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As Good As Munchausen

As Good As Munchausen image
Parent Issue
Day
13
Month
June
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

A remarkable story comes from the upper Yakima country, Washington. Two years ago Peter Stromshadt located on a piece of land near what is now known as Bórax Springs, his family oonsisting of his wife and two children. A few days after his settlement Stromshadt discovered a spring close to the shack he had built, the water of which was strongly impregnated with iron, but not unpalatable. Stromshadt dug and deepened the spring, and since July.1893, the family has used the water for all domestic purposes. One night recently a heavy electric storm passed over the cascades, accompanied by vivid displays of lightning. The following day Mrs. Stromshadt, while kindling a flre in the stove, found it almost impossible to separate the stove lifter from her hand. Her husband, hearing ner scream, ran to her assistance, when, (o his surprise, he found that he. too, ?xperienced great difficulty in detachIng any article of iron with which his hands came in contact. Breakfast was finally prepared and the family sat down to the meal. The children, girls of 5 and 7 years respectively, drank their milk from tin cups, and i:pon raising their cups to their , mouths found themselves unable to detach the =ups from their lips. Stromshadt, who is an intelligent immigrant from Swe3en, was nonplused, and while unable to account for the wonderful occv.r,-ence, nevertheless laughed at his wifes ?xclamations that the family was bewitched. In a letter to a friend he says that the small bed in which the children sleep is upon roller casters. At night when the children are put to sleep the head of the bed is a little to the east. Invariably in the morning the bed is pointing north and south. A member af the Portland, Ore., Aeademy of Science, to whom the circumstances were related, says that the Stromshadt family has become saturated with iron, which was rendered magnetic by the' passage of electricity from the clouds to the earth during the recent electric itorm. Stromshadt himself takes the matter philosophically, and aside from the inconvenience of having his head flecorated with a fringe of knives, forks ind teaspoons, which are attached to nim, is incllned to regard the occur.■ence lightly.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register