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mbers of people were working to gain the great reward, Charlie Ross has never been found. * * * * * We told you last week of the new volcano which has appeared in Mexico. The shocks have done a great deal of damage. The town of Tehuantepec has been completely destroyed, and the people are living in tents on the outskirts of the place. Tremblings of the earth still continue to be felt along the Pacific Coast, and the people are terror-stricken. One very severe shock was felt in San Francisco, but little damage resulted from it. Some of the California towns have, however, suffered severely. Nature seems to be playing some strange tricks this year. The French people have been treated to a cyclone. They seemed to be really indignant over the visitation. They had always considered that cyclones were American institutions, and never expected that they would follow the example of American people and find their way to Paris. This storm was a regular Westerner, sweeping down everything in its path, blowing houses over, and destroying things generally. Having spent part of its rage in France, it rushed across the English Channel, raising such a gale there that many vessels were wrecked, both on the English and French shores. The storm crossed England and reached the Irish Channel, where it again played havoc with the shipping. Admiral Lord Nelson's flag-ship, the _Foudroyant_, was anchored off Liverpool. It had been touring up and down the coast as a show-ship. The storm put an end to its journeyings forever. It was caught in the gale, driven ashore, and is now a total wreck. If such storms are repeated, we shall have to tell our European cousins how they manage tornadoes and cyclones out West. In the State of Kansas, tornadoes are more dreaded than fires, and the Kansas children are taught a tornado drill as our Eastern children are taught a fire drill. According to the statements we receive, the citizens take to the prairies the moment a tornado strikes a Kansas town. As the children cannot run as fast as the grown-ups, they have often been caught and injured by the terrible storms before they could escape. To prevent such accidents in the future, some one decided to build tornado caves under the schoolhouses. These caves are large enough to shelter all the children while the blow lasts, and the scholars are regularly drilled in the methods of reaching these caves
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