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New, Odd & Interesting.

e 4 n ♦. ® No bird of prey the gift of song. 1 (The inallMt humming bird weighs 1 SO grains. Female frogs bar* no voioe; only the malt* can aing. Th« highest mountain in Europe is Mount Blanc, 16,732 feet, 'All birds that live on seeda are fur- ; bished with strong giiearda. 1 Wild birds do not sing more than eight or ten weeks in the year. A gallon of alcohol can be produced from a bushel of sweet potatoes. (The cabmen of Paris are forbidden to smoke while driving a fare. About 1,000 servants are attached td the Royal household of Great Britaiii. The world's navies number 2,291 War vessels. Two-thirds of the Spanish population can neither read nor write. Whales are never found in the Gulf Stream. Diamonds have been discovered in fallen meteors. A pint of milk produces about an Ounce of butter. A flea's mouth is placed exactly be« tween his forelegs. Single women, as a rule, live longer than single men. In proportion to its size Belgium has more miles of railway than any other country in the world. The number of people at present ivho speak • English is said to be 116,000,000. In the number of murders Italy leads Europe. In the number of suicides Russia is ahead. Nearly all the residents of Montreuil j (France) are engaged in the manufac- j ture of dolls' heads. ! Snakes and other reptiles are the only animals which seem to be able to exist without drink. i A chasm thirty miles in length has been excavated by the waters of the Grand Falls of Labrador. ! Nineteen and a half stone is the or- J dinary total wei»ht carried by a British trooper's horse. I In all our wars we have won the jplendid average of 82 per cent, of the battles. This is the world's record. There are twenty-seven Royal fami- , rfes in Europe, two-thirds of which are if German originChinese scholars claim that iron j —swords were in use in their country j 4,000 years ago. When opals are first taken from the j mine they are so soft that they can be picked to pieces with the finger-nail.

Thirteen was the sacred number of the Mexicans and the ancient people of Yucatan. Their week had thirteen days, and they had thirteen snake gods. The gray buzzard is said to be the heaviest bird that flies, the young males when food is plentiful weighing nearly 40 lbs. The bird is almost extinct. The forests of Cuba occupy about 13,000,000 acres, and many of them arb so dense as to be almost impenetrable. In Stockholm the street-car conductors sell hatpin protectors for a halfpenny apiece to all women who wish to buy. Probably fhe simplest Court livery In the world is that worn in the Royal palace of Korea. The Emperor's servants are all dressed in garments and headgear of red calico. The nine points of the law are thus ooncisely given:—l. A good deal of money; 2, a good deal of patience; 3, a good cause; 4, a good lawyer; 5, a good counsel; 0, good witnesses; 7, a good jury; 8, a good judge; 9, good luck. It appears that there are people in Italy who derive a dismal satisfaction from being admitted to watch the process of'cremation at the charge of 4s. a head, and that it is the revenue from this source that defrays the cost of cremating the poor folk. The Royal crown of Roumania is made of bronze, the metal once having done service in the shape of cannons. Specimens of metal from 62 different guns, each captured from some enemy, are included in the make-up of this oddly-constructed Imperial insignia. In 1527 and 1528 Senor de la Serna made a survey of the Isthmus of Panama, having in mind a canal, and records extant in Madrid show that tho work was done pretty thoroughly. At that time Charles the Fifth was Emperor, but he gave this scheme bnt little attention. As illustrating tlio excellence of tho paper (which is made from unused linen scraps) upon which Hank of England notes are printed, it. is stated that when one of ihe.se notes is twisted into a rope it will sustain a weight of 359 lbs. As affording some idea nf tlio amount of light gold now in circulation, it is stated tl.it a financier in London accepted £l,l)i>o hnevlv made up of half sov eloigns, and that, on the amount being weighed at his banker#, it w33 found to be short by £l9.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PWT19170703.2.21

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 6, Issue 289, 3 July 1917, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
765

New, Odd & Interesting. Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 6, Issue 289, 3 July 1917, Page 3

New, Odd & Interesting. Pukekohe & Waiuku Times, Volume 6, Issue 289, 3 July 1917, Page 3

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