Show Mrlfifr mill ahuwera nl Illooit No phennmena ol nature have welted more wldeipread coniternallnn either ancient nr comparatively mnilrrn II lime than the MI called nln 01 l blond The people nl antiquity regarded such oc lurrence as dire wandering and 1 portent I por-tent and In the present crntury Ihel nccatonal happening have given riseS S n much wnnder and In tome caiet actual tear However modern I science ha been able In tope with Ihe blooi rain iiiettlon Jut at It hit with many nl the usher knotty problem which bother the wise head 01 l olden lime lute mrtrornlogllt nf Iheie latter day I have been aide In ascertain the cauirt I which I produce I thee remarkable priclp Itallon and have accounted for them by I giving reasons which prove shuck thiiwrr In be very commonplace plie I Women In 1670 there wa aram of blood at Turin and In 17u1much a almwerwas reported along lime Mediterranean According Ac-cording to the ancient wondermongeri inch phenomena were compartlvcly common during the Dark Ages In all parts of Europe 1 but the account i > f them which have been preserved are to meager at to be ol mi value whatever the compiler nf data on odd Ihlngi In nature In mil a Moody rain tell In Iarlt and II U I from that fallthat we get our first scientific data on inch occurrence Kveryhnd y In the French capital was badly cared e cept one hard headed old physician named Louia Dumnnt He calmly collected I t tome of the crimson I fluid and made a careful inlcrotcoplc ci amlnatlnnof lie found that It wa really red but the cause was not one to make sane quake with luperitllluui fear In fact he found that the fluid was literally teeming with million of blood red anlmilculac Since 1811 there hat been dozens of blood rains In different puts of the world but In all nl them the fluid hai been found to be colored wild either vegetable animal or mineral matter This being Ihe ease they no longer eiclte iiiperitlllou fear among any people peo-ple eicept the mott Ignorant and degraded I de-graded |