Newspaper Page Text
General News Items.
The wife of Minister Christ inney
is saiil t.o liavo born in.king a living
by coloring photographs.
The Chicago Daily News says :
If Senator lion Hill is smart he
•will tako tho field as a lecturer.
A stock-keeper reports curing
many bail warts on cattle and
lmrses, during several years by
application to each of ‘•one good
d..ub of tar.”
“He that is not for ns is against
us,’’ sn.vs noma of tho Democratic ed
itor-', and ti ey are tiring into every
body wh i does not Waive an mines
takable flag.
Ii isnov said that Gen. Grant,
when ho was President ol the United
Stau 8 l’eci imi $35,000 not to veto a
certain railroad lull. It is said he in
tended vetoing tho bill, hut the ah.ive
sum induced him to change his be
lief.
Captain Bognrdns. the world cham
pion wing-shot bis be, n beaten in a
Sim ting match for S2OO and 50 pi r
cent of tho gate money, by Frank
Esbe, Jr., of St. Joseph, Mo. The
birds were in five traps and neither
knew from which trap the bird were
loosed. Esbe killed 93. and Ilogai
dus 83 in a hundred sla ts.
A Paris cable dispatch says: “Ex
perino nts are being made here with
the po’vscope, anew nparnlus for il
luminating lbo interior of animal or
ganism, rendering bodies transpa
rent. so ns to render an examination
■ of every portion of a body feasible. —
The atlCMtion of scientists is drawn
* toward this remarkable discovery.'’
Chicago Times; It is growing ob
vious that the candidat'S of the ri
epectivc par ies for i resident, will be
Grant and Til ion. Neither can poll
his paitv s'rergtii, but each, being
tlu ert-htivo of his party machin -,
will be lliiusl lorward by its in.-trn
menta'iiy, and the country wi 1 h (Ve
to choose between evils.
' Ihe first ih phtnt birth in the Uni
t"d States occurred in Philadelphia,
on the lOt li of last month, mid iiti met s
riiuc'm comnn nt. '1 In Philadelphia
Bulletin put lishes a poem in honor ot
tho event. It has been claimed that
elephants would not propagate their
species during captivity, but this case
clearly refutes that, opinion.
The London Graphic says : Ev
ery boy and girl in Elizabeth's
time had to learn a trade or call
ing, and the male remained in
apprenticeship till 21. Now, in
manufacturing towns especially,
lads go into the iion works and
factories and earn at 13 nine or
ten shillings a week At 17 or IS
they are without skill in any one.
A Norwegian pnj cr states that
some fishermen, on the 12 or Feb
ruary, found off the coast of an is
land on the western coast of N"r
way a damaged railway w.- gon.
with the words “Edinburg and
Glnssgow Railway ' painted on it.
It is supposed to he one of the
wagons separated from the train
which met wtili the disaster on the
7ay Bridge, in the carriage l as
a portmanteau of clothing, some
of which was marked “P. B.”
Tl,o railway on Vesuvius is now
complete. It is 800 metros Ion" ami
extor ils 1 1 tlie oil'll! ot tin* crater.
The road lias beon built x\ i 1 1 1 "nit
cate, ami ► poured ntrrnst streams of
lava. The trains are uiovei! hy mentis
ot two wire ropes, drawn by a steam
ingine at ttio l-ase of Ih mountain.
Ihe wheels o( the ears are so con-
Mructed ns to preclude Hie possibility
of their jumping the mils. Every car
is provided with a powerful automatic
brake, wlreli prevents the vehicle
from rushing down the slope in case
a rope should break.
The patriarch of Buzzard’s Roost,
a little town within the shadow of
Mount Slrastn, Cal., after seventy
years of 'ingle bliss, longed for a w fe.
lie heard of the Matrimonial News,
sent lor a copy, and thus made the
acquaintance (by leilir) of a Boston
widow. But he was cautious, and
th ugh evidently impnss:d in her fa
vor, hesitated about taking the final
step. While be hesitated, leap year
came, and the widow taking advan
tage of that tact, packed her trunk,
telegraphi and to the patriarch that she
was going out to marry him, and
started. The old man accept, and the
situation; they were married iimncdi’
ately, and are happy.
Dorn Pedro, the Brazilian Etnpo
ror, has proved himself a genuine
lover of science by telegraphing nu
clei 1 bis own name, to the l’aris Acad
emy of Science, the first intelligible
account that has been received iu the
north of the great comet discovered
iu the southern hemisphere last
month. The comet passed remarka
bly' near the sun, but it is now lias
toning back into the darkness oi spaco
so that, it seems, we shall not have a
glimpse of it in this hemisphere. At
the Cape of Good Hope it made its
appearance suddenly and almost with
out warning its tail was seen stream
ing acrosss the evening sky irom be
hind Table Mountain. It is notice
able that the Emperor signed Ids dis
patch “Pedro Alcantara,” without
making any fuss about it.
• •
IP. A. SINGLETON, Ed <(' I'rop'r.
VOL 5.
CLEOPA TII.VS NEEDLE.
BY UNCLE WILL.
From Golden Day*. ]
It IS certainly tho oldest needle in
the world, its age being some 3400
years. It is the biggest also, say
Seventy feet long, eight loot thick
at the vyi le end, and tapering upward
to a rather dull point. Besides, it is
shaped out of tho oddest matciial
ever chosen for a need] •, and tint is
a hard granite stone, ol a rose color.
What could women (oiks now-a-days
do with such a needle ?
I see by tour twinkling eyes, my
mV dear boys and girls, 1 hat you have
already guessed my conundrum. Our
talk this week is to bo about the
strange obelisk that is being made
ready in Egypt for shipping to New
York city.
Our American nation, which is tho
youngest in the world, is about to re
ceive from tho oldest o! kingdoms the
gilt of a monument whose compan
ion was planted a couple of years
since on the banks of the Thames at
London.
Think of a single stone which
weighs a couple of hundred tons, and
hat would tower up twice as high us
most, city dwellings, bang floated
across 5000 miles of ocean to us!
Surely man, though a dwarf himself
in size, is canning enough to move
mountains, and to master tho waves
ol the sea.
At first thought, it does seem
scarcely worth while to go to such an
out'ay of toil and money in order to
gratify the curiosity ol our people,
w hen perhaps barely one in a million
among us can decipher its odd in
scriptions. Put ictus remember that
it is one ot the priceless heirlooms of
the and. ad agt s, and that it lias a Story
to tell as carious as it is interesting.
It can actu> 1 y make the
and aspirations, and mighty deeds of
a vanished race seem alive again to
us. It. can speak to us something
about the first country in the world
that discovered how to do things
unknown before, eu b as building up
great structures to.-tnnd for thou-
sands of years, carving gigantic stat
ues, columns, anil even temples, iut
of solid took, or rearing the great
pvramids as tombs lor their kings,
and whose tops are nearer the sky
than human art Los ever since been
able to at lan. Such a noble ol|. .t
--teaching as this will l ay even our
own busy generation t > take lictd to.
This obelisk can l -it us a long and
woudil’ful story. Over Intern cen
turies before Jesus Christ was born,
there reigned in Egypt t he great king
Thothmee, the third of that title, lie
was such a brave fighter that no olh
rr troops in Africa or Asia could
stand against him. He even made
the fur-ofi' King ol Nineveh pay him
tribute of eL'phunt->, giraffes, gold,
silver and lioises, which latter ani
mals the Egyptians had never owned
before, lie was also a noted hunter,
and one painting shows him busy in
slaughtering 120*tlcpbauts.
Such exploits as these so puffed up
Thothmcs with pride, that lie had
his name engraven in a temple as
•‘The living good god, lord of the up
per and lower world, the lord of
diadems!’’
At Ins order, hundreds of men
were set to work to hew two obelisks
out of the hard granite rocks at
Seyene, in Southern Egypt, near
wh re the Kilo dashes through the
cataracts. He was resolved to pre
serve the memory of his victories
forever on the stones.
Think a moment of the difficulty
ot cutting out such a huge, four-faced
monolith (or single stone) without a
breakage, and with such poor tools
as they had then.
Such feats are not ventured on in
our own days, as they are too delicate
and costly to undertake.
_A_ DEMOCHATIC IT AMILT NEWSPAPER,
BUENA VISTA, MARION COUNTY, GA„ MARCH 31, 1880.
] In the quarry, tiny used to murk
out the stone for tho whole length re
quired, and then drive metal wedges
into the lines on three Lees.
In this manner, alter the patient
labor of many mouths, tho rocks
were cut away on all sides save one.
The rough block was finally scpnra
ted by- driving a number of wooden
wedges at the same time along its en
tire hngth, in the holes previously
cut for them; and then these wooden
wedges were saturated with water,
so as tu spl.t the stone by their ex
pansion.
The next step was lo transport such
a massive block a distance cf 500
miles to Hel.opolis or On, the City of
the Sun, near 'he and. !'a of tho Nile.
So tho stone was moved across in
clined j 'atforms to a raft, which h id
been bn. ugh to tire edge ol the quar
ry through a canal, and then it was
floated down tho Nile during an in
undation.
Some scholars believe that largo
monoliths had to be conveyed ail the
way by land, on sledges and rollers.
Such a gigantic task must have oc
cnpii and sei eral years.
Oa its arrival in sab tv, the granite
was carefully polished. Next the fig
ures and inscriptions selected were
skillfully inscribed by the court
sculptor, yet slowly, on account of its
extreme hardness. The base of the
obt-l .sk was thin set within a groove
in tlie pedestal, and the entire monu
ment was raised to the pcpcndicular
I>3' building up a ridge ol earth be
neath it.
Our special obelisk and its mate
stood as guardian deities before the
grand entrance of the Temple of the
Sun at On. They were symbols o 1
the rays of the rising sun, as the pyr
amids to the westward were of the
slanting or sitting rays. In that
id'. 1 1 trous age, they were even Wor
shipped as divine images, and obla
tions wo;c offer'd to them, •
Th se monuments have b-cn st aid
ing at On when Joseph became Viz
itr ov< r Egypt, and married a daugh
ter of th; priest of On. It is nearer
certainty, however, that they were
in their place w hen Moses was being
cultured in all the learning of the
Egyptians; and he may have olten
looked upon their faces when a stu
dent.
While the Hebrews were sinking
from frec-shepherd life into bondage
in Egypt, another great and vain
glorious monarch arose. This Ba
ineses 11, tie Great, was a pompous
and cruel king, as his own inscrip
tions show, lie was so boastful that
he often engraved praises of himsell
on the monuments ol earlier kings,
and so it came that his deeds are
mentioned on the obelisks.
It was this sntno Itameses who
compelled the children of Israel to
build him treasure citi cs ot Bricks
as the Bible records, and one of
which was named after himself Ra
diuses.
It may interest you to know that
lie reigned as long as sixty-five years,
and i.l-o had so many wives that his
chi dren numbered 170 in all. But
the plagues and the exodus of Israel
fiom Egypt bel't-1 under the reign of
his weaker son, Mancptha,
After the Homans had conquered
Egypt centuries later, these two obe
lisks were removed from On to the
city of Alexandria, on the coast.—
They were then set up before the new
temple erected lor the worship of the
Caesar of Rome, the sovereign of the
world. This happened iu the reign
of either the Emperor Augustus or
Tiberius, and more than ISOO years
ago. It was also shortly after the
death of Cleopatra, the last queen of
Egypt, whose wickeded wiles ruined
herself and her kingdom.
In after years, the Egyptians set
afoot a tradition that she hid convey
ed these monoliths to their new sta
tion, and so it chanced the name ol
Cl a; patra’s Needle was thought ap
propriate.
la the lapse of centuries, ono ol
these obelisks fell prostrate, and this
l,tier is the monument which now
adorns the Thames enbnnkraeiit.
Cleopotrn's Ne< die has Good civet
throughout the entire period of th ■
Christian era, though a part of its
base has gradually worn away, and
the column has required to be kept in
position by inserting loose stones.
Tho inscriptions on tho east and
south sides have also been defaced in
part, cither by the action of the sea
breozo, the rays of the sun, or the
steady cutting by wi.ids laden with
sand from the desert, or probably by
all these causes combined. Still, con
sidering its ago and removals, the
obelisk is in remarkable preservation.
Cleopatra’s Needle testifies to-day,
as it may for many hundreds of years
to come in our own land, that those
ancient people did the be.t of handi
work, and that honest work of all
kinds will live to prove its true value.
THE MIND IN ECLIPSE.
At a recent meeting of the Med'co |
Legal Society, in this city, Dr. George
M. Bm.rd read a paper on “The'
Problems of Insanity,” iii which he :
said: ‘Tt is a paradox of astro
nomy that the sun may best be stud- 1
ied during an eclipse; and in psychol- j
ogy r the mini maybe studied best!
when it is eclipsed.
“Insanity is a disease of degrees; j
there is no plain dividing fine be:ween I
sanity and insanity. Insanity may 7
be divided into two kinds —iutell et
na! insanity, embracing forms in
which there are delusions, and emo
tional insanity, in which there are no
delusions. Insanity is a barometer
of civilization, and as we advance
higher in the arts and sciences so
w’iil insanity become more prevalent
among ih. Intense application,
brain work, and indoor life are the
agencies which most frequently bring
it about. With savages or barba
rians there is little or none of it. The
intellectual activity of the women of
to-day is another great cause of in
sanity. What the mother is, so will
the child be in an intenscr degree.
“Insanity is increasing most per
ceptibly in Europe and America
among the poorer classes Civiliza
tion grinds hardest on the poor, shut
ting them up in close houses, with
bad air and poor food, and compil
ing them to struggle for existence.—
The brain cannot always bear up un
der the strain, for they have I w re
creations and amusements which can
be indulged in lor the relation of
iheir minds, A diagnosis in e use ol
insanity is most difficu’t. The j by.fi
cian must know the subject psycho
logically; what ho thinks, and all
about his general disposition pas
sions, etc. The probabilities cl cure
iu the case of insane persons depend
greatly upon the advancement of the!
disease when the treatment : s begun.
It is better if the patient can be
treated out of the as;lum, and if he
is not confined or isolated altogether
from the world, mu coties and stupe
fying remedies should not be used
when their use can be avoided, Un
-9
til a comparatively short time our in
ventions have tended to an increase
rather titan a decrease of insanity.—
Of late, however, the inventions have
been in the opj*site direction, t rid
ing to give us more ease and rest, its,
for example, the telephone, elevated
railroad, and the electric light. If the
latter is perfected, it may also enable
us to breathe a purer air. Au improv
ed system ot education, with less
‘cramming,’ would tend to reduce the
increase of insanity. The eclipse of
the mind cannot be predicted like the
eclipse of the sun, but, with study,
men may learn to detect it in its first
stages, and, if treated early, it mui
rarely become serious.— Scicntifiic
American.
Christian Index Portrait Gallery.
Wo have received from Messrs.
James R. llurrLon & Cos., Atlanta,
Oa , publishers of tho Christian In
dex, the leading Baptist paper in the
South, a copy of the snpuib work of
art, “The Portiait Gallery,” which
they have issued as a premium to In
dex subscribers. This Gallery is, be
yond id! question, the fin.ntaml most
Costly work of art that has ever been
put forth in tho Southern States by
any publishing house, In design and
artistic execution, it is a gem. The
best engravers in tho United States
were engaged upon the w. lk for a
fong time, mid no expense was spar
ed by lhe publishers to give perfec
tion to the work.
The size of the engraving is thirty
three inches by forty.si ven inches.—
It is printed in ttireo colors; and, in
a handsome frame, makes a magnifi
cent pic ure. It contains 351 life- |
like p. rtruits of distinguished Geor
gia Puj tst ministers and members.
A volume which is to accompany the
Gallery, and which is now being pre
pared, will contain illustrated bio
graphical sketches of ail that are rep
resented. The bound volume will
comprise about 700 pages Bvo, ana
will io..t train $3 00 to $5.00, accord
ing to the style of binding. The vol
ume will be sold by subscription only.
The price of The Index for one
year, with a copy of the Portrait
Gallery, is only $3 GO. Th y should
be lound in every Baptist family in
the South. It you have not already
done so, subscribe at once.
SCANDALS IN WASHINGTON.
Affidavits have been filed with lhe
United States Di.-tiict Attorney, in
Washington district by Senator Hid,
and S.nnufi W. Small, of Georgia,
touching ceit tin charges and threats j
made against the former by 7 Jesse!
Raymond, The affidavits were re-;
lhred t .-lay by the Dislrict Attor j
nay to Ih-; police coat, for such ac
tion as it may deem necessary. Sen
ator Hi IBs affidavit sets forth the an
noyance to which lie lias been sub
jected by Iho visits of Jesse Ray
mond to his house in his absence, de
nies the truth of the charge that he
is the father of her child; denies hav
ing ever givui her mom y, or having
ever seen her except once in Atlanta,
in the pr.scnce of witnesses, and
asserts that she is a woman of aban
doned cliaract r, and a blackmailer
who Inis threatened to have “money
or his life.”
He files this affidavit in order that
the conservator of tlia peace may j
take such actions as they may think
their official duty requires. The affi
davit of Mr. Small corroborates Sen
ator Hill’s statement, as to the
threats oi the woman Raymond, and
declares that the latter in conversa
r
lion with him (Small) made use o
tho foil nviug expressions: “I must
have money. I want vSUO, and Lwi 1
hove it from him (Senator Hill) or 1
wi 1 have his life. 1 am in dead
earnest, and I do not care if I hang
for it. I will do what I sav. ’ The
affidavit further states his b, lief that
said Jcsie Raymond will Cany out
her threats by making an attempt up
on Senator Hill’s liie.
1\ a drinkers nowadays will do well
to. apply the following simple lest to
iho tea pun based of their grocers:
Tutu out Ihe infused leaves, and if
ihey are found a good brown color,
with fa r substance, the tea will bo
wholesome; but if tho leaves are black
and of a rotten texture, with an oily
appearance, Iho tea will not be fit to
drink. The purer the tea, the more
tlio distinctively brown color cl the
leaf strikes the attention. Tho mix
ing that is frequently adopted to re
duce prices result in the two kinds of
leaves being supplied together. It is
import iiil, to see that tho leaves have
the serrated or saw-like edges, with
out w hich no tea is genuine.
ANNEAL SUES( 'IUPTJON, $2 00
110 IP HE'D 1M) IT.
Several men were gathered at the
door of a blacksmith shop on Cross
avenue the other morning, when a
school boy, not over nine years of
age, came along with tears in his
eyes, and o e of the group asked:
‘ I W hat's tho matter, boy—full
down ? ’
“No, but I’ve got a hard h itlimctic
lesson, and 1 expect to g<t licked!”
was the nply.
“Let me see. I used to bo king
bee on fractions."
The man took the book, turned to
tho page and read:
“Rule I—Find the least common
multiple of the denominators of the
fractions far the least common de
nominator. Divide the least com
mon denominator by each denomi
nator, and multiply both terms ot the
fractions by the quotient obtained by
each denominator.”
lie read the rule aloud and asked
if any one could understand it. Ah
shook their heads, and then he con
tinued:
“Well, now, I think I should go
to work and discover the least uncom
mon agitator; I would then evolve a
parallel according to the intrinsic de
viator and punctuate the themome
ter.”
“So would I!” answered every
man in chorus, and one ot them add
ed: “I’ve worked ’em out that way a
thousand times.”
Not one of the men, all of whom
were in business and bad made mon
ey, could even understand the work
ing of the rule, much less woik ex
amples by it, and yet it was expect
ed that a nine year old boy should
go to the blackboard and do every
sum off-handed. —Detroit Free Press.
BENEFITS OF SINGING.
Singing is one of the most health
ful exercises in which m n, women
and children can engage. Iha medi
cal Wochenscliiift, of St. Petersburg,
has au article based upon exhaustive
researehtfs nnulc by Riofessor Mo
nassein during the autumn of 1878,
when he examined 222 singers rang
ing between tlie ages of nine and fif
ty-three. lie laid chief weight upon
the growth and absolute circumfer
i nee of the chest, upon the compara
tive relation of the latter to the tall
ness of the subject, and upon the
pneuinatometric andspirometric con
dition ot the singer. It appears to
be an ascertained fact from Dr. Mo
nas-ein’s experiments thatthe relative,
and even the absolute circumference
of chest is greater among singers
than among those who do not sing,
and that it increases with the growth
and ago of the singer. The profess
or even says that singing may be
placed physica ly as the antithesis of
drinking spirit ms liquors.
ONIONS.
From our own experience, and the
observation of others, we can fully
indorse the testimony of the St. Louis
Miller on the healthful properties of
Ihe above esculent. Lung and liver
complaints are certainly benefilted,
often cured, by a free consumption
of onions either cooked or raw. —
Colds yield to them like magic. Don't
be afraid oi them. Taken at night
all offense will be wanting by morn
ing, and the good effects will amply
compensate lor tho trifling annoy
ance. Taken regularly they greatly
promote the health of the lungs and
the digestive organs. An extract
made by boiling down the juice of
onions to a sirup, and taken as a
medicine, answers the purpose very
well, but fried, roasted, or boiled, on
ions are better. Onions are a very
cheap medicine, within everybody’s
reach, and they are not by any means
as “bad to take’’ as tiie costly nos
trums a neglect of their use may ne
cessitate. —Scientific American.
“Kind words never die.” How bit
terly does a man realize that terrible
truth when bo sees all the kindest
words he ever said in his life glaring
at him from his published I.tiers in
a breach of promise suit!
l. Hull (.11 Mill's,
Dublin and Tennvilla, on the CcfF
trnl railroad, are wanting a branch
road from the latter place to Dublin;
Immense los3 of stock was caused
by the freshet in the Oconee river;
A great number of cattle, hogs, sheep,
were di owned.
A man in Atlanta has postponed
his marriage because lie feared he
would take the mumps, to which Lo
had been exposed.
Bishop If. 11. Kavanaugk lias been
in Augusta aiding Rev. W. H. I.u
priulc in a Sirica of religious services
in St. Julin M. E. Church.
A man.in Scrivcn county caught
a hawk, and, iv.ther than kill it, crop
ped his wing and put it in his garden
to keep chickens out. Chickens keep
NO. 29
away liom that garden.
Sylvania Telephone: A paity of
fishermen caught, a short time since,
at the mouth of Briar creek, over
seven hundred fish, most of them
being hickory shad, in one-night.
We Itam from the
that on Friday
young Colquitt Barclay, the son or
Mr, J. A.Barclay, from near Bullard’s
station, was preparing a revolver for
use and had just unbridged it in the
middle to examine the cylinder, and
was in the act of looking into the
mouth ol one of the chain*
bers, accidentally the hammer fell.
The pistol was discharged, the ball
striking him over the eye and pro
ducing a wound that caused his death
in twenty minutes.
The Albany Advertiser stitea that
lust Thursday an engineer of the
Brunswick aiul Albany Railroad was
.-hot by an unkuowu negro while his
train of cars was passing Sumner's
crossing, The engineer does not
think ihat he was hit by the bullet ou
account of the speed at which the
train passed the crossing. It is a pity
an example could not be made of the
miscreant who fired the shot. No el
forts should be spared to bring him
justice.
The revival feeling that has per
vaded the community for the past
two weeks, and tho results of
which have been so marked dur
ing tho protracted meeting pro
gressing at Trinity M. E. Church,
seems to be deep-seated, and to
have assumed a permanent char
acter.
The services at Trinity yester
day indicated no abatement in
the interest manifested on relig
ions subjects. On the contray, an
increase was evidenced of the
glow oi ardor and a more earnest
inquiry upon the part of wor
shippers, “Lord, what wilt thon
have me to do?”— Savannah News.
About 11 o'clock last Friday night
a fire was discovered in the vault of
the Treasury room of the capital in
Atlanta. Tho alarm was given, tho
vualt opened, and a bucket of water
was dashed on the flames, by which
means they were extinguished. Noth
ing of any value was injured. The
origin of the fire is a mystery, though
it is attributed to mice nibbling at
matches, as several boxes were on the
shelf when the fire was discovered)
and one box was found on the fl;or
with the match heads burned off.
Augusta Nows: “If the rich mines
of Georgia were out West, or further
off from Northern capital, the usual
Western mining craze would start
with such a w .Id cry and rush that tho
quiet people of our State would think
a tornado had burst on them and ba
beNtad turned loose, ami tho inhab-~
itants of the whole globo were after
the precious metals. Some of these
days our people wi 1 Wake up and re--
ali/.e that the negheted mineral belt
in Georgia is as rich as any rein in-
California, and will see the under
ground worked like a bearer settle*
I
1 ment. There is already great excite
ment and interest manifested North
about our mines and developments of
wonderful interest, and benefit may
be looked for at an early day."
The Nineteenth Century insists that
contagion consists of minute solid
particles, which pass from the bodies
of the sick into Iks a'r and are in
haled by those who become similar
ly effected. It scouts the idea that
contagion is a gasseous or vapory
element. It contends that the reason
one person is made sick and another
escape?, is tb it the sohd particles are
i irregularly scattered in the air ami
I one person may inhale it and another
I may miss it.