungry. Then I didn't pat on my gloves to go over to Hattle's, and, I didn't look up from my, book or rise when you and grandma came into the room. You ob jected to me fixing my hair at the con cert last night and this morning you criticised my eating my 'cream toast with a spoon instead of a fork. "Now It seems to me, Aunt Margaret, that If I am to "put my mind on all tjiese trifles I shall think about myself from morning till night, and presently be the most self-conscious prig In the world: That would be worse than these lapses from your oode - of manners. Don't you really think so?" : That 'was Helen's case, and. it was not such a bad one. Her pretty face looked very grave oyer It Let us try to deal with her trouble as the wise Aunt Margaret dealt with It l To think of one's behavior all the time is a little like thinking of one's clothes or one's eyes or one's clever ness. But , underneath most of these apparently arbitrary rules lies the gen eral law that no one shall do anything in the public eye to attract attention to herself. Loud talking, eating, toilet making are non-social acts; that is, they; Ignore the claim of soolety that no one person shall do what would be painful and confusing if all did It at the same time. . "; . Again, the mark of respect for ' age and positionhas a moral reason for its existence. The quick perception of the fitness of things is the mark of true breeding. Whatever the conventional demand Is and It is substantially the same the world ovei-it is based on a sense of proportion, on an . unselfish wish to make life easy and pleasant for others, and on a just feeling of one's own place in the general order of v the world. Gloves, forks, chairs, voice, gesture, are all to serve one-end the art of gentle living. '.--':;'-:- '. .. , ' To think about thatCart not about one's self for one year or five years Is the time spent. If one may acquire it so that at the end of the time it "comes as natural as life.":; these factors have of tne hair-aozen slay their thousands the simple dairj observed It The for spreading abroad hardly for a true dls Behring and Roux diphtheria, probably but In the case of tenure of the earth an Incident, of a other claims pass FAVORITE MODELS IN MILLINERY. TEN DOLLARS FOR A SLAVE. Owner -Was Glad to Tak tho Money ; Kventnally. They had been speaking of the far back days, the days when the men of the old regime used to put negroes upon the block and sell them, the mellow antebellum days before the proclamation bad been Issued giving the negro his freedom.. . "That reminds me of one of the most Interesting slave . sales I ever made," said an old auctioneer, who lives down in the old quarter, accord ing to the New Orleans Times-Democrat "and it may be Interesting to state right here that the sale was made, just before the war between the States. I was conducting an auction business In the neighborhood of the old Cabildo. "One day a friend of mine who was a very large slave owner came to me arid said he bad an old negro woman that he wantedto get rid of. He said she was not worth' much, and he was willing - to take almost ., anything for her. 'She Is too old to work,' said the owner, 'but she makes about 60 cents every day by picking up coffee on the river front, which means $15 a month. But just give her away if you want to,' he said, as he left me, and as a matter of oourse I thought he meant what he said. -o- - ' ' "A few days later I put the old wom an up and sold her under the ham mer, and she brought the sum of $10. The owner came around. 'WelL I guess you sold the old woman for a song,' he said, as he brushed iato the office; 'a couple of hundred was all she was wbrth. I began to feel heavy In the throat, for I knew he would have a fit when I told him I had been able to get only f 10 for her. But I had to tell him. Just the same, and he did have a fit He refused to take the Court, a preferred- creditor may now retain the amount paid, provided, of course, the payment was no.t fraudulent, while at the same time, as regards-debts unpaid, he will share the rights of other creditors. Another Important amendment provides that the appointment of a receiver for "an Insolvent corporation shall be deemed an act of bankruptcy entitling the .creditors to choose their own trus tee. Among the objections to a discharge which are. in cluded in the new law. is the giving of a false mercantile statement or the proof that a voluntary bankrupt has sought to go through bankruptcy more than once in six years. The bill Just enacted also adds to the list of debts from which, a bankrupt cannot be relieved by a discharge in bankruptcy. Among these additions are debts to the wife and children, and alimony; also any sum due under a judicial decision to 4' seduced woman dr for the support of an Illegitimate child. We note, finally, that the list of cor porations permitted to go Into voluntary bankruptcy will hereafter Include mining corporations, and that the fees of referees and trustees are to be Increased on an average of about 50 per cent of the fees hitherto allowed by law. Harper's Weekly. - - New Tendency In Immigration. IN alluding to the fact that during the six months endV ing with the close of 1902, 323,641 aliens entered the United States, Commissioner Sargent, of the Immigra tion Bureau, points out that the great bulk of this army of newcomers promptly sought employment in the towns and cities, especially in the East, instead of spreading throughout the country and assisting to populate the farm ing regions of the West The change that has come about in this respect Is marked. Formerly the majority of our immigrants came from Great Britain, Germany and Scandinavia. Those from the last two territorial divisions of Europe made their way in great numbers to the West and Northwest where, their energy and Industry made them valuable fac tors In building up the prosperity of the agricultural Com monwealths which play such important parts in feeding the ntrtlon and producing the surplus food products which tho United States send abroad to furnish means of subsist ence for the masses of the Old World. This general distribution of the immigrants was whole-, some on every, account, since It tended to equalize the national population. Now, however, the people who come to our shores are chieily from Russia and the south of Europe, and their tendency to stay in the cities Increases the congestion in industrial centers, while It leaves a marked scarcity of labor on the farms of the West, where, during most of the year, the demand for workers at good wages is keen and constant How this trend toward concentration Is to be overcome is not apparent But it Is rmnlf est that It is a much less healthful development than the former practlve. It is far better that the immigrants who are now arriving In such multitudes should be distributed widely over areas where the population is comparatively scarce than that they should herd together on the Atlantic slope in 'colonies" which tend to make the' progress of Americanization slower and more difficult Philadelphia Bulletin. The Increase of Crime. THE statistics of erime as set forth in a report made to Congress by Dr. Arthur MacDonald indicate that for thirty years past crime has been increasing in the world. In spite of the progress of education and the labors of philanthropy, mental and nervous diseases, suicide, insanity, juvenile crime, and pauperism are at nnMunt Inpronainc fflnter thiin tha nnmilntlnn ' TVila In crease, due apparently to concentration of population and increased strain on the mental apparatus of mankind, does not necessarily Imply that the world Is growing worse, but merely that It Is changing. "An increase of crime may be development that in the long run will be salutary. Dr. MacDonald's report accompanies a bill to provide a laboratory for the study of the criminal, pauper, and defective classes, in the hope of discovering the microbe of crime and eliminating it. Harper's Weekly. money, and told me rather curtly I could keep .it I did keep it "More than six years rolled around before I saw my friend again. In the meantime the war broke on the country and the South wakened from the bloody orgy poor in purse and broken Ih spirit One day a worn and haggard man walked into my office. I scarcely knew' him even after he had reached out to offer me his hand. But in a few moments I recognized him, and he began te tell me about the hardships of the war. He was penni less, and did not hesitate to say so. 'By the way, old man, I owe you $10, x Bam w uiiu iu m xxieuuxjr vvajr, cluu I'll pay it now If you don't mind.' "He took the $10 and was apparently glad to get It All of which goes to show that you can't always tell just how the dice will roll out of the box." PUh JEtfected by Volcanoes. The stories of dead fish thrown out by volcanoes have" been revived by the recent West India catastrophes. In particular, great quantities of them are reported to have ueen cast into the sea from the Island of St Vincent' It is pointed out by a ( French expert, M. Girardin, that these fish are simply the denizens of the lakes formed in the craters during their long period of in activity. .A crater first becomes clogged, then fills with water, and the water is In time peopled with fish that find access te It through subterranean channels. When volcanic activity Is resumed, the first" thing that occurs Is an explosion that blows the lake water, fish, and all into the air,-and distributes It " over the neighboring land and water surface. "K ' When people meet you, after an ab sence of several year, they don't look more closely at a borrowed book that has just been returned, for signs of . age,"." '