The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, November 09, 1900, Image 6

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Uhe KfoUra Ghost Zatice.
Under ordinary clrciimstnncpH news
thnt nn Indian trlbo Ih Indulging In
tho wild frenzy known as the ghowt
danco Is enough to call up visions of
murder nnd rapine. In prist days num
orouB murderous raids of tho red men
have been preceded !y such festivals.
Dut n ghost dnnro now being held In
tho Wichita nnd Kiowa reservations
of Indian territory Is not bcllovcd to
preoago nny such tcrrlblo HcencR. Tho
roservntlona nnmnd nro to be opened
to white settlors when the allotment
of lands to Indians shall have been
complotod, nnd tho red men fenr thnt
onco tho paleface gem in among them
tho days of tribal power will have
been nurnborod. With tho vlow of
preventing tho Impending Incuralon
.these older chlofs hnvo organized the
DIANKI.
Leader of tho Ghost Dance.
ghost dance, which will, they hope,
servo to kcop the white men nwny.
Blaukl, tho leader of tho ghost
dnco, is a high priest In hlb trlbu nnd
ft dreamor as well. Ho Is u unlet man
between BO and GO yenrs of age, of
dignified manner and with a thought
ful countenance, according well with
his tribal positions as chief priest and
head man.
He Stole $700,000.
Cornelius L. Alvord. noto tollor In
the First Natlonnl bank of Now York,
2 Wall street, boa stolen $700,000 of
tho bank's funds
nnd has abscond
ed. Tho bnnk'B of
ficers positively do
ny that nnyono In
tho bank or that
any of its deposit
ors was In collu
Blon "with Alvord.
Ho had been twen
ty yearfl In tho
linnlt'a nmnlnv. hIv
President Dnkor. ycn lta noto
teller, nnd had tho Implicit confidence
of Its olllcors. It Is probable that Al
vord lost tho groater part of tho
money ho stolo in speculating In tho
etroot, at tho very ontranco to which
ho handled millions of dollurs. George
P. Baker, president of tho bank, lins
Issued thlB statement:
"Tho aggregate or the fnlse cutrlcs,
amounting to $700,000, has been
charged off on tho books of tho bank,
out of tho rosorvo fund, without di
minishing tho surplus, and profits of
tho bank as reported In Its last pub
lished statement. It is expected that
tho shortngo will bo materially re
duced by a substantial sum. of which
thero is a fair prospect of recovery."
Slg. Gullo. tho new ltnllnn minister
or public Instruction, Is being criti
cised by tho German press becauso ho
has ollmlnntod tho study of Gorman
from tho curriculum of tho Intermedi
ate schools. That language was Intro
duced In tho ltnllnn schools, by sig.
Baccelll, Gallo's predecessor. Tho Gor
man papers assort that Italy's commer
cial relations with Germauy, Austria,
nnd Switzerland nro becoming closor
year by year, and that tho Gorman
tonguo la noccssnry to Italians.
Jfeto Count Coming.
Daron Von Sternberg, who has boon
flrst socrotary to tho Gorman embassy
hero for several yoars, has beon trans
(erred to a now
post and will bo
succeeded by Count
Quadt.who has Just
arrived and Is now
looking for a ault
ft b 1 o residonce.
Count Quadt has
spent his llfo in
tho German dlnlo
matio service and
is n man of great
wealth and social
Inclination. Tho
Count Quadt.
Countoss Quadt is a daughter of Slg
nor Martino, tho Italian ambassador
to Denmark.
The lato Lord Kussell onco presided
ut a dinner given to Sir Heury Irving
on tho lattor's return from Amorica.
Whllo the dlnnor was in progress Lord
Russoll suggested that Comyns Carr
f propose Sir Henry's health. "I can't
mako speeches, you know," said ho.
v 8lr Henry gontly replied: "I heard
you mako a line npeoch boforo tho Par
noll commission." To which tho pun
ont Irishman answered: "Oh, yes, but
then I had borne thing to talk about."
y$ 4$ IB
&-
Topics
Say Mr. Cruder Is to VOcd.
From Italy como rumors that Airs.
Van Rensselaer Cruger Is engaged, to
mnrry n wealthy
young Dostontnn
named Gardnor,
and Now York so
cloty Is pltiascd
thereat.
Dcforo tho death
of her husband
Mrs. Cruger fell
Into tho habit of
writing b h ort
stories and novels,
which dealt whol
Mrs. Crugor,
ly with Bocloty, and for which publish
ers eagerly bid. It was thon alio enmo
as nenr founding o. salon as was pos
Blblo In Now York. Hor houses nt
Oyster Hoy nnd In the city wero tho
rendezvous of persons of both boxcs
with literary and nrtlstlc tiustes.
Aftor the death of Mr. Crugor and
tho discovery thnt wealth was not horn,
Mrs. Cruger dipped deepor into tho
stream of light fiction, nnd under tho
nom do plumo of "Julian Gordon"
wroto cloveror sketches' thnn ever.
Then came tho deslro to llvo abroad
and for tho past year or more Mrs.
Crugor has occupied a chnrmlng vil
la In Florence.
A Gal-Ocston Hero.
Thoro nro few men In Texas with
such n well dovelopod propensity fot
getting Into (llsngreeablu Jobs as Col.
Hunt McCaleb, who whb adjutant gen
eral of tho city forces when Galveston
wnH undor martial law. When Gen.
Thomas Scurry was appointed to tho
military command of tho city by May
or JOnes ho at onco offered tho ap
pointment of adjutant general to Col.
McCnlob. Why ho did so nobody ap
peared to know, for McCalob is not
IKipular. In normal times ho is an
unassuming nowspnper plodder of tho
most ordinary stripe, But ho seems
fairly to revol In a row, nnd perhaps
that Is why Gen. Scurry appointed
him to tho responsible position of
ndjutant genernl, and gnvo into his
hands tho work of managing tho great
mnsa of dotall which dovolvcd upon
tho military government.
Thero waa no law to guldo him save
common eonso, nnd, according to his
Btory, when ho needed a law right
badly to cover a caso which presented
itsolt at tho adjutant general's ofllco,
COL. McCALED.
ho would grind ono out us fast ns his
stenographer could work a typewriter.
During tho ton days of martial law
forty-Blx general orders wero issued.
Gen. Scurry says they were modol3 of
military conciseness. In these forty
six orders this newspaper plodder,
whom tho hurrlcnno had tossed into a
position of despotic power second only
to tho military govornor himself, gave
to the town a codo of laws which
brought order out of chaos, defined
tho common law rights which would
bo respected and indicated In no un
certain tonus tho common law rights
which ceased to exist undor this fear
ful and pocullar military despotism.
Out moro wonderful than this was the
fact that tho peoplo proper, who had
beon governed with an iron hand and
ofton at tho inuzzlo of n rlllo, roso up
and proclalmod against tho proposed
abrogation of martial law. It waa
McCalob who first suggested to Gon
Scurry thnt tho tlrao hnd como to got
back to civil government. As tho ad
jutant general had been In tho closest
touch with tho people, Gon. Scurry
placed great storo on his opinion. Ho
aaw tho correctness of it, and told tho
mayor that martial law must ceaso,
and In twonty-four hours tho machin
ery of civil process was again in mo
tion. The 'Right to Hiss.
A Kansas City Judgo bus laid down
a now canon In theatrical criticism.
Two men nt tho Standard theator In
that city who did not llko tho por
rormanco expressed their disapproval
by hissing. Thoy wore arrested and
fined, tho court deciding that while
ovory citizen has tho right to indulge
In criticism, ho has no right to dis
turb tho enjoyment of othora. Tho
learned Judgo npparontly did not ro
memlwr thnt persona sometimes ap
plaud aud usually applaud In tho
wrong timo, which disturbs many
persons. Tho two victims ought to go
to Pnrls, whoro recently an audlonco,
dlsplcasod with ttho performance,
broke Uio windows and chnira nnd
wound up by turning a hooa on tho
performers. Thoro nro many occasions
when an audience fools llko turning on
tho hose, but Paris is tho only place
whero this luxury Is enjoyed.
1L Jit
MAJ)E sewing easy.
BUT SCANT HONOR 13 DENIED
HI8 MEMORY.
Kllae How Failed of Klrcllon to tlio
Mull or Fame In tho Uulrnraltjr of
Now York ClilHf .Itullco Against
Illm.
Chancellor McCrackcn of tho Univer
sity of Now York request that tho fol
lowing bo published:
"By reason of a clerical error (tho
misreading of a single figure) In our
canvass of tho reports of tho 100 elec
tors of tho Hall of Famo, fifty-three
votes wero credited to Ellas Howo In
atoad of forty-seven. Sovontcon chief
Justices wero recorded as supporting
him, whon tho number was cloven.
Failing, thoreforo, to receive fifty-one
votes, his name Is not Included nmong
those to bo Inscribed thla present year.
This reducos tho roll of names to twen-ty-nlno
and leaves vtwenty-ouo vacant
panola to bo flltod two years lienco, In
1902. The official count will bo pub
Ushed In a fow wcokB, In tho book of
tho Hall of Fame. In a fow Instances
tho figures may vary slightly from
thoso published in tho public prints,
but tho roll of twenty-nlno names is
now oasured."
Ellas Howo was the Inventor of tho
sewing machine Ho was born at
ELIAS HOWE.
Spencer, Mass., July 9, 1819, and died
at Brooklyn, Oct. 3, 18G7. Ho was tho
son of a farmer and miller, and his
only education was that received dur
ing tho winter months, when thero was
no work to bo done on tho farm. In
1837 ho drifted to Boston, nnd secured
employment In tho bhop of a machin
ist. Hero he conceived tho Idea of the
sewing machine, nnd spent llvo years
in perfecting It.
On Sept. 10, 18IC, he was given his
first patent, but ho could not soil tho
mnchlno becnuso of tho opposition of
the artisan class to labor-saving ap
pliances. Noxt ho went to England,
and, falling thero to Interest capital
In his Invention, ho returned to
Amerlcn, working his passage as a
common sailor. Whllo ho was abroad
his machine had boon Imitated and
was selling ovorywhore. Capital now
came to his aid, nnd In a short time" his
Incomo had lnci eased from $300 to
$200,000 a year. Ho cleared up on his
Invention about $2,000,000.
CHARACTER IN THUMBS.
Hie Way They Are Held Is a (lultle o
Miwrn'n.
Thoro aro many who Judgo of tho
character of Individuals by tho ex
pression and netting of tho eye, the
shapo nnd chnracter of tho nose, tho
conformation of tho mouth, with its
toll-tnlo corners, tho looseness or tight
ness of tho lips, but hero Is a woman
who bases hor approval or conJomna
tlon on tho wny womon hold tholr
thumbs, and declares that alio has
never been deceived in her estimate.
This Is Miss Mary Burk, an organized
chnritios worker, whoso remarks nro
quoted by tho Philadelphia Daily Bul
letin ns follows; I gave the subject spe
cial study aftor I had noticed tho al
most Infallible guldo that thumbs offer
to tho woman who must road charac
ter. Many of tho so-called signs of
chnractor may bo acquired without tho
characteristic that they nro supposed
Tho late William L.Wilson, who died
at Loxlngton, Ky recently, was born
at Charlestown, W. Va,, May 3, 1843.
His father, who was also an educator,
died when tho son was a child, and
tho boy was educated by his mother, a
woman of great culture. Mr. Wilson
was graduated In 18G0 from tho Colum
bian university at Washington and for
two years thereafter waB a studont in
tho University of Virginia.
At the close of tho war, during
which ho had fought as a prlvato on
the sido of tho confederacy, ho studied
law In tho Columbian university and
was at tho samo tlnio assistant pro
fessor of Greek and Latin In that In
stitution. It was at tho Democratic natlonnl
convention of 1880, to which he was
a dclegato, that Mr. Wilson made hla
dobut In politics. Since 1871 ho had
beon a practicing lawyer in Chnrlos
I town. But law and politics wero not
1 then as attractive to him as waa odu
r catlonal work, and In 18S3 ho beenmo
I president of tho University of Wost
Virginia. Ills oloctlon to congress,
however, drew him back to tho politi
cal flold into which ho enterod this
tlmo with koon Interest
I In congress he won n distinguished
reputation as a scholarly, statesman
llko rocmbor whoso special interest in
the, tariff question led to his appoint
ment to the commlfteo on ways and
means. This was In 1887. He was nl
waya a hearty Bupportor of Mr. Cleve
mLwi m
Mm
Ipil Willi's (rctl
to Indicate. A woman may cultivate
manner and telf-control to such' an ex
tent that hor real personality nnd In
stincts mny bo kopt from tho oyoa of
most obsorvors. nut her thumb Is hor
botrayor. It la tho ono member that
aha .forgets to keep under btrct sur
veillance. And it speaks frankly.
When I am collecting money for any
philanthropy and I meet n. patron who
discusses tho subject with her thumb
hold close against her forefinger I do
not ask her for a contribution, for I
know that she Is selfish and unwilling
to part with a donation. If, on the
contrary, tho thumb stands out with a
heroic nonchalance, I know that tho
owner la open for sympathy, nnd will
help If sho can. Evon if alio cannot,
her answer will bo truthful. I do not
think that I ever have mot an excep
tion to veracity In tha right sort of
thumb. But I never placo any rellnnco
upon tho word of a woman whoso
thumb closes Insldo of her palm ns tho
speaks, or who makes a list by lotting
tho fingers cover tho thumb. Sho is de
ceptive, Insincere, and ofton cowardly.
In a man thla retirement of tho thumb
expresses woaknesa, too. Notice it
when acquaintances or friends fchako
hands with you. If womon think that
a brnvely extended thumb is obtrusive
or Inartistic they dhould dlsabuso their
minds of tho Idea, for they nro placing
a class upon themselves that thoy do
not doservo whon they chock tho
thumb In Its free expression. When a
woman manifests nervousne33 on a
club platform I loo at her thumb to
know tho cnuse. And when sho uttors
a particularly lofty or noblo sentiment
I glanco again at hor thumb to know
whether she mennt it. This has been
ono of tho most Important aids thnt I
havo used with success In studying tho
colored people
NavlKtlon ou Illinois Hirer.
Although thero aro many steamers
on the Illinois river, most of them aro
In local trado on the various pools, and
fow pass through tho locks. A feo of
$1.G0 per vessol and a toll on cargo 1b
charged at each dam. The receipts at
Honry last year wero $1,101.11, nnd
tho exponso of maintaining $1,37G.05.
At Copperas Creek $1,701X6 was col
lected to offset an expenditure of $2,
114.13. But a slnglo vessol regularly
passes tho Henry lock at present, tho
Borealls Ilex of tho Itoynl route, Capt.
Swain. This stcamor makes regular
dally round trips between LnSolle and
Henry loaded to tho guards with
freight aud passengers, and Ib said to
havo cleared nearly $10,000 abovo all
expenses this season. A new steamer,
tho Fred Swain, has been built to run
opposite to it, nnd many moro boats
nro projected in consequonco of tho
deep water and booming trado. An
other Btcamer, tho Bald Eaglo, runs
from Peoria to St. Louis. In addition
to theso grain boats, yachts and ex
cursion steamers pass at Intervals, and
this year tho expense, sheets at tho
locks will probably show a consider
able profit to tho state. John L
Mathews, In Chicago Record.
To Italic tho Kangaroo.
A movement has been started In
Franco which has for Its purposo tho
preservation, or, rather, the cultivation
of tho kangaroo, which has been rap
Idly proceeding toward extermination.
Dr. Brisson, a French surgeon, says
that thero Is likely coon to be an ex
ceptional demand for the animals In
consequence of tho success nttendlng
the uso of tho kangaroo tendon in tho
hospitals. It has been employed In
scores of Instances to tlo up tho frac
tured bones of a man's leg, In order
that ho may uso his knees while tho
bones aro knitting together. Kanga
roo tendon, ho says, Is as strong as
silver wire. It Is taken from tho tall,
and being animal In Its nature Is ab
sorbed, and tho leg doos not havo to bo
cut open, as Is necessary whon sllvor
wlro Is used.
This year has continued tho great
est season in tho history of lake traf
fic. land's policies. In tho speakership fight
between Crisp nnd Mills ho took an ac
tive part. This was followed by his
appointment as chairman of tho ways
and moans commltteo and tho Wilson,
bill was tho result Mr. Wilson fa-
THH LATE WILLIAM L. WILSON,
vorcd warmly tho repeal of tho Shor
mnn law,
In tho gonoral elections of 1891 Mr.
Wilson waa defontcd for congrosj, but
was nppolntod postmastor In general
at the expiration of his term in 189S.
Ho waa one of Mr. Cleveland's olMeat
advisors, and for his Judgment that
Prortdent bad the profoundest respect
j3i ' ' JfrygX' I
Speculation as to tho composition
md surroundings of tho sun nnd Its
toronu has run on many linos, but
Ihero have been vory few investigators
who have suspected tho existence of
inrk bodies In such a neighborhood.
Sucli suspicions have existed, but thero
has been very little to support thorn
until tho recent eclipse. Skepticism
dii the point was fully Justified until
tho fact was definitely and clearly as
certulnod, since In tho case of an ob
ject to brilliant aa the corona It was
so oasy to mistake u mero Interval
botween two bright structures for a
dark one, and this objection applies
evon to tho phott graph. It is to tho
pnotgraph. however that wo owo
our knowledge thnt dnrk boales do ex
ist In the vicinity of the sun and its
corona.
Tho discovery appears to bo duo to
tho exlstenco oi a light which Is not
that of tho corona, but a faint, diffused
light duo to tho scattering of other
light by K.lnuto pnttlclcs, and It Is
by their showing against this gleam
that wo oro able to convince oursclvcB
of the existence of tho dark bodies.
What they mean at present men of sci
ence do not know and at present havo
no menus of ascertaining. Significance
of some tort they must havo and to
tlie solution of this problem our as
tronomers will coubtlcsE address them
selves with that mixture of enthusiasm
and patience which hns given to tho
world so inany nolablo discoveries,
rrolongrd ej.pomire of the plates has
been tho means by which Mr. Maunder
has clearly demrmhtrnted that those
dark ttriutures posse en an actual ex
lstenco nnd arc not mere effects of
contrast, ns was hiiggested with regard
to the negatives taken by Mr. Wesley
as far back as 1871. Tho dark rays arq
of no small extent, one of them com
ing to an abrupt end at about 600,000
mile3 from tho edge of tho sun, and
unother bordering on a bright stream
er Is oven longer than Its companion.
Tho discovery is important oven on the
ground that it adds a new element to
the inexhaustible romance of science
Ha Currents and Migration.
Tho French scientific Journal, La
Nature, calls attention to a recent re
port of tho French consul at Hawaii,
which, it thinks, throws light on somo
problems of ethnography. Not long
ago a little schooner, dismantled and
its rudder gone as tho result of a tem
pest, was drifted by winds and ocean
currents from Tahiti to Hawaii, after
elghty-ono days of helpless wandering.
Hawaiian traditions declare that in
ancient days people camo from Tahiti,
drifting with the currents, and Bottled
In Hawaii. Tho ndventuro of tho dis
mantled schooner seems to prove tho
possibility of such n migration, nnd It
is suggested that the currents of tho
Pnclflc, which hnvo not yet been suffi
ciently studied, may throw light on tho
distribution of tho native races among
tho Island groups.
TURN THIS SIDEWAYS.
If you follow the advice you will bo
startled by the sudden apparition of
a water god's smiling face. This,
morcovor, is not a "freak," but a gon
ulno and curious case of extraordinary
reflection m still water. The picture
was taken at Wllloughby lake, a sum
mer resort iu Vermont, and tho re
flection Is called locally Devil's Face.
Harvard' lreat Klootrlo riant,
Prof. John Trowbridge .has recently
had installed at Harvard university tho
most powerful apparatus In the world
for tho production of olectro-motivo
force. Tho plant comprises 20,000 stor
age cells giving 40,000 electrical units
of pressure, and this can bo Increased
to 3,000,000 volts. But In order to ob
tain the full effect of so enormous a
pressure, Prof. Trowbridge says It
would bo necessary to romovo tho ap
paratus Into tho center of an open
flold and elevato It at least thirty feot
from tho ground In ordor to avoid Iosb
from tho inductive action of floors and
walls. With this great battery tho
highest degreo of Instantaneous tem
perature yet attained can bo produced.
Prof. Trowbrldgo hopes with Its aid to
obtain some cluo to tho temperature
at which hydrogen exists In tho stars.
This plant furnishes, ho adds, an Ideal
method of producing X-rays.
CuUlrntet! Iinntter.
The vlllago of Bracket in Belgium
onjoys tho fame of having originated
ono of the most celebrated rnccB of
domeatlc fowls. Tho Belgians do not
hesltato to assert that tho Bracket
hens are unequaled for tho exttclWnce
aSSsT $ c-'Sts
N 4i
&iI
and number of tholr eggs, whllo tho
roosters have developed, thanks to
genorationa of cultivation and tho In
fluence of "crowing tournamontB," a
power and rhythm of volco equally un
rivaled. Tho breedera have a theory
that tho mimical contests In which tho
Bracket roostors are trained servo to
develop tho peculiar qualities of tho
race. However thlB may be, It Ib cer
tain the cultivation has differentiated
theso fowls from all others.
CURES CATARRH AT NICJHT.
Most of tho cures recommendod for
catarrh, hay fevor, etc., require consid
erable cure and routino work In order
to effect a cure, and the sufferer la apt
to neglect a contlnuanco of tho treat
ment until a complote euro la effected,
simply because It Is "too much
troublo" to attend to the slmplo do-,
tnlls. It would seem, howevor, that If
a treatment was provided that could
bo applied at night, when It would not
Interfero with tho dally duties or ro
qiilro attention at stated hours, It
would havo much to rocommond Its
use. Tho Inhaler shown abovo Is so
constructed as to bo readily attached
to tho nose, and that, too, without a
sufficient pressuro on tho cartilage to
cause annoyance or Intorfeia with rest
ful sleep. The devlco consists of two
absorbent pads connected by a wire
spring, Uio latter bent to a shape con
venient for attachment to tho central
cartllago of tho nose. Tho Inventor
claims that It a sufferer from catarrh,
asthma, bronchitis and othor diseases
of tho nasal passages and throat will
apply this device at night a euro will
be shortly effected, thv modiclno doing
Its work nt tho hours whon diseases of
tho head and throat make their most
formidable strides.
Unmeaning a Waterfall,
The harnessing of ono of Sweden's
largo waterfalls has Just been accom
plished. Tho water power lies at
Quarnsveden and tho electric current
Is conveyed to Domnarfvet, about threo
mlle3 distant. Tho power station, gen
erators, cables nnd transformers aro
all from German houses. For convey
ing this current 40,000 pounds of cop
per wlro Is used. Tho waterfall, which
Is ono of tho most powerful nnd con
tinuous in tho kingdom, Is estimated
to contain 18,000 horso power, 8,000
of which Is utilized to oporato the saw
mills of tho company, whllo 10.000 la
used for tho generation of tho oloctrlo
current.
Buimlilue anil HuRar.
Tho experiments of tho French
grnpo growers In Algeria havo shown
that too much sunshine Is unfavorablo
for tho making of good wine. In tho
moro temperate climate of France
grapes possess tv proper proportion of
sugar to acid for wine making, but tho
hot Algerian sunshlno induces so ac
tive an assimilation by tho vines that
tho quantity of acid is reduced and
thnt of Hugar Increased. In conse
quence tho wine mnkers of Algeria aro
driven to many devices lor Improving
the flavor nnd lasting qualities of their
wines.
Hnve Iniecta I'uvorlto Colon.
It has been asserted that Insects
nro particularly attracted by tho colors
of certain flowers. Felix Plateau, after
Investigating tho conduct of Inseots in
their visits to various flowers, con
cludes that while thoy may porcelvo
colors and thus bo enabled to distin
guish, at a distance, between flowers
and leaves, yet they show no prefer-
'ences among tho different colors. Bluo,
red, yellow, white aro lndifforont to
them. He thinks that tho ordor of
floworB affects Insects more than tholr
colors do.
Aluminum for Soldering Italia.
Among tho uses receutly found for
aluminum Is tho soldering of Jron rails
end to end In order to obtnln a smooth,
continuous track. Aluminum has tho
luujieny 01 producing great boat la
tho act of combining with oxygen. The
ends of tho rails aro placed together
in a crucible filled with a mixture of
aluminum and Iron oro. Tho mlxturo
being fired, an lntonso heat results,
and tho rails aro flrmly soldered to
gether. This Is said to be quite as effi
cacious as tho electric method of sol.
derlng.
Marino AnlmaU Far from the Hot.
Somo of the vast changes which the
faco of tho earth has undergono aro
indicated by the recent discovery In
tho small lakes' scattered among tho
survival of certain forms of marine an
imate. Salt plains exist there whoso
deposits were formed beforo volcanic
forces upheaved tho surrounding rocka
and created mountain peaks and crat
ers. Few mon aro admired by tholr ser- fe
vants. Montaigne.
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